
Red Lane
Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame member Red Lane has passed away at age 76.
Lane died Wednesday night, July 1, following a long battle with cancer. He is noted as the creator of such big hits as “Til’ I Get It Right” (Tammy Wynette, 1973), “Darling You Know I Wouldn’t Lie” (Conway Twitty, 1969) and “New Looks From an Old Lover” (B.J. Thomas, 1981).
Born Hollis DeLaughter on Feb. 9, 1939, he was a native of Bogalusa, Louisiana. His sharecropper father taught him to play guitar. The family moved around a lot, following farming seasons. Lane graduated high school in Indiana and joined the Air Force.
Trained as an airplane mechanic, he also performed music throughout his enlistment. While stationed in Hawaii, he performed on the Waikiki radio show Hawaii Calls. While stationed in Omaha, Nebraska in 1958, he began performing in area nightclubs six nights a week.
Following his discharge, Red Lane performed in Indiana, California, Arizona and Texas. Inspired by Willie Nelson, he began writing songs at this time. Singer-songwriter Justin Tubb urged Lane to send his songs to Tree Publishing in Nashville.
Tree’s Buddy Killen signed him as a staff songwriter in 1963 and helped Lane to move to Music City. Tubb hired him as a guitarist in his band. Red Lane scored his first songwriting hit when Faron Young took his “My Friend On the Right” up the charts in 1964.
Nelson recorded Lane’s “Blackjack County Chain” in 1967. Dottie West had a hit with their co-written “Country Girl” in 1968. The song inspired a series of popular Coca-Cola ad jingles for West. Red Lane became her bandleader, and the two collaborated on dozens of other songs.
Lane’s first top-10 success came when Waylon Jennings recorded “Walk On Out of My Mind” in 1968. He repeated the feat with Eddy Arnold’s recording of “They Don’t Make Love Like They Used To” in 1969. Twitty’s 1969 recording of “Darling You Know I Wouldn’t Lie” inspired Elvis Costello to re-record the song in 1994.
Bobby Bare, Roger Miller, Jack Palance, Wanda Jackson, Lee Hazelwood & Ann-Margret, Jimmy Dickens, Tommy Cash, Jack Greene & Jeannie Seely, Johnny Paycheck, George Jones, Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown, T.G. Sheppard and Connie Smith were among the many who recorded Red Lane songs in the 1960s and 1970s.
The songwriter also became a Nashville session guitarist. Chet Atkins signed him as a recording artist to RCA, and Lane scored a moderate-sized hit with “The World Needs a Melody” in 1971. The song was subsequently a single for Johnny Cash and was also recorded by The Kingston Trio, Bill Anderson, Mother Maybelle Carter, The Chuck Wagon Gang and others.
Lane’s other charted singles as an artist were “Set the World On Fire (With Love)” (1971), “It Was Love While It Lasted” (1972) and “Throw a Rope Around the Wind” (1972). The last named was on the soundtrack of the Robert Mitchum movie Going Home.
Red Lane and Merle Travis co-wrote the “Ride This Train” segments on The Johnny Cash Show on ABC-TV in 1969-71.
After Wynette hit the top of the charts with “Til I Get It Right” in 1973, the song was recorded by dozens of others, including Kenny Rogers, Englebert Humperdinck, Trisha Yearwood, Wynonna Judd, Millie Jackson, Solomon Burke, Bob Dylan and Highway 101.
Later in the decade, Lane forged a musical partnership with Merle Haggard, who recorded nearly 30 Red Lane songs. These included 1977’s “Ain’t Your Memory Got No Pride at All” and the 1979 hit “My Own Kind of Hat” (revived by Alan Jackson in 1999). Lane also played guitar on Haggard recording sessions and sometimes toured in the superstar’s band.
In 1981, B.J. Thomas hit No. 1 with Lane’s “New Looks From an Old Love” and John Conlee scored with “Miss Emily’s Picture.” Keith Whitley released Lane’s “Would These Arms Be in Your Way” in 1987, and the song was then recorded by Vern Gosdin, Mark Chesnutt, Daryle Singletary and more.
Others who recorded his songs in the 1980s and 1990s included Loretta Lynn, The Oak Ridge Boys, Ricky Van Shelton, Ray Charles, Doug Stone, Jack Greene, Joe Diffie, Skip Ewing, Waylon Jennings and Suzy Bogguss. Red Lane was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1993.
Lane’s success continued into the new millennium. George Strait had a hit with his “Tell Me Something Bad About Tulsa” in 2003. His songs appeared on albums by Lee Ann Womack, Reba McEntire, Joan Osborne, The Del McCoury Band and more. In 2010, he was honored at the Country Music Hall of Fame’s “Poets & Prophets” songwriter series.
The tunesmith led a colorful, unconventional lifestyle. He lived in an airplane fuselage grounded near Ashland City, TN and was an avid skydiver.
CMHoF To Host Free Street Concert, Additional Performance By Peach Pickers
/by Lorie HollabaughFree Concert July 7
Nashville Cats: A New Music City Album Cover
A concert celebrating the Country Music Hall of Fame exhibit Dylan, Cash, and the Nashville Cats: A New Music City, and its two-disc audio companion will take place July 7 on closed streets outside the Hall at 5 p.m. John Carter Cash and Ana Christina, Julie Christensen, Radney Foster, Jeff Hanna, Jamie Hartford, Al Kooper, Kathy Mattea, Tracy Nelson, Michael Nesmith of the Monkees, Jason Ringenberg, Britt Ronstadt, and other special guests will perform, and tracks from the new CD will be performed by the Long Players band and some of the session players from the original recordings including Mac Gayden, Charlie McCoy, and Norbert Putnam.
Food trucks will be on hand and the first 200 attendees to arrive will receive a commemorative Hatch Show Print poster of the special event.
The album Dylan, Cash, and the Nashville Cats: A New Music City, issued jointly by Sony Legacy Recordings and the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, is available now. It features a previously unreleased version of Bob Dylan‘s “If Not for You” and 35 other essential tracks.
The Peach Pickers on Aug. 1
Ben Hayslip, Dallas Davidson, Rhett Akins
The Peach Pickers, (Rhett Akins, Dallas Davidson and Ben Hayslip), have helped fellow Georgian Luke Bryan hit No. 1 seven times, with hits like his current single “Kick the Dust Up,” as well as “Dirt Road Diary,” “Country Girl (Shake It for Me),” “I Don’t Want This Night to End,” “Play It Again,” “Rain Is a Good Thing,” and “That’s My Kind of Night.”
The Pickers will play in-the-round Aug. 1 at the Country Music Hall of Fame, performing some of those tunes in support of the museum’s new exhibit Luke Bryan: Dirt Road Diary.
The program is included in museum admission and is free to museum members and will be streamed on countrymusichalloffame.org/streaming.
July 4th Fun: Martina McBride in Nashville, Country At the Capitol, Lee Greenwood
/by Lorie HollabaughMartina McBride. Photo: Kristin Barlowe
Martina McBride will help freedom ring through the streets of downtown Nashville Saturday night at the city’s massive Fourth of July celebration. Striking Matches, Annie Bosko, Mikky Ekko, and Barry Scott are among the other artists joining the lineup for the “Music City July 4th: Let Freedom Sing” celebration. Fireworks choreographed to a live performance by the Nashville Symphony will begin at 9:30 p.m., following a performance by Martina at 8:10 p.m. at the event, which is expected to draw upwards of 300,000 people.
Music City locals looking for a spot to catch the fireworks a little above the massive crowds can head to the George, an open-air restaurant and bar on the roof of the new George Jones Museum on 2nd Ave. The George is hosting a special reserve seating event with a buffet dinner with a view of the Riverfront Stage, the fireworks, and the Cumberland River. Tickets are $200 and include admission to the museum as well, and seating will begin at 10 a.m.
Lee Greenwood
Lee Greenwood is making numerous appearances this week in support of his new patriotic children’s book Proud To Be An American. Greenwood will appear on Inside Edition, OK!TV, The Phil Valentine Show, All-American Summer Concert Series on FOX & Friends, SiriusXM and more.
Hank Williams Biopic Gets Black Friday Release Date
/by Eric T. ParkerTom Hiddleston (L) will star as Hank Williams.
Sony Classics—the worldwide distributor of I Saw The Light, the Hank Williams biopic starring English actor Tom Hiddleston—has set Black Friday (Nov. 27, 2015) as a release date for the big-screen retelling.
Written and directed by Marc Abraham, I Saw The Light is based on Colin Escott’s award-winning biography and additionally stars Elizabeth Olsen, Bradley Whitford, David Krumholtz and Cherry Jones. RatPac Entertainment’s Brett Ratner and Bron Studios’ Aaron L. Gilbert produced the film, with G. Marq Roswell and Abraham. James Packer of RatPac Entertainment and Jason Cloth of Creative Wealth Media Finance executive produced. Dante Spinotti was the cinematographer for the film.
The Thor actor will be imitating a southern drawl while singing “Your Cheatin’ Heart,” “I”m So Lonesome I Could Cry” and “Hey Good Lookin’,” titles obtained from licensing agreements with Sony/ATV by film producers. Rodney Crowell produced the music for the film.
The Hank Williams estate is controlled by Hank Jr. and Jett Williams.
DisClaimer: Innovative Sounds From Keith Urban, 2 Steps Back
/by Robert K OermannThe stars are out this Independence Day weekend, with new discs from Billy Currington, Buddy Jewell, Jake Owen, Sawyer Brown, Keith Urban and Kelsea Ballerini. Most of them are quite good, too.
Our two award winners today have one thing in common. Both of them are innovative sounding. Keith Urban wins a Disc of the Day prize for releasing a delightfully different song.
The DisCovery Award goes to 2 Steps Back, a male foursome with a refreshing song as well as an ear-opening production.
Have a great holiday, everyone.
SAWYER BROWN/We Got the Night
Writer: Bill Shore/David Wills/Alicia King; Producer: Mark A. Miller; Publisher: Plumas/Cherry Heart, BMI; Beach Street (CDX) (www.sawyerbrown.com)
—Anthemic, with a darkly romantic vibe. The minor key lends it extra sensuality.
KEITH URBAN/John Cougar, John Deere, John 3:16
Writer: Shane McAnally/Ross Copperman/Josh Osborne; Producer: Dann Huff & Keith Urban; Publisher: Smack Hits/SMACK Songs/Kobalt/EMI Blackwood/Songs By Red Room/Songs of Black River/One Little Indian Creek, GMR/BMI/ASCAP; Capitol/Hit Red (CDX)
—Quite cleverly written, with loads of pop-culture references and copious name dropping. Bonus points for sounding completely different and distinct from his many prior singles. This deserves to be a major, major smash.
CLAIRE PETRIE/Somewhere Off the Map
Writer: Callander/Montana; Producer: Jack Gale; Publisher: Universal/Mike Curb/Dandon Ranch, BMI; Playback (track)
—This sturdy country rocker romps with a steady rhythm. Petrie’s throaty vocal rides the toe-tapping track like a pro.
JAKE OWEN/Real Life
Writer: Ross Copperman/Ashley Gorley/Shane McAnally/Josh Osborne; Producer: Shane McAnally & Ross Copperman; Publisher: none listed; RCA (CDX)
—The good-time song is fairly simple, and its barely-there melody is even more so. The track is needlessly busy.
KELSEA BALLERINI/Dibs
Writer: Kelsea Ballerini/Josh Kerr/Ryan Griffin/Jason Duke; Producer: Forest Glen Whitehead & Jason Massey; Publisher: Songs of Black River/KNB/DSM Administration/Nyssa/Jason Duke, ASCAP; Black River (track)
—Ballerini follows her first trip to the top of the charts (“Love Me Like You Mean It”) with a trippy, hip hoppy, patter-happy ditty with rapid-fire lyrics and a bop that doesn’t stop. Endearingly youthful.
DANIEL ROMANO/The One That Got Away
Writer: Daniel Romano; Producer: Daniel Romano; Publisher: Daniel Romano/New West Independent/BMG Rights Management, SOCAN; New West (track) (www.danielromanomusic.com)
—This is kinda retro sounding, with its echo-chamber vocal, old-school songwriting and Nashville Sound production values. It’s not for everyone, but I found it oddly compelling. Definitely different, yet fascinating listening.
BILLY CURRINGTON/Drinkin’ Town with a Football Problem
Writer: Aarpm Henningsen/Brian Henningsen/Clara Henningsen/Elizabeth McDavid Elkins/Vanessa Ann Olivarez; Producer: Dann Huff; Publisher: none listed; Mercury (track)
—Romping and rousing, as you might expect from the title. Made for Friday-night mayhem.
DENNY HERRIN/Becky’s Bible

Writer: Chris Knight; Producer: Chris Beall; Publisher: none listed; DH (www.dennyherrin.com)
—This fellow is an up-and-comer on the Texas red dirt country scene. He grabs a-hold of this gripping Chris Knight song and doesn’t let go. The spare, punchy, country-rock track gives him just the right amount of space to deliver the lyric’s outlaw urgency. Highly recommended.
2 STEPS BACK/Boombox
Writer: none listed; Producer: Fred Mollin; Publisher: none listed; 2SB (track) (2sbmusic.com)
—Youthful, poppy, charming, catchy, tuneful, summery. Stunning production flourishes and a simply brilliant job of mixing.
BUDDY JEWELL/In the Misty Moonlight
Writer: Cindy Walker; Producer: Dave Moody; Publisher: none listed; Lamon (track) (www.lamonrecords.com)
—Jewell’s new CD is titled My Father’s Country, a collection of revived oldies that his late dad loved: “Singing the Blues,” “Behind Closed Doors,” “Galveston” and the like. His superbly resonant, effortlessly expressive voice polishes these gems with new luster. This ultra-melodic 1964 classic is especially appropriate since he used to sing songwriter Cindy Walker’s demos. But whichever track you choose, you will be in the presence of a world-class singer, guaranteed. Sing on, brother.
Song Great Red Lane Passes
/by Robert K OermannRed Lane
Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame member Red Lane has passed away at age 76.
Lane died Wednesday night, July 1, following a long battle with cancer. He is noted as the creator of such big hits as “Til’ I Get It Right” (Tammy Wynette, 1973), “Darling You Know I Wouldn’t Lie” (Conway Twitty, 1969) and “New Looks From an Old Lover” (B.J. Thomas, 1981).
Born Hollis DeLaughter on Feb. 9, 1939, he was a native of Bogalusa, Louisiana. His sharecropper father taught him to play guitar. The family moved around a lot, following farming seasons. Lane graduated high school in Indiana and joined the Air Force.
Trained as an airplane mechanic, he also performed music throughout his enlistment. While stationed in Hawaii, he performed on the Waikiki radio show Hawaii Calls. While stationed in Omaha, Nebraska in 1958, he began performing in area nightclubs six nights a week.
Following his discharge, Red Lane performed in Indiana, California, Arizona and Texas. Inspired by Willie Nelson, he began writing songs at this time. Singer-songwriter Justin Tubb urged Lane to send his songs to Tree Publishing in Nashville.
Tree’s Buddy Killen signed him as a staff songwriter in 1963 and helped Lane to move to Music City. Tubb hired him as a guitarist in his band. Red Lane scored his first songwriting hit when Faron Young took his “My Friend On the Right” up the charts in 1964.
Nelson recorded Lane’s “Blackjack County Chain” in 1967. Dottie West had a hit with their co-written “Country Girl” in 1968. The song inspired a series of popular Coca-Cola ad jingles for West. Red Lane became her bandleader, and the two collaborated on dozens of other songs.
Lane’s first top-10 success came when Waylon Jennings recorded “Walk On Out of My Mind” in 1968. He repeated the feat with Eddy Arnold’s recording of “They Don’t Make Love Like They Used To” in 1969. Twitty’s 1969 recording of “Darling You Know I Wouldn’t Lie” inspired Elvis Costello to re-record the song in 1994.
Bobby Bare, Roger Miller, Jack Palance, Wanda Jackson, Lee Hazelwood & Ann-Margret, Jimmy Dickens, Tommy Cash, Jack Greene & Jeannie Seely, Johnny Paycheck, George Jones, Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown, T.G. Sheppard and Connie Smith were among the many who recorded Red Lane songs in the 1960s and 1970s.
The songwriter also became a Nashville session guitarist. Chet Atkins signed him as a recording artist to RCA, and Lane scored a moderate-sized hit with “The World Needs a Melody” in 1971. The song was subsequently a single for Johnny Cash and was also recorded by The Kingston Trio, Bill Anderson, Mother Maybelle Carter, The Chuck Wagon Gang and others.
Lane’s other charted singles as an artist were “Set the World On Fire (With Love)” (1971), “It Was Love While It Lasted” (1972) and “Throw a Rope Around the Wind” (1972). The last named was on the soundtrack of the Robert Mitchum movie Going Home.
Red Lane and Merle Travis co-wrote the “Ride This Train” segments on The Johnny Cash Show on ABC-TV in 1969-71.
After Wynette hit the top of the charts with “Til I Get It Right” in 1973, the song was recorded by dozens of others, including Kenny Rogers, Englebert Humperdinck, Trisha Yearwood, Wynonna Judd, Millie Jackson, Solomon Burke, Bob Dylan and Highway 101.
Later in the decade, Lane forged a musical partnership with Merle Haggard, who recorded nearly 30 Red Lane songs. These included 1977’s “Ain’t Your Memory Got No Pride at All” and the 1979 hit “My Own Kind of Hat” (revived by Alan Jackson in 1999). Lane also played guitar on Haggard recording sessions and sometimes toured in the superstar’s band.
In 1981, B.J. Thomas hit No. 1 with Lane’s “New Looks From an Old Love” and John Conlee scored with “Miss Emily’s Picture.” Keith Whitley released Lane’s “Would These Arms Be in Your Way” in 1987, and the song was then recorded by Vern Gosdin, Mark Chesnutt, Daryle Singletary and more.
Others who recorded his songs in the 1980s and 1990s included Loretta Lynn, The Oak Ridge Boys, Ricky Van Shelton, Ray Charles, Doug Stone, Jack Greene, Joe Diffie, Skip Ewing, Waylon Jennings and Suzy Bogguss. Red Lane was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1993.
Lane’s success continued into the new millennium. George Strait had a hit with his “Tell Me Something Bad About Tulsa” in 2003. His songs appeared on albums by Lee Ann Womack, Reba McEntire, Joan Osborne, The Del McCoury Band and more. In 2010, he was honored at the Country Music Hall of Fame’s “Poets & Prophets” songwriter series.
The tunesmith led a colorful, unconventional lifestyle. He lived in an airplane fuselage grounded near Ashland City, TN and was an avid skydiver.
Show Dog Nashville Taps Chris Waters
/by Sarah SkatesChris Waters
Show Dog Nashville has appointed Chris Waters as Director of Southeast Regional Promotion. Waters brings extensive country music industry experience to the position including his most recent stint as Southeast Regional Manager at Warner Music Group. He previously held radio promotion roles at Sony Music Entertainment and Cumulus Media.
“Chris is an innovative promoter and I am excited to have him join the team,” said Rick Moxley, Show Dog Nashville’s VP Promotion. “His attitude, drive, experience and relationships will greatly benefit our team.”
“Having been a huge Toby fan for years, I am excited and honored to join my friends here at Show Dog Nashville,” adds Waters. “I cannot wait to get out and visit some ‘35 mph Towns’ across the southeast for some ‘Good Times & Pick Up Lines.’”
A native of Washington, North Carolina, Waters graduated from North Carolina Central University and moved to Nashville in 2003 to start a career in the music business.
He can be reached at chris.waters@showdogmail.com.
Garth Brooks Leads Country Stars On ‘Forbes’ List of Top Paid Celebrities
/by Troy_StephensonGarth Brooks
Forbes has released a new list of The World’s Highest-Paid celebrities, with several country artists included in the rankings.
The Top 5
No. 1 Floyd Mayweather $300 million
No. 2 Manny Pacquiao $160 million
No. 3 Katy Perry $135 million
No. 4 One Direction $130 million
No. 5 Howard Stern $95 million
Country Stars
No. 6 Garth Brooks $90 million
No. 8 Taylor Swift $80 million
No. 32 Toby Keith $53 million
No. 47 Jason Aldean $43.5 million
No. 48 Luke Bryan $42.5 million
No. 49 Kenny Chesney $42 million
No. 58 Tim McGraw $38 million
No. 61 Florida Georgia Line $36.5 million
No. 78 Zac Brown Band $32 million
No. 95 (tie) Miranda Lambert $28.5 million
No. 95 (tie) Blake Shelton $28.5 million
To see the entire list, click here.
According to Forbes, “Our list measures money earned from June 1, 2014 to June 1, 2015 before subtracting management fees and taxes; figures are based on data from Nielsen, Pollstar, Box Office Mojo and IMDB, as well as interviews with agents, managers, lawyers—and many of the stars themselves.”
WeddingNotes: Alison Toczylowski and Andrew Webber; Stephanie Quayle and David Couch
/by Kelsey_GradyWeekly Register: Kacey Musgraves Crowned With No. 1 Debut
/by Sarah SkatesThe critically acclaimed sophomore album is the follow-up to her Grammy winning debut album Same Trailer Different Park which also entered at No. 1 on the Billboard country albums chart. Musgraves co-wrote all of the tracks on Pageant Material as well as co-produced with Shane McAnally and Luke Laird. She celebrated the release last month in Nashville with a party at Play, complete with performances by drag queens.
Musgraves’ Mercury Nashville labelmate Canaan Smith also scored a top 5 debut, coming in at No. 4 country with 16,000 (12,000 album only). His debut album Bronco features hit single “Love You Like That” which has been certified Gold by the RIAA for digital sales in excess of 500,000. It garnered almost 33 million combined streams (total streaming partners). He worked with producers Brett Beavers, Jimmy Robbins, Ryan Tyndell and Luke Wooten on the project.
Elsewhere, Corey Smith’s Sugar Hill release entered the country chart with 3,100. He just wrapped a week of special events in Nashville surrounding the release, including concerts at Bluebird Café and Grand Ole Opry.
It’s worth noting that this is the mid-year point for 2015. As regular Weekly Register readers know, sales continue to slump:
YTD Albums
Overall -4 percent
Overall digital -.1 percent
Country -9.1 percent
Country digital -1.8 percent
YTD Tracks
Overall -10.4 percent
Country -15.8 percent
Starting July 10, the official worldwide release day for music will move to Fridays. Accordingly, the Nielsen SoundScan week will run Friday through Thursday.
*sales according to Soundscan
Bucky Covington is a ‘Happy Man’ With Release of New EP
/by Lorie HollabaughThe indie EP marks the first new music from Covington in three years, and was co-produced by Covington and Dale Oliver. Fans can pre-order the six-song collection and download the new single immediately.
“This project means a lot to me as an independent artist,” Bucky says. “The good part is that there’s no one telling me what songs to pick, and the bad part is no one is there to tell me what songs to pick or paying for making the music, so all the risk is on me. That said, I hope everyone loves it as much as I do!”
Happy Man EP track listing:
1. “I Feel Ya” (Eric Mallon, Ruben Estevez, Jason Afable)
2. “Girl You Get To Me” (Dale Oliver, Serg Salinas, Michael Harter)
3. “I’m Saying Something” (Matt Warren)
4. “Somewhere Looking Beautiful” (Bucky Covington, Dale Oliver, Dan Couch)
5. “Buzzin” (Brad Hull)
6. “Happy Man” (Shannon Lawson)