
Seth England
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.
This edition of “My Music Row Story” is sponsored by Worldwide Stages.
As Partner and CEO, Seth England leads Big Loud as one of the most unique and fastest-rising businesses in Nashville; a trailblazing conglomerate that combines music publishing, management, label services, and capital investment and has changed the industry in the process. The label’s roster includes country hitmakers Morgan Wallen, Jake Owen, Chris Lane, and Hardy, as well as rising stars Hailey Whitters, Ernest, Lily Rose, MacKenzie Porter, and more.
Since joining Big Loud Publishing in 2008, England has proven his knack for landing massive song placements, signing cutting-edge, genre altering acts, and finding unique partnerships that further the label’s innovative goals, as he did when co-founding female-driven label Songs and Daughters with ACM-winning songwriter Nicolle Galyon. Big Loud Records has earned multiple Gold and Platinum RIAA certifications, 12 No. 1 U.S. airplay hits, and more than 5.5 billion global streams in 2021 alone. England has been named to multiple Billboard power player lists, including 2021 Indie Power Players and Country Power Players.

MusicRow: Where did you grow up?
I was born in Terre Haute, Indiana. I grew up in Illinois right across the state line in a small town called Marshall, Illinois.
How did you get into the music business?
The pathway to it started for me when I was a junior in high school. It was by way of sports. I was a football player and I was going go play football in college. I was taking all sorts of recruiting visits and one of the problems of finding a place that I wanted to go to was the academic options [the schools’ offered]. I knew I wanted to do something unique and different. I was chasing that “never have to work a day in your life” thought, chasing something I was passionate about. At that time, I was thinking I would probably end up in sports. I ended up going to college at Greenville University and double majored in music business and marketing.
While I was in school, one choice just led to the next opportunity and then to the next one. I just kept trusting myself and those around me to keep walking through certain doors. I was promoting shows while I was in college during the off season, primarily. I was able to make a little money, not too much. Little did I know that later on when I would get to Nashville and meet Craig [Wiseman], the thing he loved most about me was that I had been a show promoter and I knew the live touring aspect.

Pictured (L-R): Big Loud’s Craig Wiseman, Joey Moi, Seth England. Photo: Courtesy of Big Loud
When did you start coming to Nashville?
I started going after my sophomore year of college. I knew that I wanted to get my foot in the door. My first summer in Nashville, I interned in the mornings for Harlan Howard Songs. I kept promoting shows [throughout college] so I was able to make a little money, save up, and when I came to Nashville in the summers, I could spend 40 hours a week doing my internships because I didn’t have the opportunity to come down in the fall or spring. I came down knowing I really wanted to get into publishing or A&R and I did an internship with Sara Knabe. She was the creative director at Harlan Howard Songs and she had just gotten out of Belmont a few years before that. In the afternoon I’d go to Vector Management. I did that my whole first summer.
You joined Big Loud in 2008. What was your vision for the company in the early years?
It starts with Craig. I met Craig in 2006. At that time, he was trying to do a lot of things. He had shown aspirations even before his partnership with Joey [Moi] and I that he wanted to do more than just traditional publishing. At the time he had Big Loud Shirt publishing, he had a joint venture with Extreme Writers Group in Nashville, he had an office in London, and he probably had 10 to 15 writers. It was a very A&R-centric company, but most of the cuts revolved around Craig. That was something he desired to evolve. He wanted to make sure the company was known as a successful publishing company for songwriters. I could tell quickly where his energy was at, his priorities, and the way that he saw the business. I had a feeling he was going to get into much more. I couldn’t have told you then where we were going to go, but I could just feel some energy between the two of us. The first couple years we started to talk about all the great things we had, but also the things we didn’t have. Joey joined us a few years later.

Photo: Courtesy of Big Loud
With the three of you leading the charge, Big Loud has become one of the most competitive indies in the Nashville music business. How do you feel that the company is different than other labels?
All three of us—Craig, Joey, and I—would be lying if we didn’t say that over the years while developing into this plan, we weren’t watching other record labels in town. We worked with Florida Georgia Line for years and worked within the Big Machine halls. We learned a lot from Scott [Borchetta] and Jimmy [Harnen] and some of their great executives there. Along the way, you pick up things you want to do like [other companies] and then how you want to do a few things different.
I think [the way we approach] artist development is different in a lot of ways. If you want to approach artist development as just one song or even three to five songs, it’s just not enough. No matter how good you are it just won’t be enough. The same is true if your first song to five songs doesn’t work. It wasn’t going to be enough anyway, so let’s keep going. Don’t get discouraged. Keep swinging. I feel like if the artist is good enough to come to our record label, we need to set up an ecosystem around them where they get an unlimited amount of swings at the ball. We preach that because we do believe and we’ve seen many examples of success by letting artists continue to try and swing. They build.
When do you feel most fulfilled in your role now?
When people acknowledge our process—not for any ego reason—we’re just so proud of our process. We’re so proud of the belief systems shared between Craig, Joey and I. It’s not just about music and business, it’s really about people, culture and camaraderie. We’ve worked very hard for that and we sometimes may be the ones to see the benefits. It takes a lot of additional man hours to care about culture. I get compliments every so often about that, people are really starting to notice. With the more forward-facing success some of our clients have, people may be looking into what’s going on behind the scenes.

Photo: Courtesy of Big Loud
Who have been some of your mentors along the way?
Certainly Craig and Joey. They have become brothers to me. Monte and Avery Lipman are big mentors in the record label space. Clarence Spalding in the Nashville artist management space. He ushered Big Loud into the Maverick partnership. That was such a special time with him. Brian O’Connell in concert promotion has always been a good friend and never makes us feel stupid for something we don’t know. Certain acts of ours have gotten bigger than we ever imagined. He was right there with us, teaching.
What’s some of the best advice you’ve ever received?
There’s a reason the word “music” comes before “business.” I think about it all the time. In a modern music era, we’ve never had more information ever. While analytics and data are guiding lights for the business part of it, I still remind myself that music comes before business. When we’re talking to our artists, we certainly need them to know that our agenda as a record label is to still encourage our artists to make music with their ears and gut inspiration. We are not making music for TikTok. We’re not making music for anyone other than yourself and the fans that you’re building. After you release it, then we can look at things pragmatically and make sure we give you great recommendations and best practices on how to elevate your career with your music.
If someone were to ask you what the secret to your success was, what would you say?
I would say two things. The first is each other. Be sentimental about it. There’s so much trust [you have to] put in other people, whether it’s myself with artists, Joey with artists, the songwriters with artists, or executives to each other. If we didn’t do so much over-communicating and making the artists feel in complete control of their career, especially with our business model, I don’t think it would’ve worked this well.
The other thing is we put songs over anything else. A hit record can launch a small name or an unheard of name. A bad record can slow down a huge name. It’s such a simple statement, but sometimes we find that too many people are worried about the “how,” the “when,” and the “if” that they may breeze right past the “what.” Maybe it’s just the way I started in the music business, but nothing comes before a song.
In Pictures: Opry Celebrates Memorial Day Weekend With Special Salute The Troops Performance
/by Lydia FarthingPictured (L-R): Jake Hoot, Riders In The Sky’s Jeff Taylor, Woody Paul, Doug Green, Fred LaBour, Cam, The War And Treaty’s Tanya Blount, Michael Trotter, and Craig Morgan. Photo: Rachael Black
The Grand Ole Opry saluted the U.S. Military on Tuesday night (May 24) with a return of its Salute the Troops Opry performance.
Among the artists who performed were Cam, Opry members Dailey & Vincent, Riley Green, Jake Hoot, Riders In The Sky, Opry member and U.S. Army veteran Craig Morgan, as well as husband and wife duo The War And Treaty, both of whom are U.S. Army veterans.
Opry’s Salute The Troops red carpet. Photo: Rachael Black
The Opry and its presenting sponsor Humana, partnering with DAV, invited men and women of the U.S. military and DAV members, as well as spouses, children, and parents of service members to walk the red carpet into the Opry House for the evening’s special show. Many of the night’s performers greeted the honored guests at the end of the red carpet.
This year’s Opry Salute the Troops was filmed to air as a special Opry Live on Memorial Day weekend (May 28) on the Circle Network, Circle All Access Facebook, Twitter and YouTube. The show will air live on WSM Radio and will also be heard on SiriusXM, Channel 59 Willie’s Roadhouse.
Craig Morgan with Salute the Troops show attendees. Photo: Rachael Black
Puctured (L-R): Retired Army Lt. Gen. Keith Huber, a senior advisor for the veterans and leadership initiatives at MTSU was a guest announcer representing The Daniels Center and Command Sergeant Major Andrew Lombardo. Sgt. Lombardo served with General Huber in Afghanistan, the general’s final Army assignment, and was awarded his second Bronze Star by the general. Photo: Rachael Black
On The Row: Hit Songwriter Greylan James Leans In To Artist Voice
/by LB CantrellGreylan James. Photo: MusicRow
East Tennessee native Greylan James has been writing songs in Music City since he was 18.
The talented songwriter signed his first publishing deal with Bob DiPiero, where he honed in his craft for writing. “I watched Bob write amazing songs. I got to learn from him for a couple of years,” James said in a recent visit with MusicRow.
He signed to UMPG Nashville in 2018, and has since secured cuts with Kenny Chesney, Chris Young, Blake Shelton, Cole Swindell and Chris Janson.
Greylan James with MusicRow staffers. Photo: MusicRow
“I fell in love with songwriting and really wanted to be good at it. I wanted to be able to tell my own stories. For the past few years, that’s what I’ve been doing. In the back of mind I was always thinking, ‘I want to sing these songs one day instead of hearing other guys sing them.'”
Now, with some songwriting success behind him, James is stepping behind the microphone by releasing new music. In addition to UMPG, he has aligned with Morris Higham for management and WME for booking.
James’ first artist release was the moody “Anything Cold,” which he co-wrote with Abram Dean, Jason Massey and Josh Dorr. James, along with Massey, shared in the recording and production duties as well as playing every instrument on the track.
His second release is “Make the Best Memories,” a country diddy co-written with Ben Hayslip and Chase McGill about growing up in a small town. Like “Anything Cold,” James and Massey recorded and produced the track together. James, a very talented musician, played every instrument.
“As soon as I wrote [‘Make the Best Memories’], the song got put on hold by a couple of artists,” James said. “This is one of the first songs I’ve written that I wanted to keep for myself.”
A standout of James’ artist catalog is an unreleased track called “Walls.” The musician’s guitar skills shine in an acoustic performance of the song that talks about growing up through the perspective of walls.
This past year James celebrated his first hit as a songwriter with Chesney’s “Happy Does.”
“That song changed my life,” he said. “I got to see my name on the MusicRow Songwriter Chart! That was really cool. I took a screen shot and sent it to my mom and said, ‘See, I’m doing okay!'”
The tune was a full circle moment for James, who has followed the Knoxville, Tennessee native’s career his whole life.
“I grew up loving Kenny Chesney,” he said. “They say don’t meet your heroes, but he’s been really good to me.”
Jeannie Seely, Kelly Lang, Mandy Barnett Among Honorees At SWIFT Alice Awards Gala
/by Lorie HollabaughPictured (L-R): Kelly Lang, Jeannie Seely and Mandy Barnett. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography
The Nashville Women in Film & Television SWIFT ALICE Awards Ceremony and Gala Dinner was held on Saturday, May 21 at the Carlocker Motorcars Bentley showroom in Brentwood, Tennessee.
Among those honored at the local event were Jeannie Seely, who was honored with the Legacy Award, and Kelly Lang, who received the Icon Award. Other recipients included Beverly Keel (Cornerstone Award), Gisela Moore (Leadership Award), Candace Saunders (Encore Award), Mandy Barnett (Woman of Excellence Award) and Lyn Plantinga (Luminous Woman Award).
“It truly was an honor to receive the Legacy Award from this prestigious group of accomplished ladies. Having served on the Board of SAG/AFTRA for some 30 years, I am very familiar with the challenges women have faced pursuing their chosen careers. I appreciate the legacy handed down by the generation before me, and I am proud of the progress we have made during our era,” expresses Seely. “Hopefully, I am earning this award by mentoring those who will be carrying the torch into the future. Thank you to WIFT for a wonderful evening, including the opportunity to meet so many inspiring women.”
“To be recognized by your peers for what you do is much appreciated and never taken for granted,” shares Lang. ”To be chosen for the Icon Award is very humbling since there are so many other talented women who could have been selected. I am deeply touched to be acknowledged in such a special way.”
The Alice Awards, named after Alice Guy-Blache, the world’s first female director, recognize women who have demonstrated perseverance in the pursuit of their dreams despite difficulties, hardships, and life’s circumstances.
Brooke Eden Partners With RIAA On New Music Matters Initiative
/by Lorie HollabaughBrooke Eden. Photo: Ford Fairchild
Brooke Eden has partnered with the RIAA on a new Music Matters initiative, designed to demonstrate how music can enable our authentic voice, give us purpose, connect us, and give us courage to navigate life’s challenges.
As part of the multi-event-driven initiative, Eden will appear in schools, medical centers and recording studios throughout the year. Music Matters is a cause that’s deeply personal for Eden, who just last year used the support of her friends and her music to embrace her own LGBTQ+ community.
Music Matters with RIAA will officially launch on June 23 as Eden joins representative David Cicilline, Chair of the Congressional LGBTQ+ Equality Caucus.
“It’s important to the RIAA to support artists using their voice and their music where it matters most,” says Jackie Jones, RIAA VP of Artist and Industry Relations. “By creating this program, our hope is to provide a platform that allows artists to speak to policymakers directly about the importance of music and create tangible moments that show how music makes a difference in our lives.”
“This effort is an opportunity to help others find confidence and their better selves,” Eden adds. “I’ve been going through so much healing myself, learning and unlearning, how to be a better human and I hope that comes out in the music and my writing, which is truly my therapy.”
Eden has used her personal journey to self-acceptance to create music with the same message. Since making her debut, Eden has shared stages with Garth Brooks, Tim McGraw, Dan + Shay, Florida Georgia Line, Kane Brown and Keith Urban. She recently made her ACM Awards performance debut, joining Parmalee and Blanco Brown for their Platinum No. 1 hit “Just the Way.”
New music from Eden is slated to arrive later this year.
Tanya Tucker Signs With Scott Adkins For Management
/by Lorie HollabaughScott Adkins and Tanya Tucker. Photo: Derrek Kupish
Tanya Tucker has tapped her longtime publicist Scott Adkins, of newly-formed Adkins Entertainment, to represent her as manager in all facets of her career. She also recently retained Kurt Vitolo of K V Financial Group for business management.
Tucker will continue to be represented by Adkins Publicity, and Jonathan Levine, Lenore Kinder and Kiely Mosiman at Wasserman Music for agency representation. Derrek Kupish, Tanya’s longtime photographer, cinematographer and social media manager, has been named Creative Director to execute Tucker’s vision, brand and image.
“I wake up with a new To Do List every day! Scott and I have accomplished a lot together and we’ve got a lot more to do!” Tucker shares.
“Tanya is a globally revered treasure. When Tanya speaks or sings, within a millisecond, you know it’s her,” Adkins adds. “Her stylistic voice and fierce, badass personality are synonymous with her legacy as a media mogul, who continues to reign as a bonafide superstar entertainer. Tanya may be celebrating 50 years since releasing her mega hit ‘Delta Dawn,’ but she’s only scratched the surface of her indelible career!”
Tucker will continue her “Hard Luck Tour” on June 4 in Cherokee, North Carolina. The trek will run through December.
Lauren Daigle, Kirk Franklin, Walker Hayes, More Set To Perform On K-LOVE Fan Awards
/by Lorie HollabaughLauren Daigle, Kirk Franklin, Walker Hayes, For King & Country, and many more are part of the just-announced lineup of performers for the upcoming K-LOVE Fan Awards, set to take place this Sunday (May 29).
This year’s ninth annual celebration will feature several collaborative performances, including Blanca with Dante Bowe, CeCe Winans with Lauren Daigle, Jonathan Traylor with Jordan Feliz, Kirk Franklin with Maverick City Music, and Riley Clemmons with country star Walker Hayes. Other performances include Anne Wilson, Cain, Chris Tomlin, Elevation Worship, Katy Nichole, Matthew West, Phil Wickham, Tauren Wells, and TobyMac.
Presenters at the ceremony will include Danny Gokey, Jimmie Allen, Mac Powell, Matt Maher, Mike Weaver, Sadie Robertson Huff, The Skit Guys, and Rebecca St. James with her mom Helen Smallbone.
Nominees for the 2022 K-LOVE Fan Awards were announced last week, with Anne Wilson, Casting Crowns, For King & Country, Katy Nichole, Maverick City Music, TobyMac, and Zach Williams leading with the most nominations. Fans can vote for their favorites here.
The biggest fan weekend in Christian music will take place May 27-29 in Nashville, with a kick-off concert Friday at 7 p.m., followed by an emerging artist’s showcase and songwriter’s showcase on Saturday, and the annual Sunday morning worship service, all at the Gaylord Opryland Hotel.
The Opry will welcome the Fan Awards on May 29, hosted by ASCAP Christian Songwriter of the Year Matthew West and ten-time Grammy-nominee Tauren Wells, airing on TBN June 3.
My Music Row Story: Big Loud’s Seth England
/by LB CantrellSeth England
This edition of “My Music Row Story” is sponsored by Worldwide Stages.
As Partner and CEO, Seth England leads Big Loud as one of the most unique and fastest-rising businesses in Nashville; a trailblazing conglomerate that combines music publishing, management, label services, and capital investment and has changed the industry in the process. The label’s roster includes country hitmakers Morgan Wallen, Jake Owen, Chris Lane, and Hardy, as well as rising stars Hailey Whitters, Ernest, Lily Rose, MacKenzie Porter, and more.
Since joining Big Loud Publishing in 2008, England has proven his knack for landing massive song placements, signing cutting-edge, genre altering acts, and finding unique partnerships that further the label’s innovative goals, as he did when co-founding female-driven label Songs and Daughters with ACM-winning songwriter Nicolle Galyon. Big Loud Records has earned multiple Gold and Platinum RIAA certifications, 12 No. 1 U.S. airplay hits, and more than 5.5 billion global streams in 2021 alone. England has been named to multiple Billboard power player lists, including 2021 Indie Power Players and Country Power Players.
MusicRow: Where did you grow up?
I was born in Terre Haute, Indiana. I grew up in Illinois right across the state line in a small town called Marshall, Illinois.
How did you get into the music business?
The pathway to it started for me when I was a junior in high school. It was by way of sports. I was a football player and I was going go play football in college. I was taking all sorts of recruiting visits and one of the problems of finding a place that I wanted to go to was the academic options [the schools’ offered]. I knew I wanted to do something unique and different. I was chasing that “never have to work a day in your life” thought, chasing something I was passionate about. At that time, I was thinking I would probably end up in sports. I ended up going to college at Greenville University and double majored in music business and marketing.
While I was in school, one choice just led to the next opportunity and then to the next one. I just kept trusting myself and those around me to keep walking through certain doors. I was promoting shows while I was in college during the off season, primarily. I was able to make a little money, not too much. Little did I know that later on when I would get to Nashville and meet Craig [Wiseman], the thing he loved most about me was that I had been a show promoter and I knew the live touring aspect.
Pictured (L-R): Big Loud’s Craig Wiseman, Joey Moi, Seth England. Photo: Courtesy of Big Loud
When did you start coming to Nashville?
I started going after my sophomore year of college. I knew that I wanted to get my foot in the door. My first summer in Nashville, I interned in the mornings for Harlan Howard Songs. I kept promoting shows [throughout college] so I was able to make a little money, save up, and when I came to Nashville in the summers, I could spend 40 hours a week doing my internships because I didn’t have the opportunity to come down in the fall or spring. I came down knowing I really wanted to get into publishing or A&R and I did an internship with Sara Knabe. She was the creative director at Harlan Howard Songs and she had just gotten out of Belmont a few years before that. In the afternoon I’d go to Vector Management. I did that my whole first summer.
You joined Big Loud in 2008. What was your vision for the company in the early years?
It starts with Craig. I met Craig in 2006. At that time, he was trying to do a lot of things. He had shown aspirations even before his partnership with Joey [Moi] and I that he wanted to do more than just traditional publishing. At the time he had Big Loud Shirt publishing, he had a joint venture with Extreme Writers Group in Nashville, he had an office in London, and he probably had 10 to 15 writers. It was a very A&R-centric company, but most of the cuts revolved around Craig. That was something he desired to evolve. He wanted to make sure the company was known as a successful publishing company for songwriters. I could tell quickly where his energy was at, his priorities, and the way that he saw the business. I had a feeling he was going to get into much more. I couldn’t have told you then where we were going to go, but I could just feel some energy between the two of us. The first couple years we started to talk about all the great things we had, but also the things we didn’t have. Joey joined us a few years later.
Photo: Courtesy of Big Loud
With the three of you leading the charge, Big Loud has become one of the most competitive indies in the Nashville music business. How do you feel that the company is different than other labels?
All three of us—Craig, Joey, and I—would be lying if we didn’t say that over the years while developing into this plan, we weren’t watching other record labels in town. We worked with Florida Georgia Line for years and worked within the Big Machine halls. We learned a lot from Scott [Borchetta] and Jimmy [Harnen] and some of their great executives there. Along the way, you pick up things you want to do like [other companies] and then how you want to do a few things different.
I think [the way we approach] artist development is different in a lot of ways. If you want to approach artist development as just one song or even three to five songs, it’s just not enough. No matter how good you are it just won’t be enough. The same is true if your first song to five songs doesn’t work. It wasn’t going to be enough anyway, so let’s keep going. Don’t get discouraged. Keep swinging. I feel like if the artist is good enough to come to our record label, we need to set up an ecosystem around them where they get an unlimited amount of swings at the ball. We preach that because we do believe and we’ve seen many examples of success by letting artists continue to try and swing. They build.
When do you feel most fulfilled in your role now?
When people acknowledge our process—not for any ego reason—we’re just so proud of our process. We’re so proud of the belief systems shared between Craig, Joey and I. It’s not just about music and business, it’s really about people, culture and camaraderie. We’ve worked very hard for that and we sometimes may be the ones to see the benefits. It takes a lot of additional man hours to care about culture. I get compliments every so often about that, people are really starting to notice. With the more forward-facing success some of our clients have, people may be looking into what’s going on behind the scenes.
Photo: Courtesy of Big Loud
Who have been some of your mentors along the way?
Certainly Craig and Joey. They have become brothers to me. Monte and Avery Lipman are big mentors in the record label space. Clarence Spalding in the Nashville artist management space. He ushered Big Loud into the Maverick partnership. That was such a special time with him. Brian O’Connell in concert promotion has always been a good friend and never makes us feel stupid for something we don’t know. Certain acts of ours have gotten bigger than we ever imagined. He was right there with us, teaching.
What’s some of the best advice you’ve ever received?
There’s a reason the word “music” comes before “business.” I think about it all the time. In a modern music era, we’ve never had more information ever. While analytics and data are guiding lights for the business part of it, I still remind myself that music comes before business. When we’re talking to our artists, we certainly need them to know that our agenda as a record label is to still encourage our artists to make music with their ears and gut inspiration. We are not making music for TikTok. We’re not making music for anyone other than yourself and the fans that you’re building. After you release it, then we can look at things pragmatically and make sure we give you great recommendations and best practices on how to elevate your career with your music.
If someone were to ask you what the secret to your success was, what would you say?
I would say two things. The first is each other. Be sentimental about it. There’s so much trust [you have to] put in other people, whether it’s myself with artists, Joey with artists, the songwriters with artists, or executives to each other. If we didn’t do so much over-communicating and making the artists feel in complete control of their career, especially with our business model, I don’t think it would’ve worked this well.
The other thing is we put songs over anything else. A hit record can launch a small name or an unheard of name. A bad record can slow down a huge name. It’s such a simple statement, but sometimes we find that too many people are worried about the “how,” the “when,” and the “if” that they may breeze right past the “what.” Maybe it’s just the way I started in the music business, but nothing comes before a song.
Country Guitar Great & Top Showman Thom Bresh Passes
/by Robert K OermannThom Bresh
Hotshot guitar picker Thom Bresh, who scored a top 10 country hit with 1976’s “Home Made Love,” has died at age 74.
Bresh was widely admired as a showman by his peers. In addition to his dazzling instrumental skills, he was a fine humorist, a songwriter, an impressionist, a designer of guitars and a TV personality. He was the son of Country Music Hall of Fame member Merle Travis (1917-1983), whose guitar legacy he carried forward. On disc, he collaborated with Chet Atkins, Jerry Reed, Hank Thompson, Lane Brody and Steve Wariner, as well as his father.
Following her 1947-48 liaison with Merle Travis, Bresh’s mother Ruth Johnson married photographer Bud Bresh. They raised Thom as their son in Southern California. As a young man, Thom Bresh learned that Travis was his biological father, but he vowed out of respect to not speak of it until after Bud Bresh’s death (in 1987).
He was precocious as a musician, initially performing at age 3. By age 7, he was working as a juvenile stunt man in cowboy movies. He first entertained as a musician on TV at age 11 in Los Angeles.
During his high school and college years, Thom Bresh studied music theory and orchestrations. He appeared on stage in productions of the musicals Finian’s Rainbow, The Music Man and Harvey. He performed in a rock band called The Crescents, which charted with its instrumental “Pink Dominos” in 1964. At age 16, he appeared with western-swing bandleader Hank Penny in Las Vegas.
In 1971, he recorded the topical single “D.B. Cooper Where Are You” for Kapp Records. He next signed with MGM for a flurry of singles in 1974. He hit pay dirt on Farr Records with “Home Made Love,” followed by “Sad Country Love Song” (1976).
Bresh relocated to Nashville, signed with ABC-Dot and issued two albums and six singles in 1977-79. These included a remake of Merle Travis’s co-written “Smoke! Smoke! Smoke! That Cigarette” (1978), on which Bresh included 13 celebrity impersonations. All of his best remembered discs were produced by Jimmy Bowen. Thom Bresh was nominated as the ACM’s Top New Male Vocalist in 1977.
He hosted a Canadian TV series titled Nashville Swing. He also branched out into record production. His 1981 work with his father, Travis Picking, was nominated for a Grammy Award. He also produced Lane Brody’s 1983 recording of “Over You,” which occurred on the soundtrack of Tender Mercies and was nominated for an Oscar. He and Brody charted with a 1982 duet on Liberty Records, “When It Coms to Love.”
In the 1990s, Thom Bresh became popular in Europe. He opened for Brenda Lee in Las Vegas and appeared on the national television shows of Rich Little, Dinah Shore, Lee Greenwood, Barbara Mandrell and Mike Douglas. In 1996, he issued his instrumental CD, Wires to the Wood.
Thom Bresh became a producer/director for music videos, concert TV specials and home-video packages. He also designed several guitar models and was featured in the pages of Guitar Player and similar publications. Bresh was particularly noted for his double-sided stage guitar, dubbed Dualette. One side had steel strings, while the other was in a classical mode with nylon strings.
In the 2000s, Bresh became widely respected as a Nashville guitar instructor. He also indulged his passion for photography.
Thom Bresh was diagnosed with cancer of the esophagus in 2021. He died on May 23. Funeral arrangements have not been announced.
Black River Publishing & Sony Music Publishing Sign Global Admin Deal
/by LB CantrellPictured (L-R): Rusty Gaston, Rebekah Gordon, Josh Van Valkenburg, Gordon Kerr. Photo: Drew DeSirey, Black River Entertainment
Black River Publishing and Sony Music Publishing Nashville have partnered for a worldwide publishing administration deal.
With the partnership, SMP will provide its global services to Black River’s publishing catalog, which includes songs written by Kelsea Ballerini, Josh Osborne, Jacob Davis, Doug Johnson, Forest Glen Whitehead, and more.
Of the deal, Sony Music Publishing Nashville CEO, Rusty Gaston, says, “Independent music publishers play a vital role in our Music Row community, and Black River has done an amazing job of identifying and developing some of the biggest hit songwriters in Nashville. It is an honor for Sony Music Publishing to support Black River in their efforts.”
Black River Publishing and its roster have celebrated numerous awards and accolades since its inception twelve years ago. The company has celebrated 30 No. 1 songs and multiple Grammy awards, including for Best Country Song with Kacey Musgraves‘ “Merry Go ‘Round” (2013) and for Best Contemporary Christian Performance/Song with For King & Country‘s “God Only Knows” (2019).
“Black River Publishing and our amazingly talented roster of writers are thrilled to be joining forces with our friends at Sony Music Publishing,” shares Black River VP of Publishing, Rebekah Gordon. “The passion for music and songwriters on both the creative and administrative teams is unmatched. I’m looking forward to celebrating many successes together.”
Black River Publishing’s roster includes Black River recording artists Josiah Siska, MaRynn Taylor, and Josh Wilson; artist-writers Hannah Kerr, Pryor Baird, and Bryan Simpson; songwriter/producers Bobby Huff, Blake Ruby, Dan Wilson, and Jason Earley; and Grammy-winning songwriter, producer and artist Josh Kerr. Black River Publishing is part of the Black River Entertainment family under the Pegula Sports & Entertainment company portfolio.
In Pictures: Carrie Underwood Wraps ‘Reflection: The Las Vegas Residency’ For 2022
/by Lorie HollabaughCarrie Underwood. Photo: Jeff Johnson
Carrie Underwood has wrapped up her sold-out, 2022 dates for the ongoing “Reflection: The Las Vegas Residency” at Resorts World Theatre.
The first artist to grace the largest and tallest stage in Las Vegas, Underwood opened the new 5,000-capacity theatre with a sold-out run in December 2021, followed by 18 sold-out stints in March, April and May 2022.
She’ll resume the Resorts World Las Vegas residency in 2023 following her just-announced arena “Denim & Rhinestones Tour,” which will kick off on Oct. 15 in Greenville, South Carolina. She will make stops in 43 cities, including New York’s Madison Square Garden, Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena, and L.A.’s Crypto.com Arena before concluding in Seattle on March 17.
2023 dates for the Reflection Residency will be announced at a later date.
Carrie Underwood. Photo: Jeff Johnson
Carrie Underwood. Photo: Jeff Johnson
Carrie Underwood. Photo: Jeff Johnson
Carrie Underwood. Photo: Jeff Johnson