
peermusic Nashville Sr. VP, Michael Knox. Photo: Haley Crow
In 2019, peermusic has been on the move—on many fronts.
peermusic relocated its Nashville office to 55 Music Sq. E., Ste. C—a space that previously housed SESAC’s offices, and remodeled the building to include more writer rooms, and communal, creative spaces.
Michael Knox, who has produced 23 No. 1 hits in his career, contributed to 45 million singles and 20 million albums sold, and is known for his longtime work with Jason Aldean, was promoted to Sr. VP, peermusic Nashville. The company recently celebrated the renewal of contracts for two writers—Jaron Boyer and Michael Tyler.
Tyler and Boyer each have songs on Aldean’s current chart-topping album, 9, and have co-written hits including Aldean’s “Girl Like You” and Dierks Bentley’s “Somewhere On A Beach,” among others. Other recent peermusic hits include “There Was This Girl” (Riley Green), “Rearview Town” (Aldean), and “Love You Too Late” (Cole Swindell).
Ken Burns’ recent documentary Country Music featured the story of peermusic founder Ralph S. Peer, producer of the famous “Bristol Sessions,” the 1927 recordings from the Carter Family and Jimmie Rodgers, which are considered the “Big Bang” of country music; Ralph Peer II, son of Ralph S. Peer, currently serves as Chairman and CEO of peermusic.
peermusic President/COO Kathy Spanberger celebrates her 40th year with peermusic this year and is responsible for all creative and administrative operations, including direct supervision of all U.S. signings to peermusic in the pop, urban, Latin, and country space, as well as overseeing peermusic’s international operations in Australia and Canada. Under her tenure, peermusic has seen a 25% year-over-year increase in global receipts. Spanberger began her career at peermusic in 1979 as an assistant to Ralph Peer II and went on to become one of the first female execs to serve as President and COO at a music publisher.

Michael Knox. Photo: Haley Crow
MusicRow spoke with peermusic Knox and Spanberger about peermusic’s relocation of its Nashville office, the company’s role in Burns’ Country Music documentary, and the state of music publishing.
MusicRow: peermusic recently relocated to 55 Music Sq. E.. Why was it so important for peermusic to remain located in the Music Row area?
Knox: Well, we went round and round about it because so many people were moving off the row. A lot of people, as you know, are moving out and going downtown or out by I-440. For a while there we were like, “Wow man, we’ll just take what we can get,” because they were knocking everything down. Then this spot opened up and I was like, “That’s a vintage-looking place where we’re not jumping into a corporate office visual, where we can still kind of be part of Old Nashville.”
What was your vision for the new space?
Spanberger: Well, my first thing was I had to make sure Michael Knox was happy [with the space]. Few of our offices outside of New York are in big office buildings. It’s just not the feel of the company that we want, because it’s a family-owned firm. Here, the whole feel of it is modern but still original.
Knox: The main thing I wanted was to keep the creative people in the same space, so they bump into each other. They create together, they feed off each other. You bump into your co-writers and you bump into your co-writers’ co-writers. It’s hard to find that kind of space that feels like a living room when you’re walking around. I wanted people to bump into each other and say, “Wow, this is our club. This is where we hang out.” That was the biggest part of the direction of the attitude you see. Being in publishing, that’s the big battle we have is you want to make those people want to be at your company. I mean, it’s not about the money at the end, it’s about where do you feel most comfortable. You want to have a place where other writers go. I mean, the place felt great.

peermusic Nashville. Photo: Haley Crow
What has been your approach to building a team of writers?
Knox: I’ve been working with Michael [Tyler] since he was 13. He’s a small-town America kid, but his melodies are really advanced. He’s singing about our target audiences. I met Jaron through cutting a song of his on Jason’s [album]. The first cut he ever got was “I Ain’t Ready to Quit,” I believe. He wrote it with Thomas Rhett. I brought Jaron in, and he and Michael hit it off, because that’s what I was hoping. I was looking for a mentor, and an up-and-coming producer mixed in with the new artist. Then, I just started building other people around that, and trying to create an environment where nobody does the same thing, so when they’re in the same room together, they cover so much area.
We’re a record label in a sense, with a mindset for developing talent. Our target audience is every A&R person and artist. We have to find a way to make them say, “I want my artist to be like that songwriter.” Our songwriters today would have been artists in the ’70s. My goal is to find artists that are exceptional songwriters.
Michael, you have been with peermusic Nashville for nearly a decade. What is it about working at peermusic that keeps you excited?
Knox: It’s very important for people at each [peermusic office] to have our vision of things. It’s great having Kathy and Mr. Peer to support my vision. Also, allowing me to produce and do these other things like having my own radio show and Music Knox Records, that’s a lot of gifts that peermusic gives me. I also think it helps my process of working with all the writers here. I feel like the key is keeping people motivated and excited. I want them to feel more like part of a team, instead of all this pressure of “Hey, if you don’t get a cut immediately, you’re gone.”
Artists seem to rely more on the same teams of co-writers for their albums. Do you see that shifting?
Knox: I think that’s deteriorating a little bit because now you only see three or four people at the cream of the crop. You see a lot of hits but not a lot of money. You see a lot of people winning awards but they’re only selling 80,000 records. You’re like, “Well, that’s got to change at some point.” I get it. I genuinely get it, because there’s a bulk of people I go to that I know have that right sound for what I do, but you still have to have that mindset of best song wins, because our biggest songs aren’t from the clique.
The thing about pop and country where we are, is [pop artists] can have one monster hit and it’s billions of streams, where we have to have four of those to equal that. In the pop world, and their camps, their audience is a lot bigger than ours. We have to have eight great songs, and a few album cuts. We don’t have the same privilege as some markets.

peermusic Nashville. Photo: Haley Crow
The country audience is different. We’re a club audience. They come to the clubs, they sit through a four-hour show. They want to hear multiple great songs. If you have one incredible, through the roof hit, of course you’re going to get an audience there, but over time they’re going to get tired of paying 30 bucks to go hear one song.
That’s the pressure for us, and the pressure with the cliques or the writing teams. They’re great taking off because everything’s so unique and new. New [songwriter] camps always do great at the beginning, but they recycle their ideas and then you come into the third album and you’re in trouble. If you look at Jason’s world, I’ve changed writing crews multiple times. It’s because we’re moving with the element of what we’re doing. It took me three or four years to build the team around him now; you have got to have the mindset of, “In five years, I’ve got to be doing something different.” I don’t think that some teams are thinking further than, “Oh my god, we just had a hit, so let’s put all 12 songs on there.” I think that just hurts in the long run.
And there are so many hit songs that were written years before they were recorded.
Knox: “Drowns the Whiskey” is seven years old. It took two demos to get us to hear it. Jaron Boyer and Michael Tyler have got five or six songs on Jason’s new record, and some of those are years and years old. It just takes time for things to find their place, especially given how competitive it is right now with getting an outside cut in general.
peermusic played an important role in the recent Ken Burns documentary Country Music. What kind of increase in interest and sales have you seen since the documentary came out?
Spanberger: Well, the documentary appearance has garnered the most interest in Jimmie Rodgers we’ve seen in probably the last 15 to 20 years. There was like a quadruple spike for Wikipedia searches and Google searches for Jimmie Rodgers after the documentary aired. There was a increase in monthly listeners on Spotify—It increased by 300,000 listeners per month.
Knox: I should say that just on a side route, [Ralph Peer II] told me that he’s gotten more phone calls and messages from people he hasn’t heard from in like 20 years, congratulating him on the documentary. It’s been very impactful for the company as well as on Jimmie Rodgers and the Carter family and their music.
What are the biggest opportunities you see in the publishing space in the next 5-10 years?
Knox: peermusic started out with the first songwriter, the father of country music and the first family songwriting team: Jimmie Rodgers and the Carter family. My goal is to just keep that moving forward and finding this next generation version of that. We all want to evolve into what’s happening, but you still want to find people who understand melody and who understand writing a great lyric.
Spanberger: Music is really is becoming more and more global. One of the things I’ve always felt very strongly about with Nashville is that, if I could get every songwriter I’ve ever worked with anywhere in the world to come learn how to write songs in Nashville, I would, because the craft of songwriting there transcends genres in my opinion. It’s wonderful to have a bigger presence there to perhaps expand on that philosophy going forward. Our company has 30 different offices around the world and I found in the last five years, that artists and writers from all over the world—Australia, Korea, the United Kingdom, you name it—they want to come and write in Nashville. It has become an international destination like never before for creative and songwriting opportunities from people all over the world.

peermusic Nashville. Photo: Haley Crow
Oak View Group And Live Nation Officially Break Ground On New Arena In Austin, TX
/by LB CantrellMoody Center Rendering. Courtesy: Scoop Marketing
The University of Texas at Austin, Oak View Group (OVG) and Live Nation Entertainment recently announced the official groundbreaking and start of construction on the Moody Center, a new multi-purpose, state-of-the-art, privately financed sports and entertainment arena in Austin, Texas.
The $338 million, 15,000-seat world-class arena will open early 2022, and in addition to the space being home to the University of Texas basketball games, graduations, as well as university, community, high school, and other events for the Austin community, the new venue will be built for music and host top touring concerts and shows. Moody Center will replace the 42-year-old Frank C. Erwin Jr. Center at The University of Texas at Austin campus.
Live Nation Entertainment will work with C3 Presents to bring top tours and premium live events to the Moody Center.
“The Moody Center will be a must-play arena and we look forward to bringing our concerts and tours there as soon as the doors open in 2022,” said Michael Rapino, Chairman and CEO, Live Nation Entertainment.
Moody Center Rendering. Courtesy: Scoop Marketing
“The University of Texas is one of the most important and largest universities in the world. Our partnership with President Fenves, Athletic Director Del Conte and the entire university is a new vision and a new standard on a private-public partnership that will create a world-class venue for the Longhorns and for Austin,” said Tim Leiweke, CEO, Oak View Group. “This partnership has brought together one of the most recognized universities and brands, the Longhorns, with the world’s leader in content, Live Nation, and the world’s largest developer of new arenas, OVG, with Matthew McConaughey. Those partners will create one of the greatest arenas in the world and become the heart and soul for the campus and Austin.”
McConaughey, University of Texas at Austin professor, Distinguished Alumnus (BS ’93), and Academy Award-winning actor, has signed on as Minister of Culture of the Moody Center and will work on ideas including but not limited to suite designs, bar placement, color schemes, and other concepts, to create a symbiotic relationship between the arena, the city, and the university.
“As a proud alumnus and professor at UT, I’m honored, now as Minister of Culture, to convey what a special place the university and the city of Austin are through the design and hospitality of the new Moody Center,” said McConaughey. “It should be the first place the biggest bands in the world want to play, but the last place a visiting basketball team wants to play.”
Scott And Sandi Borchetta Pledge $1 Million To Music Has Value Fund
/by Lorie HollabaughMusic Has Value co-founders Scott and Sandi Borchetta, in tandem with Giving Tuesday yesterday (Dec. 3), pledged $1,000,000 to the Music Has Value fund to help support music education and music therapy programs for years to come.
Administered by The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee since its launch in 2016, the fund has given more than $125,000 to school music programs. Music Has Value, a tagline that gained national recognition during Borchetta’s run as an advisor on American Idol, was launched with custom merchandise designed by Sandi Spika Borchetta, raising money for the organization.
“The power of music can only be realized with opportunity. Whether for pure enjoyment or the desire to pursue music-making as a career, every young person should have access to musical instruments and a system of education”, says Scott Borchetta, co-founder of Music Has Value and President/CEO of the Big Machine Label Group. “We intend to help and encourage students, teachers and schools to continue to strive for musical infrastructure and continue to realize the importance of music programs. It’s a lofty goal but one we believe in and will continue to support.”
Music Has Value will focus on two specific areas throughout 2020 and beyond. The fund will continue to target K-12 schools needing instruments and resources, with an emphasis on rural areas that are often overlooked. Since Music Has Value also aims to enrich lives both young and old, a portion of the funds pledged will also support music therapy programs for seniors and those battling Alzheimer’s.
“Scott and I are very passionate about helping enrich the lives of others via music,” said Sandi Spika Borchetta, co-founder of Music Has Value. “I grew up in small towns in Montana and Colorado. I’ve seen first-hand that many schools in small communities have little or zero funding for music programs. Our goal is to help schools get what they need to inspire and teach children the joy and gift of music. Children benefit in all areas from being involved in music programs and having access to musical instruments and the opportunity to learn music. We see a real opportunity in focusing our efforts going forward in small towns and rural areas across the country.”
The Borchetta’s support, serve and have been honored by many organizations, including Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt, Starkey Hearing Foundation, St. Jude, the T.J. Martell Foundation, City of Hope, the Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum, Ryan Seacrest Foundation, the Nashville Entrepreneur Center and others.
Shore Fire Media Joins Dolphin Entertainment’s Publicity And Marketing Group
/by Lorie HollabaughDolphin Entertainment, Inc. has acquired Shore Fire Media in a major expansion of the company’s entertainment marketing division. Shore Fire joins 42 West, The Door, and Viewpoint Creative in Dolphin’s Entertainment Publicity and Marketing Group.
“We are beyond thrilled to welcome Marilyn Laverty and the entire Shore Fire team into our family,” said Dolphin Entertainment CEO Bill O’Dowd. “Shore Fire’s reputation and relationships in the music industry are simply unparalleled. With Marilyn and her team joining us, we feel like the holidays have come early this year. We could not be more excited.”
Shore Fire Media represents top artists in multiple genres, songwriters, producers, record labels, music industry businesses, venues, trade organizations, authors, comedians, social media personalities and cultural institutions. Shore Fire artists recently received 28 nominations for the 2020 Grammy Awards, including Album of the Year and Best New Artist.
“We’re delighted to join this great group of media professionals,” said Laverty. “Bill O’Dowd is a leader with tremendous vision and we look forward to the many opportunities that this will provide for our staff and for everyone we represent.”
As part of Dolphin Entertainment, Shore Fire will continue to operate under its own name out of its existing offices in Brooklyn, Los Angeles and Nashville, with Laverty serving as President, and Mark Satlof, Matt Hanks and Rebecca Shapiro continuing to serve as Senior Vice-Presidents.
Brooks & Dunn, Kane Brown, Brett Young To Play Bobby Bones’ 5th Annual Million Dollar Show
/by Lorie HollabaughBrooks & Dunn, Kane Brown, Brett Young, Colbie Caillat, Gone West, Lainey Wilson, Heath Sanders and more are set to perform at Bobby Bones & The Raging Idiots’ 5th Annual Million Dollar Show on Jan. 13. The show, which benefits St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, features the superstar lineup along with Bones’ musical comedy band Bobby Bones & The Raging Idiots.
Tickets for this year’s show go on sale this Friday, Dec. 6 at 10 a.m. CT at BobbyBones.com. Last year’s event raised a record-breaking $200,000 for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, bringing Bones’ total raised for the cause to more than $11 Million.
John Prine’s Oh Boy Records Signs Tré Burt
/by Jessica NicholsonTré Burt
Tré Burt is the newest artist to sign to John Prine’s Oh Boy Records.
Burt is one of only two artists—including label-mate Kelsey Waldon, to have been signed to Prine’s Oh Boy Records in the past 15 years.
Oh Boy has released the video for the title track to Burt’s debut project Caught It From The Rye. The album is slated to release next year.
“The songs of mine I find most interesting to play are the ones I can’t remember writing. ‘Caught It From The Rye is’ one of those songs. I remember where I was though, and the conditions of that particular time. I was living out of a broken-down car during a warm summer in Portland, OR. I spent a lot of time hanging out in the forest brushes in Washington Park with my guitar. I had just found a fresh box of cigarettes someone must’ve dropped and was feeling pretty lucky all things considered. I sat down at the base of a tree and when I looked up I saw an unmistakable shape of a butterfly made by a break in the leaves and branches against the blue of the sky. The sun shot down on my lap. When I looked back down at my notebook I wrote the first line,”The sky then opened up and from it came a light,” After that, all I remember is rocking back and forth in the dirt in a state of hypnosis.”
He recently signed with High Road Touring for representation and will be touring alongside Haley Heynderickx this winter.
Country Jam Music Festival Headliners Announced
/by LB CantrellFour-day music festival Country Jam has announced the headliners for its 2020 lineup, including Dan + Shay, Kane Brown and Toby Keith, with an additional headlining artist and two supporting acts to be announced early January. The multistage event is slated for June 18-21, 2020 at the Jam Ranch, just outside of Grand Junction, Colorado.
Other announced performers include Dustin Lynch, Clay Walker, Mitchell Tenpenny, Craig Morgan, Jo Dee Messina, Blanco Brown, Kyle Daniel, Meghan Patrick, Rayne Johnson, Laney Wilson, Stephanie Quayle.
The 2020 event will make Country Jam’s 29th anniversary in the Grand Junction area. The festival is produced in part by Neste Live!. Neste Live! is the largest festival talent producer in North America and is part of LNE: Live Nation Entertainment, the world’s leading live entertainment company.
“Our entire team at Neste Live! is excited to continue the tradition of providing top-level country music performers for Colorado,” said Gil Cunningham, President of Neste Live. “I was the original talent buyer for Country Jam in its first years in Grand Junction, and it’s amazing to see the growth of the marketplace and have the opportunity to promote the festival with Visit Grand Junction—one of the most progressive destination marketing organizations in the country.”
Country Jam tickets and campsites go on sale to the public on Thursday (Dec. 5) at 11 a.m. CST. Four-day general admission tickets, reserved tickets and VIP tickets are all available, along with a range of camping options at various price points. All tickets and camping options can be purchased by visiting CountryJam.com.
Michael Knox, Kathy Spanberger Discuss peermusic’s New Nashville Office, The State Of Songwriting [Interview]
/by Jessica Nicholsonpeermusic Nashville Sr. VP, Michael Knox. Photo: Haley Crow
In 2019, peermusic has been on the move—on many fronts.
peermusic relocated its Nashville office to 55 Music Sq. E., Ste. C—a space that previously housed SESAC’s offices, and remodeled the building to include more writer rooms, and communal, creative spaces.
Michael Knox, who has produced 23 No. 1 hits in his career, contributed to 45 million singles and 20 million albums sold, and is known for his longtime work with Jason Aldean, was promoted to Sr. VP, peermusic Nashville. The company recently celebrated the renewal of contracts for two writers—Jaron Boyer and Michael Tyler.
Tyler and Boyer each have songs on Aldean’s current chart-topping album, 9, and have co-written hits including Aldean’s “Girl Like You” and Dierks Bentley’s “Somewhere On A Beach,” among others. Other recent peermusic hits include “There Was This Girl” (Riley Green), “Rearview Town” (Aldean), and “Love You Too Late” (Cole Swindell).
Ken Burns’ recent documentary Country Music featured the story of peermusic founder Ralph S. Peer, producer of the famous “Bristol Sessions,” the 1927 recordings from the Carter Family and Jimmie Rodgers, which are considered the “Big Bang” of country music; Ralph Peer II, son of Ralph S. Peer, currently serves as Chairman and CEO of peermusic.
peermusic President/COO Kathy Spanberger celebrates her 40th year with peermusic this year and is responsible for all creative and administrative operations, including direct supervision of all U.S. signings to peermusic in the pop, urban, Latin, and country space, as well as overseeing peermusic’s international operations in Australia and Canada. Under her tenure, peermusic has seen a 25% year-over-year increase in global receipts. Spanberger began her career at peermusic in 1979 as an assistant to Ralph Peer II and went on to become one of the first female execs to serve as President and COO at a music publisher.
Michael Knox. Photo: Haley Crow
MusicRow spoke with peermusic Knox and Spanberger about peermusic’s relocation of its Nashville office, the company’s role in Burns’ Country Music documentary, and the state of music publishing.
MusicRow: peermusic recently relocated to 55 Music Sq. E.. Why was it so important for peermusic to remain located in the Music Row area?
Knox: Well, we went round and round about it because so many people were moving off the row. A lot of people, as you know, are moving out and going downtown or out by I-440. For a while there we were like, “Wow man, we’ll just take what we can get,” because they were knocking everything down. Then this spot opened up and I was like, “That’s a vintage-looking place where we’re not jumping into a corporate office visual, where we can still kind of be part of Old Nashville.”
What was your vision for the new space?
Spanberger: Well, my first thing was I had to make sure Michael Knox was happy [with the space]. Few of our offices outside of New York are in big office buildings. It’s just not the feel of the company that we want, because it’s a family-owned firm. Here, the whole feel of it is modern but still original.
Knox: The main thing I wanted was to keep the creative people in the same space, so they bump into each other. They create together, they feed off each other. You bump into your co-writers and you bump into your co-writers’ co-writers. It’s hard to find that kind of space that feels like a living room when you’re walking around. I wanted people to bump into each other and say, “Wow, this is our club. This is where we hang out.” That was the biggest part of the direction of the attitude you see. Being in publishing, that’s the big battle we have is you want to make those people want to be at your company. I mean, it’s not about the money at the end, it’s about where do you feel most comfortable. You want to have a place where other writers go. I mean, the place felt great.
peermusic Nashville. Photo: Haley Crow
What has been your approach to building a team of writers?
Knox: I’ve been working with Michael [Tyler] since he was 13. He’s a small-town America kid, but his melodies are really advanced. He’s singing about our target audiences. I met Jaron through cutting a song of his on Jason’s [album]. The first cut he ever got was “I Ain’t Ready to Quit,” I believe. He wrote it with Thomas Rhett. I brought Jaron in, and he and Michael hit it off, because that’s what I was hoping. I was looking for a mentor, and an up-and-coming producer mixed in with the new artist. Then, I just started building other people around that, and trying to create an environment where nobody does the same thing, so when they’re in the same room together, they cover so much area.
We’re a record label in a sense, with a mindset for developing talent. Our target audience is every A&R person and artist. We have to find a way to make them say, “I want my artist to be like that songwriter.” Our songwriters today would have been artists in the ’70s. My goal is to find artists that are exceptional songwriters.
Michael, you have been with peermusic Nashville for nearly a decade. What is it about working at peermusic that keeps you excited?
Knox: It’s very important for people at each [peermusic office] to have our vision of things. It’s great having Kathy and Mr. Peer to support my vision. Also, allowing me to produce and do these other things like having my own radio show and Music Knox Records, that’s a lot of gifts that peermusic gives me. I also think it helps my process of working with all the writers here. I feel like the key is keeping people motivated and excited. I want them to feel more like part of a team, instead of all this pressure of “Hey, if you don’t get a cut immediately, you’re gone.”
Artists seem to rely more on the same teams of co-writers for their albums. Do you see that shifting?
Knox: I think that’s deteriorating a little bit because now you only see three or four people at the cream of the crop. You see a lot of hits but not a lot of money. You see a lot of people winning awards but they’re only selling 80,000 records. You’re like, “Well, that’s got to change at some point.” I get it. I genuinely get it, because there’s a bulk of people I go to that I know have that right sound for what I do, but you still have to have that mindset of best song wins, because our biggest songs aren’t from the clique.
The thing about pop and country where we are, is [pop artists] can have one monster hit and it’s billions of streams, where we have to have four of those to equal that. In the pop world, and their camps, their audience is a lot bigger than ours. We have to have eight great songs, and a few album cuts. We don’t have the same privilege as some markets.
peermusic Nashville. Photo: Haley Crow
The country audience is different. We’re a club audience. They come to the clubs, they sit through a four-hour show. They want to hear multiple great songs. If you have one incredible, through the roof hit, of course you’re going to get an audience there, but over time they’re going to get tired of paying 30 bucks to go hear one song.
That’s the pressure for us, and the pressure with the cliques or the writing teams. They’re great taking off because everything’s so unique and new. New [songwriter] camps always do great at the beginning, but they recycle their ideas and then you come into the third album and you’re in trouble. If you look at Jason’s world, I’ve changed writing crews multiple times. It’s because we’re moving with the element of what we’re doing. It took me three or four years to build the team around him now; you have got to have the mindset of, “In five years, I’ve got to be doing something different.” I don’t think that some teams are thinking further than, “Oh my god, we just had a hit, so let’s put all 12 songs on there.” I think that just hurts in the long run.
And there are so many hit songs that were written years before they were recorded.
Knox: “Drowns the Whiskey” is seven years old. It took two demos to get us to hear it. Jaron Boyer and Michael Tyler have got five or six songs on Jason’s new record, and some of those are years and years old. It just takes time for things to find their place, especially given how competitive it is right now with getting an outside cut in general.
peermusic played an important role in the recent Ken Burns documentary Country Music. What kind of increase in interest and sales have you seen since the documentary came out?
Spanberger: Well, the documentary appearance has garnered the most interest in Jimmie Rodgers we’ve seen in probably the last 15 to 20 years. There was like a quadruple spike for Wikipedia searches and Google searches for Jimmie Rodgers after the documentary aired. There was a increase in monthly listeners on Spotify—It increased by 300,000 listeners per month.
Knox: I should say that just on a side route, [Ralph Peer II] told me that he’s gotten more phone calls and messages from people he hasn’t heard from in like 20 years, congratulating him on the documentary. It’s been very impactful for the company as well as on Jimmie Rodgers and the Carter family and their music.
What are the biggest opportunities you see in the publishing space in the next 5-10 years?
Knox: peermusic started out with the first songwriter, the father of country music and the first family songwriting team: Jimmie Rodgers and the Carter family. My goal is to just keep that moving forward and finding this next generation version of that. We all want to evolve into what’s happening, but you still want to find people who understand melody and who understand writing a great lyric.
Spanberger: Music is really is becoming more and more global. One of the things I’ve always felt very strongly about with Nashville is that, if I could get every songwriter I’ve ever worked with anywhere in the world to come learn how to write songs in Nashville, I would, because the craft of songwriting there transcends genres in my opinion. It’s wonderful to have a bigger presence there to perhaps expand on that philosophy going forward. Our company has 30 different offices around the world and I found in the last five years, that artists and writers from all over the world—Australia, Korea, the United Kingdom, you name it—they want to come and write in Nashville. It has become an international destination like never before for creative and songwriting opportunities from people all over the world.
peermusic Nashville. Photo: Haley Crow
Songwriter Aimee Mayo Launches Kickstarter Campaign To Publish Autobiography
/by Lorie HollabaughAimee Mayo
Songwriter Aimee Mayo has launched a Kickstarter campaign to help publish her autobiography, Talking To The Sky. The book covers a lifetime of experiences including memories of Aimee’s late father, hit songwriter Danny Mayo, an abusive marriage, honest revelations of insecurities and a triumphant story of working through obstacles to create opportunities.
The writer of songs like “Amazed,” “This One’s For the Girls,” and “Wheel of the World,” Mayo has offered incentives like autographing copies of the book, writing a personal wedding song, or appearing in a live performance as enticements for bidders, and artists including Tim McGraw, Kenny Chesney, Martina McBride, Keith Urban and others have participated in the Kickstarter campaign with video and social media endorsements or in other ways.
“This is one of the best biographies I’ve ever read, period!” said Nashville Songwriters Association International (NSAI) Executive Director Bart Herbison of the project. “It is so good I reached out to Aimee personally to see if she would let me be part of this journey.”
“This is my life’s work. There is nothing I’ve ever created that means more to me than this book,” said Mayo. “I want to share my life with people because there is a path to overcoming difficulties found in my story. It took me 13 years to finish and I decided to self-publish the book because I can’t wait to share it with the world.”
Jameson Rodgers Announces Grew Up In The Country Tour
/by Lorie Hollabaugh“2019 has been a whirlwind year for me, signing a record deal with RiverHouse/Columbia, opening for my brother Luke Combs on his sold out arena tour all year, playing the Stadium at CMA Fest, launching my first single ‘Some Girls’ to country radio, and so much more,” said Rodgers. “The band and I are so grateful for getting to make a lot of new fans this year and we’re looking forward to playing some longer sets and a lot of new music from my debut album. I’ve asked some of my favorite artists/friends to tag along and I’m really excited for the Grew Up In The Country Tour next year.”
Pre-sale opportunities begin now (Dec. 3), with members of Rodger’s newly-launched fan club The Neighborhood gaining priority access. Tickets go on sale to the general public Friday (Dec. 6), and limited VIP upgrade packages including an acoustic performance, meet & greet, photo with Rodgers and more will be available on select dates throughout the Spring.
Rodgers’ debut single “Some Girls” is heating up at radio and the Vevo DSCVR artist also celebrated his first songwriting No. 1 with the Gold-certified hit “I Don’t Know About You,” recorded by Chris Lane. The in-demand singer/songwriter also has a cut on Jason Aldean’s just-released album 9 (“Camouflage Hat”) and co-wrote Florida Georgia Line’s latest Platinum-certified radio single “Talk You Out of It.”
Endurance Music Group Signs Ben Stoll
/by Jessica NicholsonPictured (L-R): Endurance Music Group’s Mark Ahlberg and Michael Martin, Keller Turner’s Sarah Smith, Ben Stoll, Endurance Music Group’s Josh Saxe and ASCAP’s Evyn Mustoe
Endurance Music Group has signed ASCAP songwriter Ben Stoll to an exclusive worldwide publishing agreement. Stoll joins the growing roster of Endurance songwriters, which also includes fellow ASCAP hitmakers Scooter Carusoe (Chris Janson’s “Drunk Girl,” Darius Rucker’s “For the First Time”) and Clint Lagerberg (Keith Urban’s “Blue Ain’t Your Color,” Rascal Flatts’ “Here Comes Goodbye”), as well as emerging artist-writers Jake Rose and Ryan Plappert.
“Ben has the unique ability to steer a lyric to be incredibly memorable. He’s already begun paving his way through Nashville and we’re looking forward to continuing that journey with him,” say Josh Saxe, Endurance’s Senior Creative Director.
Stoll was born and raised in rural Minnesota, where he grew up hunting, fishing and playing various sports. While playing Division 1 basketball, he started to seriously consider trying his hand at songwriting. After working in the oil fields of North Dakota for a stint, Stoll packed up his Jeep and headed for Nashville. He has a knack for bringing fresh ideas and pointed lyrics into his co-writes.
Endurance Music Group also represents the catalogs of songwriters including Kevin Kadish (Meghan Trainor’s “All About That Bass,” Morgan Wallen’s “Whiskey Glasses”), Ross Copperman (Kenny Chesney’s “Tip Of My Tongue,” Brett Eldredge’s “Love Someone”), Hillary Lindsey (Little Big Town’s “Girl Crush,” Keith Urban’s “Blue Ain’t Your Color”), Extreme Writers Group (George Strait’s “I Saw God Today,” Heartland’s “I Loved Her First”) and Matt Jenkins (Florida Georgia Line’s “Confession,” Keith Urban’s “Cop Car”).