NMPA S.O.N.G.S. Foundation, H&R Block To Provide Free Tax Services To Songwriters

The NMPA’s S.O.N.G.S. Foundation (Supporting Our Next Generation of Songwriters) will continue to provide free tax services to songwriters through its partnership with H&R Block.

This year the partnership will also serve Los Angeles area writers in addition to Nashville writers. To make a free tax preparation appointment, click here.

“After seeing the success of the program in Nashville, this year we are excited to add LA as an area of eligibility for songwriters to take advantage of free tax preparation. We hope even more creators will utilize these services which hopefully will ease some of the burden of this stressful time,” shares NMPA S.O.N.G.S. Foundation President David Israelite.

Launched in 2015, the NMPA S.O.N.G.S. Foundation supports songwriters through funding educational programs, direct financial assistance, and through partnerships with institutions and organizations to enhance opportunities for music creators. The Foundation has provided grants and scholarships to universities including Belmont, LA College of Music, MTSU and Howard University, among others.

Missing Piece Group Announces Promotions, Staff Addition

Pictured (L-R): Erik Andersen, Justin Schmidt, Bryan Ros

Missing Piece Group has announced new promotions and staff hires to the expanding company.

Erik Andersen has been promoted to Senior Director of Publicity, Justin Schmidt has been promoted to Director of Publicity, and Bryan Ros has been added to the Nashville publicity team following his tenure with the Americana Music Association.

“One of Missing Piece’s greatest strengths is the continuity of our team; I’m extraordinarily grateful that as we enter our 12th year of business that many of our executives have been with the company since its earliest days. Both Erik and Justin are seasoned, exceptionally talented publicists, and along with our GM Joe Sivick and head of marketing John Hammond have been essential in making this company what it is today,” explains CEO/Founder Michael Krumper. “At the same time, I’m thrilled for us to be adding a new publicist to our growing presence in Nashville, led by our Director of Publicity Michelle Steele. Bryan’s background working for the Americana Music Association makes him a natural addition to the company.”

“Over the past nine years, I’ve loved watching Missing Piece expand and flourish while also having the opportunity to grow along with it,” shares Andersen. “I’ve had the privilege of working with so many amazing artists, past and present. I look forward to continuing to represent our roster and working alongside this incredible staff.”

“It’s an honor to work alongside the incredible team at Missing Piece Group as Director of Publicity, and I’m excited to continue pushing the envelope of what is possible for our clients,” adds Schmidt. “Each day brings new challenges as well as new creative opportunities, both of which I am eager to take on in this role.”

“I’m thrilled to join such a collaborative and hard-working team,” says Ros. “This is the type of environment where you feel completely empowered in your role, and I’m really looking forward to working with my new teammates to keep building a platform for our clients and for music that deserves to be heard.”

Missing Piece Group’s roster of clients includes Ashley Monroe, Blue Note Records, Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah, Dan Wilson, Hailey Whitters, Jackson Browne, Keb’ Mo’, Leslie Jordan, Low Cut Connie, Old Crow Medicine Show, Tom Jones and more.

My Music Row Story: Huskins-Harris’ Becky Harris

Becky Harris

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.

Music industry veteran Becky Harris is one of Nashville’s top business managers. She started her firm, Huskins-Harris Business Management 14 years ago, where she handles business management and accounting for clients including her son, Chris Young, as well as Kane Brown, Riley Green, Alexandra Kay, Nick Conners, Angie K, Drew Baldridge, Frankie Ballard, Keith Anderson, James Stroud, and Absolute Publicity, among others. Under the Huskins-Harris umbrella, she and CPA/business partner Donna A. Huskins work for CeCe Winans.

MusicRow: Where did you grow up?

I was born and grew up in south Nashville. I grew up in the same house that my parents bought 6 months before I was born and sold 6 months after my son Chris [Young] was born. I lived in the same house my entire childhood.

Pictured (L-R): Becky Harris, Willie Nelson, Chris Young

How did you start your career?

When I was in college, I started out as a journalism major. I switched my major to literature and was going to teach college literature. I got married at the beginning of my senior year of college and graduated. In the summer after I graduated, they offered me an assistantship to work on my masters, and then I found out I was pregnant with Chris. Fast forward 13 months [after Chris was born], I had his sister. So I decided I could not go back to school with two little babies. Fast forward a few more years, I got divorced and I was raising two small kids by myself.

[When Chris was a kid], he ended up in a children’s theater group. They asked him to be part of a song and dance group. That’s when we realized he could really sing. When he was 15, this guy found us on the internet. He ended up being somebody who really didn’t know anything about anything. He had been a successful songwriter and he had an investor. I got panicked because now my kid was signed to a record deal and I didn’t know anything about this and this person didn’t either. I went to see an attorney, the attorney told me not to worry, that the deal would age out when he was 17. So I went back to school to get a second degree in the music business. After I graduated, another business manager here in town offered me a job so I went to work for him for seven or eight years.

What did you learn there?

The day I started they gave me James Stroud as my first client. James was running Dreamwork Records, had a studio, was one of the first guys in town to rent Pro Tools rigs, had publishing companies, had houses all over the place and hunted all over the place. I always tell everybody, “You want to learn how to be a business manager? Go to work for James Stroud.” I still have him as a client.

Pictured (L-R): Kane Brown, Becky Harris, Chris Young

You formed your business management firm, Huskins-Harris, in 2008. How did that come to be?

I quit [at the business management firm I was at]. My former boss passed away after I left, so James came with me. When I started, we didn’t really have any clients. We were going to take the people in Nashville that nobody else wanted. That was my business model. I thought I was going to work three days a week and Donna [Huskins], my business partner, was going to work two days a week. Now we work seven days a week. (laughs)

I had done a lot of things throughout my lifetime when my kids were little. I worked in accounting, human resources, and had been a personal assistant. I’ve done all kinds of stuff. Really the very first day that I worked for James, I thought, “This is everything I’ve ever done that I liked about every job I’ve ever had… all rolled into one thing.”

Business managers are some unsung heroes in the music industry. How do you approach business management?

We’re a little bit different than some business managers. We look at it as if it touches their money, it’s our job. So we actually get involved in a lot of stuff that some people don’t. I’ve done everything from going to somebody’s house at 8:00 o’clock at night to fix their microwave. We go get people’s car tags for them. We’re just very hands on. That’s part of why we stay a smaller firm. We over serve our clients, so I don’t take everybody. During the pandemic, a whole bunch of people called me saying “All your people are fine!” The sky fell and they were all fine.

The buck always stops with us. While we get paid the least amount of everybody, we’re always the ones that have to go to somebody else and go, “Nope, you can’t do that.” Whether that’s the artist, the booking agent, the manager, or the venue. We’re professional jackasses. (laughs)

Pictured (L-R): First National Bank of Middle Tennessee’s Ellen May, Becky Harris, SESAC’s Lydia Schultz and Shannan Hatch

Do you find it’s tough to be firm and decisive as a woman?

Not so much now as it was when I first started. I’ve been at this a long time—more than 20 years now. There weren’t a whole lot of female managers or female business managers [when I started]. Mary Ann McCready was it. She paved the way for everybody else. Now there’s Julie Boos, Kerri Edwards, Marion Kraft, and Ebie McFarland. There’s a group of people that are out there now, so you don’t have to prove yourself like you once did to be a female in the music business.

When do you feel most fulfilled in your role?

It’s always the firsts. At some point, they get to where they can afford to do whatever they want to do, but then they still have firsts. The first award, the first car they buy, the first time they get to take a bus, and their first No. 1. It’s the firsts.

I went with Kane [Brown] to buy his first truck. This was really early on—the very first year. He had always wanted this truck that somebody else had. He called me one day and he said, “Hey, I really want that truck. Do you think we can go get it?” I was like, “Yep, let’s go!” So I drove him to Chattanooga to get the truck. Now he’s a car guy, so he’s always got some car. But that very first truck was just super cool because he was like a kid at Christmas time.

You have a unique perspective on the music business, also being Chris Young’s mom. What has it been like to be in the music business and watch him work his way through it?

I was in the music business for about five years before he got record deal. I knew he was successful the day that it went from everyone introducing him as “Becky Harris’ son,” to “This is Chris Young’s mom.” Every group of people that start at a label, I have to re-prove myself. They’re always like, “Oh, you’re his mom. He put you in business.” I’m like, “No, that’s not quite how that happened.” (laughs)

You learn business lessons from every client, so it wouldn’t just be Chris. I’ve been through something with every client that’s given me a unique perspective on how to move forward with other people. If you don’t grow in this industry with the way it is right now, you won’t make it very long. Things change every year.

Pictured (L-R): Tyler Reeve, Becky Harris, Riley Green

What has been a big lesson you’ve learned over the years?

The thing that has affected me most is Route 91. Chris hadn’t intended to go there, he was going to hang out with a friend in San Diego. He changed his mind at the last minute and went by himself to Vegas.

I keep my phone on 24/7. All of my clients know that. My phone ringing always wakes me up, but I had a week where I didn’t sleep. Chris tried to call me multiple times that night and it didn’t wake me up. Kane did what I’ve always told him to do, he [kept calling] until I answered the phone. When I answered the phone, Kane goes, “Have you talked to Chris? You need to call him right now, there’s an active shooter in Vegas and he won’t answer his phone for me.”

From every business management perspective and every personal perspective, so many things came out of that. You’re always told to hit the ground when there’s a shooter. Well the shooter was above and when everyone hit the ground, a lot of people got hurt. But [in regards to] every safety protocol we had in place at the time, Route 91 was a cutting edge event. They had a fence up, they had metal detectors. You could not get into that festival with any kind of weapon. Nobody ever thought about somebody [shooting from] above. I deal with insurance, I deal with liability issues, I deal with protecting the personnel, personnel policies and all those things. That was a wake up call for everybody.

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

Don’t give up. Judy Harris is one of my mentors. She and Pat Rolfe have talked to me over the years. When I decided to go start a business for myself, they asked if I had any clients. I said, “No,” and they said “Don’t give up.” There’s been a number of times through the years that I’ve said, “Maybe I should retire,” and they’ve said “Don’t give up.” They weren’t wrong. Anything that you’re successful at, you have to work long hours. It’s like that in any career, not just the music industry.

What are you most proud of in your career?

That’s a hard one. Knock on wood they don’t all fire me tomorrow, but normally when somebody comes through my door, unless I tell them to go someplace else, they don’t leave.

I was Kane’s first business manager. I was Riley Green‘s first business manager. They come and they stay, thank goodness. I love that because I love growing a career with those people.

Muscadine Bloodline To Embark On The ‘Country Band Contraband Tour’ This Summer

Muscadine Bloodline. Photo: Wales Toney

Muscadine Bloodline will kick off the summer with their “Country Band Contraband Tour.”

The 22-date trek will begin in Phenix City, Alabama on June 3 with stops running all across the eastern U.S. The duo will perform shows in Texas, Michigan, North Carolina and more through the end of July. Tickets will go on sale Friday, March 25 at 10 a.m. local time.

The duo released their sophomore album, Dispatch to 16th Ave., in February which hit No. 1 on the iTunes Country Chart, No. 4 on the iTunes All Genre Chart, and debuted at No. 17 on the Billboard Chart.

“It’s been a long time off the road resting and preparing for the album release. We are more excited and motivated than we’ve ever been to get back on the road and see our fans face to face,” the pair share.

Comprised of Charlie Muncaster and Gary Stanton, the independent act grew up in Mobile, Alabama, but didn’t cross paths until 2012 when they began to forge their friendship. Since naming themselves Muscadine Bloodline in 2015, the duo has charted three albums, sold-out shows across the country and played the Grand Ole Opry multiple times.

Kelsea Ballerini To Receive Song Suffragettes’ Yellow Rose of Inspiration Award

Kelsea Ballerini will be honored at the Song Suffragettes eighth anniversary celebration on March 28 at the Listening Room Cafe in Nashville. Ballerini will be presented with the Song Suffragettes’ Yellow Rose of Inspiration Award for her contributions to the songwriting community.

During the special evening hit songwriter and frequent Ballerini collaborator Nicolle Galyon will interview the award-winning entertainer and discuss some of the songs that have inspired the nearly 350 women who have performed on the Song Suffragettes stage through the years.

Ballerini is only the fourth woman to receive this honor after esteemed songwriter/publisher Liz Rose (2019), hitmaker Laura Veltz (2020) and singer-songwriter Ashley McBryde (2021).

The evening’s two performance rounds will feature 11 writers, along with a performance by Ballerini. The first songwriter round will feature TMWK Records artist Kalie Shorr hosting with performances from Ava Suppelsa, Autumn Nicholas, Ava Paige and first-time Song Suffragette and Republic Records recording artist Lanie Gardner.

The second round of the evening will be hosted by Song Suffragettes alumna Lauren Hungate and feature singer-songwriters Caroline Watkins, Emily Brooke, first-time performer Peytan Porter, and BMG recording artist Madeline Merlo. Both rounds will feature Song Suffragettes’ long-time resident cajon player Mia Morris, who will be playing her 144th show and performing two of her own original songs.

Tickets to the show at Nashville’s The Listening Room Café are on sale now at the Café’s website. The show will also stream live on the Song Suffragettes YouTube channel.

Warner Chappell, Mailbox Money Music Sign Nashville-Based Band On The Outside

Pictured (L-R, standing): Mike Shimshack, Aimee Nadeau (Three Hearts Management), Jimmy Robbins (Mailbox Money Music), BJ Hill (WCM), Ben Vaughn (WCM), Sophie Moll (Mailbox Money Music), Sarah Robbins (Mailbox Money Music); (L-R, seated): On The Outside’s Devin Hayes, Sam Jenkins, Andrew Bloom, Jon Klaasen, Dawson Huckabee

Warner Chappell Music (WCM) and Mailbox Money Music have signed a global publishing deal with Nashville-based band On The Outside.

With over 25 million collective followers across their social media and more than three billion views, the band is comprised of members Andrew Bloom, Dawson Huckabee, Devin Hayes, Jon Klaasen, and Sam Jenkins. The band’s recent single, “Sleepless,” showcases their unique sound, blending the band’s vocal with the craft of a pop song and a country lyric.

BJ Hill, VP, A&R, WCM Nashville says: “There’s an unbelievable amount of talent in this group and we couldn’t be more excited to work with them and the beautiful folks at Mailbox Money.”

“I was blown away by On The Outside from the moment Jimmy and I met them and heard them sing,” adds Mailbox Money Music’s Sarah Robbins. “We are so excited to partner with Warner Chappell and get to work!”

The band is working on new music with producers Jimmy Robbins and Mike Shimshack. They are managed by Aimee Nadeau at Three Hearts Management.

Carter Faith Inks With Universal Music Publishing Nashville

Pictured (L-R, top row): Zach Lund (UMPG) and Troy Tomlinson (UMPG); (L-r, bottom row): Roxy King (UMPG), Carter Faith, Margaret Valentine (Pound It Out Loud). Photo: Courtesy of UMPG

Carter Faith has signed an exclusive, global publishing deal with Universal Music Publishing Nashville.

Originally from Davidson, North Carolina, Faith taught herself to play guitar and piano, and soon after began crafting lyrics as a way to make sense of the world around her. She signed with Pound It Out Loud Entertainment in 2019, and released her debut EP Let Love Be Love in 2021.

Faith was included in Spotify’s Hot Country Artists to Watch list, and has received over 25 million streams with her recent singles “Leaving Tennessee,” “Sinners in a Small Town,” “Easy Pill,” and most recent track, “Cowboys & Dreamers.”

Roxy King, A&R Director, UMPG Nashville, comments: “The caliber of Carter’s artistry, coupled with her exceptional writing abilities, truly set her apart. UMPG believes in Carter wholeheartedly and plans to utilize its footprint to get her music heard by the masses. We are thrilled to welcome Carter to the UMPG family and to be a part of her long career trajectory.”

“I am absolutely so grateful and excited to work with the UMPG team. From the moment I met them, all of them, I have felt nothing but passion, love, and support, and as a creative person that is so, so important to me,” Faith shares. “I feel like we are going to do great things together and I could not have picked a better team for my very first publishing deal. I am so lucky.”

LeAnn Rimes To Celebrate 25 Years In Music With Upcoming Tour

LeAnn Rimes announced her upcoming “The Story…So Far Tour” in support of her 25th career anniversary and forthcoming album, God’s Work.

Kicking off on May 13 at The Fox Theater in Mashantucket, Connecticut, the Grammy-winning vocalist will make stops across the country through July 24. Ticket will go on sale beginning Friday, March 25 at 10 a.m. local time.

The 14-date tour, will tell the story of Rimes’ impressive career over the past 25 years and will give a glimpse into her new music. The tour’s setlist will feature a mix of her greatest hits, as well as new, unreleased music from her forthcoming album expected later this year.

Throughout this past year, the singer-songwriter has been celebrating her 25 years as a recording artist, commemorating the release of her debut album Blue. Following its release, Rimes went on to win her first Grammy Award at age 14, making her the youngest solo artist to win to date.

Rimes also recently kicked off season three of her iHeartRadio mental health and wholeness podcast, Wholly Human, which brings her lifestyle blog, Soul of EverLe, to life and introduces fans to those that have made a positive impact on her life. Season three will feature guests such as international bestselling author and motivational speaker Mel Robbins; Licensed Professional Counselor and practicing anxiety coach Nancy Jane Smith; bestselling author, speaker and fasting expert Dr. Mindy Peltz; Harvard-trained sociologist, world-renowned coach and New York Times bestselling author Martha Beck, PhD, and more.

Film & TV Rep Richard Harris Joins Demolition Music

Richard Harris

LA-based film & TV representative Richard Harris has joined Demolition Music.

In his new role, Harris will be tasked with securing placements from the Demolition catalog, curating synch-focused writing sessions globally, and handling synchronization licensing.

Landing placements in Pretty Little Liars, The Bold Type, The Rookie, Good Trouble, One Tree Hill, This Means War, Single Moms Club as well as commercials with eBay, TJ Maxx, and trailer/promos for The NFL, HBO, AT&T and Fox TV, Harris is well regarded as a songwriter and producer in the synch community.

“Having Richard represent our team from LA helps secure an important piece of the puzzle needed for Demolition to continue its expansion into providing original music for the TV/film world. We are very excited about this collaboration!” says President of Demolition Music, Jon D’Agostino.

The UK native signed a publishing deal with Peer Music in 2007, garnering multiple major label cuts including several Billboard No. 1s, top ten singles, and Platinum and Gold records.

“I am thrilled to join the team at Demolition Music to help build and develop their synch catalog,” adds Harris. “This position dovetails perfectly with what I’m continuing to do personally as a creative and mentor. It allows me the opportunity to support and champion the amazing creative, multi-genre talent signed to Demolition alongside a team of like minded professionals.”

Ben Rector Talks Chicken Sandwiches, Overcoming His Fear Of Failure & His Newfound Joy [Interview]

Ben Rector & Joy. Photo: Ethan Gulley

Independent singer-songwriter Ben Rector is no stranger to the spotlight. Since releasing his first full-length record, Twenty Tomorrow in 2007, the Nashville-based artist has amassed over one billion streams, reached the peak of Billboard‘s Americana/Folk Albums chart, earned top 10 distinctions on the Billboard 200, and built a fierce following of dedicated fans.

Within the indie-pop landscape, Rector has released an impressive collection of material, including eight studio albums, two live albums and a handful of hit songs, such as the Gold-certified “Brand New” and “When A Heart Breaks,” as well as “30,000 Feet,” “Love Like This,” “Old Friends,” and more across his extensive discography.

Rector recently released his eighth studio album, The Joy Of Music. The 13-track project, which was born amidst the chaos of COVID-19, displays a new, vibrant shade of Rector’s creative process and finds the multi-instrumentalist as a producer and writer on every track. However, The Joy Of Music‘s creative journey was not a linear one.

Ben Rector & Joy. Photo: Ethan Gulley

“Right before the pandemic, I went to LA and recorded most of a record. My idea was to get my dream band in my dream studio and do something that college me would have been really excited about. That was probably in January of 2020,” Rector tells MusicRow. “The pandemic started and everything shut down. After a couple months, I started essentially rewriting the whole record. I didn’t set out to do that, I just started writing because that’s what I wanted to do. I realized that I was kind of feeling like a kid again and falling back in love with the craft of songwriting and recording.

“Before I knew it I had a whole new batch of songs,” he continues. “There were two songs that I recorded in LA that still ended up on the record, but the other 11 were all written after the pandemic started. For the first time, I was just able to fully focus on that creative process. I wasn’t playing any shows and didn’t have a deadline to wrap things up. I was able to chase whatever I wanted, and I started realizing that the music that I was making from that place felt a lot more special.”

Throughout the baker’s dozen of songs, listeners are taken through a wide swath of emotions. From the upbeat and dance-provoking “We Will Never Be This Young Again;” the inspiring, fantasy-filled ballad “Dream On;” “Living My Best Life,” which drips in positivity; the cathartic coming-to-terms with adulthood in “Heroes;” and gratitude anthem “Thank You,” The Joy Of Music serves as a soundboard for many aspects of the human experience.

However, Rector’s hope for the record isn’t to teach, instruct, or evoke some series of emotions. Rather, his focus for The Joy Of Music is simply to bring just that to people: joy.

“This is an odd analogy, but there’s this place in LA called The Honor Bar and they have this chicken sandwich that is the best sandwich I’ve ever had. Every time I eat it, I’m just like, ‘What a treat that was. I was entertained just by how good it was and it made my day better.’ I think my hope is that my music will feel like that chicken sandwich to people—like a little treat that made them feel good and made their day a little bit brighter,” Rector says with a smile. “I wasn’t necessarily aiming to make people feel thankful for their lives. I would love that, but at the end of the day, anything that people find really enjoyable—whatever that is for you—I just hope my music can be like a small version of that in people’s lives.”

Joining Rector throughout the project is a diverse group of collaborators, ranging from Snoop Dogg lending his vocals on the R&B-infused “Sunday,” to Kenny G and Dave Koz contributing their seasoned saxophone skills on “Hanging Out” and “Supernatural,” as well as Taylor Goldsmith from Dawes adding his own touch to “Cliches.”

YouTube video

“When I was making this record, I was operating from a place of wanting to find joy in the process. I wanted to do things that sounded fun, just because they sounded fun,” Rector explains. “I wasn’t constructing songs with the hope of them being a feature or anything. I was just making the art that I wanted to make and then on a couple of songs, I said, ‘Dude, it would be so fun if we got Snoop Dogg to be on the song.’ For me, the worst thing that can happen is that Snoop says, ‘No, I don’t want to do that,’ which is totally understandable. The best thing that could happen is that I’m on a song with Snoop Dogg.”

He continues: “I didn’t want to play it safe anymore. I didn’t want to show the same tricks that I’ve done before a bunch of times just because I know I won’t fail. I don’t want to be afraid of failing anymore because this is my one wild and precious life. I don’t want to look up when I’m 60 and be like, ‘Man, I was so scared the whole time that I was gonna look silly, or that it wasn’t gonna go very well.’ I just want to do cool stuff that’s fun for me and fun for other people.”

Along with the record, Rector also released an accompanying short film that features seven of the album’s songs brought to life visually. The film sees Rector being led through a journey of overcoming his deep-seated fear of failure and rediscovering the joy of music by his new friend Joy, a muppet monster that he created with Jim Henson‘s Creature Shop.

“I don’t remember when I thought about the character Joy, but I do remember thinking that I’ve never seen anybody do that. Sports teams have mascots, but I’ve never really seen that done in music and it just sounded fun to me,” Rector offers. “Honestly, sometimes it’s nice for me to have something that takes a little bit of the attention off of me when I do a show, too. It gets a little weighty to have everyone looking at me for 90 minutes. It sounded fun to be able to have Joy do stuff.”

Rector will make his return to the road this summer on “The Joy Of Music – A Live Music Event” with special guests JP Saxe and Jake Scott, beginning with a show at The Sylvee in Madison, Wisconsin on May 5. Jumping from city to city across the country, the beloved entertainer will make stops in Minneapolis, Kansas City, Denver, Houston, Charlotte, Indianapolis, Boston, Philadelphia, New York, and more on the mostly-amphitheater dates.

“Instead of having specific numerical goals, like selling this many tickets or making this much money, my real hope is that I enjoy the process of this record cycle and the tour. I’ve never really approached it like that before, and I realized that’s honestly probably the only thing that I can control. I can’t really control how many people come to a show, if I win an award, or chart positions. I’m going to do everything I can to give the record and tour the best shot to do well, but when I live mainly in that place of putting my self worth in things I can’t control, I don’t end up that happy about it.”

He sums, “This time I want to focus on enjoying it because that’s probably where the best work is going to come from. So far, the best songs and the best recordings have come from that, so I’m just going to try to carry that through the tour.”

Rector’s “The Joy Of Music – A Live Music Event” will wrap up with a special show at Nashville’s Ascend Amphitheater on June 25.