Hardy, Jameson Rodgers, Randy Montana, Hunter Phelps Headline Inaugural ‘Coulda, Shoulda, Woulda’ Benefit

Pictured (L-R): Hunter Phelps, Hardy, Tatum Allsep (Founder/CEO, Music Health Alliance), Jameson Rodgers, Randy Montana. Photo: Hunter Berry

Music Health Alliance’s inaugural “Coulda, Shoulda, Woulda” event took place last night headlined by four of Music City’s hottest writers: Hardy, Randy Montana, Hunter Phelps and Jameson Rodgers.

Pictured (L-R): Randy Montana, Hunter Phelps, Jameson Rodgers, and Hardy. Photo: Hunter Berry

The four performed songs in the round that “coulda, shoulda, woulda” been a smash along with their biggest hits during the evening of stories and songs. Hosted by Country Countdown USA’s Lon Helton at City Winery, the event raised $125,000 to support the Nashville-based non-profit’s free healthcare programs and life-saving advocacy services.

Based in Nashville, Music Health Alliance has provided free healthcare advocacy and support to more than 18,000 music industry members across 49 states in the non-profit’s first nine years by providing access to medicine, mental health resources, COVID-19 relief, diagnostic tests, lifesaving transplants, end of life care and many other necessary services.

On The Cover: Jason Aldean Graces Cover Of MusicRow Magazine’s 2022 InCharge Issue

MusicRow, Nashville’s leading music industry trade publication, is proud to announce the 2022 release of its flagship print directory, InCharge. Multi-Platinum entertainer and country mainstay, Jason Aldean, graces its cover.

Over the past 16 years, Aldean has released nine studio albums and bolstered 26 No. 1s, 15 billion streams, and over 20 million albums sold. With his tenth studio project—a double-album titled Macon, Georgia—releasing on April 22, Aldean is gearing up to take the road this summer on his “Rock N’ Roll Cowboy Tour.” The trek will launch on July 15 in Scranton, Pennsylvania and will span 34 cities.

MusicRow‘s InCharge issue highlights some of the most influential music industry executives in the Nashville entertainment community. This year’s edition includes 381 profiles which are accompanied by contact information, career biographies, and detailed board and organizational membership affiliations.

This annual guide also includes a company appendix, record label staff appendix, and a professional categories appendix, which lists executives by their areas of expertise, including label, talent agency, management, music publishing, legal, finance, performing rights organizations and more.

“Our industry is filled with both opportunities and challenges. The leaders featured in this publication are able to identify and navigate both successfully while guiding the industry forward. From the restructuring of distribution channels due to changing technology, to unexpected hardships created by a pandemic, these executives champion and lead our industry through triumph and evolution,” says MusicRow Owner/Publisher, Sherod Robertson.

In this issue of InCharge, MusicRow also takes a deep dive into the world of the metaverse as it becomes more and more buzzworthy in our culture. Tracing the journey that its cutting-edge technology has taken so far, this article also looks ahead to potential uses pertaining specifically to the music industry and opportunities that the metaverse may offer in the years to come.

Single copies of MusicRow’s 2022 InCharge issue are available for purchase at musicrow.com for $110, and are included with yearly MusicRow memberships.

Date Announced For 15th Annual ACM Honors

The 15th Annual ACM Honors will take place at Nashville’s historic Ryman Auditorium on Wednesday, Aug. 24.

The evening will celebrate the recipients of the ACM’s Special Awards, including the Songwriter of the Year Award, Studio Recording Awards and Industry Awards from the 57th ACM Awards cycle, which are voted on by the Academy’s Board of Directors.

This year’s ACM Honors will acknowledge and celebrate the achievements of this year’s Songwriter of the Year, Hardy. This award is presented to an individual who stood out as the top wordsmith of the past year, helping to create the stories that artists share with their fans through song. Notable winners from the past 15 years include Rhett Akins, Hillary Lindsey, Shane McAnally, and Lori McKenna.

Other Special Awards categories include the Cliffie Stone Icon Award, the Gene Weed Milestone Award, the Gary Haber Lifting Lives Award, the Jim Reeves International Award, the Mae Boren Axton Service Award, the Merle Haggard Spirit Award, the Poet’s Award, and the Tex Ritter Film Award.

The Academy’s Studio Recording Awards recognize the creators behind the music, with categories including Bass Player of the Year, Drummer of the Year, Acoustic Guitar Player of the Year, Piano/Keys Player of the Year, Specialty Instrument(s) Player of the Year, Electric Guitar Player of the Year, Audio Engineer of the Year, and Producer of the Year. Notable winners in the Studio Recording Awards categories in the past 15 years include Busbee, Dann Huff, Jay Joyce, Jimmie Lee Sloas, and Ilya Toshinskiy, among others.

Finally, ACM Industry Awards recognize venues and talent buyers/promoters who have bought or promoted a set number of country concerts, is in good standing with all agents/vendors, and helps promote country music ticket sales. The various categories honored include Casino of the Year – Theater, Casino of the Year – Arena, Fair/Rodeo of the Year, Festival of the Year, Club of the Year, Theater of the Year, Outdoor Venue of the Year, Arena of the Year, Don Romeo Talent Buyer of the Year, and Promoter of the Year.

Additional details including this year’s winners, host, performers, and general event information will be announced in the coming weeks.

Janie Fricke Announces Tour Dates In Support Of 40th Anniversary As A Hitmaker

Janie Fricke

Janie Fricke has announced some tour dates beginning this summer that will run throughout the end of the year.

The decades-long hitmaker will launch her summer run on May 5 at the Leo J Welder Center for the Performing Arts in Victoria, Texas, and visit Dallas, Lubbock, Kerrville and other Lone Star State cities, along with stops in Illinois, Montana, Indiana, and more through the end of 2022 into the New Year.

Fricke has released 25 albums and 36 hit singles, and in recent years, Sony Music Entertainment made four of Fricke’s classic albums available to fans on Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube, and other digital platforms via the Legacy Digital Vault campaign, including The First Word In Memory, The Very Best of Janie Fricke, Black & White and Saddle in the Wind.

The collection of albums features the 18-time chart-topper’s biggest hits, including “It Ain’t Easy Being Easy,” “Tell Me a Lie,” “She’s Single Again” and more. Legacy Recordings also released The Essential Janie Fricke to all digital service providers.

Janie Fricke Tour Dates:
5/5/22 – Leo J Welder Center for the Performing Arts – Victoria, TX
5/6/22 – Brauntex Performing Arts Theatre – New Braunfels, TX
6/4/22 – The Big Dance – Dallas, TX
6/16/22 – Sesser City Park – Sesser, IL
7/8/22 – Cactus Theater – Lubbock, TX
7/10/22 – Cailloux Theater – Kerrville, TX
7/16/22 – Tri-Lakes Center for Arts – Palmer Lake, CO
7/22/22 – Sisseton Performing Arts Center – Sisseton, SD
7/30/22 – Blue Gate Performing Arts Center – Shipshewana, IN
8/6/22 – Old Town Theatre – Huntsville, TX
8/26/22 – Music Ranch Montana – Livingston, MT
9/23/22 – Arlington Music Hall – Arlington, TX
12/2/22 – Janie Fricke’s A Country Cowgirl’s Christmas – Granbury, TX
12/11/22 – Janie Frickie’s A Country Cowgirl’s Christmas – Hopewell, VA
1/7/23 – Rosemary Clausen Performing Arts Center – Holstein, IA

Dustin Lynch’s ‘Thinking ‘Bout You’ Breaks Record As Longest-Running Top 10

Dustin Lynch. Photo: The Dwyers

At 27 weeks, Dustin Lynch‘s Platinum, six-week No. 1 collaboration “Thinking ‘Bout You (feat. MacKenzie Porter)” has made history as the longest-running Top 10 single since the Billboard Country Airplay chart launched in January 1990.

Surpassing his four-week No. 1 mark set by 2017’s “Small Town Boy,” the Lynch, Andy Albert, Hunter Phelps and Will Weatherly co-write is Lynch’s eighth U.S. and second Canadian No. 1 at country radio, as well as his third career chart-topper as a songwriter. The song also gives Porter her first U.S. and fourth Canadian No. 1, and has racked up over 300 million global on-demand streams to date.

“Wow! Adding this stat to ‘Thinking ‘Bout You’ is so huge. It further validates what we all felt with this song, and it’s so rewarding to see it continue to connect with listeners,” shares Lynch.

Lynch is once again climbing the charts with his current single “Party Mode,” which scored his biggest add week and highest career debut. He returns to the road this week for back-to-back shows at Appalachian Wireless Arena in Pikeville, Kentucky on Thursday (April 21), and The Anthem in Washington, DC, on Friday (April 22).

Chris Stapleton, Brandi Carlile, More To Headline 2022 Pilgrimage Festival

The lineup for this year’s Pilgrimage Music & Cultural Festival has been unveiled with Chris Stapleton, Brandi Carlile, Jon Batiste and The Avett Brothers at the top of the bill.

In the event’s eighth year, artists such as Lake Street Dive, Elle King, Lennon Stella, Trampled by Turtles, Dawes, Better Than Ezra, Marty Stuart, Celisse, Molly Tuttle & Golden Highway, Butch Walker, Black Joe Lewis, Adia Victoria, Bones Owens, Brittney Spencer, Jensen McRae and more are scheduled to perform across five stages.

The annual festival will return on Sept. 24 & 25 at The Park at Harlinsdale Farm in Franklin, Tennessee. Two-day GA and VIP passes go on sale tomorrow (April 21) at 10 a.m. CT.

Pilgrimage Music & Cultural Festival aims to boost tourism in Williamson County while also supporting the local community. Last year, a portion of every ticket sold was donated to members of the music industry in need through the Recording Academy’s nonprofit MusiCares, in addition to Friends of Franklin Parks for capital projects at The Park at Harlinsdale Farm.

My Music Row Story: Fusion Music’s Daniel Miller

Daniel Miller

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.

 

Daniel Miller is Managing Partner of Fusion Music where he and his team guide the careers of Martina McBride, Riley Green, Lily Rose, Cassadee Pope, Laine Hardy, and pop artist Jeffrey James. Miller, who has 20-plus years of management experience, opened Fusion Music in 2013 and aligned with Red Light in 2014. In 2015, he was named to the MTSU College of Media and Entertainment Wall of Fame, and has served as an adjunct professor there.

MusicRow: Where did you grow up? How did you get into the music business?

It’s hard to believe that this August will mark 25 years from when I moved here. I grew up on a small family farm in rural Missouri. My only exposure to the outside world was the local country radio station and the three or four TV channels our antenna would pick up. I was a finance and banking major at the University of Missouri in the early ’90s when I made friends with the owner of the local country nightclub who managed a band out of Nashville. I soon transferred to MTSU for their Recording Industry Management program. On the day I moved, my mom took me to lunch at the old Shoney’s on Demonbreun and said, “I have no idea what you’re about to do, but I know you’ll figure it out.”

Pictured (L-R): Chris Ferren (Fusion Music), Martina McBride, Daniel Miller at ACM Honors in 2019

Take me through your career journey thus far.

I had only been at MTSU a few weeks when I had the chance to volunteer for the radio remotes at the 1997 CMA Awards. I met Wes Vause, who eventually got tired of me badgering him over email and introduced me to Schatzi Hageman. They ran their independent PR firms out of a shared office space and gave me my first opportunity to learn the business. It’s hard to even remember how we got so much done without Internet access or cell phones back then, but we did.

After graduating from MTSU, I took a position with Simon Renshaw’s management company handling ticketing for the Dixie Chicks 2000 “Fly Tour.” Later that year, I moved over to Borman Entertainment in the middle of the first Tim McGraw and Faith Hill “Soul2Soul Tour,” assisting the great, late Joni Foraker. I spent the next 13 years there working in various support positions. In 2007, Lady A walked in the door and that was my first real shot at being an overzealous day-to-day manager. Gary Borman was a brilliant visionary to learn from.

When did you start your own company?

In the summer of 2013, I was convinced it was time to step out on my own, so I created Fusion Music. It was the wrong time, and I made every mistake imaginable, but no one could have convinced me otherwise. I quickly found out what I knew and mostly what I didn’t. Six months into it, Coran Capshaw extended the opportunity to partner with Red Light Management. His knowledge and intuition are highly underrated and Red Light gave us a place to incubate our business. We still work with them across all our artist projects.

Today our roster includes Martina McBride, Riley Green, Lily Rose, Cassadee Pope, Laine Hardy, and developing pop artist, Jeffrey James. My original business plan had a concept for content development but aside from a couple TV production credits, it didn’t pan out as I had hoped…until now. We recently started consulting on brand direction for The Morning Hangover, and have begun looking at unscripted TV concepts. We’re also about to start construction on a content studio adjacent to our new office in Berry Hill.

Pictured (L-R): Dylan McGraw (Fusion Music), Daniel Miller, Lily Rose, Daira Eamon (Lily Rose fiance), Lexi Howder (OH Creative) at the 2022 ACM Awards

We’re not the biggest or flashiest—nor will we ever be—and I’m fiercely protective of our team and the culture we’ve built. Chris Ferren was our first intern eight years ago, and he was recently elevated to VP of Artist & Business Development. He, Nicholas Garvin, Danielle Broome, Dylan McGraw, our co-managers and the extended management team we work with are relentless in finding the best opportunities we can to set our artists up for success.

When did Martina join the roster? How did you two come together?

We met with Martina in the fall of 2015 and I told her, “I know your catalog. I know your career.” Working with an iconic artist was a bucket list dream of mine and over the past six years, we have worked to build upon her incredible catalog and touring history.

You have several artists who are owning their own lane such as Lily Rose and Riley Green. What would you say is the ticket to developing a new artist who is different from your ordinary country artist?

It’s important to me that each of our artists have a unique career path and none are too similar or in direct competition with another. We don’t commit to a client relationship unless we can make a significant difference. The vision is ultimately theirs and we work to surround them with the resources needed to reach their goals. Then we move the goalpost. The secret recipe lies within the artists themselves, whether they know it at first or not.

I don’t think this is unique to us, but we look closely at each artist’s life—from childhood to the present moment—and try to understand their values and what motivates them. The superstar armor comes off at the door and we work as partners to create the most authentic connection between who they are and what they sing about. That’s easier said than done.

Pictured (L-R): Daniel Miller, Riley Green, RAC Clark, Zach Sutton (Red Light Management)

Riley Green knows his brand with laser-sharp precision and is a natural-born entertainer. He already had an incredibly passionate team around him when we came on board a few years ago. Our focus has been to show how who he is off stage informs the lyrics in his songs.

WME brought Lily Rose to us. I was not familiar with her music yet and until then had refused to use TikTok or take artists emerging from the platform seriously. She showed me how wrong I was. Her progressive approach challenges us to find a unique cross-section of fans influenced by a completely different generation of music and her fans are unconcerned with the genre confines.

What is something people might not know about what you do?

Philanthropic work is required of the team and expected of our artists. We owe our privilege and success to society whenever possible. The Academy of Country Music gave me an opportunity to serve on their board of directors a few years ago and I quickly learned more about ACM Lifting Lives and the significant impact it makes on our community and countless other benefactors. After witnessing the insurmountable reach of their COVID-19 Response Fund, I was honored to accept a leadership position on Lifting Lives’ board of directors.

When do you feel most fulfilled in your role?

We encourage all our artists to be completely unrealistic with their dreams and then we try our damnedest to bring them to life.  Every big “first”—single release, album release, or tour—is uniquely special. Nothing is more magical than standing at front of house for the top of a big show and hearing the thunderous crowd respond to an artist’s entrance onto the stage. That beats any amount of money you could ever earn.

My other passion is mentoring people up. I had the great privilege to be an adjunct professor for a few semesters at MTSU and loved sharing our daily experience with excited young students. After my time is done on Music Row, I hope to bore students with my stories.

Pictured (L-R): Daniel Miller, Cassadee Pope, Shannon Radel (Rising Star Travel)

What’s the best advice you’ve ever gotten?

Don’t go bankrupt buying your own hype.

Who are some of your mentors?

I was raised by strong, independent women so it’s not surprising that my mentors are also. Schatzi Hageman, Karen Krattinger, JoAnn Burnside, Joni Foraker, Donna Jean Kisshauer, and Sandra Westerman gave me opportunities I didn’t deserve and taught me the business. Ed Hardy, Joe Galante, Clarence Spalding and Paul Worley have been incredible resources over the years.

If you could change anything about the Nashville music industry, what would it be?

We have a songwriting community in Nashville like none other in the world but can’t find a way to properly pay them for their works that fuel the entire industry.

What is one of your favorite experiences in the industry that you will share for the rest of your life?

This job isn’t real life. Most of the world works a whole lot harder for much less money. We have been fortunate enough to have artists tour the world and it is overwhelming when an audience in a foreign country sings back every word of their songs.

Randy Owen, Sara Evans, Jamey Johnson, More Come Together For The World Games Theme Song

The Music of The World Games has shared its new theme song, “Hope of Alabama,” to encapsulate the strength and power of athletes, teams, coaches, entertainers and fans coming together with Birmingham, Alabama’s presentation of the The World Games 2022.

Produced by World Games Artistic Director Dr. Henry Panion III and penned by Alabama’s Randy Owen, his daughter Allison Owen, and Panion, the track represents a broad range of artists from the worlds of rock, country, R&B, gospel, and hip-hop.

The star-studded collaboration features some of Alabama’s most iconic musical stars, including Owen; hip-hop artist Yung Bleu; country stars Sara Evans and Jamey Johnson; Stellar Awards Gospel Artist of the Year pastor Mike Jr.; NBC’s The Voice top contestants Worth the Wait; Rolling Stones’ keyboardist Chuck Leavell; American Idol winners Ruben Studdard and Taylor Hicks; American Idol runner-up Bo Bice; Motown legend Martha Reeves; and the Blind Boys of Alabama.

“This song is a clarion call for the world when we need it the most—a call for hope and unity,” says The World Games 2022 CEO Nick Sellers. “’Hope of Alabama’ is a testament to music’s power to lift humanity to a better place.”

Randy Owen adds,“I want everyone to feel like they’re a part of something larger than just one. A feeling of feeling needed and wanted.”

As the first global event of 2022, The World Games 2022 will kick off on July 7 at Protective Stadium with Unlocking The Magic: Celebrating The Power of The One. Presented by Alabama Power, the presentation will feature live entertainment, special effects, honorable dignitaries and a parade of athletes representing more than 100 countries. Produced by Birmingham-based LRY Media Group, the Opening Ceremony will celebrate Birmingham’s past, present and future. Spoken word artist, musician, educator, and Birmingham native, Sharrif Simmons will deliver a poem in the Opening Ceremonies.

On July 17, the grand finale of The World Games 2022 will commemorate The Games with performances and the opportunity for athletes, fans and volunteers to bid farewell to Birmingham. Presented by Coca-Cola Bottling Company UNITED, the final presentation will include the ceremonial passing of The World Games flag to representatives of the 2025 host city: Chengdu, China.

In Pictures: Black Opry Celebrates First Anniversary With City Winery Bash

CMT’s Rachael Terrell, Black Opry’s Tanner Davenport, CMT’s Leslie Fram, Black Opry’s Holly G. Photo: Jason Davis/Getty Images for CMT

Monday night (April 18) was a big night for diversity in country music as the Black Opry celebrated its first anniversary with an event presented by CMT at Nashville City Winery.

Hosted by Black Opry founder Holly G and comedian Joshua Black, performers during the special event included Aaron Vance, Autumn Nicholas, Crys Matthews, Frankie Staton, Jett Holden, Joy Clark, Julie Williams, Kentucky Gentlemen, Nikki Morgan, O.N.E The Duo, Roberta Lea, SistaStrings, Sug Daniels, Tae Lewis and Tylar Bryant.

The Black Opry is a home for Black artists and Black fans of country, blues, folk and Americana music. Offered in two formats, writer’s rounds and festival sets, the Black Opry Revue showcases the diversity in sound and stories that Black artists offer to these genres. Black Opry Revue is currently touring nationwide featuring different artists, and is slated to perform as part of the 2022 AmericanaFest in September.

Pictured (L-R, back row): Joy Clark, Tylar Bryant, Brandon Campbell and Derek Campbell of The Kentucky Gentlemen, Julie Williams, Roberta Lea, Holly G., Nikki Morgan, Tekitha of O.N.E .the Duo and Joshua Black; (L-R, front row): Autumn Nicholas, Tae Lewis, Jett Holden, Leslie Fram, Prana Supreme Diggs of O.N.E .the Duo, Guest and Crys Matthews arrive at Black Opry Anniversary Party Presented By CMT at City Winery Nashville. Photo:  Jason Davis/Getty Images for CMT

Pictured: Hosts Joshua Black and Holly G. at the Black Opry Anniversary Party. Photo: Jason Davis/Getty Images for CMT

Jamey Johnson & Blackberry Smoke Announce Summer Tour

Jamey Johnson. Photo: Charles Reagan Hackleman

Jamey Johnson is launching a tour later this year with Blackberry Smoke. Ella Langley and Megan Maroney will support on the 19-date run, which kicks off Aug. 12 in Lincoln, Nebraska.

The hitmaker will visit Wichita, Little Rock, Charlotte, Charleston, Pittsburgh and more with a Franklin, Tennessee show at FirstBank Amphitheater on August 25. Tickets for the dates go on sale to the public on April 22.

“I don’t know what I’m going to do until I am standing there doing it,” Johnson says. “That is a freedom I have enjoyed ever since I began doing this, the ability to try something new. You’ll see me do a lot of my songs, including my old stuff. If I have a new song that I want to share, you will hear that. When I’m not doing my songs, I’ll be doing everybody else’s that I like, from every format.”

Johnson continues, “If I find a jazz song that I like, we’ll drop it in there. If I find a rock song that I like, we’ll do that. My taste is vintage, traditional, and that is not to say that everything I do is old. There are a lot of new writers these days that are putting out great music that I find in the same vein as the old stuff I like and we may try some of that out.”

Johnson’s 2008 album, That Lonesome Song, was certified Platinum for 1 million in sales, and his 2010 double album, The Guitar Song, received a Gold certification. He has won two Song of the Year awards for “Give It Away” and “In Color,” both from the ACM and the CMA. In 2012, the Alabama native released the Grammy-nominated Living for a Song: A Tribute to Hank Cochran, which paired him with Willie Nelson, Alison Krauss, Emmylou Harris, Ray Price, Elvis Costello, George Strait, Vince Gill and Merle Haggard.

Jamey Johnson & Blackberry Smoke Confirmed Tour Dates:
12-Aug – Lincoln, NE – Lincoln On The Streets – Downtown Lincoln
13-Aug –  Mankato, MN – Vetter Stone Amphitheater
16-Aug – Maryland Heights, MO – Saint Louis Music Park
18-Aug – Wichita, KS – WAVE
19-Aug – Camdenton, MO – Ozarks Amphitheater
20-Aug – Little Rock, AR – First Security Amphitheater
21-Aug – Brandon, MS – Brandon Amphitheater
23-Aug – Southaven, MS – Landers Center
25-Aug – Franklin, TN – FirstBank Amphitheater
26-Aug- Raleigh, NC- Red Hat Amphitheater
27-Aug- Charlotte, NC- Charlotte Metro Credit Union Amphitheatre
28-Aug- Greensboro, NC – White Oak Amphitheater
1-Sep- Anderson, SC- Anderson Sports & Entertainment Center
2-Sep- Doswell, VA- The Meadow Event Park – SERVPRO Pavilion – After Hours
3-Sep- North Charleston, SC- Firefly Distillery
4-Sep- Portsmouth, VA – Atlantic Union Bank Pavilion
8-Sep- Pittsburgh, PA- Stage AE Outdoors
9-Sep- Sterling Heights, MI- Michigan Lottery Amphitheatre at Freedom Hill
11-Sep- Columbus, OH- KEMBA Live!