
Julian King
Don’t miss Grammy winning Engineer/Producer Julian King on The Producer’s Chair on Thursday, June 26, at Douglas Corner at 6 p.m. Details at www.theproducerschair.com.
Long known as a Grammy Award-winning studio engineer,
Julian King has quietly made a name for himself as a record producer as well. In one capacity or another, he has been involved with records that have sold more than 100 million units.
King has worked with a who’s-who of Nashville superstars, including such huge hit makers as
Tim McGraw, Toby Keith, Tracy Lawrence, Clint Black, Martina McBride, Vince Gill, Charlie Daniels, Hank Williams Jr., Randy Travis, Brooks & Dunn, Trace Adkins, Alabama and
Jo Dee Messina. He earned a Grammy as the recording engineer of Faith Hill’s 1999 multi-million-selling, pop-crossover sensation
Breathe. And, his credits extend to some of the hottest young acts in town, such as
Tyler Farr, Chris Young, Justin Moore, Brett Eldredge and
Casey James.
In 2007, he reunited with
Tracy Lawrence and co-produced the star’s CMA Award winning hit “Find Out Who Your Friends Are” which featured
Tim McGraw and
Kenny Chesney. As an engineer his notable work includes
Lee Ann Womack’s 2005 CMA Album of the Year
There’s More Where That Came From and multi-Platinum albums by
Sugarland.
Raised by parents who were both school principals in Charlottesville, VA, King attended nearby James Madison University as a music major. He planned to be a professional trumpet player but that changed when he started off running sound for bar bands on the college circuit.
In 1987, during his junior year, King got an internship working as “an assistant to the assistant” engineer at recording sessions for producer
Jimmy Bowen, with his staff of engineers at Sound Stage, Emerald Studios and Masterfonics. The internship was set up by his advisor,
Rich Barnett, and
Merlin Littlefield. At the end of Julian’s internship they offered him a job, which he started after completing his music degree.
Working under producer Bowen, King was instantly in sessions with such Country superstars as
George Strait. While working on an album with
Charlie Daniels, King was teased by the star for being a trumpeter. Eventually, Daniels not only asked King to play trumpet on the record, he paid for King to join the Musicians Union.
King soon became a favorite of top producers
James Stroud and
Byron Gallimore. He recalls that some of the earliest No. 1 hits he engineered were the career-launching singles by
Tracy Lawrence and
Clay Walker. One of his favorite projects from those early years is the 1992
John Anderson CD
Seminole Wind. In 1993, he was tapped to engineer the debut of then-unknown, McGraw. King has engineered every McGraw album since. He also helped create the sound that kick started
Toby Keith’s career.
The entire community has learned to rely on his skills. One reason for King’s unerringly good “ear” is the fact that he is a recording engineer who is also a formally trained musician. You might even find him listed as a musician on a hit or two.
“That music degree does come in handy sometimes,” he says, “particularly on sessions with string players where music scores are involved. It took me a while to adapt, but now I find that the [musical shorthand] Nashville Number System is more useful on a day to day basis.”
The Producer’s Chair: Who have been your mentors through the years?
Julian King: I learned the bulk of what I know from the engineers that I worked for back then:
Chuck Ainlay, Steve Marcantonio, John Guess, Steve Tillisch and especially from
Lynn Peterzell. Lynn had a heart attack at the studio and died tragically at age 39. I learned so much from Lynn. He was my real mentor. Everything I know, I learned from watching and listening to those guys and then playing with the gear and the music on my own time.
With so many concerned parties, how do you manage to please everyone in the studio?
It’s been my experience that artists, producers and record labels all have the same general goal, but frequently differ on how to reach it. I feel that it’s my job to recognize the merits of each party’s ideas and then help them all come together. I have been fortunate to work with so many talented artists, producers and musicians through the years and am proud of the body of work that we have assembled.
What is your biggest strength in the studio?
I think, the ability to see that a record has many small elements that come together to make it whole. Each piece has to complement the next in order for the record to be the best that it can be. Seeing all these things come together is really satisfying.
Now that you are also producing major artists, which do you enjoy the most, engineering or producing?
Graduating into producing was thrilling but, in the end, I want to put a career together where I can be both a producer and an engineer. I think I will always engineer, as long as they’ll have me. That’s how much I love being in the recording studio.
What have been some of the biggest highlights of your career?
One of the things I look back on fondly is having worked with
George Jones, George Strait, Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson and
Merle Haggard and many other Country music icons. There aren’t very many folks who can say they got to do that.
Some artists prefer today’s ’80s rock-sounding production and some do not. Which do you prefer and why?
I do not have a preference as long as we make music that comes off as honest for the artist.
When you are producing a new artist, what is the biggest factor that determines the production sound that you create around the artist’s voice?
It is such a lyrically driven format and I feel like the songs have to fit the artist. You can’t have them singing about things they don’t directly relate to. Once the songs are chosen each one has its specific parameters. It is hard to put a single element on every song that glues them together, you have to rely on the artist’s performance to be the glue.
Given the increase in rock-influenced Country, what do you think will happen to the overall Country genre?
The genre has always evolved but I would not be shocked to see it split into two formats someday—one focusing on the rocking thumpin’ stuff and one focusing on more traditional Country. There are a lot of more traditional songs on the hot albums today but they just aren’t getting through the gatekeepers to the listeners.
Which producer has taught you the most valuable lesson about producing, and what was that lesson?
I have been fortunate to work with a lot of great producers but I think the best lesson I’ve learned is something that I see
James Stroud and
Byron Gallimore do. I try and let the musicians and artists give me what they hear first without my clouding their minds with how I have envisioned it. More times than not they deliver! If for some reason it’s not what I am looking for we can talk and make adjustments after they have put their initial thoughts down.
Who are you currently producing and looking for material for?
Jim Catino and I are in the middle of recording
Tyler Farr and I am also co-producing
Casey James, with Casey.
Edison Study: AM/FM Comprises 52 Percent of All Listening Sources
/by Jessica NicholsonEdison Research‘s new “Share of Ear” study has found that Americans spend an average of four hours and five minutes per day listening to various audio sources. More than 52 percent of that time goes to broadcast radio on all its various platforms. New sources of audio, such as Pandora and Spotify, Satellite Radio and television music channels including Music Choice account for nearly a quarter of all listening. A listener’s personal music collection receives more than 20 percent “share of ear.”
The results come from a representative sample of 2,096 Americans, age 13 and older, who completed a 24-hour audio listening diary during May 2014.
The study provides the first consistent measurement of all audio consumption, including AM/FM radio stations, online radio stations, podcasts and listeners’ own music collections. The Edison Research “Share of Ear” study allowed users to consider audio usage across various parameters, including location of listening, the devices on which audio is consumed, listening by time of day, audio content type (music, news, sports, or talk) and also across individual brands within the online radio space.
“Edison’s Share of Ear study is a response to the many requests from all corners of the audio industry and investment community for ‘total share of everything’ figures that did not previously exist,” says Edison President Larry Rosin. “Edison reported last September that America is in a ‘golden age of audio consumption.’ Seeing that Americans spend roughly a fourth of their waking day listening to some sort of audio confirms it.”
Eddie DeGarmo To Retire From CCMPG
/by Sarah SkatesEddie DeGarmo
President of Capitol CMG Publishing (CCMGP) Eddie DeGarmo will retire effective July 31, 2014, Bill Hearn, President/CEO of Capitol Christian Music Group (CCMG) and Evan Lamberg, President, North America, Universal Music Publishing Group (UMPG) announced today. Throughout the remainder of the year, DeGarmo will serve in an exclusive advisory role to Hearn, who will oversee, on an interim basis, day-to-day operations of the publishing company with CCMGP SVP Casey McGinty and Brentwood Benson Music Publications SVP Johnathan Crumpton.
“I’ve had the privilege and honor of working alongside and learning from Eddie for more than 20 years,” said Hearn. “Eddie is one of those extraordinary talents in the music industry with an uncanny ability to combine his gifted creative skills as an artist and writer with those of a strong business leader and developer of people. I will certainly miss working with him on a day-to-day basis but more importantly our industry will never be the same without his presence. He is truly one of a kind and his footprint on our community can never be filled.”
“Eddie DeGarmo is a rare and special music publishing executive who has helped build the single greatest Christian music publishing catalog our industry has ever seen. Not only does he understand the business incredibly well, but he connects with songwriters and artists at a very unique level. We will miss Eddie dearly and on a personal note, I have loved working with him over the last 20 years,” said Lamberg.
“My years at EMI and now Capitol CMG Publishing have been the capstone of a truly wonderful journey with music,” said DeGarmo. “I can’t imagine a better scenario and group of people to work alongside. I’ve had the honor of dreaming with most of the best songwriters in the business, coupled with the very ‘best in class’ staff and organization. I can’t thank Bill Hearn enough for his belief in me to build Capitol CMG Publishing. Bill is a true visionary as well as my dear friend. I also thank my longtime friend Evan Lamberg for his support. He has been instrumental in creating Capitol CMG Publishing, investing the strength of Universal Music Publishing Group fully into the Christian music genre.”
Throughout his over forty years in music, DeGarmo has had a storied career with success as an artist, songwriter, producer and businessman. He was one of the pioneers of contemporary Christian music as part of rock duo DeGarmo & Key, which was recently inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame. DeGarmo has sold millions of albums and garnered numerous Grammy and Dove Award nominations. He co-founded ForeFront Records, where he developed multi-platinum and Grammy winning artists dc Talk, Stacie Orrico, Audio Adrenaline and Rebecca St. James. DeGarmo eventually sold ForeFront to EMI Christian Music Group to focus on his new venture, Meaux Music Publishing. In 2002, he rejoined EMI CMG as President of Publishing, and Meaux was subsequently acquired by EMI CMG in 2005. Under DeGarmo’s leadership, EMI CMG Publishing was named Christian Music Publisher of the Year every year since 2004 by both Billboard and ASCAP. In 2013, DeGarmo led the merger of EMI CMG Publishing with Brentwood Benson Music Publishing to create Capitol CMG Publishing, which holds the 2014 Christian Music Publisher of the Year title with BMI, ASCAP and Billboard.
Capitol CMG Publishing’s roster includes many of the industry’s top songwriters, such as TobyMac, Michael W. Smith, Kirk Franklin, Chris Tomlin, Casting Crowns, Third Day, Mandisa, Jeremy Camp, David Crowder, Matt Redman, Ben Glover, Chris Stevens, Aaron Lindsey, David Garcia, Tim Hughes, Jamie Grace, Brenton Brown and Leeland. CCMGP also encompasses many of the world’s most prominent Christian music catalogs, including sixsteps, Thankyou Music, Integrity, Hillsong, Gaither, Maranatha! Music, Emack (the publishing catalog of Gotee Records), the Lorenz Creative Services catalogs, Reunion Music (including the Eric Clapton hit “Change The World”) and the evergreen Sparrow catalogs. Songs from these historic catalogs have been recorded by music legends including Bob Dylan, Dolly Parton, Ray Charles, Linda Ronstadt, Amy Grant, Elvis Presley and Willie Nelson.
T-Mobile Offers Music Streaming Services Free of Data Charges
/by Jessica NicholsonThe new free service is in response to smartphone users concerned that they might consume their data allowances to listen to the various music services.
T-Mobile CEO John Legere stated, “Even when you exhaust your high-speed data bucket, you will still stream music free at a high speed. As a committed music freak, I’m personally outraged at the way the other guys are using the music you love to lure you into over-priced plans with sweet ‘promotional offers’ that quickly roll into higher prices or trigger those absurd overage charges. Music should be free of all that. Music should have no limits. So, beginning right now, you can stream all you want at T-Mobile from all of the top music services – data charges do not apply.”
MusicRowPics: 26th Annual MusicRow Awards
/by Jessica Nicholson26th annual MusicRow Awards. Photo: Bev Moser, Moments By Moser
MusicRow celebrated the winners of its 26th Annual MusicRow Awards yesterday (June 18).
Brandy Clark, Cole Swindell, Nicolle Galyon, Don Henry, Phillip Coleman, Frank Liddell, Russ Paul, Aubrey Haynie, IIya Toshinsky, Justin Niebank, Greg Morrow, Charles Judge, Jimmie Lee Sloas, and Wes Hightower were among the winners.
Click here for the full Bobby Karl Works the Room recap of the 26th Annual MusicRow Awards.
All photos courtesy of Bev Moser/Moments By Moser
[slide]
Country Winners At The SOCAN Awards
/by Sarah Skatesole celebrates at the SOCAN Awards (L-R): ole CEO Robert Ott; ole songwriters Johnny Reid, Marty Dodson, and Alan Frew; SOCAN’s Peter Fera & Karen Richards; ole VP Gilles Godard.
The Canadian music industry gathered at the Harbour Castle Hotel in Toronto on June 16, 2014 to honor Canada’s most successful songwriters, composers, lyricists and music publishers at the 25th anniversary edition of the SOCAN Awards. The gala was hosted by CMT Canada’s Paul McGuire and SiriusXM Canada’s Andréanne Sasseville.
Country Music Awards
“Fire It Up”
Performed by Johnny Reid
Johnny Reid, Alan Frew, Marty Dodson (BMI)
Johnny Mac Entertainment Inc., Frewsongs Inc., ole
“Canadian Girls”
Performed by Dean Brody
Dean Brody
Roots 3 Music Inc., ole
“Love Me Or Leave Me”
Performed by Chad Brownlee
Chad Brownlee, Mitch Merrett, Benjamin Glover (ASCAP)
CCS Rights Management, Little Red Bungalow Music Publishing
“Smoke In The Rain”
Performed by Chad Brownlee
Chad Brownlee, Mitch Merrett, Philip Barton (BMI), Brian White (SESAC)
CCS Rights Management, Little Red Bungalow Music Publishing
“Cool”
Performed by Jason Blaine
Jason Blaine, Deric Ruttan
Warner Chappell Music Canada Ltd.
“Get By”
Performed by Tim Hicks
Tim Hicks, Casey Marshall, Neil Sanderson, Shawn Hamm (BMI), Tyler Hubbard (BMI), Brian Kelly (BMI)
Standup Triple Music, Night Hawk Publishing, EMI Blackwood Music Canada Ltd., Noe Valley Music Rights
“Mine Would Be You”
Performed by Blake Shelton
Deric Ruttan, Jessi Alexander (ASCAP), Connie Harrington (BMI)
Warner Chappell Music Canada Ltd.
“Cruise”
Performed by Florida Georgia Line
Joey Moi, Tyler Hubbard (BMI), Brian Kelley (BMI), Chase Rice (BMI), Jesse Rice (BMI)
Big Loud Bucks
“Nothing But Summer”
Performed by Dallas Smith
Joey Moi, Mark Abramson (ASCAP), Joseph Collins (BMI), Christopher Tomkins (ASCAP)
Big Loud Bucks
Major achievement recipients:
Drake – Global Inspiration Award
Gordon Lightfoot – Lifetime Achievement Award
Carly Rae Jepsen, Tavish Crowe and Josh Ramsay – International Achievement Award
Bill Henderson – Special Achievement Award, for his prodigious contributions to Canada’s music industry
Ian Thomas – National Achievement Award, the writer of such enduring Canadian radio hits as “Painted Ladies,” and “Right Before Your Eyes”
Click here for the complete list.
Cassetty, McCreery Settle Dispute
/by Jessica NicholsonTodd Cassetty
Todd Cassetty, president and founder of Cassetty Entertainment, has won a lawsuit against Mercury Nashville artist Scotty McCreery following a jury verdict on Wednesday (June 18) in a legal dispute between the parties, according to The Tennessean. The jury determined McCreery owes his former manager $239,329.
Cassetty sued McCreery in 2013 for back payments that had accrued over five months. Cassetty claimed he was owed 15 percent of McCreery’s gross revenue. McCreery disagreed, and the situation went to trial this week. According to the suit, McCreery’s mother Judy McCreery, who is named as a defendant in the case, controls the singer’s affairs and makes the majority of business decisions.
Scotty McCreery
Following his American Idol win in 2011, McCreery was initially managed by 19 Entertainment. 19 Entertainment and McCreery parted ways, and Cassetty was hired as the singer’s manager in 2012. The parties never finalized a written agreement, and ended their business relationship in April 2013. The lawsuit claims McCreery had not compensated Cassetty at the time the business relationship ended. The suit further claims that although McCreery originally promised to pay Cassetty 15 percent, McCreery later offered to pay Cassetty only two percent when the relationship ended.
McCreery has released the following statement today (June 19): “I am very pleased with the management fee ruling of only $239,000, which was less than half of the $570,000 Mr. Cassetty requested. It was always my intention to pay Mr. Cassetty and indeed had offered to pay him more than once. His request, however, for over half a million dollars was too much for a few months of work.
“While it has been difficult to risk having my reputation challenged, I always believed that the truth would prevail, and it has,” McCreery continued. “I have a management team, including a professional business manager, in Nashville advising me. Now I am happy to put this behind me and focus on my music. As always, I am thankful to my fans for all of their support.”
Cassetty’s established digital marketing company Hi-Fi Fusion has numerous superstar and major label clients.
McCreery is currently managed by Lytle Management Group.
Industry Signings (6/19/14)
/by Jessica NicholsonSlate Creek Records has signed The Bros. Landreth to its growing roster. The band will join fellow Slate Creek Records artists Brandy Clark and Angaleena Presley.
Brothers Joey and David Landreth were born into a musical family, with Joey taking up guitar, and David experimenting with various instruments before settling on his father’s old Fender P-Bass. Completing the band are Ryan “Rhino” Voth on drums and Alex Campbell on piano and harmonica.
The band’s debut album Let It Lie, produced by Murray Pulver, will be released on Slate Creek Records this fall.
The Bros. Landreth. Photo: Mike Latschislaw.
• • •
BMG Chrysalis has signed Georgia native Thomas Archer to an exclusive songwriting deal. BMG is the first publishing home for Archer.
Pictured (L-R): Thomas Archer, seated; BMI’s Leslie Roberts, John Allen, Noah McPike (attorney), Daniel Lee, Kevin Lane, Chris Oglesby, Sara Knabe and Kos Weaver.
CMA, Public Television Bring Country Music "Front and Center"
/by Jessica NicholsonLady Antebellum
CMA will partner with Public Television’s concert series “Front and Center” to present two separate hour-long concert specials for the 2014 fall season. One show will feature the music of Lady Antebellum and special guests. The second show, the 10th Anniversary CMA Songwriters Series celebration, will include Dierks Bentley with top songwriters Jim Beavers, Ross Copperman, Brett James, and Jon Randall. The episodes, which tape later this month in Nashville, are scheduled to air this fall leading up to “The 48th Annual CMA Awards.”
“What began as a discussion to highlight the 10th anniversary of the CMA Songwriters Series is evolving into what we believe can be a long-term partnership that not only highlights the Songwriters Series and our songwriter community on an ongoing basis, but also provides a platform to reach a wider audience through television,” said Sarah Trahern, CMA Chief Executive Officer.
Dierks Bentley
“CMA resides at the epicenter of Country Music’s past, present, and future. It is an honor and a privilege to be partnering not only with such a prestigious organization, but with an organization that truly understands the bedrock upon which the genre is built – the songwriters and its performers,” said Don Maggi, Executive Producer, “Front and Center.” “Lady Antebellum and Dierks Bentley are two of Country Music’s best and the shows that have been created for their fans will be shows that nobody will want to miss.”
“The CMA Songwriter series is always a really cool gig,” said Bentley. “It’s like everybody in the room is in on a secret or something. You’ve got a couple guys with guitars, telling stories and drinking whiskey – anything can happen!”
The Producer’s Chair: Julian King
/by contributorJulian King
Don’t miss Grammy winning Engineer/Producer Julian King on The Producer’s Chair on Thursday, June 26, at Douglas Corner at 6 p.m. Details at www.theproducerschair.com.
Long known as a Grammy Award-winning studio engineer, Julian King has quietly made a name for himself as a record producer as well. In one capacity or another, he has been involved with records that have sold more than 100 million units.
King has worked with a who’s-who of Nashville superstars, including such huge hit makers as Tim McGraw, Toby Keith, Tracy Lawrence, Clint Black, Martina McBride, Vince Gill, Charlie Daniels, Hank Williams Jr., Randy Travis, Brooks & Dunn, Trace Adkins, Alabama and Jo Dee Messina. He earned a Grammy as the recording engineer of Faith Hill’s 1999 multi-million-selling, pop-crossover sensation Breathe. And, his credits extend to some of the hottest young acts in town, such as Tyler Farr, Chris Young, Justin Moore, Brett Eldredge and Casey James.
In 2007, he reunited with Tracy Lawrence and co-produced the star’s CMA Award winning hit “Find Out Who Your Friends Are” which featured Tim McGraw and Kenny Chesney. As an engineer his notable work includes Lee Ann Womack’s 2005 CMA Album of the Year There’s More Where That Came From and multi-Platinum albums by Sugarland.
Raised by parents who were both school principals in Charlottesville, VA, King attended nearby James Madison University as a music major. He planned to be a professional trumpet player but that changed when he started off running sound for bar bands on the college circuit.
In 1987, during his junior year, King got an internship working as “an assistant to the assistant” engineer at recording sessions for producer Jimmy Bowen, with his staff of engineers at Sound Stage, Emerald Studios and Masterfonics. The internship was set up by his advisor, Rich Barnett, and Merlin Littlefield. At the end of Julian’s internship they offered him a job, which he started after completing his music degree.
Working under producer Bowen, King was instantly in sessions with such Country superstars as George Strait. While working on an album with Charlie Daniels, King was teased by the star for being a trumpeter. Eventually, Daniels not only asked King to play trumpet on the record, he paid for King to join the Musicians Union.
King soon became a favorite of top producers James Stroud and Byron Gallimore. He recalls that some of the earliest No. 1 hits he engineered were the career-launching singles by Tracy Lawrence and Clay Walker. One of his favorite projects from those early years is the 1992 John Anderson CD Seminole Wind. In 1993, he was tapped to engineer the debut of then-unknown, McGraw. King has engineered every McGraw album since. He also helped create the sound that kick started Toby Keith’s career.
The entire community has learned to rely on his skills. One reason for King’s unerringly good “ear” is the fact that he is a recording engineer who is also a formally trained musician. You might even find him listed as a musician on a hit or two.
“That music degree does come in handy sometimes,” he says, “particularly on sessions with string players where music scores are involved. It took me a while to adapt, but now I find that the [musical shorthand] Nashville Number System is more useful on a day to day basis.”
The Producer’s Chair: Who have been your mentors through the years?
Julian King: I learned the bulk of what I know from the engineers that I worked for back then: Chuck Ainlay, Steve Marcantonio, John Guess, Steve Tillisch and especially from Lynn Peterzell. Lynn had a heart attack at the studio and died tragically at age 39. I learned so much from Lynn. He was my real mentor. Everything I know, I learned from watching and listening to those guys and then playing with the gear and the music on my own time.
With so many concerned parties, how do you manage to please everyone in the studio?
It’s been my experience that artists, producers and record labels all have the same general goal, but frequently differ on how to reach it. I feel that it’s my job to recognize the merits of each party’s ideas and then help them all come together. I have been fortunate to work with so many talented artists, producers and musicians through the years and am proud of the body of work that we have assembled.
What is your biggest strength in the studio?
I think, the ability to see that a record has many small elements that come together to make it whole. Each piece has to complement the next in order for the record to be the best that it can be. Seeing all these things come together is really satisfying.
Now that you are also producing major artists, which do you enjoy the most, engineering or producing?
Graduating into producing was thrilling but, in the end, I want to put a career together where I can be both a producer and an engineer. I think I will always engineer, as long as they’ll have me. That’s how much I love being in the recording studio.
What have been some of the biggest highlights of your career?
One of the things I look back on fondly is having worked with George Jones, George Strait, Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard and many other Country music icons. There aren’t very many folks who can say they got to do that.
Some artists prefer today’s ’80s rock-sounding production and some do not. Which do you prefer and why?
I do not have a preference as long as we make music that comes off as honest for the artist.
When you are producing a new artist, what is the biggest factor that determines the production sound that you create around the artist’s voice?
It is such a lyrically driven format and I feel like the songs have to fit the artist. You can’t have them singing about things they don’t directly relate to. Once the songs are chosen each one has its specific parameters. It is hard to put a single element on every song that glues them together, you have to rely on the artist’s performance to be the glue.
Given the increase in rock-influenced Country, what do you think will happen to the overall Country genre?
The genre has always evolved but I would not be shocked to see it split into two formats someday—one focusing on the rocking thumpin’ stuff and one focusing on more traditional Country. There are a lot of more traditional songs on the hot albums today but they just aren’t getting through the gatekeepers to the listeners.
Which producer has taught you the most valuable lesson about producing, and what was that lesson?
I have been fortunate to work with a lot of great producers but I think the best lesson I’ve learned is something that I see James Stroud and Byron Gallimore do. I try and let the musicians and artists give me what they hear first without my clouding their minds with how I have envisioned it. More times than not they deliver! If for some reason it’s not what I am looking for we can talk and make adjustments after they have put their initial thoughts down.
Who are you currently producing and looking for material for?
Jim Catino and I are in the middle of recording Tyler Farr and I am also co-producing Casey James, with Casey.
On The Cover – Thomas Rhett & Rhett Akins (June/July 2014)
/by Kelsey_GradyOf this top-of-the-charts father/son success story, Akins told Billboard earlier this year, “That’s a dream come true for any songwriter or artist, but even more of a dream come true when it happens with your own son. That’s never happened in the history of music that we can figure out so far. That’s probably the highlight of my 20 years of being in Nashville.”
The landmark occasion was a big cause for celebration for Akins, 44, and Rhett (born Thomas Rhett Akins Jr.) and their performing rights organization, BMI, which toasted the brown-eyed, brown-haired, baseball-cap-wearing pair with a No. 1 shindig at Marathon Village.
Tending to a family tree full of songwriters is nothing new for BMI, which has also represented Hank Williams, Sr. and his family members, among so many other families in the industry: Bobby Bare and Bobby Bare, Jr., Billy Ray and Miley Cyrus, Dean and Jessie Jo Dillon, Waylon Jennings and Jessi Colter and their son Shooter Jennings, as well as brothers Brett and Jim Beavers, and Brett and Brad Warren. Still more bold-faced family names tied to BMI: the Presleys, the Bradleys, the Bergs, the Louvins, the Tillises, the Whitleys, the Morgans, and the Scruggs.
“Usually a songwriter’s longest-lasting professional relationship in the music industry is the one they have with their performing rights organization,” says Jody Williams, BMI’s vice president of writer/publisher relations. “If a successful songwriter who joined BMI has kids of his own, and those kids follow in his footsteps, they also will come to BMI many, many more times than not.”
Southerners are known for their loyalty, most especially to family and tradition—values that apparently extend to the region’s songwriters, most of whom show their allegiance to their performing rights organization by passing the relationship down to their songwriting children. Signing to the same performing rights organization as the songwriter parent who came before you serves as both a comfort and a convenience for artists, though BMI also views it as a larger responsibility, says Williams, whose own children have established strong careers in the industry. Williams’ youngest son Ed develops talent at Sony/ATV, while his eldest son, Driver, plays lead guitar for Eric Church and writes songs for Big Deal Music.
“For someone to bring their child to sign with you, it just shows you what confidence they have in you,” says Williams, who signed Rhett Akins to BMI in 1990, the same year Thomas Rhett was born. “It encourages you to do the best job you can for them—not that you wouldn’t do it anyway, but that’s pretty cool to be entrusted like that. We take that seriously.”
To purchase MusicRow’s 2014 MusicRow Awards issue, or to subscribe to MusicRow, visit musicrow.com.