
Ray Price
Country Music Hall of Fame member Ray Price has passed away today (Dec. 16) at 4:43 p.m. CT following a long battle with pancreatic cancer. He was 87 years old.
The legendary performer decided last Thursday that he wanted no further medical treatment at the hospital in Tyler, Texas and elected to return to his Mt. Pleasant, Texas ranch to die.
“I am at peace,” he said. “I love Jesus. I’m going to be just fine. Don’t worry about me. I’ll see you again one day.”
As a vocalist, Price defined two major eras of country-music history. His barroom “shuffle” classics made him a master of the honky-tonk style of the early 1950s. In the 1960s and 1970s, he became a cornerstone of the Nashville Sound era via a string of smooth ballads. In addition, his recorded repertoire includes a slew of country standards.
During his eight-decade career, he placed more than 100 titles on the country charts. Forty-six of them became top-10 smash hits, and eight of those went to No. 1.
His band served as a career launchpad for such country greats as Willie Nelson, Roger Miller and Johnny Paycheck. He was a key figure in the rise of Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame members Bill Anderson, Harlan Howard, Hank Cochran, Jim Weatherly and more.
Ray Noble Price was born in Perryville, TX in 1926 and was raised in Dallas. Following service in the Marine Corps during World War II, he began his professional singing career in 1948 on KRBC in Abilene. The following year, he joined the cast of the Big D Jamboree in Dallas. He began his recording career in 1950 on the Nashville independent label Bullet Records.
Signed by Columbia Records, Price moved to Music City. He became friends with his idol, superstar Hank Williams. The two men roomed together when Williams was between marriages, and Williams urged the Grand Ole Opry to sign Price to its cast in 1952. After Williams died on New Year’s Day 1953, Price inherited Hank’s Drifting Cowboys band and renamed them his Cherokee Cowboys.
By then, he had already had his first taste of success. In 1952, Price climbed the charts with the honky-tonk hits “Talk to Your Heart” and “Don’t Let the Stars Get in Your Eyes.” He co-wrote Lefty Frizzell’s 1952 smash “Give Me More, More, More.” In 1954 came Price’s singing sensations “I’ll Be There (If You Ever Want Me)” and “Release Me.”
Price scored his first No. 1 hit with the honky-tonk landmark “Crazy Arms” in 1956. That recording is now in the Grammy Hall of Fame.
He launched Bill Anderson’s hit songwriting career with 1958’s “City Lights.” He boosted the fortunes of songwriter Harlan Howard with 1959’s “Heartaches By the Number,” of Mel Tillis with 1961’s “Heart Over Mind” and of Roger Miller with 1959’s “Invitation to the Blues.”
Other classics Price created during this first phase of his career include “I’ve Got a New Heartache” (1956), “My Shoes Keep Walking Back to You” (1957), “I Wish I Could Fall in Love Today” (1960) and “The Same Old Me” (1960).
He created Pamper Music, the publishing company that introduced Howard, Hank Cochran and Willie Nelson, among others. Both Nelson and Miller served time as members of his band in the early 1960s.
With the coming of the Nashville Sound era, Price re-invented himself as a tuxedo-suited crooner and scored some of the most massive hits of his career. This process began with his version of Nelson’s “Night Life” in 1963, Tillis’s “Burning Memories” in 1964 and Cochran’s “Make the World Go Away” (1963), “That’s All That Matters” (1964), “Don’t You Ever Get Tired of Hurting Me” (1965) and “A Way to Survive” (1966).
Price’s 1967 hit version of “Danny Boy” was considered controversial because it incorporated a full orchestral backing, rather than fiddles. Other Nashville Sound landmarks he sang included “Please Talk to My Heart” (1964), “She Wears My Ring” (1968), “You Wouldn’t Know Love” (1970) and “Take Me As I Am (Or Let Me Go)” (1968). “Touch My Heart,” a 1966 hit, was co-written by another of his former band members, Johnny Paycheck.
Price left Nashville and moved back to Texas in 1969. But he continued to record in Music City.
He introduced Kris Kristofferson’s immortal “For the Good Times” in 1970. It became a big pop-crossover hit and won him a Grammy Award as well as two ACM honors. “I Won’t Mention It Again” (1971) and “She’s Got to Be a Saint” (1972) also hit No. 1 for the singer. The I Won’t Mention It Again LP was named Album of the Year by the CMA in 1971.
Price began publishing the songs of Jim Weatherly in the 1970s and released seven consecutive singles by the songwriter, including 1973’s “You’re the Best Thing That Ever Happened to Me.” That song was revived as a pop and r&b hit by Gladys Knight the following year. Price also published and recorded Weatherly’s “Neither One of Us,” which became another big Gladys Knight hit.

Ray Price
She wasn’t the only one covering Price’s tunes. Even during his heyday, the singer’s hits were constantly recycled. Eddy Arnold revived “Make the World Go Away” in 1965. Mel Tillis brought back “Heart Over Mind” in 1970 and “Burning Memories” in 1977. Mickey Gilley took “City Lights” back to the top of the charts in 1975. “Crazy Arms,” “Release Me” and “Night Life” have been re-recorded hundreds of times and are now standards.
The superstar moved to the Myrrh, ABC/Dot and Monument labels after leaving Columbia in 1974. He continued to chart throughout the 1970s, then returned to the top-10 in 1980 via the Willie Nelson duet “Faded Love.”
He returned to the top-10 yet again on the independent label
Dimension Records. This was with 1981’s “It Don’t Hurt Me Half as Bad” and “Diamonds in the Stars.”
Meanwhile, Price classics continued to become hits for others. Mickey Gilley revived “That’s All That Matters to Me” in 1980, and Gail Davies followed suit with “I’ll Be There (If You Ever Want Me)” a year later. In 1986, Ricky Skaggs brought back “I’ve Got a New Heartache.” Barbara Mandrell revived “I Wish I Could Fall in Love Today” in 1988, and the following year Ronnie Milsap scored a No. 1 hit with “Don’t You Ever Get Tired of Hurting Me.”
Ray Price was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1996.
During the next 15 years, he continued to tour and sang as powerfully as ever. He also recorded a string of critically praised albums for Step One Records in the 1980s and 1990s.
Always blunt, opinionated and outspoken, Ray Price was widely admired for his no-bull attitude. He created a mini-stir in 2012 by snapping back at what he perceived to be Blake Shelton’s lack of respect for country’s senior stylists. The two later patched things up.
Even in his later years, “The Cherokee Cowboy” commanded artistic respect. In 2007, Price collaborated with Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard on a Lost Highway Records CD titled Last of the Breed. It earned the trio a Grammy Award. Still singing with undimmed potency, Price continued to record into 2012.
Ray Price died on Monday, Dec. 16, after battling cancer for more than two years. “I love my fans and have devoted by life to reaching out to them,” he said last week. “I appreciate their support all these years, and I hope I haven’t let them down.”
Price will be received at Restland Funeral Home in Dallas.
Industry Ink (12/17/13)
/by Jessica NicholsonPictured (L-R): Jacquie Lee, Will Champlin and Tessanne Chin
On NBC, The Voice earned a 3.3 for its performance finale, down two tenths from last week’s 3.5 rating for adults 18-49, earning a comparatively low rating for the performance finale. The episode featured finalists Tessanne Chin, Will Champlin and Jacquie Lee competing for one last time, and attracted 12.7 million viewers. Part one of last season’s finale, which aired Monday, Dec. 17, 2012, brought in a stronger audience, with 13.4 million viewers.
• • •
“Herb and I always look for opportunity to educate people through our show,” says Pensado, referring to co-producer/co-host Herb Trawick. “This scholarship in conjunction with our partners at The Blackbird Academy is huge, and it represents education at the very highest level. We’re thrilled to be part of it.”
Applicants are required to submit a form and answer two essay questions relating to their passion for music and recording. In addition to the scholarship, five lucky winners will receive a “Fly Away” to Nashville to receive a private tour of The Blackbird Academy and the amazing nine-room Blackbird Studio, home to sessions by everyone from the Kings of Leon to Dave Stewart to Kid Rock, given personally by owner John McBride.
For more information, visit pensadosplace.tv/blackbird
• • •
WQSL, at 92.3 on the FM dial, is licensed to Jacksonville, N.C. and the WQSL signal area serves the Coastal Carolina region from New Bern south to and including the Wilmington market. WQZL, at 101.1 on the FM dial, is licensed to Belhaven, N.C. and the WQZL signal area serves the northern half of the Greenville-New Bern market including the cities of Greenville, New Bern and Washington.
”NextMedia is excited to launch the WOLF in the Greenville-New Bern and Jacksonville-Wilmington N.C. markets,” commented General Manager Larry Weiss. “Our two signals, at 92.3 and 101.1, will carry the WOLF’s fresh, hot new distinctive Country format to the entire coastal Carolina region. Announcements will be made following the holidays on the staff hired to fill the Program Director and air staff positions.”
• • •
“We are pleased to have Southwest add an additional nonstop flight to New York LaGuardia, one of our most popular destinations,” Rob Wigington, president and CEO of the Metropolitan Nashville Airport Authority, said. “This is a big win for the Nashville community, since LaGuardia is a slot-restricted airport and the slots are difficult to secure. The Airport Authority is committed to growing Nashville’s air service by continuously attracting new destinations and nonstop services and delivering the Nashville Airports Experience to our passengers, business partners and employees.”
MusicRowLife (12/17/13)
/by Jessica NicholsonRegina, Ron and Nate Stuve
UMPG VP Ron Stuve‘s condition is improving after 10 days in ICU at Vanderbilt Medical Center, where he has been battling an extremely rare case of Strep Group A pneumonia and sepsis. His lungs, heart, kidneys and liver have been compromised and his chances of survival were very slim.
As of yesterday (Dec. 16), Ron’s wife, entertainment publicist Regina Stuve, said, “We have witnessed a miracle and every person who has prayed for Ron is part of this Christmas miracle. The odds were against us but with everyone circling Ron and lifting him up, the odds are with us now. I know our medical team AND our spiritual team working together saved Ron’s life. To God be the Glory! The doctors keep using the word ‘remarkable’ when describing his current condition.”
Music industry executives, artists, songwriters and musicians have rallied around Ron, Regina, and their son Nate. And this morning (Dec. 17), Stuve gave Cyndi Forman, his co-worker, a song pitch idea from his hospital bed for Josh Turner, who came to visit him in the hospital last week.
• • •
Brad Funk and Tiffany Dunn
Loeb & Loeb’s Tiffany Dunn wed Brad Funk in a villa chapel outside of Siena, Italy on Nov. 29. Approximately 50 family and friends attended the nuptials.
To celebrate their wedding, and in lieu of gifts, the couple is working with Blood:Water Mission to build a deep fresh water well in Lira, Uganda.
Dunn is Senior Counsel and Office Manager of Administration at Loeb & Loeb’s Nashville office. Her practice focuses on entertainment transactions in the music, publishing, television and motion picture industries. She represents publishing companies, record labels, management companies, recording artists, visual artists, producers, authors, songwriters and other parties in the music industry.
Newlyweds celebrate with guests
ACM Lifting Lives Announces 2013 Grant Cycle Recipients
/by Jessica Nicholson“We are very pleased to announce this year’s beneficiaries,” said ACM Lifting Lives Chairman Bruce Bowman, “these organizations clearly demonstrate the mission of ACM Lifting Lives and we are proud to help grow their programs through our grant cycle. We are thankful for all of the support we’ve received throughout the year that allows us to fulfill our mission of improving lives through music.”
Programs funded during the 2013 ACM Lifting Lives grant cycle include:
For information on guidelines and how to submit for the 2014 grant cycle, visit acmliftinglives.org.
Artist Updates (12/17/13)
/by Lorie HollabaughBill Frist and Brad Paisley
Brad Paisley was honored by the Nashville Symphony last Saturday night (Dec. 14) with its Harmony Award at the 29th Annual Symphony Ball, “A Midwinter’s Night’s Dream” at the Schermerhorn Center. Former Senator Bill Frist gave Paisley the award, which is presented to a person each year who exemplifies musical excellence, embodies the spirit of community, and makes a difference in people’s lives through charitable efforts.
Paisley has been involved with the Water=Hope Campaign and the Haiti nonprofit Live Beyond.
• • •
Brittney and Brian Kelley
Florida Georgia Line’s Brian Kelley married his girlfriend of seven months, Brittney Marie Cole, in an intimate outdoor ceremony at Kelley’s new home, according to People. FGL’s Tyler Hubbard and their other bandmates were on hand for the festivities, which included a tapas-style dinner in a renovated barn and a party afterward with drinking and dancing.
• • •
Charlie Daniels
Charlie Daniels is releasing some rare 1979 live recordings from the fifth year of the his legendary Volunteer Jam concerts. Blue Hat Records and MRI/RED Distribution will release seven songs today as a sampler of the historic concerts created by CDB. The tunes can be purchased on iTunes.
• • •
Chris Cagle
Chris Cagle was arrested on suspicion of driving while intoxicated in Greenville, Texas, last weekend, according to Herald Banner. Cagle reportedly ran a red light early Sunday morning, Dec. 15, on U.S. 69, and a Department of Public Safety officer pulled him over. He was booked into the Hunt County Jail and subsequently released.
Chris Young To Join Celine Dion's 'Home For The Holidays' Special
/by Jessica NicholsonChris Young
Chris Young is set to join Home For The Holidays With Celine Dion. The special, which features inspirational stories about children adopted from foster care into loving families, will air Wednesday, Dec. 18 (8:00-9:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network.
“I’m so happy that I get to be a part of this TV special,” said Young. “Christmas has always been one of my favorite times of year and my Christmas traditions revolve around being with family. I’m excited that this show will enable kids to make those memories for themselves, and that I get to be a part of it.”
On the special, the singer-songwriter will debut his new single, “Who I Am With You,” which shipped to radio on Monday, Dec. 16. “From the first time I heard this song I knew I had to have it for my record and I fell completely in love with it,” said Young. “It’s a song that speaks to being totally in love with someone and the feelings you get from a connection like that. The feeling that just being around that person is all you need.” “Who I Am With You,” is the follow-up single to his gold selling hit, “Aw Naw,” from his new album, A.M..
Wednesday’s TV special tells uplifting stories of adoption from foster care in order to raise awareness for this important social issue. The inspirational stories of these American families are enhanced with performances from Young, Dion and Ne-Yo. Currently, there are more than 400,000 children in foster care in the United States.
Bar Owner Charged in Wayne Mills' Shooting Released From Jail
/by Jessica NicholsonJudge Steve Dozier reduced the bond, which was originally set at $300,000, to $150,000 and set rules for Ferrell, including where he will live and how regularly he must check in with a bail bondsman. Ferrell was ordered to give up his collection of more than a dozen guns, and was released at 6:54 p.m. on Monday.
• • •
Pit and Barrel bar owner Chris Ferrell was arrested Friday (Dec. 6) on a second-degree murder charge in the death of musician Jerald “Wayne” Mills, 44, on Nov. 23, reports The Tennessean.
Ferrell told police that he shot Mills in self-defense after the two got into an argument regarding Mills smoking in the bar. Mills died at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.
After a police investigation, the grand jury indicted Ferrell on the murder charge.
Linda Ronstadt To Be Inducted Into 2014 Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame
/by Lorie HollabaughLinda Ronstadt
Linda Ronstadt is among the 2014 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees in the performer category. Cat Stevens, Nirvana, Hall & Oates, KISS, and Peter Gabriel are also being inducted in the performer category of the upcoming class, while the E Street Band will receive the Award For Musical Excellence. Brian Epstein will also receive the Ahmet Ertegun Award For Lifetime Achievement at the ceremonies, which will be held April 10, 2014 at the Barclays Center arena in Brooklyn.
Ronstadt regularly crossed over to the country charts in the 1970s and performed a string of hits that revived interest in rock’s pioneers: Roy Orbison’s “Blue Bayou,” the Everly Brothers’ “When Will I Be Loved” and Buddy Holly’s “That’ll Be The Day” among them. Now 67, Ronstadt revealed to the world earlier this year that she is unable to sing anymore because of Parkinson’s Disease. Nearly three hundred artists or groups have been inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall since its opening in 1986. Inductees are chosen by over 700 members of the Rock Hall of Fame.
Sony Music Nashville Promotes Stines To Sr. Director of Operations
/by Jessica NicholsonAndrew Stines
Sony Music Nashville Sr. Vice President, Finance and Operations Mike Craft has announced the promotion of Andrew Stines to the post of Senior Director of Operations. Most recently Director of Operations, Stines is based in Nashville and reports directly to Craft.
Craft remarked, “Andrew plays a key role in leading process changes related to many of the challenges brought on by the ongoing evolution of our industry. His solid business analysis skills consistently provide value across departmental lines, and I’m very grateful that we have someone like Andrew on our team.”
A 15-year company veteran, Stines joined the company in June of 1998. A native of Elkhart, Ind., Stines is a graduate of Purdue University, where he studied Electrical Engineering Technology.
Hall of Fame Great Ray Price Passes
/by Robert K OermannRay Price
Country Music Hall of Fame member Ray Price has passed away today (Dec. 16) at 4:43 p.m. CT following a long battle with pancreatic cancer. He was 87 years old.
The legendary performer decided last Thursday that he wanted no further medical treatment at the hospital in Tyler, Texas and elected to return to his Mt. Pleasant, Texas ranch to die.
“I am at peace,” he said. “I love Jesus. I’m going to be just fine. Don’t worry about me. I’ll see you again one day.”
As a vocalist, Price defined two major eras of country-music history. His barroom “shuffle” classics made him a master of the honky-tonk style of the early 1950s. In the 1960s and 1970s, he became a cornerstone of the Nashville Sound era via a string of smooth ballads. In addition, his recorded repertoire includes a slew of country standards.
During his eight-decade career, he placed more than 100 titles on the country charts. Forty-six of them became top-10 smash hits, and eight of those went to No. 1.
His band served as a career launchpad for such country greats as Willie Nelson, Roger Miller and Johnny Paycheck. He was a key figure in the rise of Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame members Bill Anderson, Harlan Howard, Hank Cochran, Jim Weatherly and more.
Ray Noble Price was born in Perryville, TX in 1926 and was raised in Dallas. Following service in the Marine Corps during World War II, he began his professional singing career in 1948 on KRBC in Abilene. The following year, he joined the cast of the Big D Jamboree in Dallas. He began his recording career in 1950 on the Nashville independent label Bullet Records.
Signed by Columbia Records, Price moved to Music City. He became friends with his idol, superstar Hank Williams. The two men roomed together when Williams was between marriages, and Williams urged the Grand Ole Opry to sign Price to its cast in 1952. After Williams died on New Year’s Day 1953, Price inherited Hank’s Drifting Cowboys band and renamed them his Cherokee Cowboys.
By then, he had already had his first taste of success. In 1952, Price climbed the charts with the honky-tonk hits “Talk to Your Heart” and “Don’t Let the Stars Get in Your Eyes.” He co-wrote Lefty Frizzell’s 1952 smash “Give Me More, More, More.” In 1954 came Price’s singing sensations “I’ll Be There (If You Ever Want Me)” and “Release Me.”
Price scored his first No. 1 hit with the honky-tonk landmark “Crazy Arms” in 1956. That recording is now in the Grammy Hall of Fame.
He launched Bill Anderson’s hit songwriting career with 1958’s “City Lights.” He boosted the fortunes of songwriter Harlan Howard with 1959’s “Heartaches By the Number,” of Mel Tillis with 1961’s “Heart Over Mind” and of Roger Miller with 1959’s “Invitation to the Blues.”
Other classics Price created during this first phase of his career include “I’ve Got a New Heartache” (1956), “My Shoes Keep Walking Back to You” (1957), “I Wish I Could Fall in Love Today” (1960) and “The Same Old Me” (1960).
He created Pamper Music, the publishing company that introduced Howard, Hank Cochran and Willie Nelson, among others. Both Nelson and Miller served time as members of his band in the early 1960s.
With the coming of the Nashville Sound era, Price re-invented himself as a tuxedo-suited crooner and scored some of the most massive hits of his career. This process began with his version of Nelson’s “Night Life” in 1963, Tillis’s “Burning Memories” in 1964 and Cochran’s “Make the World Go Away” (1963), “That’s All That Matters” (1964), “Don’t You Ever Get Tired of Hurting Me” (1965) and “A Way to Survive” (1966).
Price’s 1967 hit version of “Danny Boy” was considered controversial because it incorporated a full orchestral backing, rather than fiddles. Other Nashville Sound landmarks he sang included “Please Talk to My Heart” (1964), “She Wears My Ring” (1968), “You Wouldn’t Know Love” (1970) and “Take Me As I Am (Or Let Me Go)” (1968). “Touch My Heart,” a 1966 hit, was co-written by another of his former band members, Johnny Paycheck.
Price left Nashville and moved back to Texas in 1969. But he continued to record in Music City.
He introduced Kris Kristofferson’s immortal “For the Good Times” in 1970. It became a big pop-crossover hit and won him a Grammy Award as well as two ACM honors. “I Won’t Mention It Again” (1971) and “She’s Got to Be a Saint” (1972) also hit No. 1 for the singer. The I Won’t Mention It Again LP was named Album of the Year by the CMA in 1971.
Price began publishing the songs of Jim Weatherly in the 1970s and released seven consecutive singles by the songwriter, including 1973’s “You’re the Best Thing That Ever Happened to Me.” That song was revived as a pop and r&b hit by Gladys Knight the following year. Price also published and recorded Weatherly’s “Neither One of Us,” which became another big Gladys Knight hit.
Ray Price
She wasn’t the only one covering Price’s tunes. Even during his heyday, the singer’s hits were constantly recycled. Eddy Arnold revived “Make the World Go Away” in 1965. Mel Tillis brought back “Heart Over Mind” in 1970 and “Burning Memories” in 1977. Mickey Gilley took “City Lights” back to the top of the charts in 1975. “Crazy Arms,” “Release Me” and “Night Life” have been re-recorded hundreds of times and are now standards.
The superstar moved to the Myrrh, ABC/Dot and Monument labels after leaving Columbia in 1974. He continued to chart throughout the 1970s, then returned to the top-10 in 1980 via the Willie Nelson duet “Faded Love.”
He returned to the top-10 yet again on the independent label
Dimension Records. This was with 1981’s “It Don’t Hurt Me Half as Bad” and “Diamonds in the Stars.”
Meanwhile, Price classics continued to become hits for others. Mickey Gilley revived “That’s All That Matters to Me” in 1980, and Gail Davies followed suit with “I’ll Be There (If You Ever Want Me)” a year later. In 1986, Ricky Skaggs brought back “I’ve Got a New Heartache.” Barbara Mandrell revived “I Wish I Could Fall in Love Today” in 1988, and the following year Ronnie Milsap scored a No. 1 hit with “Don’t You Ever Get Tired of Hurting Me.”
Ray Price was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1996.
During the next 15 years, he continued to tour and sang as powerfully as ever. He also recorded a string of critically praised albums for Step One Records in the 1980s and 1990s.
Always blunt, opinionated and outspoken, Ray Price was widely admired for his no-bull attitude. He created a mini-stir in 2012 by snapping back at what he perceived to be Blake Shelton’s lack of respect for country’s senior stylists. The two later patched things up.
Even in his later years, “The Cherokee Cowboy” commanded artistic respect. In 2007, Price collaborated with Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard on a Lost Highway Records CD titled Last of the Breed. It earned the trio a Grammy Award. Still singing with undimmed potency, Price continued to record into 2012.
Ray Price died on Monday, Dec. 16, after battling cancer for more than two years. “I love my fans and have devoted by life to reaching out to them,” he said last week. “I appreciate their support all these years, and I hope I haven’t let them down.”
Price will be received at Restland Funeral Home in Dallas.
Singer/songwriter Kelsea Ballerini Joins Black River Entertainment's Artist Roster
/by Jessica NicholsonPictured (L-R): Black River Entertainment CEO, Gordon Kerr; VP of Black River Publishing, Celia Froehlig; Flood, Bumstead, McCready & McCarthy, Inc.’s, Duane Clark; Kelsea Ballerini; Milom Horsnell Crow Rose Kelley PLC.’s Mike Milom; Black River’s VP of A&R Doug Johnson; Black River Entertainment Attorney, Rush Hicks; and Black River’s GM, Greg McCarn.
Black River Entertainment recently signed Black River Publishing writer, Kelsea Ballerini, to Black River’s artist roster. Black River’s CEO, Gordon Kerr, chose to deliver the news to their newest artist among family and friends at the company Christmas party.
“One of the things about being here in Nashville is that we can invest in people’s lives,” said Gordon. “We already knew Kelsea was an artist, she already knew that she was artist. Our job is to make sure the world knows she’s an artist.”
“She is a true writer/artist,” said Black River’s VP of A&R, Doug Johnson. “She walks into the room and you know, she was born to write music and share it with the world. She will not take no for an answer, period. I love it.”
Her special moment was captured on video (see below). Upon receiving the record deal, Ballerini shared, “There’s nothing that I love more than music and there’s no group of people that I would rather move forward and share my dream with than Black River Entertainment. So thank you. I’m so excited, let’s do this! This is so fun!”