
Brittany Schaffer
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.
As Head of Nashville Label Partnerships, Music Strategy, Brittany Schaffer co-leads Spotify’s Music Team in Nashville, with responsibility for setting the vision of the team and cultivating and nurturing industry partnerships across the greater Nashville market. Schaffer co-leads the development and execution of Spotify’s global strategy to grow the country, Christian/Gospel, and Americana genres, and has been a leader in an era-defining shift in country music consumption habits.
Her work includes the transformation and marketing of the flagship playlists Hot Country and Indigo, bringing country music to fans through Spotify’s annual four-day activation at CMA Fest, extending the St. Jude t-shirt campaign into streaming, and ongoing global artist marketing campaigns. Schaffer has also been instrumental in strategically acquiring and retaining an impressive team to meaningfully bolster Spotify’s presence in the Nashville market and has built a culture of teamwork and collaboration that fuels Spotify’s partnerships across Nashville.
Outside of Spotify, Schaffer is a highly engaged board member of CMA, CRB, and St. Jude Country Cares. Prior to joining Spotify in January 2018, Schaffer spent more than seven years practicing law in the Entertainment Department of Loeb & Loeb, LLP, where she was Senior Legal Counsel.
Schaffer will be honored as part of the current class of MusicRow’s Rising Women on the Row on March 23. For more details about the class and the event, click here.

MusicRow: Where did you grow up?
I moved nine times before high school. I was born in Orange County, California, and lived in California, Tennessee, Virginia, and Georgia. I call Nashville or the Middle Tennessee area home because I lived here when I was younger for several years and then this is where we moved when I was starting high school. I went to Battle Ground Academy in Franklin for high school and went to college at Vanderbilt, so, Nashville’s been home for a long time.
Were you musical growing up?
I always knew I wanted to work in the music business. I was singing and performing in musicals at six years old. I was even one of the little kids in the General Jackson Christmas show for a couple years. For a long time, I thought I wanted to be an artist, but when I was at Vanderbilt, I had the privilege of interning in the promotions department at Sony Nashville on the Arista imprint, and then at ASCAP. Both of those experiences for me confirmed that I definitely wanted to work in the music business, but that an artist path wasn’t for me.

Brittany Schaffer and Leighanna Smith as interns at CMA Fest 2006 with Rhett Akins
How did you start your career in the business?
During that same time, I had also been considering going to law school. I met a few music lawyers and decided that being a music lawyer would be my entry point into music. I attended Samford University’s Cumberland School of Law for law school. After my ASCAP internship, Connie Bradley was very kind and had given me a list of lawyers that she really respected in town. I sent very formal, written cover letters and emails to all of them. I think I sent 10 out and only one person responded, but I only needed one. (Laughs) It was Bob Sullivan who was running the Loeb & Loeb Nashville office at the time. He told me to come visit him over Christmas. I had no grades back—I really only had a good track record at Vanderbilt and a recommendation from Connie. He said, “Why don’t you come work for us this summer?” So I did, and that turned into two summers.
I had done really well in law school and that made it easier for him to convince some of the other partners, so I received an offer my last year of law school to join them when I graduated. During my last year of law school, I was already attending conferences with the lawyers at the firm and I thought I was coming into a dream job with a perfect cushion to learn. And then about a month before I started work and a few weeks before I took the bar exam, Bob Sullivan was diagnosed with leukemia and ultimately passed away a year later. So I came into the firm at a really challenging time.
To say that I had bath by fire my first year of work is an understatement. There was so much work that others had to take on to fill his shoes that I had no choice but to step up, to ask questions, to learn quickly, to work insanely long hours, and to learn how to manage a lot of different types of people from a lot of different parts of the music business. I was negotiating contracts and sitting in federal copyright jury trials almost immediately. It was really hard for a lot of reasons, but when I look back on it, I’m really grateful. I learned that I was capable of so much more than I thought that I was and it gave me a lot of confidence going forward. It has stuck with me to this day that even when you get in those somewhat overwhelming situations, you’re always capable of more than you think you are.

Loeb & Loeb team at the BMI Awards
After seven years as an entertainment attorney, you made a change in careers. Tell me about that.
I really enjoyed the work that I was doing. I loved my clients, I loved the people that I worked with and I definitely had a growing career in the legal field, but I kept feeling this pull that I wanted to be closer to the music business and to really explore the other parts of the industry. I always give the example that my colleagues and I represented the contestants on The Voice and negotiated numerous contracts for them, but no matter how talented we thought someone was, there was only so much we could do to expose that music and those artists as their lawyer. I felt like if I was going to truly help people navigate their way through the music business, that I was going to have to spread my own wings a little bit.
Out of the blue one day, I got an email from an internal recruiter at Spotify asking if I would talk to them. At the time I had no intent on taking the job, but I was going to be in LA the next week and I thought it would probably be smart to know the global head of label services at Spotify. I offered to stop by the office and Spotify ultimately did a really good job of convincing me that Nashville was really important to them and that they wanted to increase their support in this market. Three weeks later I accepted a job. (Laughs) One month later I left the practice of law entirely and started in my current role and I’ve never looked back.
Can you tell me more about what you do at Spotify as the Head of Artist and Label Marketing in the Nashville office?
No day is the same, but I would sum it up by saying that my team and I are responsible for overseeing our partnerships in Nashville. So that’s working with artists, labels and managers; looking out for our relationships with CMA, the Country Music Hall of Fame, the ACM, and all of our different organizations; and looking for how we can continue to partner together. That takes the shape of tracking new releases, so we keep track of all of the new music coming out of Nashville week over week for all genres. Anything that is signed to a label in Nashville or that is originating in Nashville, particularly when it’s independent and unsigned, is what we look over regardless of genre. We try to find different ways of supporting those artists and those releases. That may be everything from how we support on platform through promotional tools, that may be using a billboard, or that may be creating social content or video content. It really just depends on the artist and how we want to engage.
We’re also looking for how we can otherwise engage the fans around the music that’s coming out of Nashville. One of the things that we are responsible for is putting on the Spotify House event at CMA Fest.

Spotify House at CMA Fest 2019 with Lil Nas X and Billy Ray Cyrus
Looking at the rest of 2023, what excites you about what Spotify has planned?
2023 feels like an exciting next phase for Spotify in Nashville, with a growing team and more great music from all genres coming out of Nashville than ever before. This year will focus on how we can bring together the music community within Nashville and continue to lean into key cultural moments—particularly around Nashville’s core genres. We will help more independent and diverse artists break through the noise, tap more into our global footprint, and spend more time with the songwriting and publishing community. There is a lot of energy amongst the team this year, and I think you’ll see that filter into everything we do throughout the year.
We will be honoring you at next month’s Rising Women On the Row event. When you look back on your career, what are you most proud of?
Personally, I am most proud of my willingness to jump from a successful legal career that had a very defined career path to a career at Spotify where the path is a little more unknown. Professionally I’m really proud of helping lead the conversation around the importance of streaming and the place that it has in our current consumption habits. When I started at Spotify, audiences were still adopting streaming as a format, particularly in country and Christian music. Today our country and our Christian/gospel consumers have largely adopted streaming and our industry has really embraced strategies and tactics to engage fans through streaming. That’s not to say that radio, sales, touring, merch, and other areas of the industry aren’t incredibly important, but it is to say that streaming is no longer a format of the future. Consumption patterns are changing and we have to change with our audience if we want to continue to reach audiences in a bigger way. I’m really proud that Spotify’s been able to be a leader in those efforts and that I’ve been able to be a leader in Nashville in having those conversations.

Spotify team with Reba at the announcement of her Spotify Podcast in Nashville 2019
Who have been some of your mentors?
I’ve been fortunate to have a lot of mentors and I could probably name three that touch on key areas [of my career]. Early in my career, Connie Bradley was certainly one of those. She helped me get internships in Nashville, she helped introduce me to music lawyers when I was trying to decide if I wanted to go to law school, and she helped connect me with people when I was trying to get my first job. I always really looked up to her and the respect that she had within the Nashville community.
Today, John T. Frankenheimer, my old boss from Loeb & Loeb, is still someone that I call for advice. I really look up to and admire how he’s built his career. And then as I’ve become a mom over the last two years, Cindy Mabe is someone I go to for advice. I really admire how she has become such a successful executive while also raising her kids and having a successful marriage. At this phase in my life, it is really important to have other women that I can look to as examples. I hope I can do that for other people, too.
What moment have you had that your little kid self would think is so cool?
I love Dolly Parton. We have had the good fortune at Spotify of working with her on a few occasions. I recall one time sitting with her in a studio with some other individuals, listening to music while she was talking us through it. I remember thinking to myself, “Oh my goodness, I’m really doing this.” (Laughs) I always say I had never been starstruck until I interned at Sony and she came into the office one day. Everyone made fun of me because my mouth dropped wide open as she walked by. To fast forward all these years later, and to actually be there, getting to engage with her to support her and her music in a number of ways… As a little girl, I would’ve never believed that I would be there. There’s a lot of those moments. I think when you stop having those moments in the music business is maybe when you should get out of the music business. Those are the moments that remind us all why we do this and why we’re so fortunate to be in an industry that brings so much joy to people.
Chase Wright To Embark On ‘Hurt No More Tour’
/by Caela GriffinChase Wright will embark on his new headlining “Hurt No More Tour” beginning March 24.
Named for Wright’s recent song “Hurt No More,” the 17-date journey comes on the heels of supporting multi-Platinum country group Parmalee on their tour. Wright says his growing fanbase is to thank for this new tour which kicks off in Indianapolis, Indiana.
“Even when in the writing room, we always have the end goal of performing them live for fans,” Wright shares. “It’s what influences everything, that connection. I’m so grateful for the way this music has resonated with people across the country and that the moment has come to tour with all this new music.”
Last month, Wright, who is managed by Morris Higham and signed to Toby & Molly Music, released “Never Loved Before” which he co-wrote with Jeffrey East and Josh Kelley.
Kane Brown To Co-Host CMT Awards, Guest Star In ‘Fire Country’
/by Lorie HollabaughPhoto credit: John Shearer
Kane Brown is set to return as co-host of the 2023 CMT Music Awards alongside Kelsea Ballerini, for Austin’s first major televised awards airing live from Moody Center on April 2 on CBS.
Brown, who was the most-nominated artist for the 2022 CMT Music Awards, will also perform during the show, teaming with wife Katelyn Brown for the broadcast world premiere of their multi-week No. 1 hit, “Thank God.” The history-making duet has over 210 million streams and cements the Browns as only the second married couple in country music history to earn a No. 1 on both the Billboard and Aircheck charts.
The CMT Music Awards, country’s only entirely fan-voted award show, will also be available to stream live and on demand on Paramount+. Paramount+ Premium subscribers will have access to stream live via the live feed of their local CBS affiliate on the service as well as on demand. Essential-tier subscribers will have access to on-demand the day after the special airs.
Following the awards, Brown will make his acting debut on the new drama Fire Country on April 7 on CBS and Paramount+. Brown portrays Robin, an enigmatic, train-hopping outlaw on the run who helps injured patients on the scene of a crash in the episode.
“As soon as Kane stepped onto set it felt like he had been a part of the Fire Country family from the beginning,” shares series star and creator, Max Thieriot. “I was really blown away by how natural and honest he is in each scene. To top it off he’s just a wonderful person—kind, excited to learn and fun to be around… dude is the real deal!”
Brown’s most recent album, Different Man, includes the Platinum No. 1 single “One Mississippi,” and “Like I Love Country Music” which is his fastest rising No. 1 in the U.S. while also topping the Australian Country Radio chart and landing at No. 1 for 7 consecutive weeks at Canadian Country Radio. His most recent single “Thank God,” featuring wife Katelyn, has accumulated over 10 million streams in the first week, a career high for Brown.
My Music Row Story: Spotify’s Brittany Schaffer
/by LB CantrellBrittany Schaffer
As Head of Nashville Label Partnerships, Music Strategy, Brittany Schaffer co-leads Spotify’s Music Team in Nashville, with responsibility for setting the vision of the team and cultivating and nurturing industry partnerships across the greater Nashville market. Schaffer co-leads the development and execution of Spotify’s global strategy to grow the country, Christian/Gospel, and Americana genres, and has been a leader in an era-defining shift in country music consumption habits.
Her work includes the transformation and marketing of the flagship playlists Hot Country and Indigo, bringing country music to fans through Spotify’s annual four-day activation at CMA Fest, extending the St. Jude t-shirt campaign into streaming, and ongoing global artist marketing campaigns. Schaffer has also been instrumental in strategically acquiring and retaining an impressive team to meaningfully bolster Spotify’s presence in the Nashville market and has built a culture of teamwork and collaboration that fuels Spotify’s partnerships across Nashville.
Outside of Spotify, Schaffer is a highly engaged board member of CMA, CRB, and St. Jude Country Cares. Prior to joining Spotify in January 2018, Schaffer spent more than seven years practicing law in the Entertainment Department of Loeb & Loeb, LLP, where she was Senior Legal Counsel.
Schaffer will be honored as part of the current class of MusicRow’s Rising Women on the Row on March 23. For more details about the class and the event, click here.
MusicRow: Where did you grow up?
I moved nine times before high school. I was born in Orange County, California, and lived in California, Tennessee, Virginia, and Georgia. I call Nashville or the Middle Tennessee area home because I lived here when I was younger for several years and then this is where we moved when I was starting high school. I went to Battle Ground Academy in Franklin for high school and went to college at Vanderbilt, so, Nashville’s been home for a long time.
Were you musical growing up?
I always knew I wanted to work in the music business. I was singing and performing in musicals at six years old. I was even one of the little kids in the General Jackson Christmas show for a couple years. For a long time, I thought I wanted to be an artist, but when I was at Vanderbilt, I had the privilege of interning in the promotions department at Sony Nashville on the Arista imprint, and then at ASCAP. Both of those experiences for me confirmed that I definitely wanted to work in the music business, but that an artist path wasn’t for me.
Brittany Schaffer and Leighanna Smith as interns at CMA Fest 2006 with Rhett Akins
How did you start your career in the business?
During that same time, I had also been considering going to law school. I met a few music lawyers and decided that being a music lawyer would be my entry point into music. I attended Samford University’s Cumberland School of Law for law school. After my ASCAP internship, Connie Bradley was very kind and had given me a list of lawyers that she really respected in town. I sent very formal, written cover letters and emails to all of them. I think I sent 10 out and only one person responded, but I only needed one. (Laughs) It was Bob Sullivan who was running the Loeb & Loeb Nashville office at the time. He told me to come visit him over Christmas. I had no grades back—I really only had a good track record at Vanderbilt and a recommendation from Connie. He said, “Why don’t you come work for us this summer?” So I did, and that turned into two summers.
I had done really well in law school and that made it easier for him to convince some of the other partners, so I received an offer my last year of law school to join them when I graduated. During my last year of law school, I was already attending conferences with the lawyers at the firm and I thought I was coming into a dream job with a perfect cushion to learn. And then about a month before I started work and a few weeks before I took the bar exam, Bob Sullivan was diagnosed with leukemia and ultimately passed away a year later. So I came into the firm at a really challenging time.
To say that I had bath by fire my first year of work is an understatement. There was so much work that others had to take on to fill his shoes that I had no choice but to step up, to ask questions, to learn quickly, to work insanely long hours, and to learn how to manage a lot of different types of people from a lot of different parts of the music business. I was negotiating contracts and sitting in federal copyright jury trials almost immediately. It was really hard for a lot of reasons, but when I look back on it, I’m really grateful. I learned that I was capable of so much more than I thought that I was and it gave me a lot of confidence going forward. It has stuck with me to this day that even when you get in those somewhat overwhelming situations, you’re always capable of more than you think you are.
Loeb & Loeb team at the BMI Awards
After seven years as an entertainment attorney, you made a change in careers. Tell me about that.
I really enjoyed the work that I was doing. I loved my clients, I loved the people that I worked with and I definitely had a growing career in the legal field, but I kept feeling this pull that I wanted to be closer to the music business and to really explore the other parts of the industry. I always give the example that my colleagues and I represented the contestants on The Voice and negotiated numerous contracts for them, but no matter how talented we thought someone was, there was only so much we could do to expose that music and those artists as their lawyer. I felt like if I was going to truly help people navigate their way through the music business, that I was going to have to spread my own wings a little bit.
Out of the blue one day, I got an email from an internal recruiter at Spotify asking if I would talk to them. At the time I had no intent on taking the job, but I was going to be in LA the next week and I thought it would probably be smart to know the global head of label services at Spotify. I offered to stop by the office and Spotify ultimately did a really good job of convincing me that Nashville was really important to them and that they wanted to increase their support in this market. Three weeks later I accepted a job. (Laughs) One month later I left the practice of law entirely and started in my current role and I’ve never looked back.
Can you tell me more about what you do at Spotify as the Head of Artist and Label Marketing in the Nashville office?
No day is the same, but I would sum it up by saying that my team and I are responsible for overseeing our partnerships in Nashville. So that’s working with artists, labels and managers; looking out for our relationships with CMA, the Country Music Hall of Fame, the ACM, and all of our different organizations; and looking for how we can continue to partner together. That takes the shape of tracking new releases, so we keep track of all of the new music coming out of Nashville week over week for all genres. Anything that is signed to a label in Nashville or that is originating in Nashville, particularly when it’s independent and unsigned, is what we look over regardless of genre. We try to find different ways of supporting those artists and those releases. That may be everything from how we support on platform through promotional tools, that may be using a billboard, or that may be creating social content or video content. It really just depends on the artist and how we want to engage.
We’re also looking for how we can otherwise engage the fans around the music that’s coming out of Nashville. One of the things that we are responsible for is putting on the Spotify House event at CMA Fest.
Spotify House at CMA Fest 2019 with Lil Nas X and Billy Ray Cyrus
Looking at the rest of 2023, what excites you about what Spotify has planned?
2023 feels like an exciting next phase for Spotify in Nashville, with a growing team and more great music from all genres coming out of Nashville than ever before. This year will focus on how we can bring together the music community within Nashville and continue to lean into key cultural moments—particularly around Nashville’s core genres. We will help more independent and diverse artists break through the noise, tap more into our global footprint, and spend more time with the songwriting and publishing community. There is a lot of energy amongst the team this year, and I think you’ll see that filter into everything we do throughout the year.
We will be honoring you at next month’s Rising Women On the Row event. When you look back on your career, what are you most proud of?
Personally, I am most proud of my willingness to jump from a successful legal career that had a very defined career path to a career at Spotify where the path is a little more unknown. Professionally I’m really proud of helping lead the conversation around the importance of streaming and the place that it has in our current consumption habits. When I started at Spotify, audiences were still adopting streaming as a format, particularly in country and Christian music. Today our country and our Christian/gospel consumers have largely adopted streaming and our industry has really embraced strategies and tactics to engage fans through streaming. That’s not to say that radio, sales, touring, merch, and other areas of the industry aren’t incredibly important, but it is to say that streaming is no longer a format of the future. Consumption patterns are changing and we have to change with our audience if we want to continue to reach audiences in a bigger way. I’m really proud that Spotify’s been able to be a leader in those efforts and that I’ve been able to be a leader in Nashville in having those conversations.
Spotify team with Reba at the announcement of her Spotify Podcast in Nashville 2019
Who have been some of your mentors?
I’ve been fortunate to have a lot of mentors and I could probably name three that touch on key areas [of my career]. Early in my career, Connie Bradley was certainly one of those. She helped me get internships in Nashville, she helped introduce me to music lawyers when I was trying to decide if I wanted to go to law school, and she helped connect me with people when I was trying to get my first job. I always really looked up to her and the respect that she had within the Nashville community.
Today, John T. Frankenheimer, my old boss from Loeb & Loeb, is still someone that I call for advice. I really look up to and admire how he’s built his career. And then as I’ve become a mom over the last two years, Cindy Mabe is someone I go to for advice. I really admire how she has become such a successful executive while also raising her kids and having a successful marriage. At this phase in my life, it is really important to have other women that I can look to as examples. I hope I can do that for other people, too.
What moment have you had that your little kid self would think is so cool?
I love Dolly Parton. We have had the good fortune at Spotify of working with her on a few occasions. I recall one time sitting with her in a studio with some other individuals, listening to music while she was talking us through it. I remember thinking to myself, “Oh my goodness, I’m really doing this.” (Laughs) I always say I had never been starstruck until I interned at Sony and she came into the office one day. Everyone made fun of me because my mouth dropped wide open as she walked by. To fast forward all these years later, and to actually be there, getting to engage with her to support her and her music in a number of ways… As a little girl, I would’ve never believed that I would be there. There’s a lot of those moments. I think when you stop having those moments in the music business is maybe when you should get out of the music business. Those are the moments that remind us all why we do this and why we’re so fortunate to be in an industry that brings so much joy to people.
Industry Ink: Corey Kent, Nashville Briefing, AIMP, CMHOF
/by Caela GriffinCorey Kent Hit “Wild As Her” Certified Platinum
Corey Kent, Sony Music Nashville, Triple 8 Management and Combustion Music celebrate Kent’s smash hit single “Wild As Her” with a plaque commemorating R.I.A.A. certified Platinum status at SMN’s headquarters
Corey Kent recently celebrated his single “Wild As Her” reaching an RIAA Platinum certification with his teams from Sony Music Nashville, Triple 8 Management, and Combustion Music. Kent released “Wild As Her” on March 4, 2022, shortly before signing with Sony Music Nashville’s RCA Imprint.
For his rock-infused country sound, Kent draws inspiration from The Eagles, Keith Richards, Turnpike Troubadours and more. He has two albums out now—From The West LP and ‘21—both released via Combustion Music. With headlining and festival credits logged, Kent has been the supporting act for artists including Parker McCollum, Cody Johnson, Chase Rice, and more over the years.
Nashville Briefing Celebrates 30 Under 30 Honorees
Pictured (L-R): Will Tenney (SunPop), JJ Farrell (Jump Global), Nick Maiale (Jump Global), Blair Miller (Chaos Creators), Zak Kuhn (Nashville Briefing), Avery King Harris (Elicity PR), Megan Pekar (Loeb & Loeb), Ali Patton. Photo Credit: Hannah Kik
The Nashville Briefing held its 30 Under 30 Celebration for some of the most powerful people in Nashville under age 30. Attendees ranging from Rock and Roll Hall of Famers to successful young artists and executives joined the party at The 8th Room on Feb. 15. The music industry newsletter, in its third year of publication, presented this night alongside Stem.
“Last week we gathered many leaders in Nashville’s music industry to celebrate the next generation in the business, shine a spotlight on them and build community,” says Zak Kuhn, founder & CEO of The Nashville Briefing. “Three years in, being included on our 30 UNDER 30 list has already had so many benefits from networking, to creating new opportunities, to being more visible in the industry. We’ve built a community of honorees that […] continue supporting each other’s careers. I also want to thank Stem for all they are doing in Nashville and for being an amazing partner to the next generation.”
Some notable attendees included John Oates (Hall & Oates), Judah Akers (Judah & The Lion), Yelawolf, Copeland Isaacson (Head of Artist Partnerships – YouTube Nashville), Blake McDaniel (Agent, CAA), Spencer Crandall, Johnny Cloherty, (CEO, Songfluencer) Carla Turi (Editor, Spotify), Roxy King (A&R Director, Universal Music Publishing Group), Zach Farnum (117 Entertainment), Andre Herd (Director of A&R, APG), Rocky Block (songwriter, Big Loud) and duo Temecula Road (Warner Music Nashville).
AIMP Hosts “Things You Didn’t Know You Needed To Know” Panel
Pictured (L-R): Courtney Crist (Anthem Entertainment), Brent Daughrity (Anderson Benson), Ree Guyer (Wrensong Music), Greyson Stephens (Big Machine Label Group), Trina Smith-Dort (Me Gusta Music), Emily Boardman (River House Artists)
The Association of Independent Music Publishers Nashville Chapter hosted a panel, “Things You Didn’t Know You Needed To Know,” on Feb. 17. This panel, moderated by Trina Smith-Dort (Owner, Me Gusta Music), tackled the collection of publishing royalties and the protections of copyright insurance.
Brent Daughrity (Partner, Anderson Benson) and Grayson Stepehens (Sr. Director of Royalties & Finance, Big Machine Label Group) were the event’s featured panelists.
AIMP, whose primary focus is to educate and inform music publishers about the most current industry trends and practices, hosted this event at the CMA offices in Nashville.
CMHOF Opens New Dick Curless Legacy Exhibit
Pictured (L-R): Terry Chinnock (Curless’s daughter), Peter Guralnick, Jake Guralnick, Michael Gray and Chuck Mead. Photo courtesy of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum celebrated the new exhibit, “Dick Curless: Hard Traveling Man From Maine,” this weekend with a special performance and discussion program.
This exhibit traces the life and legacy Dick Curless, including his hit song “A Tombstone Every Mile” and through his final album, Traveling Through. “Dick Curless: Hard Traveling Man From Maine” features instruments, stage wear, and personal artifacts courtesy of the Curless family and is open through January 2024.
As the featured speakers for the evening, co-curator of the exhibit, Peter Guralnick, was joined by his son, Jake Guralnick, who produced Curless’ final album. The night also saw a tribute to Curless performed by Chuck Mead of BR549. Both the discussion and performance were filmed and will be available for streaming on the museum’s website.
BB Gun Press, MixedMediaWorks Merge To Form 2b Entertainment
/by Lorie HollabaughBased in L.A. and helmed by Luke Burland and Bobbie Gale, 2b Entertainment represents clients across the entertainment spectrum, including music, lifestyle, film, television, business and corporate, design and fashion. The firm specializes in a wide range of communication and media strategies, which encompasses legacy and emerging media, brand-building, thought leadership, influencer and lifestyle campaigns, integrated storytelling, talent acquisition, event planning and support, and more.
The company’s diverse roster includes Shania Twain, Steve Earle, Brian Tyler, Danny Elfman, Holly Humberstone, Josh Groban, Julian Casablancas, Justin Tranter, Maggie Lindemann, Meghan Trainor, My Chemical Romance, OK Go, Saleka Shyamalan, and many more. Corporate accounts include CITI, +1 Records, Laylo, Dad Grass, Muserk, and Cosm.
“MixedMediaWorks was founded on the principle that we only work on projects we believe in,” shares Gale. “It means we can remain completely dedicated to the select group of clients we take on. We’re excited to be working with Luke and her team as they share the same values: honesty, loyalty, hard work, open and constant communication and being the best partners to our clients.
“Our plan is simple: keep working with clients we love, deliver incredible results and have some fun along the way,” adds Burland. “God, I love this job.”
Canyon Star TV Unveils New Family-Friendly Streaming Platform
/by Lorie HollabaughExclusive content includes Cheri Lucas (The Dog Expert), Victory Road with Lee Benton and thirty-nine episodes of The Joey Canyon Show, along with new music performances and over 25 original television shows that will soon begin production. Canyon Star TV also offers documentaries on Dolly Parton, Patsy Cline, Tammy Wynette, ABBA and The Beatles, cooking shows including Paula Dean’s Positively Paula, Justin Wilson Cajun Cookin’, Jill’s Inspiration Kitchen and Cookin’ with Butter as well as shows such as Live at Billy Bob’s Texas, Shotgun Red Variety Show, My Life My Songs with Jimmy Fortune, TruCountry with Heather Myles, Today’s Nashville and more.
As part of Canyon Star TV’s free streaming platform, viewers will also have access to live music videos, kids programming, talk shows, outdoor living and a growing amount of new faith-based programming.
“A little over five years ago, I had the vision of creating a streaming wholesome family network,” shares Joey Canyon, Owner & Co-Founder of Canyon Star TV. “A safe haven where parents could watch television with the whole family without fear of questionable language, improper sexual situations, horror, gore or violence. On Jan. 27 of 2023, Canyon Star TV became a global reality, and a true blessing for me and Kelly Kantz, my Co-Founder and President. We will continue to provide the very best in quality family entertainment.”
“After years of discussing and planning Canyon Star TV with the Owner and Founder Joey Canyon, I am beyond excited to see all of our hard work come to fruition,” says Kantz. “With the help of the wonderful producers and programmers, we have added fantastic programming and will continue to grow the outlet moving forward. I am very excited to share wonderful family-friendly programming with the world.”
Relative Music Group Welcomes Caroline Bouldin As Creative Director
/by Caela GriffinCaroline Bouldin
Relative Music Group has hired Caroline Bouldin as its new Creative Director. She joins the publishing and artist development company’s team after time with Jody Williams Songs as a Creative Manager.
“I am eager to help lead and grow one of the best songwriting rosters in Nashville,” says Bouldin. “I am enthusiastic about being a part of such an incredible team, working on behalf of our songwriters, and positioning the company for continued success.”
Founded by father/son duo Dennis and Jesse Matkosky in 2017, Relative Music Group is known for their wide variety of songwriters, most notably Michael Hardy who is also a Partner at the company.
“Caroline is a rockstar,” share Dennis and Jesse. “In the short time she has been here she has already added so much to our company. We are so proud to have her at Relative.”
Samantha Steele Promoted To COO At Triple 8 Management
/by Lorie HollabaughSamantha Steele. Photo: Ashtin Paige
Samantha Steele has been promoted to Chief Operating Officer at Triple 8 Management.
In her new role, she will help lead a team of 30 managers, marketing, radio and partnership professionals and oversee operations, promote positive company culture and vision, and create solutions for internal communications and growth potential for both employees and clients.
“We want strong interconnectedness among everyone at Triple 8, and a working environment where people feel supported, inspired and that they’re never alone. Sam has a great history successfully managing and marketing artists and projects,” shares CEO/Founder George Couri. “This, when combined with caring for others, the company, and for the work we provide our clients, makes her, as COO, an important person to help us reinforce these core values. Life is short. In our time here, if we take care of people, they will take care of us, and everyone wins. Sam understands this better than anyone.”
Steele got her start in the music industry in 2008 via street team management and marketing before becoming General Manager at Good Time Inc. in 2010. Good Time was later acquired by Triple 8 Management in 2017. Under Steele’s management, Drew Holcomb sold over 350,000 albums and was dubbed “One of Americana’s Most Popular Stars” by Rolling Stone. Steele has also worked with Ellie Holcomb for her entire solo career, during which time Holcomb sold more than 300,000 records and published four books, the first being awarded the ECPA Bronze Award for sales of over 100,000 units. In total, Holcomb has sold more than 300,000 books under Steele’s guidance.
Additionally, Steele co-founded and produced the Moon River Music Festival alongside Drew Holcomb and Triple 8’s Executive Partner, Paul Steele. Since its inception, the event has grown into a 12,000-capacity festival in Chattanooga and is now partnered with Live Nation/C3 Presents while supporting the work of St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.
Continually paying it forward through the years, Steele has served multiple non-profits through financial donations and community service. With a primary focus of aiding children, Steele has contributed her efforts toward such organizations as IJM, Compassion International, Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital, St. Jude, Outdoor Chattanooga, Mercy Multiplied, Last Minute Toy Store and American Red Cross.
“Sam Steele is a diamond,” notes client Drew Holcomb. “She has the rare capacity to effectively dream and execute a vision for her clients, while maintaining kindness and humanity in the process. Her promotion to COO is the least surprising news I have heard in years. I’m very proud to have Sam in my corner.”
Congratulate Steele at Sam@Triple8Mgmt.com.
Moon River Music Festival Announces Full Lineup
/by Lorie HollabaughPerformers will include Hozier, Caamp, Goodbye Road (Drew Holcomb & The Neighbors and JohnnySwim), Nickle Creek, Marcus King Band, Judah & the Lion, First Aid Kit, Noah Cyrus, Larry Fleet, Houndmouth, Larkin Poe, Shane Smith & The Saints, Wilder Woods, Aoife O’Donovan, The 502s, The Dip, Son Little, Flipturn, S. G. Goodman, Sunny War, Richy Mitch & The Coalminers and Kaitlin Butts.
General Admission and VIP tickets will be available for pre-sale beginning tomorrow (Feb. 23) at 12 p.m. ET at Moonriverfestival.com with a general on-sale to follow. VIP tickets include premium festival entrance, VIP viewing areas at each stage, exclusive bar access, unlimited access to the VIP lounge with seating and air-conditioned bathrooms, a dedicated VIP concierge to assist with all festival needs and a special commemorative poster.
The festival has built a lasting relationship within the Chattanooga community through local and state level nonprofit partnerships, and this year Moon River will again donate a portion of each ticket to Friends of Outdoor Chattanooga and St. Jude Children’s Hospital of Tennessee.
Founded in 2014, Moon River Music Festival is in its eighth year, the fifth in Chattanooga, after expanding from its original home at the historic Levitt Shell in Memphis. The last few years have featured headliners including Brandi Carlile, The Avett Brothers, The National, Wilco, Lord Huron, Jason Isbell and The 400 Unit and The Head And The Heart.
Third Annual Big Machine Music City Grand Prix Tickets On Sale Now
/by Steven BoeroTim McGraw performing at the Big Machine Music City Grand Prix. Photo: Courtesy of the Music City Grand Prix
The Big Machine Music City Grand Prix is back for its third annual race on Aug. 4 through 6, 2023. Organizers have added a few elements to the event this year, including a Saturday night race under the lights of downtown Nashville and an earlier start time on Sunday for the NTT IndyCar Series weekend.
Tickets for the annual IndyCar race and festival are on sale now at the Music City Grand Prix website.
The Saturday night race will showcase the new SRO GR Cup and the returning SRO GT America Series, featuring super car manufacturers Lamborghini, Ferrari, Aston Martin, Porsche and more.
After a late afternoon start time the first two years, race executives and IndyCar worked together with NBC to move the green flag for the NTT IndyCar Series Sunday race start time to 11:30 a.m. CT so fans will enjoy cooler temperatures and a full day of thrilling race action.
“We are thrilled to bring back one of Nashville’s premier sporting events this summer,” says Jason Rittenberry, President & COO, Big Machine Music City Grand Prix. “We listened to our fans and have made some exciting changes that will enhance the overall festival experience. This will be our best race yet.”
Three-Day Ticket Packages, Clubs and Suites are now available for the third annual Big Machine Music City Grand Prix. Fans can choose their optimal grandstand seat to watch as the drivers compete in the 80-lap, 2.1-mile, 11-turn course which goes around Nissan Stadium, over the Cumberland River and curves around downtown Nashville. The event will feature live music each day and culminate with a headline concert Friday and Saturday night.
Due to popular demand, the NetJets Club RPM presented by Flatrock Motorclub tickets, will accommodate more guests in 2023. Located on Turn three, it has dynamic views, air conditioning and all-day premium food and beverages. Club RPM has sold out quickly in the past. A limited number of tickets are available now during the initial ticket on-sale. In addition, the event has added Turn Nine Club, a new experience with views of the most action-packed corner and its own private grandstand, an air-conditioned tent area with all-inclusive food and beverages featuring Edley’s Bar-B-Que and Pancho and Lefty’s Cantina.
Big Machine Music City Grand Prix 2023 Tickets Options:
Club Packages:
Grandstand and General Admission:
This article also appears in MusicRow‘s sister publication, The Sports Credential.