
Actor, singer and musician Stephen Dorff blended fiction and reality by going undercover in Nashville for the filming of his new movie Wheeler, which released Feb. 3, 2017.
Dorff stars as Wheeler Bryson, a 41-year-old singer-songwriter who finally chases his dreams to Nashville. Under the direction of Ryan Ross, Dorff went undercover for the documentary-style shooting, which covers an approximately three-week journey that follows Wheeler from Nashville haunts like Corner Music, to the Bluebird Café, to a studio meeting with Kris Kristofferson, and finally an invitation to fulfill a lifelong vision of performing onstage at the Ryman Auditorium.
“Wheeler was as character a throwback to a lot of those guys that I thought were the sexy guys in country, as far as their vibe and music—Kristofferson, [Johnny] Cash, Waylon [Jennings],” Dorff said of his character during a recent visit to the MusicRow office. “Wheeler is an old-school cowboy. He’s the kind of guy that wouldn’t go on The Voice or wouldn’t know what to do with $5 million. There was something mysterious in those guys and we wanted a little bit of that in Wheeler.”
In February 2015, Dorff arrived in Nashville and enlisted the help of influential Nashville industry members including songwriter Bobby Tomberlin, Curb Record’s Jim Ed Norman, Bluebird Café’s Erica Wollam Nichols, and Nashville Songwriters Association International’s Bart Herbison.
Dorff performed live during the filming process, having written or co-written all 13 tracks the accompanying soundtrack, including the lead track “Pour Me Out Of This Town,” “Ryman,” and “She’s Only 20.” Tomberlin, who joined Dorff for the MusicRow visit, co-wrote “Pour Me Out of This Town” and “Move On.”

Stephen Dorff and Bobby Tomberlin
Dorff gave credit to Ross for making his vision a reality. “We didn’t have a script,” Dorff recalls. “We had more of an experiment and idea and Ryan made a feature film out of it.”
Staying undercover often meant Dorff spent 18-hour days in makeup and prosthetics. Dorff went to Christien Tinsley (Westworld, The Passion of the Christ), who created five pieces, including a chin piece, nose, eyebrow piece, and a lip. “We played him four songs and showed him the treatment Ryan and I came up with. I think he got off on the fact that it wasn’t aliens or blood. They do a head cast of my head and a month later we start seeing these pictures of Wheeler. At first he has a goatee, then another one with Kristofferson hair and a little too cheekbone/cavemannish look. Finally we found this version that was more subtle. It constrained my normal Stephen faces. No matter how much I wanted to move my eyebrows, I couldn’t.”
Sometimes the crew had to improvise to keep Dorff in character.
“Once I wear prosthetics it goes in the garbage. There was an ice storm and we were traveling from Nashville back to Texas. I remember the chin piece didn’t arrive to where we were staying on the road. So my makeup artist who works with Christen is going through the trash trying to salvage the chin from yesterday so we can shoot the scene.”
Portraying Wheeler also allowed Dorff to venture into the world of music, a world familiar to his father and brother, without being overshadowed by his name and career.
Raised in Los Angeles, Dorff focused on his acting career accumulating roles in The Power of One, Blade, Backbeat, and Somewhere, among other roles. Meanwhile, Dorff’s father and brother had both pursued careers in music. His father, Steve, was the music supervisor for Pure Country and penned songs including “I Cross My Heart,” recorded by George Strait. Dorff’s brother Andrew found success as a Nashville songwriter with hits for Kenny Chesney (“Save It For A Rainy Day”), Blake Shelton (“My Eyes,” “Neon Light”), Hunter Hayes (“Somebody’s Heartbreak”) and more. “Pour Me Out Of This Town” was co-written with his brother Andrew and with Tomberlin.
“I made this movie as a tribute to my dad and my brother in the beginning,” recalls Dorff. “The country world is not my world. But it’s one I came to know my whole life. I went off into the Hollywood world and we pretty much separated for a while even though we are a very tight family. My dad and my brother are more in this community of songwriting with Bobby with these great artists and people. I never was, and I guess now I am a little bit. I wanted to be able to stand at the bar next to my dad and brother and be able to carry on a conversation and not have people know who the hell I am,” Dorff said.
“The last thing I wanted to do was have a vanity band like a lot of actors do. It’s never really taken seriously. The only person…is Jared Leto with Thirty Seconds to Mars, and he’s got a following in Europe and China. But I didn’t want to do a Stephen Dorff record. I wanted to do a character the way Sasha Baron Cohen would do for Borat or how I’ve seen it done in comedies, where they commit to a character and drop them on the ground. My buddies are shooting on little cameras, and people think they are doing a YouTube video for this singer-songwriter guy.”
Dorff and Ross eschewed the typical Hollywood ending for Wheeler.
“We knew where the movie needed to end. A lot of big producers that loved Wheeler said, ‘You should have done the end scene of Wheeler with Kris at the Ryman.’ The Hollywood ending would have been the shot of me going onstage with Kris, with the crowd shot and fade out…but I loved the way we chose to shoot that and you remember it. I feel like it would have been a little glossy and vanilla if I was playing at the Ryman. There is a certain thing that happens after death when music is there, that can live forever.”
Tragically, Dorff’s brother Andrew died on Dec. 19, 2016, just days after his 40th birthday, and a few months before Wheeler was released. Andrew’s death sent a shock through Nashville’s music community, and created an odd parallel with Stephen’s Wheeler character.
“I had no idea that this movie would have some similarities,” Dorff said. “The world is weird. He’s got so many hits coming, and the one on the radio now with Rascal Flatts (“Yours If You Want It”). The kid’s gonna have No.1 s for days and he’s not here. He will be remembered of course in this community, and for future generations through his songs.”

Stephen Dorff Honors Nashville’s Creative Community With ‘Wheeler’
/by Jessica NicholsonActor, singer and musician Stephen Dorff blended fiction and reality by going undercover in Nashville for the filming of his new movie Wheeler, which released Feb. 3, 2017.
Dorff stars as Wheeler Bryson, a 41-year-old singer-songwriter who finally chases his dreams to Nashville. Under the direction of Ryan Ross, Dorff went undercover for the documentary-style shooting, which covers an approximately three-week journey that follows Wheeler from Nashville haunts like Corner Music, to the Bluebird Café, to a studio meeting with Kris Kristofferson, and finally an invitation to fulfill a lifelong vision of performing onstage at the Ryman Auditorium.
“Wheeler was as character a throwback to a lot of those guys that I thought were the sexy guys in country, as far as their vibe and music—Kristofferson, [Johnny] Cash, Waylon [Jennings],” Dorff said of his character during a recent visit to the MusicRow office. “Wheeler is an old-school cowboy. He’s the kind of guy that wouldn’t go on The Voice or wouldn’t know what to do with $5 million. There was something mysterious in those guys and we wanted a little bit of that in Wheeler.”
In February 2015, Dorff arrived in Nashville and enlisted the help of influential Nashville industry members including songwriter Bobby Tomberlin, Curb Record’s Jim Ed Norman, Bluebird Café’s Erica Wollam Nichols, and Nashville Songwriters Association International’s Bart Herbison.
Dorff performed live during the filming process, having written or co-written all 13 tracks the accompanying soundtrack, including the lead track “Pour Me Out Of This Town,” “Ryman,” and “She’s Only 20.” Tomberlin, who joined Dorff for the MusicRow visit, co-wrote “Pour Me Out of This Town” and “Move On.”
Stephen Dorff and Bobby Tomberlin
Dorff gave credit to Ross for making his vision a reality. “We didn’t have a script,” Dorff recalls. “We had more of an experiment and idea and Ryan made a feature film out of it.”
Staying undercover often meant Dorff spent 18-hour days in makeup and prosthetics. Dorff went to Christien Tinsley (Westworld, The Passion of the Christ), who created five pieces, including a chin piece, nose, eyebrow piece, and a lip. “We played him four songs and showed him the treatment Ryan and I came up with. I think he got off on the fact that it wasn’t aliens or blood. They do a head cast of my head and a month later we start seeing these pictures of Wheeler. At first he has a goatee, then another one with Kristofferson hair and a little too cheekbone/cavemannish look. Finally we found this version that was more subtle. It constrained my normal Stephen faces. No matter how much I wanted to move my eyebrows, I couldn’t.”
Sometimes the crew had to improvise to keep Dorff in character.
“Once I wear prosthetics it goes in the garbage. There was an ice storm and we were traveling from Nashville back to Texas. I remember the chin piece didn’t arrive to where we were staying on the road. So my makeup artist who works with Christen is going through the trash trying to salvage the chin from yesterday so we can shoot the scene.”
Portraying Wheeler also allowed Dorff to venture into the world of music, a world familiar to his father and brother, without being overshadowed by his name and career.
Raised in Los Angeles, Dorff focused on his acting career accumulating roles in The Power of One, Blade, Backbeat, and Somewhere, among other roles. Meanwhile, Dorff’s father and brother had both pursued careers in music. His father, Steve, was the music supervisor for Pure Country and penned songs including “I Cross My Heart,” recorded by George Strait. Dorff’s brother Andrew found success as a Nashville songwriter with hits for Kenny Chesney (“Save It For A Rainy Day”), Blake Shelton (“My Eyes,” “Neon Light”), Hunter Hayes (“Somebody’s Heartbreak”) and more. “Pour Me Out Of This Town” was co-written with his brother Andrew and with Tomberlin.
“I made this movie as a tribute to my dad and my brother in the beginning,” recalls Dorff. “The country world is not my world. But it’s one I came to know my whole life. I went off into the Hollywood world and we pretty much separated for a while even though we are a very tight family. My dad and my brother are more in this community of songwriting with Bobby with these great artists and people. I never was, and I guess now I am a little bit. I wanted to be able to stand at the bar next to my dad and brother and be able to carry on a conversation and not have people know who the hell I am,” Dorff said.
“The last thing I wanted to do was have a vanity band like a lot of actors do. It’s never really taken seriously. The only person…is Jared Leto with Thirty Seconds to Mars, and he’s got a following in Europe and China. But I didn’t want to do a Stephen Dorff record. I wanted to do a character the way Sasha Baron Cohen would do for Borat or how I’ve seen it done in comedies, where they commit to a character and drop them on the ground. My buddies are shooting on little cameras, and people think they are doing a YouTube video for this singer-songwriter guy.”
Dorff and Ross eschewed the typical Hollywood ending for Wheeler.
“We knew where the movie needed to end. A lot of big producers that loved Wheeler said, ‘You should have done the end scene of Wheeler with Kris at the Ryman.’ The Hollywood ending would have been the shot of me going onstage with Kris, with the crowd shot and fade out…but I loved the way we chose to shoot that and you remember it. I feel like it would have been a little glossy and vanilla if I was playing at the Ryman. There is a certain thing that happens after death when music is there, that can live forever.”
Tragically, Dorff’s brother Andrew died on Dec. 19, 2016, just days after his 40th birthday, and a few months before Wheeler was released. Andrew’s death sent a shock through Nashville’s music community, and created an odd parallel with Stephen’s Wheeler character.
“I had no idea that this movie would have some similarities,” Dorff said. “The world is weird. He’s got so many hits coming, and the one on the radio now with Rascal Flatts (“Yours If You Want It”). The kid’s gonna have No.1 s for days and he’s not here. He will be remembered of course in this community, and for future generations through his songs.”
Keith Urban Celebrates Songwriters At “Blue Ain’t Your Color” No. 1 Party
/by Eric T. ParkerPictured (L-R): (front) Producer Dann Huff, songwriter Steven Lee Olsen, Keith Urban, songwriters Hillary Lindsey and Clint Lagerberg; (back) ASCAP’s Mike Sistad, Cornman Music’s Nate Lowery, Warner/Chappell’s Ben Vaughn, ASCAP’s Beth Brinker, Spirit Music’s Daniel Hill, Sea Gayle Music’s Marc Driskill, BMG’s Daniel Lee, XOMG/Get It Done’s Missi Gallimore, mix engineer Chris Lord-Alge, and UMG Nashville’s Mike Dungan. Photo: Ed Rode
ASCAP honored Keith Urban’s latest No. 1, “Blue Ain’t Your Color,” written by Clint Lagerberg, Hillary Lindsey and Steven Lee Olsen, on Friday, March 3 at Nashville’s Basement East.
Urban’s 22nd No. 1 was not only nominated during the 2017 Grammy Awards but is up for Song and Single Record of the Year at the ACM Awards where he leads the nominations with a total of seven. Voting for the April 2nd event closes March 6.
As tradition with an Urban party, the songwriters joined the Capitol Records Nashville artist on stage to perform the track and kick off the event.
ASCAP’s Mike Sistad was on hand to welcome the crowd on behalf of sponsor First Tennessee Bank, and helped introduce the songwriters and artists with creative manager Beth Brinker.
Olsen had the idea for “Blue Ain’t Your Color,” and originally held the song for the Canadian’s Columbia Nashville project, which was never released.
Pictured (L-R): Producer Dann Huff, songwriter Steven Lee Olsen, Keith Urban, songwriters Hillary Lindsey and Clint Lagerberg. Photo: Ed Rode
Lindsey celebrated her 18th No. 1 with the song. BMG’s Daniel Lee remarked, “This song outperformed what everyone thought it could do. It connected with fans of the format and strangers of the genre. These [parties] don’t get better than this. And to Hillary: You’re the best songwriter I know. Period. The best.”
“I have no idea why they had this amazing idea and asked me to help write it,” said Lindsey of her two co-writers. “We had a blast that night—there was so much freedom to just be and let the song come alive. There was so much electricity in the air and magic. Especially songwriters, we need co-writers, musicians and people that inspire us and get us to strive higher. Thank you guys for being that for me. And for Keith—your heart is tuned in to what music is supposed to be.”
Marc Driskill of Sea Gayle, on behalf of Spirit Music’s Daniel Hill, noted the song is in rare air—earning No. 1 on all four Billboard charts. “I think this is one of three songs that that has ever happened with. That’s an enormous feat—12 weeks on the Top Country Songs chart. No doubt this song found its right home.”
“It’s been such a blur the last year working so much,” commented Lagerberg. “I haven’t taken very much time to let it hit me, but it is now. I knew when I met Steven that he would be the little brother I never had. He lived at my house for like a year.”
Nate Lowery offered remarks for Olsen’s first No. 1 on behalf of Cornman Music’s Brett James and Warner/Chappell’s Ben Vaughn. “It was your dream to sing someday with Keith, and this happened,” said Lowery. “When Missi Gallimore called that day looking for songs for Keith, you [Steven] said Keith was the only artist he would want to record it. So thank you Keith.”
After bringing Missi Gallimore to the stage, Olsen thanked his family and Urban, who inspired him to move to Nashville. “Keith made me realize I didn’t have to be anything I wasn’t and that gave me the courage to move to Nashville 11 years ago. I made a record last year with Clint that never got to come out. That was a tough time for me. We spent a year putting our blood, sweat and tears in a record. But Keith gave me the wind the first time to move here, and here he is again with this song. He continues to inspire me.”
Pictured (L-R) back: Elisabeth Ashley (Borman Entertainment), Cindy Mabe (UMGN), Mike Dungan (UMGN), Jim Asker (Billboard), Beville Dunkerley (Pandora), Rachel Whitney (Pandora). Front: Dann Huff (“Blue” producer), Steven Lee Olsen, Urban, Hillary Lindsey, Clint Lagerberg
Universal Music Group’s Mike Dungan then took the stage to “expound on the magnificence” of Urban, who celebrates his 20th year at the label this year. “It’s wonderful that a magnificent work of art is being appreciated by the rest of the world,” commented Dungan after touting stats for Ripcord. Dungan delivered impaler awards and streaming plaques to songwriters in addition to a plaque for Urban, commemorating the Ripcord‘s No. 1 status in three territories: Canada, US and Australia.
“If anyone had any amount of awareness to how much work Keith has put in these albums—especially the last two—it is astonishing,” noted Dungan. “No one works as hard in this industry at making every track special and making sure he never stays in the same place—always progressing, always throwing curve balls and more than relevant. Keith, for a record label, it is absolutely a dream come true to work with you.”
Additional presenters included Jim Asker of Billboard for Urban’s 37 consecutive Top 10 hits not including “The Fighter,” which brings the total to 38. Billboard‘s record for the constraint is 41. Pandora’s Rachel Whitney and Beville Dunkerley delivered a wood record plaque and noted a cumulative spin total for Urban at 2 billion spins on the service. Holly Freeman from the CRB and Brandi Simms from the CMA also presented.
Produced by Dann Huff mentioned mixing “legend” Chris Lord-Alge before Urban welcomed him to the stage.
“As a songwriter, I so understand the conundrum of writing a song like that and either keeping it as the launching song for me or giving it to someone else,” said Urban. “A handful of people find themselves in that place in this town every now and then. I value this song as much as you. These songs are rare, and you don’t just give them away.”
Urban went on to thank many of the studio players involved. He concluded, citing his influence from Nashville, including Don Williams/Garth Fundis records (like Portrait), which helped Urban understand how minimalism in the studio can frame a song just right.
RaeLynn Invites Fans to Dance Party on RaVe Tour
/by Lorie HollabaughRaeLynn is hosting a huge dance party this Spring as she kicks off her RaVe Tour April 20 in Columbus, Ohio. Immediately following her run opening for Blake Shelton’s Doing It To Country Songs Tour, RaeLynn will launch the club tour, which will include a full performance followed by a dance party DJed by the singer.
Pre-sale for tickets and a VIP experience, which includes show admission, photo opps, a meet and greet, exclusive tour merch and early access (where applicable) begins March 6. Fans can sign up at RaeLynn.com to participate in the pre-sale by joining her online community. General public ticket sales begin March 8.
“I’m so excited to headline my first tour and show my fans what’s it’s like to come to a RaVe show,” exclaimed RaeLynn. “It will be the perfect blend of my favorite things; country music, a non-stop DANCE PARTY and all the glitter! I can’t wait for everyone to come out and experience it.”
Raelynn’s current single is “Love Triangle.”
Raelynn’s RaVe TOUR:
April 20 – Columbus, OH @ The Bluestone
April 21 – Ft. Wayne, IN @ The Rusty Spur
May 11 – Chicago, IL @ Joe’s Chicago
May 12 – Des Moines, IA @ Wooly’s
May 13 – Minneapolis, MN @ Cabooze
May 19 – Lansing, MI @ The Loft
May 20 – Indianapolis, IN @ 8 Seconds Saloon
May 24 – Nashville, TN @ Mercy Lounge
Last Call: Nominations for MusicRow’s 6th Annual Rising Women On The Row Due March 7
/by Jessica NicholsonNominations for MusicRow‘s 6th annual Rising Women On The Row are due tomorrow (Tuesday, March 7).
CLICK FOR RISING WOMEN NOMINATION FORM AND TICKETS
Multiple nominations do not increase chances of being selected, but you may nominate as many women as you like with separate forms. Self-nominations are also welcome. Candidates nominated in previous years will need to be resubmitted.
MusicRow is set to honor five deserving businesswomen who have become substantial contributors and visionary leaders during its annual Rising Women On The Row breakfast. The sixth annual event will be held Tuesday, April 25 at the Omni Nashville Hotel. Sponsorship tables and individual tickets are currently available, and regularly sell out.
CLICK FOR RISING WOMEN NOMINATION FORM AND TICKETS
Universal Music Publishing Group Extends Deal With Eric Arjes
/by Lorie Hollabaugh(L-R): Cyndi Forman, UMPG VP, Creative; Kent Earls, UMPG Nashville Executive VP/General Manager; Eric Arjes; Missy Roberts, UMPG Nashville Sr. Creative Director; Ron Stuve, UMPG Nashville VP Creative; and Travis Gordon, UMPG Sr. Creative Director
Universal Music Publishing Group Nashville has re-signed Eric Arjes.
Since first signing with UMPG in 2013, the songwriter, producer, and artist has written numerous songs for Tim McGraw, Ryan Hurd, Thompson Square and the Newsboys. Arjes has gained over a million Spotify streams from his single, “Find My Way Back,” which was featured in the MTV show Teen Wolf. In the last three years, his songs have also been featured in various films and commercials, including spots for Walmart, Pringles, Hersheys, as well as on The Best Of Me, and The Walking Dead, among others.
Arjes recently released a new EP, Unbroken, featuring the song “On My Shoulder,” which was included on Apple Music’s “Today’s Hits” playlist.
Thomas Rhett, Chris Stapleton, Dierks Bentley, Kelsea Ballerini Winners at iHeart Radio Awards
/by Lorie HollabaughThomas Rhett, Chris Stapleton, Dierks Bentley, and Kelsea Ballerini were the big country winners at Sunday night’s iHeart Radio Awards at the Forum in L.A. Thomas Rhett took home the trophy for Country Artist of the Year, while Stapleton’s Traveller continues to rack up awards with the Country Album of the Year nod.
Bentley’s “Somewhere On A Beach” was named iHeart Country Song of the Year, and Ballerini was voted Best New Country Artist at the ceremonies, which featured performances by Katy Perry, Ed Sheeran, Bruno Mars and more. Justin Timberlake took home the Song of the Year for “Can’t Stop The Feeling,” Justin Bieber was named Male Artist of the Year, Adele took home Female Artist of the Year, and The Chainsmokers received the Best New Artist award during the night.
Rascal Flatts Plots 10th Studio Album, ‘Back To Us’
/by Jessica NicholsonRascal Flatts will release the trio’s 10th studio album, Back To Us, on May 19 via Big Machine Records.
“There was a nostalgic feeling between the three of us while in the studio for this record, a feeling that was more reminiscent of our first albums,” said Jay DeMarcus. “The journey we’ve all been on together is unreal and I can honestly say I’m even more excited about what is ahead for us. BACK TO US is not only a title of a song on the album, but a feeling that has been building around this new music. It just fits in so many ways.”
“With this being our tenth album, we knew we wanted to be careful and deliberate in how we approached it,” said Gary LeVox. “This time around, the three of us have been able to really focus and work together on what we want to say at this point in our careers. We’ve all been so energized by the process of making this album and we still have a lot more music to make and we still actually like each other….for now.”
“Even though we do love to joke around, one of the best parts of being in the band is how much we really do enjoy each other’s company,” said Joe Don Rooney. “I think the comradery while recording BACK TO US has really lent itself to the spirit of the songs. We’re so excited for everyone else to hear how much fun we had making this.”
The album features the first single, “Yours If You Want It,” penned by Jonathan Singleton and Andrew Dorff.
Sony Music Nashville Appoints Ed Rivadavia As VP, Digital Strategy
/by Jessica NicholsonEd Rivadavia
Ed Rivadavia has been appointed to the post of Vice President, Digital Strategy, Sony Music Nashville. Effective Monday, March 6, Rivadavia will begin his new role and report directly to John Zarling, Sony Music Nashville’s Executive Vice President, Marketing & New Business.
“Ed brings unmatched energy and expertise to lead a team whose mission is to reach our audience in an ever-changing digital and social landscape,” said Zarling. “As the business needs of our artists morph in the interactive space, I am excited to know the Digital Marketing team will be led by one of the industry’s most respected marketers.”
Rivadavia will oversee the digital strategy for Sony Music Nashville’s Arista, Columbia and RCA Nashville rosters, including social media and web campaigns, content development and music video content use. In tandem with his direct-reports, Digital Marketing Managers Caroline Bocko, Rachael Knaak and Jaime Marconette, Rivadavia will identify and develop specific digital opportunities and partnerships to impact artist exposure, fan engagement and revenue.
On his new position, Rivadavia remarked, “I’m thrilled to join the Sony Music Nashville team under the leadership of John Zarling and Chairman & CEO Randy Goodman. I look forward to contributing my digital marketing experience to help foster our artists’ continued career success.”
Most recently Vice President of Marketing and Digital Strategy for Century Label Group, a division of Sony Music, Ed Rivadavia has a Bachelor of Business Administration degree and a Master of Arts, Entertainment and Media Management degree from Columbia College Chicago. Rivadavia’s label history began in 1995 as an intern for Polygram Group Distribution, later taking on the role of Radio Promotion Regional for A&M Records. In New York, Rivadavia was New Media Manager for Wind-Up Records, head of digital marketing at Chris Blackwell’s Palm Pictures, Director of New Media at Roadrunner Records and Sr. Director, Digital Marketing at RCA Records. After leaving RCA Records, he became the Sr. Director of Interactive at Mood Media/DMX and the Vice President, Business Development & Marketing for One Live Media.
Rivadavia can be reached at ed.rivadavia@sonymusic.com.
LifeNotes: Country Concert In The Hills Founder Dies
/by Lorie HollabaughMike and wife Mary Jo
Mike Barhorst, 77, the founder of the Country Concert In The Hills Festival, passed away at his home in Fort Laramie on March 1.
Barhorst started Country Concert In The Hills in 1981, and the annual event grew out of a family get-together with a few hundred friends in the late ’70s to become the huge festival it is today.
Seth Ennis’ New EP ‘Mabelle’ Out Today
/by Lorie HollabaughSeth Ennis is releasing his new Arista Nashville EP, Mabelle, today, Friday (March 3) and the singer/songwriter will celebrate its release with a performance on the Grand Ole Opry tonight, marking his second performance on the hallowed stage.
The new EP was produced by Corey Crowder and recorded in Nashville, and its title is a nod to the building where Ennis first resided when he first moved to Nashville with his three best friends. The four slept in bunk bed setups in the tiny one bedroom apartment, which is where the Georgia native was inspired to pen his new single, “Woke Up In Nashville.” The 24-year-old multi-instrumentalist co-produced and played all musical parts on his debut single.
Mabelle Tracks:
“Play It Cool”
Written by Seth Ennis/Femke/Phil Barton
“Think & Drive”
Written by Seth Ennis/Jonny Price/Emily Shackelton
“Fast Girl”
Written by Seth Ennis/Corey Crowder/Andrew Dorff
“Woke Up in Nashville”
Written by Seth Ennis/Blair Daly/David Hodges