
Earlier this year, Kelleigh Bannen offered fans a taste of her new music, with the confident, smoky “Deluxe.” Co-written with Danielle Blakey, the track is a churning, sultry ode of high praise for a lover who gives the relationship that extra spark. Sparkling production from Jaren Johnston (of The Cadillac Three) adds an extra jolt to the track.
When her full-length project Favorite Colors releases Friday (Oct. 11), the indie release will find Bannen’s signature blend of intensely personal songwriting and the engaging pop-soul stylings that infuse her blend of country music intact throughout the album’s 14 tracks, all of which Bannen co-wrote.
Bannen has a long-standing musical kinship with Johnston, who produced the majority of the album—and not only because they are both Nashville natives who grew up around Music City’s creative industry.
“We met at a writing session years ago,” recalling one of the first songs they co-wrote was a never-released track titled “The Wild Wild West.” “What I love about Jaren—even then—is how he embraced imperfection on his demo. Everyone knew Jaren wasn’t turning in a master when he turns in a demo, but there is something really compelling about the way he would turn in these funky demos, that were not perfect, on purpose.”
“’Deluxe’ was such an obvious Jaren match in my opinion,” she adds. “He’s so good at getting those dirty tones and a rowdy vibe. He can navigate sounds that are country but are a little bit left, or analog.”
The new album also incorporates the three songs from Bannen’s 2018 EP The Joneses.
Last year, she stepped outside of typical song release protocol, by issuing three songs simultaneously: “John Who,” “The Joneses,” and “Happy Birthday.”
“It was hard for me to release them at the same time. It wasn’t our original plan. We had just started making our plan and J.R. [Schumann] at SiriusXM heard them, and he was incredibly supportive. He came to us with the idea of doing three simultaneous songs as ‘Highway Finds.’ We had to think about it because you want to give every song a chance to be discovered by fans in its own right and have its own moment. I know how many airBNB guests I have to have in my house and I know how much it costs for each hour in the studio. As an independent artist, those champions who are willing to step out for you are so vital, that we just had to say ‘Yes.’ So we released all three songs together, something Sirius had never done before. I didn’t want those songs to get left behind too quickly, and that’s why they are included on this album, too. I couldn’t imagine not having those songs on this album.”
“I need a reason to forget/get you the hell out of my head,” she sings in “John Who,” a soulful kiss-off to a dream guy-turned-nightmare. But she also highlights the doubts that waver just beneath the breezy confidence, on the line Is she prettier than me, what do you see in her that you didn’t see in me.
Bannen says the vocal on the finished master is in fact the scratch vocal.
“I was so sick when we were recording ‘The Joneses,’ ‘Happy Birthday’ and ‘John Who,’ and Jaren was on the road so much that we couldn’t find the time for me to get back in the studio to sing ‘John Who’ and ‘Happy Birthday’ so we put the demo vocals on the master. Then as we listened, we had those versions and everyone was loving them.”
The album’s most haunting track is “Long Shadow,” co-written with Will Bowen and Tia Sillers, and produced by Bowen.
“We kept re-writing this song. I think I have five versions of it,” Bannen notes. “To me that image of grieving anything—a loved one, a relationship, a season of life—that comparison between grieving something and it having a long shadow was super powerful to me.”
Bannen recalls thinking about her late brother Grant, who died in 2008.
“I was teary on some of those takes. I was thinking about my brother Grant, and my sweet dog, who was like our first dog that my husband and I ever got, and died in December right about the time I was singing this vocal. I was afraid the vocal would sound contrived like people would think I was trying to sound really emotional about it.”
“I’m always attracted to things that are a little rough around the edges,” she says of her songs. “For myself as a woman, I think I have a tendency to think, ‘I need to clean up before I let people in,’ and that’s such a barrier to connection.”
In addition to crafting the new album, Bannen has been behind the mic, gearing up for another season of her podcast, This Nashville Life—another place where she disposes of barriers, in an effort to bring listeners deeper into the nitty gritty of the music industry.
“It’s a place where I can be really nerdy, which I think sometimes as an artist, you are trying to convince people that you are cool,” she says with a laugh. “This is a place where I’m definitively not cool, but it’s fun to just geek out about this thing we all love and that we are making, or trying to make, our living doing.”
Previous episodes have welcomed songwriters Tim Nichols and Craig Wiseman, Sandbox Entertainment’s Jason Owen (manager to artists including Kacey Musgraves, Little Big Town and Kelsea Ballerini), engineer F. Reid Shippen, attorney Chip Petree, and more, to delve deeply into the behind-the-scenes mechanics of the music industry. Bannen says she’s looking forward to highlighting more female voices in upcoming episodes.
“As the host, I do get to kind of tell the stories that I’m passionate about and that I think are interesting and important to tell. As a woman, and a Nashville native, I’m going to lean kind of heavy on voices that I don’t think as big of a platform. I also want another mark of the podcast to be that we shine a light on songs we think are incredible. Those songs are the reason this town exists.”
Industry Ink: Lady Antebellum, Chuck Wicks, Change The Conversation, Urban Writers’ Round
/by Lorie HollabaughLady A Jumps Into ‘Ocean’ With Industry Crowd
(L-R): Red Light Management’s Coran Capshaw, BMLG Records’ Jimmy Harnen, Lady A’s Dave Haywood, Hillary Scott, Charles Kelley, Big Machine Label Group’s Scott Borchetta, Red Light Management’s Callie Cunningham, Billboard’s Melinda Newman Photo Credit: Hodges Usry
Lady Antebellum performed selections from their new album Ocean for industry friends and family at 3rd and Lindsley in Nashville last night (10/8). The CMA Awards Vocal Group of the Year nominees joined Billboard‘s Melinda Newman, who moderated a discussion with the band about the process of writing and recording their first project under new label home BMLG Records. Lady A performed an eight-song set, including “Be Patient With My Love,” “Pictures,” “Boots,” “Let It Be Love” and “Crazy Love” and their Top 15-and-rising single “What If I Never Get Over You” as co-writer Ryan Hurd supported from the audience.
Chuck Wicks And Friends Support The Navy League
Back Row (L-R:) Mitchell Tenpenny, Gavin DeGraw, Chuck Wicks, Lee Brice and Jerrod Niemann. Front Row (L-R): Chase Irwin (Whiskey Row) and Rowan Pickering (Heartstrings Foundation)
Chuck Wicks hosted his first-ever “Chuck Wicks and His Super Famous Friends” at Dierks Bentley’s Whiskey Row with special guests Mitchell Tenpenny and Lee Brice. Proceeds from the event raised $14,000 for the Navy League of the United States. Other guests performing during the event included Jimmie Allen, Gavin DeGraw and Jerrod Niemann.
Dr. Jada Watson To Speak At Change The Conversation Event
Nashville Is Not Just Country Music Celebrates Anniversary
Nashville is Not Just Country Music celebrated its one-year anniversary of providing opportunities for the urban music community in Nashville with an urban writers’ round. The writers’ round took place from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. on October 7 at True Music Room in Cambria Hotel. The event included performances by 2LiveBre, Aaron Dews, Canon, Drew Castle, Krysten Simone, Robin Raynelle, Tahne and Tryon. During the event, which brought out approximately 200 attendees, Thalia Ewing, also known as “Muziqueen,” owner of Muziqueen Publishing and founder of Nashville is Not Just Country Music, awarded several attendees with special awards and gifts.
Bandsintown Launches Live Music Charts
/by Jessica NicholsonBandsintown has launched its Live Music Charts today, the first data-driven predictive charts illustrating current interest in artist touring activity.
The 24 Worldwide, US and City charts, powered by Bandsintown’s data insights based on interactions of its 50 million registered fans, weigh a formula that blends tracker growth and fan engagement.
Bandsintown, Bandsintown for Artists, and Hypebot will publish monthly Worldwide and US emerging and established artist charts, as well as weekly buzzing and emerging artist charts for 10 major US cities, including Nashville, Atlanta, Austin, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Los Angeles, New York and San Francisco. International charts will also roll out in coming weeks.
Bandsintown has partnered with Billboard to present the Billboard + Bandsintown Tour Index, four exclusive weekly charts that will showcase the top overall and rising artists both domestically and globally.
“In a fast-growing streaming music world, there is nothing more true than real fans’ interactions and engagement at live music events to build successful and long-term artist careers,” said Fabrice Sergent, Bandsintown Managing Partner. “Bandsintown’s dataset is unique in the marketplace as it highlights national and local rising stars based on fans engagement in the real world. The Bandsintown Live Music Charts furthers Bandsintown’s mission to support developing artists.”
BMI Foundation Accepting Applications For 2019 Scholarship
/by Lorie HollabaughThese annual programs include the BMI Future Jazz Master Scholarship, BMI Student Composer Awards, John Lennon Scholarship, peermusic Latin Scholarship and the Nashville Songwriting Scholarship. In addition, the Foundation administers two scholarship competitions outside the area of music creation: the BMI Founders Internship Program for broadcasting students, and the Woody Guthrie Fellowship for scholars pursuing topics or themes related to the American folk music progenitor.
The fifth annual Nashville Songwriting Scholarship will award $5,000 for the best original song in any of the following genres: Americana, blues, bluegrass, contemporary Christian, country, folk, and roots. The contest is open to students between the ages of 17 and 24, who are enrolled in any college or university located in the U.S. GRAMMY-winning recording artist and BMI songwriter Kacey Musgraves endorses the competition and serves as a final judge.
““This is an exceptional opportunity for new songwriters and composers to be recognized and supported for their work.” said BMI Foundation President Deirdre Chadwick. “Our programs are designed to provide new writers with opportunities to build a firm foundation from which to launch their careers–and many have done so quite successfully.”
Most program applications must be completed online no later than January 15, 2020, though the Founders Award, Woody Guthrie, and Student Composer Awards have extended deadlines. For complete details and to apply, please visit bmifoundation.org/ programs.
Trisha Yearwood Brings All-Female Lineup To ‘Every Girl On Tour’ Dates
/by Jessica NicholsonTrisha Yearwood is welcoming an all-female lineup of opening acts on her upcoming Every Girl On Tour, her first major North American solo tour in five years.
Caylee Hammack, Caroline Jones, Kim Richey and Rachel Wammack will serve as direct support on select dates. The tour will resume on Oct. 13 at Atlanta’s Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre.
“This tour is a very special one, because I haven’t done a proper U.S. run in five years. I know, I know, it was long overdue! Because it’s such an important moment for me, I wanted to showcase and support a really diverse and dynamic group of girls on the bill. These are strong and confident women who have their own voices, styles, and attitudes. I love that. They’re going to make every night stand out and be unforgettable. I had the support of some really great mentors and artists I admired over the years. There’s nothing better than being able to shine a spotlight on someone else now. Make sure you get to Every Girl On Tour early to watch these ladies bring down the house,” Yearwood said.
Yearwood recently released Every Girl, her first full-length project in 12 years and launched her tour with three nights at Nashville’s Schermerhorn Symphony Center last week, performing with the 70-piece Nashville Symphony conducted by Enrico Lopez-Yanez.
Several of country music’s top female artists have been touring with all-female lineups this year. Carrie Underwood’s current Cry Pretty Tour 360 features Runaway June and Maddie & Tae. Miranda Lambert’s Roadside Bars & Pink Guitars Tour has a rotating lineup including Maren Morris, Elle King, Ashley McBryde, Tenille Townes, Caylee Hammack, and the Pistol Annies. Earlier this year, Morris led her own headlining GIRL Tour featured artists including Cassadee Pope, Hailey Whitters, Tenille Townes, Kassi Ashton, Ashley McBryde, Pistol Annies and RaeLynn.
Trisha Yearwood Every Girl On Tour Dates:
10/13/19 Atlanta, GA° Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre
10/24/19 Carmel, IN° The Center for the Performing Arts – The Palladium
10/25/19 St. Louis, MO° Stifel Treheatre
10/26/19 Cincinnati, OH° Taft Theatre
10/27/19 Cleveland, OH° Playhouse Square – KeyBank State Theatre
11/02/19 Tulsa, OK* Brady Theater
11/03/19 Sugar Land, TX* Smart Financial Centre
11/04/19 Fort Worth, TX Bass Performance Hall
11/07/19 Chicago, IL* The Chicago Theatre
11/08/19 Milwaukee, WIˆ Riverside Theater
11/09/19 Minneapolis, MNˆ Orpheum Theatre
11/21/19 New York, NY+ Town Hall Theatre
11/22/19 Boston, MA+ Wilbur Theatre
11/23/19 Wilkes-Barre, PA+ The F.M. Kirby Center for the Performing Arts
11/24/19 Glenside, PA+ Keswick Theatre
12/04/19 Melbourne, FL° Maxwell C. King Center for the Performing Arts
12/05/19 Fort Lauderdale, FL° Parker Playhouse
12/06/19 Clearwater, FL° Ruth Eckerd Hall
12/07/19 Jacksonville, FL° Florida Theatre
*Caylee Hammack
ˆCaroline Jones
°Kim Richey
+Rachel Wammack
ACM Welcomes The Sisterhood Band
/by Jessica NicholsonPictured (L-R): Ruby Stewart; RAC Clark, Interim ACM Executive Director; Alyssa Bonagura. Photo: Michel Bourquard/Courtesy of the Academy of Country Music
The Academy of Country Music welcomed Sony Music Nashville recording duo The Sisterhood Band to the office while they were in Los Angeles recently. While at the Academy, they performed “Get Up and Go” and “Bullet,” new songs written and produced by the duo’s Alyssa Bonagura and Ruby Stewart.
Country Radio Seminar Adds Eric Church As Keynote Speaker
/by Jessica NicholsonCountry Radio Seminar has secured EMI Nashville’s Eric Church as the keynote speaker during an exclusive Q&A session, set for 4 p.m. (CT) on Thursday, Feb. 20 at Nashville’s Omni Hotel during Country Radio Seminar (CRS 2020).
CRB/CRS President of the Board, Kurt Johnson, comments, “As if CRS 2020 wasn’t already star-studded—Kenny Chesney, Miranda Lambert, Rascal Flatts, Carrie Underwood—the addition of Eric Church ups the ante for sure. You can bet I’ll be front and center to take in this amazing, intimate conversation with a modern country music legend.”
Registration for Country Radio Seminar (CRS 2020) will increase from $599 to $649 starting Thursday, Oct. 17. Registrations are available for purchase at countryradioseminar.com.
Already released agenda highlights include: A Conversation With Miranda Lambert; the “CRS Artist Interview” with Capitol Nashville’s Carrie Underwood; Rascal Flatts appearing at Rascal Flatts: 20 Years Of Country Radio Success; and Kenny Chesney headlining this year’s Warner Music Nashville Kickoff Luncheon, where he will be joined by several artists from the Warner Music Nashville (WMN) family.
Country Radio Seminar is the premier educational and networking event for country radio and music industry professionals, offering attendees access to informative panels, countless valuable networking opportunities, prominent speakers, research presentations and intimate performances from some of today’s biggest stars and emerging artists. Panels at CRS 2020 will cover a broad range of topics relevant to today’s country radio industry, including social media and digital innovations, PPM, brand strategies, leadership skills, consumer research studies, the relationships and economics of the radio and record industries and much more.
Toby Keith To Release ‘Greatest Hits: The Show Dog Years’
/by Lorie HollabaughToby Keith Greatest Hits: The Show Dog Years is set for release Oct. 25 and available for pre-sale now, featuring more than a dozen tracks and four newly-recorded songs including “Don’t Let The Old Man In” and Keith’s current single, “That’s Country Bro.”
Two other previously unreleased tracks on the collection are “American Ride (Official Remix)” featuring DJ KO and “Back In The 405,” a co-write with Colt Ford that celebrates a hometown girl’s return. The album is a time capsule of Keith’s career, celebrating hits from the fun “Red Solo Cup” and rousing “Made In America,” to the wrenching “She Never Cried In Front Of Me” and mournful “Cryin’ For Me (Wayman’s Song),” as well as “Hope On The Rocks” and “Don’t Let The Old Man In,” which was featured on the soundtrack of the Clint Eastwood film The Mule.
Dan Anderson Joins 287 Entertainment
/by Jessica NicholsonDan Anderson
287 Entertainment has added Dan Anderson to the executive team, where he will oversee development strategies for company clients.
Greg McCarn and Jake LaGrone founded the Nashville-based 287 Entertainment in 2016, as a full-service artist and talent management company. Among the company’s clients are Austin Burke, Dillon Carmichael, The Desert City Ramblers, Zoe Nutt, Caroline Romano, Sarahbeth Taite, and Tiffany Woys.
Anderson brings more than 25 years of sales, marketing and artist management experience to the 287 team, with prior tenures at Red Light Management, Sony Music Nashville, Black River Entertainment, BIG Label Records, Moress Nanas Entertainment and D. Management.
“I have known Jake for over 25 years, and Greg and I have talked about working together on the management side for years,” says Anderson. “Jake and Greg have pulled together an exciting and eclectic roster of artists, and I look forward to helping each of them build their careers.”
“Dan’s addition to the 287 management team is a huge boost to the company,” says CEO LaGrone. “Dan is one of the most well-respected industry professionals in Nashville, and he brings a vast amount of knowledge both from his prior management experience and his significant label experience.”
“We are thrilled to have Dan on board to contribute to the growth of 287,” says General Manager McCarn. “Dan is one of those rare individuals who has a strong background on both the management side and label side of the business, and he has been an integral part of breaking some of the biggest artists in the format. We are excited to have him roll up his sleeves and help us build the careers of the emerging artists on our roster.”
Kelleigh Bannen Is Painting With All Her ‘Favorite Colors’ On New Album [Interview]
/by Jessica NicholsonEarlier this year, Kelleigh Bannen offered fans a taste of her new music, with the confident, smoky “Deluxe.” Co-written with Danielle Blakey, the track is a churning, sultry ode of high praise for a lover who gives the relationship that extra spark. Sparkling production from Jaren Johnston (of The Cadillac Three) adds an extra jolt to the track.
When her full-length project Favorite Colors releases Friday (Oct. 11), the indie release will find Bannen’s signature blend of intensely personal songwriting and the engaging pop-soul stylings that infuse her blend of country music intact throughout the album’s 14 tracks, all of which Bannen co-wrote.
Bannen has a long-standing musical kinship with Johnston, who produced the majority of the album—and not only because they are both Nashville natives who grew up around Music City’s creative industry.
“We met at a writing session years ago,” recalling one of the first songs they co-wrote was a never-released track titled “The Wild Wild West.” “What I love about Jaren—even then—is how he embraced imperfection on his demo. Everyone knew Jaren wasn’t turning in a master when he turns in a demo, but there is something really compelling about the way he would turn in these funky demos, that were not perfect, on purpose.”
“’Deluxe’ was such an obvious Jaren match in my opinion,” she adds. “He’s so good at getting those dirty tones and a rowdy vibe. He can navigate sounds that are country but are a little bit left, or analog.”
The new album also incorporates the three songs from Bannen’s 2018 EP The Joneses.
Last year, she stepped outside of typical song release protocol, by issuing three songs simultaneously: “John Who,” “The Joneses,” and “Happy Birthday.”
“It was hard for me to release them at the same time. It wasn’t our original plan. We had just started making our plan and J.R. [Schumann] at SiriusXM heard them, and he was incredibly supportive. He came to us with the idea of doing three simultaneous songs as ‘Highway Finds.’ We had to think about it because you want to give every song a chance to be discovered by fans in its own right and have its own moment. I know how many airBNB guests I have to have in my house and I know how much it costs for each hour in the studio. As an independent artist, those champions who are willing to step out for you are so vital, that we just had to say ‘Yes.’ So we released all three songs together, something Sirius had never done before. I didn’t want those songs to get left behind too quickly, and that’s why they are included on this album, too. I couldn’t imagine not having those songs on this album.”
“I need a reason to forget/get you the hell out of my head,” she sings in “John Who,” a soulful kiss-off to a dream guy-turned-nightmare. But she also highlights the doubts that waver just beneath the breezy confidence, on the line Is she prettier than me, what do you see in her that you didn’t see in me.
Bannen says the vocal on the finished master is in fact the scratch vocal.
“I was so sick when we were recording ‘The Joneses,’ ‘Happy Birthday’ and ‘John Who,’ and Jaren was on the road so much that we couldn’t find the time for me to get back in the studio to sing ‘John Who’ and ‘Happy Birthday’ so we put the demo vocals on the master. Then as we listened, we had those versions and everyone was loving them.”
The album’s most haunting track is “Long Shadow,” co-written with Will Bowen and Tia Sillers, and produced by Bowen.
“We kept re-writing this song. I think I have five versions of it,” Bannen notes. “To me that image of grieving anything—a loved one, a relationship, a season of life—that comparison between grieving something and it having a long shadow was super powerful to me.”
Bannen recalls thinking about her late brother Grant, who died in 2008.
“I was teary on some of those takes. I was thinking about my brother Grant, and my sweet dog, who was like our first dog that my husband and I ever got, and died in December right about the time I was singing this vocal. I was afraid the vocal would sound contrived like people would think I was trying to sound really emotional about it.”
“I’m always attracted to things that are a little rough around the edges,” she says of her songs. “For myself as a woman, I think I have a tendency to think, ‘I need to clean up before I let people in,’ and that’s such a barrier to connection.”
In addition to crafting the new album, Bannen has been behind the mic, gearing up for another season of her podcast, This Nashville Life—another place where she disposes of barriers, in an effort to bring listeners deeper into the nitty gritty of the music industry.
“It’s a place where I can be really nerdy, which I think sometimes as an artist, you are trying to convince people that you are cool,” she says with a laugh. “This is a place where I’m definitively not cool, but it’s fun to just geek out about this thing we all love and that we are making, or trying to make, our living doing.”
Previous episodes have welcomed songwriters Tim Nichols and Craig Wiseman, Sandbox Entertainment’s Jason Owen (manager to artists including Kacey Musgraves, Little Big Town and Kelsea Ballerini), engineer F. Reid Shippen, attorney Chip Petree, and more, to delve deeply into the behind-the-scenes mechanics of the music industry. Bannen says she’s looking forward to highlighting more female voices in upcoming episodes.
“As the host, I do get to kind of tell the stories that I’m passionate about and that I think are interesting and important to tell. As a woman, and a Nashville native, I’m going to lean kind of heavy on voices that I don’t think as big of a platform. I also want another mark of the podcast to be that we shine a light on songs we think are incredible. Those songs are the reason this town exists.”
Carrie Underwood Reveals CMA Broadcast Awards Winners
/by Jessica NicholsonThe Country Music Association revealed the winners for its CMA Broadcast Awards categories Wednesday morning (Oct. 9), with CMA Awards host Carrie Underwood making the calls to announce the winners.
Underwood will host the upcoming Country Music Association Awards on Nov. 13 at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena. She is also nominated for Entertainer of the Year, Album of the Year (Cry Pretty) and Female Vocalist of the Year.
This year’s radio winners include:
“The Bobby Bones Show” (Bobby Bones, Amy Brown, “Lunchbox” Dan Chappell and Eddie Garcia) – Premiere Networks
MAJOR MARKET
“The Morning Wolfpack with Matt McAllister” (Matt McAllister, Emily Raines and “Slow Joe” Wallace) – KKWF, Seattle-Tacoma, Wash.LARGE MARKET
“Q Morning Crew” (Mike Wheless and Janie Carothers) – WQDR, Raleigh-Durham, N.C.MEDIUM MARKET
“Mo & Styckman” (Melissa “Mo” Wagner and Greg “Styckman” Owens) – WUSY, Chattanooga, Tenn.
SMALL MARKET
“Dr. Shane and Tess in the Morning” (Shane Collins and Tess Connell) – WPAP, Panama City, Fla.
CMA RADIO STATION OF THE YEAR WINNERS:
WIL – St. Louis, Mo.LARGE MARKET
WSIX – Nashville, Tenn.MEDIUM MARKET
WIVK – Knoxville, Tenn.
SMALL MARKET
WYCT – Pensacola, Fla.