
Travis Denning
Mercury Nashville Recording artist Travis Denning recently released his sophomore project Dirt Road Down, which provides a well rounded spectrum of Denning’s personality.
With a long song (“Dirt Road Down”), a bar-burner (“Call It Country”), a wise look at life (“I Went Fishin'”), and a tongue-in-cheek ditty Denning is becoming known for (“ABBY”), the ever-charming artist shows off his songwriting chops on the six-song set.
Denning recently spoke with MusicRow about his Dirt Road Down project.

MusicRow: You wrote over 100 songs during the pandemic. Other than your current single, “ABBY,” are the rest of these songs from that period of time?
“Jack And Coke” is an older song. The other four were all pandemic songs.
How did you pick four out of 100 for this project?
I still don’t really know to be honest with you. It’s tough when you’re looking at an EP and you have all these songs that you want to put on there, but for me, it was more about balance. I knew I wanted a show-opener and I wanted a slammin’ song. I also love nostalgic love and heartbreak songs, so that was “Dirt Road Down,” I always try to have a song like that on an EP. And I wanted to put something really personal in there and that was “I Went Fishin’.” So it was more about a checklist of songs that fill these slots in my head for the whole thing.
“ABBY” is currently climbing at country radio. Do you ever notice people in the audience the moment they get that “Abby” is “any body but you?”
Oh yeah. The the first time we ever played it was in Tulsa, Oklahoma with Riley Green. It wasn’t even out yet—it wasn’t going to be out for another couple of months but I was like, “Here’s a new song. Just pay attention to it and you’ll get it.” You see some people get it immediately when I say “any body but you,” but there’s some others [that don’t get it that quickly]. I remember that show just looking at the band and going, “This might be something right here.” Luckily now most people have gotten it, but every now and then I have some people tweet me and say, “Oh my God, I just got this.” I’m like, “Well it’s only been out for two years, but it’s all good.”
“Call It Country” is a jam, and so wordy. Tell me about writing that one with Jessi Alexander and Chris Stevens.
Jessi is one of my best buds in town, especially in the songwriting community. I just walked in there and said, “I don’t want to write anything slower than 120 BPM. I want to write a bar burner.” She immediately was like, “Thank God. I’m so down for that.” Me, her and Chris Stevens actually ran to the gas station and bought beer because we had to have beer for that song. I just wanted it to be very rhythmic, that was the thing. I had the guitar lick right off the bat. I wanted it to be very staccato and very bouncy. So for the melody, I was like “We’re gonna put a lot of words in this bad boy,” and treated the melody more like a rhythm or a pattern or a drum. It adds a layer to that song.
You wrote “Grew Up With A Truck” by yourself.
I partnered with Charles Schwab to debut their giveaway for their PGA tour stop. They called me and asked, “Can you write a truck song?” I was like, “Yeah, I probably can. I think I’ve written about 9,000 of them.” I just sat down and took that as an opportunity to write it myself. I had a lot of time to write it and it was really cool to be in that process of picking at it for a week versus going, “Hey, I’ll meet you at 11 o’clock at this office and we’re going to write this song.” Being able to do it like my idols and heroes, like Neil Young, Gregg Allman and Steve Earl, I got to spend some time and really put every little piece that I can remember from growing up into that song. I’m gonna try to do that more often because I felt like I got a little better at writing.
“I Went Fishin’” was written a few days after you got the news about the Sam Hunt tour that you were supposed to be on was canceled.
It just sucked. It was the realization that COVID wasn’t going anywhere and that we weren’t going to be on the road anytime soon. It was just an overall bummer. I had the title in my phone prior to that because I really fell back in love with fishing when the pandemic hit. I fished a little bit growing up. And truthfully, it’s up there with playing guitar and being a songwriter for me. It’s just something I really love to do. It gives me a lot of joy and happiness.
But even with the headspace I was in after the Sam tour was canceled, I realized I had the opportunity to go out on the boat and do things. I was like, “You know, this sucks and this pandemic is not going anywhere, but I don’t think about it when I’m out there. I just think about trying to catch a damn fish.” It seems so simple, but just that moment of peace, turning the world off, that’s when it all really clicked for me and I realized that for a lot of people, that is what fishing is for. I thought about the times in my life that felt like wouldn’t get better during first heartbreaks and losing the dog I’d had my whole life. I wrote that with Thomas Archer and James McNair, it literally just fell out of us. We all sat there and went, “I think this could be something special.”
Runaway June Opens New Chapter With Upcoming Western-Rooted EP
/by Lorie HollabaughRunaway June. Photo: CeCe Dawson
Runaway June is providing fans with a taste of their backstory EP on Friday, Aug. 20, the same weekend they join Luke Bryan on his Proud To Be Right Here Tour.
The new EP focuses on heartbreak, break-ups and moving on as their rock and Western sound colors the three-song project, produced by Dan Huff and Mark Trussell. With all three ladies — Naomi Cooke, Natalie Stovall and Jennifer Wayne — now married, backstory weaves the tale of where it all begins, before finding a happily ever after.
The fiery “Forgot About That” opens the project, romanticizing all the good memories that surface when you run into your ex while “Down The Middle” speaks to the realistic emotions following a gut-wrenching breakup. “T-Shirt,” a breezy, good riddance track, rounds out the project.
Honored as a coveted New Face at the 2020 Country Radio Seminar, the BBR Music Group/Wheelhouse Records trio’s latest single, “Buy My Own Drinks,” peaked at Top 5 on Mediabase Country Chart, the highest charting song by a female trio or group since The Chicks in 2003. Their 2019 debut album, Blue Roses, received critical acclaim and was included on Rolling Stone’s and Paste Magazine’s best albums of the year lists.
Runaway June. Photo: CeCe Dawson
Backstory Track List:
1. Forgot About That (Naomi Cooke, Jennifer Wayne, Corey Crowder, Emily Shackelton)*
2. Down The Middle (Naomi Cooke, Jennifer Wayne, Hannah Mulholland, Barry Dean, Tofer Brown)*
3. T-Shirt (Naomi Cooke, Jennifer Wayne, Adam Hambrick, Mark Trussell)^
*Produced by Dann Huff
^Produced by Mark Trussell
Renowned Singer-Songwriter Nanci Griffith Passes
/by LB CantrellNanci Griffith
American singer, guitarist, and songwriter Nanci Griffith passed away today (Friday, Aug. 13). She was 68.
Born Nanci Caroline Griffith in Austin, Texas, Griffith became known for her unique version of country-folk music.
She released over 20 albums, perhaps most notably her 1993 project Other Voices, Other Rooms, which consisted entirely of cover songs, in tribute to songwriters who influenced her own songwriting. Other Voices, Other Rooms earned a Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Folk Album in 1994.
As a songwriter, some of Griffith’s greatest hits include Kathy Mattea’s cover of “Love at the Five and Dime” and Suzy Bogguss’s hit with “Outbound Plane.”
Griffith was awarded the Kate Wolf Memorial Award by the World Folk Music Association in 1995, and in 2008 the Americana Music Association awarded her its Lifetime Achievement Trailblazer Award. Most recently Griffith was invited to be a member of the Texas Heritage Songwriters’ Association’s Hall of Fame. She was to be inducted in February of 2022.
“Nanci Griffith was a master songwriter who took every opportunity to champion kindred spirits, including Vince Bell, Elizabeth Cook, Iris DeMent, Julie Gold, Robert Earl Keen, Lyle Lovett, Eric Taylor and Townes Van Zandt,” said Kyle Young, CEO, Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. “Her voice was a clarion call, at once gentle and insistent. Her brilliant album The Last of the True Believers is a template for what is now called Americana music, and her Grammy-winning Other Voices, Other Rooms is a compelling guide to 20th-century folk songs. Nanci offered gifts that no one else could give.”
Griffith is a survivor of breast cancer which was diagnosed in 1996, and thyroid cancer in 1998.
Her death was confirmed by her management company, Gold Mountain Entertainment. A cause of death was not provided.
Memorial services have not yet been announced.
In This Issue: MusicRow Awards Issue Features John Shearer, Dualtone Records, 615 Leverage + Strategy
/by Lydia FarthingNashville music industry publication MusicRow Magazine has released its 2021 MusicRow Awards, with Warner Music Nashville’s Gabby Barrett gracing the cover.
The MusicRow Awards print issue highlights this year’s MusicRow Awards nominees in a range of categories, including Producer of the Year, Label Group of the Year, Talent Agency of the Year, Breakthrough Songwriter of the Year, Breakthrough Artist-Writer of the Year, Male Songwriter of the Year, Female Songwriter of the Year, Song of the Year, Discovery Artist of the Year, Breakthrough Artist of the Year, and Artist of the Year.
The winners for the 33rd annual MusicRow Awards will be announced virtually among multiple MusicRow platforms on Thursday, Aug. 19, 2021. Presenting Sponsor of the 2021 MusicRow Awards is City National Bank. This print issue also honors the Top 10 Album All-Star Musicians Awards, which will also be announced on Aug. 19, recognizing the studio players who played on the most albums reaching the Top 10 of Billboard’s Country Albums Chart during the eligibility period.
The 2021 MusicRow Awards print issue features acclaimed photographer John Shearer, celebrates 20 years of Nashville’s indie label Dualtone Records, and catches up with John Zarling and Jackie Campbell on their newest marketing and brand partnership company 615 Leverage + Strategy.
This issue also reassesses the state of independent venues and the touring industry as a whole as it begins to reopen amidst the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, and contains an informative roundup of music industry awards.
Single copies of MusicRow’s 2021 MusicRow Awards print issue are available for purchase at musicrow.com for $20, and are included with yearly MusicRow subscriptions.
Tiera Signs With WME [Exclusive]
/by Lorie HollabaughTiera. Photo: Kamren Kennedy
Tiera, one of R&B country’s newest artists, has signed with WME for representation in all areas.
A recent signee to Big Machine’s Valory Records, Tiera released her debut EP in March. Over the last year, she also signed her first publishing deal with Songs & Daughters as the flagship songwriter for Nicolle Galyon’s female-driven publishing house.
Tiera has previously performed at iconic Nashville venues including the Bluebird Café and The Listening Room, earning opening spots for the Charlie Daniels Band and Rodney Atkins.
She has been named one of CMT’s Next Women of Country as well as a Listen Up Class of 2020 artist and was honored by the AIMP in its Rising Songwriters Class of 2020. Named as an Artist to Watch by Teen Vogue, Nashville Lifestyles, CMT, Spotify’s Hot Country, Country Now and Sounds Like Nashville, Tiera also hosts her own radio show on Apple Music where she chats about about up-and-coming artists.
With new music planned for release in the coming months, Tiera continues to be represented by Olivia Hanceri at OH Creative and Brenner McDonald, McGlinchey Stafford PLLC.
Brothers Osborne Named Ambassadors For Habitat For Humanity’s Music Row Build
/by Lorie HollabaughBrothers Osborne‘s TJ and John Osborne are the new 2021 Ambassadors for Habitat for Humanity of Greater Nashville’s Music Row Build, scheduled for Oct. 2-3.
To show their support for Habitat for Humanity and affordable homeownership opportunities in Nashville, TJ and John will be out on the build site prior to the Music Row Build swinging hammers and helping volunteers construct Habitat’s first townhome community, Sherwood Commons, home to 26 future Habitat homeowners.
Nashville was recently listed as one of five cities on the verge of a housing crisis by 24/7 Wall Street, with more than 70 percent of Nashvillians needing affordable or workforce housing.
“With climbing housing prices, many Nashvillians are priced out of the real estate market. Nashville is home to many creative and diverse communities, and we need to make sure everyone who calls Nashville home, has a home,” says TJ.
“We are excited to help with the Music Row Build this year,” says John. “We were privileged enough to grow up in a stable home in Deale Maryland, where we would have jam sessions with family and friends. We recognize the importance of this and want to do our part to lend a hand with this project.”
Music Row Build began in 2003 and helped eight local families purchase affordable homes before it ended in 2012. Habitat’s Music Row build reignited in 2020 when Mark Brown, senior vice president and GM of Round Hill Music, decided he wanted to do more to help hardworking Nashvillians have equal opportunities to live in the city in which they work. Brown loved the hands-on approach the Habitat program offered for building better futures and working with and getting to know future homeowners.
“Our fundraising goal this year is $60,000. We are incredibly grateful for TJ and John’s help getting the word out about Music Row Build and the need for more affordable homeownership opportunities in Nashville,” says Brown.
WME, a two-year Habitat home sponsor, is joining this year’s Music Row Build. Habitat Board Member and WME Partner and Co-Head Jay Williams says, “A Habitat home build is one of my favorite Nashville things to do. It is so gratifying to get out on the build site and hammer nails and saw 2x4s with the future homeowners. It is a great team building experience as well. The staff looks forward to it every year.”
To support the Music Row Build, text Music Row Build to 44321. For more information on how you can volunteer for the Music Row build, visit: www.habitatnashville.org/Music-Row.
Jameson Rodgers Announces Debut Album Dropping In September
/by Lorie HollabaughJameson Rodgers. Photo: Matthew Berinato
Jameson Rodgers is gearing up for the release of his debut album, Bet You’re From a Small Town, on Sept. 17. A new track from the album, “One Day,” is available now.
The Columbia Nashville/River House artist co-wrote 14 of the project’s 15 tracks, including his Top 10-and-climbing single “Cold Beer Calling My Name,” featuring labelmate Luke Combs. The single currently sits at No. 3 on the MusicRow CountryBreakout Chart. The set also features his Platinum-certified, No. 1 debut single “Some Girls,” along with fan favorites “Good Dogs,” “Desert,” “Missing One,” and “Girls that Smoke.” The release follows Rodgers’ latest EP, In It For the Money, which arrived earlier this year.
“Being from a small town in Mississippi, I’m well aware that not everyone gets to do music for a living,” comments Rodgers. “I’ve been waiting to announce and release my debut album ever since I moved to Nashville 11 years ago. I’m extremely grateful for this day to be here and I can’t wait to see and hear how people react to these songs and this album.”
Rodgers is nominated for MusicRow‘s Breakthrough Artist of the Year at the 2021 MusicRow Awards. The winners will be announced on Aug. 19 through all MusicRow social platforms.
He also recently kicked off his Cold Beer Calling My Name Tour with a sold-out show in Rootstown, Ohio, and will hit the stage tonight at Wooly’s in Des Moines, Iowa. The trek includes Rodgers’ first headlining show in New York City, plus stops in Boston, Philadelphia, and Washington D.C. before wrapping with a two-night stand at Nashville’s Exit/In.
Bet You’re From a Small Town Track List:
1. One Day (Jameson Rodgers/Smith Ahnquist/Will Bundy/Lynn Hutton)
2. Merle Haggard (Jameson Rodgers/Lynn Hutton/Jake Mitchell)
3. Close to Anything (Jameson Rodgers/Brent Anderson/Jake Mitchell/Hunter Phelps)
4. Bet You’re from a Small Town (Jameson Rodgers/Smith Ahnquist/Will Bundy/Lynn Hutton)
5. Missing One (Jameson Rodgers/Smith Ahnquist/Hunter Phelps)
6. You Won’t (Jameson Rodgers/Smith Ahnquist/Will Bundy/Lynn Hutton)
7. Girl with the Broken Heart (Jameson Rodgers/Michael Hardy/Jake Mitchell)
8. Bars Back Home (Jameson Rodgers/Smith Ahnquist/Ashley Gorley/Hunter Phelps)
9. Porch with a View (Jameson Rodgers/Brent Anderson/Jake Mitchell/Hunter Phelps)
10. Bringing It Back (Jameson Rodgers/Jake Mitchell)
11. Girls That Smoke (Jameson Rodgers/Smith Ahnquist/Brent Anderson)
12. Cold Beer Calling My Name feat. Luke Combs (Jameson Rodgers/Hunter Phelps/Brett Tyler/Alysa Vanderheym)
13. Some Girls (Michael Hardy/Jake Mitchell/C.J. Solar)
14. Good Dogs (Jameson Rodgers/Brent Anderson/Jake Mitchell/Hunter Phelps)
15. Desert (Jameson Rodgers/Smith Ahnquist/Josh Miller/Jake Mitchell)
On The Cover: Gabby Barrett Graces The Cover Of MusicRow Awards Print Issue
/by Lydia FarthingWarner Music Nashville’s Gabby Barrett is featured on the cover of the 2021 MusicRow Awards print issue, which releases today (Aug. 13). The American Idol alum has had a groundbreaking year, being named the ACM New Female Artist of the Year while also racking up three Billboard Music Awards for Top Country Female Artist, Top Country Song (“I Hope”) and Top Collaboration with Charlie Puth (“I Hope”); iHeartRadio Music Awards Best New Country Artist; and the 2021 CMT Music Awards top honor for Female Video of the Year (“The Good Ones”).
Her debut single, “I Hope” has been certified 5X Platinum, becoming the most-streamed country song of 2020 and reigning atop the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart for a record-breaking 27 weeks. “I Hope” was also the first debut single by a solo female artist to top the country radio charts since 2017 and made her the youngest artist with a No. 1 debut at country radio in over two decades. Adding to her over 1.5 billion global streams, Barrett’s LP Goldmine includes the 4-week Hot AC No. 1 crossover version of “I Hope” feat. Charlie Puth alongside her Platinum three-week No. 1, “The Good Ones,” and latest single “Footprints On The Moon.”
The powerhouse artist returned to the road in August with headlining shows, fairs and festivals. She also started her opening slot on Thomas Rhett’s The Center Point Road Tour in August, and will take the stage at the all-genre iHeartRadio Music Festival on Sept. 18.
Single copies of MusicRow’s 2021 MusicRow Awards print issue are available for purchase at musicrow.com for $20, and are included with yearly MusicRow subscriptions.
Lainey Wilson Notches First No. 1 On MusicRow’s CountryBreakout Radio Chart
/by Alex ParryLainey Wilson earns her first MusicRow CountryBreakout Radio Chart No. 1 this week with “Things A Man Oughta Know.” In addition to being nominated for MusicRow’s Discovery Artist of the Year, Wilson was also named the featured artist for August for Opry NextStage.
“Things A Man Oughta Know” appears on Wilson’s latest album, Sayin’ What I’m Thinkin’ and was co-written by Wilson, Jonathan Singleton, and Jason Nix. Wilson sat down with MusicRow to discuss the making of her album. Read the exclusive interview here.
Wilson will join Jason Aldean on his Back in the Saddle Tour kicking off this month.
Click here to view the latest edition of The MusicRow Weekly containing the MusicRow CountryBreakout Radio Chart.
Travis Denning Shows Off His Many Sides With ‘Dirt Road Down’ [Interview]
/by LB CantrellTravis Denning
Mercury Nashville Recording artist Travis Denning recently released his sophomore project Dirt Road Down, which provides a well rounded spectrum of Denning’s personality.
With a long song (“Dirt Road Down”), a bar-burner (“Call It Country”), a wise look at life (“I Went Fishin'”), and a tongue-in-cheek ditty Denning is becoming known for (“ABBY”), the ever-charming artist shows off his songwriting chops on the six-song set.
Denning recently spoke with MusicRow about his Dirt Road Down project.
MusicRow: You wrote over 100 songs during the pandemic. Other than your current single, “ABBY,” are the rest of these songs from that period of time?
“Jack And Coke” is an older song. The other four were all pandemic songs.
How did you pick four out of 100 for this project?
I still don’t really know to be honest with you. It’s tough when you’re looking at an EP and you have all these songs that you want to put on there, but for me, it was more about balance. I knew I wanted a show-opener and I wanted a slammin’ song. I also love nostalgic love and heartbreak songs, so that was “Dirt Road Down,” I always try to have a song like that on an EP. And I wanted to put something really personal in there and that was “I Went Fishin’.” So it was more about a checklist of songs that fill these slots in my head for the whole thing.
“ABBY” is currently climbing at country radio. Do you ever notice people in the audience the moment they get that “Abby” is “any body but you?”
Oh yeah. The the first time we ever played it was in Tulsa, Oklahoma with Riley Green. It wasn’t even out yet—it wasn’t going to be out for another couple of months but I was like, “Here’s a new song. Just pay attention to it and you’ll get it.” You see some people get it immediately when I say “any body but you,” but there’s some others [that don’t get it that quickly]. I remember that show just looking at the band and going, “This might be something right here.” Luckily now most people have gotten it, but every now and then I have some people tweet me and say, “Oh my God, I just got this.” I’m like, “Well it’s only been out for two years, but it’s all good.”
“Call It Country” is a jam, and so wordy. Tell me about writing that one with Jessi Alexander and Chris Stevens.
Jessi is one of my best buds in town, especially in the songwriting community. I just walked in there and said, “I don’t want to write anything slower than 120 BPM. I want to write a bar burner.” She immediately was like, “Thank God. I’m so down for that.” Me, her and Chris Stevens actually ran to the gas station and bought beer because we had to have beer for that song. I just wanted it to be very rhythmic, that was the thing. I had the guitar lick right off the bat. I wanted it to be very staccato and very bouncy. So for the melody, I was like “We’re gonna put a lot of words in this bad boy,” and treated the melody more like a rhythm or a pattern or a drum. It adds a layer to that song.
You wrote “Grew Up With A Truck” by yourself.
I partnered with Charles Schwab to debut their giveaway for their PGA tour stop. They called me and asked, “Can you write a truck song?” I was like, “Yeah, I probably can. I think I’ve written about 9,000 of them.” I just sat down and took that as an opportunity to write it myself. I had a lot of time to write it and it was really cool to be in that process of picking at it for a week versus going, “Hey, I’ll meet you at 11 o’clock at this office and we’re going to write this song.” Being able to do it like my idols and heroes, like Neil Young, Gregg Allman and Steve Earl, I got to spend some time and really put every little piece that I can remember from growing up into that song. I’m gonna try to do that more often because I felt like I got a little better at writing.
“I Went Fishin’” was written a few days after you got the news about the Sam Hunt tour that you were supposed to be on was canceled.
It just sucked. It was the realization that COVID wasn’t going anywhere and that we weren’t going to be on the road anytime soon. It was just an overall bummer. I had the title in my phone prior to that because I really fell back in love with fishing when the pandemic hit. I fished a little bit growing up. And truthfully, it’s up there with playing guitar and being a songwriter for me. It’s just something I really love to do. It gives me a lot of joy and happiness.
But even with the headspace I was in after the Sam tour was canceled, I realized I had the opportunity to go out on the boat and do things. I was like, “You know, this sucks and this pandemic is not going anywhere, but I don’t think about it when I’m out there. I just think about trying to catch a damn fish.” It seems so simple, but just that moment of peace, turning the world off, that’s when it all really clicked for me and I realized that for a lot of people, that is what fishing is for. I thought about the times in my life that felt like wouldn’t get better during first heartbreaks and losing the dog I’d had my whole life. I wrote that with Thomas Archer and James McNair, it literally just fell out of us. We all sat there and went, “I think this could be something special.”
AEG Presents To Enforce COVID-19 Vaccination Requirement
/by Lydia FarthingAEG Presents, a global leader in concerts and live events, will be requiring proof of vaccination for entry into its owned and operated clubs, theatres, and festivals, including New York’s Webster Hall and Brooklyn Steel, The Roxy and El Rey Theatre in Los Angeles, The Theatre at Resorts World Las Vegas, Firefly Music Festival, Day N Vegas, The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, and Coachella Music & Arts Festival, among others.
The vaccination policy, limited only as required by law, will go into effect nationwide by Oct. 1, 2021 to allow time for any eligible unvaccinated ticket holders and staff to reach fully vaccinated status should they choose to do so. Leading up to Oct. 1, AEG Presents will be requiring either proof of vaccination or a negative COVID test taken within 72 hours of the show date.
“We have come to the conclusion that, as a market leader, it was up to us to take a real stand on vaccination status,” says Jay Marciano, COO of AEG and Chairman and CEO, AEG Presents. “Just a few weeks ago, we were optimistic about where our business, and country, were heading. The Delta variant, combined with vaccine hesitancy, is pushing us in the wrong direction again. We realize that some people might look at this as a dramatic step, but it’s the right one.” He continues, “We also are aware that there might be some initial pushback, but I’m confident and hopeful that, at the end of the day, we will be on the right side of history and doing what’s best for artists, fans, and live event workers.”
“Certain states’ regulations may override our mandate, or a few artists may not want to immediately get on board with the plan, but we know that using our platform to take a strong position on vaccinations can make an impact,” adds Shawn Trell, COO and General Counsel, AEG Presents. “The message we want to send is simple and clear: the only way to be as safe as possible is to require everyone to be vaccinated. And we’re confident that others who haven’t been ready to make this full commitment yet will follow our lead.”
This news follows similar COVID entry protocol announcements from a wave of independent Nashville music venues, Live Nation, and festivals including Bonnaroo and Summerfest, to name a few. For more information on COVID-19 and vaccinations, click here.