Mitch Glazier Opens Vanderbilt Music Law Summit With The Honorable John Squires Interview

John Squires and John Squires. Photo: Chad Driver

RIAA Chairman & CEO Mitch Glazier kicked off the third annual Vanderbilt Music Law Summit with The Honorable John Squires, Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of the United States Patent & Trademark Office, for a keynote conversation about the importance of preserving intellectual property for individuals.

The discussion centered around how AI policy should allow for innovation and copyright protection to coexist, with courts playing a central role in striking that balance, as well as how the legal system must adapt with each new technology and the immediate need to identify rights across all areas of IP as deepfakes blur lines across patents, trademarks and copyright.

The Vanderbilt Music Law Summit also brought together other industry, government and academia leaders for panels highlighting the evolving music landscape from a variety of perspectives.

Pivotal Economics Founder Will Page offered a look at the global value of music copyright, noting America’s prominence, and expanded on his latest report.

Vanderbilt Law School Professor Joe Fishman moderated “Race to the Future: The Developing Licensed AI Music Marketplace” alongside Chris Horton (EVP, Strategic Technology, Universal Music Group), Bob Brauneis (Professor of Law, George Washington University Law School), Lina Heyman (Acting CEO, STIM Sweden), Victoria Oakley (CEO, IFPI) and Thomas Hesse (Co-Founder, KLAY Vision). The panelist discussed how AI is impacting music across the globe, how laws are shaping in different countries and the responsible way innovation and creation can thrive through partnerships.

Caldecott Music Group VP, Creator Policy & Corporate Affairs and Recording Academy National Advocacy Committee Co-Chair Dani Deahl transformed the chat into a real-time demo, giving more practical insight into actual AI tools she uses in her own music career from companies that seek permission and compensate creators and rightsholders when developing models.

Acclaimed singer-songwriter, Artist Rights Alliance Board Member & Duke University Practitioner-in-Residence Tift Merritt and Duke Initiative for Science & Society Interim Director and Sanford School of Public Policy Professor of the Practice David Hoffman wrapped the sessions with a discussion on protecting working musicians, importance of all voices represented as technology advances and how an interdisciplinary approach is vital to understanding how each fits together.

Tift Merritt. Photo: Chad Driver

Pictured (L-R): Professor Joe Fishman (Vanderbilt Law School); Chris Horton (EVP, Strategic Technology, Universal Music Group); Bob Brauneis (Professor of Law, George Washington University Law School); Lina Heyman (Acting CEO, STIM Sweden); Victoria Oakley (CEO, IFPI) and Thomas Hesse (Co-Founder, KLAY Vision). Photo: Chad Driver

My Music Row Story: Farris, Self & Moore’s Stephanie Alderman



Stephanie Alderman



Stephanie Alderman serves as a Partner at Farris, Self & Moore, where she works closely with artists and their teams to support the financial and strategic side of their careers.

A Michigan native, Alderman began her career in music as a classically trained pianist before transitioning to the business side of the industry. She moved to Nashville in 2004 and built her career through a combination of internships, touring and hands-on experience across multiple areas of the business.

Following a 15 year tenure at Rashford Kruse, she joined FSM in 2021 and became a partner in 2023.

MusicRow: Where did you grow up? Tell me a little about your childhood.

Photo: Courtesy of Alderman

I grew up in Lansing, Michigan. I lived with my mom, my younger sister and my grandparents. My mom was an admin assistant at Michigan State, which is how she found out about the community music program there. She came home one day from work and asked, “Hey, do you want to take piano lessons?” I remember learning to read books and read music at the same time.

Music became pretty central: piano, church choir, all of it. But even when I was in high school, I was always watching what was happening around the music. I would go to concerts and stand outside counting production trucks. I’d watch concert DVDs and study the credits, figuring out who did what and who was responsible for which piece of it. Or I’d sit with the liner notes and read through everything. I didn’t know what any of it could become.

Did you go to school for music?

I did. And, for a long time, I was completely single-minded about it. I was going to be a concert pianist. That was the plan, full stop. It was such a huge part of my identity that I don’t think I could have imagined anything else.

I went to Interlochen Arts Academy, a performing arts boarding school in northern Michigan. Being surrounded by people who were equally serious about music, theater, dance and visual art made me start seeing the whole ecosystem differently. Not just the performance, but everything that holds it together.

My senior year there, I was practicing six to eight hours a day. I had this tendency to put my head down and push through anything, and I ended up developing carpal tunnel in my right wrist right before audition season. The doctor told me if I didn’t rest it, I could do more damage. I ended up cancelling several auditions because I had enough clarity to recognize that nobody auditions for a competitive conservatory program planning to take an immediate break after.

That was the first time in my life I had ever considered that my plan might not unfold the way I thought. I’d always just been head down, getting it done. There was a bit of panic. But looking back, there was also a little relief. I don’t think I was fully aware of the amount of pressure I’d put on myself.

Photo: Courtesy of Alderman

I still went to Michigan State for classical piano performance, because I was stubborn and wasn’t ready to admit I didn’t have it figured out. I went back to study with my professor, Deborah Moriarty, the chair of the piano department there. I learned an enormous amount from her. She knew long before I was willing to say it out loud that I would end up somewhere other than the stage. She was always very supportive in a way that went beyond just the music.

But I was also starting to feel the other thing: the stage fright and anxiety that had always been there, but I’d been suppressing. It came to a head right before my senior recital. I remember standing backstage with this very clear thought: I don’t need a degree. I could just walk out right now.

I obviously didn’t. Deborah intercepted that train of thought. I walked out, played the recital, and lived.

But in that moment, I knew. I love music, but maybe this is not for me. It was a gradual peeling of the onion to come to the idea that there’s a whole other world out there where I can still be really involved in music, even though it would not be onstage.

So what came next?

At Michigan State, I’d started taking some business classes alongside the performance degree. I interned with the jazz department, or more accurately, they humored me. I was doing admin and behind-the-scenes work, and I was probably not as useful to them as they were to me. But I soaked up everything I could. I was also reading every music industry book I could get my hands on. The curiosity about how the business worked had been there since the production trucks.

At that point, I thought my options were New York, LA, or Nashville. I had never even been to Nashville and didn’t know anyone in town. But I called a bunch of places and kept hearing the same thing: you have to be a student to intern. So I thought, fine. I’ll be a student.

And that’s what brought you to Belmont?

Photo: Courtesy of Alderman

Yes, though I initially signed up for Belmont’s music business program with no real intention of finishing a degree. I just knew I needed to get to Nashville and start building some experience and connections. What I didn’t expect was that I got close enough to finishing that I went ahead and completed it.

But the thing that really changed everything was getting involved with Service Corps, a student-led volunteer organization. We went to the ACM Awards in Las Vegas to work the radio remotes. I was assigned to a new artist who had just released his first single. His manager was there too, and at the end of the day the manager said pretty offhandedly, “Oh, you live in Nashville? You should call me when you get back.”

I don’t think he really meant it. I followed up anyway.

What did that lead to?

I interned for that manager for a bit before the artist eventually let him go. But I stayed on to do random things, and through that connection I started doing some work with the artist’s business manager at the time, Tom Rashford, who would later become my boss. I was also interning for Mary Hilliard Harrington, who had just started her own company and was the artist’s publicist at the time.

Mary opened doors for me, including introducing me to an opportunity to go on the road as a production assistant. I had zero road experience. I was the only female in the camp, living on a bus with 11 guys. I don’t have brothers, so that was a significant adjustment. Looking back, that stretch of time was formative in ways I never anticipated.

About a year into that first tour, my husband joined the camp. He’s had a long career on the road himself. When my role at FSM started demanding more, he retired from touring so he could be home with our three boys. None of this works without him, and I’m so thankful for his support.

How did you end up in business management?

It’s a little embarrassing in retrospect.

I would do a road gig, come back to Nashville, and find myself drifting back into Tom’s office to help with things. Then I’d do another road gig. Then come back. Over and over. I kept telling myself business management wasn’t really an industry job, that it was too peripheral, too far from the thick of it. I had moved to Nashville to be an artist manager. I had this whole plan in my head, and business management wasn’t my plan.

I actually said to Tom at some point: “I’ll help with whatever you need, but I don’t want my own clients. I’m not going to be a business manager.”

Photo: Courtesy of Alderman

What I didn’t understand yet was that business management is a role where you truly see the full picture. You’re not just managing money. You’re involved in decisions that shape the long-term trajectory of someone’s career and their life. It’s also where everything I’d learned on the road, in production, in publicity—all of it—came together.

The thing that finally grounded me was when I had my oldest son. I knew once we had kids, my husband and I couldn’t both stay on the road. I moved into the office more permanently, still “just helping.”

Then, a few weeks into maternity leave, I went to an office birthday lunch and realized the co-worker covering for me was dealing with some difficult personal stuff and was also out. I came back early. Baby in tow. And in a strange way, throwing myself back into work was exactly what I needed, because I was struggling more than I’d admitted. My husband was on the road, and I was going through postpartum depression. Work gave me something to hold onto. Once I had my own clients, there was a bit of a shift. I realized I actually did really love it. Never say never, I guess.

The partners at my prior firm were incredibly forward-thinking about all of it. I had a colleague who was going through almost the exact same season of life at the same time. We had our kids months apart and essentially propped each other up for years. I don’t know how we managed, other than it truly takes a village. But I’m grateful that my prior firm never made me feel like I had to choose between my family and my career. They had a lot of grace for me to keep coming back, and they gave me a lot of room to learn.

Where did you go from there?

I stayed at my prior firm for about 15 years. It was a small office, and through various circumstances over the years, I ended up taking on more and more responsibility, including eventually running day-to-day for the major client I’d first met at that ACM radio remote, who is still a client to this day.

Then COVID hit, and like everyone in this industry, we just dealt with it. In the middle of it, you don’t have the luxury of falling apart. But when things started coming back to normal, the burnout landed all at once. I realized I’d hit a ceiling. Not because anything was wrong, but because I’d stopped growing. I loved what we’d built, but I wasn’t fulfilled.

The hardest part of even entertaining the idea of leaving was the thought of walking away from the relationships—with clients, with colleagues, with people who had been a part of my professional life. The idea of disrupting them was genuinely agonizing.

How did FSM come into the picture? 

My brother-in-law, who is also in the industry, knew Stephanie Mundy Self. He mentioned that FSM had grown to the point where they needed to expand strategically to keep serving clients the right way.

I’d actually crossed paths with Stephanie years earlier while working for one of her clients when she was at another firm. When she, Kella [Farris] and Catherine [Moore] started FSM, my former colleague and I were quietly rooting for them from the sidelines—checking their website, watching them grow. I’m sure they had no idea. So when my brother-in-law mentioned they were looking to expand, I was curious enough to say yes to breakfast.

I told myself it was just a conversation.

Stephanie is very persuasive! But more than that, the timing was right and everything aligned. Had this come up a year earlier, I probably would have said no. I’d turned away approaches before, and some of those felt like people wanted access to clients more than they wanted me. This felt different. FSM was operating with the same values and culture I believe in. We all have different strengths and personalities, but the same foundation.

I kept thinking about how this was the second time I’d walked away from my plan. I didn’t really know what was going to happen. I just knew it would all work out. My husband will tell you he never expected me to make the move. It probably looked impulsive from the outside, but it wasn’t. I just trusted it.

What has been your favorite part about your time at Farris, Self & Moore?

Photo: Courtesy of Alderman

Besides working with our clients, I would say our team. The people at FSM make me want to be better and do better every single day. Watching them grow, investing in them, seeing them take ownership. That’s what drives me now more than almost anything else.

The moments I love most are when we can go to a client’s show together, when we step out from behind the desk and see what we’re actually a part of. That reminder of what all the work is for.

Who are your mentors?

So many people, and most of them wouldn’t even think of themselves that way.

Deborah Moriarty, my piano professor at Michigan State, was foundational. She saw something in me before I could see it myself and supported me in a way that went well beyond teaching piano. Mary Hilliard Harrington opened doors early on and took a chance on someone who barely knew what she was doing. Tom Rashford shaped my understanding of what it means to truly serve a client and how character defines a career.

And my partners, Stephanie, Kella and Catherine, who have shown me what it looks like to be a business owner, a leader, a mom, and a friend all at the same time, without pretending any of it is easy.

The truth is, I’ve learned from everyone I’ve worked with. I’ve had a lot of help along the way.

What is the best advice you’ve ever gotten?

Your reputation is all you have, so use it wisely. Every decision either builds it or spends it.

What are you most proud of in your career?

Making the move to FSM. It was simultaneously one of the hardest and best decisions I’ve made. The relationships I was most afraid of losing, I didn’t lose them. It turned out to be the thing I didn’t need to worry about. This business doesn’t usually end up how you plan it—my path certainly didn’t. And I wouldn’t change a thing.

Kylie Morgan Slates New Album ‘Healed Cowgirl Pt. 1’

Kylie Morgan will release her new album, Healed Cowgirl Pt. 1, on April 10.

Morgan co-penned all eight tracks on the album, with writing collaborators featuring Emily Landis, Johnny Clawson, Sarah Buxton and more. Themes across the project include healing after heartbreak, emotional upheaval, and personal rebirth. Among the album’s track list are the already released “Then You Happened,” “1-(800) Dump Him,” “Like My Own,” and “Break Up With Me.”

“This album is the most vulnerable and exciting body of work I’ve ever put out,” shares Morgan. “I had the hardest year of my life last year in every element, and songwriting became the thing I relied on most to get through it. You see every stage of the healing process through every track. All the emotions that led me from heartbreak to letting go to finally living not only a new chapter, but what feels like a whole new book in life. As we start my first-ever world tour named after the project, you can also hear the songs I wrote specifically for my live set—to bring the energy I’m known for bringing to my fans on the road. This project is not just mine, it’s ours.”

Morgan is currently amidst her “Healed Cowgirl World Tour,” which will make stops in Indianapolis, Seattle, Omaha and more. She will then join BRELAND for their co-headline run beginning in May.

Healed Cowgirl Pt. 1  Tracklisting:
1. “You Had Me At Howdy” (Kylie Morgan/Jess Cayne/Brock Westover)
2. “Then You Happened” (Kylie Morgan/Eric Arjes/Levi Hummon)
3. “Hell Bent” (Kylie Morgan/Sam & Walker Tuten)
4. “Love And Country Music” (Forest Finn/Emily Landis/Kylie Morgan/Mike Walker)
5. “1(800) – DUMP HIM” (Jeff Garrison/Kylie Morgan/Nelly Reeves)
6. “Cool It Cowboy” (Sarah Buxton/Nate Miles/Scott Stepakoff/Kylie Morgan)
7. “Like My Own” (Kylie Morgan/Kasey Tyndall/Aaron Zuckerman)
8. “Break Up With Me” (Sarah Buxton/Johnny Clawson/Kylie Morgan)

Billy Strings Adds Fall Dates To 2026 Headline Tour

Billy Strings. Photo: Joshua Black Wilkins

Billy Strings is extending his headline tour through the fall.

Newly confirmed stops include shows in Denver, San Diego, New Orleans, Huntsville, Baltimore, and many others through December. Strings will perform theater shows in select cities, and to be eligible for a chance to buy tickets for the Paramount Theatre (Denver), Orpheum Theatre (Los Angeles) and Saenger Theatre (New Orleans) shows, fans must purchase a ticket for one of that city’s corresponding arena dates. Eligibility for the ticket request period ends on April 6 and full details can be found here.

Ahead of his fall run, Strings will continue his extensive headline tour through the spring with stops in Boston, Charlottesville, Portland and more. Strings’ first annual “Iona Freak Fair” will also take place this summer, featuring performances from Strings, Sierra Hull, Greensky Bluegrass and more.

Graffiti Sound & Casual Records Launch Joint Venture

Pictured (L-R): Heather Vassar, John Gray, Stephen Kirk and Jenna Andrews. Photo: Shervin Lainez

Graffiti Sound and Casual Records have launched a new joint venture label.

The label will be led by Graffiti Sound founders Jenna Andrews and Stephen Kirk, and Casual Records founder Heather Vassar. The news follows Vassar’s recent appointment to Senior Vice President, Nashville at The Orchard.

“This partnership with Jenna and Stephen is about building a label that leads, not follows,” says Vassar. “We’re here to break records, develop careers, and redefine what a modern label can be. Being able to combine my experience with these elite hitmakers is to create a new standard for how records and artists are developed with our energy, vision and hustle.”

“When we first met Heather, I knew that she was aligned with our vision to break artists,” adds Kirk. “Her attention to detail and true passion for music is what makes us such a great partnership.”

Initial signings and releases under the new label are expected to be announced soon.

Nicholas Jamerson Signs With Why & How Management & CAA

Pictured (L-R): Jacob Lapidus (CAA), John Smithwick (W&H), Nicholas Jamerson, Halie Hampton Mosley (W&H), Eddie Kloesel (W&H) and Michael Bornstein (CAA)

Nicholas Jamerson has signed with Why And How Management and CAA.

Born into a musical family in eastern Kentucky where gatherings were full of guitars and songs, Jamerson got his start playing piano and singing in the choir as a child. He later added guitar, banjo and mandolin to his repertoire, and after college, co-founded the band Sundy Best. Jamerson has since released a dozen records between Sundy Best and his solo work over the last 13 years. His latest album, The Narrow Way, is a soul-stirring blend of mountain wisdom and familial remembrance, written by someone that carries the weight of memory, the fire of purpose, and the humility of a man still learning.

“My grandmother always had a camera rolling, which taught me early on that life is worth documenting,” says Jamerson. “That’s what I try to do through songwriting: turn ordinary moments into something meaningful. Music has taken me places I never dreamed, like the Ryman and the Grand Ole Opry, but more than anything, it’s a way for me to honor place and people, and to help others feel seen and proud of where they come from.”

Jessie Brackin Signs With RED Creative Group

Photo: Courtesy of Red Creative Group

Songwriter Jessie Brackin has signed a publishing deal with RED Creative Group.

An Alabama native, Brackin first began coming to Nashville for co-writes in 2023. On her first visit, became a member of NSAI.  She caught the attention of RED Creative Group’s Kaileen Mangan Smith while performing at NSAI’s Summer 2025 Showcase Luncheon.

“I knew Jessie was special the first time I heard her music,” says Mangan Smith. “I’m incredibly grateful she’s placed her trust in me and Red, and I can’t wait to see all that we accomplish together.”

“Jessie is a natural songwriter with an authenticity that cuts through. Her songs feel honest, effortless, and built to last,” says RED Creative Group’s Jeremy Stover. “We’re excited to have her as part of the Red Creative family.”

“I’m beyond grateful to join the Red Creative team, and so thankful to Kaileen and Jeremy for taking a chance on me,” says Brackin. “This opportunity means everything – I’ve dreamed about this my entire life, and it still feels surreal to call it my job. I’m so excited for what’s to come.”

Mark Your Calendar—April 2026

Single/Track Releases & Radio Add Dates:

Belles & Dolly Parton. Photo: ashtronot

April 3
Dan + Shay/Say So/Warner Records Nashville
Lee Brice/When The Kingdom Comes/Curb Records
49 Winchester/Slowly/New West Records/Lucille Records/MCA
Hayden Blount/Hope It Was Fun/Santa Anna Nashville
Thelma & James/Alternate Ending/Big Loud Records
Walker Montgomery/Saving The Honky Tonks/Red Street Records
Slade Coulter/Lucky
Jake Hoot & Jamie Floyd/The Blade
Waylon Payne/Looking For A Feeling/Big Loud Texas
Brayden Stewart/Keep On Walking/Santa Anna Nashville
Jared Redden/Addicted/Santa Anna Nashville
Keyland/Pinball Machine Rodeo Queen/One Riot
Shannon Clark/Calls Me Home
Sarah Harralson/It Can’t Rain All The Time

April 6
William Clark Green/Stubborn and Remains
Tristan Roberson/I Can’t Get Over You/Tristan Roberson Music, LLC

April 10
Niko Moon/GEORGIA (ROOTS)/Empire
Annie Bosko/God Winks (Pop Version)/QHMG/Stone Country Records
Lakelin Lemmings/Life of Mine/QHMG/Quartz Hill Records

April 13
Parmalee/God Knew Better/Stoney Creek Records
James Tamelcoff/Cowgirl At Heart/James Tamelcoff Music

April 17
Belles & Dolly Parton/Son of Jolene
Matt Cooper/Vices/QHMG/Quartz Hill Records
Ben Gallaher/I’ll Take You (Taylor Gold Acoustic Version)/QHMG/Stone Country Records
Matt Rogers/Grandma’s House
Levi Foster/Fat Elvis

April 20
Ian Munsick/Love Is Blind/WEST TO THE REST RECORDS/Triple Tigers Records
Jet Jurgensmeyer/Nothing On You/Simba Entertainment, LLC
Adysen Malek/Whiskey After Women/Write On Records

April 24
Bryan Ruby/Room To Breathe

April 27
Tim & The Glory Boys/If I Go Missin’/Buckaroo Records
Lakelin Lemmings/Get Around Boy/QHMG/Quartz Hill Records
Celeste Marie Wilson/Jesus, Tequila, & Whiskey/Little Dipper Records

 

Album/EP Releases:

April 3
Various Artists/Main Street Country/Walt Disney Records
Sam Barber/Broken View/Outpost/Lockeland Springs
Paul Cauthen/Book of Paul
Luke Grimes/Redbird/MCA
The Droptines/Drought Flower/Big Loud Texas
Joe Pernice/Sunny, I Was Wrong/New West Records
Zachary Baker/Dark Horse/VNGNZ RECORDS
Jonah Pierce/Born For It/Santa Anna Nashville
Waxed/The Continental Way/Missing Piece Records

April 8
FORREST FRANK/DAWN PATROL

April 10
Ella Langley/Dandelion/SAWGOD/Columbia Records
Hayden Coffman/Goner
Tenille Townes/The Acrobat
Alex Miller/MORE COUNTRY THAN YOU/Billy Jam Records

April 17
Cameron Whitcomb/Deep Water/Atlantic Outpost
Owen Riegling/In The Feeling/Universal Music Canada/Big Loud Records
Benjamin Tod/Vengeance and Grace/Thirty Tigers
Benny G/When You Know You Know/Sony Music Nashville/Free Flight Records
Brooke Lee/Desert Darling/Spirit Nashville Recordings/2Mix Music
Nicole Alexis/Mirrors and Smoke

April 24
Noah Kahan/The Great Divide/Mercury Records
Jason Aldean/Songs About Us/BBR Music Group/BMG
Jackson Dean/Magnolia Sage/Blue Highway Records
Ringo Starr/Long Long Road/UMe
2 Lane Summer/Flawless/QHMG/Quartz Hill Records
Krislyn Arthurs/Honky Tonk PhD

 

Industry Events:

April 13
CMA Triple Play Awards

April 14
AIMP Nashville Awards

April 15
37th Annual Pollstar Awards

April 19-21
HITS HOME Conference

April 24-26
Stagecoach Festival

 

Upcoming Nashville Concerts:

Riley Green. Photo: David Higgs

April 1
Max McNown/Ryman Auditorium
NateWantsToBattle/Phantom Burial Tour/The Basement East
Hannah Cohen/The Blue Room
Jesse Roper/Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 2
Max McNown/Ryman Auditorium
Vincent Neil Emerson/The Basement East
Fleshwater/EXIT/IN

April 3
Chris Tomlin/Good Friday Nashville/Bridgestone Arena
The Format/Ryman Auditorium
Peekaboo/Skydeck on Broadway
YFN Lucci/Cannery Hall (Mainstage)
Tyler Farr/EXIT/IN
Chandra Currelley/City Winery
Slomosa/The Blue Room
House Party./Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 4
Chris Lake/The Pinnacle
Zara Larsson/Midnight Sun Tour/Marathon Music Works
Indigo de Souza/The Basement East
Tejon Street Corner Thieves/Cannery Hall (The Mil)
John Craigie/EXIT/IN
Nick Hexum/City Winery
Lala Lala/The Blue Room
Cat Clyde/Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 6
Sebastian Bach/Cannery Hall (Mainstage)
Carly Pearce/City Winery

April 7
Bob Moses & Cannons/The Pinnacle
Steel Panther/Twenty Twenty $ex Tour/Brooklyn Bowl
Emo Orchestra with The Spill Canvas/Cannery Hall (Mainstage)
Various Arists/TONS Live!/The Basement East
Natalie Layne/Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 8
Various Artists/Freely Fest/Bridgestone Arena
Various Artists/BRELAND & Friends/Ryman Auditorium
Emperor/The Emperial Wrath Tour/Brooklyn Bowl
Ashes to Amber/Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 9
Various Artists/Hollow Crown Tour/The Basement East
City of the Sun/Cannery Hall (The Mil)
Casey James/City Winery
Brad Stank/The Blue Room
Harvey Street/Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 10
RICARDO ARJONA/LO QUE EL SECO NO DIJO/Bridgestone Arena
Moonchild/Waves Tour/Brooklyn Bowl
Various Artists/Spring For Moore/The Basement East
OJ da Juiceman/Cannery Hall (The Mil)
Kendall Street Company/EXIT/IN
the Surfaris/City Winery
Field Medic/The Blue Room
Racoma/Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 11
The Avett Brothers & Mike Patton/AVTT/PTTN/The Pinnacle
Brother Cane/The Basement East
Jorma Kaukonen & John Hurlbut/City Winery
Redd Kross/The Blue Room
Lil Xan/Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 12
Third Day/30th Anniversary Tour/Bridgestone Arena
The Devil Wears Prada/Flowers Tour/Brooklyn Bowl
Ashes Remain/”What I’ve Become 15 Year Anniversary Tour/EXIT/IN
Johnathan Butler/City Winery
Wild Party/Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 13
The Growlers/Brooklyn Bowl
Malevolence & Guilt Trip/Cannery Hall (The Mil)

April 14
Lamb of God/Into Oblivion Tour/Municipal Auditorium
Melrose Avenue/The Basement East
BRONCHO/Cannery Hall (The Mil)
El DeBarge/City Winery
They Are Gutting A Body Of Water/The Blue Room
Anand Wilder/Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 15
Voxtrot/The Basement East
Allie X/Cannery Hall (The Mil)
Steinza/EXIT/IN
The Belair Lip Bombs/The Blue Room

April 16
The Academy Is…/Almost Here. 20th Anniversary Tour/Brooklyn Bowl
Phoneboy/The Basement East
Ashley Kutcher/EXIT/IN
Ruthie Foster/City Winery
Eliza McLamb/The Blue Room
Various Artists/Match Records Showcase/Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 17
Sports/Cannery Hall (The Mil)
Sarah Kinsley/EXIT/IN
Peabo Bryson/City Winery
Delicate Steve/The Blue Room
Never Ending Fall/Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 18
Riley Green/Cowboy As It Gets Tour/Bridgestone Arena
LANY/The Pinnacle
Baby Keem/The Ca$ino Tour/Marathon Music Works
Calum Scott/The Avenoir Tour/Brooklyn Bowl
Various Artists/Nash MoonFest/Cannery Hall (Mainstage)
The Moss/The Basement East
Perreo Electrico/Cannery Hall (The Mil)
Outlaws & Blackhawk/9th Annual Freeborn Jam/City Winery
El Khat/The Blue Room

April 19
The Black Dahlia Murder/Brooklyn Bowl
Pop Evil/The What Remains Tour/The Basement East
Zinadelphia/EXIT/IN

April 20
Black Pistol Fire/Flagrant Act of Bliss/The Basement East
Various Artists/420-A-Thon/Riverside Revival

April 21
Styx/Ryman Auditorium
GoldFord/Space of The Heart Tour/Brooklyn Bowl
Cut Worms/The Basement East
Pump Action and The Retrograde/Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 22
Gov’t Mule & Larkin Poe/The Pinnacle
Curren$y/The Winners Circle Tour/Marathon Music Works
Health x Carpenter Brut/Brooklyn Bowl
Thomas Dolby/Cannery Hall (Mainstage)
AJ Lee & Blue Summit/The Basement East
Frog/Cannery Hall (The Mil)
Faetooth/The Blue Room
The Yawpers/Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 23
Hunter Hayes/The Evergreen Tour/Brooklyn Bowl
Robyn Hitchcock/Live and Electric/The Basement East
Lee Fields & The Expressions/EXIT/IN
Gatlin/The Blue Room
Fantastic Cat/Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 24
The Maine/I Love You But… I Chose The Maine/Marathon Music Works
Driveways/The Basement East
Kid Congo Powers & The Pink Monkey Birds/The Blue Room
Jack The Underdog/Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 25
Hayley Williams/Ryman Auditorium
Microwave/”Much Love” 10 Year Anniversary Tour/Brooklyn Bowl
Electric Feels/Cannery Hall (Mainstage)
In Color/The Basement East
Gorilla Zoe/EXIT/IN
Howie Day/City Winery
Ritt Momney/The Blue Room
Various Artists/Nashville miniFEST/Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 26
Crowder/The Pinnacle
Snarky Puppy/Ryman Auditorium
The Gray Havens/Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 27
Hayley Williams/Ryman Auditorium
Two Feet/The Next Steps Tour/Marathon Music Works
Tripping Daisy/The Basement East
Virginia Man x Sun Child/Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 28
Hayley Williams/Ryman Auditorium
Chameleons/Arctic Moon Tour/The Basement East
Armand Hammer/The Blue Room

April 29
RAYE/Ryman Auditorium
The Head & The Heart/Jam For Good/Brooklyn Bowl
Jake Worthington/Intent to Tonk/The Basement East
The Brudi Brothers/EXIT/IN
Cate/Cannery Hall (Row One Stage)

April 30
Searows/Death in the Business of Whaling/The Basement East
Cass McCombs/The Blue Room

The Band Perry Inks With Borchetta Entertainment Group

Pictured (L-R): Shelby Marvel, Johnny Costello, Kimberly Perry and Scott Borchetta. Photo: Courtesy of Borchetta Entertainment Group

The Band Perry has signed to the new Borchetta Entertainment Group management division. Additionally, Shelby Marvel has joined the Borchetta Entertainment Group team.

The duo, which now consists of Kimberly Perry and Johnny Costello, returned to Nashville Harbor Records & Entertainment last year, releasing their first single in nine years, “PSYCHOLOGICAL,” in February.

“Kimberly and I have had so many incredible successes in the past, and as we’ve both entered this new season, we’re finding we’re more aligned than ever,” says CEO/Founder Scott Borchetta. “She is one of the greatest live frontwomen of all-time and her musical vision has never been clearer. This is going to be a beautiful era for The Band Perry.”

“There are very few people who truly see your vision and fight for it the way Scott has always fought for mine,” adds Perry. “Being apart for a moment only made it clearer how rare that kind of belief is. I’m obsessed with building this second chapter with him. I’m incredibly proud of everything we’ve built so far and wildly excited about everything we’re about to.”

“Partnering with Scott Borchetta and Borchetta Entertainment Group comes down to shared values—believing in artists, doing the work, and building something that lasts,” says Marvel. “Stepping into Season 2 of The Band Perry with someone who’s been in their corner since day one makes it that much more meaningful. I’m proud to also bring Trey Pendley and Kendell Marvel into what we’re building together.”

The band is currently on the Psycho Rodeo Tour and will perform at Nissan Stadium during CMA Fest 2026.

Sam Tinnesz Inks With Reservoir Media [Exclusive]

Sam Tinnesz. Photo: Ryan Sims

Sam Tinnesz has inked a publishing deal with Reservoir Media.

Based in Nashville, the Platinum-selling singer-songwriter’s catalog has surpassed eight billion global streams and generated more than nine billion views on TikTok. Tinnesz is best known for his Platinum-certified single “Play With Fire” and the Gold-certified “Legends Are Made.”

Tinnesz co-wrote Sum 41’s No. 1 alternative radio single, “Dopamine,” and his collaboration with Kygo, “Don’t Give Up On Love,” reached the Top 40 on Billboard’s Dance/Electronic charts. His tracks have earned placements across major television series, including Grey’s Anatomy, Riverdale and American Ninja Warrior, as well as in national campaigns for brands such as Target, Jeep, Toyota, Xbox, PlayStation, Pepsi and T-Mobile.

Tinnesz was recently named the official lead singer of the Savannah Firefighters, the rival team of the popular exhibition baseball team the Savannah Bananas. He is currently on a 33-date stadium tour with the team for their 2026 season.

“Reservoir feels like home to me, and their long history of being advocates for their creatives speaks for itself,” shares Tinnesz. “I have known the members of this team for over a decade and watched the impact they’ve had on Nashville. It was definitely time for me to join in on the fun! Excited to see all we are able to accomplish in joining forces!”

“Sam is an exceptional songwriter and artist with a distinct voice and a proven ability to create music that resonates across film, television, and the global streaming landscape,” adds John Ozier, Reservoir Executive Vice President of Creative. “We’re thrilled to welcome him to Reservoir and look forward to supporting the next chapter of his career as he continues to push creative boundaries and connect with audiences worldwide.”