
Ben Vaughn
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.
Ben Vaughn is President & CEO of Warner Chappell Music Nashville, where he has spent the last decade overseeing all creative and commercial activities across A&R, administration, business development, finance, and human resources. Vaughn also works with staff songwriters, while actively engaging in songwriter advocacy and rights protection initiatives. The company has been named Country Publisher of the Year at ASCAP eight times, BMI four times and SESAC twice. In 2019, Warner Chappell won the coveted Triple Crown for the first time, sweeping the ASCAP, BMI, and SESAC Awards.

Vaughn was the youngest executive to ever head a major publisher in Nashville when he became EVP and GM of EMI Music Publishing. During his career, he has worked with songwriters who have been honored by the CMA, ACM, Grammy and PROs, collectively winning Songwriter of the Year 19 times and Song of the Year 32 times. His industry honors include being named Billboard‘s 2020 Nashville Executive of the Year, multiple times listed in 40 under 40, Country Aircheck‘s Power 31, and receiving Belmont University’s Music Milestone Award.

Vaughn as an intern at Warner Chappell in 1994
MusicRow: Where did you grow up?
I grew up in a map dot town in Kentucky called Sullivan. It’s about 500 people. It was an awesome place to grow up. My father was a coal miner and a mechanic. My family is very blue collar.
How did you get into music?
When I was 16, I wanted to get a job. I liked country music, so I just went to the local radio station. They played country music, ran all of the high school football and basketball games, and played the St. Louis Cardinals’ baseball games. It was called WMSK.
That’s where I got my love and deep knowledge of country music. That place was like a library. At the time, CDs would come in every couple of weeks from Nashville on a service called CDX. I would just devour that. I would look at who wrote the songs, who published the songs, the record label names, the producers… I was fascinated by all of it.
How did you end up moving to Nashville?
I was a good student in high school. I was at the top of my class, the newspaper editor and the school bank president. Most of my friends knew where they wanted to go to college and what they wanted to do, but I didn’t. One night when I was working at the radio station, I was driving home really late because of a late St. Louis Cardinals baseball game. I remember this stretch of road in the back woods in Kentucky. I’m driving and have the windows down, blasting ’90s country music. All of a sudden I just thought, “I want to do this. I love country music and I want to do something around country music.” It wasn’t more evolved than that, but that was my light bulb moment. I found out about Belmont University, which was also a light bulb moment. I was like, “Wow, you can actually go to college to study the music industry?” I had gotten some scholarship offers from some other schools, but I didn’t even visit any other places. I was like, “I want to work in the music business and this is what I need to do. I’m going to go figure it out.” So I moved to Nashville.
I didn’t really know anybody when I moved to Nashville. I was in school for about two weeks and I was told by a professor, Bob Malloy, to look to your left and look to your right. He said, “You will end up working with some of your classmates,” and he was completely right.

Vaughn (far right) attends a No. 1 party for Randy Travis
How did you get your career started while at Belmont?
There was a paper that you had to do at Belmont where you had to interview someone in the music industry. I found out that I had a middle school computer teacher who had moved to Nashville and had gotten a job as a staff songwriter at Warner Chappell. I called her out of the blue and asked her to help me find someone to interview. She said, “Let me bring you to my publisher.” So she walked me around the Warner Chappell building—the same building we just re-opened this year. I remember meeting Josh Leo, who produced Alabama, and Jeff Stevens. I was totally fan-girling. I had an interview with Kurt Denny, who was one of the publishers there. I walked into the tape room and I just asked, “Can I intern here?” They were like, “Sure!” (Laughs) You’re not supposed to intern as a freshman, so I had to get special permission from Bob, but I got an internship within two weeks of being in town.
Did you know from that point on that you wanted to be a publisher?
I just wanted to work in country music. I didn’t know what that would mean at all. I feel like I got really lucky that my first experience was in music publishing, because what I’ve learned about myself is that I’m one of those left brain and right brain people. I equally love the creative part of publishing as I do the administrative and licensing side of it. They both are fascinating to me—the business side and the creative side. Publishing is where you can marry the two together, so it’s always been really suited for my personality type because I can click in either and be really happy.

Vaughn (left) with Arturo Buenahora, after Buenahora lost a bet
What followed your Warner Chappell internship?
I got this opportunity to go to a partner company of Warner Chappell’s called Big Tractor Music. They asked me to come over and intern for them. I was getting ready to start my junior year and they were going to pay me $5.50 an hour. It was a small office of just myself, another person that ran the office, and three writers. The person that was running the company ended up leaving. I had been there about six months and I’d been hustling. I had been pitching songs for the writers, I was driving around trying to find Garth Brooks‘ truck and put cassette tapes on the windshield—I got a cut out of that. (Laughs) I was doing anything possible to try to make something happen for those songwriters. [When the person running the company left], Warner Chappell was trying to figure out who they were going to hire for that position.
The writers were like, “Why don’t you get Ben a shot?” I had just turned 21, which is crazy. Scott Hendricks owned that company at the time and at that point in his career, he was running Capitol Records. He was a really successful producer and was busy, so he called me in his office and basically said, “Listen, the writers really like you. We’ll give you six months to take a shot at this, but if you quit school, I’ll fire you.” I was a junior in college at that moment, and it took me about six and a half years to finish college, but I did it.
Big Tractor was amazing. We became a really successful small publishing company. It afforded me the ability to learn a lot about the nuts and bolts of music publishing, not necessarily just on the creative side, but also on the deal making side, the administration side, and just how it all fits together.
Did you have people doubt you because you were so young?
All the time. I’m 46 now and I’ve had the opportunity to run major publishing companies for almost 14 years, which is crazy. For so long I was always the kid just trying to prove that I could actually be in a room and be heard, compete and contribute. Now it’s flipped where I’m viewed as the mentor, so that’s an interesting feeling.
Age is just a number. It’s really about how much heart and effort you put in it. No matter what it is. I was thrown into the lake and told to swim. I think it’s an awesome way to do it, personally. You can see pretty quickly if someone us going to be able to figure it out or not.

Vaughn (right) and Guy Clark
After your work at Big Tractor, you went to EMI Music Publishing where you eventually became the youngest executive to head a major publishing company in Nashville. Tell me about that transition.
I was at Big Tractor for about six years and we had a lot of success. I try to make a lot of my decisions based on education and what I can learn. I was definitely a self-taught publisher at that point. At the time, EMI was losing a couple of their vice presidents. Gary Overton ran EMI for a number of years very successfully. He was a very smart executive, and knew everything about the publishing business. They approached me about joining the company, so I decided to leave Big Tractor based on what I could learn and the platform of the company.
Gary was a wonderful mentor. He was very open and willing to share his knowledge of the business. For me at the time, it was absolutely perfect. I was there for 10 years and ran the creative department for seven of those years. When I was 34, I got the chance to run the company. I was the youngest person to do that, which is nuts. The executives at EMI gave me a lot of trust and I worked really hard to earn that. It was a great experience to be at that company. We helped a lot of songwriters break through that have gone on to become some of the biggest writers and artists in the format.

Vaughn (right) with Rhett Akins after Akins won his first BMI Songwriter of the Year award
How did you wind up back at Warner Chappell, all those years later?
There was a big acquisition with all of the EMI companies. The record labels when to Universal and the publishing company went to Sony. I learned a lot during that transition. You could argue that was the biggest seismic shift that has ever happened in this town, in terms of affecting the most amount of people. My part of that story was I wasn’t able to stay with the EMI company. It was not a possibility. I had about six months of a sabbatical and was doing lunches, talking to people, and trying to figure out what I was going to do next. I had a few really good opportunities and options, but this Warner Chappell opportunity came up. [Working at Warner Chappell] has really been one of the best things I’ve ever gotten to do in my life. I got to go back to a company where I started as an intern. How cool is that? Some of our administrative folks were there when I was an intern. This year is my tenth year. We’ve grown a lot in 10 years. We’ve been able to be a part of so many people’s stories.
What are some of the best qualities about our industry?
The community, first and foremost. The real celebration of songwriting. That’s so special and it’s, in some ways, very unique to Nashville. I see it getting a little better in some places, but the songwriters here are really celebrated in so many ways and that’s so wonderful.
If someone were to ask you how to be successful in this business, what would you say?
Do well in the little things. Always follow through. I feel like that is a skill that has gotten in short supply in so many ways. Be somebody that does what you say you’re going to do and follow through.
Earl Scruggs Music Festival Announces Lineup For Inaugural Event
/by Steven BoeroEarl Scruggs Music Festival has announced that Béla Fleck, Jerry Douglas, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band and many more will perform for its inaugural event, taking place September 2-4 at Tryon International Equestrian Center in Mill Spring, North Carolina.
Fleck will kick off the weekend with songs from his Grammy-winning record My Bluegrass Heart. Heavyweights Sam Bush, Molly Tuttle & Golden Highway, and The Earls of Leicester—who was previously announced as festival host and artist-in-residence—will perform on Friday. Saturday standouts include jam-grass veterans Leftover Salmon, decorated multi-instrumentalist and composer Alison Brown, country-rock icons Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, and a choice display of North Carolina talent featuring Rissi Palmer, Darin & Brooke Aldridge, Balsam Range and more. Dom Flemons, Chatham County Line, and Becky Buller Band are set to close the festival on Sunday.
The first ever Earl Scruggs Music Festival will celebrate the Cleveland County native whose innovative banjo technique transformed the course of American music. Produced in collaboration with the Earl Scruggs Center, WNCW 88.7, and Isothermal Community College, the event supports a two-fold mission to underwrite educational programming and community outreach in Earl’s home region while carrying his legacy into the context of modern culture.
Single day passes to Earl Scruggs Music Festival are on sale now via the festival’s website at $75 (Friday and Saturday) and $55 (Sunday) for General Admission. To explore premium options, purchase tickets, and stay up-to-date on all things Earl Scruggs Music Festival, visit earlscruggsmusicfestival.com.
Earl Scruggs Music Festival 2022 Daily Lineup
Friday, September 2
Jerry Douglas, host
The Earls of Leicester
Bela Fleck My Bluegrass Heart
Featuring Billy Contreras, Jacob Jolliff, Justin Moses, Mark Schatz, Bryan Sutton
Sam Bush
Molly Tuttle & Golden Highway
Rob Ickes & Trey Hensley
Acoustic Syndicate
Fireside Collective
The Barefoot Movement
Laura Boosinger & Josh Goforth
Jon Stickley Trio
Chatham Rabbits
Saturday, September 3
Jerry Douglas, host
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
Leftover Salmon
Alison Brown
Balsam Range
Acoustic Syndicate
Darin & Brooke Aldridge
Chatham County Line
Fireside Collective
Unspoken Tradition
Rissi Palmer
Bella White
Lakota John
Sunday, September 4
Jerry Douglas, host
Chatham County Line
Dom Flemons
Becky Buller Band
Darin & Brooke Aldridge
Songwriters Hall of Fame Debuts New Traveling Exhibit
/by Lorie HollabaughSongwriters Hall of Fame Exhibit timeline display
The Songwriters Hall of Fame has launched a new traveling exhibit, the “Songwriters Hall of Fame Songwriting Experience,” currently on display at New York’s CUNY Graduate Center James Gallery through July 24. The new exhibit will also travel to other cities around the country to be announced later this year.
Curated by the Grammy Museum, the Songwriters Hall of Fame Songwriting Experience digs deep into the great compositional works that make up the treasure trove of American music. Through graphic panels, artifact displays, and interactive experiences, it examines the creative process and works of some of the world’s most prolific songwriters.
The piano of legendary Tin Pan Alley- era songwriter Victor Herbert, who composed “Babes in Toyland”
Artifacts on display represent the work of renowned writers including Sammy Cahn, Desmond Child, Steve Dorff, Woody Guthrie, John Mellencamp, Alan Menken, and Carole Bayer Sager, among others.
Visitors can watch highlights from Songwriters Hall of Fame galas and interviews with inductees including Jimmy Jam, Toby Keith, Carole King, Smokey Robinson, Carole Bayer Sager, and Diane Warren, as well as Hal David Starlight Award honorees John Legend, Taylor Swift and Nick Jonas. A songwriting interactive also features Toby Keith, Carole King, Smokey Robinson, and Don Schlitz dissecting their hits.
Established in 1969, the Songwriters Hall of Fame honors a spectrum of the most beloved songs from the world’s popular music songbook. The non-profit’s ongoing mission is to celebrate and honor the contributions and legacies of songwriters of all genres while developing and nurturing the next generation of songwriters through Master Sessions, songwriting craft forums, scholarships, and digital initiatives.
My Music Row Story: Warner Chappell’s Ben Vaughn
/by LB CantrellBen Vaughn
Ben Vaughn is President & CEO of Warner Chappell Music Nashville, where he has spent the last decade overseeing all creative and commercial activities across A&R, administration, business development, finance, and human resources. Vaughn also works with staff songwriters, while actively engaging in songwriter advocacy and rights protection initiatives. The company has been named Country Publisher of the Year at ASCAP eight times, BMI four times and SESAC twice. In 2019, Warner Chappell won the coveted Triple Crown for the first time, sweeping the ASCAP, BMI, and SESAC Awards.
Vaughn was the youngest executive to ever head a major publisher in Nashville when he became EVP and GM of EMI Music Publishing. During his career, he has worked with songwriters who have been honored by the CMA, ACM, Grammy and PROs, collectively winning Songwriter of the Year 19 times and Song of the Year 32 times. His industry honors include being named Billboard‘s 2020 Nashville Executive of the Year, multiple times listed in 40 under 40, Country Aircheck‘s Power 31, and receiving Belmont University’s Music Milestone Award.
Vaughn as an intern at Warner Chappell in 1994
MusicRow: Where did you grow up?
I grew up in a map dot town in Kentucky called Sullivan. It’s about 500 people. It was an awesome place to grow up. My father was a coal miner and a mechanic. My family is very blue collar.
How did you get into music?
When I was 16, I wanted to get a job. I liked country music, so I just went to the local radio station. They played country music, ran all of the high school football and basketball games, and played the St. Louis Cardinals’ baseball games. It was called WMSK.
That’s where I got my love and deep knowledge of country music. That place was like a library. At the time, CDs would come in every couple of weeks from Nashville on a service called CDX. I would just devour that. I would look at who wrote the songs, who published the songs, the record label names, the producers… I was fascinated by all of it.
How did you end up moving to Nashville?
I was a good student in high school. I was at the top of my class, the newspaper editor and the school bank president. Most of my friends knew where they wanted to go to college and what they wanted to do, but I didn’t. One night when I was working at the radio station, I was driving home really late because of a late St. Louis Cardinals baseball game. I remember this stretch of road in the back woods in Kentucky. I’m driving and have the windows down, blasting ’90s country music. All of a sudden I just thought, “I want to do this. I love country music and I want to do something around country music.” It wasn’t more evolved than that, but that was my light bulb moment. I found out about Belmont University, which was also a light bulb moment. I was like, “Wow, you can actually go to college to study the music industry?” I had gotten some scholarship offers from some other schools, but I didn’t even visit any other places. I was like, “I want to work in the music business and this is what I need to do. I’m going to go figure it out.” So I moved to Nashville.
I didn’t really know anybody when I moved to Nashville. I was in school for about two weeks and I was told by a professor, Bob Malloy, to look to your left and look to your right. He said, “You will end up working with some of your classmates,” and he was completely right.
Vaughn (far right) attends a No. 1 party for Randy Travis
How did you get your career started while at Belmont?
There was a paper that you had to do at Belmont where you had to interview someone in the music industry. I found out that I had a middle school computer teacher who had moved to Nashville and had gotten a job as a staff songwriter at Warner Chappell. I called her out of the blue and asked her to help me find someone to interview. She said, “Let me bring you to my publisher.” So she walked me around the Warner Chappell building—the same building we just re-opened this year. I remember meeting Josh Leo, who produced Alabama, and Jeff Stevens. I was totally fan-girling. I had an interview with Kurt Denny, who was one of the publishers there. I walked into the tape room and I just asked, “Can I intern here?” They were like, “Sure!” (Laughs) You’re not supposed to intern as a freshman, so I had to get special permission from Bob, but I got an internship within two weeks of being in town.
Did you know from that point on that you wanted to be a publisher?
I just wanted to work in country music. I didn’t know what that would mean at all. I feel like I got really lucky that my first experience was in music publishing, because what I’ve learned about myself is that I’m one of those left brain and right brain people. I equally love the creative part of publishing as I do the administrative and licensing side of it. They both are fascinating to me—the business side and the creative side. Publishing is where you can marry the two together, so it’s always been really suited for my personality type because I can click in either and be really happy.
Vaughn (left) with Arturo Buenahora, after Buenahora lost a bet
What followed your Warner Chappell internship?
I got this opportunity to go to a partner company of Warner Chappell’s called Big Tractor Music. They asked me to come over and intern for them. I was getting ready to start my junior year and they were going to pay me $5.50 an hour. It was a small office of just myself, another person that ran the office, and three writers. The person that was running the company ended up leaving. I had been there about six months and I’d been hustling. I had been pitching songs for the writers, I was driving around trying to find Garth Brooks‘ truck and put cassette tapes on the windshield—I got a cut out of that. (Laughs) I was doing anything possible to try to make something happen for those songwriters. [When the person running the company left], Warner Chappell was trying to figure out who they were going to hire for that position.
The writers were like, “Why don’t you get Ben a shot?” I had just turned 21, which is crazy. Scott Hendricks owned that company at the time and at that point in his career, he was running Capitol Records. He was a really successful producer and was busy, so he called me in his office and basically said, “Listen, the writers really like you. We’ll give you six months to take a shot at this, but if you quit school, I’ll fire you.” I was a junior in college at that moment, and it took me about six and a half years to finish college, but I did it.
Big Tractor was amazing. We became a really successful small publishing company. It afforded me the ability to learn a lot about the nuts and bolts of music publishing, not necessarily just on the creative side, but also on the deal making side, the administration side, and just how it all fits together.
Did you have people doubt you because you were so young?
All the time. I’m 46 now and I’ve had the opportunity to run major publishing companies for almost 14 years, which is crazy. For so long I was always the kid just trying to prove that I could actually be in a room and be heard, compete and contribute. Now it’s flipped where I’m viewed as the mentor, so that’s an interesting feeling.
Age is just a number. It’s really about how much heart and effort you put in it. No matter what it is. I was thrown into the lake and told to swim. I think it’s an awesome way to do it, personally. You can see pretty quickly if someone us going to be able to figure it out or not.
Vaughn (right) and Guy Clark
After your work at Big Tractor, you went to EMI Music Publishing where you eventually became the youngest executive to head a major publishing company in Nashville. Tell me about that transition.
I was at Big Tractor for about six years and we had a lot of success. I try to make a lot of my decisions based on education and what I can learn. I was definitely a self-taught publisher at that point. At the time, EMI was losing a couple of their vice presidents. Gary Overton ran EMI for a number of years very successfully. He was a very smart executive, and knew everything about the publishing business. They approached me about joining the company, so I decided to leave Big Tractor based on what I could learn and the platform of the company.
Gary was a wonderful mentor. He was very open and willing to share his knowledge of the business. For me at the time, it was absolutely perfect. I was there for 10 years and ran the creative department for seven of those years. When I was 34, I got the chance to run the company. I was the youngest person to do that, which is nuts. The executives at EMI gave me a lot of trust and I worked really hard to earn that. It was a great experience to be at that company. We helped a lot of songwriters break through that have gone on to become some of the biggest writers and artists in the format.
Vaughn (right) with Rhett Akins after Akins won his first BMI Songwriter of the Year award
How did you wind up back at Warner Chappell, all those years later?
There was a big acquisition with all of the EMI companies. The record labels when to Universal and the publishing company went to Sony. I learned a lot during that transition. You could argue that was the biggest seismic shift that has ever happened in this town, in terms of affecting the most amount of people. My part of that story was I wasn’t able to stay with the EMI company. It was not a possibility. I had about six months of a sabbatical and was doing lunches, talking to people, and trying to figure out what I was going to do next. I had a few really good opportunities and options, but this Warner Chappell opportunity came up. [Working at Warner Chappell] has really been one of the best things I’ve ever gotten to do in my life. I got to go back to a company where I started as an intern. How cool is that? Some of our administrative folks were there when I was an intern. This year is my tenth year. We’ve grown a lot in 10 years. We’ve been able to be a part of so many people’s stories.
What are some of the best qualities about our industry?
The community, first and foremost. The real celebration of songwriting. That’s so special and it’s, in some ways, very unique to Nashville. I see it getting a little better in some places, but the songwriters here are really celebrated in so many ways and that’s so wonderful.
If someone were to ask you how to be successful in this business, what would you say?
Do well in the little things. Always follow through. I feel like that is a skill that has gotten in short supply in so many ways. Be somebody that does what you say you’re going to do and follow through.
City Of Cleveland Declares July 6 ‘Steve Popovich/Cleveland International Records Day’
/by Lorie HollabaughFormer industry executive Steve Popovich is being honored by the city of Cleveland, Ohio with his own official day, July 6.
Cleveland Mayor Justin Bibb declared the special day “Steve Popovich/Cleveland International Records Day” in honor of the legacy of Popovich, whose work helped boost the careers of Michael Jackson, Bruce Springsteen, Johnny Cash, Cheap Trick, Miles Davis, Ronnie Spector, Meat Loaf and many others.
Popovich, who passed away in 2011, founded Cleveland International Records, the indie label behind Meat Loaf’s smash album Bat Out of Hell, which became one of the best-selling albums of all time, selling 45 million records worldwide. Popovich moved to Cleveland in the late 1950s and first got into music as bassist for local band the Twilighters.
His label career began at Columbia Records, where he worked his way up through the promotions department. In the early 1970s, Popovich was named Vice President of Columbia Records, where he led promotion efforts for everyone from Springsteen and Bob Dylan to Santana and Earth, Wind & Fire. Popovich later headed Polygram Records in Nashville, signing Cash, Kris Kristofferson, and Johnny Paycheck, among others.
Thompson Square Celebrates Summer With New ‘Country In My Soul Tour’
/by Lorie HollabaughThompson Square. Photo: Ford Fairchild
Thompson Square will embark on their 2022 “Country In My Soul Tour” this summer, beginning July 8.
The cross-country trek will include stops in New Mexico, Alabama, Ohio, Arizona, Kentucky and more through Oct. 29.
The announcement follows the release of the duo’s brand new single “Country In My Soul,” which was co-written by Lainey Wilson, Daniel Ross and James McNair. The song marks Thompson Square’s first single release since 2019’s “You Shoulda Been There,” and their first with Quartz Hill Records.
Earlier this year they signed with Brown Sellers Brown Management, once again partnering with label veteran Benny Brown, who helped them achieve their first No. 1 “Are You Gonna Kiss Me Or Not,” subsequent No. 1 “If I Didn’t Have You,” and Top 10 “Everything I Shouldn’t Be Thinking About.”
“Country In My Soul Tour” Dates:
July 8 – St. Croix Casino – Turtle Lake, Wis.
July 9 – Rollies Rednecks and Longnecks – Sauk Rapids, Minn.
July 29 – Lincoln Hills Farm – Canandaigua, N.Y.
Aug. 13 – San Juan County Fair Association – Farmington, N.M.
Aug. 20 – Watermelon Festival – Russellville, Ala.
Aug. 27 – Oakdale Rodeo Grounds – Oakdale, Calif.
Sept. 2 – Blarney Island – Antioch, Ill.
Sept. 3 – Country Legends Festival – West Liberty, Ohio
Sept. 10 – The Vista Center for the Performing Arts – Surprise, Ariz.
Sept. 16 – Midland Theatre – Newark, Ohio
Sept. 17 – Bourbon and Blades Festival – Radcliff, Ky.
Sept. 24 – East Grand Forks Civic Center – East Grand Forks, Minn.
Sept. 25 – Rusch Park – Citrus Heights, Calif.
Oct. 29 – Gillioz Theatre – Springfield, Mo.
Gretchen Peters Brings Her Live Show To Fans With New Album
/by Lydia FarthingGrammy-nominated and CMA award-winning recording artist Gretchen Peters will release a new live album, The Show: Live from the UK, on Aug. 19 via Proper Music Group.
Featuring 18 songs from Peters’ catalog, The Show marks her first release since 2020’s tribute to Mickey Newbury, The Night You Wrote That Song, and her first live release since 2005’s Trio.
Taken from three performances from Peters’ 2019 “Strings Attached Tour” at St. George’s in Bristol, The De La Warr Pavilion in Bexhill-On-Sea, and The Apex in Bury St. Edmunds, The Show features Peters’ touring band as well as an all-female, Scottish string quartet. The resulting album is a retrospective look at Peters’ career to date, framed with new arrangements that let her songwriting take the spotlight.
As a songwriter, Peters has had her songs cut by the likes of George Strait, Martina McBride, Trisha Yearwood, Pam Tillis, Bonnie Raitt, and Neil Diamond. She was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2014.
The Show: Live from the UK Tracklist:
Arguing With Ghosts
Hello Cruel World
The Secret Of Life
Revival
Love That Makes A Cup Of Tea
Blackbirds
When You Love Someone
On A Bus To St. Cloud
To Say Goodbye
When You Are Old
When All You Got Is A Hammer
Disappearing Act
Wichita
Say Grace
Everything Falls Away
The Matador
Five Minutes
Idlewild
Reba & Melissa Peterman Reunite For New Lifetime Movie ‘The Hammer’
/by Lorie HollabaughReba McEntire
Reba McEntire is teaming up with her old pal and former Reba co-star Melissa Peterman in a new Lifetime movie, The Hammer, according to Deadline. The film is inspired by the life of traveling circuit judge Kim Wanker.
McEntire, who executive produces the film, plays Kim Wheeler, an attorney who is appointed Judge of the 5th District of Nevada and is one of the few traveling judges left in the country. She finds herself covering the circuit between Las Vegas and Reno and quickly earns the nickname “The Hammer.” When a reigning judge dies under suspicious circumstances and the investigation goes underway, Wheeler’s sister Kris, played by Peterman becomes the prime suspect.
The Hammer is McEntire’s second project for the Lifetime network, following 2021’s Reba McEntire’s Christmas in Tune. McEntire’s real-life partner Rex Linn (CSI: Miami) and Kay Shioma Metchie (Totally Normal) will also star.
The Hammer is produced by The Cartel and Pahrump Pictures with Stan Spry, Eric Woods, Anthony Fankhauser, and Steven St. Arnaud as executive producers. Jeff Beesley directs from a script by Karen Wyscarver and Sanford Golden.
Peterman and McEntire have also starred together in CMT’s Working Class and Freeform’s Baby Daddy, and both recur on CBS’ Young Sheldon.
Nashville’s 4th Of July Bash Featuring Old Dominion Draws Nearly 300,000
/by Lorie HollabaughLet Freedom Sing! Music City July 4th. Alan Poizner/Nashville Convention & Visitors Corp
Nashville’s Let Freedom Sing! 4th of July event downtown was a huge success, with nearly 300,000 attending the annual star-studded Independence Day celebration.
Old Dominion headlined the free show on Lower Broadway, which also featured performances from Gramps Morgan, Cassadee Pope, and Levi Hummon. The event featured the biggest fireworks show in Nashville history synchronized to a live performance by the Nashville Symphony.
“We estimate attendance of 250,000 to 300,000 at the event site,” Butch Spyridon, CEO, Nashville Convention & Visitors Corp. shares. “That’s about what we thought with July 4th being on a Monday, compared to last year’s record crowd of 350,000 coming on a Sunday. Thank you to the city and all our partners for helping us host a successful event that generates millions of dollars in visitor spending and also gives local Nashvillians a world-class concert and fireworks show right in their backyard.”
Last year’s event generated $14.7 million for the city. This year’s event was the 19th annual celebration produced by the Nashville Convention & Visitors Corp and the 38th in the city.
Matt McGinn Enters Top Five On MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart
/by LB CantrellMatt McGinn wins Songwriter of the Year onstage during the 2018 SESAC Nashville Music Awards at Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. Photo: Jason Kempin/Getty Images for SESAC.
Matt McGinn has shifted into the top five this week on the MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart.
McGinn is a co-writer on three currently charting songs, including Kane Brown’s “Like I Love Country Music,” Tim McGraw’s “7500 OBO,” and Dustin Lynch’s “Party Mode.”
Ernest spends his third week atop the MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart this week. He is a co-writer on Morgan Wallen’s “Wasted On You” and “You Proof,” Jelly Roll’s “Son Of A Sinner,” and his own “Flower Shops.”
Ashley Gorley (No. 2), Ben Johnson (No. 3), and Morgan Wallen (No. 4) complete the top five this week.
The weekly MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart uses algorithms based upon song activity according to airplay, digital download track sales and streams. This unique and exclusive addition to the MusicRow portfolio is the only songwriter chart of its kind.
Click here to view the full MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart.
Weekly Register: Luke Combs Commands Country Charts With Newest Release
/by Lydia FarthingLuke Combs. Photo: Jeremy Cowart
Luke Combs dominates the country albums and songs charts this week. With the release of his new record, Growin’ Up, the River House/Columbia recording artist racks up 74K in total consumption (28K album only/55 million song streams), ranking at No. 1 country and at No. 2 overall. Combs also claims the No. 4 spot on the country albums chart with What You See Is What You Get and the No. 5 spot with This One’s For You, according to Luminate data.
Combs’ “The Kind of Love We Make” also claims the top spot on the country streaming songs chart, adding 13 million to the single’s 25 million streams RTD after only two weeks.
Elsewhere on the songs chart, Zach Bryan‘s “Something In The Orange” adds 9.8 million streams, coming in at No. 2. Morgan Wallen‘s resides in the No. 3 and No. 4 positions with “You Proof” adding 9.2 million streams and “Wasted On You” adding 8.1 million streams. Bailey Zimmerman rounds out the top five as “Fall In Love” gains 7.9 million streams.
Filling out the rest of the top country albums chart is Wallen’s Dangerous: The Double Album in second with 51K in total consumption and Bryan’s American Heartbreak adding 27K.