
In January 2015, Google announced it would bring its high-speed, fiber-optic, gigabit internet known as Google Fiber to Nashville, with plans for up to 1,000 Mbps speeds, enough to download an HD movie in 40 seconds. The speed is positioned to dramatically impact productivity and creativity for thousands of creators living and working in the Nashville area.
Martha Ivester, Head of Operations for Google Fiber Nashville and a previous employee at CAA, recalls a conversation she had with one top label executive.
“The exec said, ‘If I had multiple artists in multiple studios around town, I wouldn’t have to get in my car and go to all the studios. I could actually have them all open on a screen and just be able to have a listen in and see how things are going, and talk when I need to, just how much more effective I could be in my job.’” Ivester tells MusicRow. “There are so many people trying to do great music in Nashville and this would make it easier.”
Google Fiber’s reach in Nashville currently extends to seven properties in the Gulch, including Icon, Laurel House, Terrazzo, The James, Rhythm at Music Row, Element Music Row, and Edgehill Apartments.

Eddie Gore
Eddie Gore, owner of Historic RCA Studio C, is also an early Google Fiber customer. He noted the asset and speed of Google Fiber just last week, during an urgent upload of a nine-gig music file to his sound mixer.
“Normally I would have had to either get in the car and spend half the day in traffic, or set my computer to upload overnight. Instead, I took that 8- or 9-gig file and ‘whoosh’ it was just done. I said, ‘Are you kidding me? This is great! To hell with wasted gas!’”
However, Google’s charge to bring fiber high-speed internet directly to residences has collided with a slow rollout, as it faces off with two communications industry heavyweights, Comcast and AT&T, in an issue that centers around utility pole attachment agreements.
Due to the Nashville region’s deep limestone, which restrains underground fiber installation, Ivester says 90 percent of Google’s fiber cables will be connected via utility poles. Nashville Electric Service owns approximately 75 percent of the utility poles in Nashville, while AT&T owns an estimated 25 percent.
Under current law, existing internet providers must move their own lines on each utility pole before a new provider can add new cable. First, the pole owner approves the application for a new utility provider to be added to an existing pole. Existing carriers must then move their own lines, with each carrier sending crews sequentially. According to Ivester, the process can take approximately 60 days, and in some cases, up to 90 days for each company to move its equipment around on the utility pole. An average pole in Nashville has three to four carriers.
“If you multiply that by four, that’s one year for each pole to be set up,” says Ivester. “Google Fiber is currently on 33 utility poles in Nashville. Think about trying to get Google Fiber on 88,000 poles.” To date, Google Fiber has submitted 24,000 pole submissions to NES, and 16,000 of those submissions have been approved.
With the help of Metro Council member Anthony Davis, Google Fiber introduced its One Touch Make Ready ordinance, which would significantly decrease installation time on Nashville’s utility poles, by using one approved contractor to move and install equipment for all carriers at once.

Martha Ivester
“For example, on an NES-owned pole, you have four carriers on that pole, NES would send one contractor out, they do all that work and can do it in one day, depending on what their work load is that day and who they subcontract out to,” Ivester says. “It’s pretty significant.
“It is really about setting Nashville up for the 21st century,” she continues. “One of the realities is the current system, in the current way you attach to poles, is something that was devised years ago and is not really appropriate for the scale of deployment that a new provider needs.”
AT&T and Comcast have argued that the One Touch Make Ready policy would disrupt service and cause safety hazards. Additionally, AT&T argues that the One Touch Make Ready ordinance would violate its union contracts with Communications Workers of America, due to non-represented workers that could possibly be changing the lines. According to Ivester, Google Fiber has worked with a variety of contractors, both union and non-union, on their recent installs.
In early August, the first of three council votes were held to consider the ordinance. Metro Council’s next vote will take place Sept. 6.
Rodney Crowell is one musician skeptical of Google Fiber. In an article published in July in the Nashville Scene, his statement provided by Content Creators Coalition begins this way:
“As Google makes its demands on Nashville, a city revered for its export of music, I urge our leaders and lawmakers to examine the realities of artistic life in the digital age. Google is able to exploit artists due to outdated laws (such as the DMCA Safe Harbor provisions), and it is up to all lawmakers to stand up for the music that is our city’s lifeblood, especially in the ever-evolving digital realm. I embrace accessibility, but the protection of Nashville’s artists, revision of antiquated laws, and demand for corporate accountability should come before Google is granted access to our city’s infrastructure. And fellow artists, we who are complicit in this injustice, now is the time to demand your leaders and lawmakers take a stand on our behalf.”
After a full day of negotiations led by Nashville Mayor Megan Barry’s office on Aug. 24, an assembly of internet providers were unable to come to a compromise or agreement on the issue. Ivester asserts that the alternatives suggested to the One Touch Make Ready policy during the meeting with Comcast, Google Fiber, AT&T, NES, and Metro are not sufficient.
“Google Fiber believes that in order to get the city ready to employ this type of infrastructure, that tweaks to the system are not enough. We look forward to a change, which we feel, really makes sense to come out in the form of this ordinance. Competition is a good thing,” Ivester says. “When Google comes to a market, other providers increase their speeds and drop their prices. We’ve seen that in other states and certainly in Nashville. This is not just for ourselves but for anyone who wants to attach in the future. It’s not just the three of us on the poles. There are a lot of other people who would like to see this change as well.”

Andrew Kautz
“Music Row has always been the hub of creativity for Nashville’s music community but has lacked in the core infrastructure needed to help the creative community connect to the rest of the world,” adds Andrew Kautz, Chief Operating Officer for Big Machine Label Group. “I can speak from experience of trying to find affordable and reliable connectivity on Music Row as we struggled just to make our phones work reliably with the existing copper infrastructure. When we made the move to fiber there were very few options and most were still cost prohibitive. Our campus of six buildings are all connected via fiber but we still have limited options for affordable bandwidth. Google Fiber’s roll out is important to Nashville’s creative community and we need to fix the roadblocks that are in place that limit competition. It’s time for Nashville to encourage investment in our technological infrastructure to not only attract new technology companies, but to also better equip our community to connect with the rest of the world reliably and efficiently.”
“I look at Kansas City, the first fiber city,” says Ivester. “Someone came in and bought up a bunch of properties and started renting them out to software developers and started this kind of startup village in Kansas City. It was one of the first cities in the US to have Google Fiber, so all these tech whiz kids came in and starting creating. I see that happening in Nashville. We have this great quote we use at Google, from Vint Serf, known as the father of the internet. He says that 99 percent of what we will do on the internet hasn’t even been invented yet. I truly believe that is the case with music. I think there will be true innovations that will come from Nashville and we want to help with that.”
In the meantime, Ivester emphasized the availability of Google’s Fiber Space in Nashville, which is located in the Icon Building at 1108 Division Street, and is open Monday-Saturday from 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
“It’s a community space. We have customer service for the customers we have, but I keep saying to artists to go to the Fiber Space,” Ivester says. “Its doors are open to the music community. Come into the Fiber Space and use it.”
Exclusive: Google Fiber’s Martha Ivester Explains Hurdles, Value Of Controversial Ordinance
/by Jessica NicholsonIn January 2015, Google announced it would bring its high-speed, fiber-optic, gigabit internet known as Google Fiber to Nashville, with plans for up to 1,000 Mbps speeds, enough to download an HD movie in 40 seconds. The speed is positioned to dramatically impact productivity and creativity for thousands of creators living and working in the Nashville area.
Martha Ivester, Head of Operations for Google Fiber Nashville and a previous employee at CAA, recalls a conversation she had with one top label executive.
“The exec said, ‘If I had multiple artists in multiple studios around town, I wouldn’t have to get in my car and go to all the studios. I could actually have them all open on a screen and just be able to have a listen in and see how things are going, and talk when I need to, just how much more effective I could be in my job.’” Ivester tells MusicRow. “There are so many people trying to do great music in Nashville and this would make it easier.”
Google Fiber’s reach in Nashville currently extends to seven properties in the Gulch, including Icon, Laurel House, Terrazzo, The James, Rhythm at Music Row, Element Music Row, and Edgehill Apartments.
Eddie Gore
Eddie Gore, owner of Historic RCA Studio C, is also an early Google Fiber customer. He noted the asset and speed of Google Fiber just last week, during an urgent upload of a nine-gig music file to his sound mixer.
“Normally I would have had to either get in the car and spend half the day in traffic, or set my computer to upload overnight. Instead, I took that 8- or 9-gig file and ‘whoosh’ it was just done. I said, ‘Are you kidding me? This is great! To hell with wasted gas!’”
However, Google’s charge to bring fiber high-speed internet directly to residences has collided with a slow rollout, as it faces off with two communications industry heavyweights, Comcast and AT&T, in an issue that centers around utility pole attachment agreements.
Due to the Nashville region’s deep limestone, which restrains underground fiber installation, Ivester says 90 percent of Google’s fiber cables will be connected via utility poles. Nashville Electric Service owns approximately 75 percent of the utility poles in Nashville, while AT&T owns an estimated 25 percent.
Under current law, existing internet providers must move their own lines on each utility pole before a new provider can add new cable. First, the pole owner approves the application for a new utility provider to be added to an existing pole. Existing carriers must then move their own lines, with each carrier sending crews sequentially. According to Ivester, the process can take approximately 60 days, and in some cases, up to 90 days for each company to move its equipment around on the utility pole. An average pole in Nashville has three to four carriers.
“If you multiply that by four, that’s one year for each pole to be set up,” says Ivester. “Google Fiber is currently on 33 utility poles in Nashville. Think about trying to get Google Fiber on 88,000 poles.” To date, Google Fiber has submitted 24,000 pole submissions to NES, and 16,000 of those submissions have been approved.
With the help of Metro Council member Anthony Davis, Google Fiber introduced its One Touch Make Ready ordinance, which would significantly decrease installation time on Nashville’s utility poles, by using one approved contractor to move and install equipment for all carriers at once.
Martha Ivester
“For example, on an NES-owned pole, you have four carriers on that pole, NES would send one contractor out, they do all that work and can do it in one day, depending on what their work load is that day and who they subcontract out to,” Ivester says. “It’s pretty significant.
“It is really about setting Nashville up for the 21st century,” she continues. “One of the realities is the current system, in the current way you attach to poles, is something that was devised years ago and is not really appropriate for the scale of deployment that a new provider needs.”
AT&T and Comcast have argued that the One Touch Make Ready policy would disrupt service and cause safety hazards. Additionally, AT&T argues that the One Touch Make Ready ordinance would violate its union contracts with Communications Workers of America, due to non-represented workers that could possibly be changing the lines. According to Ivester, Google Fiber has worked with a variety of contractors, both union and non-union, on their recent installs.
In early August, the first of three council votes were held to consider the ordinance. Metro Council’s next vote will take place Sept. 6.
Rodney Crowell is one musician skeptical of Google Fiber. In an article published in July in the Nashville Scene, his statement provided by Content Creators Coalition begins this way:
After a full day of negotiations led by Nashville Mayor Megan Barry’s office on Aug. 24, an assembly of internet providers were unable to come to a compromise or agreement on the issue. Ivester asserts that the alternatives suggested to the One Touch Make Ready policy during the meeting with Comcast, Google Fiber, AT&T, NES, and Metro are not sufficient.
“Google Fiber believes that in order to get the city ready to employ this type of infrastructure, that tweaks to the system are not enough. We look forward to a change, which we feel, really makes sense to come out in the form of this ordinance. Competition is a good thing,” Ivester says. “When Google comes to a market, other providers increase their speeds and drop their prices. We’ve seen that in other states and certainly in Nashville. This is not just for ourselves but for anyone who wants to attach in the future. It’s not just the three of us on the poles. There are a lot of other people who would like to see this change as well.”
Andrew Kautz
“Music Row has always been the hub of creativity for Nashville’s music community but has lacked in the core infrastructure needed to help the creative community connect to the rest of the world,” adds Andrew Kautz, Chief Operating Officer for Big Machine Label Group. “I can speak from experience of trying to find affordable and reliable connectivity on Music Row as we struggled just to make our phones work reliably with the existing copper infrastructure. When we made the move to fiber there were very few options and most were still cost prohibitive. Our campus of six buildings are all connected via fiber but we still have limited options for affordable bandwidth. Google Fiber’s roll out is important to Nashville’s creative community and we need to fix the roadblocks that are in place that limit competition. It’s time for Nashville to encourage investment in our technological infrastructure to not only attract new technology companies, but to also better equip our community to connect with the rest of the world reliably and efficiently.”
“I look at Kansas City, the first fiber city,” says Ivester. “Someone came in and bought up a bunch of properties and started renting them out to software developers and started this kind of startup village in Kansas City. It was one of the first cities in the US to have Google Fiber, so all these tech whiz kids came in and starting creating. I see that happening in Nashville. We have this great quote we use at Google, from Vint Serf, known as the father of the internet. He says that 99 percent of what we will do on the internet hasn’t even been invented yet. I truly believe that is the case with music. I think there will be true innovations that will come from Nashville and we want to help with that.”
In the meantime, Ivester emphasized the availability of Google’s Fiber Space in Nashville, which is located in the Icon Building at 1108 Division Street, and is open Monday-Saturday from 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
“It’s a community space. We have customer service for the customers we have, but I keep saying to artists to go to the Fiber Space,” Ivester says. “Its doors are open to the music community. Come into the Fiber Space and use it.”
Dottie West Remembered 25 Years After Fatal Car Accident
/by Craig_ShelburneJeannie Seely places a memorial cross near the Briley Parkway exit in Nashville on the 25th anniversary of the car accident there that claimed Dottie West’s life.
Grand Ole Opry star Jeannie Seely paid tribute to her friend Dottie West on Tuesday (Aug. 30) with a memorial cross on the 25th anniversary of the car accident that claimed the entertainer’s life.
Seely placed the cross at the Briley Parkway exit on Interstate 40 in Nashville where the crash took place in 1991. West was a passenger in the car, driven by an elderly neighbor who was driving her to the Grand Ole Opry. West died from injuries sustained in the crash on Sept. 4, 1991.
West recorded 15 Top 10 country hits in her extensive career, including two duets with Kenny Rogers. She is buried in McMinnville, Tennessee.
Nash Pop Camp Unites Writers From Nashville, L.A., New York
/by Jessica NicholsonPictured (top row, L-R): Eric Daigle, Holy Graffiti; Courtney Allen, Starstruck; Shane Stevens, Holy Graffiti; Soaky Siren; Erika Nuri; Nash Overstreet; Cameron Montgomery; Jesse Lee; Jesse McCartney. Pictured (bottom row, L-R): Lauren Jane Sanders, Rachel Knepp, Marcus Cobb, Bryan Lyda, Rachel Tripp, James Slater, Jimmy Robbins, Dave Pittenger
Songwriters from Nashville, Los Angeles and New York City schmoozed on a rooftop party at Nashville’s Element Music Row on Aug. 20 as part of the inaugural Nash Pop Welcome Party.
The event is a collaborative work betweenStarstruck Writers Group and artist development company Holy Graffiti, in an effort to cultivate relationships among rising songwriters, artists and musicians.
“Nothing brings me more joy than to have some of the most talented people in the world all in one beautiful room, breaking bread, and celebrating new relationships, and new music, from first time collaborations. Hopefully this party helped to inspire fresh ideas and excitement for what’s to come,” said Holy Graffiti’s Shane Stevens.
“Before I knew Shane Stevens, I was a fan of his work,” says Courtney Allen, Creative Director for Starstruck Writers Group. ” The best thing about this industry is that you get to work with your friends. Eric, Shane and I share the same passion and vision so it seemed like a no brainer to team up with them to create something truly special that has never been done before in Nashville. This is just the beginning of big things to come for Starstruck and Holy Graffiti,” said Allen.
Music tech company Jammber sponsored the event, as the company’s CEO/founder Marcus Cobb offered a presentation that showed Jammber’s ability to manage creative projects and income for artists, songwriters, producers and contributors.
Music City Hit-Makers Sell Out Two Shows At Cheekwood
/by Troy_StephensonPictured L-R: Brett James, Rivers Rutherford, Chris DeStefano. Photo: Kim Hooker
Music City Hit-Makers returned to Cheekwood in Nashville over the weekend (Aug. 26-27) for two sold-out shows. Three of Nashville’s most successful songwriters — Brett James, Rivers Rutherford and Chris DeStefano — performed as part of Cheekwood’s Songwriters Under The Stars annual series.
The show also featured Emily West debuting her symphony set American One Night Standards set to tour in 2017.
Emily West. Photo: Kim Hooker
Sirius XM The Highway’s Storme Warren and The Big 98’s Amy Paige emceed.
For more information and to view upcoming tour dates, visit musiccityhitmakers.com.
Photo: Caitlin Harris Photography
Sam Hunt Sets Record With Fourth No. 1 Single From ‘Montevallo’
/by Craig_ShelburneSam Hunt
With “Make You Miss Me,” Sam Hunt has become the first solo male artist to achieve four No. 1 country singles from a debut album since Billboard launched its Country Airplay Chart in 1990.
The single follows “Leave the Night On,” “House Party” and “Take Your Time” at the top of the chart. “Break Up in a Small Town” reached the Top 5. All the singles come from Hunt’s MCA Nashville debut, Montevallo.
Since the 2014 release of that album, Hunt has accrued 2.53 billion streams and has earned an additional 10.5 million units in RIAA single certifications. Recent certifications include “Take Your Time” going triple platinum; “Leave the Night On,” “Break Up in a Small Town” and “House Party” each earning double platinum;” “Make You Miss Me” reaching platinum; and album track “Ex to See” hitting gold.
Hunt is currently working on new music.
Warner/Chappell Music Signs Nathan Chapman
/by Jessica NicholsonNathan Chapman
Warner/Chappell Music has signed a worldwide publishing agreement with songwriter and producer Nathan Chapman.
Chapman has composed more than 30 songs for major label releases, including for Phillip Phillips, Lady Antebellum, Michael Ray, Dan + Shay, Jake Owen, Eric Paslay, Martina McBride, Colbie Caillat, Lauren Alaina, Sara Evans, Rascal Flatts, O.A.R., Mickey Guyton, Thompson Square, and Darius Rucker, whose song “Homegrown Honey” was Chapman’s first No. 1 hit.
Chapman has released his own project, Revival, featuring songs penned with Lori McKenna, Ashley Monroe, Leslie Satcher, Stephanie Chapman, Hillary Lindsey, Andrew Dorff, and Mary Steeburgen. Chapman also penned the end title for the film, My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2.
“Warner/Chappell has impressed me for a long time, as their crew have this whole publishing thang dialed in,” said Chapman. “From the writers to the creative staff to the admin peeps, it’s a culture of excellence and positivity. If my career journey led me here, I must be doing something right.”
“We’ve had the pleasure of knowing Nathan for a number of years and have always been impressed with his passion for songwriting and songs,” said Ben Vaughn, Executive Vice President of Warner/Chappell Music Nashville. “The depth & diversity of his songwriting voice shines so brightly on his project Revival, and everyone at Warner/Chappell is proud to have Nathan in our family.”
As a producer, Chapman has worked on all five of Taylor Swift’s albums, earning a Grammy award for Album of the Year as a producer on 1989. Chapman has had 16 No. 1 hits as a producer, and has worked with artists such as Martina McBride, The Band Perry, Lionel Richie, Sara Evans, Shania Twain, Colbie Caillat, Cassadee Pope, Lady Antebellum, Jewel, and most recently, on Keith Urban’s No. 1 hit “Break on Me.”
Martina McBride, Kris Kristofferson Set For ‘Grammy Salute To Music Legends’ On PBS
/by Jessica NicholsonThis year’s Lifetime Achievement Award honorees are Ruth Brown, Celia Cruz, Earth, Wind & Fire, Herbie Hancock, Jefferson Airplane, Linda Ronstadt and Run DMC. John Cage, Fred Foster and Chris Strachwitz are Trustees Award honorees; and EMT and Dr. Harvey Fletcher are Technical Grammy Award recipients. Also being honored is Phillip Riggs, this year’s recipient of the Music Educator Award.
McBride and Souther will honor Ronstadt with a collaboration of “Blue Bayou,” while Souther also offers a rendition of “Faithless Love.”
Kristofferson and Lynne pay tribute to Foster with a turn at “Me and Bobby McGee,” with Lynne continuing for a take on “Oh Pretty Woman.”
Previously held during Grammy Week in February, this is the first time The Recording Academy has celebrated the Special Merit Awards with a stand-alone event and musical tribute. The celebration was recorded at Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles.
Josh Kear Collects Four MusicRow No. 1 Challenge Coins
/by Craig_ShelburnePictured (L-R): Sherod Robertson, Owner/Publisher, MusicRow; Josh Kear. Photo: Molly Hannula
Josh Kear picked up four MusicRow No. 1 Challenge Coins during a visit to the MusicRow office on Thursday (Aug. 25).
Since 2014, every artist and songwriter who achieves a No. 1 single on the MusicRow CountryBreakout Chart receives a coin.
Coins were presented for writing credits on Dierks Bentley’s “Drunk on a Plane,” Blake Shelton’s “Neon Light,” Lee Brice’s “Drinking Class,” and Lady Antebellum’s “Long Stretch of Love.”
Signed to Big Yellow Dog Music, Kear has achieved numerous hit singles over the years, including Carrie Underwood’s “Before He Cheats” and Lady Antebellum’s “Need You Now,” as well as Tim McGraw’s “Highway Don’t Care,” Luke Bryan’s “Drunk on You” and Frankie Ballard’s “Helluva Life.”
Josh Kear with MusicRow staff. Pictured (L-R): Craig Shelburne, Sherod Robertson, Josh Kear, Troy Stephenson, Eric T. Parker, Jessica Nicholson. Photo: Molly Hannula
Luke Bryan, Rare Country Join Charlie Daniels Volunteer Jam
/by Craig_ShelburneLuke Bryan
Luke Bryan will be joining Chris Stapleton, Kid Rock, Larry The Cable Guy, and Travis Tritt to celebrate with Charlie Daniels at his 80th Birthday Volunteer Jam on November 30 at Bridgestone Arena. Tickets are available through Ticketmaster.
Joining Volunteer Jam for the first time is Cox Media Group’s Rare Country who has signed on as an official media sponsor. RareCountry.com will provide in-depth coverage of the event, including backstage artist interviews, performance footage, and more.
“Rare Country is proud to stand alongside Charlie as he celebrates his 80th Birthday Volunteer Jam,” said Laurissa Phillips, GM, Rare Country. “This year’s incredible performance lineup is a testament to Charlie’s legendary status both on and off the stage. We look forward to providing Rare Country fans with unparalleled access to this epic event.”
A portion of the proceeds from the night will go to the The Journey Home Project, a 501(c)(3) non-profit co-founded by Daniels and manager, David Corlew, to help Veterans of the United States Armed Forces.
CMA Awards Nominations Will Be Announced Wednesday Morning
/by Craig_ShelburneDierks Bentley, Cam and Keith Urban will help announce CMA Awards nominations on Wednesday (Aug. 31) on ABC’s Good Morning America.
The three artists will appear live from the Grand Ole Opry House during the half-hour segment that begins at 8:30 a.m. ET.
The Opry House served as the home to the CMA Awards from 1974 to 2004.
Select announcements will air in the 8:30 AM/ET half-hour segment of the top-rated morning news program on Wednesday. The remaining categories will be revealed live on GoodMorningAmerica.com on Yahoo as well as via Good Morning America’s Facebook page through Facebook Live. CMA will then release the full slate of nominees.
Cam will be notifying the finalists for CMA’s Broadcast Station and Personality of the Year with personalized video messages.
“Having these three artists participate together in our 50th Anniversary celebration on Good Morning America makes this kick off to an especially historic Awards season a true celebration of our genre,” said Sarah Trahern, CMA Chief Executive Officer. “To have Dierks, Cam, and Keith standing on the Opry stage, where so much of the history of the Awards took place, just adds to the excitement of this year’s announcements.”