
Chase McGill. Photo: Courtesy UMPG
In September 2018, Chase McGill earned his first No. 1 single with Luke Bryan’s “Sunrise, Sunburn, Sunset,” which McGill penned alongside Ryan Hurd and Zach Crowell. One month later, he earned his second No. 1, with Cole Swindell’s “Break Up In The End,” as it topped the chart in October. By December, McGill had notched a third chart-topper, with Kane Brown’s “Lose It.”
McGill, who is signed with UMPG Nashville and affiliated with BMI, recently celebrated 109 consecutive weeks with at least one track of his charting on the Country Airplay Charts.
Earlier this year, he earned his very first CMA Triple Play Award, being honored alongside songwriting heavyweights such as Ashley Gorley, Shane McAnally and Luke Combs, for earning three No. 1 hits in a single year. “Break Up In The End” earned a nomination for Song of the Year at the recent Academy of Country Music Awards.
Not a bad start to a songwriting career for Mississippi native McGill, who first began experimenting with music by starting a band in ninth grade.
“We didn’t really have anywhere to practice, and my mom was an assistant principal at an elementary school in town,” he recalls to MusicRow. “She’d let us go to their gym and play. I was playing an electric guitar at the time and one of the teachers heard us playing and let me borrow her Martin guitar. I remember loving the sound of an acoustic and just playing it until my fingers bled. I thought I ruined her guitar,” he quips.
Though none of McGill’s directly family members played music while he was growing up, he notes that a few of his cousins were accepted into Juilliard and one of his uncles was a local gospel singer.
“My direct family sounds—I mean—horrible. No rhythm, nothing. Maybe I got my interest in music from some of my uncles.” he ponders.
McGill was also heavily involved with baseball, though he eventually burned on pursuing the sport professionally. He attended Mississippi State University, playing in bands and traveling to gigs.
“I had this mindset at the time that the whole band has to write songs and you have to write all your own stuff,” he says. “You spend several years in a 15-passenger van with five other guys and you realize, woo, man I hate writing songs with that many people every day. And honestly, after seeing a good bit of the country, I got the traveling bone out of me. I started kind of realizing I don’t actually like the performing as much as I do just creating it.”
Those years of road gigs did help McGill diversify his playing and writing, as he dabbled in Americana, country and rock sounds.
While living in Los Angeles, McGill received timely advice when a friend suggested he try moving to Nashville and writing songs full time.
“I wanted to write songs that could make you feel emotion and tug at a heart string. With country music, I knew I could do that so that was definitely part of the attraction of Nashville. A couple of months after that, I was here,” he says. “A bunch of forks in the road led to that.”
In 2012, McGill met UMPG Exec. VP/GM Kent Earls via an ASCAP representative, and three years after arriving in Nashville, McGill was signed with UMPG Nashville.
“Chase came over and played three songs, with one of them being ‘Don’t It,’ and it just blew me away, lyrically and with the phrasing. I was just like how are you not signed?
“You always look for those little moments that stand out when you’re trying to sign a writer. After talking, we knew he was going to be really a workaholic—that he was going to dive in and give it his all—and secondly, the songs were there. During the meeting I asked Chase if he knew any of our song pluggers here, and he said, ‘Yeah, I know Travis [Gordon] really well from WME.’ So it was a no-brainer to sign him.”
His most recent hit “Lose It,” was co-written with fellow UMPG Nashville writer Kane Brown.
“To be put in the room with say Kane, it just made a lot of sense, because I knew that Chase lyrically would help Kane quite a bit with what he wanted to say, and that’s what, I think, makes Kane so unique is he has so many stories that he’s lived that he needs to say, and that’s why I think they write so well together,” Earls says. “And, obviously, adding Will [Weatherly] to the session just rounds it out.”
As getting into writers’ rooms with the artists themselves is so valued in today’s songwriting economy, “I joke that we spend more money on travel than we do on demos now,” quips Earls.
“So many times between the 16th and 18th Avenues, you can get caught up on look on what we can do with this lyric or ‘Did you hear that chord change?’ What’s awesome for me about writing on the road is disregarding the things that I sometimes care too much about, and going, ‘Man, here’s what the crowd cares about.’ Which is really what it’s all about.
“And, I’ve learned so much being out with Kane, or Luke, or Cole, and everybody, and going, ‘Man, I totally get it now.’ And then you go, “Ah, okay. Maybe we should veer a song in this direction.’ And I bring that back to Nashville with me.”
“Everybody in this building has believed from day one that we would be at this point, and now we’re getting to see down the road all these incredible songs getting recorded. He’s being called by everybody to write with them. It’s just incredible, and we think this run is just going to continue. He’s an incredible lyric guy, and he puts integrity in his songs.” Earls says.
Though McGill is co-writing with many of Nashville’s top tunesmiths, he does have a few more on the bucket list.
“Probably Alan Jackson. This guy was a huge influence on me. But then, I would be okay if we had a writing session, but we sat there, talked and we didn’t write a song. I would definitely settle for a burger and a grape snow cone,” sums McGill.
MTSU Honors Alums, LANCO Members Chandler Baldwin, Jared Hampton And Eric Steedly
/by LB CantrellPictured (L-R): LANCO’s Chandler Baldwin, MTSU President Sidney A. McPhee, LANCO’s Jared Hampton and Eric Steedly. Photo: David Foster
Middle Tennessee State University’s Department of Recording Industry honored alumni and LANCO members Chandler Baldwin, Jared Hampton and Eric Steedly for their outstanding accomplishments and excellence in artistic expression on Wednesday, April 17, at BMI in Nashville. MTSU President Sidney A. McPhee presented certificates honoring Baldwin, (Class of 2014), Hampton, (Class of 2014), and Steedly, (Class of 2013).
“I can honestly say I can attribute a lot of what has happened to me and us to being at MTSU. I am forever thankful for that,” Steedly told the crowd.
Added Hampton, “We call it the incubator. It is where everyone grows, meets and can network. That is what MTSU was for us, so I am forever thankful.”
The three met while in college and joined LANCO before graduating, and would go on to win the ACM for New Vocal Group of the Year in 2019.
“This is extra special to MTSU because Pete Fisher, who is the CEO of the Academy of Country Music, is also one of our graduates. So we have an outstanding alum honoring other outstanding alums,” said Beverly Keel, chair of the Department of Recording Industry.
“I am really thankful for the audio production program at MTSU,” Baldwin said. “It was great to learn practical ways to advance in the music industry that we have legitimately used. When we are having some band discussions or meetings, we will bring up some things we have learned, like, ‘We should do it this way.’ I am thankful to MTSU for giving me that foundation.”
Keel said the three are serving as wonderful role models for MTSU students.“They recently released the single ‘Rival,’ which is the first song from their upcoming second album,” she said. “The song is about grit and dedication, which captures the spirit of so many of our students, who are scrappy, hard working and driven by their passion for music. The song’s message is, no matter who you are and where you are from, be proud of that. Be yourself and take pride in creating your own path.
“Like Chandler, Jared and Eric, our students aren’t going to let anything stop them from pursuing their dreams of having a career in music. They are changing lives with their music, inspiring our students, and serving as great role models and ambassadors for MTSU,” Keel concluded.
Joshua Singleton Signs With Combustion Music, King Pen Music
/by Jessica NicholsonPhoto (L-R): Chris Farren (Combustion Music), Kelly King (King Pen Music), Kenley Flynn (Combustion Music), Joshua Singleton, Chris Van Belkom (Combustion Music), Kelly Lyons (Combustion Music)
Joshua Singleton has signed an exclusive publishing agreement with Combustion Music in partnership with King Pen Music. Singleton began touring throughout Europe in 2001 performing Blues and Americana music. Upon returning stateside, Singleton lived and played in Asheville, North Carolina until 2017, when he moved to Nashville.
Combustion Music’s Chris Van Belkom said, “We’ve been following Joshua for a while now, so when he told us he was moving to Nashville we jumped at the chance to work with him. His unique voice and commercial writing style are exactly what we look for in a songwriter. Additionally, we had been looking for an opportunity to collaborate with Kelly and King Pen on a writer together, and Joshua was the perfect fit for that alliance.”
Kelly King stated, “I am so proud to be partnering with a great company like Combustion, and we are beyond excited to be a part of Joshua’s journey as a writer. I think his versatility as a writer is going to earn him a really special place in this industry.”
Joshua joins Combustion Music’s roster, which includes Matt Jenkins, Matthew West, Jameson Rodgers, Anthony Olympia of Everette, Brett Tyler, Bones Owens, AJ Pruis, Leanna Crawford, Lukr, Johnny McGuire, Jordan Walker and Sam Bergeson.
Chuck Wicks To Fill In For Kix Brooks On “American Country Countdown”
/by Jessica NicholsonChuck Wicks
Listeners of popular syndicated radio show “American Country Countdown” will hear a familiar voice this weekend but it won’t be that of usual show host Kix Brooks. Singer-songwriter and media personality Chuck Wicks will be standing in for Brooks, counting down this week’s top 30 songs on the long-running program. Wicks will be joined on air by specials guests Jason Aldean, Florida Georgia Line and Michael Ray.
In addition to filling in for Brooks and planning his wedding to fiancé Kasi Williams, Wicks is also back in the studio finishing new music—“Solid Gold” and “Started in a Bar”—the latter about how he met his fiancé. The release date is coming soon for both songs, which were written by Wicks.
Wicks first burst onto the country music scene in 2007, when his debut single “Stealing Cinderella” earned him the highest debut for a new country artist that year. Since then, he has found success down various paths. Much more than a musician, Wicks is a co-host of Academy of Country Music Awards’ two-time nominated and Nationally Syndicated radio show “Ty Bentli Show” heard in over 50 cities across the United States, and now in the UK as well. Additionally, Wicks is an alumnus of ABC’s Dancing With The Stars.
Watch: Sheryl Crow & Johnny Cash Release “Redemption Day,” Lee Ann Womack Releases “Hollywood”
/by Eric T. ParkerSheryl Crow Releases Poignant “Redemption Day” Video Duet With Johnny Cash
Scott Borchetta‘s Big Machine Label Group has released the first new music since signing the incomparable Sheryl Crow. “Redemption Day” is a poignant song written and released by Crow in 1996. Johnny Cash recorded his version shortly before his 2003 death, so moved by the meaning in the lyric. The Valory Music Co. has simultaneously released the record single of the newly combined duet and music video, which was directed by Shaun Silva.
“As a mom of two young kids, I see that our kids watch what we do on their behalf and how we shape their future,” said Crow. “They’re privy to everything visual, especially now, and there’s no way to shield your children from the roughness of reality. If we could see the world through a child’s eyes, we would make different decisions.”
Read MusicRow‘s exclusive reporting on the song’s announcement at MusicRow.com.
Lee Ann Womack Reinvents Tinseltown Romance For “Hollywood” Music Video
Refinery29 has exclusively released the music video for “Hollywood,” Lee Ann Womack‘s second single from the Grammy nominated The Lonely, The Lonesome & The Gone (ATO Records).
Directed by Chris Ullens (Rex Orange County, Fergie), the video features custom-made dolls and stop-motion animation set to the moody and mournful tune of faded love, all paired with romanticized footage of California landmarks like the Hollywood sign, desert motels, and wind farms.
Womack teased the video on her socials this week with a series of movie posters featuring quotes from her friends Reba McEntire, Buddy Miller, Brothers Osborne, Rodney Crowell and Willie Nelson.
Lee Ann Womack’s Upcoming Tour Dates:
Friday, May 3 – Musical Instrument Museum – Phoenix, AZ
Wednesday, May 29 – Cactus Cafe – Austin, TX
Thursday, May 30 – Cactus Cafe – Austin, TX
Friday, May 31 – Cheatham Street Warehouse – San Marcos, TX
Wednesday, July 3 – J.M. Caldwell Sr. Community Park – Princeton, TX
Saturday, August 10 – Sugar Creek Casino – Hinton, OK
Friday, October 4 – City Winery – Chicago, IL
Saturday, October 5 – City Winery – Chicago, IL
Blake Shelton To Hold Nashville Concert To Honor Musicians On Call’s 20th Anniversary
/by Jessica NicholsonBlake Shelton
Musicians On Call, a nonprofit that brings live and recorded music to the bedsides of patients in healthcare facilities, will host its 20th Anniversary Kick-Off Celebration in Nashville on Friday, May 31 at the CMA Theater.
The event will celebrate the organization’s 20th anniversary of delivering the healing power of music nationwide and will feature a headlining performance by Warner Music Nashville superstar Blake Shelton and an opening set from labelmate Cale Dodds.
The event will honor longtime MOC supporter and Warner Music Nashville Sr. VP/Artist Development Shane Tarleton with the organization’s first Lifetime Achievement Award. Tarleton, an Advisory Board Member, is being recognized for his commitment to health and music causes throughout Nashville including his volunteer service with Musicians On Call at Alive Hospice and Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt.
Charlie Cook, VP/Country Formats, Cumulus Media, Operations Manager/Cumulus Media-Nashville, and Program Director/WSM-FM, will receive the Leadership in Music Golden Ukulele in gratitude for the support Cumulus and Nash FM has given to MOC.
Universal Music Group Nashville recording artist Lauren Alaina will receive the Music Heals Award thanks to her commitment to volunteering at Musicians On Call’s Bedside Performance Program.
“Over the past 20 years we’ve brought the healing power of music to over 700,000 people in hospitals nationwide. A single song has the ability to lift a patient’s spirit unlike anything else and science has proven that music does actually help patients heal,” said Musicians On Call President & CEO Pete Griffin. “It’s been an honor to bring this experience to facilities nationwide and we could not have done it without the support of our community, volunteers and artists who generously give their time and talents to brighten someone’s day, especially champions like Shane Tarleton, Charlie Cook and Lauren Alaina. What better way to celebrate this milestone than with music icon, Blake Shelton!”
The celebration will begin with an exclusive VIP reception at the CMA Theater, followed by performances by Dodds and a full-band set from Shelton. A limited number of tickets will be available to the public starting on sale Friday, April 26 at 10 a.m. (CT). Pre-sale will begin Wednesday, April 24 for existing Musicians On Call volunteers and supporters. Tickets can be found at musiciansoncall.org/MOC20.
Musicians On Call 20th Anniversary Kickoff Celebration is sponsored by City National Bank, Outback Presents, Warner Music Nashville, OnSite, HCA, RIAA, UMG Nashville, YouTube, Cumulus Media and John and Stephanie Roberts.
Rodney Atkins Prepares To Launch First New Album In Eight Years
/by LB CantrellRodney Atkins with his Curb Records team at his Caught Up In The Country album launch event at ONE at Cannery Row in Nashville. Photo: Photo credit: Molly Mantlow
Rodney Atkins celebrated his upcoming album, Caught Up In The Country, this week at a gathering at Nashville’s ONE at Cannery Row. Atkins’ first new album in eight years comes out May 10. The Curb Records crew also celebrated the success of his 2011 album, Take A Back Road, along with Atkins’ co-writers.
Atkins supposes he started making Caught Up In The Country around 2014. He wed fellow artist Rose Falcon—whose presence on the album is undeniable—in 2013.
“A lot of it was me writing with Rose,” Atkins tells MusicRow. “We met in 2012 and obviously started trying to write songs together. It kind of didn’t work [at first] because we wanted it to be the end-all, be-all of all songs. That process took a while for us to figure out we needed to just write a freaking song. Once we clicked, man, it changed everything. It changed how I wrote with other people. So it was constant from 2014.”
“My Life,” which was released early, is a direct implantation from Rose’s life onto the album. It is inspired by her grandparents’ 71-year marriage, and written when her grandmother passed in 2017.
Known for his father-son hits like “Watching You” and “He’s Mine,” Atkins continues the story on Caught Up In The Country with “Young Man.”
“So we had ‘Watching You,’ and then ‘He’s Mine,’ so that’s young, teenage boy getting in trouble,” he said. “And then this is the next place for where [my son] Eli is at. Saying, ‘It’s okay, quit trying to be cool and just be where you are.’ It definitely is a purposeful message to him—and to me!”
Atkins also includes his version of Jason Isbell’s “Cover Me Up” on the album. “I’ve heard other people cover that song before but they’re pretty much just trying to do Isbell, and I knew I couldn’t do Isbell,” he said. “I had to hopefully make it my own thing, and not even try to be him because what he does is unbelievable.”
Atkins worked with Ted Hewitt again on this record, and brought on Blake Bollinger on to do a few tunes, as well.
“Two of my secret weapons when making records are Kim Keyes and Vicki Hampton. They are singing on several songs to make it big, and then Rose would come in and she would keep it in Williamson County,” he quips. “There’s a couple duets on there, she’s singing on almost everything.”
Caught Up In The Country is available for pre-order now.
Pictured (L-R): Luke Laird, Laurel Kittleson (VP of Artist Development & A&R, Curb Records), Marv Green, Rhett Akins, Atkins, Ted Hewitt, and Bob Regan. Photo credit: Molly Mantlow
Pictured (L-R): Bob Regan, Rhett Akins, Ted Hewitt, Atkins, and Luke Laird. Photo credit: Molly Mantlow
Weekly Chart Report (4/19/19)
/by Alex ParryClick here or above to access MusicRow’s weekly CountryBreakout Report.
Chase McGill Talks Penning Triple Chart Toppers And Making Country His Home
/by Jessica NicholsonChase McGill. Photo: Courtesy UMPG
In September 2018, Chase McGill earned his first No. 1 single with Luke Bryan’s “Sunrise, Sunburn, Sunset,” which McGill penned alongside Ryan Hurd and Zach Crowell. One month later, he earned his second No. 1, with Cole Swindell’s “Break Up In The End,” as it topped the chart in October. By December, McGill had notched a third chart-topper, with Kane Brown’s “Lose It.”
McGill, who is signed with UMPG Nashville and affiliated with BMI, recently celebrated 109 consecutive weeks with at least one track of his charting on the Country Airplay Charts.
Earlier this year, he earned his very first CMA Triple Play Award, being honored alongside songwriting heavyweights such as Ashley Gorley, Shane McAnally and Luke Combs, for earning three No. 1 hits in a single year. “Break Up In The End” earned a nomination for Song of the Year at the recent Academy of Country Music Awards.
Not a bad start to a songwriting career for Mississippi native McGill, who first began experimenting with music by starting a band in ninth grade.
“We didn’t really have anywhere to practice, and my mom was an assistant principal at an elementary school in town,” he recalls to MusicRow. “She’d let us go to their gym and play. I was playing an electric guitar at the time and one of the teachers heard us playing and let me borrow her Martin guitar. I remember loving the sound of an acoustic and just playing it until my fingers bled. I thought I ruined her guitar,” he quips.
Though none of McGill’s directly family members played music while he was growing up, he notes that a few of his cousins were accepted into Juilliard and one of his uncles was a local gospel singer.
“My direct family sounds—I mean—horrible. No rhythm, nothing. Maybe I got my interest in music from some of my uncles.” he ponders.
McGill was also heavily involved with baseball, though he eventually burned on pursuing the sport professionally. He attended Mississippi State University, playing in bands and traveling to gigs.
“I had this mindset at the time that the whole band has to write songs and you have to write all your own stuff,” he says. “You spend several years in a 15-passenger van with five other guys and you realize, woo, man I hate writing songs with that many people every day. And honestly, after seeing a good bit of the country, I got the traveling bone out of me. I started kind of realizing I don’t actually like the performing as much as I do just creating it.”
Those years of road gigs did help McGill diversify his playing and writing, as he dabbled in Americana, country and rock sounds.
While living in Los Angeles, McGill received timely advice when a friend suggested he try moving to Nashville and writing songs full time.
“I wanted to write songs that could make you feel emotion and tug at a heart string. With country music, I knew I could do that so that was definitely part of the attraction of Nashville. A couple of months after that, I was here,” he says. “A bunch of forks in the road led to that.”
In 2012, McGill met UMPG Exec. VP/GM Kent Earls via an ASCAP representative, and three years after arriving in Nashville, McGill was signed with UMPG Nashville.
“Chase came over and played three songs, with one of them being ‘Don’t It,’ and it just blew me away, lyrically and with the phrasing. I was just like how are you not signed?
“You always look for those little moments that stand out when you’re trying to sign a writer. After talking, we knew he was going to be really a workaholic—that he was going to dive in and give it his all—and secondly, the songs were there. During the meeting I asked Chase if he knew any of our song pluggers here, and he said, ‘Yeah, I know Travis [Gordon] really well from WME.’ So it was a no-brainer to sign him.”
His most recent hit “Lose It,” was co-written with fellow UMPG Nashville writer Kane Brown.
“To be put in the room with say Kane, it just made a lot of sense, because I knew that Chase lyrically would help Kane quite a bit with what he wanted to say, and that’s what, I think, makes Kane so unique is he has so many stories that he’s lived that he needs to say, and that’s why I think they write so well together,” Earls says. “And, obviously, adding Will [Weatherly] to the session just rounds it out.”
As getting into writers’ rooms with the artists themselves is so valued in today’s songwriting economy, “I joke that we spend more money on travel than we do on demos now,” quips Earls.
“So many times between the 16th and 18th Avenues, you can get caught up on look on what we can do with this lyric or ‘Did you hear that chord change?’ What’s awesome for me about writing on the road is disregarding the things that I sometimes care too much about, and going, ‘Man, here’s what the crowd cares about.’ Which is really what it’s all about.
“And, I’ve learned so much being out with Kane, or Luke, or Cole, and everybody, and going, ‘Man, I totally get it now.’ And then you go, “Ah, okay. Maybe we should veer a song in this direction.’ And I bring that back to Nashville with me.”
“Everybody in this building has believed from day one that we would be at this point, and now we’re getting to see down the road all these incredible songs getting recorded. He’s being called by everybody to write with them. It’s just incredible, and we think this run is just going to continue. He’s an incredible lyric guy, and he puts integrity in his songs.” Earls says.
Though McGill is co-writing with many of Nashville’s top tunesmiths, he does have a few more on the bucket list.
“Probably Alan Jackson. This guy was a huge influence on me. But then, I would be okay if we had a writing session, but we sat there, talked and we didn’t write a song. I would definitely settle for a burger and a grape snow cone,” sums McGill.
The Allman Betts Band Signs With BMG
/by Jessica NicholsonThe Allman Betts Band have signed a new global recording agreement with BMG to release their forthcoming debut album Down To The River. Led by Devon Allman, son of founding Allman Brothers Band keyboardist and singer, Gregg Allman, and Duane Betts, son of founding Allman Brothers Band guitarist and singer, Dickey Betts, the album was recorded at Muscle Shoals Sound Studios with producer Matt Ross-Spang (Jason Isbell, Margo Price, John Prine and Elvis Presley). Down To The River is slated for release this June.
The band recently kicked off their inaugural world tour on March 26 – 50 years, to the date, after The Allman Brothers Band first jammed in Jacksonville, Florida. With 80+ dates already confirmed, and more to be announced soon, the shows feature new music, songs from their solo projects and classic Allman Brothers and Gregg Allman tunes in honor of the 50th Anniversary of The Allman Brothers Band.
Allman said, “We’re really psyched to have a machine like BMG get behind The Allman Betts Band! We look forward to expanding our brand and music into the international arena with such a professional team.”
Betts said, “We are very happy to start a great relationship with a powerhouse like BMG and look forward to the release of our debut record.”
The beginning of the partnership between Devon Allman and Duane Betts goes back to the Gregg Allman tribute show at the Fillmore in San Francisco. It was time, in that historic venue, to pass the spirit to the next generation. It was time to take all the lessons of the past, all their collective experiences, and make something new.
Following that concert, Betts would go on to serve as an opening artist on the Devon Allman Project 2018 world tour, joining Allman each night for a musical tip of the hat to their respective fathers. The year-long trek was the first to pair Allman and Betts, tallying nearly 100 dates across the US and internationally, and increasingly drawing larger audiences with each successive leg.
After a successful year of touring, the sons of Gregg Allman and Dickey Betts officially joined forces to form a new group together. Their first call was to old friend Berry Oakley Jr., son of the Allman Brothers Band’s founding late bassist, Berry Oakley, and floated the idea of joining them. The trio’s musical friendship traces back to The Allman Brothers Band’s 20th anniversary summer tour in 1989 when the three first met, and often sat-in with the Rock-And-Roll Hall of Fame inductee. In November of 2018, they announced the formation of The Allman Betts Band.
Welcoming producer Matt Ross-Spang the band recorded their sessions at the famed Muscle Shoals Sound Studios. They brought in Gregg’s former bandmate, Peter Levin, and former Allman Brother Chuck Leavell as guests, adding organ and piano, and recruited seasoned players from the Project ensemble: slide guitarist Johnny Stachela, drummer John Lum, and percussionist R Scott Bryan (Sheryl Crow). Motivated by classic recording techniques and vintage gear in the historic Alabama studio, they cut the album live. No computers. No digital editing. Setting-up as one in the studio, they tracked nine songs on two-inch analog tape, resulting in their debut album.
The Allman Betts Band is Devon Allman (guitar, vocals), Duane Betts (guitar, vocals), Berry Oakley Jr., Johnny Stachela (guitar, vocals), John Ginty (keyboards), percussionists R Scott Bryan (percussion, vocals) and John Lum (drums).
Moon Taxi, Lindsay Ell, Ryan Hurd, More Added To NFL Draft Performers
/by LB CantrellThe NFL and the Nashville Convention & Visitors Corp today announced that Nashville-based alternative band Moon Taxi will kick off the 2019 NFL Draft Experience with a free performance on the Draft Main Stage on Thursday, April 25. The performance is part of the 2019 NFL Draft Experience—a free three-day football festival, held outside of Nissan Stadium. It was also announced that Lindsay Ell will open for Dierks Bentley on Saturday, April 27, and singer-songwriter Ryan Hurd will play on April 27 as St. Jude Rock ‘n’ Roll Nashville Marathon & ½ Marathon runners cross the finish line and join the Draft activities outside of Nissan Stadium.
Hip hop artist Mez has also been added to the Thursday lineup at the Draft Experience Stage. The critically acclaimed band Sixwire will be the first ever house band to provide entertainment between Draft selections on Thursday, April 25 and Friday, April 26. The Tennessee State University (TSU) “The Aristocrat of Bands” marching show band will also perform during the NFL Draft Red Carpet at The Green at Riverfront Park on Thursday, April 25.
As previously announced, Grammy-winning gospel music great Cece Winans will sing the National Anthem to help open the Draft on Thursday, April 25, and country music stars Tim McGraw and Dierks Bentley will serve as headliners on Friday and Saturday night, respectively.
The complete list of 2019 NFL Draft performances are included below:
Draft Main Stage on Lower Broadway
Thursday, April 25: Moon Taxi with CeCe Winans to sing the National Anthem
Friday, April 26: Tim McGraw
Saturday, April 27: Dierks Bentley with Lindsay Ell opening
NFL Draft Experience Stage
Thursday, April 25:
New North (Americana)
Striking Matches (alternative rock, pop rock and blues rock)
Mez
Mikky Ekko (alternative)
Friday, April 26:
Willie Jones (country)
Kid Politics (indie pop)
Jessy Wilson (neo soul/rock)
Charlie Worsham (country singer-songwriter)
Jonny P (soul)
Rayland Baxter (alternative)
Saturday, April 27:
Ryan Hurd (country)
Katie Schecter (rock and roll and soul)
Jason Eskridge (soul)
Three Star Revival (soul/jam/funk/Americana/rock)
Andrew Combs (indie folk)
Charles Esten (country/rock “Nashville” TV show star)
For more information on how fans can celebrate the Draft in Nashville, visit nfl.com/draftexperience.