
Deborah Evans Price accepts the 2013 CMA Media Achievement Award. Photo: Jamie Schramm
Freelance journalist and author
Deborah Evans Price was presented the 2013 CMA Media Achievement Award in the backstage media center during “The 47th Annual CMA Awards” on Wednesday, Nov. 6.
“I’m so honored to win the CMA Media Achievement Award this year, especially when I think of all the wonderful journalists who precede me like Chet Flippo, my beloved former bureau chief at
Billboard,” said Price. “The publicists in the Country Music community are the hardest working, most caring people and such a joy to work with. I’m blessed to get up every day and write about music I love and am so touched by this recognition.”
“Deborah is respected within the industry and is highly regarded for her passion for the music, her relationships with our artists, and her creative, collaborative approach to her work,” said CMA VP of Corporate Communications
Wendy Pearl. “Over the years, Deborah has made great contributions to the development of many artist’s careers as well as championing our legends.”
Price authored a coffee table book on the history of the CMA Awards, which was released in 2010. She also recently released
Country Faith, a compilation of musical artists’ favorite scriptures.
Based in Nashville, Evans Price is a frequent contributor to
Billboard, Country Weekly, FIRST for Women, GospelMusicChannel.com,
PEOPLE Country, HomeLife, and
CMA Close Up, among other publications. A respected music industry analyst, Price has been interviewed by key media outlets, including MSNBC, CNN, the “Today Show,” ABC’s “Prime Time Live,” the Gospel Music Channel, CMT,
The Washington Post,
The New York Times, among others.
A native of Richlands, Va., Price’s father was in the Air Force, and she grew up on military bases all over the world, from McGuire Air Force Base in New Jersey to Kadena AFB in Okinawa, Japan. She majored in journalism at Louisiana State University in Shreveport and, while in college, worked at KTAL-TV Channel 6. During college, she worked as a disc jockey at Country station KRMD-FM for four years while also writing articles on Country music for the
Shreveport Times and
Shreveport Journal. A Nashville resident since 1983, Deborah began her career on Music Row as editorial assistant at
Radio & Records magazine before landing the editor-in-chief post at
Country News.
She has served as associate editor with
American Songwriter and Country/Christian editor at
Billboard. She was a contributor to the
Billboard Encyclopedia of Record Producers, profiling such music industry legends as
Sam Phillips, Billy Sherrill, and
Ken Nelson. She was a contributing author to
The World’s Best Songwriters on Creating the Music That Moves Us.
The CMA Media Achievement Award was established to recognize outstanding achievements in the media as they relate to Country Music. Print and Internet journalists, columnists, authors, and editors; television writers, producers and bookers; and syndicated radio reporters are eligible to win this award. CMA member publicists nominate media candidates for consideration. The top five nominees are collected and sent to the publicist panel for a second round of voting. The overall winner is presented to the Awards and Recognition Committee and then approved by the CMA Board of Directors.
Previous Winners of the Media Achievement Award:
1982 Jack Hurst
1983 Neil Hickey
1984 Dolly Carlisle
1985 Red O’Donnell
1986 No Recipient
1987 David Zimmerman
1988 Robert K. Oermann
1989 Bob Claypool
1990 Dick Heard
1991 No Recipient
1992 Mark McEwen
1993 Lynn Lester
1994 Judy Massa
1995 Clay Smith
1996 Tisi Aylward
1997 Jay Orr
1998 Chet Flippo
1999 Hazel Smith
2000 Neil Pond
2001 Harry Chapman
2002 Jim Patterson
2003 Denise Quan
2004 Alanna Nash
2005 Mark Bracco
2006 Donna Hughes
2007 Storme Warren
2008 Monica Escobedo
2009 Cynthia Sanz
2010 Beville Darden
2011 Ashley Dvorkin
2012 Jennifer Meyer and Ray Sells
Deborah Evans Price Presented With 2013 CMA Media Achievement Award
/by Jessica NicholsonDeborah Evans Price accepts the 2013 CMA Media Achievement Award. Photo: Jamie Schramm
Freelance journalist and author Deborah Evans Price was presented the 2013 CMA Media Achievement Award in the backstage media center during “The 47th Annual CMA Awards” on Wednesday, Nov. 6.
“I’m so honored to win the CMA Media Achievement Award this year, especially when I think of all the wonderful journalists who precede me like Chet Flippo, my beloved former bureau chief at Billboard,” said Price. “The publicists in the Country Music community are the hardest working, most caring people and such a joy to work with. I’m blessed to get up every day and write about music I love and am so touched by this recognition.”
“Deborah is respected within the industry and is highly regarded for her passion for the music, her relationships with our artists, and her creative, collaborative approach to her work,” said CMA VP of Corporate Communications Wendy Pearl. “Over the years, Deborah has made great contributions to the development of many artist’s careers as well as championing our legends.”
Price authored a coffee table book on the history of the CMA Awards, which was released in 2010. She also recently released Country Faith, a compilation of musical artists’ favorite scriptures.
Based in Nashville, Evans Price is a frequent contributor to Billboard, Country Weekly, FIRST for Women, GospelMusicChannel.com, PEOPLE Country, HomeLife, and CMA Close Up, among other publications. A respected music industry analyst, Price has been interviewed by key media outlets, including MSNBC, CNN, the “Today Show,” ABC’s “Prime Time Live,” the Gospel Music Channel, CMT, The Washington Post, The New York Times, among others.
A native of Richlands, Va., Price’s father was in the Air Force, and she grew up on military bases all over the world, from McGuire Air Force Base in New Jersey to Kadena AFB in Okinawa, Japan. She majored in journalism at Louisiana State University in Shreveport and, while in college, worked at KTAL-TV Channel 6. During college, she worked as a disc jockey at Country station KRMD-FM for four years while also writing articles on Country music for the Shreveport Times and Shreveport Journal. A Nashville resident since 1983, Deborah began her career on Music Row as editorial assistant at Radio & Records magazine before landing the editor-in-chief post at Country News.
She has served as associate editor with American Songwriter and Country/Christian editor at Billboard. She was a contributor to the Billboard Encyclopedia of Record Producers, profiling such music industry legends as Sam Phillips, Billy Sherrill, and Ken Nelson. She was a contributing author to The World’s Best Songwriters on Creating the Music That Moves Us.
The CMA Media Achievement Award was established to recognize outstanding achievements in the media as they relate to Country Music. Print and Internet journalists, columnists, authors, and editors; television writers, producers and bookers; and syndicated radio reporters are eligible to win this award. CMA member publicists nominate media candidates for consideration. The top five nominees are collected and sent to the publicist panel for a second round of voting. The overall winner is presented to the Awards and Recognition Committee and then approved by the CMA Board of Directors.
Previous Winners of the Media Achievement Award:
1982 Jack Hurst
1983 Neil Hickey
1984 Dolly Carlisle
1985 Red O’Donnell
1986 No Recipient
1987 David Zimmerman
1988 Robert K. Oermann
1989 Bob Claypool
1990 Dick Heard
1991 No Recipient
1992 Mark McEwen
1993 Lynn Lester
1994 Judy Massa
1995 Clay Smith
1996 Tisi Aylward
1997 Jay Orr
1998 Chet Flippo
1999 Hazel Smith
2000 Neil Pond
2001 Harry Chapman
2002 Jim Patterson
2003 Denise Quan
2004 Alanna Nash
2005 Mark Bracco
2006 Donna Hughes
2007 Storme Warren
2008 Monica Escobedo
2009 Cynthia Sanz
2010 Beville Darden
2011 Ashley Dvorkin
2012 Jennifer Meyer and Ray Sells
Twitter IPO Creates Frenzy
/by Jessica NicholsonTwitter’s highly publicized and anticipated IPO launched today creating a whirlwind of hungry investors. The social media platform opened at $45.10 on the New York Stock Exchange (NYX) this morning (Thurs., Nov. 7), up 73 percent from the $26 initial public offering price. Twitter is the largest U.S. technology IPO since Facebook, Inc. went public nearly two years ago.
Trading under the symbol TWTR, the frenzy escalated until reaching a high today of $50.09, closing at $44.90 a share.
While revenues have more than double over last year, Twitter has yet to make a profit.
2013 MusicRow Awards Predict CMA Trophies
/by Sherod RobertsonKacey Musgraves. Photo: Alan Mayor
Kacey Musgraves, who swept the 25th Annual industry-voted MusicRow Awards earlier this summer, took home the statue for CMA’s Best New Artist last night (Nov. 6) at its 47th Annual Awards Show. The Mercury Nashville newcomer had become the first person ever to take home both MusicRow‘s Breakthrough Artist and Breakthrough Songwriter awards.
In addition to Musgraves’ success last night, MusicRow’s 2013 Song of the Year winner, “I Drive Your Truck,” garnered the coveted Song of the Year prize at last night’s awards show. The song, written by Jessi Alexander, Connie Harrington and Jimmy Yeary, and recorded by Lee Brice tied with “Merry Go ‘Round” back in June at the MusicRow Awards.
The MusicRow Awards, voted by Industry members, are often a key predictor for select CMA Awards. In past years, Song of the Year honors at both ceremonies went to “If I Die Young” (2011), “The House That Built Me” (2010) and “In Color” (2009). Almost every year since 2006, MusicRow’s Breakthrough Artist winners also received the CMA New Artist/Horizon Award later the same year, including The Band Perry (2011), Zac Brown Band (2010), Lady Antebellum (2008), Taylor Swift (2007), and Carrie Underwood (2006).
ACM Lifting Lives Teams with The Henningsens For November "My Cause" Feature
/by Jessica NicholsonThe Henningsens
ACM Lifting Lives® has unveiled its November “My Cause” web feature, spotlighting The Henningsens and the charity organization, Elijah’s Heart. The web feature drives awareness of artist-supported charitable organizations and supports fundraising efforts for those philanthropies.
Over the past two years, ACM Lifting Lives has donated more than $190,000 to artists’ favorite charities through this program, and will again make a donation in addition to driving fan awareness.
This month, “My Cause: Elijah’s Heart” highlights an organization whose purpose is to show love to underprivileged children and their families, to assist them with practical needs and to raise awareness about their desperate situations to inspire others to act. Throughout America, countless children and their families are buried under the oppression of poverty, hunger, poor education and other devastations. The plight of these people often goes unnoticed. Elijah’s Heart is calling others to unite with them to show mercy and practical love to those individuals.
Visit ACMLiftingLives.com to watch the November “My Cause” video and donate to this cause.
47th Annual CMA Awards After Party Pics
/by Jessica NicholsonSony Music Nashville celebrated at a gathering at The Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum following Wednesday’s 47th Annual CMA Awards, co-hosted by Brad Paisley and Carrie Underwood. Miranda Lambert took home her fourth consecutive Female Vocalist of the Year honor.
Pictured L-R: Top row: Love and Theft (Eric Gunderson and Stephen Barker Lyles), Dee Jay Silver, Jake Owen, Keith Gale (VP National Promotion, RCA Nashville), Bush Hawg’s Alex Wilshire, Craig Hand, Shaun Ames, Russ Caldwell, Ben Helton, Bob Garbarini (SVP, National Sales, Sony Music Entertainment), Mike Craft (SVP Finance & Operations, Sony Music Nashville), Angie Magill (VP Legal & Business Affairs, Sony Music Nashville). Middle row: Taylor Lindsey (Director A&R, Sony Music Nashville),im Catino (VP A&R, Sony Music Nashville), Casey James, Chris Young, The Henningsens (Brian, Clara, Aaron), Leah Turner, Jerrod Niemann, Kix Brooks, Caryl Healey (VP Sales, Sony Music Nashville), The Swon Brothers (Colton and Zach). Front row: Paul Barnabee (SVP Marketing, Sony Music Nashville), Lesly Tyson (VP National Promotion, Arista Nashville), Angie Johnson, Miranda Lambert, Gary Overton (Chairman & CEO, Sony Music Nashville), Brad Paisley. Photo: Alan Poizner
• • •
UMG celebrated George Strait‘s Entertainer of the Year title, Kacey Musgraves‘ New Artist of the Year honor, and Little Big Town‘s Vocal Group of the Year award.
Pictured (L-R): LBT’s Phillip Sweet, Universal Music Group Chairman and CEO Lucian Grainge, LBT’s Jimi Westbrook, LBT’s Karen Fairchild, LBT’s Kimberly Schlapman, George Strait, Kacey Musgraves, Universal Music Group Nashville Chairman and CEO Mike Dungan, Universal Music Group EVP and CFO Boyd Muir, Universal Music Group Distribution President and CEO Jim Urie. Photo: Chris Hollo.
Pictured (L-R): Universal Music Group Chairman and CEO Lucian Grainge, Keith Urban, Luke Bryan, Universal Music Group Distribution President and CEO Jim Urie, Universal Music Group Nashville Chairman and CEO Mike Dungan, Universal Music Group EVP and CFO Boyd Muir. Photo: Chris Hollo.
Pictured (L-R): Kacey Musgraves, Universal Music Group Nashville Chairman and CEO Mike Dungan. Photo: Chris Hollo.
• • •
Warner Music Nashville celebrated another historic CMA night, with Blake Shelton winning the Male Vocalist of the Year and Album of the Year awards, marking the first time a husband and wife garnered four consecutive wins in the Male and Female Vocalist of the Year categories.
WMN artists and senior executives gathered for a family photo including John Esposito, President and CEO WMN; Peter Strickland, EVP & GM WMN; Tree Paine, SVP Publicity; Chris Stacey, SVP of Promotion; Scott Hendricks, SVP A&R; Mark Robinson, VP and Sr. Counsel, WMG; and Jeremy Holley, SVP Consumer and Interactive Marketing.
• • •
The good times continued with a star-studded guest list at Rosewell for the BMLG After Party, which featured an Origami Owl jewelry bar, signature Crown Royal cocktails, a booming Beats photo wall and more. Florida Georgia Line took home Vocal Duo of the Year and Single of the Year honors, while Taylor Swift took home the Pinnacle Award, and Swift and Tim McGraw were honored for “Highway Don’t Care” as Musical Event of the Year and Video of the Year.
Pictured (L-R): Front Row – The Band Perry’s Reid, Neil and Kimberly Perry; Big Machine Label Group President/CEO Scott Borchetta; Taylor Swift; Danielle Bradbery; Cassadee Pope; RaeLynn; Laura Bell Bundy; Back Row – Eli Young Band’s James Young; Mike Eli; Rascal Flatts Joe Don Rooney; Jon Jones; Tim McGraw; Brantley Gilbert; Eli Young Band’s Chris Thompson and Rascal Flatts Jay DeMarcus
Pictured (L-R): Front Row – Universal Republic Records Chairman/CEO Monte Lipman; Florida Georgia Line’s Brian Kelley; Taylor Swift; Universal Music Group Chairman/CEO Lucian Grainge; Back Row – BMLG EVP/Republic Nashville President Jimmy Harnen; Universal Republic Records President/COO Avery Lipman; Florida Georgia Line’s Tyler Hubbard; and BMLG President/CEO Scott Borchetta
CMA Awards Gets Ratings Rise
/by Jessica NicholsonLast year, Country music’s biggest night peaked at 14.1 million viewers and brought in a 3.8 rating in the 18-49 demographic.
Spotify Adds Concert Dates To Apps Through Songkick
/by Lorie HollabaughBandsInTown and BandPage have also recently cut deals to expand their tour dates to more music sites and services. Songkick registered 100,000 new users within four months of launching the special Spotify app and has sent millions of personalized concert alerts to users who register through the company.
Kenny Rogers Honored with Willie Nelson Lifetime Achievement Award
/by Jessica NicholsonPhoto Credit: Donn Jones / CMA
During last night’s (Wednesday, Nov. 6) 47th Annual CMA awards, newly inducted Country Music Hall of Fame member Kenny Rogers received the Willie Nelson Lifetime Achievement Award. He was saluted with an all-star tribute that featured Jennifer Nettles, Rascal Flatts and Darius Rucker.
“Kenny Rogers is a living legend and Country Music trailblazer,” said Ed Hardy, President of the CMA Board of Directors, when Rogers was first named the recipient of the award. “He is more than deserving of this honor and what is sure to be a stellar tribute. He represents everything that this Award was intended to recognize when we initiated it last year with Willie.”
Rogers is a five-time CMA Awards winner with 23 career nominations. Rogers has sold more than 120 million records worldwide, recorded 24 No. 1 songs and 12 No. 1 albums, is a New York Times Bestselling author, and recently released his 35th studio album, You Can’t Make Old Friends.
The Willie Nelson Lifetime Achievement Award was presented for the first time in 2012 to its namesake. The Lifetime Achievement Award was created and meant to be presented to an iconic artist who has attained the highest degree of recognition in Country Music. The Award recognizes an artist who has achieved both national and international prominence and stature through concert performances, humanitarian efforts, philanthropy, record sales, and public representation at the highest level.
CMT Launches Video App Including On-Demand Viewing
/by Jessica Nicholson“With this launch, we’re giving fans more opportunities to access their favorite shows and characters, while at the same time providing new ways to work with our cable and ad partners,” said Martin Clayton, VP of Connected Content for CMT. “This new app experience will immerse our audience in the CMT brand and allow us to deliver them new video content every day.”
The app provides fans with a library of current episodes and full seasons of hits including Dog and Beth: On The Hunt, Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders: Making The Team and Cassadee Pope: Frame By Frame, as well as retro favorites like Trick My Truck via TV Everywhere. Access to full-length episodes in the CMT app will be included as part of a subscriber’s TV service package from any one of 10 distributors, including AT&T U-verse, Bright House Networks, Cablevision, DirecTV, EPB Fiber Optics, Hawaiian Telcom, RCN, Suddenlink, Time Warner Cable and Verizon FiOS, which collectively reach almost 50 million homes. Subscribers sign in with their TV provider credentials to watch full episodes. All users will be able to access unique content that extends the narrative of the show, including after shows, cast interviews and original webisodes.
Recently, MTV became the first network to pre-release an entire season of a series, Wait ‘Til Next Year, in its app prior to its premiere on television.
The new CMT app will offer a new co-viewing “connect” experience that will filter the best tweets from Twitter and allow fans to discuss their favorite shows and characters in real time with other fans or with the show’s cast on the app or via Facebook.
The CMT App is available for free from the App Store on iPhone, iPad and iPod touch or at AppStore.com/CMTApp.
Bobby Karl Works The 47th Annual CMA Awards
/by Bobby KarlBOBBY KARL WORKS THE ROOM
Chapter 442
George Strait wins Entertainer of the Year. Photo: Alan Mayor
This is a very good week to be George Strait.
The 6,000 voters of the Country Music Association have spoken, and on Wednesday night (Nov. 6), they proclaimed Strait their Entertainer of the Year. On Monday (Nov. 4), he won ASCAP’s Founders Award, and on Tuesday (Nov. 5), he was in the spotlight for BMI’s salute to his chief songwriter, Dean Dillon.
“What? Never in a million years. Wow,” Strait blurted when his name was announced at the CMA Awards. “This blows me away. I cannot believe this. I’m just blown away to even be nominated again. Thank you so much. This means the world to me.
“Obviously, I didn’t prepare anything to say,” he added backstage. “I’m looking forward to my last year [on the road] next year.”
The only other person to win Entertainer of the Year after being inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame is the late Eddy Arnold. At age 61, Strait is the oldest person ever to win Entertainer.
Blake Shelton and Miranda Lambert repeated as Male and Female vocalists, both for the fourth time. Little Big Town scored its second consecutive Group of the Year win. Mac McAnally won his sixth Instrumentalist CMA prize.
But the show also held a few surprises. The CMA voters showed real class in voting for Kacey Musgraves as Best New Artist over the more successful Florida Georgia Line.
“This first year for me has been just indescribable,” said Musgraves. “My grandma is in the audience tonight. She was my first booking agent. I feel so grateful.”
Another artistic, classy choice was “I Drive Your Truck” as Song of the Year over the commercial blockbuster “Cruise.” That selection was marred by a breach of award-show etiquette. Singer Lee Brice commandeered the mic even though he is not the song’s author. Then songwriter Jimmy Yeary took over. There was no time left for his co-writers Connie Harrington and Jessi Alexander to speak.
On the other hand, the classiest acceptance speech was Lambert’s. She was the only winner to recognize and praise her fellow Female Vocalist nominees. That’s probably a reflection of how aware country’s women are of their precarious status.
As expected, Florida Georgia Line won Duo and Single of the Year. Shelton (and producer Scott Hendricks) took home Album of the Year. The third double winner was “Highway Don’t Care,” which won Video and Musical Event awards for Tim McGraw, Taylor Swift and Keith Urban, plus video director Shane Drake.
Swift was also given the CMA Pinnacle Award. After being serenaded by Lennon & Maisy’s winsome “You Belong with Me,” she accepted her honor from presenters Urban, Strait, McGraw, Brad Paisley, Faith Hill and Rascal Flatts. All of them took her on the road as an opening act when she was a teenager.
“I didn’t know this was going to be all this,” said Swift to her mentors. “You guys all got up here and did this. I love you. You’ve made me feel so special.” Backstage, she and Hill both shed happy tears when Strait was announced as the night’s big winner.
The show had a number of musical high points. Lady Antebellum was rousing with the instantly catchy “Compass.” Florida Georgia Line was drawling and thumping on “Round Here.” One of the night’s best vocals was Shelton’s on “Mine Would Be You.” The Zac Brown Band teamed up with the furiously drumming Dave Grohl for their ultra cool, multi-layered “Dance Among the Living.” Little Big Town was audio-lovely and harmonically flawless on “Sober.”
Urban and Lambert teamed up for “We Were Us.” They had admirable energy and passion, but seemed somewhat vocally muffled. Hunter Hayes and Jason Mraz also had shaky audio on “Everybody’s Got Somebody But Me.”
A standing ovation greeted Swift after her acoustic performance of “Red” with Vince Gill, Alison Krauss, Sam Bush, Eric Darken and Edgar Meyer. Other standing ovations went to Eric Church’s moody, rocking, pyro-accented “Outsiders” and to Strait and Alan Jackson for their “He Stopped Loving Her Today” salute to the late George Jones.
Mugraves was adorable on the super witty “Follow Your Arrow,” which also received a huge ovation. The telecast bleeped out the word “joint” in her song, but left in “crack,” “hell” and “damned.” Go figure.
Taylor Swift. Photo: Alan Mayor
Also acquitting themselves admirably were The Band Perry (“Don’t Let Me Be Lonely”), Jason Aldean (“Night Train”), McGraw (“Southern Girl”) and Luke Bryan (“Drink a Beer”). Jennifer Nettles, Darius Rucker and Rascal Flatts saluted new Hall of Fame member Kenny Rogers. Fellow inductee Bobby Bare was recognized in the audience. Rucker closed the show with “Wagon Wheel.”
Bryan was the hardest working man in show business on Wednesday. He was up at the crack of dawn to sing for host Robin Roberts on Good Morning America and was still game to open the CMA Awards with “That’s My Kind of Night.” He said he tried to nap in between, but couldn’t. Throngs of happy fans cheered him on, downtown in front of the Bridgestone Arena, during his a.m. romp. The GMA telecast is also where the “Highway Don’t Care” award wins for Musical Event of the Year and Video of the Year were announced.
Also prior to the telecast, the CMA’s international awards were given to Jeff Walker, the BBC’s Bob Harris and Swift (for the second time). Thompson Square hosted pre-telecast honors for Musician of the Year and radio winners.
Speaking of the latter, why do we waste network television time by showing and announcing the radio winners? Terrestrial radio is only one of the delivery systems for music. Why not recognize cable TV, print journalists, the internet’s many platforms and/or satellite radio during the telecast?
The CMA Awards Show was co-hosted by Carrie Underwood and Brad Paisley, who also performed. These two become more amusing each time they host. Their opening bit included ditties about musical feuds, Obamacare and twerking, aided by Kellie Pickler and the Duck Dynasty Robertson family.
Later in the show, Paisley presented Underwood with an oversized foam-fangs “finger” that fans wave for the Nashville Predators ice hockey team. “Go Preds!” said Underwood as she waved it (she is married to the team’s Mike Fisher). “I don’t think Miley done it that way,” Paisley cracked.
Pictured (L-R): “I Drive Your Truck” songwriters Jessi Alexander, Jimmy Yeary and Connie Harrington. Photo: Alan Mayor.
As you might expect, the audience was packed with stars. Craig Morgan, Kix Brooks, Tracy Lawrence, Easton Corbin, Jerrod Niemann, The Eli Young Band, Brett Eldredge, Kip Moore, Scotty McCreery, Kristian Bush (who has his first solo single, “Love Or Money”), Brantley Gilbert, Ketch Secor of Old Crow Medicine Show, Jake Owen, Charlie Worsham, Laura Bell Bundy, Clay Walker, Jana Kramer, Sheryl Crow, Cassadee Pope, David Nail, Kelly Clarkson and Chris Stapleton were in the house.
So were the Nashville TV show stars Connie Britton, Chip Esten, Kimberly Williams-Paisley, Sam Palladio, Aubrey Peeples and Chaley Rose, not to mention Lennon & Maisy Stella. Industry mavens mingling included Ken Levitan, Ron Cox, Frank Bumstead, Neil Orne, Dawn Davenport, Vanessa Parker-Davis, Allen Brown, Wes Vause, Suzanne Alexander, Storme Warren, Nan Kelley, Allison DeMarcus, Scott Stem, Brett Wolcott, Scott & Sandi Spika Borchetta, Joey Moi, Nancy Jones, John Grady, John Esposito and John Dwyer.
For a full list of winners, visit the MusicRow winners list.
Kacey Musgraves