
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 Artist and Label Partnerships in Spotify’s Nashville office, Brittany Schaffer co-leads the office and the development and execution of Spotify’s strategy for growing the country, Christian/gospel, and Americana genres. She and her team oversee the relationships with Nashville’s music industry and look for ways to partner with artists, labels, and managers of all genres to promote their music and connect with their fans. Prior to joining Spotify in January 2018, Brittany spent 7+ years in the Entertainment Department of Loeb & Loeb, LLP, where she was Senior Counsel. She is a member of the Board of Directors for both ACM and CRB.

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
CMA Fest starts this week. What can you tell me about the Spotify House event?
Spotify House at Ole Red is one of Spotify’s largest artist fan events. It was the brain child of myself and Sally Williams back in 2018 when Ole Red was still under construction. There is no better place where country fans and artists come together than CMA Fest, and Spotify really prides itself on being the leading destination for fans to discover and explore country music and how we likewise create that artist and fan connection. So it felt like the perfect opportunity to really bring our goals to life in a live setting.
We, in the past years, have programmed over 50 artists. We’re excited to bring that back this year. You’ll continue to see a really diverse mix of established and emerging artists—everything from artists who have been discovered and highlighted through our Fresh Finds program all the way to some of the biggest names in country music today. I have to give a lot of credit to the entire team who has been really working to bring this to life since I had a baby in the middle of all the planning. (Laughs) Alison Junker, Mary Catherine Kinney, Dan Franquemont and Miller Guth are the core Nashville team planning the event this year!
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.
Meg Kehoe Named Head Of Media At Sony Music Nashville
/by Lydia FarthingMeg Kehoe
Sony Music Nashville (SMN) has appointed Meg Kehoe as Head of Media. She will report to Jennifer Way (Senior Vice President, Marketing), relocate to Nashville, and start with the company on July 5.
The news follows the announcement that Allen Brown, Sr. VP of Media and Corporate Communications at Sony Music Nashville, would be retiring.
In this role, Kehoe will be responsible for the label group’s media team as well as overseeing the press strategy for both SMN and its entire artist roster. In addition to designing and implementing media campaigns and strategies for Sony Music Nashville artists, she will be identifying and pursuing new opportunities and partnerships for the label that will help amplify the artists’ narrative, maximize audience growth and drive consumption.
“Meg is a dynamic leader and one of the most diligent media executives I’ve ever know,” Way shares. “She is highly respected and trusted by her artists, managers, industry colleagues and partners alike. I am confident that her passion for country music combined with her diverse experience and knowledge across multiple genres will serve our team and artists well, and I’m thrilled to welcome her to the Sony Nashville Family!”
“I’ve been a fan of country music for as long as I can remember,” Kehoe adds. “I’m excited to further expand the profiles and reach of the company’s artist roster and am grateful to Sony Music for supporting my career growth with this new role as part of the team in Nashville.”
Most recently, Kehoe held senior media relations roles at RCA Records for 14 years where she developed and implemented the media campaigns for artists including P!NK, Pentatonix, Kelly Clarkson, Ray LaMontagne, Jimmy Eat World, Fousheé and most recently breakout star Tate McRae. She was also an integral member on the campaigns for Justin Timberlake, Britney Spears, G-Eazy, Cam, Backstreet Boys, Elle King, Kane Brown, Tenille Townes and so many others.
She was one of the leading architects for the label’s external media storytelling as well as handled the strategy for RCA’s Grammy submissions, which led to 52 nominations this year alone, as well as Clio Awards, CMA Awards, ACM Awards, and more.
Kehoe began in the music industry as an intern for Jive Records and graduated from Fordham University in 2008.
She can be reached at meghan.kehoe@sonymusic.com.
The Warren Brothers Sign With Warner Chappell Music
/by Lorie HollabaughPictured (L-R): Ben Vaughn (WCM), Brad Warren, Brett Warren, Christina Wiltshire (WCM)
The Warren Brothers–Brad Warren and Brett Warren–have signed a global publishing deal with Warner Chappell Music.
The Florida-native songwriting duo moved to Nashville in the mid-90s, signing a record deal with RCA Records and making three albums for RCA’s sister label BNA Records. During that time, they toured as the opening act for Tim McGraw and Faith Hill, among others. McGraw has recorded over 30 of the duo’s songs, and many of their songs have also landed on the Billboard charts.
The Warrens also starred as celebrity judges on the second season of Nashville Star, and had their own reality series, Barely Famous, The Warren Brothers. They have collaborated with Luke Bryan, Little Big Town, Lady A, Thomas Rhett, Cole Swindell, Gary Allan, Billy Currington, and many others.
Throughout their career the Warrens have received Grammy and CMA nominations, in addition to winning a Daytime Emmy Award for co-writing the Good Afternoon America theme song with Little Big Town. Their penned hits include Tim McGraw’s Platinum “Felt Good on My Lips” and the Gold single “If You’re Reading This,” Keith Urban’s Platinum “Little Bit of Everything,” Dierks Bentley’s Gold-certified “Feel That Fire,” Jason Aldean’s Gold “Lights Come On,” Blake Shelton’s Gold “Every Time I Hear That Song,” Chris Young’s Gold “Sober Saturday Night,” Toby Keith’s “Red Solo Cup,” and Faith Hill’s “The Lucky One,” among many others. They have also written for artists in other genres including Lynyrd Skynyrd, Nickelback, Hinder, Joss Stone, and Boys Like Girls.
“Brad and Brett are two of the best songwriters to ever grace Music Row,” says Ben Vaughn, President & CEO, WCM Nashville. “They have an uncanny ability to write both the deep lyrics and fun commercial songs with ease. They are true tunesmiths that also keep their co-writers and publishers laughing with their jokes and fast wit. Our Warner Chappell family looks forward to working with them!”
“Ben Vaughn, Christina Wiltshire, and the staff at Warner Chappell absolutely feel like home to us,” the brothers add. “There’s no place in Nashville we’d rather be. It’s great to have publishers who not only allow you to be yourself, but encourage it. We suck at being anyone else anyway.”
Colton Venner Inks First-Ever Publishing Deal With Concord
/by Lydia FarthingPictured (L-R): Ashley Nite, Courtney Allen, Lauren Davis, Brad Kennard, Melissa Spillman, Colton Venner, Leah Venner, Mason Hunter (BMI), Rachel Guttman (Taylor Guttman PLLC), Matt Turner, and Jen Hubbard.
Concord Music Publishing has signed Nashville-based singer-songwriter Colton Venner to his first ever publishing contract. The worldwide publishing agreement includes Venner’s full catalog and future works.
A Fort Worth, Texas native, Venner draws inspiration from the likes of Chris Knight and legends like Johnny Cash, harnessing attention to detail when playing out a story within his songs.
“Signing a publishing deal is a lifelong dream come true! However, signing with the Concord team is so much better than I could have ever hoped for or imagined. I’m so excited to see what’s next,” Venner shares.
In addition to his songwriting career, he also releases music independently. His breakout 2019 single “Honey Slow,” with over 1.5 million streams on Spotify alone, showcases his songwriting talents blending country and Americana for an acoustic-guitar driven sound.
“We are honored that Colton has chosen our team to partner with him creatively,” says Melissa Spillman, VP A&R at Concord Music Publishing, Nashville. “It was evident from his first song I heard that he is an incredible writer who will leave his stamp on our town. I’m excited for the rest of our community to get to know Colton and his songs, and we look forward to many successes together!”
My Music Row Story: Spotify’s Brittany Schaffer
/by LB CantrellBrittany Schaffer
As Head of Artist and Label Partnerships in Spotify’s Nashville office, Brittany Schaffer co-leads the office and the development and execution of Spotify’s strategy for growing the country, Christian/gospel, and Americana genres. She and her team oversee the relationships with Nashville’s music industry and look for ways to partner with artists, labels, and managers of all genres to promote their music and connect with their fans. Prior to joining Spotify in January 2018, Brittany spent 7+ years in the Entertainment Department of Loeb & Loeb, LLP, where she was Senior Counsel. She is a member of the Board of Directors for both ACM and CRB.
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
CMA Fest starts this week. What can you tell me about the Spotify House event?
Spotify House at Ole Red is one of Spotify’s largest artist fan events. It was the brain child of myself and Sally Williams back in 2018 when Ole Red was still under construction. There is no better place where country fans and artists come together than CMA Fest, and Spotify really prides itself on being the leading destination for fans to discover and explore country music and how we likewise create that artist and fan connection. So it felt like the perfect opportunity to really bring our goals to life in a live setting.
We, in the past years, have programmed over 50 artists. We’re excited to bring that back this year. You’ll continue to see a really diverse mix of established and emerging artists—everything from artists who have been discovered and highlighted through our Fresh Finds program all the way to some of the biggest names in country music today. I have to give a lot of credit to the entire team who has been really working to bring this to life since I had a baby in the middle of all the planning. (Laughs) Alison Junker, Mary Catherine Kinney, Dan Franquemont and Miller Guth are the core Nashville team planning the event this year!
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.
Spotify House Unveils Fresh Finds Rooftop Lineup For CMA Fest Weekend
/by Lydia FarthingIn addition to the recently announced return of Spotify House for CMA Fest, this year’s event will also introduce the Fresh Finds Rooftop for the first time as part of its four-day marquee music event at Ole Red Nashville.
As part of the company’s commitment to supporting rising talent and music discovery, fans will be able to see new acts from Spotify’s Fresh Finds Country playlist perform live throughout the weekend.
Featured in the lineup of independent and rising artists will be Abby Anderson, Alana Springsteen, Chris Ruediger, David J, Dylan Marlowe, Ella Langley, Erin Kinsey, Finmar, Halle Kearns, Johnny Dailey, Jonathan Hutcherson, Jordan Rowe, Lauren Weintraub, Leah Marie Mason, Maggie Baugh, Megan Maroney, Peytan Porter, Pierre Alexander, Renee Blair, Reyna Roberts, Sophia Scott, Tanner Adell, Taylor Edwards, and Zack Dyer.
The Fresh Finds Rooftop at Spotify House will be first-come, first-serve for fans, with set times Thursday, June 9 through Saturday, June 11 from 6-8:00 p.m. CT, and Sunday, June 12 from 4 to 6:00 p.m. CT.
CAA Hosts 28th Annual Nashville Barbecue At GEODIS Park
/by Lorie HollabaughPictured (L-R): Ryan McElrath, CAA’s Howie Nuchow and Jim Burtson, Jon Pardi, and CAA’s Brian Manning. Photo: Jason Myers
Creative Artists Agency (CAA) hosted its 28th annual CAA Nashville BBQ at GEODIS Park, the city’s new soccer stadium, on June 6. Held in celebration of CMA Fest, the event raised funds for Communities in Schools of Tennessee at Nashville and PENCIL, organizations supporting students at local public schools.
Pictured (L-R): Drew Parker, Priscilla Block, and Niko Moon. Photo: Jason Myers
Plenty of star-studded guests were in attendance at the barbecue, including Brett Young, Jon Pardi, Lauren Alaina, Maddie & Tae, Priscilla Block, Drew Holcomb, Jelly Roll, Niko Moon, Jake Long, Filip Forsberg, Rex Ryan, CAA Nashville co-founder John Huie, and CAA Nashville Music Co-Heads Brian Manning, Marc Dennis, Jeff Krones, and Darin Murphy.
“It’s been three years since we were last able to gather for one of our favorite events of the year so we were beyond excited to get together again after all this time,” shares Krones, Co-Head of CAA Nashville Music. “We are grateful for the funds raised in support of Communities in Schools of Tennessee and PENCIL – two causes near and dear to our hearts.”
Pictured (L-R): CAA’s Blake McDaniel, Lauren Alaina, and Trisha McClanahan. Photo: Jason Myers
“For nearly three decades, our music colleagues have hosted this extraordinary event, which brings together our clients, colleagues and business partners in one of the most dynamic and energized sports and entertainment markets in the U.S.,” adds Howard Nuchow, Co-Head, CAA Sports. “We are thrilled to join them in celebrating this special week of country music, and are proud to do so at the incredible GEODIS Park, which our colleagues at CAA ICON helped bring to fruition.”
Nashville’s GEODIS Park is the largest soccer-specific stadium in the U.S. and Canada, featuring 30,000 seats. It officially opened its doors for Nashville SC’s first home match on May 1. CAA ICON oversaw development, design, and construction as Owner’s Representative for Nashville Soccer Holdings, owner of Nashville SC.
Wes Vause Launches Press On Publicity, Partners With Essential Broadcast Media
/by LB CantrellWes Vause
Following the news of his exit from the Sr. VP Publicity role at Warner Music Nashville, industry veteran Wes Vause has announced he will launch Press On Publicity beginning July 1.
“I’ve dedicated my career to broadening the awareness of country music and its ambassadors, our artists,” Vause shares. “I started as an independent publicist, and now with 20+ years of label experience, I’m ready to bring all that knowledge and strategy full circle into this new venture.
Vause has spent more than 20 years at Nashville-based record labels, rising from Director of Media at Sony Music Nashville to Vice President, Media (2000 – 2014) and most recently, Senior Vice President, Publicity at Warner Music Nashville (2014 – 2022). He began his career with renowned publicist, Evelyn Shriver, whose firm represented some of the biggest names in country music, including Country Music Hall of Fame member, Randy Travis. He also held positions at Asylum and Polydor Records before joining Sony in 2000.
“I am forever grateful for all the artists I’ve had the honor of representing and working with,” Vause shares. “I’m equally grateful to Joe Galante and John “Espo” Esposito, for mentoring, butt-kicking and believing in me over these years. I’m really excited for what the future holds. Press On!”
Additionally, Vause announced that he has established a strategic partnership with longtime friend and three-time CMA Publicist of the Year, Ebie McFarland. The pair will collaborate on a variety of her Essential Broadcast Media clients.
“Over the years, at both Sony and at Warner, Ebie and I have always collaborated so well. When it came time to make this leap, I wanted to do it with a trusted friend and colleague,” says Vause. “While talking it over one afternoon, we realized partnerships don’t have to mirror an existing model. We decided to make it up as we go, while continuing the creativity and camaraderie we’ve enjoyed and shared for 15 years.”
“Working with Wes in this capacity already breeds so much creativity,” adds McFarland, who founded Nashville-based firm Essential Broadcast Media in 2007. “I admire how solutions-oriented and relationship-driven he is on behalf of his clients and look forward to expanding on our already collaborative relationship.”
Congratulate Vause at wes.vause@pressonpublicity.com.
Will Hoge, The McCrary Sisters, More Added To AmericanaFest 2022 Lineup
/by Lydia FarthingPictured (L-R, top row): Sierra Ferrell, Hayes Carll, Mindy Smith; (L-R, bottom row): North Mississippi Acoustic, Leyla McCalla, Trousdale
Americana Music Association has added 58 acts to its annual AmericanaFest, which runs from Sept. 13-17 in Nashville. With 147 acts now confirmed to perform, a final round of performers will be announced in the coming months.
Among the performers added to this year’s lineup are The Wild Feathers, Will Hoge, The McCrary Sisters, Madeline Edwards, Early James, Ben Chapman, and more. The five-day festival and conference will bring together award-winning legends, trailblazing mainstays and buzz-worthy new artists for its 22nd year.
The week of festivities will kick off with the Americana Honors & Awards at the Ryman Auditorium. Tickets are on sale now to AmericanaFest Conference Registrants, and Americana Music Association Members will have a chance to buy tickets beginning July 21.
2022 AmericanaFest Passes, which allow admission into all evening showcase venues and select sanctioned special events, are now on sale to the public. 2022 Conference + Festival Passes provide access to the daytime educational conference, the evening music festival plus all sanctioned special events, and can be purchased here.
New Acts Confirmed to Showcase at AmericanaFest 2022:
Abby Hamilton
Abraham Alexander
Alex Williams
Ashley Ray
Autumn Nicholas
Bandits on the Run
Ben Chapman
Chuck Mead
Colin Lillie
Cordovas
Dan Bettridge
Early James
Fanny Lumsden
Ferris & Sylvester
Gabe Lee
Garrison Starr
Hannah Juanita
Hayes Carll
Jaime Wyatt
KINGSWOOD
Kyshona
Lady Nade
Larry McCray
Lauren Housley
Leah Blevins
Leyla McCalla
Lilli Lewis
Lisa Morales
Madeline Edwards
Margo Cilker
Mark Wilkinson
The McCrary Sisters
Megan Nash
Melody Moko
Memorial
Michelle Malone
Michigan Rattlers
Mindy Smith
Nicki Bluhm
North Mississippi Acoustic
Oliver Wood
Ordinary Elephant
Pete Muller & The Kindred Souls
Robby Hecht
Ryland Moranz
Sean McConnell
Sierra Ferrell
Tami Neilson
Them Coulee Boys
Tim Kelly with Ruston Kelly
Tommy McLain
Tommy Prine
Tristan Bushman
Trousdale
Webb Wilder
The Weeping Willows
The Wild Feathers
Will Hoge
Starwood Rehearsals Space Opens In Middle Tennessee
/by Lorie HollabaughProduction Resource Group (PRG), the largest entertainment and live event production solutions provider of tour and event support, is opening Starwood Rehearsals. The new concept in rehearsal spaces will serve Nashville artists preparing for their tours.
The Starwood Rehearsals space is located at PRG’s Super Depot in La Vergne, Tennessee, and provides clients with direct access to the entire suite of PRG equipment and expertise, allowing for any type of production setup.
Starwood Rehearsals. Photo: Courtesy of Production Resource Group, LLC
The new, climate controlled 10,000 square foot facility boasts a 100 foot by 100 foot rehearsal space, dressing rooms, a green room, board rooms, production offices, and a gallery viewing space. Other venue features include a 50,000-pound distributed rigging capacity, multiple loading docks and drive-up ramps, 24/7 secure access, secure bus parking and power, and much more.
“With so much pent-up demand for the return of concert touring, artists and their management are experiencing a scarcity of suitable rehearsal facilities. With Starwood Rehearsals, we’re rounding out our service offering by answering that need,” shares Randy Hutson, CEO of PRG Music.
From 1986 to 2006, Starwood Amphitheatre was an outdoor music venue just five miles from PRG’s current facility. The Starwood Rehearsals name pays homage to Nashville’s local culture, the rich history of concert touring, and the artists and their production teams who put on shows at the venue.
Trisha Yearwood To Receive 2022 CRB Artist Achievement Award
/by Lorie HollabaughTrisha Yearwood will be honored with this year’s CRB Artist Career Achievement Award. She’ll receive the award during the 2022 Country Radio Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony, set for June 30 at Virgin Hotel Nashville.
The CRB Artist Career Achievement Award is presented to an individual artist or act that, through their creativity, vision, performance or leadership, has significantly contributed to the development and promotion of country music and country radio.
“Trisha’s career achievements are among the ultimate imaginable: country icon, TV star, bestselling author, philanthropist,” shares CRB/CRS Board President Kurt Johnson. “Undeniably a legend. Let’s celebrate her together on this extraordinary night.”
A musical tribute, featuring a surprise performer, will be held during the evening in honor of Yearwood. The Class of 2022 Country Radio Hall of Fame inductees will also be honored at the event and include off-air honorees Becky Brenner, Bob Call and Barry Mardit and on-air honorees Whitney Allen, Debbie Conner, Cathy Martindale, and Rachel & Grunwald. Individual tickets are available for purchase here.
Previous Artist Career Achievement recipients include Keith Urban, Rascal Flatts, Vince Gill, Randy Travis, George Strait, and The Judds, among others.