Dierks Bentley To Host 2023 NHL Awards At Bridgestone Arena

Country music superstar Dierks Bentley will host the 2023 National Hockey League (NHL) Awards at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville on Monday, June 26 at 7 p.m. CT.

“Hockey plays a big part [in] my daily life,” says Bentley. “I’ve been to rinks all over the country with my travel-hockey son. I coach his spring league games and spend hours in the local hockey store, telling him, ‘No, you do not need a new stick!’ We love watching YouTube highlight reels, the whole family loves going to Nashville Predators games and watching the Stanley Cup Final together. And, I am a proud member of a beer league team here in Nashville. To get to add NHL Awards host to this list is truly an honor.”

The 2023 NHL Awards will open a week of NHL activities in Nashville. The NHL, in conjunction with the City of Nashville and the Nashville Predators, will stage the 2023 Upper Deck NHL Draft, June 28-29 at Bridgestone Arena.

“We can’t wait to celebrate the NHL’s best and brightest with the best of country music in Nashville,” says Steve Mayer, NHL Chief Content Officer & Senior Executive Vice President. “Dierks has rocked our stage over the years as a headline performer, and we’re so happy to welcome him as host of this year’s NHL Awards.”

A list of NHL and Predators public activities and events, including red carpet arrivals for the NHL Awards show and the NHL Draft, will be held in the area outside Bridgestone Arena and announced in the coming weeks.

K-Love Awards Set To Air On TBN June 2

CAIN hosts the K-Love Fan Awards from the Opry House in Nashville

The K-Love Awards are set to air on TBN on Friday, June 2 at 7 p.m. CT, with an encore performance on June 10.

The evening featured powerful collaborations from Colton Dixon and Gabby Barrett; Mac Powell and Jason Crabb; MercyMe with David Leonard; Katy Nichole and Big Daddy Weave; and Matthew West and a fan choir. It also included a moving tribute to late show producer Steve Strout with his daughter Pippa.

Additional performances and collabs included Tasha Layton with Jon Reddick, Jeremy Camp and his two daughters, Cody Carnes with Russell Dickerson, and We The Kingdom joined by Anne Wilson. An emotional highlight of the show featured Blessing Offor performing with students from Nashville’s Covenant School.

Steven Curtis Chapman also led a special ensemble performance of his 50th No.1 song with Bart Millard, Mac Powell and West. The show included many other unique moments with Rachael Lampa, Lauren Daigle, and many more.

Lauren Alaina Unlocks New Chapter On Big Loud Debut

Lauren Alaina is opening the door to the next chapter of her life on her revealing first project for Big Loud Records, Unlocked, out everywhere June 9. She’s giving fans a first taste of the new six-song EP today, releasing two tracks, “A Walk In The Bar” and “Hangovers.”

Standing firmly in who she’s always been, Unlocked features a set of new songs anchored in Alaina’s truth, digging deeper and stretching her further both musically and personally than ever before. She announced the new project on her socials this morning.

Alaina laid the foundation for the new EP with a new teaser, narrating over b-roll footage of her time in the studio creating the project with producer Joey Moi. Created by an assortment of Nashville talents, the six-track collection includes cuts by Cole Swindell, Ella Langley and Luke Bryan, as well as mainstay hit makers Josh Osborne, Parker Welling and Hunter Phelps, and many others. It also features a cheeky duet with collaborator/buddy Lainey Wilson.

YouTube video

“It’s been 13 years since we first met, and until a couple of years ago, I don’t know that I ever slowed down for more than a day or two at a time,” Alaina reflects. “I spent more time with the people that matter most to me—my family, my fiancé, my friends—during that period than I had in years. This music comes from my heart and my hometown. I am who I am because of where and who I come from, and I’m more me today than I’ve ever been. I can’t wait to unlock this next chapter with you.”

Alaina will be speaking at Billboard‘s Country Live in Conversation, and performing the new music at CMA Fest on the Chevy Riverfront Stage on June 8.

Unlocked Track List:
1. A Walk In The Bar (Lauren Alaina, Casey Brown, Lydia Vaughan, Parker Welling)
2. Hangovers (John Byron, Greylan James, Josh Osborne, Matt Roy)
3. Don’t Judge A Woman (Autumn McEntire, Joybeth Taylor, Sarah Allison Turner)
4. Smaller The Town (Zach Crowell, Joel Hutsell, Cole Swindell, Hunter Phelps)
5. Like Her (Trannie Anderson, Joe Fox, Emily Landis, Ella Langley)
6. Thicc As Thieves (feat. Lainey Wilson) (Lauren Alaina, Rocky Block, Luke Bryan, Dallas Davidson, Jacob Durrett, Parker Welling)

Mark Your Calendar—June 2023

Single/Track Release Dates:

June 1
Lauren Alaina/A Walk In The Bar/Big Loud Records
Lauren Alaina/Hangovers/Big Loud Records

June 2 
Lanco/Sound of a Saturday Night/Riser House Records
Jenna DeVries/Self Made Man
Matt Jordan/Anyone But Me/ONErpm

June 5
Nate Smith/World on Fire/Sony Music Nashville

June 9 
Ashley Jordan/Angels and Demons/ABlaze Entertainment

June 12 
Ashley Barron/Blaze A Trail/SSM Nashville

June 19 
Rob Fitzgerald/Bad N’ Boozy/Riverbend Recordings
Joe Nichols/Brokenhearted (Single Version)/Quartz Hill Records

June 23 
Jennifer Mlott/Showdown/MC1 Nashville
Erin Kelly/So Far Away/MC1 Nashville
Chris Colston/Tell it to the Whiskey/The Orchard/AMG Records

June 26 
Randy Rogers Band/Know That By Now/Thirty Tigers
Hurricane Highway/Baby I Do/Kick Ass Music
Ben Calhoun/Daddy’s Home/General Records

 

 

Album/EP Release Dates:

June 2
Tanya Tucker
/Sweet Western Sound/Fantasy Records
Kenny Rogers
/Life Is Like A Song/UMe
Lonestar
/Ten to 1
Jelly Roll
/Whitsitt Chapel/Stoney Creek Records
Drew Parker
/At The End Of The Dirt Road/Warner Music Nashville
Corey Kent/Blacktop/RCA Nashville/Sony Music Nashville
Ben Folds/What Matters Most/New West Records

June 9
Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit
/Weathervanes/Southeastern Records/Thirty Tigers
Chase Matthew/Come Get Your Memory/Warner Music Nashville
Kimberly Perry/Bloom/Records Nashville/Columbia Records
Lauren Alaina/Unlocked/Big Loud Records
Brooke Eden/Outlaw Love/BBR Music Group
Colby Acuff/Western White Pines/Sony Music Nashville
Mike Kuster/Country So Fresh You Have To Check Your Boots 

June 16
Willie Jones/Something To Dance To/Sony Music Nashville/The Penthouse
Chris Janson/The Outlaw Side of Me/BMLG Records
Roman Alexander/Downtime

June 23 
Jake Owen/Loose Cannon/Big Loud Records
Old Dominion/Memory Lane/Columbia Nashville
Michael Ray/Dive Bars & Broken Hearts/Warner Music Nashville
Tigirlily Gold/Blonde/Monument Records
Dan Tyminski/God Fearing Heathen/8 Track Entertainment
Various Artists/Growin’ Up Country Vol. 1/Platoon

June 30 
BoomTown Saints/BoomTown Saints/8 Track Entertainment

 

 

Industry Events:

 

June 8 – 11
CMA Fest

June 20 
BMI Christian Awards

33 Creative Adds Isaac Harris To Roster

Isaac Harris

Boutique artist management company 33 Creative has signed country rocker Isaac Harris.

Harris joins Parmalee and Avery Anna on the company’s roster. Under the direction of 33 Creative’s David Fanning and Tina Crawford, Parmalee topped the year-end Country Airplay chart as the most-played song of 2022 with “Take My Name.” Just this month, the tune hit the top 10 on the Hot AC chart. Parmalee received a nod at the 2023 CMT Awards and was the sole country act nominated for Best Duo / Group of the Year at the iHeartRadio Awards earlier this year.

Anna has been named an artist to watch by Spotify, Pandora, Amazon Music and more. In just two years, she has earned more than 225 million global streams. Her Gold-certified song “Narcissist” took the world by storm, topping SiriusXM The Highway’s Hot 30 Countdown and earning a spot among today’s biggest pop songs on SiriusXM Hits 1. The music video for “Narcissist” was nominated for Breakthrough Video of the Year at the 2023 CMT Awards.

New signee Harris released his debut song, “Somethin’ I Ain’t,” in January. A native of East Tennessee, he hails from a long line of moonshiners and bootleggers. Harris started to play clubs at just 15 years old, working his way to Nashville and honing his craft on Broadway.

Robert Carlton Named President Of SMACK

Robert Carlton

Robert Carlton has been promoted to President and Equity Partner of SMACK. The company’s Michael McAnally Baum has stepped down from his operational role, but will stay on the ownership team alongside CCO Robin Palmer and Founder Shane McAnally.

Carlton will continue to manage McAnally while also overseeing SMACK’s publishing, digital and management branches. He joined the company in 2014 and rose to Sr. VP of Development in 2016.

“From intern to the presidency, Robert Carlton’s steady hand, work ethic and innate instincts have earned him the top office at SMACK,” says McAnally Baum. “As a visionary who grew up with the company, he has shown how his passion and dedication will lead the team at SMACK into their next chapter of success.”

Carlton adds, “This is an incredible company with the most incredible people, that all started with Shane, Michael and Robin’s leadership. When I started here almost 10 years ago, I knew it was a great opportunity, but I never could’ve dreamed it would be all that it is today.”

SMACKSongs, the publishing leg, includes songwriters like the multi-Grammy-Award winning McAnally and CMA Song of the Year winner Josh Jenkins, as well as more than 20 staff writers who contributed seven No. 1 songs to the genre in 2022 alone.

SMACKManagement includes superstar artist Walker Hayes, whose smash hit “Fancy Like” topped every country sales and streaming chart upon release. SMACKTok, the digital leg, offers influencer marketing services and focuses on connecting artists directly with their fans through social media platforms.

Shane McAnally & Brandy Clark Win The Outstanding Music Trophy At Drama Desk Awards

Shane McAnally & Brandy Clark. Photo: Emilio Madrid

Shane McAnally and Brandy Clark received an award for Outstanding Music at the 67th Annual Drama Desk Awards for Shucked, the hit musical comedy that they composed the music and lyrics for. Shucked‘s Alex Newell also won Outstanding Featured Performance in a Musical.

The accolades are racking up for Shucked, which is also nominated for multiple awards including Best Original Score at the upcoming 76th Annual Tony Awards.

Clark has been busy with her recently-released, self-titled album, which was produced by Grammy-winner Brandi Carlile and released via Warner Records. In celebration of the new music, Clark was featured on CBS Saturday Morning last weekend as part of their “Saturday Sessions” series, performing three songs from the new album: “Northwest,” “Tell Her You Don’t Love Her” and “Ain’t Enough Rocks.”

My Music Row Story: CMA’s Sarah Trahern

Sarah Trahern. Photo: Donn Jones

The “My Music Row Story” weekly column features notable members of the Nashville music industry selected by the MusicRow editorial team. These individuals serve in key roles that help advance and promote the success of our industry. This column spotlights the invaluable people that keep the wheels rolling and the music playing.

Sarah Trahern was named CEO of the Country Music Association (CMA) in 2014. With foresight and determination, she has crafted a brand identity for country music and has been at the forefront of some of the industry’s most intentional and strategic initiatives. With a new, robust CMA membership structure in place beginning March 2023, Trahern oversees CMA’s efforts to act as a critical resource for information, a pipeline for individuals across every aspect of the music business and a community partner committed to fostering collaboration and conversation. She also helms the organization’s three acclaimed network television properties, one of the biggest music festivals in the world and serves as President of the CMA Foundation.

Trahern has been instrumental in maintaining and fostering CMA’s relationship with its broadcast partner, ABC, the network home of the CMA Awards, CMA Country Christmas and CMA Fest. Trahern is consistently included on various Billboard lists and has been honored by the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, Nashville Business Journal, CRB and NMPA.

MusicRow: Where did you grow up?

I grew up in Champaign, Illinois until I was 13. Then we moved to Knoxville. My dad was a university professor, so I grew up around college campuses since I was a little kid.

Sarah Trahern. Photo: Courtesy of Trahern

Were you into music?

Oh yes. My mom was a classical viola player. She played in Champaign and ended up playing with UT’s Opera Program when we moved to Knoxville. My dad grew up listening to the Grand Ole Opry under the covers, so I grew up with these very divergent [types of music] but just the love of music throughout.

I actually grew up as part of a public school music education program, playing violin from kindergarten through eighth grade. I learned piano and guitar too. One of the things that was so amazing for me once I came to this job in 2014 is that everything we do with the CMA Foundation for music education is a big part of our job. Having been the beneficiary of a public school music education program myself, it felt like my life had really come full circle to something I believed in as a child and now I get to do as my job.

How did you start your career?

I went to college at Georgetown University and studied American political history. I went to college thinking I would be a lawyer or a journalist, and I followed that path into journalism in D.C. I stayed in D.C. covering Congress and campaigns for C-SPAN until 1995. When I was in high school, I picked up the banjo, so while I was going to college in D.C., I would go to a lot of live music shows, particularly at the Birchmere. My first apartment after college was a mile from the Birchmere, so journalism [was] my career and music was my passion.

Sarah Trahern. Photo: Courtesy of Trahern

How did you get to Nashville?

I was looking for a new job. I had interviewed and was one of three finalists to produce Nightline, but I didn’t get the job. I said to myself, “What do I want my life to look like? Do I wanna stay in D.C.? Do I want to go to New York?” I decided I wanted to be in Nashville, and if it took me three months or three years, that’s what I was going to do. About three months later, in 1995, I ended up getting a job at TNN to oversee music specials.

I had a great life in D.C., but I was going to need to move to grow, and getting to do TV specials about my passion was so unbelievable. I shared this story with Wynonna Judd when we announced her as an inductee into the Country Music Hall of Fame last year, but the day I moved, I got in my car and I played a cassette of Wynonna’s with this song, “Is It Over Yet.” I must have worn the tape out by playing that song over and over. I was crying and thinking, “Is it over yet? Am I leaving my D.C. life and making a huge mistake by moving to Nashville?” By the time I got an hour away from D.C., I had cried it all out.

Tell me about your time at TNN.

At TNN, I oversaw all the music specials. I had the TNN Music City News Awards, that later became the CMT Awards. During my time working on that show, we actually moved the awards show from the Opry House to Bridgestone Arena. So when Bridgestone was built, I was the first network executive to do an awards show from there. Many fortuitous opportunities happened during that time. I had a show called Monday Night Concerts—hosted by Ricky Skaggs—that was a precursor to what CMT did with Crossroads, where we might have Wynonna perform with Michael McDonald or Brian Setzer with Marty Stuart. We did that for three seasons over three years.

My very first show at TNN was The Marty Party hosted by Marty Stuart. [On one of the episodes,] the three guests were Alan Jackson, Junior Brown and Johnny Cash. I remember being in the control room at TNN and Johnny came up to the microphone and did his, “Hello, I’m Johnny Cash.” I remember sitting in the control room and going “Oh my gosh, this is my job! This is what I get paid to do for a living.” What is so great is that, to this day, there’s still moments when we get to experience that.

Pictured (L-R): Robert Deaton, Sarah Trahern and Thomas Rhett at rehearsals for the CMA Summer Jam 2021 at Ascend Amphitheater. Photo: John Shearer

What was your next move?

I [was with] TNN until 2001. They closed the network here and moved to New York, but I made the decision not to go with them to New York and to stay here. I went to get my MBA at Vanderbilt during that time and I had my own production company, so I did some work for Scripps Networks in Knoxville and the First Amendment Center. I did the First Amendment Center’s entertainment talk show for PBS as well as a lot of projects for CMT during that time. I did my own thing for two years, which was fine. It was successful and great, but I’m not a sole practitioner. I’m an organizational person. I missed working with people in a collaborative environment.

I went to work for Scripps in 2003, right after I finished my MBA. Scripps had bought a TV shopping network here called the Shop at Home Network. The network’s goal was to take shows that are on the Food Network and [send viewers to] Shop at Home to buy the pots and pans [that were used in the Food Network show]. I learned very quickly that TV shopping was not my passion.

I was about to leave without a job at the end of 2004. Then Scripps bought Great American Country (GAC). The timing was fortuitous that I happened to be at Scripps, even though I was unhappy, when they bought the country network. That’s where my experience and passion was. So at the beginning of 2005, I moved over to GAC. I was at GAC until I was offered this job at the end of 2013.

Sarah Trahern at the Chevy Riverfront Stage during the 2019 CMA Music Festival. Photo: John Russell

What are some of your proudest accomplishments from your time at GAC?

One of the first things that comes to mind is doing the telethon after the Nashville flood in 2010. We were able to work with all of the networks to basically roadblock across the HGTV, Travel and Food networks and bring in talent from all of those networks. We were able to do the program from the Ryman and we raised somewhere between $2 and $2.5 million for the community foundation to help Nashville rebuild.

We also did a show called Country Music at the White House in 2011. Michelle Obama was doing a series of concerts in Washington with different genres of music and they were going to do country. The guests were going to be Charley Pride, Brad Paisley and Alison Krauss. Michelle Obama was going to bring music students from around the country to D.C., including kids from W.O. Smith Music School here in Nashville. They were going to get to go to the White House, perform and meet the First Lady and then do something with the artists. My boss at the time, Ed Hardy, and I were in a conference room trying to figure out how we could help the W.O. Smith Music School kids get to Washington for this really cool experience. My assistant got me out of the conference room and said, “You’ve got a call from the White House Social Secretary.” They were calling to see if we wanted to send a TV crew for the show. I just riffed and said, “Yeah, we could do that, but is anybody televising the whole thing? We could provide the cameras for everybody, but we could do it live.” They said, “That sounds really good. We should do that.” I walked back to the conference room and I said to Ed, “Forget just getting the kids to Washington. I think I just committed us to a network special.” [Laughs]

Sarah Trahern and Lainey Wilson during rehearsals for the CMA Summer Jam 2021 at Ascend Amphitheater. Photo: John Shearer

Tell me about joining the CMA.

It was around 2011 or 2012 and I was working with an executive coach. She had this exercise with cards that each had skill sets. With the cards, we created a mission statement. I looked at that and said, “I think I should run the CMA or the Country Music Hall of Fame.” At the time, the CMA job was open. I reached out to somebody here, but it just didn’t really feel like the right time for me, so I didn’t go for it, but always had that in my heart.

Ed retired and I ended up running the GAC network for two years, which was a great experience for me from a business standpoint. I really loved that chapter. Then the CMA job became [available] again. It was perfect—it still had a television component, it had a great organizational mission, message and a really good staff. All of those things aligned. I went to the interview. Thankfully they called me and now I’m in my ninth year and [about to take on] my 10th CMA Fest.

How do you explain what you do?

I sit at this point of a spear between a 75-person Board of Directors—folks that are so engaged in the business—and a 61-person staff. [Industry members] don’t get paid to be [on the] Board of Directors and [it takes up] a lot of time. My job is to activate the staff on behalf of the vision of the board, all driven towards our mission. We all are driven by making country music stronger.

Who have been some of your mentors along the way?

My very first boss Brian Lamb, the former CEO & Founder of C-SPAN, was a great leader. He really brought out the best of everybody on his team. I had a great mentor in a woman named Judy Girard, who was actually my boss at Shop at Home. She was one of the first women to run a TV network and worked at Lifetime, Food Network and HGTV. She is a real straight shooter and is still a really good friend of mine.

I had a boss named Jim Clayton, who gave me the best piece of advice I’ve ever gotten. When you brought him a business problem, he’d [ask a series of questions.] Question one is: “Were any small children affected?” Right now, if I’m faced with a business problem, it’s usually about politics or money. Right at this very moment, someone’s kid is having serious medical issues just a mile away at Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital, so that puts things in perspective. His second question is: “What’s the problem?” Question three is: “What is the solution?” Nine times out of 10, you know what that solution is. Question four is the key one: “Why aren’t you doing what you know is right?” What impediments are you trying to overcome? Is it politics or money? Is it what people are going to think about you? What you’re really solving is not necessarily the problem, but what’s keeping you from doing what you know is right. I think about that a lot.

Luke Combs and Sarah Trahern during sound check for CMA Summer Jam. Photo: Josh Brasted

Next week, CMA Fest will mark its 50th anniversary. What are some of your favorite CMA Fest memories?

There’s so many of them. CMA Fest is so fun because it’s all about music discovery. There are different experiences at different stages.

During my very first Fest in 2014, I was staying at the Hilton downtown. I write letters to all the artists who do the stadium, because they’re giving up a big day to come do our show for free. We also have notes and pictures from the kids that the CMA Foundation benefits and we put those in with my letter to all the stadium headliners. I had these spread out on the table in the hotel room. The hotel had sent up some fruit and wine and the guy delivering it asked where he should put it. I told him to put it on the table.

He looked at some of the letters and said, “What do you know about this Disney Musicals in Schools at TPAC?” I said, “I’m with the CMA and we support Disney Musicals in Schools through our CMA Foundation. Half of the proceeds from this festival we’re having right now go to benefit music education. [How] do you know about it?” He said, “My son played Simba in the eighth grade last year and it changed his life.”

I will always think about that down to the very last CMA Fest I do. This city comes together, the industry and the artists show up and our staff works their tails off for months on end to get there. Then there’s all these downstream beneficiaries that are not just the fans. The fans are certainly a big part of why we do what we do, but [it’s also about the kids] who have guitars, trombones and vocal classes that may never end up in our business, but they have the gift of self-expression through music.

What are you excited about for this year’s CMA Fest?

One of the surprises is we’ve been working on a documentary about the 50th anniversary of CMA Fest that will air on Hulu in July. Anybody who has come to Nashville and been a part of Fest has their own stories about it. People on our staff were there when Garth Brooks did his 23-hour autograph signing. I did my TNN job interview during Fan Fair, [which is what CMA Fest used to be called], in 1995. People have their moments at CMA Fest and it becomes their history. There’s 50,000 people at the stadium, so they have 50,000 different experiences every single year. We have roughly 60 people on our staff and we have 3,000 people working on our behalf to pull off the festival. Everyone has their own experiences at CMA Fest. I’m proud that we get to be a part of everybody’s experience.

Industry Toasts To Carly Pearce’s Fourth No. 1 Hit ‘What He Didn’t Do’

Pictured (L-R): Ashley Gorley, Carly Pearce and Emily Skackelton. Standing: Josh Osborne. Photo: Alexa Campbell

Music industry members gathered at Starstruck Entertainment on Music Row Tuesday afternoon (May 30) to celebrate Carly Pearce‘s fourth career No. 1, “What He Didn’t Do.”

Pearce co-wrote the tune with Ashley Gorley and Emily Shackelton. It appears on her lauded studio album, 29: Written In Stone, which was co-produced by Josh Osborne and Shane McAnally.

The celebration was thrown by ASCAP, BMI and Big Machine Records. Everyone was glad to see Big Machine label head Scott Borchetta in attendance since his serious racing accident. Many shared grateful sentiments about his recovery from the stage.

Pictured (L-R, front row): Josh Osborne, Carly Pearce, Scott Borchetta (BMLG), Ashley Gorley and Emily Shackelton; (L-R, back row): Mike Sistad (ASCAP), Clay Hunnicutt (BMLG), Andrew Kautz (BMLG), Mike Rittberg (BMLG), Kris Lamb (BMLG) and MaryAnn Keen (BMI). Photo: Alexa Campbell

ASCAP’s Mike Sistad kicked the party off by recognizing ASCAP’s Pearce and Gorley. He spoke about each of them, reminding the crowd that Pearce is a Grammy, CMA and ACM Award-winning artist; and that Gorley, who has been named ASCAP’s Country Songwriter of the Year nine times, recently won his first ACM Songwriter of the Year award and has notched 67 No. 1 songs.

BMI’s MaryAnn Keen was on hand to support BMI songwriter Shackelton. She pointed out that “What He Didn’t Do” was her second No. 1 song, and that her first was Pearce’s “Every Little Thing.”

“Both songs are unfortunately songs many of us can relate to, as far as breakups go,” Keen said. “Fortunately, they make us feel a little more understood. That’s the magic of these three.”

Round Hill’s Lindsay Will was the first publisher to speak. She thanked Pearce, the co-writers and the BMLG team. On behalf of Gorley, Round Hill made a donation to My Life Speaks Foundation.

BMG’s Chris Oglesby stepped up to the mic to recognize BMG writers Pearce and Shackelton.

“I’m here to help celebrate one of the hardest working individuals I know in the music industry—or in the world. I’m blessed to be able to work with Carly Pearce,” Oglesby said.

“We’re thrilled to work with Emily as well,” he added. “Your lyrics and melodies are unbelievably amazing.”

Liz Rose, who also works with Shackelton, spoke about discovering her at BMI’s Key West Songwriters Festival. “Emily, I’m so inspired by you always,” Rose said.

Jess Busbee, widow of Pearce’s former producer Michael Busbee and leader of AltaDena, shared some emotional words about her late husband’s legacy. “It’s so sweet how a legacy lives on,” she said.

Big Machine Records General Manager Clay Hunnicutt and SVP of Promotion & Digital Kris Lamb gave a presentation about Pearce’s unmatched work ethic and authentic artistry.

“We never take days like this lightly. No. 1s are hard to come by and hard fought,” Hunnicutt said. “Thanks to Carly for sharing your story. That’s what this song is about.” He let the crowd know that “What He Didn’t Do” was Borchetta’s 250th No. 1 song.

Lamb said, “Promo is very hard—I don’t want to give you the illusion that it’s not difficult—but it’s so much easier with artists like Carly. She’s the hardest working artist that I’ve ever had the opportunity to work with.”

“What He Didn’t Do” collaborators with their MusicRow No. 1 Challenge Coins. Pictured (L-R): MusicRow‘s Sherod Robertson, Emily Shackelton, Carly Pearce, Ashley Gorley, MusicRow‘s LB Cantrell. Photo: Alexa Campbell

Osborne spoke about co-producing Pearce’s record. He pointed out how, as a songwriter first, it’s hard to hear great songs that you didn’t write. He also highlighted the magic of songs written by Shackelton and Pearce, and said that Gorley is a great songwriter and friend.

“What Carly does for country music is important,” Osborne said. “I’m so glad she is becoming the dominate force that she is. We need her in the format.”

Next it was time to hear from the songwriters. Gorley went first, thanking God, his family, his publishers, ASCAP, BMLG, Osborne and McAnally and his co-writers.

“Like Josh said, Emily and Carly have the magic. They let me crash. It was the first time we all worked together,” Gorley shared, adding that the three wrote another upbeat song before writing “What He Didn’t Do.” He said, “Carly tells you the honest truth. What needed to be written that day got written after we tried [writing something upbeat] for a couple of hours.”

Shackelton thanked her family, publishers and Pearce’s village. “I’m so grateful to God. The story never goes the way I want it to but he make it better in the end,” she said.

Shackelton thanked Pearce for her relationship, piling on the praise for the country star’s work ethic. She also gave more insight into Gorley’s contribution to the song.

“I learned so much from you that day,” she said to Gorley. “The fact that you heard Carly say something off the cuff and were able to say, ‘Sit down. We’re writing that,’ was awesome. It’s no wonder you have [so many] No. 1s.”

When Pearce stepped up the mic, she added to the creation story of “What He Didn’t Do.”

“We were packing up, like they said. We had already written a song. Ashley looked at me and said, ‘What did he do?’ I said, ‘What didn’t he do?’ He said, ‘Sit down,'” Pearce shared. “It’s been a powerful thing.”

Pearce recognized each member of her team, individually thanking each of them. She summed, “The thing that continues to be a constant in my life is music. I feel very grateful to know that I have a purpose in writing songs that people can connect to.”

Chase Rice Earns Multiple Accolades For ‘Way Down Yonder’ Music Video

Chase Rice. Photo: Kaiser Cunningham

Chase Rice has received numerous awards for his recent “Way Down Yonder” music video, earning recognition from both the Telly Awards and American Advertising Awards.

The Telly Awards, known for honoring the best in video and television across all screens, recognized the “Way Down Yonder” video with an array of awards. Directed by Kaiser Cunningham and produced by Twelve Midnight, the single-take video earned the following accolades:

  • Gold – Craft (Art Direction)
  • Silver – General (Budget Under $100,000)
  • Silver – Campaign (Promotional)
  • Silver – General (Music)
  • Bronze – Craft (Cinematography/Videography)

The American Advertising Awards, which recognize excellence in advertising and marketing communications, also honored the video. “Way Down Yonder” was filmed at the Fort Worth Stockyards National Historic District in their Fort Worth district category, making it eligible for the National Competition. The video celebrating the historic Western way of life was acknowledged with the following awards:

  • Gold – Branded Content & Entertainment Campaign
  • Gold – Cinematography
  • Gold – Music Video

Additionally, several of Rice’s fan-favorite songs earned new RIAA Platinum and multi-Platinum certifications. His two-week chart topper “Eyes On You” received triple-Platinum certification and the top five hit “Ready Set Roll” achieved double-Platinum status. “Ignite the Night,” “Gonna Wanna Tonight” and “Ride” are now Platinum-certified as well.

Rice has also given fans a behind-the-scenes look at the making of his album I Hate Cowboys & All Dogs Go To Hell with never-before-seen footage in a new 10-part docuseries premiering weekly via Rice’s YouTube channel. The short films chronicle the two weeks Rice spent crafting the album at his rural home-turned-studio alongside producer Oscar Charles. Nine episodes are available to watch now, with the final installment debuting next Tuesday, June 6.