Michael Bryan Launches Southern Drift

Jordon Isbell, Michael Bryan & Taryn Anderson. Photo: Lance Wilson / RUN CLUB

Michael Bryan, former Global Head of Country Music for Apple Music, has launched Southern Drift, a Nashville-Based management and media company.

The company’s initial ventures include management for Charlie Worsham, a two-time ACM and CMA award winner, and the chart-topping podcast God’s Country, hosted by hit songwriters Reid and Dan Isbell.

Taryn Anderson has been tapped as Chief Operating Officer/General Manager. She has previously served as CFO/COO of Sandbox Entertainment and Account Executive at FBMM, Inc.

Jordon Isbell joins as Vice President, Marketing and Executive Producer of the God’s Country Podcast. She joins from her role as Senior Marketing Director at Virgin Music Group, where she oversaw the Nashville roster, following her time as Founder of 270 Media & Co.

“I’ve spent my career watching how music moves, and it’s never been more fluid,” Bryan says. “Artists aren’t staying in one lane, and fans aren’t either. What pushed me to start Southern Drift was seeing the gap between how artists are building today and how the industry is still structured. We built Southern Drift to move with it, not control it.”

Dan + Shay’s New Single ‘Say So’ Igniting The Conversation Around Mental Health Awareness

Dan + Shay. Photo: Robby Klein

Dan + Shay’s personal, hope-filled new song “Say So” is helping raise national and community awareness about the grave and timely topic of suicide prevention.

The poignant track arrived at country radio with 112 stations adding the single to immediate rotation, making it the most added song of the week. “Say So” also received overwhelming support by a massive multi-platform launch, including major market billboards from YouTube, Pandora, Spotify and Amazon as well as radio world premieres across major networks including iHeart, Audacy, Cox, Connoisseur, Summit and Beasley.

“If you need somebody, say so” banner on Music Row

A powerful accompanying video, conceptualized and directed by the duo’s Dan Smyers, offers a long-lasting visual that allows room for watchers to react, and mobilize, in their own way. Days after the song and video arrived, banners inspired by the music video were seen around Nashville.

“Music can offer a respite for people during troubled times,” says Stephanie Rogers, EVP and Chief Communications Officer of The American Foundation for Suicide Prevention. “It also has the power to send potentially lifesaving messages and elevate our culture’s consciousness. Dan + Shay’s song, inspired by a friend lost to suicide, and which urges listeners, ‘If you need somebody, say so’ encourages those in distress to reach out to someone when they’re struggling. It’s important we all learn to speak openly about suicide and mental health, whether we notice someone struggling or could use some friendly support. This song, which assures listeners, ‘If you’re going through hell, you’re not alone,” offers a beacon of hope.”

YouTube video

If you or a loved one is in crisis, please call or text 988 for the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, or contact the Crisis Text Line by texting TALK to 741741 to talk to someone who can help.

Written by Dan Smyers, Shay Mooney, Jimmy Robbins and David Hodges, “Say So” is the first release of more music to come from the duo this year. Dan + Shay are set to perform on April 24 at Stagecoach in Indio, California.

‘Songs For Squeeks’ To Take Place At The Listening Room

“Songs for Squeeks,” a special benefit supporting music city creative Justin “Squeeks” Mayotte as he battles lymphoma, is set for May 4 at The Listening Room.

Lead singer Marty Raybon will represent the group for the special night. The all-star lineup will also include Shenandoah, Chase Matthew, Alana Springsteen, Priscilla Block, Graham Barham, Tyler Nance, Beau Bailey, Cody Webb, and Ethan Burdick, with additional surprise guests expected.

“Justin has spent years helping artists build their careers behind the scenes,” says Raybon. “Now it’s our turn to show up for him.”

Tickets are available here. Those unable to attend who want to help can make a donation here. All proceeds will directly support Mayotte, his wife Kristina, and their newborn son Grayson as he undergoes treatment.

A respected photographer, videographer, and director in the Nashville music community, Mayotte has worked with both established and emerging artists, helping bring their creative visions to life.

Black River Entertainment Partners With Akando Music For Radio Promotion

Black River Entertainment has partnered with AKANDO Music for radio promotion.

The first official release under the partnership will be on Chris Young‘s upcoming single “I Didn’t Come Here To Leave,” impacting mid-June.

“We are thrilled to be partnering with AKANDO Music for radio promotion and to begin with Chris Young’s latest single,” says Black River’s National Director of Promotion and Artist Relations, Kellie LaJack.

“Chris Young is one of the most consistent hit makers in our format for the last decade. We are excited to represent him and his music to country radio,” says Raffaella Braun, VP promotion for Triple Tigers/AKANDO Music.

In addition to Young, Black River Entertainment’s roster includes Kelsea Ballerini and MaRynn Taylor.

Hop On A Cure Passes $5 Million In ALS Research Grants

As of March 1, 2026, Hop On A Cure has given over $5 million in grants to ALS research programs at notable hospitals across the country.

The charity was started in 2022 after John Driskell Hopkins of Zac Brown Band was diagnosed with ALS. The funding supports a diverse portfolio of research efforts, including artificial intelligence-driven drug discovery, gene therapy, biomarker identification and advanced disease modeling.

“Crossing the five-million-dollar mark in research funding is not just a number for us,” shares Nic Shefrin, CEO of Hop On A Cure. “It represents real momentum toward solutions for families facing ALS today. We are deeply grateful to every donor who, like us, believes that accelerating bold science is the fastest path to a world without ALS.”

Among the grants awarded this year is support for research led by Dr. Tim Miller at Washington University in St. Louis, Dr. Rita Sattler at Barrow Neurological Institute in partnership with The Robert Packard Center for ALS Research at Johns Hopkins, Dr. Claire Clelland at University of California, San Francisco, and more.

St. Jude Rock ‘N’ Roll Nashville Reveals Entertainment Lineup

The St. Jude Rock ‘n’ Roll Running Series Nashville is returning April 25–26, celebrating 26 years of running, music and community with a full weekend of live entertainment.

Entertainment begins at the free Health & Fitness Expo on April 23 and continues April 24 at the Music City Convention Center. Thursday’s lineup will feature Lance Carpenter, Jamie Floyd and Olivia Rubini. Friday’s Expo continues with Greg Pratt, an interactive line dancing session led by Nashville Dance Fest co-founder Taylor Winston, a performance byGolden West, and a closing set from Dave Kennedy. Race day on April 25 will begin with the National Anthem performed by Julianna Fallon, Miss Teen Volunteer America.

From the start line to the finish, runners will experience a nonstop Music City soundtrack, with live bands, DJs and multiple Honky Tonk Buses energizing participants throughout the course. Positioned at key locations, the buses bring Nashville’s signature country sound to every mile. Finish line entertainment will follow on the Encore Entertainment Stage, with Pratt opening the morning and Rodeo Disco delivering a honky-tonk style performance featuring musicians who have performed alongside artists including Tim McGraw, Dolly Parton and Keith Urban.

The celebration concludes with an interactive line dancing experience led by Nashville Dance Fest founders Taylor and Brittany Winston. Featuring approximately 20 dancers, the finale invites runners and spectators to join in a lively finish line celebration. On April 26, family-friendly events continue at Nissan Stadium with music by DJ Pete, creating a fun atmosphere for participants in the 1 Mile, Doggie Dash and KiDS ROCK races.

My Music Row Story: BBR Music Group/BMG Nashville’s Peter Strickland

Peter Strickland

Peter Strickland oversees the financial and daily operations of BBR Music Group/BMG Nashville, streamlines distribution channels and physical-product sales as well as spearheads the label’s comedy initiatives.

Throughout his tenure, he has served several executive-level roles at Warner Music Nashville such as VP of Sales, VP of Sales & Marketing, Sr. VP of Brand Management & Sales, Executive Vice President/General Manager and Chief Marketing Officer.

In addition to the roles at WMN, he also created two successful comedy imprints and executive produced Jimmy Fallon’s 2013 Grammy Award-winning comedy album, Blow Your Pants Off, before opening his management company, Marathon Talent, in 2018.

MusicRow: Where did you grow up?

I grew up in a town called Shrewsbury, Massachusetts.

Photo: Courtesy of Strickland

What were you into as a kid?

As a kid, I always wanted to buy music. I had a paper route, and with whatever money I had, I would go out to the record store and just buy music. By the time I was around 12 years old, I already had a pretty decent record collection. As I got older, I found myself turning my friends on to songs, so I was an early record promoter.

When I was 17, the whole club scene was going on in New England and across the country. The drinking age was 18 at that time, so I was trying to figure out how I could get into the club scene. I just took a handful of records and went up to the doorman and said, “Hey, I’m bringing these up to the DJ.” He said, “Go right ahead,” so every week I’d go up to the DJ in that nightclub and say, “You’ve got to check this out. Have you heard this song?”

Eventually, the club owner came up to me and said, “Hey, do you know how to spin those things?” I didn’t, but I told him I did. He said, “Can you come spin on Thursday nights?” So that was kind of my entry into what I guess was part of the business. Eventually, I took over all those nights and then started my own DJ business doing parties.

Photo: Courtesy of Strickland

Wow! How did you get further along into the business?

At one point, I was spending a lot of money buying music, so I needed to find something to do during the day. I applied to work at a record store called Strawberry Records, which is no longer around, but they were a chain of stores that dominated the New England area. Even though I had a lot of experience in a nightclub, the manager thought I should actually work in the warehouse. I said, “Okay, as long as I can still get my discount on music purchases.”

I got more than a discount. What ended up happening is they put me in a buying role for the whole chain of stores for R&B and dance singles. So I’d have all the distributors coming in and pitching to me. Eventually, I got hired out of there to work for WEA distribution in Boston.

Tell me about that.

That was my intro to the real music industry. I elevated quite quickly through the ranks there. I came in as a junior salesperson and won Sales Rep of the Year by my second year. In my fourth year, I got promoted to sales manager position, leap frogging a number of people who had been there for a long time, so that was a challenge—learning to manage people.

Eventually, the role became a little stagnant for me because it was all about pick, pack and ship. There was nothing creative about it. I heard through the grapevine through distribution that Warner Bros. Records in Nashville was looking for a salesperson. I knew a number of the people down here because part of my job in New England was to promote country music.

Photo: Courtesy of Strickland

I applied for that job. I really wanted to move here and get into a label to absorb everything that happens there. How do they make the decision to sign an artist? How do they make decisions about songs? How does radio work?

I got the job, and I spent a good portion of my first decade here just learning everything I could about the industry at a record label level. During that time, the digital revolution happened, and it started to have a serious effect on Music Row. Half of the labels on Music Row went away overnight. Warner Bros. absorbed Giant, Elektra, and Atlantic, so there was a big cleansing that took place during that time.

A key part of a shift in my career was when Blake Shelton was one of the artists we took on from Giant. When he came over, there was really no one in marketing. I raised my hand to help with sales and marketing on Blake, and that unveiled a talent I didn’t know I had.

Photo: Courtesy of Strickland

Tell me more about that.

As time went on, other artists started getting added to my marketing responsibilities, like Faith Hill, Dwight Yoakam and Big & Rich. Eventually, it was Hunter Hayes, Brett Eldredge and Jana Kramer etc. It was one of the most rewarding time periods of my career because all of a sudden I was doing all the stuff that I really enjoyed. I moved from VP of Sales to SVP, then EVP of Marketing, and eventually CMO at Warner.

I started the comedy division there and brought Jeff Foxworthy back. That led to the whole Blue Collar Comedy Tour coming to Warner Bros. in Nashville. I ended up signing a number of comedians including Larry the Cable Guy, that record ended up debuting higher than the Red Hot Chili Peppers the same week.

Later on, Jimmy Fallon called my office mentioning he had just taken over the late-night show and wanted to do a comedy record. He had gotten my name from people in the industry, so we ended up doing it together. It won a Grammy and was certainly one of the biggest highlights of my career.

What was next for you?

When I left Warner, I wasn’t sure what I was going to do from that point. I took about six months off and decided to start a management company, Marathon Talent. The excitement of that led to me signing artists rather rapidly. I signed some incredibly talented artists, but I felt I was moving too fast, trying to prove that I could build something in a short period of time, which we all know doesn’t happen overnight.

Photo: Courtesy of Strickland

Just as things started to uptick, COVID hit, and it really put a huge damper on the management company. At the time, I felt like the industry was abandoning me as well. That wasn’t the case, but it felt like it. I was at a pivotal point, asking, “What’s next?” My wife was very supportive, so I stayed at it. I struggled, struggled, struggled, and then Jon Loba called and said he wanted me to manage a comedian who was an employee of his who wanted to quit what he was doing to become a comedian.

I said I would help him out and help build that for him. In the meantime, I started consulting for BMG under the radar and was helping out in marketing while they had a couple of people out, and one on maternity leave. Soon, Jon brought me on full-time as GM. I didn’t think I’d ever want to go back into the corporate space, but being able to see what I was getting into through consulting with BMG allowed me to make a better decision about whether that was what I wanted to do.

Photo: Courtesy of Strickland

What have you enjoyed about being back in the label system?

I’ve enjoyed being able to work with a different group of people after spending so many years at one company. A lot of things don’t change. We’re all challenged with the same things we’ve faced for years, but getting to know and work with more people has been very rewarding. I never put myself on a pedestal, but hearing people say they enjoy working with me and learning from me is, at the end of the day, the most rewarding part of what I do. Sharing my experiences and knowledge to help someone else grow and better themselves in the business is incredibly fulfilling.

Do you have any mentors?

There have been so many people who have positively affected my career it’s hard to single out one. When I first moved here, I came down for an interview with Jim Ed Norman, who was the CEO of Warner Bros. Nashville at the time. Neal Spielberg actually ended up hiring me. Jim Ed, Neal and I met and talked about the job. I asked how the interview was going, and he said, “Oh, you’ve got the job. I just wanted to get to know you.” He is such a warm and kind human being. He cared a lot about how my family would feel about moving here.

What’s one of the coolest moments you’ve had in your career?

Winning the Grammy Award for the Jimmy Fallon album. That’s something I never dreamed would happen, and it was never a goal.

Durable ‘Nashville Cat’ Wayne Moss Passes

Wayne Moss performs at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum during his Nashville Cats program in 2009. Photo: Donn Jones, courtesy of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

A vital presence on the Nashville music scene for seven decades, Wayne Moss has died at age 88.

He was a first-choice session guitarist, a record producer, the owner of Nashville’s oldest independent recording studio and the co-founder of the seminal country-rock bands Area Code 615 and Barefoot Jerry.

Born in 1938 in South Charleston, West Virginia, Moss spent his teenage years playing in local bands. He made the move to Nashville in 1959. Fellow musicians recognized his talent and began recruiting him to play on Music Row recording sessions.

The first hit song that Moss played on was “Sheila” by Tommy Roe (1962). Moss also played guitar on “Oh Pretty Woman” by Roy Orbison (1964) and on Bob Dylan’s acclaimed LP Blonde on Blonde (1966). He also played on R&B star Joe Simon’s 1969 album The Chokin’ Kind and its Grammy Award winning title track.

His work on guitar and/or bass can be heard on the records of more than 30 Country Music Hall of Fame members, including Patsy Cline, Loretta Lynn, Charley Pride, The Everly Brothers, Roger Miller, Kris Kristofferson, Eddy Arnold, Willie Nelson, Bobby Bare, Marty Robbins, Jerry Lee Lewis, Grandpa Jones, Porter Wagoner and Charlie McCoy.

Wayne Moss was in the studio band for Dolly Parton’s signature tunes “Jolene” (1973), “I Will Always Love You” (1974) and “Coat of Many Colors” (1971). Moss was also a guitarist on Tammy Wynette’s iconic “D-I-V-O-R-C-E” and “Stand By Your Man” (1968). His guitar solo on “Only Daddy That’ll Walk the Line” by Waylon Jennings (1968) inspired Marty Stuart to begin playing. Moss also played on the Charlie Rich mega hit “Behind Closed Doors” (1973).

Moss was on recordings by such pop artists as Fats Domino, Joan Baez, Carl Perkins, The Beau Brummels, Artimus Pyle, Nancy Sinatra, The Monkees, Ronny & The Daytonas, Al Kooper, Leonard Cohen, Perry Como, Esther Phillips, Simon & Garfunkel and Peter, Paul & Mary, as well as Orbison, Dylan, Simon and Roe. He toured with Rock & Roll and Country Hall of Famer Brenda Lee as a member of her band, The Casuals, in 1959-62. Back in Nashville, he joined The Escorts, one of the city’s earliest rock & roll bands.

He and fellow West Virginia musician McCoy ran a Nashville nightclub called The Sack. When it wen out of business in 1961, they used the venue’s equipment to build a recording studio in Moss’s garage in Madison. Dubbed Cinderella Sound, the small studio has hosted recording sessions by artists including Jackie DeShannon, The Steve Miller Band, Linda Ronstadt, Grand Funk Railroad, The James Gang, Tracy Nelson, Faron Young, The Louvin Brothers and Merle Kilgore. Cinderella Sound was unusual in that it didn’t advertise and wasn’t even listed in the phone book. It has succeeded via word-of-mouth for its entire 65-year existence.

In 1969, some of Music Row’s top session musicians formed the group Area Code 615. Members included Moss and McCoy, plus Mac Gayden, Bobby Thompson, Buddy Spicher, David Briggs, Norbert Putnam, Kenny Buttrey, Ken Lauber and Weldon Myrick. Area Code 615 was a unique fusion band combining elements of rock, jazz, country and funk. It recorded two albums for Polydor Records before most of its members returned to their more lucrative session work.

Moss, Buttrey and Gayden next formed Barefoot Jerry with keyboard player John Harris. The pioneering country-rock group recorded for Capitol, Warner Bros. and Monument. Its disc debut was the 1971 LP Southern Delight. Buttrey and Gayden left. Moss and Harris recruited Russ Hicks and Kenny Malone for 1972’s LP Barefoot Jerry. The lineup expanded into a nine-member ensemble for 1974’s Watchin’ TV and Barefoot Jerry Live (recorded in 1973, released in 2007). Membership varied, but the band continued under Moss’s leadership. The title tune of You Can’t Get Off with Your Shoes On scraped the bottom of the pop charts in 1975. Keys to the Country (1976) and Barefootin’ (1977) rounded out the band’s discography. In addition to being a group member, Wayne Moss produced the Barefoot Jerry records.

Barefoot Jerry was name checked in the Charlie Daniels hit “The South’s Gonna Do It Again” in 1975. Billed as “Barefoot Jerry,” Wayne Moss appeared in the landmark 1981 documentary Heartworn Highways alongside Daniels, Guy Clark, David Allan Coe, Steve Earle, Rodney Crowell, Townes Van Zandt, Steve Young and other country “outlaws.”

In the 1980s, Wayne Moss returned to studio work. He spent 15 years in the house band of TV’s Hee Haw. He also had some success as a songwriter. Among those who have recorded his tunes are Hall of Famers The Oak Ridge Boys, Chet Atkins, Brenda Lee and Willie Nelson.

Cinderella Sound continued to be active in the ‘80s, ‘90s and beyond. Jerry Reed, Connie Smith, Ricky Skaggs, Tony Joe White, John Hartford, Kathy Mattea and Mel McDaniel have been among the studio’s dozens of clients. Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame member Gretchen Peters recorded her Mickey Newbury tribute album at Cinderella Sound in 2020.

The Country Music Hall of Fame honored Wayne Moss as a Nashville Cat in 2009. Moss was inducted into the West Virginia Music Hall of Fame in 2013. Three years later, author Michael Selke published the biography Nashville Cat: The Wayne Moss Story.

Wayne Moss passed away on Monday, April 20. Funeral arrangements have not been announced.

Country Music Hall Of Fame & Museum Celebrates ‘Clint Black: The Hard Way On Purpose’

Clint Black at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. Photo: Mary Caroline Russell for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum celebrated the opening of its newest exhibit, “Clint Black: The Hard Way On Purpose” last night (April 21).

The new exhibition traces Black’s story from a working-class kid to topping the charts on his own terms, and includes stage wear, instruments, memorabilia, manuscripts, photos, videos and more. In 1990, Black received four Academy of Country Music Awards for the album which he wrote or co-wrote in its entirety. Six months later, Black won Male Vocalist of the Year at the Country Music Association Awards, and also became the first new artist to generate four consecutive No. 1s on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart.

Photo: Mary Caroline Russell for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

He went on to write or co-write 29 Top 10 hits over the next decade and has racked up sales of more than 20 million records. Black continued to write or co-write his Platinum-selling albums throughout the 1990s, was inducted into the Grand Ole Opry in 1991, and continued winning awards and selling out arenas including the Houston Astrodome. He also played the Super Bowl Halftime Show in 1994 and received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

“Clint Black: The Hard Way On Purpose” is included with museum admission, the exhibit is now open and runs until August 2027. The official exhibit playlist is now available here.

On May 23, Black will participate in an intimate evening in conversation celebrating his new memoir Killin’ Time: My Life and Music. The event will take place at 6 p.m. in the Ford Theater at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, and tickets, which include an autographed book, are on sale here.

Clint Black and Lisa Hartman Black. Photo: Mary Caroline Russell for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

Kyle Young, Clint Black, Erin Osmon, Michael Gray and Mick Buck. Photo: Mary Caroline Russell for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

Chris Stapleton, Lainey Wilson, More Among Country Calling Headliners

Chris Stapleton, Lainey Wilson, Miranda Lambert and Rascal Flatts are slated to headline Country Calling Festival 2026. The festival is slated for Ocean City Inlet Beach on Oct. 2 and 3.

The lineup also includes Dierks Bentley, Brothers Osborne, Dustin Lynch, Russell Dickerson, Travis Tritt, Charley Crockett, Mitchell Tenpenny, Wyatt Flores and many more across the festival’s three stages.

Tickets go on sale tomorrow (April 23). Additional information can be found here.

Beyond the music, festival grounds include the full Ocean City Boardwalk experience which includes restaurants, bars, variety shops, and the Jolly Roger at the Pier Amusement Park.