Jason Isbell, Brandi Carlile, Felix Cavaliere’s Rascals To Headline 10th Annual 30A Songwriters Festival

Jason Isbell, Brandi Carlile, and Felix Cavaliere’s Rascals have been announced as headliners of the 10th annual 30A Songwriters Festival, set for Jan. 18-21, 2019 in Florida’s South Walton County.

The festival, held in venues along scenic Highway 30A, will feature performances in presenting partner Grand Boulevard’s Town Center throughout the weekend by renowned songwriters including Patty Griffin, Steve Earle, Gregory Alan Isakov, Suzy Bogguss, Amanda Shires, Shawn Mullins, Livingston Taylor, John Fullbright, The Secret Sisters, The War And Treaty, Aaron Lee Tasjan, Robyn Hitchcock, Jeffrey Steele, Chely Wright, and Radney Foster.

“This will be our tenth annual 30A Songwriters Festival and we are delighted to welcome back some of our favorite performers from past years, including Jason Isbell, and introduce our audience for the first time to Grammy and Americana award nominee Brandi Carlile,” state Festival producers Russell Carter and Jennifer Steele. “We join with our ticket patrons, sponsors, the board of the Cultural Arts Alliance and RCAM to happily donate a portion of the net profit from the Festival to Hurricane Michael relief efforts in the Florida Panhandle.”

Additional artists will be announced over the next few weeks. Festival Weekend Passes are currently available for $280. VIP tickets that include premium seating on the lawn at Grand Boulevard for the headline shows on Saturday and Sunday afternoons along with access to the VIP tent serving complementary food, beer, wine and cocktails are available for $685; VIP Premier weekend passes with all VIP amenities plus the best seats in the house are $810.

CMA Songwriters Series Wraps Second-Annual U.K. And European Tour

Pictured (L–R): Chris DeStefano, Ashley Campbell, Tenille Townes, Kassi Ashton and James Black (Kassi Ashton’s guitarist). Photo: Matt Carson

The Country Music Association’s CMA Songwriters Series wrapped the second-annual U.K. and European tours with a final show in London, England from Oct. 8 – 22.

The stops included Kassi Ashton, Ashley Campbell, Chris DeStefano, Tenille Townes, Drake White and Charlie Worsham in Stockholm, Oslo, Hamburg and Amsterdam, Glasgow, Liverpool, Gateshead, Manchester and London.

Chase Rice made a surprise appearance at the final show in London at O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire, followed by the exclusive announcement of the lineup for the three-day 2019 C2C: Country to Country Festival.

Local artists also joined the lineup at each leg: Swedish artist Jill Johnson in Stockholm and Oslo; German-based artist Martin Kelly opened in Hamburg; and Dutch artist Joe Buck opened the show in Amsterdam. Special guests Catherine McGrath and The Wandering Hearts joined two shows, with Gary Quinn opening at the Royal Northern College of Music (RNCM) in Manchester.

Historic Nashville Announces 2018 Nine Most Endangered Historic Properties

Historic Nashville, Inc. announced its 2018 Nashville Nine, a list of the city’s most endangered historic places, at a press event held yesterday (Oct. 25) at Bobby’s Idle Hour on Nashville’s historic Music Row. Historic Nashville Vice President Trey Bruce revealed this year’s Nashville Nine properties (which include Bobby’s Idle Hour) that heavily focus on the threat new development has on maintaining Nashville’s unique character.

Among the properties in jeopardy on this year’s list are 1030 16th Avenue South, (the current home of Warner/Chappell Production Music,) the Monroe Harding Children’s Home at 1120 Glendale Lane in Green Hills, 1028 16th Avenue South, (the home of Bobby’s Idle Hour Tavern,) and 1022 16th Avenue South, where Ed and Patsy Bruce operated the Ed Bruce Talent Agency in the late 70’s through the ’80’s.

Trey Bruce, whose family owned 1022 16th Ave. S. on Music Row, was instrumental in saving the iconic RCA Studio A in 2014. With HNI, he has focused on preserving both the physical character of the Music Row neighborhood and the music industry that still lives on the row. He has helped establish a Music Row Preservation Fund with HNI and seeks to see the neighborhood designated the Music Row Cultural Industry District.

“The properties placed on the Nashville Nine list are buildings and places that appear vulnerable in Nashville’s climate of development,” said Bruce. “This is a way for us to make city officials and citizens aware that these places exist and that we’re watching out for them. Finding people that care about historic places is easy but making them aware is the hard part. We think the Nashville Nine is the way to do that,” says Bruce.

The 2018 Nashville Nine was nominated by members of the community and will be the focus of Historic Nashville’s advocacy and outreach throughout the coming year. The non-profit accepts nominations for historic properties threatened by demolition, neglect or development and strives to bring public awareness to the historic places that matter most to Nashville.

Last year, HNI chose to break from their traditional nine properties and listed only one, Fort Negley Park, in an effort to bring attention to how the city’s growth is impacting the character and story of the city. The former site of Greer stadium represented the greater trend seen across the city that encourages new development over preserving the historic places that make Nashville unique. As a result of the listing and outcry from the community, plans were abandoned, and the site will be developed as a park and historic site.

Over the years, Historic Nashville has successfully assisted in preserving numerous landmarks including the Ryman Auditorium, Union Station, and the Hermitage Hotel. HNI accepts nominations for the Nashville Nine year-round at historicnashvilleinc.org.

Newsboys Celebrate 10 Million In Career Sales

Pictured (L-R): Newsboys’ Phil Joel, Peter Furler, Jeff Frankenstein, Jody Davis, Duncan Phillips and Michael Tait

CCM group Newsboys were honored at their Nashville tour stop earlier this week for total career sales in excess of 10 million units. During a VIP reception at Lipscomb University’s Allen Arena, FairTrade Services president/founder Jeff Moseley recognized the band’s achievement within the genre. Since forming in Australia more than three decades ago and arriving in America in 1987, Newsboys have released 23 recordings and are heralded as one of Christian music’s most iconic bands.

Ryan Griffin Inks Deal With Warner Music Nashville, Altadena

Pictured (L-R): Shane Tarleton (SVP Artist Development, WMN); busbee (Founder / CEO, Altadena); Ryan Griffin; John Esposito (Chairman & CEO, WMN); Kristen Williams (SVP Radio & Streaming, WMN)

Warner Music Nashville and busbee’s Altadena have co-signed newcomer Ryan Griffin. His busbee-produced blend of country and soul is demonstrated on previously-released tracks “Good Company,” “Play It By Heart” and “Best Cold Beer,” the latter of which SiriusXM The Highway featured as part of their influential “On the Horizon” show.

As a songwriter, Griffin penned Kelsea Ballerini’s 2016 Platinum-certified No. 1 hit “Dibs.”

Pictured (L-R): Nate Ritches (Agent, Morris Higham Management); Shane Tarleton (SVP Artist Development, WMN); Daniel Lee (GM / VP Creative, Altadena); busbee (Founder / CEO, Altadena); Noreen Prunier (Creative Director, Altadena); Ryan Griffin; Kristen Williams (SVP Radio & Streaming, WMN); John Esposito (Chairman & CEO, WMN); Clint Higham (President, Morris Higham Management); Jess Rosen (Co-Chair, Greenberg Traurig’s Atlanta Entertainment & Media); Will Hitchcock (Manager, Morris Higham Management)

Cledus T. Judd Signs With Bang Productions For Management, Booking

Cledus T. Judd has inked an exclusive management and booking agreement with comedy production and management company Bang Productions.

Headed by company CEO John Edmonds Kozma, Bang Productions is known for utilizing social media and extensive touring to break comedians such as Darren Knight (aka Southern Momma), Gary Cargal, Andrew Conn, Catfish Cooley, Ginger Billy and Red Squirrel. The company signed Judd upon the success of his hilarious comeback video “My Weight’s Goin’ Up Down.”

“When we looked at Cledus and how his fans react to him, I knew we had to have him as part of our family,” said Kozma. “No one does what Cledus does, and we’re excited to work with someone so incredibly creative, talented and ready to take on the world.”

Bang Productions and its roster of comedians have amassed a network of 6.2 million comedy fans. Kozma discovered Darren Knight in 2016 and went on to produce his Southern Momma An Em Comedy Tour that has since sold out over 200 consecutive shows all across the US.

“I have never been more excited about working with a management company than I am about Bang Productions,” said Cledus. “They understand where I’ve been, what I’m doing and where I want to go. This feels like family to me.”

The first date scheduled by Bang Productions is The Southern Momma Cledus T. Judd Comedy Experience on November 9 at Knoxville Civic Auditorium & Coliseum.

Music Health Alliance Names Caitlin Kennedy As Executive Administrator

Caitlin Kennedy

Nashville-based organization Music Health Alliance has added Caitlin Kennedy as Executive Administrator.

Kennedy will support CEO/Founder Tatum Allsep and COO Shelia Shipley Biddy and assist with day-to-day operations of the Nashville-based non-profit. On the job since Oct. 22, her immediate focus is setting thousands of appointments for members of the music community during the health insurance enrollment period.

In 2017, MHA advocates served more than 1,800 clients over 45 days, assisting the largely self-employed community find affordable health insurance solutions. All MHA services are offered at no cost.

A Nashville native with deep family roots in the music industry, Kennedy most recently worked in the Licensing Department at ASCAP. She graduated Cum Laude from the University of Tennessee. Kennedy can be reached at caitlink@musichealthalliance.com or 615-200-6807.

 

Dierks Bentley Announces First Leg Of 2019 Burning Man Tour

Dierks Bentley will kick off his 2019 Burning Man Tour Jan. 17 in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada with special guests Jon Pardi, Tenille Townes and Hot Country Knights. Following a nine-date run in Canada, the tour will visit Fresno, Reno, Wichita, Toledo, Grand Rapids, and more, including a date at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena set for Feb. 22.

“I talked to Jon Pardi last April about the idea of going back on the road together one last time, and I am so happy that I can finally let our fans in on this,” said Bentley. “I’m still coming off the high of playing Hollywood Bowl and the last tour, but knowing that this Burning Man Tour with Pardi was out there waiting has been so awesome. We cannot wait to get back on the road! Who we bring with us on tour is so important to the band, crew and me and the addition of Tenille Townes is something we are all stoked about. Our hardcore fans are aware of the ’90s country cover band, the Hot Country Knights, who have been following us around and opening shows. They talked us into having them on the actual billing for this tour…hope their van has snow tires for Canada!”

Citi cardmembers will have access to purchase pre-sale tickets beginning Oct. 31 through Citi’s Private Pass® program. Initial public on-sales are scheduled for Friday, Nov. 2 and additional dates will be announced in the coming weeks.

2019 BURNING MAN TOUR Dates:
1/17/19    Hamilton, ON – FirstOntario Centre
1/18//19   Ottawa, ON – Richcraft Live at the Canadian Tire Centre
1/19/19    Oshawa, ON – Tribute Communities Centre
1/22/19    Winnipeg, MB – Bell MTS Place
1/23/19    Saskatoon, SK – SaskTel Centre
1/24/19    Edmonton, AB – Rogers Place
1/26/19    Calgary, AB – Scotiabank Saddledome
1/28/19    Kelowna, BC – Prospera Place
1/29/19    Vancouver, BC – Pepsi Live at Rogers Arena
2/14/19    Ontario, CA – Citizens Business Bank Arena
2/15/19    Fresno, CA – Save Mart Center
2/16/19    Reno, NV – Reno Events Center
2/21/19    Lexington, KY – Rupp Arena
2/22/19    Nashville, TN – Bridgestone Arena
2/23/19    Columbia, MO – Mizzou Arena
2/28/19    Sioux Falls, SD – Denny Sanford PREMIER Center
3/01/19    Wichita, KS – INTRUST Bank Arena
3/02/19    Omaha, NE – CHI Health Center Omaha
3/07/19    Moline, IL – TaxSlayer Center
3/08/19    Duluth, MN – AMSOIL Arena
3/09/19    Grand Forks, ND – Alerus Center
3/28/19    Toledo, OH – Huntington Center
3/29/19    Columbus, OH – Nationwide Arena
3/30/19    Grand Rapids, MI – Van Andel Arena

Weekly Chart Report (10/26/18)

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Chris Tomlin Talks New Album, Connecting Fans, And Stadium-Sized Dreams

Chris Tomlin

Seventeen years after his first commercial solo release (2001’s The Noise We Make), and with 16 No. 1 songs, five Gold albums, two Platinum albums, a Grammy and 21 Dove Awards to his credit, Chris Tomlin is still breaking new ground—and new records. In 2017, Tomlin was announced as one of only four artists ever to earn the Sound Exchange Digital Radio Award for more than 1 billion digital radio streams (the other recipients? Garth Brooks, Justin Timberlake, and Pitbull).

Earlier this week, Tomlin was feted as becoming the first Christian music artist to reach 1 billion streams on Pandora. He was presented with Pandora’s Billionaire Award during an album preview event in Nashville.

But for Tomlin, who will release his twelfth solo album, Holy Roar, on Friday (Oct. 26), those numbers are ever more impressive—and perhaps, personal—given that he has penned so many of his signature hits, including his classic “How Great Is Our God,” and “Whom Shall I Fear.”

“With songwriting, it never turns off for me,” says Tomlin. “I keep a collection of songs and try to find the best songs for each record.”

Like songwriters of all music genres, Tomlin fights to find phrasings and imagery that eclipse clichés and help listeners find a new way of connecting with the music and themselves. Those unexpected lines are found throughout Holy Roar, such as one of Tomlin’s favorites from “Impact,” which he co-wrote alongside Mitch Wong and Tommy Iceland, as an example.

“There’s a line that says ‘As I lay down my defenses/Your love invades and I brace for the impact.’ A line like that, I don’t think anyone sees that coming in the language of worship. For me, I think songwriting in worship is about helping people see, more than helping them sing. It’s to help them see the goodness of God, greatness of God, the mercy of God.”

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Another such line crashes through “Nobody Loves Me Like You,” penned by Holy Roar co-producer Ed Cash with Scott Cash.

“There’s a line that goes ‘I could’ve had a really different story’ and I think that’s so relatable,” Tomlin says. “The essence of that line, you just think about all the things that come against you in life, from depression and anxiety and making decisions that can lead to a really bad place. I’m human and struggle with the same things. Where would I be? As a career, I’d still be playing music, but that message just puts you in a humble place. It’s the hope that is found in Jesus and that’s what I try to point people to in my concerts and in my music.”

Those concerts are arena-sized headlining shows, and curated worship experiences more concerned with connecting than simply entertaining. It is these nightly worship journeys his fans partake in that Tomlin keeps in mind when crafting an album, carefully sifting through potential tracks to see which will enhance, deepen, and expand on an audience’s time of reverence.

“When I write songs or want to record them, that’s the lenses I see it through,” Tomlin says. “Is this a song people can really sing to God? That’s what I’ve always wanted to do, is just write songs that people can sing to God. I hope these songs will find play in all these different kinds of places and go beyond me as an artist, and just become songs that people will worship with.”

Perhaps the album’s most sterling gem is one of the few that Tomlin did not pen, the Andrew Peterson and Ben Shive track “Is He Worthy?”

“I will go on the record to say this is the song that could be remembered off this record, long after this record is done,” Tomlin says. “Every record has had a song like that, whether it’s ‘Good Good Father’ or ‘How Great Is Our God,’ something that lasts and this could be it.”

The song uses a familiar gospel call-and-response framework to allow space for the listener to consider both doubt and hope. The song’s very title takes the form of a question. Emphasizing the universal pulls of both doubt and anticipation, the choir featured on the song is actually an assembly of four different choirs, among them a Korean choir, a Brazilian choir and an African-American choir. Each was recorded in different regions, then digitally assembled into one track.

“I find it very powerful, you sing all these questions and the congregation, wherever you are singing the song, they sing it back to you,” Tomlin says. “This world is broken and messed up and everybody longs for it to be fixed. Another line ‘Is anyone whole?’ I find that to be a very powerful thing because it’s interesting that we run to other broken things to fix our own brokenness. Everybody is hurting, everybody has things that hold us back in life and it’s asking that question of ‘Is there anybody out there who is not broken that I can go to?’ Yes, there is one. This song is one of those that the first time I heard it, it just puts you in your place, not in a derogatory way, but it magnifies the greatness of Jesus so much.”

Holy Roar is but one of the projects Tomlin has been working on of late. On Oct. 23, he released the book Holy Roar: 7 Words That Will Change The Way You Worship. In March, he launched Bowyer & Bow, a partnership with his label Capitol CMG to help promote singer-songwriter Pat Barrett, who co-wrote “Good Good Father” and who appears on Holy Roar on the closing track “How Sweet It Is.”

“It’s really a partnership rather than a label—I don’t have staffing,” he says, “but it’s investing in them, helping them make records, with the writing songs, with touring. Pat’s got every gift you would want in an artist—an amazing singer, charisma, great songwriting—and the heart to lead the church in worship. I don’t know if the partnership will go past Pat Barrett, but it has been fun. I’m not looking to be a big label or anything.”

In November, Tomlin will launch a brief Christmas tour that will wrap at the Beacon Theater in New York City. In March, he will launch the Holy Roar Tour, with guests Tauren Wells, Pat Barrett, Nicole Serrano and Tomlin’s Pastor Darren Whitehead. In May, he will headline a concert at Los Angeles’ 17,500-capacity amphitheater the Hollywood Bowl. Last year, Tomlin headlined a two-night performance at the coveted Red Rocks Amphitheater in Colorado. While Tomlin keeps breaking new ground, both in recording and touring, he hopes to one day see stadiums filled with worshippers.

“Whether God uses me in that way, we’ll see,” Tomlin says. “Every other genre of music performs in massive stadiums, and I don’t see why we couldn’t bring the church together in worship in that way.”