
Frank Liddell
Self-proclaimed “music company” Carnival Music, led by powerhouse publisher and producer Frank Liddell, was born out of frustration. In the early 1990s, Liddell left publishing company Bluewater Music to relaunch Decca Records in Nashville.
“I opened and closed Decca, or I guess ran it into the ground,” says Liddell. “I was excited to work for a record company because I had a real job and insurance, but it wasn’t too long after I went to work there that I realized that I was not cut out for it. I learned a lot and I loved the people I worked with and the artists, but I realized early on that I liked being independent. Toward the end of my time at Decca, I had been working with a songwriter named Bruce Robison for a while. I had known him since 1990, and in fact I had tried to sign him at Bluewater but the timing just didn’t work out.”
Around the same time Liddell decided to change directions in his career, a songplugger friend, Travis Hill, was intent on starting his own company.
“I was still working at Decca. In the meantime, Travis said, ‘I need to go start my life,’ so I said, ‘Here’s a bag full of songs. Go start.’” Liddell says. “He started the doors [at Carnival Music] and he was here for a year before I ever came over.”
Carnival Music opened in 1997 with Robison as the company’s first signing. The roster now includes writers and artists such as Brent Cobb, Scooter Carusoe, Troy Jones, Aubrie Sellers, Marla Cannon-Goodman, Dustin Christensen, Derik Hultquist, David Nail, Stephanie Lambring, Gretchen Peters, Adam Wright, Hailey Whitters, Waylon Payne, and Mando Saenz.

Emily Schiraldi, Carnival Music’s Senior Director of Creative
“We signed [Bruce] because we thought he was great,” recalls Liddell. “Looking back over the past 25 years of my life and almost 20 years of Carnival, those are the things we’ve done well. We signed things that we love, that we can be proud of, that we can make have some financial success but that we can also brag about the quality of the music, not just the stats behind it.”
Though, those stats are enviable.
A sampling of Carnival’s hits includes songs recorded by Kenny Chesney (“Anything But Mine”), Billy Currington (“People Are Crazy”), Dixie Chicks (“Traveling Soldier”), Miranda Lambert (“All Kinds of Kinds”), Tim McGraw (“Angry All the Time”), and David Nail (“Let It Rain”). Newer cuts include “Rock On” (the first single for Tucker Beathard), “All the Way to Me” (on Dierks Bentley’s upcoming album, Black), and “Wanna Be That Song” and “Time Well Spent” (on Brett Eldredge’s album, Illinois).
With an eye toward curating top quality music, the Carnival staff willingly takes the gamble that quality can translate to a longer wait for radio success. Written by Robison, “Travelin’ Soldier” was 13 years old before it became a hit for The Dixie Chicks. “Angry All The Time,” another Robison cut, was 11 years old. “All Kinds of Kinds,” penned by Phillip Coleman and Don Henry, was 15 years old before Lambert released it as a single in 2013.
“I’m not thrilled about that all the time, because I hope when we have new writers come in, we don’t have to tell them, ‘You’ll have a hit in about 10 years,’ but I also think it goes to show the power of a song and that we understand that,” says Liddell, who is married to Lee Ann Womack. “We believe in a writer’s art and we work with them and continue to work it for as long as we think it’s viable. We find people who have talent and we try to embrace new opportunities. We sort of have a land of misfit toys, and we allow those people to breathe in their own way.”

Courtney Gregg, Carnival Music VP, Artist and Writer Development
“We are in it for the long haul,” says Courtney Gregg, VP, Artist and Writer Development. “It’s not like, ‘Oh, two years have come up and you haven’t done anything, so bye, onto the next one.’ Scooter has had songs cut maybe two weeks after he wrote them. We hope it happens tomorrow, but if it doesn’t, if it takes 10 years… you just take a step back and say this is worth fighting for.”
Aubrie Sellers is one of the unique writer-artists Carnival has signed recently. She is Womack’s daughter from her first marriage, to songwriter Jason Sellers.
“She’s obviously grown up in the business,” says Liddell. “She had left school, and thought she would go off to Los Angeles and act, but she’s always sung with Lee Ann and she’s always been a really good singer. So when she came back to Nashville, she talked to me about working together. I wanted her to have something better than working with her stepdad, but over time I realized she was serious.”
Working with Liddell and Carnival songwriter Adam Wright, Sellers crafted music that showcased her traditional-sounding voice, juxtaposed against a raw, new “garage country” sound on her debut New City Blues, released through a partnership with the artist, Carnival Music and Thirty Tigers.
“We worked with her for several years, developing her sound and live show,” Liddell says. “It’s fun to watch it continue to grow and develop more interest. She never said, ‘Mom, Dad, Stepdad, go get me a record deal.’ She wanted to find her sound and hone in on it and make it what it can be. I love that about her. “
Carnival artist-writer Hailey Whitters contributed “Low All Afternoon” and “The Real Thing” to Martina McBride’s upcoming project, Reckless. Whitters also teamed with Matraca Berg to pen “Long Come To Jesus” for the up-and-coming artist’s own album, Black Sheep, released on Oct. 2 on Carnival Music. Emily Schiraldi, who is Carnival’s Senior Director of Creative, has championed Whitters’ writing and vocal abilities since the burgeoning singer-songwriter was a student at Nashville’s Belmont University.
“When Hailey’s first cut is a 100 percenter [solo write] for Martina, that’s validation of things we are working for,” says Schiraldi. “Not many people can say their first cut was a [solo write] for an established artist like that.”
“I’ve sat a bit on the sidelines with Hailey and I’ve watched her become a great writer, and now to have songwriters like Matraca Berg say, ‘I want to write with Hailey’…To watch this grow organically, that to me is what Carnival is all about,” adds Liddell.
If some of Liddell’s biggest successes have come from working with female artists such as Womack and Lambert, he says it’s because female artists are taking more creative risks.
“I feel there are a lot of females that have their backs against the wall, and because the climate hasn’t been great, they have nothing to lose,” says Liddell. “And they are doing two things: singing subject matter that is important to them, and they are singing melodies. I would love to work with more males. David Nail, I think he’s a great singer. Circumstances led me to work more with females, rather than us having a knack for working with females.”
Schiraldi agrees that more females are holding their own, and speaking their minds, as writers and artists. “I bang my head against the wall any time I play a song for a female artist, and as soon as it’s done, she’s looking around at everybody else like, ‘Am I supposed to like this song? What do you think?’ Whereas with artists like Hailey and Aubrie, they have a vision and will tell you exactly what they think.”
For Liddell and company, the pinnacle of success isn’t just measured by the number of hit songs, but by the successes of dreamers who trust Carnival with their songs and ambitions.

Troy Jones
Songwriter Troy Jones had spent 10 years in Nashville, in hopes of getting a hit single on radio, but the daily grind left him unsuccessful and drained. Shortly after hearing that Jones had been let go from a publishing deal, Liddell reached out.
“I said, ‘I hear you are out of a deal.’ He said, ‘Yeah,’ and I said, ‘You’re not anymore. I’m signing you.’ I thought he would have been really excited, but he said, ‘Hey, I’m on vacation with my family but I’ll be in Nashville in a couple of weeks, can I come see you?’ I said sure.”
In truth, prior to that call, Jones had no intentions of returning to Nashville. Standing in the kitchen in Florida, Jones had been preparing to thank his family for their years of supporting his ambitions as a songwriter, but he was going to return to the paper mill, where he had worked for 20 years before trying his luck in Nashville.
“He was talking with his wife about, ‘How am I going to tell the kids?’ and that’s what he was gearing up for when the phone rang,” says Liddell. “It threw him so bad. Later he told me, ‘I wanted you to know that I was honored. I just didn’t know how to compartmentalize it, getting that kind of call at that moment.’”
Jones did return to Nashville and signed with Carnival. He has gone on to pen two No. 1 singles for Billy Currington—“People Are Crazy” and “Pretty Good At Drinking Beer.” His other cuts include Kenny Chesney and George Strait’s “Shiftwork,” as well as Joe Nichols’ “Like Me” and “Shade.”
“That means way more to me than any trophy, or sitting onstage,” says Liddell. “That’s what this is about… about poets expressing themselves and changing people’s lives.”

Dylan Fest Coming To Ryman Auditorium On May 23-24
/by Craig_ShelburneThe Nashville music community will celebrate Bob Dylan’s 75th birthday at the Ryman Auditorium with back-to-back concerts scheduled for May 23 and 24. Tickets go on sale Friday (April 15) at 10 a.m.
Billed as Dylan Fest, the event is presented by the Best Fest, an organization that throws concerts honoring iconic musicians and gives the proceeds to charity. Thistle Farms, a Nashville-based charity committed to helping a community of women who have survived prostitution, trafficking and addiction, will be the beneficiary of Dylan Fest.
Confirmed artists include Emmylou Harris, Jason Isbell (May 24 only), Kacey Musgraves (May 24 only), Ann Wilson, Kurt Vile, Wynonna & The Big Noise, Boz Scaggs, Kesha, City & Colour, Moon Taxi, Brothers Osborne (May 24 only), Dhani Harrison, John Paul White, Nikki Lane, Brendan Benson, Rayland Baxter, Holly Williams, Langhorne Slim, Eric Pulido of Midlake, Ruby Amanfu, Karen Elson, Amanda Shires (May 24 only), Danny Masterson, Bijou Phillips, The Whigs, Cory Chisel, Adriel Denae, Jonathan Tyler, Robert Ellis, Shelly Colvin, Tommy Emmanuel and more surprise guests.
Charlie McCoy (who played on the Dylan albums Blonde on Blonde, Nashville Skyline and John Wesley Harding) will be sitting in on harmonica. The artists will be backed by the Best Fest’s house band, The Cabin Down Below Band.
The concerts will also mark the 50th anniversary of the release of Blonde on Blonde, Dylan’s first album recorded entirely in Nashville.
“We are thrilled and grateful to celebrate the life and legacy of Bob Dylan at the legendary Ryman Auditorium,” said Best Fest founder Austin Scaggs. “To honor Bob and raise money for a wonderful charity is a win-win.”
Jameson Irish Whiskey, Google Play, SunTrust Bank, Billy Reid, The Hutton Hotel, Jim & Nicks BBQ, and Husk are sponsors of the event.
Downtown Music Publishing, YouTube Ink Direct Deal For Performance Rights
/by Jessica NicholsonDMP and YouTube already have a deal in place for licensing reproduction rights for Downtown’s songwriters.
Andrew Sparkler, Downtown’s VP of Business Affairs and Operation, noted, “Certain methods of royalty collection have been in place for over one hundred years and may need to be reconsidered. This broader licensing arrangement, which includes performance income, provides our songwriters with reduced administrative fees, expedited payments and more robust usage and royalty data. We are excited to collaborate with a platform like YouTube, who is also invested in rights management, transparency, accuracy and precision in licensing. ”
Anjali Southward, YouTube’s head of U.S. music publishing said, “Downtown Music Publishing has been a trusted, forward-looking partner for many years. Downtown’s ability to provide YouTube with up-to-date accurate repertoire ownership information is a key component of our partnership. We look forward to continuing our work together and supporting innovative ways to connect songwriters and content providers.”
Exclusive: Carnival Music Finds Hits, Success As “Land Of Misfit Toys”
/by Jessica NicholsonFrank Liddell
Self-proclaimed “music company” Carnival Music, led by powerhouse publisher and producer Frank Liddell, was born out of frustration. In the early 1990s, Liddell left publishing company Bluewater Music to relaunch Decca Records in Nashville.
“I opened and closed Decca, or I guess ran it into the ground,” says Liddell. “I was excited to work for a record company because I had a real job and insurance, but it wasn’t too long after I went to work there that I realized that I was not cut out for it. I learned a lot and I loved the people I worked with and the artists, but I realized early on that I liked being independent. Toward the end of my time at Decca, I had been working with a songwriter named Bruce Robison for a while. I had known him since 1990, and in fact I had tried to sign him at Bluewater but the timing just didn’t work out.”
Around the same time Liddell decided to change directions in his career, a songplugger friend, Travis Hill, was intent on starting his own company.
“I was still working at Decca. In the meantime, Travis said, ‘I need to go start my life,’ so I said, ‘Here’s a bag full of songs. Go start.’” Liddell says. “He started the doors [at Carnival Music] and he was here for a year before I ever came over.”
Carnival Music opened in 1997 with Robison as the company’s first signing. The roster now includes writers and artists such as Brent Cobb, Scooter Carusoe, Troy Jones, Aubrie Sellers, Marla Cannon-Goodman, Dustin Christensen, Derik Hultquist, David Nail, Stephanie Lambring, Gretchen Peters, Adam Wright, Hailey Whitters, Waylon Payne, and Mando Saenz.
Emily Schiraldi, Carnival Music’s Senior Director of Creative
“We signed [Bruce] because we thought he was great,” recalls Liddell. “Looking back over the past 25 years of my life and almost 20 years of Carnival, those are the things we’ve done well. We signed things that we love, that we can be proud of, that we can make have some financial success but that we can also brag about the quality of the music, not just the stats behind it.”
Though, those stats are enviable.
A sampling of Carnival’s hits includes songs recorded by Kenny Chesney (“Anything But Mine”), Billy Currington (“People Are Crazy”), Dixie Chicks (“Traveling Soldier”), Miranda Lambert (“All Kinds of Kinds”), Tim McGraw (“Angry All the Time”), and David Nail (“Let It Rain”). Newer cuts include “Rock On” (the first single for Tucker Beathard), “All the Way to Me” (on Dierks Bentley’s upcoming album, Black), and “Wanna Be That Song” and “Time Well Spent” (on Brett Eldredge’s album, Illinois).
With an eye toward curating top quality music, the Carnival staff willingly takes the gamble that quality can translate to a longer wait for radio success. Written by Robison, “Travelin’ Soldier” was 13 years old before it became a hit for The Dixie Chicks. “Angry All The Time,” another Robison cut, was 11 years old. “All Kinds of Kinds,” penned by Phillip Coleman and Don Henry, was 15 years old before Lambert released it as a single in 2013.
“I’m not thrilled about that all the time, because I hope when we have new writers come in, we don’t have to tell them, ‘You’ll have a hit in about 10 years,’ but I also think it goes to show the power of a song and that we understand that,” says Liddell, who is married to Lee Ann Womack. “We believe in a writer’s art and we work with them and continue to work it for as long as we think it’s viable. We find people who have talent and we try to embrace new opportunities. We sort of have a land of misfit toys, and we allow those people to breathe in their own way.”
Courtney Gregg, Carnival Music VP, Artist and Writer Development
“We are in it for the long haul,” says Courtney Gregg, VP, Artist and Writer Development. “It’s not like, ‘Oh, two years have come up and you haven’t done anything, so bye, onto the next one.’ Scooter has had songs cut maybe two weeks after he wrote them. We hope it happens tomorrow, but if it doesn’t, if it takes 10 years… you just take a step back and say this is worth fighting for.”
“She’s obviously grown up in the business,” says Liddell. “She had left school, and thought she would go off to Los Angeles and act, but she’s always sung with Lee Ann and she’s always been a really good singer. So when she came back to Nashville, she talked to me about working together. I wanted her to have something better than working with her stepdad, but over time I realized she was serious.”
Working with Liddell and Carnival songwriter Adam Wright, Sellers crafted music that showcased her traditional-sounding voice, juxtaposed against a raw, new “garage country” sound on her debut New City Blues, released through a partnership with the artist, Carnival Music and Thirty Tigers.
“We worked with her for several years, developing her sound and live show,” Liddell says. “It’s fun to watch it continue to grow and develop more interest. She never said, ‘Mom, Dad, Stepdad, go get me a record deal.’ She wanted to find her sound and hone in on it and make it what it can be. I love that about her. “
“When Hailey’s first cut is a 100 percenter [solo write] for Martina, that’s validation of things we are working for,” says Schiraldi. “Not many people can say their first cut was a [solo write] for an established artist like that.”
“I’ve sat a bit on the sidelines with Hailey and I’ve watched her become a great writer, and now to have songwriters like Matraca Berg say, ‘I want to write with Hailey’…To watch this grow organically, that to me is what Carnival is all about,” adds Liddell.
If some of Liddell’s biggest successes have come from working with female artists such as Womack and Lambert, he says it’s because female artists are taking more creative risks.
“I feel there are a lot of females that have their backs against the wall, and because the climate hasn’t been great, they have nothing to lose,” says Liddell. “And they are doing two things: singing subject matter that is important to them, and they are singing melodies. I would love to work with more males. David Nail, I think he’s a great singer. Circumstances led me to work more with females, rather than us having a knack for working with females.”
Schiraldi agrees that more females are holding their own, and speaking their minds, as writers and artists. “I bang my head against the wall any time I play a song for a female artist, and as soon as it’s done, she’s looking around at everybody else like, ‘Am I supposed to like this song? What do you think?’ Whereas with artists like Hailey and Aubrie, they have a vision and will tell you exactly what they think.”
For Liddell and company, the pinnacle of success isn’t just measured by the number of hit songs, but by the successes of dreamers who trust Carnival with their songs and ambitions.
Troy Jones
Songwriter Troy Jones had spent 10 years in Nashville, in hopes of getting a hit single on radio, but the daily grind left him unsuccessful and drained. Shortly after hearing that Jones had been let go from a publishing deal, Liddell reached out.
“I said, ‘I hear you are out of a deal.’ He said, ‘Yeah,’ and I said, ‘You’re not anymore. I’m signing you.’ I thought he would have been really excited, but he said, ‘Hey, I’m on vacation with my family but I’ll be in Nashville in a couple of weeks, can I come see you?’ I said sure.”
In truth, prior to that call, Jones had no intentions of returning to Nashville. Standing in the kitchen in Florida, Jones had been preparing to thank his family for their years of supporting his ambitions as a songwriter, but he was going to return to the paper mill, where he had worked for 20 years before trying his luck in Nashville.
“He was talking with his wife about, ‘How am I going to tell the kids?’ and that’s what he was gearing up for when the phone rang,” says Liddell. “It threw him so bad. Later he told me, ‘I wanted you to know that I was honored. I just didn’t know how to compartmentalize it, getting that kind of call at that moment.’”
Jones did return to Nashville and signed with Carnival. He has gone on to pen two No. 1 singles for Billy Currington—“People Are Crazy” and “Pretty Good At Drinking Beer.” His other cuts include Kenny Chesney and George Strait’s “Shiftwork,” as well as Joe Nichols’ “Like Me” and “Shade.”
“That means way more to me than any trophy, or sitting onstage,” says Liddell. “That’s what this is about… about poets expressing themselves and changing people’s lives.”
CMA Music Festival Reveals Riverfront Stage Concert Lineup
/by Jessica NicholsonJake Owen.
Jake Owen will launch the 2016 CMA Music Festival’s concerts at the Riverfront Park stage on June 9 at 10 a.m. The free concert is one of almost 40 performances that will take place at the Riverfront Park stage during the CMA Music Festival, which runs June 9-12.
Other artists slated to perform at Riverfront Stage throughout CMA Music Festival include A Thousand Horses, Rodney Atkins, Brothers Osborne, Chase Bryant, Kane Brown, Cam, Brandy Clark, Terri Clark, Brooke Eden, Charles Esten, Tyler Farr, High Valley, Home Free, Chris Janson, Jana Kramer, Chris Lane, Tracy Lawrence, Aaron Lewis, LOCASH, Love and Theft, Maddie & Tae, Neal McCoy, Scotty McCreery, Lorrie Morgan, Maren Morris, Old Dominion, Jon Pardi, Parmalee, Eric Paslay, Kellie Pickler, Michael Ray, Canaan Smith, Corey Smith, Granger Smith, The Cadillac Three, Thompson Square, Phil Vassar, Darryl Worley, and more.
The Nightly Shows at Nissan Stadium are sold out, though tickets for Fan Fair X at Music City Center are still available for $10 per day, or $25 for four days at cmaworld.com.
Artist Updates: Dierks Bentley, Reba, Brooks & Dunn, Lady Antebellum’s Hillary Scott
/by Jessica NicholsonDierks Bentley Holds ‘CMT Instant Jam’ Pop-Up Concert
Dierks Bentley. Photo: John Shearer/Getty Images
Dierks Bentley surprised fans in Knoxville, Tennessee on Sunday night (April 10) with a CMT Instant Jam pop-up concert at The International. Bentley released information to fans about the free 14-song set, which included his current single “Somewhere on a Beach,” as well as two additional songs from his upcoming Capitol Records Nashville album Black.
CMT Instant Jam: Dierks Bentley debuts Saturday, May 28 at 9 p.m. ET/PT. Each episode of CMT Instant Jam features performances and captures the excitement and energy as artists reveal to fans how to score tickets to an exclusive show in their area, while giving a behind-the-scenes look at the hours leading up to their concert.
Reba, Brooks & Dunn, Carrie Underwood Take Part In Celebrity Fight Night
The 22nd Annual Celebrity Fight Night was held Saturday (April 9) in Phoenix, Arizona, with host Reba in addition to country stars Brooks & Dunn and Carrie Underwood.
Lady Antebellum’s Hillary Scott Aids Cancer Research
Hillary Scott (of Lady Antebellum) was on hand for Stand Up To Cancer (SU2C)’s Standing Room Only event on Saturday night (April 9) in New York City, to help raise funds for colorectal cancer research. The event was chaired by Jim Toth and Reese Witherspoon, as well as MasterCard President/CEO Ajay Banga and his wife Ritu, and included performances from Scott, Tony Bennett, Sheryl Crow, and Jamie Foxx.
Stand Up To Cancer (SU2C) honored SU2C Co-Founder and award-winning journalist Katie Couric for her dedication to cancer advocacy at a star-studded fundraising event here Saturday night. A portion of the proceeds will be devoted to research on colorectal cancer, the disease that took her first husband’s life and launched her career as a cancer advocate.
SOURCE Awards Set For August 23
/by Craig_ShelburneThe 2016 SOURCE Awards will honor and induct a select group of women into the SOURCE Awards Hall of Fame at this year’s event, scheduled for Tuesday, August 23 at the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum at the historic Municipal Auditorium in downtown Nashville.
The honorees are women who have played a vital role in the success of Music Row and Nashville’s entertainment industry. Information on how to purchase tickets to the awards will be released in the coming weeks along with the names of the 2016 honorees.
Founded in 1991, SOURCE is a nonprofit organization supporting women executives and professionals who work in all facets of the Nashville music industry. In 2003, the annual SOURCE Awards were established to pay respect to and honor the women who helped develop and build upon the foundation of the music industry in Nashville. SOURCE also pays tribute to women who presently make major contributions with their work in the industry.
Ticketmaster To Sell Tickets Directly On Facebook
/by Eric T. Parker“By putting the ability to buy tickets directly within Facebook we hope that we’re going to provide a more seamless purchase experience and sell more tickets,” said Armstrong.
The buy-on-Facebook option will initially be limited to a select group of general admission events. For its referral, Facebook will receive an undisclosed “affiliate fee” from Ticketmaster.
For users, tickets must still be claimed via Ticketmaster’s website or app. But Ticketmaster’s move is aimed at consumers who are trending more toward mobile apps than websites.
Along those lines, BuzzFeed notes Facebook is experimenting with a similar strategy for Messenger, where users can buy tickets through an experimental virtual assistant M, which sends images of your tickets upon request before an event.
Musicians Corner Announces Permanent Location, Spring Lineup
/by Jessica NicholsonFree concert series Musicians Corner will launch its seventh year with a two-day celebration in its new permanent location at Nashville’s Centennial Park on Friday, May 13 and Saturday, May 14. Concerts are scheduled through June 25.
Musicians Corner’s permanent home is stationed at the corner of West End Avenue and 27th Street, as part of phase one of the Centennial Park Restoration that offers a native woodland landscape with paths and benches, crab orchard stone seating, and gently-graded slopes for blankets and picnics.
“Musicians Corner has been a fantastic display of the community spirit at the heart of Nashville’s commitment to arts and music since it debuted in 2010,” said Nashville Mayor Megan Barry. “This permanent location will showcase that spirit even more powerfully, and it will be a source of joy and entertainment for families in Nashville for years to come. I’m grateful to all of the artists, sponsors, and Metro employees who came together to make it happen.”
Additionally, Musicians Corner will debut Acoustic Friday Nights, set for May 13, May 20, June 17 and June 24.
“With the gaining popularity of our program, we’re excited to introduce our first evening series,” said John Tumminello, Executive Director. “Musicians Corner’s permanent location looks beautiful under the string lights and will be the perfect setting for a date night or to unwind from a busy week.”
Events will feature multi-genre artist performances on the SunTrust Main Stage and Lightning 100 Acoustic Stage, Mix 92.9 Kidsville activities, several of Nashville’s best food trucks, Dogville activities, local artisans, featured charity partners, and the Musicians Corner Pub. Events will take place from 5-9 p.m. on Fridays and from 12-5 p.m. on Saturdays.
Musicians Corner will also present an encore performance by Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars along with a special screening of their critically-acclaimed documentary film at City Winery on Monday, May 23. Tickets are available at citywinery.com/nashville
Musicians Corner Spring 2016 SunTrust Main Stage Artist Line Up
Friday, May 13
Emerson Hart (of Tonic) • Fairfield Four • Jason Eskridge
Saturday, May 14
Robert Randolph and the Family Band, Andy Davis, Caroline Glaser, Halfbrass
Friday, May 20
Andrew Ripp, Marc Scibilia, Birdtalker, Ike Ndolo
Saturday, May 21
Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars, Elle Macho (Butterfly Boucher & David Mead), Zeke Duhon, Edward & Jane
Saturday, May 28
Family of the Year, The Black Cadillacs, Cordovas, Spoken Word Artists from Southern Word
Saturday, June 4
The Mowgli’s, AJ & The Jiggawatts, Rashad Tha Poet, Kyshona
Saturday, June 11
Matthew Perryman Jones & Friends, John Fullbright, Mike Hicks, Slings & Arrows
Friday, June 17
Steve Forbert, Leigh Nash (of Sixpence None The Richer), Angel Snow
Saturday, June 18
Hurray For The Riff Raff, River Whyless, Justin Klump, Marie Miller
Friday, June 24
Dom Flemons (of Carolina Chocolate Drops), Damien Horne, Tristan McIntosh
Saturday, June 25
The Jayhawks, Griffin House, Hope Country, W.O. Smith Music School Camp BackBeat Bands
SESAC Signs Steve Bogard
/by Jessica NicholsonSESAC has signed hit songwriter Steve Bogard for representation. Bogard has written nine No. 1 songs in his career including George Strait’s “Carried Away” and “Carrying Your Love with Me” and Rascal Flatts‘ “Prayin’ For Daylight.” He has garnered two Grammy nominations for Best Country Song and has had cuts by the Four Tops, Sinead O’Connor, Jack Ingram and Dustin Lynch.
Bogard stopped by SESAC’s new Music Row headquarters with representatives from his publishing company, Magic Mustang Music.
Pictured (L-R): SESAC’s Dennis Lord, Magic Mustang’s Juli Newton Griffith, Bogard, SESAC’s Shannan Hatch.
Photo: Peyton Hoge
Webster PR Adds Two Staffers
/by Jessica NicholsonPictured (L-R): Shannon Gursky, Spencer Turney
Webster Public Relations has added Shannon Gursky as Events & Branding Manager, and Spencer Turney as Associate Publicist.
Gursky will work on festival/event clients, including: Ashley for the Arts, Country Jam USA Festival, Country Stampede, Muskogee G Fest, Tree Town Music Festival, Wild West Comedy Festival, 70s Romance Cruise, Country Music Cruising, Country Music Cruise, Helping A Hero, The Journey Home Project, NATD Honors, National Music Council Awards, Charlie Daniels’ Volunteer Jam, APA, Larry’s Country Diner, Country’s Family Reunion and The Joey Canyon Show.
Gursky previously worked at the Nashville Songwriters Association International (NSAI) where she oversaw all of the organizations’ marketing and events, and assisted with the Tin Pan South Songwriters Festival. Prior to NSAI, she worked with Kaleidoscope Media’s broad range of clients as well as Capitol Records Nashville where she assisted in spearheading tour publicity for Luke Bryan. She is a graduate of Belmont University.
Turney joins work on Webster PR’s Reviver Records roster, including LOCASH, Blackjack Billy, Michael Tyler, Kayla Adams and Little Anthony. He will also work in tandem with Scott Adkins, Webster PR’s VP of Publicity, on the Bellamy Brothers, Crystal Gayle, Cyndi Lauper, Dolly Parton, Gene Watson, Hank Williams Jr., Jeannie Seely, Johnny Lee, Kiefer Sutherland, Moe Bandy, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Ronnie McDowell, Roy Clark and Tanya Tucker.
After spending time in Chicago working for L.C. Williams & Associates, the Memphis native returns to the south and the music industry. Turney studied public relations and journalism at the University of Memphis, where he was part of the PR team for the student-run record label and oversaw publicity for local independent artists.
Gursky can be reached at shannon@websterpr.com or at 615-777-6995 x229. Turney can be reached at spencer@websterpr.com 615-777-6995.