
Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame member John D. Loudermilk has died at age 82 following a struggle with bone cancer. He died on Wednesday (Sept. 21), according to a Facebook post by songwriter Bobby Braddock.
Loudermilk’s classics include “Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye,” “Break My Mind,” “Tobacco Road,” “Abilene,” “Talk Back Trembling Lips” and “Waterloo.” He is unusual as a Nashville songwriter of his generation who had as many pop successes as country hits.
The native North Carolinian worked in a variety of occupations before becoming a songwriting professional. As a youngster, he was a shoeshine boy, janitor, door-to-door Bible salesman, sign painter, grocery bagger, bulldozer operator, radio entertainer and telegram delivery boy.
He was a graduate of the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. His first cousins were Ira and Charlie Loudermilk, who found country fame as The Louvin Brothers.
Loudermilk was working for a local TV station, painting sets and doing commercial artwork when he began to write poems and songs. In 1956, he wrote “A Rose and a Baby Ruth.” Fellow North Carolinian George Hamilton IV turned it into a teen pop smash.
Recording as “Johnny Dee,” Loudermilk, himself, scored a modest teen pop hit in 1957 with “Sittin’ in the Balcony.” Rockabilly sensation Eddie Cochran also scored with the tune that year.
Loudermilk moved to Nashville in 1958 and continued to pursue dual careers as a songwriter for others as well as a recording artist.
RCA executive Chet Atkins took a shine to him. He hired Loudermilk to screen songs for the label’s Nashville artists and signed him to make records. Atkins used him as a session musician and backup vocalist, as well. Loudermilk’s career was also bolstered when he signed as a staff writer for Cedarwood Publishing, then Acuff-Rose Music.
His Nashville career took off in 1959. “Grin and Bear It” was a hit for Jimmy C. Newman and “Half Breed” did the same for Marvin Rainwater. But it was “Waterloo,” sung by Stonewall Jackson, that made Loudermilk a songwriting star. Co-written with Marijohn Wilkin, the song became a No. 1 country smash and a No. 4 pop-crossover hit.
In early 1960, Loudermilk scored again, this time as the cowriter of the Kitty Wells country hit “Amigo’s Guitar.” Meanwhile, on the pop charts, Johnny Ferguson hit with 1960’s “Angela Jones” and Connie Francis had 1961 successes with Loudermilk’s “(He’s My) Dreamboat” and “Hollywood.” Mark Dinning had a minor pop hit with “Top Forty News, Weather and Sports.”
Also in 1961, Loudermilk began writing a string of pop hits for Sue Thompson. These included “Sad Movies (Make Me Cry)” (1961), “Norman” (1962), “James (Hold the Ladder Steady)” (1962) and “Paper Tiger” (1965). The Everly Brothers had a big 1961 pop hit with Loudermilk’s classic death ballad “Ebony Eyes.”
The songwriter returned to the pop charts as an artist in 1961-62 with self-penned RCA singles including “Language of Love,” “Thou Shalt Not Steal,” “Callin’ Doctor Casey” and “Road Hog.”
Chet Atkins recorded the songwriter’s “Windy and Warm” in 1961, and the instrumental has since been recorded by many other guitarists. Bobby Vee had a 1961 pop hit with the teen-themed “Stayin’ In.”
The following year, Loudermilk’s pop activity included “Torture,” sung by Kris Jensen. The song later achieved camp status via its inclusion in Kenneth Anger’s 1963 underground cult film Scorpio Rising.
Loudermilk’s “Talk Back Trembling Lips” was a country and pop audio icon of 1963, thanks to recordings by Ernie Ashworth and Johnny Tillotson, respectively. George Hamilton IV solidified his transition from pop to country stardom thanks to Loudermilk’s “Abilene” in 1963. Stonewall Jackson also returned to the songwriter’s catalog for “Can’t Hang Up the Phone” that year.
Hamilton had two more country hits with Loudermilk’s “Linda With the Lonely Eyes” and “Fort Worth, Dallas or Houston” in 1964. In addition, Johnny Cash scored on the country hit parade with “Bad News.” Bobby Lord’s version of “Life Can Have Meaning” and Bob Luman’s recording of “The File” were also significant country chart entries of 1964.
But the songwriter’s biggest triumph that year was in pop. The “British Invasion” band The Nashville Teens scored a rocking hit with his “Tobacco Road,” and the song went on to be recorded by dozens of bands. The group followed it with his “Google Eye,” which became a big hit in England.
Also in the pop world, “Thou Shalt Not Steal” (Dick and DeeDee), “Everything’s Alright” (The Newbeats) and “This Little Bird” (Marianne Faithful) were successful John D. Loudermilk songs of 1964-65.
Meanwhile, the songwriter continued to work as a recording artist. Following his LPs The Language of Love (1961), 12 Sides of John D. Loudermilk (1962) and Presenting John D. Loudermilk (1963), he resumed making RCA albums with John D. Loudermilk Sings a Bizarre Collection of the Most Unusual Songs (1966), Suburban Attitudes in Country Verse (1967), Country Love Songs (1968) and The Open Mind of John D. Loudermilk (1969). His liner notes for Suburban Attitudes won him a Grammy Award.
As a songwriter, he continued to have simultaneous success in both the country and the pop worlds. Sandy Posey posted a pop hit with “What A Woman in Love Won’t Do” in 1967. In the country genre, Hamilton returned with “Break My Mind,” “Little World Girl” and “It’s My Time” in 1967-68. The last-named was also recorded by Jody Miller, Dolly Parton and Lynn Anderson, among others. “Break My Mind” also became much-recorded, entering the repertoires of Linda Ronstadt (1969), Vern Gosdin (1978) and many more.
But the biggest news for Loudermilk during 1967 was “Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye,” a major pop hit for The Casinos that year. The ballad has gone on to become a huge success on various charts for such performers as Eddy Arnold (1968), Glen Campbell (1976), Toby Beau (1979) and Neal McCoy (1996). It has been recorded by more than 200 artists.
Campbell scored a No. 1 country hit with Loudermilk’s “I Wanna Live” in 1968. The songwriter’s final pop No. 1 hit occurred in 1971 with “Indian Reservation” by The Raiders. This song returned him to the spotlight when it was used in Tim McGraw’s 1994 country smash “Indian Outlaw.” The McCoy hit with “Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye” two years later also kept the songwriter’s name on the charts in the 1990s.
Among the hundreds who have recorded his songs are such rockers as The Allman Brothers, Edgar Winter, David Lee Roth, War, Jefferson Airplane, The Animals, Johnny Winter, Jerry Lee Lewis and Rare Earth. Pop stars Petula Clark, Perry Como, Brenda Lee, Roy Orbison, Tracey Ullman, Sammy Davis Jr., The Box Tops, Rick Nelson and many more have dipped into his catalog. So have soul music makers such as James Brown, Solomon Burke, Nina Simone, Norah Jones, Bettye Swann, Jay Z, Kanye West and Barbara Lynn.
Virtually everybody in country music has sung a John D. Loudermilk song, including Skeeter Davis, The Browns, Connie Smith, Webb Pierce, Barbara Mandrell, George Jones, Bobbie Gentry, The Flying Burrito Brothers, Waylon Jennings, Doc Watson, Sonny James, Anne Murray, Conway Twitty and Willie Nelson.
Loudermilk’s last significant country chart success, to date, was in 1973. This was George Hamilton IV’s Top 30 treatment of his “Blue Train,” which has since become a bluegrass favorite.
John D. Loudermilk’s later-career solo albums included 1971’s Volume 1 – Eloree, 1975’s Rockin’ Styles and 1977’s Just Passing Through. He was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1976.
In 1981, he helped to establish the Nashville office of The Songwriters Guild. The organization fights for better contracts for composers.
Loudermilk was long regarded as an eccentric, “unforgettable character” in Nashville. During the 1990s, he devoted himself to travelling, studying ethnomusicology, chasing hurricanes and doing research on Native American burial mounds.
He was honored at the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2007 in its “Poets and Prophets” speaker series. Also in 2007, Loudermilk donated approximately 2,000 items of career papers, photos, recordings and memorabilia to the Southern Folklife Collection at the University of North Carolina. He was inducted into the North Carolina Music Hall of Fame in 2011.
Following his cancer diagnosis, an all-star group gathered to honor him at The Franklin Theater in March 2016. He said he didn’t want a memorial service after his death, so the Nashville music community gave him one while he was alive.
Performing his catalog of hits were such talents as Rodney Crowell, Bobby Braddock, Lee Roy Parnell, Jimmy Hall, Doyle Lawson, Ricky Skaggs, The Whites, Billy Burnette, Emmylou Harris, Beth Nielsen Chapman, Marty Stuart and Deborah Allen.
Bobby Karl Works Kacey Musgraves’ Christmas Album Preview Party
/by Bobby KarlPhoto: Instagram/spaceykacey
BOBBY KARL WORKS THE ROOM
Chapter 541
The only thing Bobby Karl loves better than a room to work is a NEW room to work.
Kacey Musgraves delivered one again this week. You will recall that her last album party was at PLAY, with drag queens prancing to her new tunes. This time around, the venue for her holiday CD, A Very Kacey Christmas, was Riverwood mansion in East Nashville. It hosted the new album’s launch party on Tuesday (Sept. 20).
With construction commencing in 1798, this is one of Music City’s oldest homes. Expanded over time to more than 9,000 square feet, it is also one of the largest. Riverwood rents out as an event space, and I have always wanted to see its interior.
Parking on the expansive, fenced grounds, we walked across the lawn toward the neo-classical portico, its two-story fluted Corinthian columns lit by red and green spotlights. As dusk gathered, a snow machine on the second-story balcony began showering the guests with “flakes,” despite the 90-degree weather. Wow.
Santa greeted us at the door. He kidded that no kiddies these days know anything about getting lumps of coal and switches for presents. Miss Mary added that they also don’t know anything about getting fruit and nuts for their only gifts.
Riverwood’s inside did not disappoint. Historic wall treatments, rugs and Victorian furniture decorated each of the five party rooms, plus the center and side hallways. The bar was located at the end of the central hall, with hard working barkeeps tending to the likes of R.J. Curtis, John Huie, Shanna Strassberg, Heather Byrd, Ben Vaughn and Steve Buchanan.
Once we schmoozed through the hall throng, we took in the splendors of the party rooms. In the main one, a round table topped with a Christmas tree and a festive, “ermine”-trimmed red tablecloth held white faux-fur earmuffs that were actually headphones for listening to Kacey’s tunes. Mini holiday trees with ornaments were everywhere, with gaily wrapped “presents” piled under them.
Each room had a table or a mantle encrusted with holiday frou-frou. Guests took snapshots of trees that were especially visually appealing, although white-and-sparkly seemed to be the theme of most of them.
That was also evidently the theme of Kacey’s cocktail-party couture. Her snow-fairy frock had a tutu aspect, with a puffed white skirt of iridescent faux feathers. Charming.
She posed on the porch amid the “snowflakes.” Her hair is now black, which makes her look more than ever like the country Katy Perry, with whom she has toured.
“I made this record with my band mates,” she said. “Christmas to me is great memories….old-school 1940s, ‘50s and ‘60s songs. I just want you to enjoy it.”
We listened to her version of “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” as a cha-cha. “Let It Snow” is a Western swinger featuring The Quebe Sisters. Her co-written “A Willie Nice Christmas” features, of course, Willie Nelson.
“I’m describing it as part western swing sprinkled with bits of classic pop, Hawaiian moments [such as “Mele Kalikimaka”] and child-like fun that all comes to a nostalgic/melancholy end,” Kacey said. “I had so much fun making this record.”
Working those holiday-festooned rooms were Leslie Fram, Leslie Roberts, John Marks, Jon Freeman, Alicia Warwick, Hunter Kelly, Luke & Beth Laird, Mike Vaden, Rod Essig, Donna Hughes, Chris Scruggs, Evelyn Shriver, Brenden Oliver, Cindy Watts, Mac McAnally, Susan Nadler and Phyllis Stark.
The wait staff circulated with trays of sausage balls, hot-chicken biscuits, deviled eggs, mini phyllo chicken pot pies, cheese sticks and other delights. We grabbed an opportunity to tour the formal gardens, complete with statuary, arched walkways, plazas and a gazebo. Now can somebody I know book a wedding there that lets me see the rest of this fabulous mansion?
LifeNotes: Songwriting Great John D. Loudermilk Passes
/by Robert K OermannNashville Songwriters Hall of Fame member John D. Loudermilk has died at age 82 following a struggle with bone cancer. He died on Wednesday (Sept. 21), according to a Facebook post by songwriter Bobby Braddock.
Loudermilk’s classics include “Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye,” “Break My Mind,” “Tobacco Road,” “Abilene,” “Talk Back Trembling Lips” and “Waterloo.” He is unusual as a Nashville songwriter of his generation who had as many pop successes as country hits.
The native North Carolinian worked in a variety of occupations before becoming a songwriting professional. As a youngster, he was a shoeshine boy, janitor, door-to-door Bible salesman, sign painter, grocery bagger, bulldozer operator, radio entertainer and telegram delivery boy.
He was a graduate of the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. His first cousins were Ira and Charlie Loudermilk, who found country fame as The Louvin Brothers.
Loudermilk was working for a local TV station, painting sets and doing commercial artwork when he began to write poems and songs. In 1956, he wrote “A Rose and a Baby Ruth.” Fellow North Carolinian George Hamilton IV turned it into a teen pop smash.
Recording as “Johnny Dee,” Loudermilk, himself, scored a modest teen pop hit in 1957 with “Sittin’ in the Balcony.” Rockabilly sensation Eddie Cochran also scored with the tune that year.
Loudermilk moved to Nashville in 1958 and continued to pursue dual careers as a songwriter for others as well as a recording artist.
RCA executive Chet Atkins took a shine to him. He hired Loudermilk to screen songs for the label’s Nashville artists and signed him to make records. Atkins used him as a session musician and backup vocalist, as well. Loudermilk’s career was also bolstered when he signed as a staff writer for Cedarwood Publishing, then Acuff-Rose Music.
His Nashville career took off in 1959. “Grin and Bear It” was a hit for Jimmy C. Newman and “Half Breed” did the same for Marvin Rainwater. But it was “Waterloo,” sung by Stonewall Jackson, that made Loudermilk a songwriting star. Co-written with Marijohn Wilkin, the song became a No. 1 country smash and a No. 4 pop-crossover hit.
In early 1960, Loudermilk scored again, this time as the cowriter of the Kitty Wells country hit “Amigo’s Guitar.” Meanwhile, on the pop charts, Johnny Ferguson hit with 1960’s “Angela Jones” and Connie Francis had 1961 successes with Loudermilk’s “(He’s My) Dreamboat” and “Hollywood.” Mark Dinning had a minor pop hit with “Top Forty News, Weather and Sports.”
Also in 1961, Loudermilk began writing a string of pop hits for Sue Thompson. These included “Sad Movies (Make Me Cry)” (1961), “Norman” (1962), “James (Hold the Ladder Steady)” (1962) and “Paper Tiger” (1965). The Everly Brothers had a big 1961 pop hit with Loudermilk’s classic death ballad “Ebony Eyes.”
The songwriter returned to the pop charts as an artist in 1961-62 with self-penned RCA singles including “Language of Love,” “Thou Shalt Not Steal,” “Callin’ Doctor Casey” and “Road Hog.”
Chet Atkins recorded the songwriter’s “Windy and Warm” in 1961, and the instrumental has since been recorded by many other guitarists. Bobby Vee had a 1961 pop hit with the teen-themed “Stayin’ In.”
The following year, Loudermilk’s pop activity included “Torture,” sung by Kris Jensen. The song later achieved camp status via its inclusion in Kenneth Anger’s 1963 underground cult film Scorpio Rising.
Loudermilk’s “Talk Back Trembling Lips” was a country and pop audio icon of 1963, thanks to recordings by Ernie Ashworth and Johnny Tillotson, respectively. George Hamilton IV solidified his transition from pop to country stardom thanks to Loudermilk’s “Abilene” in 1963. Stonewall Jackson also returned to the songwriter’s catalog for “Can’t Hang Up the Phone” that year.
Hamilton had two more country hits with Loudermilk’s “Linda With the Lonely Eyes” and “Fort Worth, Dallas or Houston” in 1964. In addition, Johnny Cash scored on the country hit parade with “Bad News.” Bobby Lord’s version of “Life Can Have Meaning” and Bob Luman’s recording of “The File” were also significant country chart entries of 1964.
But the songwriter’s biggest triumph that year was in pop. The “British Invasion” band The Nashville Teens scored a rocking hit with his “Tobacco Road,” and the song went on to be recorded by dozens of bands. The group followed it with his “Google Eye,” which became a big hit in England.
Also in the pop world, “Thou Shalt Not Steal” (Dick and DeeDee), “Everything’s Alright” (The Newbeats) and “This Little Bird” (Marianne Faithful) were successful John D. Loudermilk songs of 1964-65.
Meanwhile, the songwriter continued to work as a recording artist. Following his LPs The Language of Love (1961), 12 Sides of John D. Loudermilk (1962) and Presenting John D. Loudermilk (1963), he resumed making RCA albums with John D. Loudermilk Sings a Bizarre Collection of the Most Unusual Songs (1966), Suburban Attitudes in Country Verse (1967), Country Love Songs (1968) and The Open Mind of John D. Loudermilk (1969). His liner notes for Suburban Attitudes won him a Grammy Award.
As a songwriter, he continued to have simultaneous success in both the country and the pop worlds. Sandy Posey posted a pop hit with “What A Woman in Love Won’t Do” in 1967. In the country genre, Hamilton returned with “Break My Mind,” “Little World Girl” and “It’s My Time” in 1967-68. The last-named was also recorded by Jody Miller, Dolly Parton and Lynn Anderson, among others. “Break My Mind” also became much-recorded, entering the repertoires of Linda Ronstadt (1969), Vern Gosdin (1978) and many more.
But the biggest news for Loudermilk during 1967 was “Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye,” a major pop hit for The Casinos that year. The ballad has gone on to become a huge success on various charts for such performers as Eddy Arnold (1968), Glen Campbell (1976), Toby Beau (1979) and Neal McCoy (1996). It has been recorded by more than 200 artists.
Campbell scored a No. 1 country hit with Loudermilk’s “I Wanna Live” in 1968. The songwriter’s final pop No. 1 hit occurred in 1971 with “Indian Reservation” by The Raiders. This song returned him to the spotlight when it was used in Tim McGraw’s 1994 country smash “Indian Outlaw.” The McCoy hit with “Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye” two years later also kept the songwriter’s name on the charts in the 1990s.
Among the hundreds who have recorded his songs are such rockers as The Allman Brothers, Edgar Winter, David Lee Roth, War, Jefferson Airplane, The Animals, Johnny Winter, Jerry Lee Lewis and Rare Earth. Pop stars Petula Clark, Perry Como, Brenda Lee, Roy Orbison, Tracey Ullman, Sammy Davis Jr., The Box Tops, Rick Nelson and many more have dipped into his catalog. So have soul music makers such as James Brown, Solomon Burke, Nina Simone, Norah Jones, Bettye Swann, Jay Z, Kanye West and Barbara Lynn.
Virtually everybody in country music has sung a John D. Loudermilk song, including Skeeter Davis, The Browns, Connie Smith, Webb Pierce, Barbara Mandrell, George Jones, Bobbie Gentry, The Flying Burrito Brothers, Waylon Jennings, Doc Watson, Sonny James, Anne Murray, Conway Twitty and Willie Nelson.
Loudermilk’s last significant country chart success, to date, was in 1973. This was George Hamilton IV’s Top 30 treatment of his “Blue Train,” which has since become a bluegrass favorite.
John D. Loudermilk’s later-career solo albums included 1971’s Volume 1 – Eloree, 1975’s Rockin’ Styles and 1977’s Just Passing Through. He was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1976.
In 1981, he helped to establish the Nashville office of The Songwriters Guild. The organization fights for better contracts for composers.
Loudermilk was long regarded as an eccentric, “unforgettable character” in Nashville. During the 1990s, he devoted himself to travelling, studying ethnomusicology, chasing hurricanes and doing research on Native American burial mounds.
He was honored at the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2007 in its “Poets and Prophets” speaker series. Also in 2007, Loudermilk donated approximately 2,000 items of career papers, photos, recordings and memorabilia to the Southern Folklife Collection at the University of North Carolina. He was inducted into the North Carolina Music Hall of Fame in 2011.
Following his cancer diagnosis, an all-star group gathered to honor him at The Franklin Theater in March 2016. He said he didn’t want a memorial service after his death, so the Nashville music community gave him one while he was alive.
Performing his catalog of hits were such talents as Rodney Crowell, Bobby Braddock, Lee Roy Parnell, Jimmy Hall, Doyle Lawson, Ricky Skaggs, The Whites, Billy Burnette, Emmylou Harris, Beth Nielsen Chapman, Marty Stuart and Deborah Allen.
Big Americana Awards Go To Chris Stapleton, Jason Isbell
/by Robert K OermannChris Stapleton accept Artist of the Year. Photo: Terry Wyatt/Getty Images
Chris Stapleton and Jason Isbell claimed top honors at the 15th annual Americana Music Awards at the Ryman Auditorium on Wednesday night (Sept. 21).
The ceremony marks the official kick-off of the Americana Music Association’s convention and festival, which continues through the rest of this week in Nashville. An estimated 2,000 are registered for “Americanafest.”
At the nearly four-hour ceremony, the much-awarded Stapleton won the Americana Artist of the Year honor. The singer-songwriter has been embraced by both the country and Americana genres.
“I don’t know what to say,” he said bashfully. “I’ve been sitting here, watching my heroes play…and it….means a great deal to me. I’m nervous. There’s so many heroes in the audience.”
Jason Isbell. Photo: Terry Wyatt/Getty Images
Isbell won both the Song and Album of the Year honors. In 2014, he claimed the same two awards, as well as Artist of the Year. He is a “homegrown” Americana favorite, who has blossomed along with the genre.
“This community has given us a place,” he said. “I was not one of the first, second, or even third generation of Americana musicians. We never expected to get out of the bars. This group of people, they helped pull all of us up, together. I feel like I can go any place in the world to make this kind of music, now.”
Isbell’s winning song was “24 Frames,” from his winning Americana album, Something More Than Free.
The Duo/Group of the Year award went to Emmylou Harris & Rodney Crowell, both of whom are prior Lifetime honorees at this convention.
“It’s amazing what Americana has become,” said Harris. “We were kind of ‘field hippies,’ and now we’re ‘Americana.’”
“Hat off and hearts out to the other nominees in this category,” added Crowell. Among those he was saluting were the nominated Milk Carton Kids, who were standout performers on the show.
Margo Price. Photo: Terry Wyatt/Getty Images
The Emerging Artist of the Year award was won by Margo Price. She is a Nashville country singer-songwriter who is on Jack White’s rock label Third Man Records.
“I’m very, very thankful to the Americana Music Association for presenting honest music,” she said. “Some of the people who passed on my record might be sitting here tonight. I’d like to thank my husband, Jeremy Ivey, who believed in me and this record enough to sell our car.”
The Instrumentalist of the Year award went to Sara Watkins. The former Nickel Creek fiddler was not present. Brother and fellow Nickel Creek alumnus Sean Watkins accepted on her behalf.
The AMA honors always balance contemporary-artist accolades with salutes to veteran music makers. The latter are annually recognized via Lifetime Achievement presentations.
This year, those were the Lifetime Achievement Performer award to Bob Weir, Lifetime Achievement Songwriter award to William Bell, Trailblazer Award to Shawn Colvin, President’s Award to the late Woody Guthrie, Spirit of Americana Free Speech Award to Billy Bragg and Wagonmaster Award to Jim Lauderdale, who is the show’s longtime host.
All of the honors were punctuated by live performances. Indeed, the show’s music always outshines its actual award presentations.
Before the event even started, the divinely gifted McCrary Sisters favored the crowd with gospel harmonies as a benediction. They then sang backup for the other artists on the bill.
Then came a segment honoring some greats who passed away during the past year. Alison Krauss led an awesome quartet featuring Stuart Duncan, Buddy Miller and Melonie Cannon on “Glory Land” to salute Ralph Stanley.
Joe Henry gave deep, blue-eyed soul to “Freedom for the Stallion” honoring Allen Toussaint. Steve Earle saluted Guy Clark with “Desperados Waiting for a Train” with the house band thundering righteously behind him. Bob Weir’s dusty vocal — backed by the kick-ass, Bakersfield-fired band — offered “Mama Tried” in honor of Merle Haggard.
For the first Lifetime salute, Bonnie Raitt introduced Colvin, who accepted her honor by saying, “This award is proof that if you never give up…and…fight like hell, you can wind up here.” She then delivered a slinky and tough “Diamond in the Rough” with John Leventhal joining the house band on lead guitar. Colvin has a current duo CD with Earle. Presenter Raitt capped this segment with a vampy, bluesy, sensuous “Gypsy in Me.”
Winners Harris & Crowell delivered “Bring it on Home to Memphis” in a rollicking, romping arrangement with a swampy backbeat. Isbell presented his bopping “It Takes a Lifetime” with wife Amanda Shires by his side on fiddle.
Bragg was on stage for his award as well as for the Guthrie honor. He sang a moody and downcast version of Guthrie’s “I Ain’t Got No Home.”
“I think this is another example of Nashville’s generosity,” he said of his own award. “I want to pay tribute to the AMA for their inclusiveness about what Americana music is. E Pluribus Unum – America is never greater than when it strives to live up to that.”
Of the Guthrie salute, Bragg added, “All of us stand on the shoulders of a great American songwriter and activist. He wrote the truth.”
Emerging Artist winner Price sang her country stomper “Tennessee Song.” Performer winner Weir, best known for his work in The Grateful Dead, read a prepared speech.
“How could a guy be more truly blessed?” he asked. “I don’t know what to say. I don’t know what to think. I have dedicated my life to performing and honoring this art form.” His Dead songs have included “Sugar Magnolia,” “Truckin,’” and “Jack Straw.”
Lifetime Songwriter winner Bell is responsible for “You Don’t Miss Your Water,” “Born Under a Bad Sign,” “I Forgot to Be Your Lover” and more. He brought out Raitt to sing with him on his “The Three of Us,” which is on his new Stax Records CD.
“William is the foundation – He was there when soul music started,” said presenter Leventhal. “He has written standards. He is a soul poet.”
Pictured (L-R): George Strait, Jim Lauderdale. Photo: Terry Wyatt/Getty Images
Lauderdale’s award was presented by superstar George Strait, who has recorded many of the songwriter’s works. Strait also punctuated the honor with a profoundly country performance of Lauderdale’s “The King of Broken Hearts.”
“This means so much to me,” said Lauderdale. He listed such influences as Ralph Stanley, Marty Stuart, Roland White and Dwight Yoakam, as well as Strait. “They gave me something to aspire to. I’m trying to catch up with those guys.” He has a new CD, too.
Other standout performances came from 2016 AMA nominees. The Milk Carton Kids cast a spell with interwoven guitars and innocence-lost vocals on the dreamy “Memphis.” John Moreland’s “American Flags in Black and White” was rolling folk-rock. Miller and Earle did a rocked-up version of The Delmore Brothers chestnut “I Let the Freight Train Carry Me On.”
The Lumineers were stirring and anthemic on the enthralling “Angel.” Parker Millsap presented his tempo-shifting lament with the topical lyric of brotherhood, “Heaven Sent.” Lucinda Williams was chiming and echo-y and Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats were rousing and rootsy.
Dwight Yoakam wasn’t nominated, but was a sensation with his new funky-bluegrass sound on “What I Don’t Know.” It’s on his new CD, Swimmin’ Pools, Movie Stars.
Presenters included John Prine, Wynonna, Larry Campbell, The Indigo Girls, Ken Paulson, Taylor Goldsmith from Dawes, Jed Hilly, Timothy B. Schmit, Jack Ingram, Sam Palladio and Bruce Hornsby. Miller’s All-Star Band this year included Duncan, the McCrarys, Steve Fishell, Matt Rollings, Dave Cobb, Fred Eltringham and Chris Wood.
“If you’re looking for The Rosetta Stone of Americana Music, you can point to this album,” said Hilly referring to 1971’s Will the Circle Be Unbroken. The show finale was that album’s title tune, an all-star “group sing” saluting the 50th anniversary of its creators, The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band.
The Americana Music Honors & Awards show was carried live on Nashville’s WSM, WRLT and WMOT, and also on Sirius/XM’s Outlaw Channel. It was taped for a later telecast as an Austin City Limits episode on PBS.
Photo: Terry Wyatt/Getty Images
Liz Hengber Signs Publishing Deal With Starstruck Writers Group
/by Craig_ShelburnePictured (L-R): Cliff Williamson, Chief Operating Officer, Starstruck; Liz Hengber; Courtney Allen, Creative Director, Starstruck
Starstruck Writers Group has renewed its worldwide publishing agreement with songwriter Liz Hengber.
Hengber has an impressive list of credits that go back 25 years. She’s written five No. 1 singles and had over 75 songs recorded by artists including Reba McEntire, Vince Gill, Easton Corbin, Trisha Yearwood, Andy Griggs, Peter Cetera, The Steeldrivers and many more.
Her most recognizable songs include “And Still,” “For My Broken Heart,” “Forever Love” and “It’s Your Call,” all recorded by Reba McEntire.
In 2011, Hengber won Song of the Year at the Canadian Gospel Awards for “A Fathers Love” recorded by both Bucky Covington and High Valley. This year she had two songs on The Steeldrivers’ Grammy Award-winning album The Muscle Shoals Recordings. Hengber also co-wrote Ronnie Dunn’s current single, “Damn Drunk” which features Kix Brooks.
“I’m so excited to be working with Starstruck Writers Group again. It was my first publisher and in truth it feels like home,” Hengber said.
“We are thrilled to continue working with Liz Hengber. I’m always blown away by the incredible ideas that she brings to life in her songs and her unique approach to storytelling through her lyrics,” said Courtney Allen, Creative Director at Starstruck.
Kenny Chesney Reveals Track List, Cover For New Album
/by Craig_ShelburneKenny Chesney has announced the 11 songs and an album cover for his next project, Cosmic Hallelujah. The project will be released by Blue Chair Records/Columbia Nashville on Oct. 28.
Chesney delayed the original release date after finding “Setting the World on Fire” and recording it as a duet with Pink. He also dropped the album’s original title, Some Town Somewhere. Cosmic Hallelujah is Chesney’s first new album since 2014’s The Big Revival.
“I’ve been blessed with some of the best songs out there, some songs written, actually, just for this album by writers whose work I’ve loved for years,” he said. “When ‘Setting The World On Fire’ came together, it opened a window of time – and some songs that had come in after we were done, I didn’t have to save for the next album. Suddenly, everything was changing, and the album I’m releasing now has a lot of what made Some Town Somewhere capture the essential part of who the No Shoes Nation is, but really takes the your-life-is-now piece of The Big Revival and expands it.”
Track List for Kenny Chesney’s Cosmic Hallelujah
1. “Trip Around the Sun”
Nick Brophy/Brett James/Hillary Lindsey (ASCAP)
2. “All the Pretty Girls”
Nicolle Galyon/Tommy Lee James/Josh Osborne (BMI/ASCAP)
3. “Setting the World On Fire” (With P!nk)
Ross Copperman/Matt Jenkins/Josh Osborne (BMI/ASCAP)
4. “Noise”
Kenny Chesney/Ross Copperman/Shane McAnally/Jon Nite (BMI/GMR/ASCAP)
5. “Bucket”
Brett James/Craig Wiseman (ASCAP)
6. “Bar at the End of the World”
J. T. Harding/Aimee Mayo/David Lee Murphy (ASCAP/BMI)
7. “Some Town Somewhere”
Ross Copperman/Heather Morgan/Josh Osborne (BMI)
8. “Rich and Miserable”
Jesse Frasure/Shane McAnally/Josh Osborne (BMI/GMR/ASCAP)
9. “Jesus and Elvis”
Matraca Berg/Hayes Carll/Allison Moorer (BMI/SESAC)
10. “Winnebago”
David Lee Murphy (ASCAP)
11. “Coach”
Kenny Chesney/Casey Beathard (BMI)
Anderson Benson Expands Services For Live Performances
/by Sherod Robertson“As Nashville has become home base for an increasing number of national and international music performers and their management companies, it is a natural step for Anderson Benson to extend our music focus to include a division dedicated to serving their special risk management needs for live performances.” said Anderson Benson partner Brent Daughrity.
”Artists in these various genres and their associated management have specific needs that require specialized risk management,” said Anderson Benson partner Will Wright. “These higher risk acts have more complicated liability factors than the artists in the Country and Christian genres due to a number of factors that include larger and more elaborate staging, massive audio and visual arrangements, pyrotechnics and certainly crowd behavior. Outdoor events, concerts and festivals have weather challenges that we provide solutions for as well. We possess deep music industry experience and expertise to execute extraordinary risk management so that our clients in every genre can focus on their art and entertain their fans.”
Based in Nashville, Tennessee, Anderson Benson is reportedly the only locally owned and independent entertainment industry insurance broker that services clients across the country. Anderson Benson Partner George Anderson can be reached here.
Artist Updates: Sam Hunt, Jimmy Wayne, The Last Bandoleros
/by Jessica NicholsonSam Hunt Added As Headliner For Taste Of Country Festival
Sam Hunt
Sam Hunt will join Jason Aldean as a headliner for the fifth annual Taste of Country Music Festival, to be held June 9-11, 2017 at Hunter Mountain Resort in Hunter, New York.
This year, the festival hosted 53,000 fans over the three days, to see Kenny Chesney, Jake Owen, Kid Rock, Gary Allan, Big & Rich and more.
Jimmy Wayne Honored With Points of Light Award
Pictured: Jimmy Wayne receives Points Of Light Award from Neil Bush
Country artist and author Jimmy Wayne was honored with the Points of Light Award for his work raising awareness for youth in foster care. Prior to receiving the honor from Neil Bush, Wayne met with President George H.W. Bush, the founder of Points of Light, at the Bush family home at Walker’s Point in Kennebunkport, Maine.
Wayne said, “No one should receive an award for helping kids; it’s what we’re all supposed to do and not expect anything in return. But what do you do with an award that’s been given to you? Use it to raise awareness for more foster youth. It was an honor for me to meet the President of the United States, and to do that in his living room made it even more special. The shoreline leading to his driveway and his home were indeed beautiful, but what impressed me most was how humble he was.”
The Last Bandoleros Announce EP Release
The Last Bandoleros
Warner Bros. Records/Warner Music Nashville band The Last Bandoleros announced the Tuesday (Sept. 20) release of their debut self-titled EP during Spotify’s Artists to Watch showcase in New York.
With the official addition of Diego Navaira’s brother Emilio Navaira IV, sons of the late Tejano legend Emilio Navaira III, the band is ready to take country fans on a tour of the Texas borderlands.
The EP’s tracks include “Maria,” “Adios,” “Where Do You Go?”, “Get Down,” “I Don’t Want to Know” and “Take Me to It.”
Charlie Daniels Expresses Deep Gratitude For CMHoF Exhibit
/by Craig_ShelburnePictured (L-R): Hazel Daniels, Charlie Daniels, Carolyn Tate, David Corlew. Photo by Anna Webber/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum
Charlie Daniels spoke only for a few minutes during the party thrown in his honor on Tuesday night (Sept. 20) at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. Despite his brevity, he was able to express his thanks for having a long career that led to an exhibit in his honor, named Million Mile Reflections.
That exhibit officially opens Friday, yet Daniels was able to gather dozens of his friends and business associates (some of whom have worked for him for more than 40 years) to the museum’s BMI Hall a few days early.
The occasion coincided with the 52nd wedding anniversary for Daniels and his wife, Hazel Daniels. David Corlew, who has managed Daniels’ career for 43 years, stood proudly in the back of the room. In addition to the invitation-only event, Daniels and his entourage spent time admiring the exhibit.
Charlie Daniels. Photo: Anna Webber/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum
After remarks from Sr. Vice President of Museum Services Carolyn Tate, Daniels greeted the well-wishers with remarks he had written in advance. He will be formally inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame later this year.
“At the age of almost 80 years, God has chosen to bless me with yet another wonderful blessing,” he began. He said he considered himself lucky as “a chubby fiddle player who came to town with a dream and a $20 bill.”
Throughout his remarks, he spoke highly of Nashville, and said that when he arrived in 1967 with his wife and infant son, there was no question he was going to stay.
Charlie Daniels. Photo by Anna Webber/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum
“As I often say, when I leave Tennessee, I wanna go to Heaven because there is no other place but there that I’d rather live,” he said.
He described the museum as a sanctuary from the politics of the music business and as a destination for country fans who want to get a glimpse into the life of the stars they admire.
“It’s a place where the past is respected and the future is excitedly anticipated,” he said. “Of all the other music capitals across the nation, Nashville stands alone as a city where the music is what truly brings us together. It’s the music that brought us here, the music that kept us here – and the music will live on long after we’ve all gone to our eternal awards.”
After recalling his heart’s desire to be part of Nashville’s music community, Daniels concluded, “Not only has that blessing been granted, not only did I get to share my music with the world, but thanks to the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, I get to share my life. Thank you for coming. God bless Music City USA.”
Nashville Songwriter Angel Snow Signs To Nettwerk Music Group
/by Craig_ShelburneAngel Snow is completing work on her first album for Nettwerk Music Group. The Nashville-based artist has signed to the label and publishing divisions of the company.
Snow’s album is expected to be released in 2017. She has re-recorded one of her most popular songs, “Secret,” for the project. The new version will be released in the coming weeks. Her album will have electronic music elements added to her Americana roots influences.
Snow is scheduled to perform at Pilgrimage Music & Arts Festival on Sunday (Sept. 25).
ASCAP Sets ‘Top Shelf Songs: Heartbreak Edition’ Showcase
/by Jessica NicholsonASCAP will present Top Shelf Songs: Heartbreak Edition on Wednesday (Sept. 21) at 5:30 p.m. at The Basement.
Aaron Eshuis, Ryan Hurd, Steven Lee Olsen, Jonathan Singleton, Old Dominion’s Brad Tursi and more will offer unique collaborations.
The happy hour event will feature co-writers performing the songs together. While past installments have been built around a publishing company partner, this is the first time the showcase has been curated around a theme.
“I wanted to develop a series to showcase outstanding, not-yet recorded songs written by our ASCAP writers in a fun and collaborative setting,” says ASCAP’s Beth Brinker, who launched the program. “Not just new songs, but extremely well-written songs that deserve a moment to be heard by the A&R, management, and artists and peers.”