
Phil Everly
Phil Everly, one of the most influential singers and songwriters in modern music history, has died.
As the high-harmony voice in
The Everly Brothers, he co-created a body of work that has become timeless. The Everlys are members of the Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame, the Country Music Hall of Fame and the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. Their work influenced
The Beatles,
The Eagles,
Simon & Garfunkel,
The Hollies and virtually every other harmony-singing group since the 1950s. They were among the first to take Nashville music around the world.
Phil Everly, born in 1939, and his older brother
Don Everly, born in 1937, were the sons of country radio entertainers
Ike and
Margaret Everly. The brothers began singing with their parents as children and were regulars on radio by 1949. During his radio debut at age 6, Phil was billed as “Baby Boy Phil.”
Ike Everly was a guitarist of great skill and became friends with fellow country guitarist
Chet Atkins. Atkins took the boys under his wing in 1954 and urged them to move to Nashville. Guided by Atkins, the Everlys recorded as a country act for Columbia Records in 1955. The resulting discs went nowhere.
Publisher
Wesley Rose took the duo to Cadence Records in 1957. He signed the Everlys as songwriters to Acuff-Rose Publishing and introduced them to the songs of the company’s
Boudleaux & Felice Bryant. With Atkins by their side in the studio, the team recorded the Bryants’ “Bye Bye Love” in a rockabilly style. The record became a country and pop smash and led to cast membership at the Grand Ole Opry.

The Everly Brothers (L: Phil, R: Don)
Hitting the road on rock ‘n’ roll package shows made the Everlys’ Opry tenure a brief one. In 1957-60, they issued the rocking “Wake Up Little Susie,” “Claudette,” “Problems” and “Poor Jenny,” as well as such enduring ballads as “All I Have to Do Is Dream,” “Devoted to You” and “Let It Be Me.”
Both brothers developed as songwriters. Phil Everly’s rocking “When Will I Be Loved” was a hit for the duo in 1960. It has since been revived by dozens of artists, including
Linda Ronstadt (1975),
Vince Gill (1994) and
Fleetwood Mac (1995).
When The Everly Brothers signed with Warner Bros. Records in 1960, it marked the first million-dollar recording contract in history. During the next five years, the team racked up such hits as “Cathy’s Clown,” “So Sad (To Watch Good Love Go Bad),” “Walk Right Back,” “Ebony Eyes,” “Stick With Me Baby,” “Crying in the Rain,” “That’s Old Fashioned” and their co-written “Gone, Gone, Gone.” Both “Stick With Me Baby” and “Gone, Gone, Gone” were revived in 2007 by
Alison Krauss &
Robert Plant.
Don and Phil Everly also co-wrote 1965’s “The Price of Love.” Like many of their songs, it became a huge hit in England. It has since been recorded by
The Move,
The Status Quo,
Bryan Ferry,
Poco,
Roxy Music,
BR5-49,
Buddy Miller and more.
Over the years, the Everly hit catalog has been re-recorded by hundreds of artists.
Emmylou Harris, Connie Smith, Tanya Tucker, Gram Parsons, NRBQ, Webb Pierce, The Who, Ricky Skaggs, Don Gibson, Del Shannon, Anne Murray, The Searchers, Reba McEntire, Pat Boone, Hank Williams Jr., Mott the Hoople, Steve Wariner, Sweethearts of the Rodeo, John Prine, The Ventures and
Bob Dylan have all sung their songs. The current album by
Billy Joe Armstrong and
Norah Jones is a re-creation of the 1958 Everly Brothers album
Songs Our Daddy Taught Us.

Phil Everly and son Jason
The widely acclaimed 1969 LP
Roots brought the duo back into the spotlight, and they starred in a 1970 TV series that was the summer replacement for
The Johnny Cash Show. The brothers split up in 1973.
Phil Everly issued such critically applauded solo albums as 1973’s
Star Spangled Springer. Produced by
Duane Eddy, that collection introduced “The Air That I Breathe,” later a hit for
The Hollies.
Phil’s Diner (1974),
Mystic Line (1975, featuring
Warren Zevon),
Living Alone (1979) and
Phil Everly (1983) were all largely comprised of his original songs. The last named contained “She Means Nothing to Me” as a duet with British pop superstar
Cliff Richard.
After a decade apart, The Everly Brothers reunited in 1983. Three albums for Mercury Records featured contributions from such admirers as
Paul McCartney, Nick Lowe, Dave Edmunds, Jeff Lynne, Mark Knopfler and
Albert Lee. Six singles from those LPs made the country charts, including McCartney’s “On the Wings of a Nightingale” and the 1986 hit “Born Yesterday.” They appeared in Nashville at Fan Fair in 1988. A year later, their version of
Jack Clement’s “Ballad of a Teenage Queen,” recorded with
Johnny and Rosanne Cash, was nominated for a CMA Award.
The Everly Brothers became inaugural inductees into the Rock ‘N’ Roll Hall of Fame in 1986, which is also the year they were given a star in the Hollywood Walk of Fame. They were given a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 1997. Their induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame occurred in 2001, as did both brothers’ election to the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame.
The Associated Press reported Phil Everly’s death on Friday night, Jan. 3. He died of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease at age 74 in Burbank, CA.
Funeral arrangements have not been announced.

The Everly Brothers performing on the 1970 Johnny Cash summer replacement show.
David Nail To Offer Third Album In March
/by Jessica NicholsonI’m A Fire features Nail’s former tourmates Little Big Town lending harmonies to the song “When They’re Gone (Lyle County),” while Lee Ann Womack joins him for a duet of Glen Campbell’s “Galveston.”
Full track listing for I’m A Fire:
1. Whatever She’s Got [Written by Jimmy Robbins and Jon Nite]
2. Broke My Heart [Written by David Nail, Scooter Carusoe and Jonathan Singleton]
3. Burnin’ Bed [Written by Bob DiPiero, Brandy Clark and Shane McAnally]
4. When They’re Gone (Lyle County) [Written by Brett Eldredge and Scooter Carusoe]
5. Brand New Day [Written by David Nail, Scooter Carusoe and Shane McAnally]
6. Kiss You Tonight [Written by David Cook, Jay Knowles and Trent Summar]
7. The Secret [Written by David Nail and Scooter Carusoe]
8. Countin’ Cars [Written by Lee Thomas Miller, Michael Dulaney and Neil Thrasher]
9. Easy Love [Written by David Nail and Lee Thomas Miller]
10. I’m A Fire [Written by Jaren Johnston and Tom Douglas]
11. Galveston [Written by Jimmy L. Webb]
Chesney, Rucker Added to 2014 Nashville Honors Gala
/by Jessica NicholsonKenny Chesney
The T.J. Martell Foundation will welcome Kenny Chesney and Darius Rucker to the Omni Hotel in downtown Nashville on March 10 to pay tribute to the honorees of the 2014 Nashville Honors Gala.
Included among the honorees are music industry leaders Mike Dungan, Chairman/CEO, Universal Music Group Nashville, and Dale Morris, President, Dale Morris & Associates.
Darius Rucker
Individuals being honored at the 2014 gala include:
Mike Dungan–Frances Preston Lifetime Music Industry Achievement award
Dale Morris–Tony Martell Lifetime Entertainment Achievement award
Mark Bloom–Spirit of Nashville award
Dr. Scott Hiebert–Medical Research Advancement award
Beth Dortch Franklin–Lifetime Humanitarian Award
For more information, visit tjmartell.org.
Industry Ink (1/6/14)
/by Jessica NicholsonThe new Country channel puts the new Nash FM against Clear Channel Country WNOE. Nash FM 92.3 has no PD; resumes can be sent to cumulusradio.jobs@cumulus.com. NOLA should be put in the subject line.
• • •
This will be the first award show held at the Historic Nashville Municipal Auditorium, the new home of the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum. Tickets can be purchased through Ticketmaster.
Inductees for 2014 include Randy Bachman, Jimmy Capps, Peter Frampton, Buddy Guy, Ben Keith (posthumously), Will Lee, Barbara Mandrell, Corki Casey O’Dell, Velma Smith, Stevie Ray Vaughan (posthumously) & Double Trouble. Roy Orbison‘s “Pretty Woman” will be honored with the 2014 Iconic Riff Award, while Mike Curb will be awarded the 2014 Industry Icon award.
• • •
MusicRowLife: Billy Block Undergoes Treatment For Cancer
/by Jessica NicholsonBilly Block
Billy Block, host/producer of the long-running The Billy Block Show, has been diagnosed with stage 4 metastatic melanoma, according to a letter from Block’s wife Jill.
Block is starting a clinical trial in Nashville on Jan. 29 at St. Thomas Hospital. His doctor is consulting with others at M.D. Anderson in Houston.
“Cancer was discovered when he went to his doctor for bronchitis a few weeks ago. He is starting a clinical trial here in Nashville this month that is promising and gives us hope,” Jill wrote. “As we all know, Billy is an extraordinary man. He is in the fight of his life and we will all love each other through it. ”
A Billy Block Family Fund has been set up at Wells Fargo Bank. Individuals who would like to donate can make a deposit as a gift to the family at any Wells Fargo branch office. Checks can also be made payable to the Billy Block Family Fund and mailed to the attention of Bradley Gallimore or Danielle Lares-Bouharoun at Wells Fargo Private Bank, 3100 West End Ave., Suite 550, Nashville 37203.
Jill’s letter reads:
Hi dear friends and family,
Many of you already know that we have had some rough news this holiday. My sweet husband, soulmate, father to my boys and very best friend has been diagnosed with stage 4 Metastatic Melanoma. After only a chest scan, his cancer is in his lymph nodes, spleen and liver. He is starting a clinical trial here in Nashville this month that is promising and gives us hope. His ROCK STAR cancer doc, Kent Shih, has been consulting with top docs at M.D. Anderson in Houston as to the best treatment options for him, and this clinical trial is the one they all agree is the best place to start. Billy is not in any pain yet and the cancer was discovered when he went to his doctor for bronchitis a couple of weeks ago. If the treatment here is not getting the results we hope for, we have an open door at MD Anderson to pursue more aggressive therapy. He has lots more scans, a brain MRI, tissue analysis coming. We are currently slated to start the medicine infusions on January 29th at St. Thomas Hospital.
The boys have all been keeping busy during this time – Micheal and Shandon working many late nights and double shifts bussing tables and hosting at Carrabba’s in Green Hills, Rocky up early to ref WNSL basketball then off to work at Which Which, Grady pet sitting and officiating hockey for the little guys – we have all hands on deck to make ends meet. I have also been working at Macy’s and now have a new client that starts this month for marketing work. We have never been able to get disability insurance because of Billy’s prior Melanoma surgeries, and his ability to work will be limited. We have set up the Billy Block Family Fund at Wells Fargo Bank as many of you have asked if there is a way to help. You can go to any Wells Fargo branch office anywhere in the country and make a deposit as a gift (for tax purposes) to our family. We are MOST grateful, however, for your prayers, prayers, prayers. As we all know, Billy is an extraordinary man, and has an amazing relationship with God. He is in the fight of his life, and we will all love each other through it. Here is the post he made a few days ago on Facebook which I wanted to share. Please feel free to forward this email on to others as I know many are anxious for an update. Godspeed, everyone, and you are in our prayers as well.
Love,
Jill and the boys
Thomas Named Silverfish Media’s Programming Director
/by Michael_SmithPatrick Thomas
Patrick Thomas has been added as Programming Director for Big D and Bubba’s new venture Silverfish Media.
Thomas began working in radio at age 18, and previously worked for Gulfstar Communications and Premiere Networks.
Thomas can be reached at patrick@silverfishmedia.com
Nashville Represented in Grammy Salute to The Beatles
/by Eric T. ParkerThe Australia native will be joined by John Mayer in The Night That Changed America: A GRAMMY Salute To The Beatles, which airs Sunday, Feb. 9, at 8 p.m. ET/PT.
Also announced is a reunion performance with Eurythmics, Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart. Alicia Keys and John Legend will perform together, and the evening will also feature Maroon 5. Additional performers and presenters are forthcoming.
The primetime entertainment special — presented by The Recording Academy, AEG Ehrlich Ventures and CBS — will tape on Monday, Jan. 27, the day after the 56th Annual Grammy Awards. Tickets to the Los Angeles Convention Center, West Hall taping are on sale now, available with AXS or by phone at 877-234-8425.
Ken Ehrlich is the executive producer and writer, Rac Clark is co-executive producer, Gregg Gelfand is director, and David Wild served as writer for the event.
LifeNotes: Ronnie Gant Passes
/by Jessica NicholsonHoriPro executives Butch Baker, Kaz Hori, Ronnie Gant, and Bob Beckham celebrating the HoriPro Nashville office’s 20th anniversary in 2010.
Ronnie Gant, a 40+ year member of Nashville’s music industry, died Saturday, Jan. 4. Gant was 69.
For 22 years, Gant was associated with music publishing company Acuff-Rose, and is credited with bringing the Oak Ridge Boys a tune that would become one of the group’s signature hits.
“The music industry lost another giant this week,” said The Oak Ridge Boys’ Duane Allen via Twitter. “RIP, Ronnie Gant, and thank you for bringing us great songs like ‘Elvira.'” The story goes that Gant, then a song plugger for Acuff-Rose, heard a bar band in Texas performing “Elvira,” and thought it would be a perfect fit for Oak Ridge Boys members Joe Bonsall’s and Richard Sterban’s voices. He presented the song to the Oak Ridge Boys’ producer, Ron Chancey.
During his time at Acuff-Rose/Opryland, Gant was responsible for signing writers including Skip Ewing, David Chamberlain, Patty Loveless, and Donny Kees. He also placed songs including “Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your Mind” for George Strait, “Thank God For Kids” for The Oak Ridge Boys, and “Darlene” for T. Graham Brown.
Gant opened his own publishing company in 1988, and in 1990, the R. Gant Music Group’s song “Friends In Low Places” was recorded by Garth Brooks. The song went on to win the CMA’s “Single of the Year” honor in 1991, and was included on Brooks’ No Fences album.
Additionally, Gant’s producing skills can be heard on projects by Eddie Raven, Lorrie Morgan, Don Gibson and songwriter Mickey Newbury.
Gant was hired by Bob Beckham in 2001 to lead HoriPro’s creative team in Nashville. Gant worked alongside Butch Baker, Kaz Hori, and Beckham, who died in November 2013.
The family will receive friends on Saturday, Jan. 11 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Cole & Garrett Funeral Home in Goodlettsville .
Iconic Superstar Phil Everly Dead At Age 74
/by Robert K OermannPhil Everly
Phil Everly, one of the most influential singers and songwriters in modern music history, has died.
As the high-harmony voice in The Everly Brothers, he co-created a body of work that has become timeless. The Everlys are members of the Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame, the Country Music Hall of Fame and the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. Their work influenced The Beatles, The Eagles, Simon & Garfunkel, The Hollies and virtually every other harmony-singing group since the 1950s. They were among the first to take Nashville music around the world.
Phil Everly, born in 1939, and his older brother Don Everly, born in 1937, were the sons of country radio entertainers Ike and Margaret Everly. The brothers began singing with their parents as children and were regulars on radio by 1949. During his radio debut at age 6, Phil was billed as “Baby Boy Phil.”
Ike Everly was a guitarist of great skill and became friends with fellow country guitarist Chet Atkins. Atkins took the boys under his wing in 1954 and urged them to move to Nashville. Guided by Atkins, the Everlys recorded as a country act for Columbia Records in 1955. The resulting discs went nowhere.
Publisher Wesley Rose took the duo to Cadence Records in 1957. He signed the Everlys as songwriters to Acuff-Rose Publishing and introduced them to the songs of the company’s Boudleaux & Felice Bryant. With Atkins by their side in the studio, the team recorded the Bryants’ “Bye Bye Love” in a rockabilly style. The record became a country and pop smash and led to cast membership at the Grand Ole Opry.
The Everly Brothers (L: Phil, R: Don)
Hitting the road on rock ‘n’ roll package shows made the Everlys’ Opry tenure a brief one. In 1957-60, they issued the rocking “Wake Up Little Susie,” “Claudette,” “Problems” and “Poor Jenny,” as well as such enduring ballads as “All I Have to Do Is Dream,” “Devoted to You” and “Let It Be Me.”
Both brothers developed as songwriters. Phil Everly’s rocking “When Will I Be Loved” was a hit for the duo in 1960. It has since been revived by dozens of artists, including Linda Ronstadt (1975), Vince Gill (1994) and Fleetwood Mac (1995).
When The Everly Brothers signed with Warner Bros. Records in 1960, it marked the first million-dollar recording contract in history. During the next five years, the team racked up such hits as “Cathy’s Clown,” “So Sad (To Watch Good Love Go Bad),” “Walk Right Back,” “Ebony Eyes,” “Stick With Me Baby,” “Crying in the Rain,” “That’s Old Fashioned” and their co-written “Gone, Gone, Gone.” Both “Stick With Me Baby” and “Gone, Gone, Gone” were revived in 2007 by Alison Krauss & Robert Plant.
Don and Phil Everly also co-wrote 1965’s “The Price of Love.” Like many of their songs, it became a huge hit in England. It has since been recorded by The Move, The Status Quo, Bryan Ferry, Poco, Roxy Music, BR5-49, Buddy Miller and more.
Over the years, the Everly hit catalog has been re-recorded by hundreds of artists. Emmylou Harris, Connie Smith, Tanya Tucker, Gram Parsons, NRBQ, Webb Pierce, The Who, Ricky Skaggs, Don Gibson, Del Shannon, Anne Murray, The Searchers, Reba McEntire, Pat Boone, Hank Williams Jr., Mott the Hoople, Steve Wariner, Sweethearts of the Rodeo, John Prine, The Ventures and Bob Dylan have all sung their songs. The current album by Billy Joe Armstrong and Norah Jones is a re-creation of the 1958 Everly Brothers album Songs Our Daddy Taught Us.
Phil Everly and son Jason
The widely acclaimed 1969 LP Roots brought the duo back into the spotlight, and they starred in a 1970 TV series that was the summer replacement for The Johnny Cash Show. The brothers split up in 1973.
Phil Everly issued such critically applauded solo albums as 1973’s Star Spangled Springer. Produced by Duane Eddy, that collection introduced “The Air That I Breathe,” later a hit for The Hollies. Phil’s Diner (1974), Mystic Line (1975, featuring Warren Zevon), Living Alone (1979) and Phil Everly (1983) were all largely comprised of his original songs. The last named contained “She Means Nothing to Me” as a duet with British pop superstar Cliff Richard.
After a decade apart, The Everly Brothers reunited in 1983. Three albums for Mercury Records featured contributions from such admirers as Paul McCartney, Nick Lowe, Dave Edmunds, Jeff Lynne, Mark Knopfler and Albert Lee. Six singles from those LPs made the country charts, including McCartney’s “On the Wings of a Nightingale” and the 1986 hit “Born Yesterday.” They appeared in Nashville at Fan Fair in 1988. A year later, their version of Jack Clement’s “Ballad of a Teenage Queen,” recorded with Johnny and Rosanne Cash, was nominated for a CMA Award.
The Everly Brothers became inaugural inductees into the Rock ‘N’ Roll Hall of Fame in 1986, which is also the year they were given a star in the Hollywood Walk of Fame. They were given a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 1997. Their induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame occurred in 2001, as did both brothers’ election to the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame.
The Associated Press reported Phil Everly’s death on Friday night, Jan. 3. He died of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease at age 74 in Burbank, CA.
Funeral arrangements have not been announced.
The Everly Brothers performing on the 1970 Johnny Cash summer replacement show.
Chapman to Join Reynolds In Upcoming Movie
/by Jessica NicholsonMarshall Chapman
Marshall Chapman, a Nashville songwriter who has had songs recorded by Sawyer Brown, Jimmy Buffett and Crystal Gayle, will appear in the upcoming film Mississippi Grind alongside actor Ryan Reynolds, according to The Tennessean. Chapman will portray Reynolds’ mother in the movie, which will begin shooting next month in New Orleans.
Chapman has previously worked with Tim McGraw and Gwyneth Paltrow on the project Country Strong; Chapman portrayed Paltrow’s manager in the movie.
“I have one scene, and, if it doesn’t end up on the cutting-room floor, it’ll be my longest-speaking scene to date,” Chapman says. “My character is a chain-smoking, seen-it-all blues singer in New Orleans, the mother of a drifter/gambler played by Ryan Reynolds.”
Vine Introduces Full Profiles, TV Mode
/by Jessica NicholsonThe TV mode allows users to watch videos in full screen on their computers. The mode can be used to view videos, browse users’ back catalogs and to interact with them on the web, including liking, commenting and sharing videos. The new version does now allow users to record videos through webcams, though it does offer an easier way for people to access published Vines.