
Fred Mollin
By James Rea
Legendary producer Fred Mollin appeared on The Producerâs Chair, Thursday, September 24, 2015 at Douglas Corner at 6 PM.
Fred Mollin‘s story may even make Fred himself take a step back and think, I canât believe how blessed Iâve been. Considering his 40-year production discography, one would think that Mollin is one of the highest profile producers in the biz but that is not the case. “Under the radarâ is an understatement when describing his remarkable career, which started with a record deal and a Grammy nomination for the very first artist he co-produced.
Mollin has won three Juno Awards in Canada, a Gemini Award from the Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television, and five SOCAN Awards for film and television music. A portion of his body of production work includes duets & solo productions for Jimmy Webb, Johnny Mathis, Dan Hill, Billy Joel, Natalie Cole, Gloria Estefan, Barbra Streisand, JD Souther, America, Vince Gill, Amy Grant, Sheryl Crow, Lucinda Williams, Lyle Lovett, Joe Cocker, Linda Ronstadt, Art Garfunkel, Kris Kristofferson, Billy Ray Cyrus, Miley Cyrus, BB King, David Crosby and Graham Nash, Carly Simon, Barry Mann, Glen Campbell, Alison Krauss, Frank Stallone, Michael McDonald, Shawn Colvin, Jackson Browne, Daryl Hall, Collin Raye, Carole King, and Willie Nelson. In the last decade Mollin produced two albums for Johnny Mathis, both of which were nominated for Grammys. He has also had cuts by Cher and Eric Clapton.
Mollin recalls, âMost of my career was born out of Toronto. I had my singer/songwriter career that started around â71-â72, and then my producer life which happened by accident. In 1974 I was 21 with no thoughts about being a producer, I was doing a lot of gigs with Dan Hill. Iâd open for him and he would open for me. One day he asked me to produce his demo. He thought Iâd be a good producer, because I studied records. I knew which musicians played on it, and who engineered it. I was a musicologist without knowing it.â
In 1978, three Dan Hill albums later, his song âSometimes When We Touchâ written by Hill (lyrics) and Barry Mann (music), flew to the top of the Billboard charts and received a Grammy nomination.
Afterwards Mollin found himself working as a composer for TV and film for over 15 years, after which he continued to work as producer for critically acclaimed albums by Jimmy Webb, Kris Kristofferson, and Johnny Mathis.
Fred grew up on Long Island behind his first love, a drum kit, until The Beatles came along, at which point he picked up a guitar and joined the ranks as a singer/songwriter to impress the ladies. Fredâs older brother Larry, who became an actor and sort-of mentor to Fred, moved to Toronto and eventually Fred joined him there.
Mollin says, âI was also affected by James Taylor and Neil Young. I quit school when I was 16 which was a freaky thing, because back in those days in my neighborhood, a nice Jewish boy didnât quit school. And my mother, who is now 97 and still sharp as a tack, was my protector and my support system.â
Then as fate would have it, one of the most-pivotal moments in Fred Mollinâs career took placeâŠ
Mollin recalls, âIn ’78, Matthew and I had a classic âHollywood moment.â I was so inspired by Jimmy Webb, I wanted to produce him and Matt did too. After we had âSometimes When We Touch,â the guy at 20th Century Fox Records invited us to his office. He was smoking a cigar and he said, âWho do you want to produce next? Whoever it is, Iâll get them for you.â Just like that. Like a moron I said, âJimmy Webb.â In reality I should have said James Taylor or Elton John. And the guy said, âWhy?â and I said, ‘Because heâs the greatest songwriter in the history of song. He has a unique voice, and heâs never been produced right. I think we could do an incredible record with him.’ The next day we were meeting with Jimmyâs manager, and then the next night we were at Jimmyâs house, and Iâve been with him ever since. That created a 40-year collaboration with Jimmy Webb as his musical director and producer. I was never driven by the money. I am a musician first and a music lover. I wanted to work with the people who inspired me.â
As a composer for television, Fred has run the gamut including Liar Liar, Little Criminals, â Tekwar, Beyond Reality, Friday The 13th, The Outer Limits, Forever Knight, Beverly Hills 90210 and Hard Copy. Mollin’s most recent songwriting for TVÂ has been as one of the main composers and lyricists for songs on the Disney Channelâs Handy Manny.
In the feature film realm his orchestral score for The Fall and Borderline Normal. One project dear to Mollin was the VH-1 television movie Daydream BelieversâThe Monkees Story, where he composed the underscore, and served as musical director.
As an artist, Mollin’s projects include several Disney lullaby albums which have sold over 2 million copies worldwide. Then in 2007-08, Mollin took a hiatus from his freelance career and became Vice President of A&R for Walt Disney Records in California. He was also Executive Producer of such Disney successes as High School Musical The Concert. He produced Billy Ray Cyrus‘ Home At Last, which included the Gold single “Ready, Set, Donât Go” a duet with daughter Miley Cyrus.
In 2008 he went freelance again and returned to the studio full time in Nashville. His most recent album productions include a Johnny Mathis Christmas album, and Still Within The Sound of My Voice by Jimmy Webb. Fred is currently producing another album on Mathis, as well as finishing a new Christmas project with teen phenomenon Lexi Walker. And thereâs plenty more where that came from.
The Producerâs Chair: How did you and Matthew McCauley wind up co-producing Dan Hill?
Mollin: Dan and I went to a little 4-track place on Hazelton Lanes in Toronto called Captain Audio I walked into the basement and saw a young guy. It wasnât the engineer. He had a big, black beard and long, long hair and a white flowing shirt. It was Matt McCauley.
Matt was one of Danâs friends from school, whose father William Alexander McCauley, was one of the great musical directors of Canada. Matt was a genius and had learned arranging and conducting from his father. At age 20 (I was 21) he was an absolute phenomenon. In his wisdom, Dan decided to create a creative blind date for us and not tell either one of us that we were going to produce this little demo.
It was like two roosters in a cage for the first couple of hours. And then by the end of these little demo sessions we really connected. Matt to this day is my best friend. Heâs been my creative partner on many records early on, and then he stopped producing. He had other things that he wanted to do. Matthew is still the person I will go to for string arrangements.
Dan was so smart to know that we would be the perfect team. We worked together from about â74-’79. From that first meeting and the demos came a record deal for Dan.
How did you get Dan Hill that record deal?
No, not at all. Matthewâs parents decided they would invest. So, they actually financed a record and an album which Matt and I produced for Dan. Then, GRT Records in Canada signed the McCauleyâs production deal and signed Dan. So, here we were. This wonderful situation occurs and boom, the next thing you know, within a year we have two Top-3 records in Canada. Dan became a Canadian star, and we became producers.
Whatâs the story behind âSometimes When We Touchâ?
The first album was called Dan Hill. The second album was called Hold On. Then, on the third album we had a U.S. deal with 20th Century Fox Records. It was sort of interesting, because at that point we had a lot of pressure because they had to break Dan in the U.S. Otherwise, we would lose that deal. I think Danâs publisher at that point was the McCauleys, co-published by ATV.
People in L.A. set up Dan to co-write with Barry Mannâone of the greatest songwriters of all time. Barry and Cynthia Weil have been in my life ever since. But Dan was so intimidated by the co-write that he didnât do very well. As he was leaving Barry said, âWell, do you have any lyrics that you want me to put music later?â Dan pulled âSometimes When We Touchâ out of his guitar case, which he had already written music to, but the music was weak. Barry took it home, and I still have the cassette that Barry gave me of him just singing into a little cassette machineâjust whipping off this Elton John-esque song. It was like hearing the sound of your entire career ahead of you. Because Barry is just singing and playing away and itâs likeâthis is a hit. âSometimes When We Touchâ became a smash hit all around the world, and to this day it is an iconic record. Of course, we didnât know it would be. We were just thrilled to be making music. We were very precocious kids, but we were blown away at how successful that was.
What was the significance of producing Jimmy Webbâs Ten Easy Pieces album? Â
I was missed producing. Jimmy Webb was having a rough time. He was in a terrible divorce with a wife of many years and six children. He had addiction issues and problems with the IRS. He had to sell his publishing off. He was literally on the edge. I said, âBuddy, Iâve got to think of something that we can do together.â So I called Jay Landers, an old friend of mine who was at EMI. I said, âWhat do you think if I do an album with Jimmy of his most famous songs, just literally piano, vocals, and a couple extra things? It will really be a historic record. I can do it mostly in my house.â And he said, âWell, Iâll give you 25 grand if you can do it.â It was a low budget, and it meant that I wouldnât get paid. I was getting used to being pretty well paid in TV and film, but it wouldnât have mattered if he had said $1,000. I would have done it because it was a means to an end of great importance.
So I called Jimmy and told him I got the green light from EMI. And he said, âFreddy, Iâll never do that record. Those songs killed me.â And Iâm like, âOh, boy.â His frame of mind was so bad, but also his belief was that he never got his due as a great songwriter or especially as a great singer/songwriter. I said, âCome up here to Toronto. Physically, Iâd like to get you out of ground zero. Iâll put you up in a hotel near my house, and we will work and do this beautiful stripped down album of you.â
I finally convinced him. I said, âDo it for your children so they have an archival recording of you singing your most famous songs.â So, we did this record called Ten Easy Pieces which became an ironic title by Jimmy, because it was really ten tortured pieces but it saved his life and it changed his life.
Jimmy got through the divorce and his sobriety a couple years later and heâs been traveling and performing all over the world ever sinceâjust piano and vocal. I felt very good about the fact that I was able to help him. And it is a lightning-strikes sort of album.
How did you wind up producing Kris Kristofferson: The Austin Sessions?
It was a beautiful project. In 1996 I was still doing a lot of film and TV in Toronto, and we had already had this incredible response to Jimmyâs album critically. And then Jay Landers said, âWell, letâs make a series now with these kinds of records with the great songwriters. Why donât we do Kris Kristofferson?â And I said, âWell, I couldnât do Kris like I did Jimmy, because Jimmy is such a brilliant piano player that itâs so captivating in that record to hear him play. Heâs orchestrating as he plays, and itâs wonderful. With Kris Iâd like to do it with, maybe, four players in the studio.â Krisâs biggest inspiration was that he became a janitor at the CBS Studios here in Nashville just to hear Bob Dylan, possibly, in the studio. That was when Bob was doing Blonde On Blonde. So I said, âLetâs cut Kris doing his most famous stuff, but in a Blonde On Blonde vibe because, Kris really canât solo guitar very well.â He couldnât do just a voice and guitar thing on the record. It would sound sort of one-dimensional. I thought if I surrounded him with four great players from Nashville, weâd have a magical situation. The problem was, he was doing a movie in Louisiana so we had to go to the closest city with a studio, which was Austin. The four musicians and I converged to make that record over the course of a week. Kris considers it his greatest album. Itâs the way he always wanted his songs to sound. The album is called The Austin Sessions. Itâs very precious to me. I love Kris. We had such a terrific time.
Speaking of iconic songwriters, I understand that you knew Gordie Sampson before he moved to Nashville.
Gordie is one of the great writers out of Nashville nowâI moved Gordie down here from Canada. I feel like I discovered Gordie for the U.S. This guy is a monsterâbrilliant as an engineer, musician, arranger, performer, singer, and producer. I felt like I could find him a publishing deal. And that was no problem when they heard Gordie. He signed with Ken Levitan and Chris Farren at Combustion. And the rest is history.
Are you also an engineer/mixer?
No. Here in Nashville I have a team. Iâve worked with Dave Salley for 10 years. Thatâs my house engineer. Heâs just so fantastic. I also work with Kyle Lehning, who Iâve known since my first visit to Nashville in 1972. He will mix for me whenever I need, and heâs a very important person in my life.
Do you have an A-team of musicians?
Actually, I have a bunch of A-teams. I have guys who would be the perfect guys for Americana. I have guys who are perfect for a little more of a rock thing. I have guys who are perfect for the country stuff. I have guys who would be better for a little jazzier thing. So, I probably have four or five A-teams. Isnât it wonderful to have that? Nashville is amazing.
How well did you get to know Linda Ronstadt?
I remember Linda telling me that when Jimmy would open for her, she would just stand by the side of the stage to watch his opening act. And someone asked her, âWhy are you always watching Jimmyâs set?â And she goes, âBecause he frightens me.â Just to see that genius on stage. And at that point he wasnât a good performer. So, every night it could be different. She was in awe of his genius. They are very connected still. I became friends with Linda and we are great pen-pals. Sheâs really a special person and I had the honor of producing her last recording.
What do you enjoy doing the most today?
I love performing. I always have. Iâll wind up performing three or four times a year backing up for someone or musical directing for someone. I always love producing the basic tracks, because Iâm out on the floor either playing or conducting. I find it the most exciting part of my life.
Lauren Alaina Set To Release Self-Titled EP
/by Troy_StephensonMercury Nashville/19/Interscope Recordsâ Lauren Alaina is set to release her self-titled EP on Oct. 2. The American Idol alum is finalizing her second studio album due out next year. The first single, âNext Boyfriend,â impacts radio Sept. 28.
Along with âNext Boyfriend,â Lauren co-wrote all tracks on the five-song EP including âHistory,â a song Lauren recorded specifically at ESPNâs request for an exclusive promo track for its extensive college football coverage this season. âHistoryâ is also used for the top college matchups each week.
Lauren Alaina EP Track Listing:
1. Road Less Traveled (Lauren Alaina, Jesse Frasure, Meghan Trainor)
2. Holding The Other (Lauren Alaina, Emily Weisband, Eric Olson)
3. Next Boyfriend (Lauren Alaina, Emily Weisband, Matt McVaney)
4. Painting Pillows (Lauren Alaina, Lindsay Jack Rimes, Alex Masters)
5. History (Lauren Alaina, Emily Weisband, Jesse Frasure)
For more information on Lauren, her new EP and music, visit www.LaurenAlainaOfficial.com.
Tucker Beathard Lands Dot Records, Big Machine Music Deals
/by Jessica NicholsonPictured (L-R): Back Row â Big Machine Musicâs Alex Heddle, Mike Molinar, Tali Canterbury, Manager Mary Hilliard Harrington, Big Machine Label Groupâs Allison Jones and Big Machine Musicâs Brianna Steinitz
Front Row â BMLGâs Scott Borchetta, Tucker Beathard & Dot Recordsâ Chris Stacey. Photo: Seth Hellman for Dot Records.
Dot Records has signed singer-songwriter Tucker Beathard to its artist roster. He has also inked a deal with BMLG’s publishing arm, Big Machine Music. Born and raised in Nashville, Beathard is the son of songwriter Casey Beathard (“Don’t Blink”).
Tucker is currently working on his debut album for Dot Records, and was recently added to Chase Rice’s JD and Jesus fall tour.
Mary Hilliard Harrington serves as management.
Diamond Rio Releases Album Today, Celebrates 25th Anniversary
/by Sarah SkatesDiamond Rio (l- r): Dana Williams, Jimmy Olander, Marty Roe, Dan Truman, Gene Johnson, Brian Prout. Photo: Russ Harrington
Diamond Rio is releasing their tenth studio album today (Sept. 18), featuring eleven new songs. The title track “I Made It” was co-written by lead guitarist Jimmy Olander, who co-produced the project with Michael D Clute. It is available at iTunes and through Rio Hot Records at diamondrio.com. In celebration of the release for a limited time, fans can receive a free MP3 of the title track by visiting www.diamondrio.com.
âAs artists producing music as long as Diamond Rio has, fresh subject matter tends to get more and more difficult to come by,â says Olander. âAs a writer on the title track âI Made It,â simply telling our story is freeing. This is a very specific story, the autobiographical melding of the migration stories my partners and I share about moving to Nashville. Collectively, we have achieved the amount of success that dreams are made of, but at the end of the day have learned having someone to share this amazing life with â âloveâ and âbe loved byâ is the real measure of success. It’s true, âI Made It.ââ
Dan Truman further explains, “Instead of cutting the album in a 2 week period, or 2 month period we’d cut a few songs every year. What that allowed us to do is be very selective about what we cut and to take the time to live with these songs, making the proper edits and decisions.”
Marty Roe and Dana Williams both agree that, collectively, this may be the best group of songs the band has ever recorded. âWe’ve always had a sense of excitement when a new CD was being released. However, since this is our first new music from Diamond Rio in many years, it almost feels like it did when our very first record came out 25 years ago. At least for me, there is some nervous tension anticipating what our new and longtime fans think about it.â
Brian Prout concludes saying, âWe are proud of this CD and we hope that our fans will enjoy listening to it as much as we did recording it.â
Diamond Rio signed to Arista Records and in 1991, and with the release of âMeet In The Middleâ became the first country music group in history to reach No. 1 with a debut single. Celebrating their 25th anniversary, the band is known for their hits âHow Your Love Makes Me Feel,â âOne More Day,â âBeautiful Mess,â âUnbelievable,â âIn A Week or Two,â and more. The band is known for playing every note on every album, and has sold more than 10 million units.
I Made It Track Listing
âI Love This Songâ
Writers: Jeffrey Steele, Marcel Chagnon
âRide The Rangeâ
Writers: Bobby Terry, Catt Gravitt
âI Made Itâ
Writers: Jimmy Olander, Josh Shilling, Michael Dulaney
âI Canât Think Of Anything But Youâ
Writers: Skip Ewing, David Fertitta, Allan Dennis Rich
âCrazy Lifeâ
Writers: Peter Kevin Fisher
âBeckettâs Back Forty Acresâ
Writers: Ashley Gorley, Matthew Rossi, Hugh Bryan Simpson
âLay Your Lovinâ On Meâ
Writers: Ben Hayslip, Jimmy Yeary
âFindinâ My Way Back Homeâ
Writers: Craig Wiseman, Chris Stapleton
âIf Youâre Willingâ
Writers: Jason Sellers, Stewart Harris
âIâll Wait For Youâ
Writers: Shane Minor, Shannon Brown, Joshua Stevens
Bonus Track: âWalking By Beautyâ featuring Joshua Bell
Writers: Patrick Jason Matthews, Jason White
Track Benefiting: do Terra Healing Hands Foundation
Bobby Karl Works ‘Eric Church: Inside The Outsider Exhibit’
/by Bobby KarlVIP preview of Eric Church’s exhibit at the Country Music Hall of Fame. Pictured (L-R): Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s Carolyn Tate, Eric Church, Q Prime South’s John Peets, and Universal Music Group’s Mike Dungan. Photo: Rick Diamond, Getty Images for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
BOBBY KARL WORKS THE ROOM
Chapter 506
A man I consider to be a Hall of Fame caliber artist has a new exhibit at the Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum, and I bet it wonât be his last.
The museum hosted a preview party on Thursday evening (9/17) for âEric Church: Inside the Outsider.â Itâs just a pocket exhibit, but the star was enormously moved by the gesture.
âI just want to say I grew up as a fan,â said honoree Eric Church at the reception in the Library Reading Room. âI revere country music. I remember walking by the Country Music Hall of Fame and having a âmoment.â I was a songwriter who had been told âNoâ a bunch.
âI just walked through an exhibit that had my name on it,â he added with emotion in his voice. âI canât believe how far weâve come.
âIâve learned one thing: Itâs not about me. Itâs about the people in this room. I canât say how much I love each and every one of you.
âThank you for this.â
John Peets, Mike Dungan, Troy Tomlinson, Arturo Buenahora, Jody Williams, and Donna Hughes were just a few of the Church team members in attendance.
They applauded alongside Chris Horsnell, Kelsey Grady, Lori Badgett, Scott Stem, Vernell Hackett, Holly George Warren, Hunter Kelly, Bob Paxman and Charlie Cook.
âHe took his songs to the People and put on shows full of raw energy,â said the senior vice president of museum services Carolyn Tate to the crowd.âEric converted his fans one club at a time, one theater at a time and finally one arena at a time.
âThank you for letting us tell your story. We believe this is just the first chapter in a long and very significant career.â My sentiments, exactly.
The pocket exhibit contains stage outfits, hand-written song lyrics, awards, a set list, an autographed George Strait guitar, photographs and other career memorabilia. Between this, the âDylan, Cash & The Nashville Catsâ exhibit and the âFlying Saucers Rock & Roll: Sam Phillipsâ exhibit, the Hall of Fame is a must-visit more than ever. Go.
The Producer’s Chair: Fred Mollin
/by contributorFred Mollin
By James Rea
Legendary producer Fred Mollin appeared on The Producerâs Chair, Thursday, September 24, 2015 at Douglas Corner at 6 PM.
Fred Mollin‘s story may even make Fred himself take a step back and think, I canât believe how blessed Iâve been. Considering his 40-year production discography, one would think that Mollin is one of the highest profile producers in the biz but that is not the case. “Under the radarâ is an understatement when describing his remarkable career, which started with a record deal and a Grammy nomination for the very first artist he co-produced.
Mollin has won three Juno Awards in Canada, a Gemini Award from the Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television, and five SOCAN Awards for film and television music. A portion of his body of production work includes duets & solo productions for Jimmy Webb, Johnny Mathis, Dan Hill, Billy Joel, Natalie Cole, Gloria Estefan, Barbra Streisand, JD Souther, America, Vince Gill, Amy Grant, Sheryl Crow, Lucinda Williams, Lyle Lovett, Joe Cocker, Linda Ronstadt, Art Garfunkel, Kris Kristofferson, Billy Ray Cyrus, Miley Cyrus, BB King, David Crosby and Graham Nash, Carly Simon, Barry Mann, Glen Campbell, Alison Krauss, Frank Stallone, Michael McDonald, Shawn Colvin, Jackson Browne, Daryl Hall, Collin Raye, Carole King, and Willie Nelson. In the last decade Mollin produced two albums for Johnny Mathis, both of which were nominated for Grammys. He has also had cuts by Cher and Eric Clapton.
Mollin recalls, âMost of my career was born out of Toronto. I had my singer/songwriter career that started around â71-â72, and then my producer life which happened by accident. In 1974 I was 21 with no thoughts about being a producer, I was doing a lot of gigs with Dan Hill. Iâd open for him and he would open for me. One day he asked me to produce his demo. He thought Iâd be a good producer, because I studied records. I knew which musicians played on it, and who engineered it. I was a musicologist without knowing it.â
In 1978, three Dan Hill albums later, his song âSometimes When We Touchâ written by Hill (lyrics) and Barry Mann (music), flew to the top of the Billboard charts and received a Grammy nomination.
Afterwards Mollin found himself working as a composer for TV and film for over 15 years, after which he continued to work as producer for critically acclaimed albums by Jimmy Webb, Kris Kristofferson, and Johnny Mathis.
Fred grew up on Long Island behind his first love, a drum kit, until The Beatles came along, at which point he picked up a guitar and joined the ranks as a singer/songwriter to impress the ladies. Fredâs older brother Larry, who became an actor and sort-of mentor to Fred, moved to Toronto and eventually Fred joined him there.
Mollin says, âI was also affected by James Taylor and Neil Young. I quit school when I was 16 which was a freaky thing, because back in those days in my neighborhood, a nice Jewish boy didnât quit school. And my mother, who is now 97 and still sharp as a tack, was my protector and my support system.â
Then as fate would have it, one of the most-pivotal moments in Fred Mollinâs career took placeâŠ
Mollin recalls, âIn ’78, Matthew and I had a classic âHollywood moment.â I was so inspired by Jimmy Webb, I wanted to produce him and Matt did too. After we had âSometimes When We Touch,â the guy at 20th Century Fox Records invited us to his office. He was smoking a cigar and he said, âWho do you want to produce next? Whoever it is, Iâll get them for you.â Just like that. Like a moron I said, âJimmy Webb.â In reality I should have said James Taylor or Elton John. And the guy said, âWhy?â and I said, ‘Because heâs the greatest songwriter in the history of song. He has a unique voice, and heâs never been produced right. I think we could do an incredible record with him.’ The next day we were meeting with Jimmyâs manager, and then the next night we were at Jimmyâs house, and Iâve been with him ever since. That created a 40-year collaboration with Jimmy Webb as his musical director and producer. I was never driven by the money. I am a musician first and a music lover. I wanted to work with the people who inspired me.â
As a composer for television, Fred has run the gamut including Liar Liar, Little Criminals, â Tekwar, Beyond Reality, Friday The 13th, The Outer Limits, Forever Knight, Beverly Hills 90210 and Hard Copy. Mollin’s most recent songwriting for TVÂ has been as one of the main composers and lyricists for songs on the Disney Channelâs Handy Manny.
In the feature film realm his orchestral score for The Fall and Borderline Normal. One project dear to Mollin was the VH-1 television movie Daydream BelieversâThe Monkees Story, where he composed the underscore, and served as musical director.
As an artist, Mollin’s projects include several Disney lullaby albums which have sold over 2 million copies worldwide. Then in 2007-08, Mollin took a hiatus from his freelance career and became Vice President of A&R for Walt Disney Records in California. He was also Executive Producer of such Disney successes as High School Musical The Concert. He produced Billy Ray Cyrus‘ Home At Last, which included the Gold single “Ready, Set, Donât Go” a duet with daughter Miley Cyrus.
In 2008 he went freelance again and returned to the studio full time in Nashville. His most recent album productions include a Johnny Mathis Christmas album, and Still Within The Sound of My Voice by Jimmy Webb. Fred is currently producing another album on Mathis, as well as finishing a new Christmas project with teen phenomenon Lexi Walker. And thereâs plenty more where that came from.
The Producerâs Chair: How did you and Matthew McCauley wind up co-producing Dan Hill?
Mollin: Dan and I went to a little 4-track place on Hazelton Lanes in Toronto called Captain Audio I walked into the basement and saw a young guy. It wasnât the engineer. He had a big, black beard and long, long hair and a white flowing shirt. It was Matt McCauley.
Matt was one of Danâs friends from school, whose father William Alexander McCauley, was one of the great musical directors of Canada. Matt was a genius and had learned arranging and conducting from his father. At age 20 (I was 21) he was an absolute phenomenon. In his wisdom, Dan decided to create a creative blind date for us and not tell either one of us that we were going to produce this little demo.
It was like two roosters in a cage for the first couple of hours. And then by the end of these little demo sessions we really connected. Matt to this day is my best friend. Heâs been my creative partner on many records early on, and then he stopped producing. He had other things that he wanted to do. Matthew is still the person I will go to for string arrangements.
Dan was so smart to know that we would be the perfect team. We worked together from about â74-’79. From that first meeting and the demos came a record deal for Dan.
How did you get Dan Hill that record deal?
No, not at all. Matthewâs parents decided they would invest. So, they actually financed a record and an album which Matt and I produced for Dan. Then, GRT Records in Canada signed the McCauleyâs production deal and signed Dan. So, here we were. This wonderful situation occurs and boom, the next thing you know, within a year we have two Top-3 records in Canada. Dan became a Canadian star, and we became producers.
Whatâs the story behind âSometimes When We Touchâ?
The first album was called Dan Hill. The second album was called Hold On. Then, on the third album we had a U.S. deal with 20th Century Fox Records. It was sort of interesting, because at that point we had a lot of pressure because they had to break Dan in the U.S. Otherwise, we would lose that deal. I think Danâs publisher at that point was the McCauleys, co-published by ATV.
People in L.A. set up Dan to co-write with Barry Mannâone of the greatest songwriters of all time. Barry and Cynthia Weil have been in my life ever since. But Dan was so intimidated by the co-write that he didnât do very well. As he was leaving Barry said, âWell, do you have any lyrics that you want me to put music later?â Dan pulled âSometimes When We Touchâ out of his guitar case, which he had already written music to, but the music was weak. Barry took it home, and I still have the cassette that Barry gave me of him just singing into a little cassette machineâjust whipping off this Elton John-esque song. It was like hearing the sound of your entire career ahead of you. Because Barry is just singing and playing away and itâs likeâthis is a hit. âSometimes When We Touchâ became a smash hit all around the world, and to this day it is an iconic record. Of course, we didnât know it would be. We were just thrilled to be making music. We were very precocious kids, but we were blown away at how successful that was.
What was the significance of producing Jimmy Webbâs Ten Easy Pieces album? Â
I was missed producing. Jimmy Webb was having a rough time. He was in a terrible divorce with a wife of many years and six children. He had addiction issues and problems with the IRS. He had to sell his publishing off. He was literally on the edge. I said, âBuddy, Iâve got to think of something that we can do together.â So I called Jay Landers, an old friend of mine who was at EMI. I said, âWhat do you think if I do an album with Jimmy of his most famous songs, just literally piano, vocals, and a couple extra things? It will really be a historic record. I can do it mostly in my house.â And he said, âWell, Iâll give you 25 grand if you can do it.â It was a low budget, and it meant that I wouldnât get paid. I was getting used to being pretty well paid in TV and film, but it wouldnât have mattered if he had said $1,000. I would have done it because it was a means to an end of great importance.
So I called Jimmy and told him I got the green light from EMI. And he said, âFreddy, Iâll never do that record. Those songs killed me.â And Iâm like, âOh, boy.â His frame of mind was so bad, but also his belief was that he never got his due as a great songwriter or especially as a great singer/songwriter. I said, âCome up here to Toronto. Physically, Iâd like to get you out of ground zero. Iâll put you up in a hotel near my house, and we will work and do this beautiful stripped down album of you.â
I finally convinced him. I said, âDo it for your children so they have an archival recording of you singing your most famous songs.â So, we did this record called Ten Easy Pieces which became an ironic title by Jimmy, because it was really ten tortured pieces but it saved his life and it changed his life.
Jimmy got through the divorce and his sobriety a couple years later and heâs been traveling and performing all over the world ever sinceâjust piano and vocal. I felt very good about the fact that I was able to help him. And it is a lightning-strikes sort of album.
How did you wind up producing Kris Kristofferson: The Austin Sessions?
It was a beautiful project. In 1996 I was still doing a lot of film and TV in Toronto, and we had already had this incredible response to Jimmyâs album critically. And then Jay Landers said, âWell, letâs make a series now with these kinds of records with the great songwriters. Why donât we do Kris Kristofferson?â And I said, âWell, I couldnât do Kris like I did Jimmy, because Jimmy is such a brilliant piano player that itâs so captivating in that record to hear him play. Heâs orchestrating as he plays, and itâs wonderful. With Kris Iâd like to do it with, maybe, four players in the studio.â Krisâs biggest inspiration was that he became a janitor at the CBS Studios here in Nashville just to hear Bob Dylan, possibly, in the studio. That was when Bob was doing Blonde On Blonde. So I said, âLetâs cut Kris doing his most famous stuff, but in a Blonde On Blonde vibe because, Kris really canât solo guitar very well.â He couldnât do just a voice and guitar thing on the record. It would sound sort of one-dimensional. I thought if I surrounded him with four great players from Nashville, weâd have a magical situation. The problem was, he was doing a movie in Louisiana so we had to go to the closest city with a studio, which was Austin. The four musicians and I converged to make that record over the course of a week. Kris considers it his greatest album. Itâs the way he always wanted his songs to sound. The album is called The Austin Sessions. Itâs very precious to me. I love Kris. We had such a terrific time.
Speaking of iconic songwriters, I understand that you knew Gordie Sampson before he moved to Nashville.
Gordie is one of the great writers out of Nashville nowâI moved Gordie down here from Canada. I feel like I discovered Gordie for the U.S. This guy is a monsterâbrilliant as an engineer, musician, arranger, performer, singer, and producer. I felt like I could find him a publishing deal. And that was no problem when they heard Gordie. He signed with Ken Levitan and Chris Farren at Combustion. And the rest is history.
Are you also an engineer/mixer?
No. Here in Nashville I have a team. Iâve worked with Dave Salley for 10 years. Thatâs my house engineer. Heâs just so fantastic. I also work with Kyle Lehning, who Iâve known since my first visit to Nashville in 1972. He will mix for me whenever I need, and heâs a very important person in my life.
Do you have an A-team of musicians?
Actually, I have a bunch of A-teams. I have guys who would be the perfect guys for Americana. I have guys who are perfect for a little more of a rock thing. I have guys who are perfect for the country stuff. I have guys who would be better for a little jazzier thing. So, I probably have four or five A-teams. Isnât it wonderful to have that? Nashville is amazing.
How well did you get to know Linda Ronstadt?
I remember Linda telling me that when Jimmy would open for her, she would just stand by the side of the stage to watch his opening act. And someone asked her, âWhy are you always watching Jimmyâs set?â And she goes, âBecause he frightens me.â Just to see that genius on stage. And at that point he wasnât a good performer. So, every night it could be different. She was in awe of his genius. They are very connected still. I became friends with Linda and we are great pen-pals. Sheâs really a special person and I had the honor of producing her last recording.
What do you enjoy doing the most today?
I love performing. I always have. Iâll wind up performing three or four times a year backing up for someone or musical directing for someone. I always love producing the basic tracks, because Iâm out on the floor either playing or conducting. I find it the most exciting part of my life.
Buddy Miller, Jim Lauderdale Welcome Guests To City Winery For SiriusXM Series
/by Sarah SkatesJim Lauderdale and Buddy Miller perform at the 2014 Americana Music Festival. Photo: Getty Images
Esteemed musicians and colleagues Buddy Miller and Jim Lauderdale will begin a unique concert series at City Winery Nashville on Nov. 14. The co-hosts will invite special guests to perform and chat in front of a live studio audience, with Tony Joe White set for the first show.
Each of these intimate experiences will be recorded for broadcast on The Buddy and Jim Show on SiriusXM. The weekly radio show airs exclusively on Outlaw Country channel 60.
On air since August 2012, it regularly broadcasts from Buddy’s home studio and has featured over 100 celebrated artists including Lucinda Williams, Emmylou Harris, Guy Clark, Jason Isbell, Patty Griffin, Striking Matches, Ashley Monroe and Rodney Crowell.
The Buddy and Jim Show is also available on SiriusXM On Demand for subscribers, and through the SiriusXM App on smartphones and other connected devices, as well as online at siriusxm.com.
Dates For The City Winery Series
Saturday, November 14, 2015
Thursday, January 14, 2016
Thursday, February 25, 2016
Thursday, April 7, 2016
Thursday, May 26, 2016
For tickets and details visit www.citywinery.com/nashville.
LifeNotes: Star Drummer Martin Parker Passes
/by Robert K OermannMartin Parker
Widely beloved Nashville drummer Martin Parker died on Sept. 10 in his home community in North Carolina at age 63.
He was a member of the 1989 Reprise Records group Billy Hill (âToo Much Month at the End of the Moneyâ), alongside John Scott Sherrill, Bob DiPiero, Dennis Robbins and Reno Kling.
Parker also worked extensively in the bands of Vince Gill and Ricky Skaggs. His widow, Ira Byrum Parker, is a stylist who became a personal assistant to Dolly Parton.
During his Nashville career, Martin Parker backed Patty Loveless, Alison Krauss, Vestal Goodman, Earl Scruggs, Bonnie Raitt, Crystal Gayle, Don Schlitz, Gail Davies and The OâKanes.
His recording-studio credits include Willie Nelson, Jerry Douglas and Steve Earle. He was mentored by the late Nashville session musician Larrie Londin (1943-1992), who was one of the most recorded drummers in history.
Born Martin Newbury Parker, he was a native of the Yeopim community of Chowan County, NC. He died in Greenvilleâs Vidant Medical Center. His celebration of life event was on Sunday, Sept. 13, in Tyner, N.C.
He is survived by wife Ira, as well as sons Quinton, Chris and Jamie and several granddaughters.
Contributions in his memory may be made to The Edenton-Chowan Educational Foundation, P.O. Box 206, Edenton, NC 27932 with a notation on the check reading âThe Martin Parker Music Fund.â Online condolences may be made by visiting www.millerfhc.com.
Weekly Chart Report (9/18/15)
/by Troy_StephensonClick here or above to access MusicRow‘s weekly CountryBreakout Report.
Carrie Underwood Announces CMT Instant Jam Concert in Atlanta
/by Jessica NicholsonUnderwood teased the concert by posting a photo of a peach on her social media accounts, followed by a short video of Underwood lip synching to “Georgia On My Mind.”
Fans can wait in line for a wristband at Central Park in Atlantic Station, starting at 10 a.m. ET. Variety Playhouse doors open at 7 p.m. for the show.
Recent artists who have staged pop up concerts for CMT Instant Jam include Darius Rucker in his hometown of Charleston, S.C., and Hunter Hayes in Lexington, Ky. Hayes’ show will air Sept. 26 on CMT. Other artists who have taken part in the series include Kenny Chesney and Florida Georgia Line.
Underwood’s schedule has been ramping up over the past several months. The singer-songwriter will release her album Storyteller on Oct. 23, and recently released the project’s first single and video, “Smoke Break.” Next week, she will make the trek to London to appear at the Apple Music Festival on Sept. 21. Underwood is the first country artist to headline the event, and her set will be live-streamed by Apple Music.
5 Things We Learned From Don Henley’s Keynote at the Americana Conference
/by Sarah SkatesHenley grew up in the twilight zone.
Henley said his hometown Linden, Texas, was like âa twilight zone where the south meets the west.â At night he would hide under the covers with the GE transistor radio he bought with money from mowing lawns. Heâd tune into 50,000 watt radio stations, picking up bluegrass from the Ozarks, Bob Wills from Texas radio, and stations from New Orleans, which he calls âits own musical planet.â His parents listened to big band music like Glenn Miller, and his grandmother, who moved in with them after her husband died, sang hymns and Stephen Foster songs.
As an adult, Henley realized all the storied musicians who came from the area around Linden, including T Bone Walker, Scott Joplin and Lead Belly, whose grave Henley sometimes visits.
Even rock stars enjoy college.
Henley said his fatherâs âfondest wishâ was for him to go to college, so he went to Stephen F. Austin college in Nacogdoches, Texas where he was greatly impacted by an English professor who said, âYou donât have to be like everybody else.â
Henley eventually transferred to North Texas âwhere the hippies were.â There he made the deanâs list his final semester but didnât graduate. He was an English major and the experience solidified his love of words and poetry.
When his father fell ill, he went home to help his mother before moving to California.
If music didn’t work out, âThere was no plan B⊠maybe I would have become a teacher. But the college years I really appreciate.â
Kenny Rogers was an early mentor.
In 1970 Henley moved to California at the urging of Kenny Rogers.
âThe music we were gravitating toward was coming from Los Angeles, the country-rock, folk-rock.â They were into the Byrds, Nitty Gritty Dirty Band and Flying Burrito Brothers.
Upon arriving in Los Angeles, Rogers produced an album on Henleyâs band Shiloh. (They also recorded in Memphis, but Henley says it was âshort lived.â) Rogers had already scored with the hit âJust Dropped In (To See What ConditionâŠ).â
âWe really werenât ready to record an album when Kenny recorded us. We were green as songwriters⊠I learned a lot from watching him work in the studio, about his work ethic and about the business. He was one of the first honest people I met in the business.
âWhen David Geffen wanted to sign Glenn Frey and I to his label, Kenny helped me get out of the contract that he had negotiated for me. Thatâs unheard, he helped me get free so that I could move up to something else. Extraordinary what he did for me.â
âHeâs generous, honest, kind, thoughtful,â said Henley. Rogers also gave him key advice: be nice to people on the way up because youâre going to meet those same people on the way back down.
Cass County will be released Sept. 25.
Don’t put his music in a box.
âYou can trace country music all the way back to our European roots. I think one of the things that is leaving country music these days is⊠that connection to the roots, and the land and the people who lived on the land.
âThe Eagles were always a musical mutt. There were all kinds of elements mixed into our music⊠âOne of These Nightsâ has Memphis and r&b influences, Glenn Frey brought the Detroit influence.â
As he prepared to release his solo album Cass County, Henley looked at the Billboard chart for the first time in 15 or 20 years. âMy jaw dropped,â he said, when he saw how many charts there are now, because the last time he looked there were only five or six.
âThatâs what our society does to everything now. We put everything in little boxes, including radio. When I was growing up you could listen to the same FM channel and one minute you would hear Wilson Pickett and the next minute you would hear The Beatles, then Engelbert Humperdinck, and I think thatâs good because it gives people the chance to broaden their palate. And nowadays you only listen to whatever it is you think you want to hear. And thatâs true with political discourse too, everybodyâs preaching to the choir now, which doesnât give you access to different music, different ideas. Itâs all preboxed and prepacked for you. This category thing, I donât think itâs healthy.â
He loves Dolly Parton.
In fact, he loves her so much, he went to Sevierville, Tenn. to explore her roots and the area’s landscape.
âHer voice contains everything about America. It contains so much history, the history of a people, especially the people of the mountainous regions of the eastern part of the country, it contains sorrow, and suffering and empathy and joy and love and compassion. Every time she opens her mouthâsheâs such a tiny personâand the big voice comes out I hear this country and that part of this country. Itâs such an authentic voice. Itâs grown out of the land. The author E.L. Doctorow said we are neither all spirit nor all clay, we are both. And she is both, she is spirit and she is clay. I have tremendous respect for her and Iâm so appreciative that I got to work with her⊠Iâm not afraid to sing with people who can kick my ass, who are better singers than me.â
For more Americana fun this week, check out the New West Records party tomorrow at Acme.