
Troy Tomlinson
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.
A 37-year publishing veteran, Troy Tomlinson is in charge of day-to-day operations for Universal Music Publishing Nashville. Among his current writer/artist hitmakers are Taylor Swift, Kenny Chesney, Keith Urban, Maren Morris, Luke Combs, Shania Twain, Chris Young, Brandi Carlile, Brad Tursi (Old Dominion), Scotty McCreery, Sam Hunt, Ingrid Andress and Caitlyn Smith.

Notable hit songwriters at UMPG include Chase McGill, Paul DiGiovanni, Justin Ebach, Lee Miller, Sam Ellis, Derrick Southerland, Ray Fulcher, Jacob Davis, Shane Minor, Bart Butler, Jamie Paulin, Troy Verges, John Pierce, Greylan James, and Dave Cobb, among many others.
Prior to UMPG, Tomlinson served as President and CEO of Sony Music Publishing Nashville from 2002 until 2019. Before that, he served as EVP of Acuff Rose Music Publishing from 1988 until 2002.
MusicRow: Where did you grow up?
I grew up up 40 miles north of here on the Kentucky line in a little town called Portland, Tennessee. I grew up on a beef cattle farm. My brother and I roamed the 80 acres that we had and had a really great childhood that made us grow up to be curious. There was just so much to explore on that farm and it really did expand this notion of curiosity for me. That’s been something that I cherish now as an adult looking back on it because we really don’t meet a lot of people in our creative business who don’t have a sense of curiosity, because that’s what spurs creativity.

Pictured: Troy, asleep in the tape room.
Did you always want to work in the music business?
When I graduated high school, I went straight to work at a plastic injection mold company, in a mentorship program. I was burned really badly on both my hands. I had second and third degree burns on both hands from this accident that happened with 700 degree molted plastic.
At the same time, I was volunteering for a civic organization called the JCs, or the junior chamber of commerce. We did about a dozen events each year to raise money for one event a year, which was to take underprivileged children in our area Christmas shopping and to throw a big Christmas party for them. I became president of the JCs when I was 19 or 20.
At my induction as president, there was a guy there that I had only met a couple of times named Cliff Williamson. So fast forward a few months, I’m laying in a burn unit here in Nashville with skin grafts on my hands, and Cliff called me. He said, “Hey man, have you ever thought about changing careers?” I was thinking, “As a matter of fact, I’m thinking about it right now!” (laughs)
Cliff hired me as a tape copy boy and as a beginner song plugger to teach me the art of song plugging at a company called Multimedia, which was a New York firm that owned TV shows like The Phil Donahue Show, Sally Jessy Raphael’s show, and some early talk shows. They also owned Channel 17 here in town and a magazine called Music City News. Cliff just thrust me into this world that I could have never really imagined being a part of.

Troy with Reba McEntire.
After getting your start at Multimedia, where did you go next?
When Multimedia was prepared to sell off pieces of the company, they began to do layoffs. I got laid off after a little over two years.
One of my writers was a writer named Don King. Don had built a new studio and started a little side publishing company. He and his father, Don Sr., asked me to come and work for them to help build up a roster. I stayed there for a couple of years. Then Rick Hall—the Muscle Shoals mogul, producer and publisher—had an opening for someone to run his Nashville office. He hired me to do that.
I was only there about a year and I learned so much. I learned what standards were. Rick Hall taught me the difference in hit songs and standards in American culture. That catalog that he owned, Rick Hall Music and FAME, it’s a patch quilt made of America’s music standards.
Then you went to work for Jerry Bradley at Acuff Rose.
All those years prior that I had been in the business, Acuff Rose and Tree Music Publishing were, to me, the preeminent country catalogs. Jerry Bradley was running Acuff Rose, and they were reinvigorating the sleeping giant [that the company had been]. It had drifted when Mr. Fred Rose became ill. So Jerry Bradley hired me and pushed me out in front of our parent company, Gaylord Entertainment and Mr. Bud Wendell, every time he could. If Jerry couldn’t be at a meeting, he pushed this little 24-26 year-old to go sit in for him in these corporate meetings and make presentations. That’s the mentoring that he did, he pushed me to the front of the stage, metaphorically.
I worked for Acuff Rose from ’88 to 2002, and moved up the ladder in that company to my final position, being Executive VP of the company and Jerry as the President. Then we were bought by Sony, and Donna [Hilley] allowed me to come over and bring a half dozen of my employees with me to Sony.

Kenny Chesney and Troy accept a BMI Award.
You had many successful years at Sony Music Publishing, and then left in 2019 to become Chairman/CEO Of UMPG Nashville.
We become an aggregate of all of life’s experiences, the good ones and the bad ones. That period working for Jerry, and then that period working for Martin [Bandier, former CEO/Chairman of Sony/ATV] were the largest aggregation of knowledge about publishing for me.
Marty was retiring and changes within Sony were occurring. At the same time, Jody Gerson, who I had worked with for a number of years at Sony and always respected and admired so much, we had breakfast together in LA at some function we were both attending. At breakfast she proposed that we find a way to work together. She was very convincing and ultimately, I made what, in one respect, was a difficult decision because myself, my staff and most people on Music Row thought that Sony/ATV is where I would spend the rest of my career.
In that regard, it took some thinking to process why I should do it. The reason I ultimately did it was I knew Jody was another one of those people that would mentor me, support me and grow me in that sphere of influence that a publisher has. I also watched the culture she had built at Universal Music Publishing since she got there and was blown away. She’s a culture-centric leader, it’s very top of mind with her.
That was a little over two and a half years ago now. Of course two years of that has been eaten up by COVID, but we’ve not only nixed a beating, but we have grown remarkably in every measurement over COVID. That’s a testimony to the employees here and the support that Jody has given us.
Looking back, what are some of the first few songs you remember having success with?
The first No. 1 that I pitched was the Alabama song called “If I Had You.” Barry Beckett, a dear friend who’s gone now, cut one album with Alabama. I’d known the boys from Alabama since I was a teenager through a variety of interesting ways. But my first pitch appointment at Acuff Rose when I got hired was with Beckett. I wanted to impress Mr. Bradley that I could get Barry Beckett in the room.
He was producing 15 acts at the time. So Beckett came down at the end of the day. He was tired and was notorious for falling asleep during pitching appointments, which was beautiful. You’d cough really loud or turn the volume up real quick [to wake him up]. (laughs) The last song on the tape was the Danny Mayo and Kerry Chater song, “If I Had You.” It was just a work tape. When it finished, Beckett said, “Randy will love that, I’ll love cutting it, and we’ll have a hit together.” Within six months, we had a No. 1 record.
Interestingly enough, as I told you, “If I Had You” was the last song out of 10 that I played Barry that day and it was the only one he loved. Fast forward a few months or a year, I’m in our new building at Acuff Rose, playing for Jerry Fuller and John Hobbs who were producing Collin Raye. The first song I played them was “Love, Me.” We had a No. 1 on it. I played them three or four more and every time they’d pass on one, they would say, “We gotta cut that first song.” So after four songs, I could see where the meeting was going, and I said, “Do y’all just want to stop listening and go to lunch?” They said, “Yeah!” (laughs). We didn’t listen to another song. I’ll never forget that. That was a wonderful experience.

Taylor Swift and Troy accept a BMI Award.
What are some of the best qualities about our industry?
We are truly a community. We’re not strung out miles apart like Los Angeles is forced to be. We run into one another and spend time with one another at the ball field, concerts, restaurants and clubs. We have a sense of community. LA, New York and Atlanta all have their own sense of community, but there’s no question that this is pretty unique.
Earlier this week I was in a label meeting with three other heads of Nashville publishing companies, and we’re all in there together talking, conversing, asking questions and sharing together. That’s a little more iffy in other places. Obviously we all compete with each other in a certain sense, because you’re trying to get the cut or have the hit, but in another sense, we truly are friends. That’s what sets this community apart.
One of the most satisfying things about the Music Row community is raising a child around all these gifted songwriters who are such characters and then having that child grow up and want to work in that same culture, both with some of those same writers but also with their own generation of creators. Seeing my son Joshua, find his place in this community as songwriter representative at BMI has been particularly gratifying.

Troy (middle) with his wife Sylvia, and son Joshua, who is also in the business as Director of Creative in Nashville’s BMI office.
What does it take to be a successful person in business and in life?
There is a a quote from To Kill A Mockingbird that I try to live by. It’s when Atticus is sitting with Scout, his young daughter who’s really torn up inside because she sees the divisiveness in their community over this false accusation of rape by a Black man. She sees this miniature culture war that’s happening all because of this lie that’s told. She’s obviously trying make sense of it and, I’m paraphrasing, but Atticus says that great line: “You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view…until you climb into his skin and walk around in it.” I would say that, one of the ways that one might measure success that seems more important to me than a lot of other ways we can measure it, is what Atticus was describing: empathy. Putting yourself in another person’s shoes to the best that you can.
I really believe with all of my soul that you will look back on your career and call it successful if you have loved the people that you work with, if you’ve poured yourself into it, and if you have tried your best, even in difficult times, to show them empathy. Even when we disagree, even when it’s hard to show empathy toward people, I believe that would be the premier expression of success for me. If I’m doing that, I can feel successful. And if people see me doing that, they might consider me successful.
The string of No. 1s or the string of awards from organizations, all the pictures that we take with ourselves and with artists, all that’s wonderful—that’s part of our culture and who we are. It’s all important and a joyful experience. But if we gain all that and we sacrifice loving one another and showing empathy to one another, all that other stuff is just a breeze that blows by for a second and is gone. That would be my underlying definition of success.
Sam Grow & Deluge Music Form Growhouse Publishing, Sign Danny Orton As Flagship Writer
/by Lorie HollabaughPictured (L-R, front row): Stephanie Greene (President, Deluge), Danny Orton, Sam Grow (President, GrowHouse Publishing); (L-R, back row): David Robkin (Managing Partner, Deluge), Brad Austin (Forward Music Management).
Average Joes Entertainment artist Sam Grow and Deluge Music’s David Robkin have launched a joint venture, GrowHouse Publishing. Grow and Robkin also announced the company’s flagship signing, songwriter Danny Orton.
Brad Austin at Forward Music Management, who manages Grow, will work closely with the GrowHouse Publishing writers and team in an operations, coordinating and consulting role. The new company will focus on digital and streaming, as well as terrestrial and traditional media.
“Sam’s passion for songwriting is second to none and we are thrilled to partner with him on this venture,” shares Robkin. “I love his interest in working with veteran writers like Danny Orton and in developing new up and coming writers. Stay tuned!”
Orton has contributed to an array of country hits, including Dan + Shay‘s “19 You and Me,” Rascal Flatts‘ ”Stand,” and Emerson Drive‘s “Fall Into Me.” He’s also had cuts with Reba McEntire, Tim McGraw, Randy Travis, Lady A, Billy Ray Cyrus, Chicago and more. Orton was also credited as a co-writer and producer on Dan + Shay’s debut album.
”I’ve enjoyed all of the publishing deals that I’ve had, but I can honestly say that I’ve never been as excited as I am about signing with GrowHouse Publishing,” says Orton. “I can’t wait to dig in with Sam, David, Stephanie, Brad and the whole gang! They’re great and all of this just feels right!”
As an artist, Grow has amassed over 65 million streams on tracks such as “Song About You,” “The Blame,” “This Town,” and more. He’s been writing, performing and recording in Nashville for nearly a decade, and in November 2021 made his Grand Ole Opry debut.
“I am so grateful and thankful to have this opportunity to create GrowHouse Publishing in partnership with David Robkin and Deluge,” adds Grow. “Not only because David and Stephanie Greene are now giving me a chance to sign and fund songwriters in the pursuit of their dreams but also, I will get a world-class education from folks who have been doing that with writers for years.”
BBR Music Group Hires Marissa Messer, John Carroll & Hillary Borden
/by LB CantrellPictured (L-R): Marissa Messer, John Carroll, Hillary Borden. Photo: Jessica Crans
BBR Music Group announced the hiring of Marissa Messer to Director of Digital Marketing, John Carroll to Director of Streaming, and Hillary Borden to Marketing Manager.
Messer joins BBR from Soles4Souls, where she handled the non-profit’s digital presence, helping to turn shoes and clothing into opportunity by providing relief, creating jobs and empowering people to break the cycle of poverty. Prior to that, she spent time at various digital agencies. Reporting to Elise Stawarz, Sr. Director of Digital Marketing, Messer handles the strategic digital initiatives for the label’s artist roster. Reach her at marissa@bbrmusicgroup.com.
“I’m thrilled to welcome Marissa to our digital marketing team,” says Stawarz. “Marissa comes to us with incredible experience in the non-profit and agency spaces, and I’m excited for her to bring these talents to our BBR Music Group artists.”
Carroll comes to BBR from Sony Music Nashville, where he served as Associate Director, A&R. Prior to that, he worked at Universal Music Group on their Global Streaming Marketing team. Reporting to Chris Loss, VP of Streaming at BBR, Carroll collaborates with key partners to amplify all of BBR Music Group’s artists, is responsible for delivering all new music, and works to discover and provide actionable insights to connect the dots between streaming and country radio. He can be reached at john@bbrmusicgroup.com.
“John Carroll is well-versed in the big picture, yet also very much energized by the details,” says Loss. “He is creative while being analytic and is a spectacular fit for our culture and how collaborative we are here at BBR Music Group.”
Borden joins BBR from from The Bobby Bones Show, where she served as a producer, booking artists for the show and writing the weekend show, Country Top 30. Now, reporting to JoJamie Hahr, SVP of BBR Music Group, Borden is responsible for managing artist projects, creating marketing plans, streamlining advertising initiatives and coordinating with all departments on artist release plans and strategies. Reach her at hillary@bbrmusicgroup.com.
“We are so thrilled to have Hillary join our family,” says Hahr. “She has been a friend to so many of us through The Bobby Bones Show, and her talent, passion and creativity sets her in a class all of her own. We are so lucky to have her!”
Industry Ink: Jeffrey Steele, Grass Roots Promotion, Reel Muzik Werks, Fred Mollin
/by Lydia FarthingJeffrey Steele Helps Raise $150,000 At 15th Annual Benefit Concert
Jeffrey Steele. Photo: Anthony Scarlati
The 15th annual Jeffrey Steele & Friends fundraiser concert was recently held at The Franklin Theatre in Franklin, Tennessee. The event raised $150,000 to support overlooked and at-risk youth in Middle Tennessee and beyond in the memory of Steele’s son Alex, who passed away in 2007.
The evening, which was hosted by Steele and his daughter Casey LeVasseur, included performances by Steele, Paul Overstreet, Lit, Ira Dean, Billy Dean, Darryl Worley, Silence X Noise, CJ Solar, Bridgette Tatum, and Stephen Wilson Jr.
During the event, Steele and his family made grants from the Alex LeVasseur Memorial Fund to three non-profits. Two of those grants included $100,000 checks to both The Skatepark Project, helmed by Pro Skater Tony Hawk, and The Beat of Life, a Nashville-based non-profit that uses the healing power of music. The event also supported One Pedal At A Time, a non-profit organization that is focused on suicide awareness and prevention.
“We’ve been blown away with your generosity over the past fifteen years. We have raised over $1.5 million to help nonprofits in our area who are championing our youth and the kids of our community and in other neighborhoods and communities across the country to share Alex’s love and light to those who need it most,” the LeVasseur family shares.
GrassRoots Promotion Adds Nancy Johnson, Ups RJ Jordan
GrassRoots Promotion has added Nancy Johnson as its Music Row Promotion Manager. She will step into the role previously held by RJ Jordan, who is transitioning to the company’s management division as VP Artist Management & Development.
Johnson comes to GrassRoots after previous stops at Capitol Records, Big Machine Records and Broken Bow Records.
GrassRoots Co-Owner and Managing Partner, Nancy Tunick, comments: “We are so excited to welcome Nancy Johnson to our promotion team. Her knowledge and experience speak for itself, and she has always been a wonderful partner to radio. We are equally excited to have RJ take the helm at the management division after seven very successful years in our promotion department. His expertise in radio and records as well as his exceptional creative and strategic skills will benefit our growing management roster.”
Reel Muzik Werks Announces Two Staff Additions
Derek Hughes, Armando Bonnet
Reel Muzik Werks (RMW), a full-service independent music publisher specializing in film/TV music and international rights management, has added two staff members to its Nashville headquarters.
Derek Hughes is a producer and songwriter who comes to Nashville from Austin, Texas. He will serve as RMW’s Studio & Creative Manager. He also works in the EDM industry with artists such as Lux and Adara. He is currently composing his first feature film, due out later this year.
RMW’s new Studio & Sync Assistant Armando Bonnet is a producer, artist, songwriter and engineer who hails from Puerto Rico. Steeped in a wide variety of global music genres, he brings musical twists to all of his creative endeavors.
“We are excited to welcome two new additions to our RMW family,” says Teri Nelson Carpenter, Reel Muzik Werks’ CEO. “Derek is a gifted Composer & Producer and Armando has an amazing creative sense. We look forward to growing our artist roster and music catalogue with the assistance of these two talented professionals.”
Chris Keaton Presents To Represent Producer Fred Mollin
Fred Mollin. Photo: Ed Rode
Producer, arranger and musician Fred Mollin has added Nashville-based Chris Keaton Presents as his U.S. producer representative.
Mollin has worked with artists such as Jimmy Webb, Johnny Mathis, Kris Kristofferson, Billy Ray Cyrus, Jackie Evancho and more. His work producing duets found him working with iconic artists including Billy Joel, Willie Nelson, Carly Simon, Glen Campbell, Crosby and Nash, Art Garfunkel, Jackson Browne, Linda Ronstadt, Sheryl Crow, Natalie Cole, Gregory Porter, Gloria Estefan, Michael McDonald, Todd Rundgren, Carole King, and Joe Cocker.
“Chris is known as The Connector. Of course, I want to be represented by him!”says Mollin. Keaton adds, “The opportunity to represent a talent like Fred is an absolute joy and I look forward to our future.”
Keaton can be reached at chris@chriskeaton.com.
Maverick City Music, Kirk Franklin To Embark On The ‘Kingdom’ Arena Tour
/by Lydia Farthing5x Grammy-nominated group Maverick City Music has announced its upcoming headlining tour with 16x Grammy award-winning vocalist Kirk Franklin. The “Kingdom” arena tour, the largest so far in their career, is named after the group’s forthcoming collaboration album.
Produced by Live Nation and Undivided, the 37-city tour kicks off on June 1 at FTX Arena in Miami, making stops across North America in Atlanta, Toronto, Nashville, Los Angeles and more before wrapping up at Denver’s Ball Arena on July. Tickets will go on sale to the general public beginning Friday, March 18 at 10 a.m. local time.
Since forming in 2018, Maverick City Music has featured a rotating group of members that include Chandler Moore, Naomi Raine, Dante Bowe, Lizzie Morgan, MJ George, Aaron Moses, Joe L Barnes and Brandon Lake. Their 2021 album Old Church Basement, in collaboration with Elevation Worship, earned the group three Grammy nominations across three categories.
“Kingdom” Tour Dates:
Wed Jun 01 – Miami, FL – FTX Arena
Thu Jun 02 – Orlando, FL – Amway Center
Sat Jun 04 – Tampa, FL – MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre at the FL State Fairgrounds
Sun Jun 05 – Atlanta, GA – Lakewood Amphitheatre
Tue Jun 07 – Birmingham, AL – Legacy Arena at the BJCC
Thu Jun 09 – Charlotte, NC – PNC Music Pavilion
Fri Jun 10 – Raleigh, NC – Coastal Credit Union Music Park at Walnut Creek
Sun Jun 12 – Newark, NJ – Prudential Center
Tue Jun 14 – Toronto, ON – Budweiser Stage
Thu Jun 16 – Washington DC – Capital One Arena
Fri Jun 17 – Cleveland, OH – Blossom Music Center
Sat Jun 18 – Detroit, MI – Little Caesars Arena
Sun Jun 19 – Pittsburgh, PA – PPG Paints Arena
Tue Jun 21 – Grand Rapids, MI – Van Andel Arena
Wed Jun 22 – Columbus, OH – Schottenstein Center
Thu Jun 23 – St. Louis, MO – Chaifetz Arena
Sat Jun 25 – St. Paul, MN – Xcel Energy Center
Sun Jun 26 – Chicago, IL– Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre
Tue Jun 28 – Kansas City, MO – T-Mobile Center
Thu Jun 30 – Nashville, TN – Bridgestone Arena
Fri Jul 01 – Memphis, TN – FedExForum
Sat Jul 02 – Jackson, MS – Brandon Amphitheater
Thu Jul 07 – Oklahoma City, OK – Paycom Center
Fri Jul 08 – Houston, TX – The Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion presented by Huntsman
Sat Jul 09 – San Antonio, TX – AT&T Center
Sun Jul 10 – Ft. Worth, TX – Dickies Arena
Wed Jul 13 – Rogers, AR – Walmart AMP
Sat Jul 16 – Salt Lake City, UT – USANA Amphitheatre
Tue Jul 19 – Seattle, WA – Climate Pledge Arena
Wed Jul 20 – Portland, OR – Moda Center
Fri Jul 22 – Concord, CA – Concord Pavilion
Sat Jul 23 – Irvine, CA – Five Point Amphitheater
Sun Jul 24 – Los Angeles, CA – Crypto.com Arena
Wed Jul 27 – San Diego, CA – Cal Coast Credit Union Open Air Theatre
Thu Jul 28 – Phoenix, AZ – Ak-Chin Pavilion
Fri Jul 29 – Las Vegas, NV – Michelob ULTRA Arena
Sun Jul 31 – Denver, CO – Ball Arena
Lainey Wilson Welcomes CMHOF Troubadour Members At Annual Kickoff Party
/by Lydia FarthingLainey Wilson. Photo: Photo: Courtesy of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
Lainey Wilson, the freshly-crowned ACM New Female Artist of the Year, took the stage at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s annual Troubadour kickoff party on Tuesday night (March 15).
The singer-songwriter performed a handful of her hits, including “Two Story House;” a solo version of her fiery duet with Cole Swindell, “Never Say Never;” and “Things a Man Oughta Know,” which won the award for ACM Song of the Year earlier this month.
Pictured (L-R, back row): Ben Hall, senior director of development; Zach Farnum, Troubadour Advisory Council leadership team member; Lainey Wilson; Patrick Thomas, chair of the Troubadour Advisory Council; (L-R, front row): Katie Cline Moore, Troubadour Advisory Council leadership team member; Katherine Smith, senior manager of advancement, membership and annual giving; and Lisa Purcell, senior vice president of external affairs. Photo: Courtesy of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
Wilson is also highlighted in the museum’s annual exhibition American Currents: State of the Music, which opened this month and explores notable music, artists’ achievements and music-related events from the past year.
Troubadour is a membership program of the museum that engages young professionals in supporting its mission. The museum hosts quarterly networking events, which range from concerts to exhibition previews, for Troubadour members.
The goals of the program are to engage young leaders, ages 21-45, in the museum’s mission, build life-long relationships between members and the nonprofit museum, and create a special networking space that unites music lovers. For more information on the Troubadour membership program, visit here.
Carly Pearce To Host One-Night-Only Event In Nashville
/by Lorie HollabaughCarly Pearce. Photo: Alexa Campbell
Carly Pearce is inviting fans to a one-night-only concert event titled “Inside 29: Written in Stone Live from Music City” at Nashville’s Marathon Music Works on April 6.
Throughout the evening, the newly-crowned ACM Female Artist of the Year will share songs from her album, 29: Written In Stone. A portion of ticket sales will benefit losses from the recent tornado devastation in the Kentucky native’s home state through the Music Has Value Fund.
“I have been lucky enough to connect with fans in times of heartache and joy, especially with 29, so this is going to be such a special night. There may be a few surprise guests, and I can’t wait to share even more of the inspiration behind these songs that led me to a place of growth and happiness,” Pearce says.
The special show will be filmed for release later in the year. General on-sale will begin this Friday (March 18).
Pearce will continue on “The 29 Tour” this weekend with shows in Vermont, New Hampshire, and New York. She will also join Kenny Chesney’s “Here and Now Tour 2022” as direct support.
My Music Row Story: UMPG’s Troy Tomlinson
/by LB CantrellTroy Tomlinson
This edition of “My Music Row Story” is sponsored by Worldwide Stages.
A 37-year publishing veteran, Troy Tomlinson is in charge of day-to-day operations for Universal Music Publishing Nashville. Among his current writer/artist hitmakers are Taylor Swift, Kenny Chesney, Keith Urban, Maren Morris, Luke Combs, Shania Twain, Chris Young, Brandi Carlile, Brad Tursi (Old Dominion), Scotty McCreery, Sam Hunt, Ingrid Andress and Caitlyn Smith.
Notable hit songwriters at UMPG include Chase McGill, Paul DiGiovanni, Justin Ebach, Lee Miller, Sam Ellis, Derrick Southerland, Ray Fulcher, Jacob Davis, Shane Minor, Bart Butler, Jamie Paulin, Troy Verges, John Pierce, Greylan James, and Dave Cobb, among many others.
Prior to UMPG, Tomlinson served as President and CEO of Sony Music Publishing Nashville from 2002 until 2019. Before that, he served as EVP of Acuff Rose Music Publishing from 1988 until 2002.
MusicRow: Where did you grow up?
I grew up up 40 miles north of here on the Kentucky line in a little town called Portland, Tennessee. I grew up on a beef cattle farm. My brother and I roamed the 80 acres that we had and had a really great childhood that made us grow up to be curious. There was just so much to explore on that farm and it really did expand this notion of curiosity for me. That’s been something that I cherish now as an adult looking back on it because we really don’t meet a lot of people in our creative business who don’t have a sense of curiosity, because that’s what spurs creativity.
Pictured: Troy, asleep in the tape room.
Did you always want to work in the music business?
When I graduated high school, I went straight to work at a plastic injection mold company, in a mentorship program. I was burned really badly on both my hands. I had second and third degree burns on both hands from this accident that happened with 700 degree molted plastic.
At the same time, I was volunteering for a civic organization called the JCs, or the junior chamber of commerce. We did about a dozen events each year to raise money for one event a year, which was to take underprivileged children in our area Christmas shopping and to throw a big Christmas party for them. I became president of the JCs when I was 19 or 20.
At my induction as president, there was a guy there that I had only met a couple of times named Cliff Williamson. So fast forward a few months, I’m laying in a burn unit here in Nashville with skin grafts on my hands, and Cliff called me. He said, “Hey man, have you ever thought about changing careers?” I was thinking, “As a matter of fact, I’m thinking about it right now!” (laughs)
Cliff hired me as a tape copy boy and as a beginner song plugger to teach me the art of song plugging at a company called Multimedia, which was a New York firm that owned TV shows like The Phil Donahue Show, Sally Jessy Raphael’s show, and some early talk shows. They also owned Channel 17 here in town and a magazine called Music City News. Cliff just thrust me into this world that I could have never really imagined being a part of.
Troy with Reba McEntire.
After getting your start at Multimedia, where did you go next?
When Multimedia was prepared to sell off pieces of the company, they began to do layoffs. I got laid off after a little over two years.
One of my writers was a writer named Don King. Don had built a new studio and started a little side publishing company. He and his father, Don Sr., asked me to come and work for them to help build up a roster. I stayed there for a couple of years. Then Rick Hall—the Muscle Shoals mogul, producer and publisher—had an opening for someone to run his Nashville office. He hired me to do that.
I was only there about a year and I learned so much. I learned what standards were. Rick Hall taught me the difference in hit songs and standards in American culture. That catalog that he owned, Rick Hall Music and FAME, it’s a patch quilt made of America’s music standards.
Then you went to work for Jerry Bradley at Acuff Rose.
All those years prior that I had been in the business, Acuff Rose and Tree Music Publishing were, to me, the preeminent country catalogs. Jerry Bradley was running Acuff Rose, and they were reinvigorating the sleeping giant [that the company had been]. It had drifted when Mr. Fred Rose became ill. So Jerry Bradley hired me and pushed me out in front of our parent company, Gaylord Entertainment and Mr. Bud Wendell, every time he could. If Jerry couldn’t be at a meeting, he pushed this little 24-26 year-old to go sit in for him in these corporate meetings and make presentations. That’s the mentoring that he did, he pushed me to the front of the stage, metaphorically.
I worked for Acuff Rose from ’88 to 2002, and moved up the ladder in that company to my final position, being Executive VP of the company and Jerry as the President. Then we were bought by Sony, and Donna [Hilley] allowed me to come over and bring a half dozen of my employees with me to Sony.
Kenny Chesney and Troy accept a BMI Award.
You had many successful years at Sony Music Publishing, and then left in 2019 to become Chairman/CEO Of UMPG Nashville.
We become an aggregate of all of life’s experiences, the good ones and the bad ones. That period working for Jerry, and then that period working for Martin [Bandier, former CEO/Chairman of Sony/ATV] were the largest aggregation of knowledge about publishing for me.
Marty was retiring and changes within Sony were occurring. At the same time, Jody Gerson, who I had worked with for a number of years at Sony and always respected and admired so much, we had breakfast together in LA at some function we were both attending. At breakfast she proposed that we find a way to work together. She was very convincing and ultimately, I made what, in one respect, was a difficult decision because myself, my staff and most people on Music Row thought that Sony/ATV is where I would spend the rest of my career.
In that regard, it took some thinking to process why I should do it. The reason I ultimately did it was I knew Jody was another one of those people that would mentor me, support me and grow me in that sphere of influence that a publisher has. I also watched the culture she had built at Universal Music Publishing since she got there and was blown away. She’s a culture-centric leader, it’s very top of mind with her.
That was a little over two and a half years ago now. Of course two years of that has been eaten up by COVID, but we’ve not only nixed a beating, but we have grown remarkably in every measurement over COVID. That’s a testimony to the employees here and the support that Jody has given us.
Looking back, what are some of the first few songs you remember having success with?
The first No. 1 that I pitched was the Alabama song called “If I Had You.” Barry Beckett, a dear friend who’s gone now, cut one album with Alabama. I’d known the boys from Alabama since I was a teenager through a variety of interesting ways. But my first pitch appointment at Acuff Rose when I got hired was with Beckett. I wanted to impress Mr. Bradley that I could get Barry Beckett in the room.
He was producing 15 acts at the time. So Beckett came down at the end of the day. He was tired and was notorious for falling asleep during pitching appointments, which was beautiful. You’d cough really loud or turn the volume up real quick [to wake him up]. (laughs) The last song on the tape was the Danny Mayo and Kerry Chater song, “If I Had You.” It was just a work tape. When it finished, Beckett said, “Randy will love that, I’ll love cutting it, and we’ll have a hit together.” Within six months, we had a No. 1 record.
Interestingly enough, as I told you, “If I Had You” was the last song out of 10 that I played Barry that day and it was the only one he loved. Fast forward a few months or a year, I’m in our new building at Acuff Rose, playing for Jerry Fuller and John Hobbs who were producing Collin Raye. The first song I played them was “Love, Me.” We had a No. 1 on it. I played them three or four more and every time they’d pass on one, they would say, “We gotta cut that first song.” So after four songs, I could see where the meeting was going, and I said, “Do y’all just want to stop listening and go to lunch?” They said, “Yeah!” (laughs). We didn’t listen to another song. I’ll never forget that. That was a wonderful experience.
Taylor Swift and Troy accept a BMI Award.
What are some of the best qualities about our industry?
We are truly a community. We’re not strung out miles apart like Los Angeles is forced to be. We run into one another and spend time with one another at the ball field, concerts, restaurants and clubs. We have a sense of community. LA, New York and Atlanta all have their own sense of community, but there’s no question that this is pretty unique.
Earlier this week I was in a label meeting with three other heads of Nashville publishing companies, and we’re all in there together talking, conversing, asking questions and sharing together. That’s a little more iffy in other places. Obviously we all compete with each other in a certain sense, because you’re trying to get the cut or have the hit, but in another sense, we truly are friends. That’s what sets this community apart.
One of the most satisfying things about the Music Row community is raising a child around all these gifted songwriters who are such characters and then having that child grow up and want to work in that same culture, both with some of those same writers but also with their own generation of creators. Seeing my son Joshua, find his place in this community as songwriter representative at BMI has been particularly gratifying.
Troy (middle) with his wife Sylvia, and son Joshua, who is also in the business as Director of Creative in Nashville’s BMI office.
What does it take to be a successful person in business and in life?
There is a a quote from To Kill A Mockingbird that I try to live by. It’s when Atticus is sitting with Scout, his young daughter who’s really torn up inside because she sees the divisiveness in their community over this false accusation of rape by a Black man. She sees this miniature culture war that’s happening all because of this lie that’s told. She’s obviously trying make sense of it and, I’m paraphrasing, but Atticus says that great line: “You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view…until you climb into his skin and walk around in it.” I would say that, one of the ways that one might measure success that seems more important to me than a lot of other ways we can measure it, is what Atticus was describing: empathy. Putting yourself in another person’s shoes to the best that you can.
I really believe with all of my soul that you will look back on your career and call it successful if you have loved the people that you work with, if you’ve poured yourself into it, and if you have tried your best, even in difficult times, to show them empathy. Even when we disagree, even when it’s hard to show empathy toward people, I believe that would be the premier expression of success for me. If I’m doing that, I can feel successful. And if people see me doing that, they might consider me successful.
The string of No. 1s or the string of awards from organizations, all the pictures that we take with ourselves and with artists, all that’s wonderful—that’s part of our culture and who we are. It’s all important and a joyful experience. But if we gain all that and we sacrifice loving one another and showing empathy to one another, all that other stuff is just a breeze that blows by for a second and is gone. That would be my underlying definition of success.
CMA Makes Triumphant Return To U.K. For 2022 C2C Festival
/by Lorie HollabaughA special CMA Songwriters Series show opens the 2022 C2C Festival in London on Thursday, March 10. Pictured (L-R): Luke Dick, Caitlyn Smith, Russell Dickerson and Shy Carter. Photo: Luke Dyson/CMA
The CMA returned to the Country to Country: C2C Festival this past weekend in the U.K. with its CMA Songwriters Series and Introducing Nashville series.
Serving as the official kickoff for C2C, the CMA Songwriters Series show on Thursday (March 10) set the tone for the weekend’s return and featured performances from Shy Carter, Luke Dick, Russell Dickerson and Caitlyn Smith.
Other highlights included special guests Priscilla Block, Everette, Tiera Kennedy and Morgan Wade surprising fans and joining the round, as well as the announcement that both Carter and Wade would be making their Grand Ole Opry debuts.
CMA’s Introducing Nashville stage. Pictured (L-R): Morgan Wade, Tiera Kennedy and Priscilla Block. Photo: Luke Dyson/CMA
CMA’s international touring series, Introducing Nashville, featured performances by Block, Kennedy and Wade during the festival’s opening set on the main stage at the O2 in London, 3 Arena in Dublin, and the OVO Hydro in Glasgow. This year’s show also marked the first time a songwriter’s round has been featured on a U.K. arena stage.
“To be back and celebrating country music with our international fans, colleagues and industry partners has been incredibly meaningful,” says Milly Olykan, Vice President, International Relations and Development. “The energy of the crowds and overall excitement throughout the weekend was a testament to the ways the country genre has continued to grow and reach audiences even with the challenges we’ve faced over the last two years. We are already counting down until next year!”
Live In The Vineyard Goes Country Announces 2022 Lineup
/by Lorie HollabaughLive In The Vineyard Goes Country (LITVGC), set for April 26-28 in Napa Valley, has announced the lineup for this year’s event.
Jessie James Decker, Mitchell Tenpenny, and Joe Nichols will kick things off at the Opening Reception at Napa’s oldest winery, Charles Krug, on April 26. Events on April 27 begin with a VIP Tailgate among the vineyards at Peju with performances from Hannah Ellis, Jameson Rodgers, and Lee Brice.
The evening will conclude with the Mainstage event at The Uptown Theatre with Chase Rice, Breland, Morgan Evans, Tyler Braden, Caroline Jones, and more to be announced. The event will close with a special Send-Off Brunch at Domaine Chandon on April 28 with artists to be announced soon.
In addition to the LITVGC main events, private VIP performances are set at wineries throughout Napa Valley and will feature intimate acoustic sets from Easton Corbin, Tim Duggar, Ian Flanigan, Jordan Fletcher, Ray Fulcher, Ryan Griffin, Ty Herndon, Rayne Johnson, Erin Kinsey, Brooke Moriber, O.N.E. The Duo, Caitlyn Smith, Matt Stell, and Restless Road, with more to be announced.
“LITVGC is an event that brings together ‘the best of’ in music, culinary arts, wine, and more,” says Founder of Live In the Vineyard and President of Forefront Entertainment Bobbii Jacobs. “LITVGC bridges relationships like no other, and we couldn’t be prouder of the impact it continues to have on the different communities it touches. We are excited about this year’s lineup and for what’s in store–this year’s attendees are in for a real treat.”
The three-day private event brings together radio programmers, DSP curators, label execs, VIPs, corporate hospitality groups, and more to hear brand new music by artists in a unique setting. For more information, click here.
SixForty1 Builds Team: Signs With Morris Higham, WME, More [Exclusive]
/by Lorie HollabaughPictured (L-R): Aaron Keiser (Morris Higham Management), Eric Gallimore (Amped Entertainment), Rob Filhart (Toby & Molly Music), Aaron Tannenbaum (WME)
SixForty1 has signed with Morris Higham Management and WME’s Aaron Tannenbaum for representation.
The pop-country duo comprised of Austin Gee and Brooks Hoffman have also individually inked respective publishing deals with Amped Entertainment and Toby & Molly Music.
Formed while attending Murray State University in Kentucky, the duo discovered they had immediate songwriting chemistry. After moving to Nashville in 2018, they soon gained attention from some of Nashville’s power players, including Aaron Keiser at Morris Higham Management and Tannenbaum.
The announcement on their new team follows SixForty1’s 2021 EP release, Started Right Here, which moved the duo’s streaming numbers into the multi-millions. SixForty1 has toured with Brantley Gilbert, Eli Young Band, Michael Ray, Walker Hayes, Niko Moon and Dustin Lynch, and are currently on the road with Tyler Rich on the “Two Thousand (more) Miles Tour.”
“It’s an honor to represent SixForty who are dedicated to their craft,” says Morris Higham Management’s Clint Higham. “Both Austin and Brooks are equally talented songwriters as they are performers. In a day of TikTok and instafamous moments, it’s refreshing to work with Brooks and Austin. They are the real long-term deal.”
“I am proud to be working with Aaron Keiser and Morris Higham Management to nurture what Brooks and Austin have already established with their unique songwriting and great live show,” says Tannenbaum.
“We are blessed with the opportunity to work with such an incredible team and we are excited to see where we take each other,” shares Gee and Hoffman. “The sky is truly the limit here.”