ASCAP Announces Sundance Festival Music Cafe Lineup

Lee Ann Womack, Patty Griffin, Carlton Anderson, and Deana Carter are among the artists on ASCAP’s eclectic music lineup for its 21st Annual Sundance ASCAP Music Café, taking place Jan. 25 – Feb. 1, 2019 during the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah.

Beginning at 2 p.m. each day, the Café will feature a mix of artists including BeulahbelleStephen Bishop, Claudia Brant, Dounia, The Dumes,Everlast, Flor de Toloache, Herizen, iDKHOW (I Dont Know How But They Found Me), Leland, Patrick Martin, MILCKShim Moore, Neff-U & Priscilla Renea, Judith Owen, Park88, JP SaxeWarbly Jets and NewSong Competitionwinner Mel Bryant & the Mercy Makers. A special ACM & Bluebird Cafe Songwriters Series on Jan. 30 and 31 will feature Womack and Carter as well as Anderson and Jacob Davis. Also on Wednesday, Jan. 30, the Café will present a dedicated performance of music from Sundance Film Festival selection Abe by Seu Jorge and Jaques Morelenbaum.

“For 21 years, we have partnered with our friends at the Sundance Film Festival to bring the Sundance ASCAP Music Café to Park City and shine a spotlight on the magic of music in film,” said Loretta Muñoz, ASCAP Assistant Vice President, Membership. “The wonder of the Café is that for eight straight days, our artists and audiences get to experience one-of-a-kind performances – and there are always a few surprises. We cannot wait for what we know will be another stunning run. Join us and discover the artist that could be your next obsession!”

The Sundance ASCAP Music Café takes place at 751 Main Street, Park City, Utah, and is open to all festival credential holders.

Music City Management Adds Centricity Music’s Jason Gray To Roster

Music City Management’s Josh Petersen and artist Jason Gray

Nashville-based Music City Management has added Centricity Music recording artist and songwriter Jason Gray to its artist roster. Gray has earned two No. 1 hits, including “Nothing Is Wasted,” which held the No. 1 spot at radio for nine weeks, as well as “With Every Act of Love,” which hit Top 10 on the Christian Airplay Chart, in addition to five Top 5 singles.

“Jason is one of the most talented and smart songwriters I have ever met,” shares Josh Petersen, Music City Management’s owner and president. “I couldn’t be more excited for our new journey together and look forward to helping him tell share his stories and deliver his songs to new audiences.”

Opening its doors in 2012, Music City Management also represents Marc Martel, whose voice was most recently featured in 2018’s 20th Century Fox Queen biographical film, Bohemian Rhapsody, which just won a Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture-Drama.

Gray was heard this past holiday season on Martel’s version of “O Come All Ye Faithful,” which was the highest-charting new Christmas radio single release, reaching No. 8 on the Billboard National Airplay chart for their last chart of 2018. Gray also headlined his annual Christmas tour, “Christmas Is Coming,” and was joined by Curb | Word artist Stars Go Dim.

King Calaway Signs With BMG/BBR Music Group

King Calaway. Photo Credit: Alex Ferrari

BMG/BBR Music Group has signed the band King Calaway to its roster. The group’s self-titled debut EP will be released Jan. 25 via BBR’s Stoney Creek Records imprint.

Members Caleb Miller, Chris Deaton, Simon Dumas, Jordan Harvey, Chad Michael Jervis, and Austin Luther each made their own way to Nashville chasing their dreams from across the globe, hailing from towns in the American Midwest and the Atlantic seaboard to the small coastal country of Gibraltar and the Central Belt of Scotland. They came together as King Calaway in early 2018, and offer a fresh new take on country with a sound reminiscent of the Eagles. The band is guided by a co-production team that includes Robert Deaton and Ross Copperman.

“King Calaway is that rare combination of incredible individual talent combined with amazing group chemistry,” says Jon Loba, EVP/BBR Music Group. “Their skill as musicians, vocalists and entertainers, along with Robert Deaton and Ross Copperman’s creative vision has very quickly fueled the passions and excitement of not only those of us in the BBR Music Group but also BMG and Bertelsmann globally.  We can’t wait to introduce them to partners and audiences around the world!”

“The six musicians who make up King Calaway are a fresh take on contemporary country music,” adds Robert Deaton. “These young men hail from all corners of the globe, but when put together on a stage, they are one and magic happens.”

“The six of us are beyond excited to be working with the great teams at BMG and BBR. They’ve already dedicated so much time and effort into this project, and we’re incredibly grateful,” noted King Calaway’s Chad Michael Jervis. “We’re ready for the world to hear all the songs we’ve worked so hard on.”

Already firmly laying roots in Nashville, King Calaway will make its debut on the Grand Ole Opry stage on March 1. The band is booked by United Talent Agency and managed by 24 Entertainment.

Industry Ink: Big Machine/John Varvatos Records, Big Loud Records, Rose Music Group

Big Machine/John Varvatos Records Names National Director, Promotion

Allison Smith

Big Machine/John Varvatos Records has named Allison Smith as National Director, Promotion. The label is spearheaded by Big Machine Label Group President, CEO and Founder Scott Borchetta and fashion mogul John Varvatos. Launched in 2017, Big Machine/John Varvatos Records was formed to help discover and develop new rock talent. In its inaugural year the label catapulted California-based band Badflower to the top of the rock charts with their smash single “Ghost.”

Based in Chicago, Smith previously spent 13 years at Virgin/Capitol Records as a Midwest Regional Director of Promotion. She also held stints at Lava Records and London-Sire.

 

Big Loud Records Adds Promotion Coordinator

Brittani Koster

Big Loud Records has added Brittani Koster as Promotion Coordinator. She will report to Big Loud Records VP, Promotion Stacy Blythe and can be reached at brittani@bigloud.com. Koster moves into the role vacated by Maggie Abrams, who has exited for a soon-to-be-announced new opportunity.

Koster previously worked as Promotions and Label Coordinator for Rebel Engine Entertainment, and holds a degree from University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

 

Rose Music Group Names Cyd Blanchard As Associate Booking Agent, Domestic Tours/Festivals

Cyd Blanchard

Nashville-based talent management, booking and promotion agency Rose Music Group has named Cyd Blanchard as Associate Booking Agent for Domestic Tours/Festivals. Blanchard is the longtime talent buyer for The 5 Spot’s Sunday Night Soul music series and owner of Ciann Photography.

Rose Music Group, founded in 2006, focuses on promoting Soul, Funk/Jazz, Blues and Americana artists, with a client roster including Reverend Sekou, Roy “Futureman” Wooten, Jason Eskridge, Johnny Neel and others.

 

Maria Ivey Launches IVPR In Nashville

Maria Ivey has opened IVPR, a new festival and artist PR firm located in Nashville. Ivey previously operated the Nashville office of The Press House for the past five years.

IVPR currently represents clients Sam Bush, The Del McCoury Band, The Travelin’ McCourys, MerleFest, DelFest, High Sierra Music Festival, Radney Foster, The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Kelsey Waldon, Doom Flamingo, Rising Appalachia, LUTHI, Blue Rose Music (Tim Bluhm, Jackie Greene, among many others), and more.

Ivey can be contacted at maria@ivpr.co.

Celebration Of Life Planned For Musician Victor Mecyssne


By Robert K. Oermann

A Celebration of Life in remembrance of musician Victor Mecyssne is being scheduled for this coming weekend. Regarded as one of the forerunners of Nashville’s Americana music scene, Mecyssne passed away on Dec. 17, 2018 in Canada at age 66. In addition to being a singer-guitarist, he made his mark as an actor, a songwriter and a photographer.

The native Nashvillian absorbed blues, jazz and country sounds as a youngster, and his hard-to-classify style reflected those eclectic influences. For example, his 1998 LP Hush Money featured such diverse supporting players as Lucinda Williams, Tim Carroll and Duane Jarvis.

His output also included the albums Personal Mercury (1995), Skinnybones (2001), Mystery Loves Company (2007) and Those Nashville Blues (2008). As the leader of his band The Ragtops, Mecyssne was a regular entertainer at The Bluebird Café, Radio Café and other local venues beginning in 1985. He also toured beyond Tennessee’s borders, appearing in 48 states and throughout Europe.

For more than 15 years, he was a semi-resident musician and actor at the Cumberland County Playhouse in Crossville, TN. Among his roles there was “Burl Sanders” in Smoke on the Mountain.

In 2000, the Nashville Ballet choreographed six of Victor Mecyssne’s songs into a ballet titled “Short Stories.” Its premiere was staged at the Tennessee Performing Arts Center.

He married Joelle Anthony in 2004 and took her last name. They migrated to Canada in 2007, settling in the far western province of British Columbia. Victor Anthony (Mecyssne) became a Canadian citizen in 2014.

He passed away in their home on Gabriola Island, BC with Joelle by his side.

The Celebration of Life event for Victor Mecysnne was held on Sunday, Jan. 13 at the Cloister Clubhouse in Nashville. The family wished for attendees to “Bring an instrument!”

UMG Recordings Purchases House Of Blues Studios Nashville

House of Blues Nashville. Photo: House of Blues

According to the Metro Nashville and Davidson County Property Assessor, UMG Recordings purchased Nashville’s House of Blues Studios, including buildings at 516-518, and 520 E. Iris Drive in the Berry Hill area. The properties were purchased Nov. 16, 2018 for approximately $4.3 million. The listings also show UMG Recordings purchased a building at 514 E. Iris Drive.

The 1,146 square foot building at 517 E. Iris Drive, and the 1,130 square foot building located at 520 E. Iris Drive were constructed in 1945, while the 6,476 square foot building located at 518 E. Iris Drive was constructed in 1964. Prior to House of Blues taking over the studios in 2009, the studio was known as East Iris Studios.

Among the albums recorded in the studios are Kacey Musgraves’ Golden Hour, Kesha’s Rainbow, Robert Plant’s Band of Joy, Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell’s The Traveling Kind, and numerous others.

Music Row Tavern Bobby’s Idle Hour To Close Jan. 12, With Tentative Plans For New Location

Longtime songwriter hangout Bobby’s Idle Hour will close Jan. 12, MusicRow has confirmed. The building, located at 1028 16th Ave. S., has long been a favored social establishment for songwriters and musicians.

“This displaces a lot of good people,” Lizard Thom Case, owner of Bobby’s Idle Hour for the past five years, told MusicRow. Case says he hopes to reopen the venue in a new location, though nothing has been set at this time.

The name “Bobby’s” is a tribute to Bobby Herald, who took over the bar in 1978. The songwriter-centric venue moved to its current location in 2005 before the bar’s current owner, songwriter Lizard Thom Case, took over ownership in 2013.

Last year, it was announced that development company Panattoni had purchased the building, along with five nearby properties, with plans to turn the property into a six-story office building.

 

 

Steve Ripley, Guitarist, Producer and Band Leader for The Tractors Dies


Steve Ripley
, leader of the country-rock band The Tractors, died peacefully at his home Thursday, Jan. 3 in Pawnee, Oklahoma, at the age of 69, surrounded by his family. He had been suffering from cancer.

In addition to his work as a recording artist, Ripley was also a songwriter, producer, engineer, studio owner, radio host and inventor of the “stereo guitar” favored by such fellow musicians as Eddie Van Halen, Ry Cooder and Dweezil Zappa. He owned The Church Studio in Tulsa for 19 years, and additionally distinguished himself by playing guitar with Bob Dylan and producing and/or engineering projects for Leon Russell, J. J, Cale, Roy Clark, Johnnie Lee Wills, and many others.

Born Paul Steven Ripley on Jan. 1, 1950 in Idaho, Ripley grew up on the family’s Oklahoma Land Run homestead in Pawnee County. He recalled his earliest musical memory came at three years old listening to his dad enthusiastically singing along to Bob Wills’ “Roly Poly” in the family car, and his “most impactful” musical memory was hearing Elvis Presley’s “Heartbreak Hotel” blasting from his Aunt Babe’s radio when he was six.

Ripley played in bands from junior high through college and continued to work nearly full-time as a musician while attending Oklahoma State University, where he earned a degree in communications. He discovered his love for recording in the 1960s, recording in Gene Sullivan’s Hi Fi Studio in Oklahoma City, the same venue where Tulsans J.J. Cale, Leon Russell, and David Gates made some of their first recordings. He opened his first studio, Stillwater Sound, in the early 1970s.

Ripley was a friend and confidante of many luminaries of rock, country, and Americana music, and was respected throughout the industry for his gifts as an artist and producer, and for his technical innovations in the world of guitars, microphones and sonic design. Once, while sitting at George Harrison’s recording console at Friar Park, Ringo Starr asked Steve, “Do you know how to run this thing?” To which Steve replied, “Well yeah, I guess I do. You know, it’s what I do.”

His lifelong interest in modern musicology was highlighted by his radio series, Oklahoma Rock & Roll, which explored Oklahoma’s vast contributions to music and American pop culture; and most recently, his successful efforts to rescue and preserve the musical archives of his friend and mentor, Leon Russell.

The first LP in his discography was named for his band, Moses. The name the band chose for their record label, Red Dirt Records, places Ripley at the birth of the Oklahoma strand of music that would one day be called Americana. Given his role in the origin story and his legendary support for regional musicians in the genre through the years, Ripley has long been regarded as one of the patriarchs of “Red Dirt” music, and is an inductee into the Oklahoma Red Dirt Hall of Fame.

After a stint writing songs in Nashville, Ripley landed a job as a live sound engineer for music legend Leon Russell.  He then moved back to Oklahoma in the late 1970s, to work for the Jim Halsey Company and produce critically acclaimed records for the likes of Roy Clark/Gatemouth Brown and Johnnie Lee Wills. From there, he moved to Burbank, CA to work as a studio engineer for Leon Russell’s Paradise Records,  aiding Russell on many projects including those by JJ Cale and New Grass Revival. He also played on two J.J. Cale records.

It was during this period that Ripley had the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to play for one of his biggest musical heroes, Bob Dylan.   Ripley’s “Dylan connection” was his friend, legendary drummer for the stars (and Tulsa native) Jim Keltner, who was also playing with Dylan at the time. Ripley played guitar on the Dylan album Shot Of Love and jetting off on a world tour, played in Dylan’s band as well. In a 2009 interview for Rolling Stone, Dylan recalled Ripley as one of his favorite guitar bandmates.

Another friendship that emerged from Ripley’s time in California was with legendary guitarist Eddie Van Halen, with whom he collaborated on his stereo guitar design and started the company Ripley Guitars. The two forged what became a lifelong friendship and mutual love that lasted until Ripley’s final days. “For more than 35 years I’ve been fortunate to call Steve Ripley one of my true friends,” says Van Halen. “Steve is many things. Part genius, part musician, part inventor and many other great things, but my favorite thing about Steve is the wonderful, kind, humble human being he is and always will be. I love Steve with all my heart and am proud to know him.”

In 1987, Ripley and his wife Charlene and family moved back to Tulsa, and he acquired The Church Studio, the legendary recording venue which Leon Russell owned in the 1970s. This would become his second home and the hub for his larger body of creative work—including seven albums for The Tractors and a solo album, Ripley. The latter was a departure from the “Oklahoma Boogie” stylings and leaned more toward roots Americana. Ripley is among Oklahoma artists who have carried the torch of the music originated by the likes of Leon Russell and J.J. Cale — music that later came to be called “the Tulsa Sound.”

In 1994, The Tractors took the country music world by storm with their debut self- titled album, and for Ripley, the project was the culmination of a quest to blend his earliest influences—from the western swing of Bob Wills and traditional country stylings of Hank Williams to the emergence of Chuck Berry and what Ripley called “the Elvis thing.” The Tractors’ debut album shocked the contemporary country world by going platinum faster than any debut album by a country group in history, and eventually achieving double-platinum status. The album garnered two Grammy nominations, won CMT Video of the Year for its smash single, “Baby Likes to Rock It” and is to this day the top-selling record of all time for a work recorded in Oklahoma.

In 2005, Ripley and Charlene moved back out to the Pawnee County farm where he was raised, quickly expanding it beyond the small farmhouse to a compound with a guitar shop and recording studio dubbed “The Farm,” from which he hosted his Oklahoma Rock & Roll radio show for the Oklahoma Historical Society.  He continued recording music, including a collaboration with the Red Dirt Rangers titled Ripley and The Rangers, and a full length LP for The Red Dirt Rangers as well.

In 2013, he was hired as an audio archivist, and worked with OKPOP Executive Director Jeff Moore to engineer a collection of unreleased Bob Wills recordings which was later released on vinyl. Most notably and recently, in 2016,  OKPOP acquired the Leon Russell archive and Ripley became the official Curator of the Leon Russell collection,  working as a diligent steward for the legacy of his dear friend and mentor.  Ripley worked restoring, cataloguing, digitizing, and archiving invaluable Leon Russell master tapes for the museum, forthcoming in downtown Tulsa. His love for this project and Leon kept him going during his final days.

In 2017, Ripley was given the opportunity to re-visit two of the great passions of his life—his role as a band leader and his love of all things Bob Dylan, when he was asked by the George Kaiser Family Foundation to create a live musical event celebrating the arrival of the Bob Dylan archives, which were acquired and relocated to Tulsa and are soon to be housed in the Bob Dylan Center. “On A Night Like This” was a one-night-only musical revue and saw Ripley leading what he dubbed “The House Band Approximately.”  It featured a bevy of too-many-to-name legends of Oklahoma music, many of the new generation of Oklahoma voices and talent, and even the powerhouse vocal stylings of the McCrary Sisters, featuring Regina McCrary, a tourmate of Ripley’s from the Bob Dylan days. The concert, which would be his final live performance, was a tour-de-force of a wide range of the Bob Dylan catalog.

He is survived by his wife Charlene, children Elvis Ripley and Angelene Ripley Wright, son-in-law Jonny Wright, grandson Mickey Wilder Ripley Wright, and brothers Scott Ripley and Bobby Ripley and their families. 

The family will announce a memorial service later. In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations to The Red Dirt Relief Fund, which provides a safety net of critical assistance to Red Dirt music people in times of need at reddirtrelieffund.org.

2019 CRS Rusty Walker Scholarship Recipients Revealed

Megan Benoit, Shannon Lewis, Kristin Monica

The Country Radio Broadcasters have revealed the recipients of the 2019 Rusty Walker Scholarship, which is awarded annually to three full-time radio station employees who are attending their first Country Radio Seminar.

Kristin Monica (On-Air/APD/Digital Director/Program Coordinator, NASH-FM/WFYR/Peoria, IL), Megan Benoit (Promotions Coordinator, CKRY/Calgary, AB, Canada), and Shannon Lewis (Digital Managing Editor, KATP/Amarillo, TX) are the honorees for 2019. This marks the first year all three scholarship honorees have been female.

Each individual will receive an all-expense paid trip and attendance to CRS 2019, to be held Feb. 13-15, 2019. The three scholars will also be recognized during the CRS 2019 Opening Ceremonies. Country Radio Seminar will be held Wednesday, Feb. 13 through Friday, Feb. 15 at the Omni Nashville.

The Rusty Walker Scholarship program is named in honor of Country Radio Hall of Fame member Rusty Walker, who passed away in May 2012 at the age of 59. To honor Walker’s belief in cultivating rising stars, CRS created the scholarship program in his name, enabling young members of the business who may not otherwise have the chance to attend CRS.

Country Radio Seminar registration is currently available at the “Regular Rate” of $599 but will increase to $699 on Jan. 14. For more, visit countryradioseminar.com.