Chapter 518

Pictured (L-R): musician Duane Eddy, Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum CEO Kyle Young, Fred and Dinah Gretsch, musician Steve Wariner, and Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum Senior Vice President of Museum Services Carolyn Tate. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images
Bobby Karl always likes finding new places to party, but it somehow seemed fitting to launch this year’s round of schmoozathons at an old favorite, The Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum.
Thursday evening, Dec. 14, the Hall hosted a preview party for its latest exhibit, “American Sound and Beauty: Guitars From the Bachman-Gretsch Collection.” As always, the food was great, and the invited guests were an A-list crowd.
This year marks the 100th anniversary of Gretsch Guitars. The exhibit spotlights its most historic and iconic guitars. The company has also manufactured drums, amplifiers, guitar strings, pickups and other musical stuff.
The Hall’s CEO, Kyle Young, greeted the crowd in the Rotunda. “If you like guitars as much as we do, you’re in the right place,” he said. “These are great guitars, but they are also works of art.

Pictured (L-R): Lisa Purcell, Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum; Tom Peterson, Cheap Trick; Kyle Young, CEO, Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images
“This is unlike anything we have ever undertaken…..This exhibit provides a window into the history of American guitar making.”
Kyle explained that Canada’s Randy Bachman — of The Guess Who and Bachman-Turner Overdrive rock fame – was so obsessed with Gretsch guitars that he collected more than 300 of them. The 75 instruments exhibited are drawn from that extraordinary collection.
Fred Gretsch, who is of the fifth generation of the guitar family, noted that instruments from Randy’s collection were borrowed to use as prototypes for the new Gretsch guitars after the family reacquired the company in 1984. Baldwin had bought Gretsch in 1967 and later phased out the brand. Temporarily, as it turned out.
“The guitars we ship today have a unique Gretsch sound,” said Fred. He noted that artist endorsements have been important to the line. The most important of these was Country Music Hall of Fame member Chet Atkins. When George Harrison played one of Chet’s “Country Gentleman” Gretsch guitars on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1964, sales skyrocketed. He also played a Chet Gretsch in The Beatles movie Help!

Musician Steve Wariner performs at the American Sound & Beauty: Guitars from the Bachman-Gretsch Collection exhibit opening. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images
Other significant Gretsch players have included Neil Young, Steve Stills, Bo Diddley, Brian Setzer of The Stray Cats, Eddie Cochran, Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top and Michael Nesmith of The Monkees. (The company’s drums have been endorsed by Charlie Watts of The Rolling Stones, plus many jazz greats.)
“Duane’s creative guitar innovations have led to his well-deserved induction into The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame,” said Kyle in introducing “The King of Twang,” Duane Eddy. The rocking Gretsch master and longtime Nashvillian got a rousing ovation from the crowd.
“Gretsch guitars have been a part of my life since 1957,” Duane recalled. “I bought it [and]….the guitar seemed to change my luck. A few months later, I made my first record, ‘Movin’ and Groovin.’ In March 1958, I cut ‘Rebel Rouser.’ It became a hit that summer.”
That record began a string of smashes that made Duane Eddy the most successful instrumentalist in rock history. He made the pop charts in the 1960s, ‘70s and ‘80s and won an instrumental Grammy Award in 1986 for “Peter Gunn,” a collaboration with Art of Noise.

Pictured (L-R): Tom Peterson of Cheap Trick, Fred Gretsch, Duane Eddy, and Steve Wariner. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images
“I’ve been with Gretsch Guitars for 59 years. I realized, ‘I’m getting old!’
“I ended up selling a lot of records and probably a lot of Gretsch guitars. That guitar has taken me all over the world. But the best thing is the friends it has made me. It’s been a great life. And I give the credit to that Gretsch Guitar.”
Grand Ole Opry star and multiple country hitster Steve Wariner recalled the music store in his hometown of Noblesville, Indiana, and how he gazed at its wall of Gretsch guitars.
“Some people dream in color and some dream in black-and- white,” he reminisced. “I dream in Gretsch.”

Steve Wariner views the American Sound & Beauty: Guitars from the Bachman-Gretsch Collection exhibit at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images
He favored the crowd with his instrumental performances of “Windy and Warm” and “Copper Kettle.” Steve was dazzling with his dexterity on the strings.
“You must be a guitar geek to write a song about a guitar,” he said introducing “6120,” an instrumental he wrote to salute an iconic Chet Atkins model Gretsch. Yeah, that’s a geek. And it was great..
We shared a cocktail table with Walter & Christie Carter. Their lovely Carter Vintage Guitars emporium sponsored the exhibit, which Kyle graciously pointed out. I was grateful that knowledgeable Walter was next to me to illuminate Gretsch history, instrumental titles, technology and other things that are over my head.
My A-list table also included Walter’s fellow Tarheels David Conrad and Chris Horsnell. Guitar celebs Steve Gibson and Jerry Douglas were hovering nearby.

Fred Gretsch speaks during the American Sound & Beauty: Guitars from the Bachman-Gretsch Collection exhibit opening. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images
The cocktail-party nibbles included winter citrus salad with grapefruit, corn grits, croutons, pickled onions, red-leaf lettuce and endive. Serving platters were piled with cheeses, crostini and antipasto fare such as marinated artichoke hearts, pickled cauliflower buds, olives, roasted red peppers, prosciutto, salami and ham roll-ups. Roast-beef-and-swiss pressed sandwiches on toast quarters were accented with speared dill-pickle slices and cherry tomatoes.
Butch Spyridon, Jerry & Ernie Williams, Chase Cole, Seab Tuck, George Gruhn (how generous of the Carters to have a competitor there), Michael McCall, Michael Gray, Barry Mazor, Jimmy Carter, and Fender CEO Andy Mooney worked the room.
“Tonight, we fulfilled another dream,” concluded Kyle Young about the new exhibit. This is the largest collection of stringed instruments ever exhibited at the Hall.
The Country Music Hall of Fame is now one of the 10 most-visited history museums in the United States.
Producer Dave Cobb To Take Over Music Row’s Historic RCA Studio A
/by Jessica NicholsonDave Cobb
Ben Folds is set to leave Music Row’s historic RCA Studio A, after renting the space for 14 years. Folds cited a demanding touring schedule and increasing roster of projects around the globe as reasons for stepping away from Studio A, though he will record in the space as time allows.
Beginning April 1, Dave Cobb will take up working residence in the historic studio, which was built by Chet Atkins, Harold Bradley, and Owen Bradley. Cobb’s reputation as a producer has risen, thanks to the popularity of roots-oriented albums from Jason Isbell, Sturgill Simpson, and Chris Stapleton.
“I know the studio will be in good hands with Dave Cobb,” Folds said. “Dave is familiar with the history and inner workings of Studio A and he represents a bright future for Music Row.”
In 2014, RCA Studio A became the epicenter of a battle between preservationists and real estate opportunists, when Folds penned an open letter stating that RCA Studio A was to be sold to a Brentwood firm that had plans to demolish the space and build condominiums. A “Save Studio A” movement began, spearheaded by Folds and songwriter-producer Trey Bruce. The movement garnered supporters including Justin Timberlake, Dave Grohl, Keith Urban, and others.
At the eleventh hour, a trio of entrepreneurs including Mike Curb, Aubrey Preston, and Chuck Elcan (operating as Studio A Preservation Partners) stepped in to preserve the studio. The federal government added RCA Studio A to the National Register of Historic Places.
“I’m proud to be entrusted with the keys to one of the best-sounding rooms in the world,” Cobb said. “My plan is simple: Honor the history of Studio A while making sure its unique sound carries forward onto new songs and albums with new artists.”
“Ben Folds played a key role in reopening one of the world’s most important recording studios,” said Preston. “Mike, Chuck and I wish Ben the very best in the future.”
Opened in 1965, Studio A’s client list has included Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, Dolly Parton, Charley Pride, and George Strait as well as newer artists like Hunter Hayes, Jamey Johnson, and Kacey Musgraves. Pop and rock artists who have worked at the Studio A complex include Tony Bennett, The Beach Boys, and The Monkees, and newer artists like Sara Bareilles and Kesha.
Old Dominion Celebrates First No. 1 and Sold-Out Nashville Show
/by Eric T. ParkerPictured (L-R) front: Old Dominion’s Whit Sellers, Trevor Rosen, Matthew Ramsey, Geoff Sprung and Brad Tursi; (back) Big Deal Music’s Pete Robinson, Rehits/Smacktown Music’s Michael McAnally Baum and Ree Guyer Buchanan, producer Shane McAnally, RCA Nashville’s Keith Gale, ASCAP’s Mike Sistad, Sonic Geo Music’s George Whaley, ASCAP’s Beth Brinker, Music of RPM’s Blake Chancey and Smacktown Music’s Robert Carlton. Photo: Ed Rode for ASCAP
Old Dominion gathered before a sold-out show at Marathon Music Works on Thursday (Jan. 14) to celebrate the band’s first No. 1 single, “Break Up With Him.”
The title spent two weeks at the top of the Billboard chart and was written by all five members of the band, Matthew Ramsey (celebrating his third No. 1), Trevor Rosen (celebrating his fourth No. 1), Brad Tursi (celebrating his third No. 1), Geoff Sprung, and Whit Sellers. For their first No. 1, the latter two writers were presented with their own Boulder Creek No. 1 guitar.
All five songwriters are ASCAP-affiliated. Mike Sistad and Beth Brinker represented the organization. The No. 1 event was sponsored by First Tennessee Bank and FTB Advisors.
“When it’s just the five of us on the road, someone always points it out,” says Ramsey. “It highlights how it’s not just the five of us anymore, but how many people are out there busting their asses for us. Sometimes that’s the only reason we get up and bust ours.”
“I moved here to not be in a band,” said Tursi. “But that didn’t work out.” Sellers recalled having been in Nashville for 10 years and how the band feels serendipitous. Sprung looked back on the long journey while Ramsey expressed surprise at how everything has fallen in place.
Producer Shane McAnally celebrated his fourth No. 1 as a producer at the event. McAnally offered thanks to the band’s manager, Clint Higham, who also managed McAnally’s artist career in the 1990s. “Clint and I have been friends for 20 years and have for so long tried to figure out a project to work on together,” recalled McAnally. “He is the most generous, the most passionate and the hardest-working manager with a great team around him. That’s the reason he’s so successful. It feels like this is all meant to be.”
Remarks were also offered by publishers. Blake Chancey of RPM Music shared the lesson he’s learned from the band−to never give up. Ree Guyer Buchanan of Rehits and Robert Carlton of Smacktown Music testified to the strong work ethic they observe specifically in Rosen, the writer they share. Pete Robinson of Big Deal Music commented on how the band’s success is not something that happens every day, going from Whiskey Jam to the Hollywood Bowl. Geo Whaley’s Sonic Geo Music also recalled the band’s humble beginnings.
As the “label before the label,” ReeSmack Records (Thirty Tigers) was also recognized with remarks from Guyer Buchanan and Michael Baum before current label—RCA Nashville/Sony—was represented by Keith Gale, who offered plaques and remarks. “We’re here to celebrate a big No. 1 record, but I’d also like to celebrate the album (Meat and Candy) as a whole body of work because it’s amazing,” Gale said before pumping the band’s second single, “Snapback,” which had over 126 stations playing the song in its first week.
MusicRow’s Owner/Publisher Sherod Robertson offered No. 1 Challenge Coins for the single that also landed No. 1 on the secondary radio CountryBreakout chart on October 8, 2015. SiriusXM was an early adopter of the gold-selling “Break Up With Him,” and it was announced that the song won The Highway’s listener poll as the No. 1 song of 2015, for which plaques were presented. Holly Freeman from the CRB and Brandi Simms from the CMA also offered commemorations.
Pictured (L-R): MusicRow‘s Sherod Robertson, Old Dominion’s Trevor Rosen, Whit Sellers, Matthew Ramsey, Geoff Sprung, Brad Tursi and MusicRow‘s Troy Stephenson. Photo: Ed Rode for ASCAP
Later that evening before Old Dominion took to the stage, Buzz Brainard and Al Skop announced the show would be live streamed on SiriusXM.
For the band’s first show of 2016, a playlist of catchy, self-penned tunes was in line including “Snapback,” “Said Nobody,” “Nowhere Fast,” and “Wrong Turns.”
Old Dominion.
The audience of largely 20-somethings crowded the stage and snapped smartphone photos throughout the show, which also featured the band members’ individual songwriting catalogs.
Those songs intermingled through the set included “A Guy Walks Into A Bar” (Tyler Farr), “Ex To See” (Sam Hunt), “Say You Do” (Dierks Bentley), “Save It For A Rainy Day” (Kenny Chesney), “Sangria” (Blake Shelton) and “Wake Up Lovin’ You” (Craig Morgan).
Columbia Nashville/Sony newcomer Maren Morris opened the show. Morris also shares early beginnings with songs released by her publisher, Big Yellow Dog, before being picked up by a major label. With a two-member band, not including her own acoustic guitar prowess, she played through her stellar songs “Sugar,” “80s Mercedes,” “I Wish I Was,” “Drunk Girls Don’t Cry,” and her current single “My Church.”
Maren Morris.
Mel Tillis Is Recovering, Spokesman Says
/by Craig_ShelburneMel Tillis
Although stories about Mel Tillis’ failing health are spreading throughout social media, spokesman Don Murry Grubbs has stated that the singer is recovering well from colon surgery.
As the posts spread on Friday (Jan. 15), Grubbs told The Tennessean, “Doctors said he’s doing fine and on the right track. He’s awake and watching television.” When contacted by MusicRow, Grubbs offered the same information.
On Tuesday (Jan. 12), it was announced that Tillis, 83, had to cancel an upcoming appearance on The Country Music Cruise due to the surgery, which requires several weeks of recovery time.
Kelsea Ballerini Sings on ‘GMA,’ ‘Late Night With Seth Meyers’
/by Craig_ShelburneKelsea Ballerini made debut performances on ABC’s Good Morning America and NBC’s Late Night with Seth Meyers on Wednesday (Jan. 13). She started the day by singing her current Top 10 single, “Dibs,” on GMA and chatted with host Amy Robach about her meteoric rise to stardom as well as what’s ahead for 2016.
Showing off another side of her music, Ballerini performed fan-favorite “XO” from her debut album, The First Time, that night on Late Night with Seth Meyers.
See the performance below:
In Pictures: Cam, Craig Morgan, Jana Kramer
/by Jessica NicholsonCam Brings Her “Burning House” To The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon
Cam made her late-night TV debut this week, singing her platinum hit, “Burning House,” on NBC’s Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. The song earned Cam her first Grammy nomination for Best Country Solo Performance. If you missed her performance, you can watch it here.
Pictured (L-R): Jimmy Fallon, Cam
Craig Morgan Performs at Country Music Association
Craig Morgan visited CMA staff earlier this week. Morgan played several songs including his current autobiographical hit, “When I’m Gone.” Available now at all digital outlets, the song was written by Justin Ebach and Steven Dale Jones and is the lead single from Craig’s upcoming project, produced by Byron Gallimore and expected to release later this year.
Pictured (L-R): Gordon Kerr, CEO, Black River Entertainment; Brenden Oliver, Membership & Balloting Coordinator, CMA; Brandi Simms, Sr. Director of Membership & Balloting, CMA; Craig Morgan, Rick Froio, EVP, Black River Records; Mike Wilson, Director National Promotion, Black River Records.
Jana Kramer Stops By CMT
Jana Kramer and husband Michael Caussin recently stopped to chat with CMT’s Cody Alan. Cody came dressed to deliver in scrubs and had a CMT onesie ready for Baby Caussin, just in case she decided to make her grand entrance at CMT.
Pictured (L-R): Michael Caussin, Cody Alan, Jana Kramer.
Trisha Yearwood To Star In FOX’s Live Musical, ‘The Passion’
/by Jessica NicholsonTrisha Yearwood
Trisha Yearwood has been selected to play Mary, the mother of Jesus, in The Passion, a two-hour musical event airing live from New Orleans. The Passion will air on Palm Sunday, March 20, at 8 p.m. ET live on FOX. Prince Royce will play the disciple Peter. Yearwood and Royce join Tyler Perry, who was previously announced as the event’s host and narrator.
The Passion, written by Peter Barsocchini (High School Musical), tells the story of the last hours of Jesus Christ’s life on Earth through a variety of popular music, sung by the cast including Yearwood and Royce, and arranged specifically for this event by executive producer and hit music producer Adam Anders (Glee, Rock of Ages). Robert Deaton (executive director of the CMA Awards) will serve as executive producer and showrunner for the special.
The Passion is produced by dick clark productions. Allen Shapiro (CEO, dick clark productions), Mike Mahan (President, dick clark productions), Mark Bracco (Executive Vice President, Programing and Development, dick clark productions), Jacco Doornbos (CEO and Creative Director of Eye2Eye Media), Adam Anders (CEO, Anders Media Inc.) and David Grifhorst (The Passion: Netherlands) will serve as executive producers.
Set in the modern day, the plot follows the dramatic story of Jesus of Nazareth, as he presides over the Last Supper, and then is betrayed by Judas, put on trial by Pontius Pilate, convicted, crucified and resurrected. The event will unfold live at some of New Orleans’ most iconic locations, while featuring a procession of hundreds of people carrying a 20-foot, illuminated cross from outside the Superdome to the live stage at Woldenburg Park on the banks of the Mississippi River.
The role in The Passion adds another element to Yearwood’s multi-faceted career. No stranger to the acting world, she has appeared on TV series JAG and Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman. In 2014, she released her 12th album, PrizeFighter: Hit After Hit. She has also authored three cookbooks and hosts the Emmy Award-winning series, Trisha’s Southern Kitchen. In addition, she recently launched her line of cookware (Precious Metals) and furniture (Trisha Yearwood Home Collection).
AT&T Audience Network Adds Country Music to Winter Schedule
/by Craig_ShelburneA number of country artists will be featured this winter on the AT&T Audience Network, a television channel available only to DIRECTV and AT&T U-verse subscribers.
Hank Williams Jr. will be part of the programming on Sunday (Jan. 17), followed by Ashley Monroe on Jan. 22, Jerrod Niemann on Feb. 5, Michael Ray on Feb. 12, Hunter Hayes on Feb. 19, and Kelsea Ballerini on Feb. 26.
Additional programming will include exclusive concerts, a series presented by Ernie Ball about influential guitarists, a music series filmed at Hollywood Guitar Center promoting breakthrough artists, new music documentaries and short-form programming.
“Audience Network will be the premier destination for music lovers this year,” said Christopher Long, senior vice president, Original Content and Production, AT&T. “We’re bringing extraordinary concerts and rare musical performances from artists of every genre into your home with the premium viewing experience that Audience Network is best known for.”
“We strongly believe that storytelling through music has a way to impact our audience, not just for entertainment, but in deeper meaningful ways,” said Bart Peters, vice president, development and production, AT&T. “We feel fortunate to be able to continue and expand upon our long tradition of music programming with this new slate of artists.”
The new slate of music programming will be filmed in ultra high definition 4K.
Bobby Karl Works The Room: CMHoF’s Guitars From The Bachman-Gretsch Collection
/by Bobby KarlChapter 518
Pictured (L-R): musician Duane Eddy, Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum CEO Kyle Young, Fred and Dinah Gretsch, musician Steve Wariner, and Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum Senior Vice President of Museum Services Carolyn Tate. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images
Bobby Karl always likes finding new places to party, but it somehow seemed fitting to launch this year’s round of schmoozathons at an old favorite, The Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum.
Thursday evening, Dec. 14, the Hall hosted a preview party for its latest exhibit, “American Sound and Beauty: Guitars From the Bachman-Gretsch Collection.” As always, the food was great, and the invited guests were an A-list crowd.
This year marks the 100th anniversary of Gretsch Guitars. The exhibit spotlights its most historic and iconic guitars. The company has also manufactured drums, amplifiers, guitar strings, pickups and other musical stuff.
The Hall’s CEO, Kyle Young, greeted the crowd in the Rotunda. “If you like guitars as much as we do, you’re in the right place,” he said. “These are great guitars, but they are also works of art.
Pictured (L-R): Lisa Purcell, Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum; Tom Peterson, Cheap Trick; Kyle Young, CEO, Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images
“This is unlike anything we have ever undertaken…..This exhibit provides a window into the history of American guitar making.”
Kyle explained that Canada’s Randy Bachman — of The Guess Who and Bachman-Turner Overdrive rock fame – was so obsessed with Gretsch guitars that he collected more than 300 of them. The 75 instruments exhibited are drawn from that extraordinary collection.
Fred Gretsch, who is of the fifth generation of the guitar family, noted that instruments from Randy’s collection were borrowed to use as prototypes for the new Gretsch guitars after the family reacquired the company in 1984. Baldwin had bought Gretsch in 1967 and later phased out the brand. Temporarily, as it turned out.
“The guitars we ship today have a unique Gretsch sound,” said Fred. He noted that artist endorsements have been important to the line. The most important of these was Country Music Hall of Fame member Chet Atkins. When George Harrison played one of Chet’s “Country Gentleman” Gretsch guitars on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1964, sales skyrocketed. He also played a Chet Gretsch in The Beatles movie Help!
Musician Steve Wariner performs at the American Sound & Beauty: Guitars from the Bachman-Gretsch Collection exhibit opening. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images
Other significant Gretsch players have included Neil Young, Steve Stills, Bo Diddley, Brian Setzer of The Stray Cats, Eddie Cochran, Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top and Michael Nesmith of The Monkees. (The company’s drums have been endorsed by Charlie Watts of The Rolling Stones, plus many jazz greats.)
“Duane’s creative guitar innovations have led to his well-deserved induction into The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame,” said Kyle in introducing “The King of Twang,” Duane Eddy. The rocking Gretsch master and longtime Nashvillian got a rousing ovation from the crowd.
“Gretsch guitars have been a part of my life since 1957,” Duane recalled. “I bought it [and]….the guitar seemed to change my luck. A few months later, I made my first record, ‘Movin’ and Groovin.’ In March 1958, I cut ‘Rebel Rouser.’ It became a hit that summer.”
That record began a string of smashes that made Duane Eddy the most successful instrumentalist in rock history. He made the pop charts in the 1960s, ‘70s and ‘80s and won an instrumental Grammy Award in 1986 for “Peter Gunn,” a collaboration with Art of Noise.
Pictured (L-R): Tom Peterson of Cheap Trick, Fred Gretsch, Duane Eddy, and Steve Wariner. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images
“I’ve been with Gretsch Guitars for 59 years. I realized, ‘I’m getting old!’
“I ended up selling a lot of records and probably a lot of Gretsch guitars. That guitar has taken me all over the world. But the best thing is the friends it has made me. It’s been a great life. And I give the credit to that Gretsch Guitar.”
Grand Ole Opry star and multiple country hitster Steve Wariner recalled the music store in his hometown of Noblesville, Indiana, and how he gazed at its wall of Gretsch guitars.
“Some people dream in color and some dream in black-and- white,” he reminisced. “I dream in Gretsch.”
Steve Wariner views the American Sound & Beauty: Guitars from the Bachman-Gretsch Collection exhibit at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images
He favored the crowd with his instrumental performances of “Windy and Warm” and “Copper Kettle.” Steve was dazzling with his dexterity on the strings.
“You must be a guitar geek to write a song about a guitar,” he said introducing “6120,” an instrumental he wrote to salute an iconic Chet Atkins model Gretsch. Yeah, that’s a geek. And it was great..
We shared a cocktail table with Walter & Christie Carter. Their lovely Carter Vintage Guitars emporium sponsored the exhibit, which Kyle graciously pointed out. I was grateful that knowledgeable Walter was next to me to illuminate Gretsch history, instrumental titles, technology and other things that are over my head.
My A-list table also included Walter’s fellow Tarheels David Conrad and Chris Horsnell. Guitar celebs Steve Gibson and Jerry Douglas were hovering nearby.
Fred Gretsch speaks during the American Sound & Beauty: Guitars from the Bachman-Gretsch Collection exhibit opening. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images
The cocktail-party nibbles included winter citrus salad with grapefruit, corn grits, croutons, pickled onions, red-leaf lettuce and endive. Serving platters were piled with cheeses, crostini and antipasto fare such as marinated artichoke hearts, pickled cauliflower buds, olives, roasted red peppers, prosciutto, salami and ham roll-ups. Roast-beef-and-swiss pressed sandwiches on toast quarters were accented with speared dill-pickle slices and cherry tomatoes.
Butch Spyridon, Jerry & Ernie Williams, Chase Cole, Seab Tuck, George Gruhn (how generous of the Carters to have a competitor there), Michael McCall, Michael Gray, Barry Mazor, Jimmy Carter, and Fender CEO Andy Mooney worked the room.
“Tonight, we fulfilled another dream,” concluded Kyle Young about the new exhibit. This is the largest collection of stringed instruments ever exhibited at the Hall.
The Country Music Hall of Fame is now one of the 10 most-visited history museums in the United States.
Shane McAnally, Josh Osborne Receive ‘MusicRow’ No. 1 Challenge Coins
/by Craig_ShelburnePictured (L-R): Troy Stephenson, Shane McAnally. Photo: Moments by Moser
Shane McAnally and Josh Osborne each accepted their latest MusicRow No. 1 Challenge Coins this week at the office of SMACK Songs.
MusicRow CountryBreakout Chart Director Troy Stephenson presented the coins, which are earned by artists and songwriters when their single reaches No. 1 on the chart.
McAnally’s latest coin is for his writing credit on Brothers Osborne’s “Stay A Little Longer.”
Pictured (L-R): Troy Stephenson, Josh Osborne. Photo: Moments by Moser
Meanwhile, Osborne earned his latest coin for Tim McGraw’s “Top Of The World.”
McAnally and Osborne each earned five No. 1 singles on the MusicRow CountryBreakout Chart in 2015.
They are also frequent collaborators, with shared credits on songs like Kenny Chesney’s “Wild Child,” Sam Hunt’s “Take Your Time,” and Keith Urban’s “John Cougar, John Deere, John 3:16.”
See the list of No. 1 Challenge Coins.
Granger Smith’s Wheelhouse Records Debut Slated For March 4
/by Jessica NicholsonGranger Smith was named to MusicRow‘s Next Big Thing list in 2015, alongside accolades from Rolling Stone Country, Billboard, Huffington Post, and more. Smith also made his debut appearance on the Grand Ole Opry last year.
This year, Smith is poised for even more accolades, as his first Wheelhouse Records album, Remington, will release March 4. The follow-up to his 4×4 EP, Remington is co-produced by Smith and Frank Rogers, and includes his current single, “Backroad Song.” Other tracks on the album include “Tractor,” a tribute to his late father, and “Merica,” a new track featuring Smith’s popular alter ego, Earl Dibbles Jr.
“I’ve always thought of my albums as diaries of my life,” says Granger. “Some songs are easy and light-hearted, while others are painful and personal. During this time, we welcomed the birth of my little boy, and we lost my dad. My life was such a roller coaster during my time writing and recording Remington, and you can hear that journey in these songs.”
Remington Track Listing:
1. “Backroad Song” (Smith, Rogers)
2. “Tonight” (Smith, Rogers)
3. “Remington” (Smith, Rogers)
4. “If The Boot Fits” (Jordan M. Schmidt, Andy Albert, Mitchell Tenpenny)
5. “Tailgate Town” (Smith, Rogers)
6. “Blue Collar Dollars” (Westin Davis, Jaron Boyer, Josh Mirenda)
7. “Crazy As Me” feat. Brooke Eden (Smith, Rogers)
8. “Likin’ Love Songs” (Smith, Rogers)
9. “Tractor” (Smith)
10. “Echo” (Smith, Rogers)
11. “Around The Sun” (Smith, Rogers)
12. “5 More Minutes” *GS Reloaded bonus track (Smith)
13. “Country Boy Love” *EDJ Reloaded bonus track feat. Earl Dibbles Jr. (Earl Dibbles Jr.)
14. “City Boy Stuck” *feat. Earl Dibbles Jr. (Earl Dibbles Jr., Austin Outlaw, Tyler Smith, Chris Lee)
15. “Merica” feat. Earl Dibbles Jr. (Earl Dibbles Jr., Austin Outlaw, Chris Lee, Dusty Saxton)