
John Anderson is going back to basics with an acoustic show at Nashville’s City Winery on Saturday night (Dec. 19). A 2014 inductee into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, Anderson is celebrated for hits like 1983’s “Swingin’” and 1992’s “Seminole Wind” (both of which he wrote), yet he’s also got an ear for outside material, like “Wild and Blue,” “Black Sheep,” “Straight Tequila Night” and “Money in the Bank,” among many others.
Between 1981 and 1995, Anderson notched 20 Top 10 hits at country radio, including five No. 1’s. He released his latest album, Goldmine, in May.
Leading up to the City Winery concert, the native of Apopka, Florida, visited with MusicRow about how the acoustic show brings his career full circle.
MusicRow: You have an acoustic show coming up in Nashville. Have you done a lot of shows like that?
Anderson: We’ve been doing them now for about five years, but haven’t done them in Nashville. I played one on the General Jackson three or four months ago for WSM, and I was proud to do that. The next one coming up at City Winery is very special. I’ll have my buddy Glenn Rieuf. He moved to Nashville in ’73, I believe, the year after I did. So he’s seen a lot of changes here. But anyway, Glenn and I have been playing across the country and we do 10 or 15 of these shows a year. Most of them are in performing arts theaters and small listening rooms.
I tell you, it’s really been uplifting for me, just because most folks don’t know, but I started on a stool by myself, doing it single. When I started doing this again, I said, “Well, it will be almost just like when I started, only now I don’t have to play other people’s songs.” And wow, what a difference that makes. Now, 40 years later, the acoustic show has made me come to appreciate my songs, probably more than I ever did before.
It’s because I’m seeing that the people are coming to hear those songs. It’s not really the arrangement so much. In our case, where it’s me and a guitar, and a little Dobro on the side, those songs are in the wide open. You’re really laying it out on the line there. They see that and hear that. That’s becoming a plus in this particular type of set-up, in an acoustic set-up.
When you said you started on a stool, are you talking about playing around town when you first got to Nashville?
Oh yeah, here and in Florida too, before I moved to town. I did that in Florida. Back then, when I was 14 or 15 and doing it, I was playing songs that were more of the folk-pop songs, like James Taylor and John Denver. Then, of course, after moving to Nashville and becoming a songwriter, and writing for 40 years and ending up with a catalog, yeah, it’s a bit different.
How often are you writing now?
Well, I hadn’t written in a little while, but I was telling someone this morning, I just found myself starting to pick up paper and jotting things down again. So, I guess I’m ready this winter to really hunker down and create a little bit.
How do you recognize that impulse?
I kinda have to drum it up. I have to work at it, to get where I write what I call “the good stuff.” You gotta go through a whole lot of just working up to the good stuff. For me, I may be my worst critic, but I have to weed through a lot of mediocrity to get to anything good. I’m hard on myself. And there are lot of things that I write and I say, “You know, a lot of people have gotten by with a lot less than this.” So, it’s just a matter of you deciding when your song is finished, I guess.
I’ve always loved “Seminole Wind.” What kind of imagery were you hoping to capture with that song?
First, you need to know that I wrote that song without ever thinking of it commercially. I mean, you don’t write a song like that thinking, “Boy, this is going to make me a ton of money.” In fact, it was at a time in my career where we’d had a bit of a slow spell. One of the first lessons I learned after having a streak of big hits, and then things started bluntly slowing down due to management changes, the record company, whatever—it wasn’t the music. I knew that. The music was the same.
It was the business side of the music business.
The business side of the music business can sometimes be a real bitch. As we all know. I had to fight that just the same as all the rest of the artists have to fight it. In my case, though, what made me able to overcome a lot of that was the writing of the songs. Being able to sit down and say, “Hey, I want to write ‘Seminole Wind’ for me, about a place I grew up.”
It’s hard to explain “Seminole Wind” because it’s a very spiritual song anyway. A lot of the messages in it are spiritual and subconscious-type things. However, it was a song I wanted to write that I could like about the place where I was raised. I also wanted to write it for some of my friends that I grew up with. I wanted to write a song that we could all like about our spot. I hope I did that. I think I did in a lot of ways. In fact, now there’s talk down in Florida about them making it a state song. That would be something for an ol’ Apopka boy.
What was the smartest decision you made when you started having success again with “Seminole Wind” and “Straight Tequila Night”?
To not change what we were doing originally. I was almost at a point of thinking, “God, do we need to just change?”
Did you really consider doing that?
I couldn’t change if I wanted to. That’s the good thing. That was the blessing. And I didn’t want to. I realized that these songs that I write, and this music that we play, and the band and the tour—hey, people still love us. So we just need to play for those people that love us. I really don’t care about playing my music for somebody who don’t want to hear it. That ain’t a very good feeling at all. So, yeah, it works out better when we’re playing to a crowd of folks that came to hear our stuff.
Industry Ink: CAA, TuneCore, ASCAP, SOLID
/by Jessica NicholsonCAA Promotes Six
Creative Artists Agency (CAA) promoted six trainees to agent or executive.
In Nashville, Justin Cahill has been promoted to the role of Agent in CAA’s Music Department.
The company’s Los Angeles office has five promotions. Joe Della Rosa and Luke Rodgers have been upped to Agent roles in CAA’s Film Finance and Sales department. Meanwhile, Monique Francis and Amanda Jimenez have been promoted to Executive in CAA Marketing, and Ryan Vogt has been promoted to Agent in CAA’s Licensing department.
TuneCore Names VP, Marketing
Andreea Gleeson
Digital music distribution and publishing administration provider TuneCore announced Andreea Gleeson as Vice President, Marketing.
Gleeson joins TuneCore from Lord & Taylor where she led the omni-marketing strategy for the department store chain. In her tenor at Lord & Taylor and its sister store Hudson’s Bay Company, Gleeson held multiple leadership roles in the e-commerce team where she drove the digital strategy and grew the Lord & Taylor and Hudson’s Bay sites from the ground up, surpassing the volumes for the flagship stores for both chains.
In her new role, Gleeson will be assuming the leadership of TuneCore’s global multi-channel marketing initiatives focused on growth and retention of the company’s artist customer base. Further, Gleeson will oversee all areas of marketing including branding, creative, paid media, content, social and analytics, ensuring all marketing campaigns are consumer focused and drive toward a larger 360-degree marketing plan.
ASCAP Songwriters Bring Hits to NYC
ASCAP songwriters took to NYC last week, when Chris DeStefano, Matt Jenkins, and three-time ASCAP Country Music Songwriter of the Year Ashley Gorley performed during the CMA Songwriter Series at Joe’s Pub with fellow writer Leslie Satcher.
Pictured (L-R): ASCAP executive Mike Sistad with Chris DeStefano, Matt Jenkins, Leslie Satcher and Ashley Gorley.
SOLID Names Board Members for 2016
Nashville-based music industry organization, Society of Leaders in Development (SOLID), recently appointed its 2016 Executive Board of Directors and inducted 82 new members.
Board Members include:
President Basak Kizilisik (Morris Higham Management)
Vice President Eric Wright (Music Data Analytics)
Secretary Rachel Cunningham (The Collective)
Treasurer John Huelsman (Big Enterprises)
Social Chair Johnny Cloherty (WME | IMG)
Social Co-chair Kelsey McMahan (Modern Management)
Communications Chair Jason G Zinser (So Good Entertainment)
Communications Co-chair Matt Pramstaller (Naxos of America)
Education Chair Juliana Lee (Notes for Notes)
Education Co-chair Lucia Kaminsky (Warner Music Nashville)
University Outreach Chair Tim Gray (Grayscale Entertainment)
Community Outreach Chair Courtney Kruckeberg (Clearbox Rights)
Community Outreach Co-Chair Ben Boyd (Music Services)
University Outreach Co-Chair Lisa Nolan (For the Record Entertainment)
Yard Sale Chair Kari Barnhart (Fifth Third Bank)
Yard Sale Co-Chair Carli McLaughlin (Rebel Engine Entertainment)
Alumni Chair Emma Tur (Warner Music Nashville + Word Entertainment)
Pictured (L-R): John Huelsman, Treasurer; Basak Kizilisik, President; Eric Wright, Vice President; Rachel Cunningham, Secretary.
[Updated]: Nashville Music Venue 12th & Porter To Reopen in February 2016
/by Jessica Nicholson12th & Porter has nearly two dozen shows slated through May 2016, including performances from Anthony Smith, Coolio, O-Town, Skid Row, and Andrew Ripp.
The venue is now owned by Infinity Restaurant Group, which took over ownership of 12th & Porter in early 2015. The venue closed for remodeling, including improvements to sound and production, as well as interior remodeling and an expanded menu for customers.
Infinity Hospitality Group co-owner and Executive Chef Tabor Luckey worked with the culinary team to develop a menu featuring everything from regular bar fare to more unique offerings including fish tacos with chipotle Crème fraîche, the meatloaf sandwich with caramelized onions, and Jack Daniels chocolate bread pudding. The menu will also feature bone and boneless wings with a number of flavors including mango habanero, dry rub, green onion sriracha and other house specialties.
12th & Porter’s upper mezzanine has been expanded to provide a better view of the stage for guests. They have partnered with 4Wall Entertainment to install an upgraded sound/lighting system throughout the entire venue. The new remodel includes a five-camera HD video setup with recording and streaming capabilities. The bar in the restaurant has been adjusted to provide more room for guests.
“We are thrilled to re-open such an iconic space in the Nashville music community and provide the city with another elite venue,” says Infinity Hospitality Group’s president and co-owner Nathaniel Beaver. “We look forward to working with all types of artists to host events that really make this city special.”
Since its opening in the 1980s, 12th & Porter has welcomed performers including Vince Gill, Neil Young, John Prine, Townes Van Zandt, Run-DMC and more.
Underwood, Bentley, Chesney to Headline ACM’s Party For A Cause
/by Troy_StephensonFull-set performances will include headliners Carrie Underwood (Friday, April 1), Dierks Bentley (Saturday, April 2) and Kenny Chesney (Sunday, April 3).
Additional performers include Frankie Ballard, Kelsea Ballerini, Lee Brice, Cam, Sam Hunt, Chris Janson, Dustin Lynch, Kip Moore, Kellie Pickler, Chris Stapleton, Chris Young, Maddie & Tae, Old Dominion and more to be announced.
The Party Stage will feature more hit makers and rising stars including Lauren Alaina, Kelleigh Bannen, Chase Bryant, Lindsay Ell, Jana Kramer, Chris Lane, Jackson Michelson, Granger Smith, Brothers Osborne , with more artists to be announced soon.
Underwood is also slated to host a special “ACM Women of Country Night.” More details on the evening will be announced soon.
Ticket proceeds from the ACM Party For A Cause Festival benefit the Academy’s charitable arm, ACM Lifting Lives. Generous giving from fans, and partnerships with artists, has allowed ACM Lifting Lives to support military programs that use music therapy to aid our veterans and wounded warriors, while providing funding to help them ease back into civilian life. Over $400,000 has been donated to various military organizations in just three years.
“We’re excited to bring the ACM Party for a Cause Festival back to our home-away-from-home in Las Vegas,” said Bob Romeo, CEO of the Academy of Country Music. “As we continue to raise the bar in country music entertainment, we’re also educating guests on the causes they’re contributing to. It’s because of the fans buying tickets and joining us for this event, that we’re able to support and give back to those that serve and protect our country.”
Three-day passes are on sale now at www.ticketmaster.com.
‘Nashville: On the Record 3’ Will Air Wednesday on ABC
/by Craig_ShelburneA one-hour music special featuring the cast of Nashville will air Wednesday night (Dec. 16) at 10 p.m. ET on ABC. The one-hour special follows Clare Bowen, Chris Carmack, Charles Esten, Sam Palladio, Aubrey Peeples and Lennon and Maisy Stella, as they traveled the country on a nine-city tour earlier this year. They will perform music from Nashville as well as original material they have written.
Nashville: On The Record 3 also includes cast members’ personal stories about touring and writing, and reveals some of their pre-performance rituals. The music special features interviews with Steve Buchanan, executive producer of Nashville; Lennon and Maisy’s parents, Brad and Marylynne Stella; bandleader Colin Linden; and musician Brandon Young.
On Dec. 4, The Music of Nashville: Original Soundtrack Season 4, Volume 1 was released on Big Machine Records to digital retailers and Target. The soundtrack is produced by Big Machine Records, ABC Studios, Lionsgate and Opry Entertainment. In addition, 4.8 million digital tracks from the previous Nashville soundtracks have been sold to date.
Cumulus: Grimes Will Lead Westwood One, Tommy Page Will Oversee NASH
/by Jessica NicholsonIn an memo to staff, Cumulus Media CEO Mary Berner has announced that Suzanne Grimes will join Cumulus in a dual role, as President of Westwood One Division, as well as Executive VP of Corporate Marketing, effective January 1. Grimes is former President/COO for Clear Channel Outdoor North America.
Steve Shaw, President of Westwood One, will continue to lead ad sales, and Charles Steinhauer, Chief Operating Officer of Westwood One, will continue to lead operations, both reporting directly to Grimes.
In her capacity as EVP of Corporate Marketing for all of Cumulus, Grimes will lead efforts in developing marketing strategies designed to drive more revenue. Chief Marketing Officer Pierre Bovard and VP of Social Media Lori Lewis will now both report to Grimes.
Meanwhile, Tommy Page, leader of platform events initiatives and brand partnerships, has been named SVP of Brand Partnerships & NASH. Page will continue to play a key role in the Corporate Marketing function, and will begin the development and execution of the NASH brand strategy, including the NASH Next talent competition.
Finally, Berner announced a newly developed Office of Programming. Mike McVay, SVP of Content & Programming, was formally appointed to lead content strategy across the platform, including talent recruitment and development and label relations. Tom Schurr, SVP of Operations, will partner with McVay in a new role, overseeing the business aspects of programming, including organization and prioritization, resource allocation, and budget responsibilities.
“Over the past two months, the team and I have been listening to your feedback and actively developing strategies that will result in better operational blocking and tackling; growth in our ratings; and a focused, responsible, collaborative and empowered corporate culture,” said Berner in the memo. “Collectively, we will get Cumulus back on track and begin the evolution into a true next-generation radio business.”
Big Deal Music Acquires Administration Company Words & Music
/by Jessica NicholsonPictured (L-R): Pete Robinson, Sr. Vice President/GM Nashville; Kim McCollum-Mele, President, Words & Music; Kenny MacPherson, President, Big Deal Music
Big Deal Music has acquired Nashville-based administration company Words & Music. Words & Music will continue to provide independent administration services, and will assume most of Big Deal Music’s domestic administrative duties beginning January 1, 2016. Big Deal’s extension with BMG will remain in effect for territories outside North America.
Big Deal’s Kenny MacPherson stated, “The foundation built in Nashville by Kim McCollum-Mele and her staff are a testament to those classic old-fashioned values we treasure: tenacity, independence, honesty and hard work. We have a unique opportunity to expand upon the base they’ve built, while continuing the steady, organic growth that Big Deal has enjoyed our first three years. While such a move was a natural and inevitable step in our evolution as full service publishers, we’re very fortunate to be able to take such a critical next step with Words & Music.”
Kim McCollum-Mele, President of Words & Music, commented on the acquisition, “I am very excited to be joining forces with Kenny and his amazing team at Big Deal. At Words & Music, we have always prided ourselves in our service and honest relationships with our songwriters and publishers. This move allows us to expand upon that foundation in new and creative ways, growing what we’ve built over the past 13 years into a vibrant new business.”
Industry Ink: UMG Nashville, Turnpike Music & Management, Given Music Publishing
/by Craig_ShelburneBlain Rhodes Hired at UMG Nashville
Blain Rhodes
UMG Nashville has expanded its A&R department with new hire Blain Rhodes as Director of A&R. Rhodes’ most recent experience includes nearly four years as a manager with Warner/Chappell Music in Nashville, where he provided creative support across the company’s roster, assisting in the discovery of new talent and the development of the publisher’s signed songwriters.
While there, Rhodes placed songs with Luke Bryan, Tim McGraw, George Strait, Frankie Ballard, Lee Brice, Craig Campbell, Billy Currington, Scotty McCreery, Jon Pardi and many more.
“I’m very excited to have Blain join our UMG team,” says Brian Wright, SVP A&R. “His track record of finding hit songs and great songwriters will be a huge asset to our A&R staff and artists.”
Justin Mason Signs to Turnpike Music & Management
Pictured (L-R): Kevin Mason, Turnpike Music EVP of Operations; Justin Mason; Larry Pareigis, Turnpike Music/Nine North Label Group President
Justin Mason has signed an exclusive deal for management, marketing and social media oversight with Turnpike Music & Management in Nashville. Mason is a native of Fort Worth, Texas, and worked for six years as a police office in Arlington, Texas, before forming a band. Prior to that, he served five years in the U.S. Navy.
“Justin exemplifies the brash artistic independence that I am always looking to amplify,” said Larry Pareigis, President, Turnpike Music & Management. “The road to success for Mr. Mason begins here!”
Turnpike Music & Management is a part of the Nine North Records Label Group.
Naima Adedapo Signs to Given Music Publishing
Pictured (Front row, L-R): Denise Stevens, Partner, Loeb & Loeb LLP; Naima Adedapo; Cindy Owen, Partner, Given Entertainment. (Back row, L-R) Wayne Milligan, Tri Star Sports and Entertainment Group; Mike Sebastian, VP/General Manager, Given Music Publishing
Naima Adedapo has signed a publishing deal with Given Music Publishing in Nashville. She was a Top 10 finalist on American Idol in 2011. She released an EP titled Beautifully Made in 2015.
“Naima is a very talented young writer/artist, who we are all excited to have as a part of our Given family,” said VP/GM Mike Sebastian. “With her upbeat, positive attitude, dedication and love for the music, good things are definitely headed her way.”
Given Music Publishing, a division of Given Entertainment, LLC, was formed in 2013 by music industry veteran Cindy Owen and business partner Jim Kacmarcik. Tri Star Sports and Entertainment is the exclusive administrator of Given Music Publishing.
Mary Hilliard Harrington Will Join Red Light Management in January
/by Craig_ShelburneMary Hilliard Harrington will begin a senior management position at Red Light Management in January, according to Billboard. Her management clients include Dierks Bentley and newcomers Tucker Beathard and Aubrie Sellers. She will also be involved in launching Charles Kelley‘s solo project in early 2016.
Harrington sold her prior company, GreenRoom PR, in September to two former employees. She has been co-managing Bentley with Red Light founder Coran Capshaw. Harrington and her staff of four will be working from Red Light’s Nashville offices.
Stephanie Johnson, who is Bentley’s day-to-day manager, and Kevin Grace, who handles digital and creative content, will follow Harrington to Red Light. New hires are Taylor Lee, who will handle day-to-day for Beathard and Sellers, and Heather Young, who will work Harrington’s clients to radio.
Read the full story at Billboard.
Exclusive: John Anderson Comes Full Circle for Nashville Concert
/by Craig_ShelburneJohn Anderson is going back to basics with an acoustic show at Nashville’s City Winery on Saturday night (Dec. 19). A 2014 inductee into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, Anderson is celebrated for hits like 1983’s “Swingin’” and 1992’s “Seminole Wind” (both of which he wrote), yet he’s also got an ear for outside material, like “Wild and Blue,” “Black Sheep,” “Straight Tequila Night” and “Money in the Bank,” among many others.
Between 1981 and 1995, Anderson notched 20 Top 10 hits at country radio, including five No. 1’s. He released his latest album, Goldmine, in May.
Leading up to the City Winery concert, the native of Apopka, Florida, visited with MusicRow about how the acoustic show brings his career full circle.
MusicRow: You have an acoustic show coming up in Nashville. Have you done a lot of shows like that?
Anderson: We’ve been doing them now for about five years, but haven’t done them in Nashville. I played one on the General Jackson three or four months ago for WSM, and I was proud to do that. The next one coming up at City Winery is very special. I’ll have my buddy Glenn Rieuf. He moved to Nashville in ’73, I believe, the year after I did. So he’s seen a lot of changes here. But anyway, Glenn and I have been playing across the country and we do 10 or 15 of these shows a year. Most of them are in performing arts theaters and small listening rooms.
I tell you, it’s really been uplifting for me, just because most folks don’t know, but I started on a stool by myself, doing it single. When I started doing this again, I said, “Well, it will be almost just like when I started, only now I don’t have to play other people’s songs.” And wow, what a difference that makes. Now, 40 years later, the acoustic show has made me come to appreciate my songs, probably more than I ever did before.
It’s because I’m seeing that the people are coming to hear those songs. It’s not really the arrangement so much. In our case, where it’s me and a guitar, and a little Dobro on the side, those songs are in the wide open. You’re really laying it out on the line there. They see that and hear that. That’s becoming a plus in this particular type of set-up, in an acoustic set-up.
When you said you started on a stool, are you talking about playing around town when you first got to Nashville?
Oh yeah, here and in Florida too, before I moved to town. I did that in Florida. Back then, when I was 14 or 15 and doing it, I was playing songs that were more of the folk-pop songs, like James Taylor and John Denver. Then, of course, after moving to Nashville and becoming a songwriter, and writing for 40 years and ending up with a catalog, yeah, it’s a bit different.
How often are you writing now?
Well, I hadn’t written in a little while, but I was telling someone this morning, I just found myself starting to pick up paper and jotting things down again. So, I guess I’m ready this winter to really hunker down and create a little bit.
How do you recognize that impulse?
I kinda have to drum it up. I have to work at it, to get where I write what I call “the good stuff.” You gotta go through a whole lot of just working up to the good stuff. For me, I may be my worst critic, but I have to weed through a lot of mediocrity to get to anything good. I’m hard on myself. And there are lot of things that I write and I say, “You know, a lot of people have gotten by with a lot less than this.” So, it’s just a matter of you deciding when your song is finished, I guess.
I’ve always loved “Seminole Wind.” What kind of imagery were you hoping to capture with that song?
First, you need to know that I wrote that song without ever thinking of it commercially. I mean, you don’t write a song like that thinking, “Boy, this is going to make me a ton of money.” In fact, it was at a time in my career where we’d had a bit of a slow spell. One of the first lessons I learned after having a streak of big hits, and then things started bluntly slowing down due to management changes, the record company, whatever—it wasn’t the music. I knew that. The music was the same.
It was the business side of the music business.
The business side of the music business can sometimes be a real bitch. As we all know. I had to fight that just the same as all the rest of the artists have to fight it. In my case, though, what made me able to overcome a lot of that was the writing of the songs. Being able to sit down and say, “Hey, I want to write ‘Seminole Wind’ for me, about a place I grew up.”
It’s hard to explain “Seminole Wind” because it’s a very spiritual song anyway. A lot of the messages in it are spiritual and subconscious-type things. However, it was a song I wanted to write that I could like about the place where I was raised. I also wanted to write it for some of my friends that I grew up with. I wanted to write a song that we could all like about our spot. I hope I did that. I think I did in a lot of ways. In fact, now there’s talk down in Florida about them making it a state song. That would be something for an ol’ Apopka boy.
What was the smartest decision you made when you started having success again with “Seminole Wind” and “Straight Tequila Night”?
To not change what we were doing originally. I was almost at a point of thinking, “God, do we need to just change?”
Did you really consider doing that?
I couldn’t change if I wanted to. That’s the good thing. That was the blessing. And I didn’t want to. I realized that these songs that I write, and this music that we play, and the band and the tour—hey, people still love us. So we just need to play for those people that love us. I really don’t care about playing my music for somebody who don’t want to hear it. That ain’t a very good feeling at all. So, yeah, it works out better when we’re playing to a crowd of folks that came to hear our stuff.
Chord Overstreet Signs to Safehouse Publishing/UMPG Joint Venture
/by Craig_ShelburneChord Overstreet.
Chord Overstreet has inked a publishing deal with a new venture between Universal Music Publishing Group (UMPG) and Safehouse Publishing. The latter organization is a division of Safehouse Records, which is co-owned by entertainment executive Phil McIntyre, Demi Lovato and Nick Jonas.
Overstreet is the first songwriter signed under the new agreement. He is the son of country songwriter Paul Overstreet and known for his role on FOX’s Glee.
“I’m thankful and excited for this partnership,” said McIntyre, CEO and Founder of Philymack. “Having a trusted, powerful partner to help us turn our dream into a reality is incredibly exciting. We believe in our vision to build a safe community for artists and writers to work together and to help each other to make amazing art.”