
Shane McAnally
Don’t miss Shane McAnally, current nominee for ACM Songwriter of the Year, on The Producer’s Chair on Thurs., March 31, at Douglas Corner at 6 p.m.
Shane McAnally started writing songs in Texas when he was 8 and was performing in clubs by age 12. He appeared on Star Search at 15 and later spent a summer performing in Branson, before returning to Texas and becoming a regular on the state’s Opry circuit. In 1993, he moved to Nashville at age 19. He signed with Curb two years later but despite tours with Reba, Kenny Chesney and Alabama, his five-year stint failed to yield radio success. He moved to Los Angeles and worked as a bartender while continuing to write and play music.
Thankfully McAnally wasn’t finished with Nashville. In 2008, he got his first major cut with Lee Ann Womack’s “Last Call,” written with Erin Enderlin, and he moved back to Music City. The next year, he scored a Luke Bryan cut. In 2010, the flood gates opened with Reba cutting “All The Women I Am,” (McAnally/Kent Blazy/Marv Green), “Cry” (McAnally/Brandy Clark), and “The Day She Got Divorced” (McAnally/Clark/Mark D. Sanders); and LeAnn Rimes recording “Crazy Women” (McAnally/Clark/Jessi Jo Dillon). McAnally’s first No. 1 arrived in 2011 with Kenny Chesney’s “Somewhere With You,” a co-write with J.T. Harding. Not bad for a guy without a publishing deal. But that was only half of what was brewing.
Along the way, McAnally’s obsession with songwriting led to his transition into producing. It all began when he organized the first of many songwriter retreats at a cabin on Center Hill Lake with Brandy Clark, Josh Osborne, Matthew Ramsey, Trevor Rosen and Matt Jenkins. At the time, they’d all been kickin’ around for about 10 years with little success. But something clicked as they began writing and recording their demos, and McAnally found himself, at their request, producing their demos. They called themselves The Hit Shitters.
This was the foundation for Smack Songs, McAnally’s publishing, production and artist development company launched in 2011 with partners Michael Baum and Robin Palmer. Staff writers include McAnally, Ramsey, Rosen and Osborne, as well as Josh Jenkins, Matthew McGinn, Jo Smith and Walker Hayes.
Brandy Clark eventually bought the cabin, where she and McAnally collaborated on music for Moonshine: That Hee Haw Musical, which debuted in Dallas in September 2015 and is headed for Broadway.
McAnally’s production credits now boast major label albums by Kacey Musgraves (Same Trailer Different Park and Pageant Material) both co-produced with Luke Laird; Sam Hunt’s Montevallo co-produced with Zach Crowell; Old Dominion’s Meat and Candy; and Jake Owen’s upcoming album co-produced with Ross Copperman.
To date, McAnally has had over 150 major cuts, 15 of which went to No. 1. Last year he was named Billboard’s No. 1 hot country songwriter, No. 4 hot country producer and Smack Songs was the No. 7 hot country publisher. He has won CMA and Grammy awards, and every album he has produced or co-produced has been nominated for a Grammy for Best Country Album. Transition complete.
The Producer’s Chair: How did you get your first No. 1?
McAnally: Robin Palmer was one of the only people in town that I could meet with. She used to pitch songs to me at Curb when I was an artist. We weren’t great friends but we had met a few times and she was open to hearing my stuff. I had “Somewhere With You” and she was so certain about it that she pitched it 11 times. When Kenny Chesney finally recorded it and it became a single, it was a moment where Robin and I were like, “Let’s just jump off together.” It started happening really fast after that. And that was what started Smack.
What is your partner Michael Baum’s career background?
Michael is a problem solver. He was a loan officer in Atlanta. He and another banker started their own business and next thing he knew he had 14 branches and 180 employees. Even though the music business is a totally different world, it’s still problem-solving. I’m the first person to say, “I can’t do that.” He’s the kind of person that says, “I can find someone who knows how to do that.” I didn’t know the way that those kinds of things could work so well together. I’ve learned a lot and respect that side of things a lot more now. Knowing how important that is has been a big part of [our success].
With the company doing everything under one roof, is there a possibility of Smack becoming a label?
We acted like a label for Old Dominion before Sony bought their deal. If you walk and talk like you’re a label, then you’re a label. It’s a matter of convincing yourself that it’s OK. They were on XM and we were funding them to record. Then a label and management company with more experience came in and took it to a place we couldn’t. We learned how capable we were during that process and we wouldn’t change one thing. But next time we are more equipped to take it in [a bigger] direction.
If Smack became a label what would be your greatest challenge?
Country radio is still dominant, so I think that would be our biggest challenge. Radio promotion is very hard and very expensive, and the majors have it down. Radio promotion is a part that scares me because this town that is so radio focused.
How did you get that first producing gig, working with Kacey?
She’s responsible for me seeing myself as a producer. We were all friends and we would set up a demo session at a studio, to record the songs we had written at the cabin. I was writing with Kacey and she also wrote with Luke Laird. Luke and I had written but we weren’t all a team yet. When the three of us got into a room, it was like we couldn’t stop. Luke is a great musician and engineer. I was more of an instinct person. Then she said, “You guys are my producers.”
How did Kacey get her deal with Mercury?
She and I went to all the labels with our five-song demo that Luke and I had done. Every person that we went to offered her a deal on the spot, Scott Borchetta, Mike Dungan and then Luke Lewis. Ultimately she and Luke had instant chemistry. There’s nothing that doesn’t happen for that girl that she isn’t doing. I was with her prior to management, and when Jason Owen came on as manager, he took it to the stratosphere without looking at radio—period. That was a new lesson for me, that you just do what you can.
Publicity-wise, she’s almost like a cartoon like Dolly Parton. It’s just so specific that you don’t know if radio is ever going to get on that train, but it’s too special to not be heard. And because she is so talented and authentic, everyone rallied. She got a lot of attention outside of Nashville with all the big magazines. Jason knew that world because he came from L.A. publicity. He was managing Shania Twain. He knew how to bring things to the table that a record label, which is more focused on radio, didn’t know the value and power of.
How do you feel about producing artists that aren’t songwriters?
I am fine with that. I have not worked with someone who is solely a singer or musician. When you look at the careers of George Strait, Reba, Martina McBride, Tim McGraw—they were able to find amazing material and not be bogged down between choosing between their song and someone else’s song. I would be very interested in finding someone like that.
How did you and Zach Crowell wind up co-producing Sam Hunt’s record?
Sam and I started writing about six years ago. Then we cut demos together and the sound evolved to a point where sound-wise it was out of my wheelhouse. We needed someone else and that’s where Zach came in, because they also co-wrote together. And Zach did a track and Sam was like, “This is the missing element!” Again I’m not an engineer, I don’t know how to do things the way Zach does. I knew how to work with live musicians. There are elements of the sound that [were more] electronic, and that’s where Zach came in. I don’t sit in front of the computer and play with sounds, but he can do that for hours.
Did Matthew and Trevor put together Old Dominion when you guys were at the cabin?
Matt had a band prior to those cabin things with his buddies from Virginia. Two of them are still in the band with him. They just played music but they weren’t called Old Dominion. They had different names and then it started to happen. While that was happening, I was doing demos on Matt Ramsey, the lead singer. We would pitch these songs and a lot of times people would cut the songs, but they would never sound better than him. And then it was like, “Why aren’t we just doing something with y’all?” So it kind evolved like that.
Did you write a lot of the songs on Jake Owen’s new album?
Ross Copperman and I wrote a lot for the record and co-produced it. Jake is always on the road, and he wrote a couple of songs for the record too, but we didn’t all end up writing together. Jake tends to lean to Jaren Johnston as a writer and cuts a lot of his songs because he likes the phrasing. It sounds like one or two people wrote the record, but it’s a lot of writers—16 songs and we are almost done. We have a few mixes. The single came out this week and had a huge impact.
When it comes to writers and publishers not getting paid fairly, who are the worst offenders? And is there anything, anybody can do about it?
Pandora and YouTube. I left ASCAP after 22 years and went with Irving Azoff’s new company Global Music Rights. It is a boutique PRO that can go up against YouTube because their deals are not already in place. All the PROs are trying, but he has a little bit of an opportunity because he started his own company to catch up with streaming. That is going to be our new radio. Radio is what has made songwriters viable and so we have to get them caught up.
Old Crow To Perform Dylan’s ‘Blonde On Blonde’ In Entirety
/by Sarah SkatesTo celebrate the 50th anniversary of Bob Dylan’s classic album Blonde on Blonde, the Country Music Hall of Fame ® and Museum will host Grammy-winning Old Crow Medicine Show performing the album in its entirety. The concerts will take place on back to back nights at 8 p.m. May 12 and 13, in the museum’s CMA Theater. The event is in support of the exhibit Dylan, Cash, and the Nashville Cats: A New Music City, presented by Citi.
Museum CEO Kyle Young says, “Fifty years ago, Bob Dylan came to Music City to work with Nashville’s unmatched session players, the Nashville Cats. The result was Blonde on Blonde. This pivotal album opened the floodgates to Music City, and artists such as Joan Baez, Leonard Cohen, Paul McCartney and Neil Young came here to record. Blonde on Blonde was the impetus for a major shift in both who and what was recorded in Nashville. Dylan’s master work left a new sensibility in its wake and gave rise to a magical time we explore in our major exhibition, Dylan, Cash and the Nashville Cats: A New Music City.”
Tickets are $34 and $39 and will go on sale April 1 at 10 a.m. CDT. To purchase tickets, visit countrymusichalloffame.org.
Top Nashville Female Music Execs To Speak At Music Biz 2016
/by Jessica NicholsonThe event will feature influential female music executives, as well as Supremes co-founder and vocalist Mary Wilson, as well as songwriting trio the Love Junkies (Hillary Lindsey, Lori McKenna, Liz Rose). The trio penned “Girl Crush” for Little Big Town, who are set to receive the Music Biz 2016 Artist of the Year Award.
Additionally the event will include keynote speaker Vivien Lewit, Director of Content Partnerships and Global Head of Artist Relations for YouTube and Google Play, conducted by music industry veteran Cindy Charles.
Music Biz Board of Directors members, including Candace Berry of Universal Music Group, Kelly Rich of Big Machine Label Group, Christina Calio of Microsoft, Amy Dietz of INgrooves Music Group, and Dilyn Radakovitz of Dimple Records, will then discuss their journey through the music business and how it affects their everyday lives with moderator Debbie Newman.
Finally, entertainment attorney and musician Judy Tint speak with Wilson and the Love Junkies to discuss how female creators navigate their way through the business.
“We’re thrilled to celebrate some formidable women in the music industry and help to inspire those looking to break into the biz with a forum to share ideas and discuss ways to overcome and eliminate inequality,” said James Donio, President of Music Biz. “It is amazing to see more and more women rising to positions of power and being recognized. We hope this event will play a part in encouraging even more young women to make their mark in this business.”
Admission to “Finding Your Voice: Music’s Leading Ladies Speak Out” is included with a full Music Biz 2016 badge, which Music Biz members can purchase at eventbrite.com. Passes for the “Leading Ladies” event only can be purchased via Eventbrite.
Music Biz 2016, which will return to Nashville from May 16-18. For more information or to sign up for the conference, visit www.musicbiz2016.com.
MV2 Entertainment Signs Nora Collins
/by Sarah SkatesStanding (L-R): James Archer, CEO, MV2 Entertainment; attorneys Linda Edell Howard and Amy Everhart; Kendra Poling, MV2; Seated (L-R): Tony Harrell, GM, MV2; Nora Collins; Clay Myers, Creative Dir. MV2
MV2 Entertainment has signed singer-songwriter Nora Collins. The Wisconsin native has self-released four albums, including most recent title My Radio, featuring seven tracks she wrote or co-wrote.
Collins has been touring for five years, playing over 200 shows annually and opening for artists such as American Idol winner Lee DeWyze, Kelsea Ballerini, Ashley Monroe, David Nail, and Josh Turner. She has won three Wisconsin Area Music Industry awards.
“I am honored to be joining the MV2 Entertainment family,” says Collins. “I feel blessed to have the opportunity to work with and to learn from such well respected industry professionals like Clay Myers and Tony Harrell. It’s exciting to be a part of a team that is passionate about helping their writers and artists achieve success through values based on faith and integrity.”
Myers, MV2 Creative Director, shares, “I have been following Nora’s growth as an artist and a writer for over a year. She truly has the right stuff to succeed in this very competitive industry. Many great opportunities are coming to this extremely talented young lady.”
“I’m so thrilled to have Nora at MV2. She is a talented and driven artist with a compelling voice,” said Harrell, MV2 General Manager.
Weekly Register: Randy Houser Fires Up Albums Charts
/by Jessica NicholsonRandy Houser‘s latest album, Fired Up, made a solid debut on the music charts, landing at No. 3 this week on the country album chart and No. 15 on the overall album chart, selling 25k (21k album only). Joey + Rory‘s Hymns collection tops the country albums chart this week, with 44k sold. They are followed by Chris Stapleton‘s Traveller, which moved 27k this week (1,049,818 RTD). Houser’s Fired Up, Loretta Lynn‘s Full Circle (8k) and Sam Hunt‘s Montevallo (6.9k) round out the top 5.
Rihanna‘s Anti tops the overall albums charts, with 54k (17k album only).
Overall, country album sales are down five percent and country digital sales are down 14.8 percent. Overall album sales are down 16.6 percent, while overall digital sales are down 23.7 percent.
Blake Shelton
Blake Shelton‘s “Came Here To Forget” tops the country digital tracks rankings this week, with 51k sold. He is followed by Maren Morris‘ “My Church” (33k), Tim McGraw‘s “Humble and Kind” (32.8k), Dierks Bentley‘s “Somewhere On A Beach” 28.4k), and Cole Swindell‘s “You Should Be Here” (28k).
Lukas Graham‘s 7 Years tops the overall digital tracks chart, with 125k sold.
On the digital tracks rankings, overall track sales have shrunk by 26.1 percent, while country track sales have decreased by 22.1 percent.
Info provided by Nielsen Soundscan.
The Producer’s Chair: Shane McAnally
/by contributorShane McAnally
Don’t miss Shane McAnally, current nominee for ACM Songwriter of the Year, on The Producer’s Chair on Thurs., March 31, at Douglas Corner at 6 p.m.
Shane McAnally started writing songs in Texas when he was 8 and was performing in clubs by age 12. He appeared on Star Search at 15 and later spent a summer performing in Branson, before returning to Texas and becoming a regular on the state’s Opry circuit. In 1993, he moved to Nashville at age 19. He signed with Curb two years later but despite tours with Reba, Kenny Chesney and Alabama, his five-year stint failed to yield radio success. He moved to Los Angeles and worked as a bartender while continuing to write and play music.
Thankfully McAnally wasn’t finished with Nashville. In 2008, he got his first major cut with Lee Ann Womack’s “Last Call,” written with Erin Enderlin, and he moved back to Music City. The next year, he scored a Luke Bryan cut. In 2010, the flood gates opened with Reba cutting “All The Women I Am,” (McAnally/Kent Blazy/Marv Green), “Cry” (McAnally/Brandy Clark), and “The Day She Got Divorced” (McAnally/Clark/Mark D. Sanders); and LeAnn Rimes recording “Crazy Women” (McAnally/Clark/Jessi Jo Dillon). McAnally’s first No. 1 arrived in 2011 with Kenny Chesney’s “Somewhere With You,” a co-write with J.T. Harding. Not bad for a guy without a publishing deal. But that was only half of what was brewing.
Along the way, McAnally’s obsession with songwriting led to his transition into producing. It all began when he organized the first of many songwriter retreats at a cabin on Center Hill Lake with Brandy Clark, Josh Osborne, Matthew Ramsey, Trevor Rosen and Matt Jenkins. At the time, they’d all been kickin’ around for about 10 years with little success. But something clicked as they began writing and recording their demos, and McAnally found himself, at their request, producing their demos. They called themselves The Hit Shitters.
This was the foundation for Smack Songs, McAnally’s publishing, production and artist development company launched in 2011 with partners Michael Baum and Robin Palmer. Staff writers include McAnally, Ramsey, Rosen and Osborne, as well as Josh Jenkins, Matthew McGinn, Jo Smith and Walker Hayes.
Brandy Clark eventually bought the cabin, where she and McAnally collaborated on music for Moonshine: That Hee Haw Musical, which debuted in Dallas in September 2015 and is headed for Broadway.
McAnally’s production credits now boast major label albums by Kacey Musgraves (Same Trailer Different Park and Pageant Material) both co-produced with Luke Laird; Sam Hunt’s Montevallo co-produced with Zach Crowell; Old Dominion’s Meat and Candy; and Jake Owen’s upcoming album co-produced with Ross Copperman.
To date, McAnally has had over 150 major cuts, 15 of which went to No. 1. Last year he was named Billboard’s No. 1 hot country songwriter, No. 4 hot country producer and Smack Songs was the No. 7 hot country publisher. He has won CMA and Grammy awards, and every album he has produced or co-produced has been nominated for a Grammy for Best Country Album. Transition complete.
The Producer’s Chair: How did you get your first No. 1?
McAnally: Robin Palmer was one of the only people in town that I could meet with. She used to pitch songs to me at Curb when I was an artist. We weren’t great friends but we had met a few times and she was open to hearing my stuff. I had “Somewhere With You” and she was so certain about it that she pitched it 11 times. When Kenny Chesney finally recorded it and it became a single, it was a moment where Robin and I were like, “Let’s just jump off together.” It started happening really fast after that. And that was what started Smack.
What is your partner Michael Baum’s career background?
Michael is a problem solver. He was a loan officer in Atlanta. He and another banker started their own business and next thing he knew he had 14 branches and 180 employees. Even though the music business is a totally different world, it’s still problem-solving. I’m the first person to say, “I can’t do that.” He’s the kind of person that says, “I can find someone who knows how to do that.” I didn’t know the way that those kinds of things could work so well together. I’ve learned a lot and respect that side of things a lot more now. Knowing how important that is has been a big part of [our success].
With the company doing everything under one roof, is there a possibility of Smack becoming a label?
We acted like a label for Old Dominion before Sony bought their deal. If you walk and talk like you’re a label, then you’re a label. It’s a matter of convincing yourself that it’s OK. They were on XM and we were funding them to record. Then a label and management company with more experience came in and took it to a place we couldn’t. We learned how capable we were during that process and we wouldn’t change one thing. But next time we are more equipped to take it in [a bigger] direction.
If Smack became a label what would be your greatest challenge?
Country radio is still dominant, so I think that would be our biggest challenge. Radio promotion is very hard and very expensive, and the majors have it down. Radio promotion is a part that scares me because this town that is so radio focused.
How did you get that first producing gig, working with Kacey?
She’s responsible for me seeing myself as a producer. We were all friends and we would set up a demo session at a studio, to record the songs we had written at the cabin. I was writing with Kacey and she also wrote with Luke Laird. Luke and I had written but we weren’t all a team yet. When the three of us got into a room, it was like we couldn’t stop. Luke is a great musician and engineer. I was more of an instinct person. Then she said, “You guys are my producers.”
How did Kacey get her deal with Mercury?
She and I went to all the labels with our five-song demo that Luke and I had done. Every person that we went to offered her a deal on the spot, Scott Borchetta, Mike Dungan and then Luke Lewis. Ultimately she and Luke had instant chemistry. There’s nothing that doesn’t happen for that girl that she isn’t doing. I was with her prior to management, and when Jason Owen came on as manager, he took it to the stratosphere without looking at radio—period. That was a new lesson for me, that you just do what you can.
Publicity-wise, she’s almost like a cartoon like Dolly Parton. It’s just so specific that you don’t know if radio is ever going to get on that train, but it’s too special to not be heard. And because she is so talented and authentic, everyone rallied. She got a lot of attention outside of Nashville with all the big magazines. Jason knew that world because he came from L.A. publicity. He was managing Shania Twain. He knew how to bring things to the table that a record label, which is more focused on radio, didn’t know the value and power of.
How do you feel about producing artists that aren’t songwriters?
I am fine with that. I have not worked with someone who is solely a singer or musician. When you look at the careers of George Strait, Reba, Martina McBride, Tim McGraw—they were able to find amazing material and not be bogged down between choosing between their song and someone else’s song. I would be very interested in finding someone like that.
How did you and Zach Crowell wind up co-producing Sam Hunt’s record?
Sam and I started writing about six years ago. Then we cut demos together and the sound evolved to a point where sound-wise it was out of my wheelhouse. We needed someone else and that’s where Zach came in, because they also co-wrote together. And Zach did a track and Sam was like, “This is the missing element!” Again I’m not an engineer, I don’t know how to do things the way Zach does. I knew how to work with live musicians. There are elements of the sound that [were more] electronic, and that’s where Zach came in. I don’t sit in front of the computer and play with sounds, but he can do that for hours.
Did Matthew and Trevor put together Old Dominion when you guys were at the cabin?
Matt had a band prior to those cabin things with his buddies from Virginia. Two of them are still in the band with him. They just played music but they weren’t called Old Dominion. They had different names and then it started to happen. While that was happening, I was doing demos on Matt Ramsey, the lead singer. We would pitch these songs and a lot of times people would cut the songs, but they would never sound better than him. And then it was like, “Why aren’t we just doing something with y’all?” So it kind evolved like that.
Did you write a lot of the songs on Jake Owen’s new album?
Ross Copperman and I wrote a lot for the record and co-produced it. Jake is always on the road, and he wrote a couple of songs for the record too, but we didn’t all end up writing together. Jake tends to lean to Jaren Johnston as a writer and cuts a lot of his songs because he likes the phrasing. It sounds like one or two people wrote the record, but it’s a lot of writers—16 songs and we are almost done. We have a few mixes. The single came out this week and had a huge impact.
When it comes to writers and publishers not getting paid fairly, who are the worst offenders? And is there anything, anybody can do about it?
Pandora and YouTube. I left ASCAP after 22 years and went with Irving Azoff’s new company Global Music Rights. It is a boutique PRO that can go up against YouTube because their deals are not already in place. All the PROs are trying, but he has a little bit of an opportunity because he started his own company to catch up with streaming. That is going to be our new radio. Radio is what has made songwriters viable and so we have to get them caught up.
Lisa Owen Named Manager, Regional Promotion At Arista Nashville
/by Troy_StephensonLisa Owen
Josh Easler, VP, Promotion, Arista Nashville has named Lisa Owen as Manager, Regional Promotion.
Owen has worked for Show Dog Nashville Records since 2005. Prior to this, she was Director of Promotion & Marketing, West Coast for DreamWorks Records and Manager of Promotion, West Coast for Giant-Reprise Records Nashville.
A California native and a graduate of the University of California, Los Angeles, Owen is based in Los Angeles.
Of the announcement, Easler said, “It’s truly a pleasure for me to welcome Lisa. Her promotion skills, excellent reputation and strong relationships with radio make her a great addition to our team!”
Arista Nashville represents artists including Brad Paisley, Carrie Underwood, LANco, and Cam.
In Pictures: Jake Owen, NSAI, Frankie Ballard, Jake Worthington
/by Jessica NicholsonJake Owen Visits Academy of Country Music
Photo (L-R): Brandon Gill, Morris Higham Management & ACM Board Member, Bob Romeo, Academy of Country Music, and Jake Owen. Photo credit: Courtesy of the Academy of Country Music
The Academy of Country Music welcomed RCA Nashville artist Jake Owen to the office while he was in Los Angeles. Owen performed his new single, “American Country Love Song,” along with playing some of his mega-hits.
Watch the performance below:
NSAI In Washington For Music Licensing Talks
Pictured (L-R): NSAI Board member Tim Nichols, Jimmy Yeary and Deric Ruttan. NSAI’s Bart Herbison, Jennifer Turnbow and Libby Oellerich.
The Nashville Songwriters Association International (NSAI) was in Washington, D.C. this week for meetings with members of Congress regarding music licensing reform and the upcoming Senate confirmation hearings for Dr. Carla Hayden.
Hayden has been nominated by President Barack Obama as Librarian of Congress who oversees the U.S. Copyright Office. In addition to NSAI Board member Tim Nichols, Jimmy Yeary and Deric Ruttan (pictured above), NSAI’s Bart Herbison, Jennifer Turnbow and Libby Oellerich also participated in the event.
Frankie Ballard Takes London
Frankie Ballard
Taking his electrifying set overseas, Warner Bros. Records/Warner Music Nashville’s Frankie Ballard played two sold out shows at London’s Hoxton Bar and Brooklyn Bowl. Ballard brought huge crowds to his Birmingham, Glasgow and Manchester shows as well.
“It’s a dream come true to be this far from home and discover people who know your music,” said Ballard. “Hearing my lyrics sung with a British accent makes me so happy!”
Ballard is heading to Germany next week for three more shows before returning to the U.S.
The Voice Runner-Up Visits WRTB
Pictured (L-R): Justin Brown, Jake Worthington
Paul Lyman Joins Renee Grant-Williams Voice Studio
/by Craig_ShelburnePaul Lyman
Paul Lyman has been named an associate teacher at Renee Grant-Williams Voice Studio in Nashville.
Lyman is an alumnus of Carnegie-Mellon University and has a Music Business degree from James Madison University. He is a multi-instrumentalist who has coached vocalists and instrumentalists for over 20 years.
His client roster includes Top 10 and No. 1 songwriters, as well as developmental artists for most of the major record labels in Nashville, including Warner Bros., Sony, MCA, RCA, Mercury, Arista, Curb and Word.
In addition to voice lessons, Lyman teaches guitar, piano, bass and live performance coaching. He is based in West Nashville. His rate for a 55-minute session is $65.
“I’ve known Paul for about 10 years when he was the pianist for the Music City Community Chorus, which I created and directed; and I’m very excited about everything that he has to offer singers and musicians,” said Grant-Williams.
“I first worked with Renee in 2006, and have continued to marvel at how many students she has helped in all aspect of their voice,” said Lyman. “I am honored to continue to work with my friend, and teach the vocal secrets she’s shared with me which make her a powerhouse of a teacher!”
Belmont University, Nashville Songwriters Hall Of Fame Host Retreat For Veterans
/by Jessica NicholsonThree Nashville organizations partnered to host a day-long songwriting retreat for veterans on Feb. 26 at Belmont University.
Belmont and the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame (NaSHOF) co-sponsored the event led by Operation Song, an organization that helps veterans and active-duty military tell their stories through songwriting.
“We were excited to partner with NaSHOF and Belmont on this retreat,” says songwriter and Operation Song Founder/Director Bob Regan. “As we writers know, songwriting can be therapeutic – a very effective way to ‘put the puzzle pieces in place.’ Operation Song brings this creative process to veterans and service members to help them express themselves and to deal with the trauma of war and the transition to civilian life.”
The retreat teamed five professional songwriters from Operation Song and the Hall of Fame with Belmont students and five veterans who served in Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan. Roxie Dean (“Why They Call It Falling” by Lee Ann Womack), Regie Hamm (“The Time Of My Life” by David Cook), Thom Schuyler (“Love Will Turn You Around” by Kenny Rogers) and George Teren (“Real Good Man” by Tim McGraw) joined Regan (“Thinkin’ About You” by Trisha Yearwood) as songwriting facilitators for each team.
“I had the great pleasure of writing a song with a veteran of the U.S. Navy (Joe) and a Belmont songwriting student (Luke),” says Schuyler, a Hall of Fame inductee who participated as part of NaSHOF’s Wayland Holyfield Outreach. “Joe arrived with a poignant song idea already fashioned into a promising lyric, and he was generous enough to share it with Luke and me. It was gratifying to see the expression on Joe’s face as we all did our best to bring a part of his personal story to life in words and music.”
Though most Operation Song events feature teams of two, the teams for Feb. 26 were expanded to include students from Belmont’s songwriting degree program.
“We appreciate the opportunity for our songwriting students to be a part of this special songwriting event with Operation Song and the Hall of Fame,” says James Elliott, Chair of Belmont’s Songwriting Program. “This is a unique opportunity for our students to help veterans express themselves in song and is sure to be a life-changing event for them.”
The teams spent the day talking and writing songs based on veteran experiences. At the end of the day, teams gathered in the Columbia A recording studio to reflect upon the experience and perform their new songs for each other in a large group setting.
LifeNotes: Outlaw Country Artist Steve Young Passes
/by Robert K OermannSteve Young. Photo: steveyoung.net.
Acclaimed singer-songwriter Steve Young passed away in Nashville on Thursday, March 17, at the age of 73.
Often called a “songwriter’s songwriter,” Young wrote such classics as “Seven Bridges Road,” “Lonesome, On’ry and Mean,” “Long Way to Hollywood” and “Montgomery in the Rain.” He was a key figure in the progressive or “Outlaw” country movement of the 1970s.
Steve Young was born in Newnan, Georgia, on July 12, 1942. He was raised in Alabama and strongly identified with that state’s native son, Hank Williams. His family also lived in Texas during his boyhood.
He spent part of the 1960s in New York City, kicking around the edges of the folk-music scene in Greenwich Village. He relocated to California in 1964 and formed the band Stone Country.
On the West Coast, he performed and recorded with Gram Parsons, Gene Clark and Chris Hillman, all of whom were cornerstone artists in the emerging country-rock genre. Young’s debut LP, Rock Salt & Nails, was issued by A&M Records in 1968. Parsons, Clark and guitar ace James Burton all played on it.
Young tired of Hollywood and moved to Marin County. He ran the Amazing Grace guitar store there for several years before making his way to Music City.
Waylon Jennings recorded Young’s “Lonesome, On’ry and Mean” as the title song of his 1973 album. This record was the first of the star’s self-produced Outlaw collections.
Young’s Nashville-recorded Seven Bridges Road appeared on Reprise Records in 1972. It has since been reissued three times by various other labels. Honky Tonk Man was issued in 1975 by the Mountain Railroad label. Steve Young appeared in the Outlaw music documentary Heartworn Highways in 1976, singing his song “Alabama Highway.” The film featured him alongside such figures as David Allan Coe, Charlie Daniels, Guy Clark, Townes Van Zandt, Rodney Crowell, Steve Earle and Larry Jon Wilson.
RCA picked up his recording contract and issued his two most well known albums, the aptly named Renegade Picker (1976) and No Place to Fall (1978). Both were roots-music classics, with hints of blues and gospel in his Southern country sound. Labelmate Jennings took him on tour as his opening act.
Hank Williams Jr. issued his versions of Young’s “Montgomery in the Rain” and “Long Way to Hollywood” in 1977. Others who recorded his songs include Tracy Nelson, Joan Baez, Ian Matthews, Ricochet, Dolly Parton and Rita Coolidge. Travis Tritt revived “Lonesome, On’ry and Mean” in 2003.
Rounder Records reissued Steve Young’s Seven Bridges Road (1981) and Honky Tonk Man (1984) and also put out the artist’s new sounds on To Satisfy You (1981). Also in 1981, The Eagles scored a pop and country hit with “Seven Bridges Road.”
During this part of his career, Young gave up drugs and alcohol. He’d long been Regarded as a “zen cowboy” and now began to explore spirituality in his music. Recorded in Sweden, his 1985 album Look Homeward Angel added synthesizers to his sound.
His intensity and conviction as a live performer made him a “cult” favorite artist, particularly in Europe. His 1990 collection Long Time Rider was recorded in the Netherlands. He issued his first concert recording Solo/Live in 1991 on Watermelon Records, which also issued 1993’s Switchblades of Love.
Later recordings include 2000’s Primal Young, 2006’s Songlines Revisited and 2007’s Stories Round the Horseshoe Bend.
Steve Young’s son, Jubal Lee Young, competed on NBC’s The Voice in 2015. His current CD is titled On a Dark Highway.
Funeral arrangements have not been announced. Steve Young believed in reincarnation.