
Lee Ann Womack yesterday (4/25) at NaFF.
Photos by Shelley Justiss/NaFF
Chapter 395
I usually try to make a point of supporting the Nashville Film Festival by attending some of its many movies with music themes. On Wednesday evening (4/25) that meant a trip to Green Hills for the sold-out screening of Hank Cochran: Livinâ for a Song. The documentary tells the life story of one of the most endearing, gifted, fascinating, charismatic, charming and quirky characters who ever called Nashville home.
Hank Cochran died in 2010. The filmmakers immortalized his remarkable saga during the five years leading up to then. The filmâs content is thoroughly compelling, for Cochran was one of the great raconteurs. His life story is fascinating as a fourth-grade-educated Mississippi child who rose to become a member of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame (and who should be a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame). His classic songs are undeniable â âMake the World Go Away,â âSheâs Got You,â âI Fall to Pieces,â âSet âEm Up Joe,â âThe Chair,â âDonât Touch Me,â âItâs Not Love But Itâs Not Bad,â âWhy Canât He Be You,â âDonât You Ever Get Tired of Hurting Me,â âOcean Front Property,â âA-11,â âThatâs All That Matters to Me,â âA Little Bitty Tear,â âThis Ainât My First Rodeo,â âWho You Gonna Blame it on This Time,â âYou Comb Her Hair,â âFunny Way of Laughing,â âIs It Raining at Your Houseâ etc. etc.
Whenever someone performs one of these in the movie, time stands still. Elvis Costello, Ronnie Milsap, Lee Ann Womack, Jamey Johnson, Mandy Barnett, Beegie Adair, Mike Henderson, Mark Chesnutt and others create magic whenever theyâre on screen in song.

Buddy Cannon yesterday (4/25) at the NaFF.
So, yes, the content is terrific. The filmâs finesse, not so much. The Nashville Scene charitably described it as âa straight-forward, no-cinematic-frills documentary.â What that means is that absolutely no attention seems to have been paid to photographic composition, lighting, film technique or visual quality. Itâs as if the subjects were simply sat down just anywhere and the camera turned on. At times, the visual results are downright ugly. Also, my heart went out to whoever had to deal with the wildly varying sound quality during editing and post-production.
But for the sheer enjoyment of seeing and hearing âHanktumâ again, we were willing to put up with oafish production values. Packing the Regal Cinema 16 were John Prine, John D. Loudermilk, Dean Dillon, Dale Dodson, Luke Lewis, Martha Moore, Troy Tomlinson, Mandy Barnett, Buddy Cannon, Jay Orr, Suzanne Kessler, Cathy Gurley, Brett Woolcott, Suzi Cochran, Holly Gleason, Vernell Hackett and Belmontâs Don Cusic and James Elliott, among many others.

Mark Chestnutt and NaFF Executive Director Ted Crockett.
Other music-oriented films at the festival centered on Paul Williams, Charlie Louvin, Rick Springfield, Dolly Parton, Paul Simon, Bobby Bare Jr., Wes Cunningham, Andrew Bird, Common and Hole rock drummer Patty Schemel. Under African Skies, the doc about Simonâs Graceland album, won the Music Films Grand Jury Prize. Parton was given the Career Achievement Award. Williams was presented with the Mike Curb Award for Film Music. Nashville theater entrepreneur, director, actor, playwright and filmmaker jeff obafemi carr won a special award for He Ainât Heavy, his controversial film about fraternity hazing.
⢠⢠â˘Â
The hostess with the mostest at Tuesdayâs (4/24)Â Dining Out for Life AIDS charity event at numerous Nashville restaurants, was Kay West, presiding at the French-themed bistro Table 3.
She attracted such fabulons as Kristi Rose, Jill Forbert, Robert Ellis Orrall, Tamara Saviano, Wendy Stamberger, Liz Thiels, Elaine Wood, Paula Batson and Denise Stiff, not to mention a big politico table including Rich Riebling, Christine LaLonde, Dan Kornfeld, Hedy Weinberg and I-hope-our-future-mayor Megan Barry.
Miss Mary dined on the succulent veggies in puff pastry. I had the beef bourguignon, which was delish.
Nielsen to Host Webinar For CMA Members Today
/by Eric T. ParkerClick here to join the online meeting. In addition to this afternoon, the report will be made available on the CMA member-only website.
For more info, email Nielsen’s Josh Bennett here.
Bobby Karl Works NaFF’s World Premiere of the Hank Cochran Documentary
/by Bobby KarlLee Ann Womack yesterday (4/25) at NaFF.
Photos by Shelley Justiss/NaFF
Chapter 395
I usually try to make a point of supporting the Nashville Film Festival by attending some of its many movies with music themes. On Wednesday evening (4/25) that meant a trip to Green Hills for the sold-out screening of Hank Cochran: Livinâ for a Song. The documentary tells the life story of one of the most endearing, gifted, fascinating, charismatic, charming and quirky characters who ever called Nashville home.
Hank Cochran died in 2010. The filmmakers immortalized his remarkable saga during the five years leading up to then. The filmâs content is thoroughly compelling, for Cochran was one of the great raconteurs. His life story is fascinating as a fourth-grade-educated Mississippi child who rose to become a member of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame (and who should be a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame). His classic songs are undeniable â âMake the World Go Away,â âSheâs Got You,â âI Fall to Pieces,â âSet âEm Up Joe,â âThe Chair,â âDonât Touch Me,â âItâs Not Love But Itâs Not Bad,â âWhy Canât He Be You,â âDonât You Ever Get Tired of Hurting Me,â âOcean Front Property,â âA-11,â âThatâs All That Matters to Me,â âA Little Bitty Tear,â âThis Ainât My First Rodeo,â âWho You Gonna Blame it on This Time,â âYou Comb Her Hair,â âFunny Way of Laughing,â âIs It Raining at Your Houseâ etc. etc.
Whenever someone performs one of these in the movie, time stands still. Elvis Costello, Ronnie Milsap, Lee Ann Womack, Jamey Johnson, Mandy Barnett, Beegie Adair, Mike Henderson, Mark Chesnutt and others create magic whenever theyâre on screen in song.
Buddy Cannon yesterday (4/25) at the NaFF.
So, yes, the content is terrific. The filmâs finesse, not so much. The Nashville Scene charitably described it as âa straight-forward, no-cinematic-frills documentary.â What that means is that absolutely no attention seems to have been paid to photographic composition, lighting, film technique or visual quality. Itâs as if the subjects were simply sat down just anywhere and the camera turned on. At times, the visual results are downright ugly. Also, my heart went out to whoever had to deal with the wildly varying sound quality during editing and post-production.
But for the sheer enjoyment of seeing and hearing âHanktumâ again, we were willing to put up with oafish production values. Packing the Regal Cinema 16 were John Prine, John D. Loudermilk, Dean Dillon, Dale Dodson, Luke Lewis, Martha Moore, Troy Tomlinson, Mandy Barnett, Buddy Cannon, Jay Orr, Suzanne Kessler, Cathy Gurley, Brett Woolcott, Suzi Cochran, Holly Gleason, Vernell Hackett and Belmontâs Don Cusic and James Elliott, among many others.
Mark Chestnutt and NaFF Executive Director Ted Crockett.
Other music-oriented films at the festival centered on Paul Williams, Charlie Louvin, Rick Springfield, Dolly Parton, Paul Simon, Bobby Bare Jr., Wes Cunningham, Andrew Bird, Common and Hole rock drummer Patty Schemel. Under African Skies, the doc about Simonâs Graceland album, won the Music Films Grand Jury Prize. Parton was given the Career Achievement Award. Williams was presented with the Mike Curb Award for Film Music. Nashville theater entrepreneur, director, actor, playwright and filmmaker jeff obafemi carr won a special award for He Ainât Heavy, his controversial film about fraternity hazing.
⢠⢠â˘Â
The hostess with the mostest at Tuesdayâs (4/24)Â Dining Out for Life AIDS charity event at numerous Nashville restaurants, was Kay West, presiding at the French-themed bistro Table 3.
She attracted such fabulons as Kristi Rose, Jill Forbert, Robert Ellis Orrall, Tamara Saviano, Wendy Stamberger, Liz Thiels, Elaine Wood, Paula Batson and Denise Stiff, not to mention a big politico table including Rich Riebling, Christine LaLonde, Dan Kornfeld, Hedy Weinberg and I-hope-our-future-mayor Megan Barry.
Miss Mary dined on the succulent veggies in puff pastry. I had the beef bourguignon, which was delish.
Photos: WO Smith Benefit; CMHoF Words And Music Night
/by Sarah SkatesStars Perform at WO Smith Benefit Concert
Billy Currington, Ronnie Milsap, Phil Vassar and the Lost Trailers performed at Tuesday nightâs (4/24) fifth annual Dustin J. Wells Gift of Music Foundation benefit concert at Nashvilleâs Wildhorse Saloon. Proceeds from the event benefit the W.O. Smith Music School which provides 50 cent music lessons to Nashvilleâs under-served children.
Pictured (L-R): Billy Currington, Ronnie Milsap and Phil Vassar with members of the W.O. Smith School student band. Photo: Aaron Crisler / The Judy Nelon Group
⢠⢠⢠⢠â˘
Country Music Hall of FameÂŽ and Museum hosts 33rd annual Words & Music Night
The Country Music Hall of FameÂŽ and Museum hosted its 33rd annual Words & Music Night on Tuesday (4/24). Diamond Rio hosted the event during which Nashville-area students performed their original songs accompanied by professional songwriters. Words & Music Night is the culmination of the year-long Words & Music program where students learn about the lyric-writing process and write or co-write lyrics in the classroom; the lyrics are then given to professional songwriters, who refine their lyrics and add melodies.
Pictured (L-R): Director of Education and Public Programs Ali Tonn, Diamond Rioâs Dan Truman and Gene Johnson, Museum Director Kyle Young, DRâs Marty Roe and Jimmy Olander, Vice President of Museum Programs Jay Orr and School Programs Manager Nathalie Lavine. Photo: Donn Jones
Old Crow Medicine Show Celebrates Gold
/by Freeman(L-R): Morgan Jahnig (OCMS), Norm Parenteau (OCMS Manager), Ketch Secor (OCMS), Mark Jowett (Nettwerk VP International A&R/Publishing), Kevin Hayes (OCMS), Terry McBride (Nettwerk CEO); Photo: Crystal Jahnig
Nettwerk Records and Nashvilleâs Old Crow Medicine Show recently celebrated Gold certification of the groupâs breakout single âWagon Wheel,â for sales surpassing 500,000 units. Nettwerk executives Terry McBride (CEO) and Mark Jowett (VP International A&R/Publishing) recently presented the band with Gold plaques while they were visiting Nashville.
âWagon Wheelâ was originally sketched by Bob Dylan and later completed by OCMS member Ketch Secor. It has now sold over 715k units and become a live bar band standard. The song has a fascinating history that reaches even further back than Dylan.
ââWagon Wheelâ is a gold record 75 years in the making,â said Secor. âBack in 1995, I first heard Bob Dylan sing that striking chorus on his unfinished 1972 studio outtake of âRock Me Mama.â Being an audacious, banjo-picking teenager, I quickly rattled off three verses and rushed it out to coffeehouses and street corners, singing it to anyone who would listen. In 2003, seeking a copyright to the song, I learned that Dylan had credited it to Memphis songster Arthur âBig Boyâ Crudup, who recorded the 1950s boogie-woogie number âRock Me Mama.â From there, I learned that Crudup attributed the song to Mississippi-turned-Chicagoan Big Bill Broonzy, who recorded it way back in the late 1920s. So, from Big Bill to Big Boy to Bob and on down to me, âWagon Wheelâ has become a true American folk song, borrowed, half-stolen, and sung out far and wide. The rest, as they say, is history.â
ASCAP Licenses Rhapsody; Presents Combustion Writers in Chicago
/by Sarah SkatesNews from ASCAP this morning includes a new licensing agreement with Rhapsody, and a concert in Chicago by Combustion Music writers.
ASCAP recently teamed with Black Label Entertainment to present the Circle Sessions at Joe’s Bar in Chicago featuring the writers of Combustion Music. Black Label is bringing the songwriters-in-the-round concept to the Windy City and celebrating the writers behind the hits. Playing to a standing room only crowd were Combustion tunesmiths Brett James, Ashley Gorley, Chris Farren and Matt Jenkins.Â
Pictured (L-R): Kenley Flynn (Combustion), Kelsey Maynard (Joe's Bar), Ryan Allen (Black Label Ent.), Mike Abramson (Black Label Ent.), Chris "the Falcon" Van Belkom (Combustion), Ashley Gorley, Matt Jenkins, Chris Farren, Brett James, and LeAnn Phelan (ASCAP).
⢠⢠⢠â˘
ASCAP and Rhapsody have reached a new agreement for the Rhapsody subscription streaming music service that covers licensing for 2012 and 2013. The license allows Rhapsody to publicly perform the works of more than 430,000 songwriter, composer and music publisher members of ASCAP.
Although Rhapsody has been licensed since its inception, the new agreement is ASCAP and Rhapsody’s first independent agreement since Rhapsody’s separation from long-time parent company, RealNetworks, in April 2010.
Rhapsody was the first subscription music service, launched in December 2001. Today, it is the largest premium subscription music service in the United States, with more than 1 million paying subscribers and more than 14 million tracks.
In recent months, ASCAP also concluded agreements with other digital streaming services including Netflix and Hulu.
Industry Ink (4/26/12)
/by Freemanâ˘Â â˘Â â˘Â â˘
Jason Charles Miller
Jason Charles Miller has signed a recording agreement with Nashville-based Render Records, it was announced recently by Render co-founder Steve Freeman. Miller was previously leader of the rock band Godhead, which was signed to Marilyn Mansonâs Posthuman Records and sold over 200k albums. A Virginia native, Miller has been spending recent years rekindling his love of country music. His first single âUp To Meâ ships to country radio May 1.
â˘Â â˘Â â˘Â â˘
â˘Â â˘Â â˘Â â˘
Rick Rekedal
Franklin-based Seabourne Pictures has announced that DreamWorks Animation executive Rick Rekedal has joined the companyâs board of advisors. Rekedalâs efforts at DreamWorks has helped launch franchises like Shrek, Madagascar, Kung Fu Panda and more. Recently, Seabourne premiered its 2012 feature After (directed by Ryan Smith) at the 2012 NaFF.
â˘Â â˘Â â˘Â â˘
Singer/songwriter Jessica Campbell has signed a worldwide co-publishing agreement with Franklin-based The MWS Group. Campbellâs album Great Escape appeared in 2011 and she has placed songs on ABCâs Ugly Betty, CBCâs Heartland, and the CWâs Hart of Dixie. The MWS roster also includes Kyle Lee and Michael W. Smith.
(L-R): MWS Groupâs Trevor Mathiesen, MWS Group Partner Greg Ham, Campbell, and Michael W. Smith
â˘Â â˘Â â˘Â â˘
The Hummingbirds of Avenue Bank
The winner of the Arts & Business Councilâs 2012 Music City Corporate Band Challenge, which was held Monday (4/23) at the Wildhorse Saloon, was The Hummingirds from Avenue Bank. In second place was Totally Booked from Hutton Hotel, and third place went to Three Day Weekend from First Tennessee. The top three teams received cash prizes to donate to the arts organization of their choice. Judges for the competition included Kitty Moon Emery (Kitty Moon Enterprises), Tony Conway (of Conway Entertainment Group), and Gary Kraen (PD/Operations at Lightning 100). More info here.
â˘Â â˘Â â˘Â â˘
Laurissa Ryan To Exit CMT
/by Sarah SkatesLaurissa Ryan is exiting her post at CMT after 13 years with the network. She currently serves as Sr. Director of Talent and has decided to leave the company to pursue new opportunities.
âIâm grateful for the incredible experiences and lifelong friendships these 13 years at CMT have afforded me,â said Ryan. âAs difficult as this decision was, I am excited to see what the future holds.â
âWeâre very sad to see Laurissa go,â said John Hamlin, SVP, Music Events and Talent, CMT. âWeâre extremely proud of the work sheâs done here and the relationships sheâs been able to build on behalf of the network. We owe much of our talent departmentâs success to Laurissa and wish her nothing but the best in her new endeavors.â
Ryan will remain at the network through the end of this week. She can be reached at laurissa.ryan@gmail.com, or (615) 477-8752.
MusicRowPics: Jon Pardi Artist Visit
/by Caitlin RantalaYesterday (4/24) Capitol Records Nashville artist Jon Pardi stopped by MusicRow headquarters to visit with the staff and play a few songs, including his single “Missin’ You Crazy.” The song is currently climbing MusicRow’s CountryBreakout Chart, landing at No. 55 this week.
Pardi also played “Write You A Song” and “Chasin’ Them Better Days.” Both songs will be available on his upcoming EP, which he co-produced with Bart Butler.
His full length debut album is expected to be released later this fall.
“Tuskegee” Stays At No. 1
/by Sarah SkatesRichie and Ray Charles are the only artists in history to have No. 1 albums on both the Billboard Country Albums and R&B/Hip-Hop Albums charts.
peermusic Adds Shaun Ames to Roster
/by Eric T. ParkerPictured (L-R): Attorney Scott Safford, peermusic Creative Manager Kim Wiggins, peermusic Sr. Creative Director Michael Knox, Shaun Ames and peermusicâs Kevin Lamb
peermusic has announced the signing of Shaun Ames, founding member of the Sony/RCA recording group, Bush Hawg, to its writer roster.
Ames established the band more than 10 years ago with Alex Wilshire, and the group is currently working with producer and peermusic creative director Michael Knox, .
“Shaun and I have been working together for the past six years, I’m very excited to be working with him now as part of the peermusic family,â says Knox.
peermusic is the worldâs largest global independent publishing company, operating 35 offices in 28 countries.