
Dallas Davidson
The “My Music Row Story” weekly column features notable members of the Nashville music industry selected by the MusicRow editorial team. These individuals serve in key roles that help advance and promote the success of our industry. This column spotlights the invaluable people that keep the wheels rolling and the music playing.
Multi-Platinum songwriter, father of three and songwriter rights advocate Dallas Davidson has written over 700 noteworthy, cross-genre tracks recorded. With over a billion radio impressions to his name, his illustrious songwriting repertoire massively influenced the modern country music of today.
He has penned 27 No. 1 singles, including nine No. 1 hits performed by Luke Bryan like “That’s My Kind of Night” and “I Don’t Want This Night To End.” Other hit songs written by Davidson include “Boys Round Here” (Blake Shelton), “Just A Kiss” (Lady A), “I Don’t Dance” (Lee Brice), “Running Out Of Moonlight” (Randy Houser) and many others. He has written songs with and for megastars like Morgan Wallen, Darius Rucker, Lady Gaga, Jason Aldean, Sabrina Carpenter, Jewel, T-Pain, Trace Adkins, Teddy Swims, Florida Georgia Line, FloRida, Tim McGraw, Keith Urban and Blake Shelton.
The Georgia-born lyricist’s writing chops have won him countless awards and honors since he made his way to Nashville in 2004, including a Grammy Award, six CMA Triple Play, two ACM Songwriter of the Year honors, Billboard’s Hot Country Songwriter of the Year, two BMI Songwriter of the Year awards, NSAI Songwriter of the Year, two BMI Song of the Year trophies, two NSAI “Songs I Wish I Had Written” and others.
In 2021, Davidson launched his full-service music company, Play It Again Music (PIA), whose name is inspired by Bryan’s eight-times platinum smash hit of the same name, which Davidson co-penned. He and his PIA team champion rising artists and songwriters, helping them discover and strategically execute their goals and creative vision. With two decades of industry-altering success under his belt, Davidson is now keen on forging the way for emerging storytellers and artists.

MusicRow: Where did you grow up?
I was born in Atlanta and raised in Albany, Georgia, which is southwest Georgia.

Photo: Courtesy of Davidson
Were you musical growing up?
No. I played sports, hunted and fished. My mother played piano and always tried to get me to play. Where I was from, if you played piano, you were a little wimp. I have learned that I should listened to my mother because, man, did I miss out on that one.
What was your dream when you were 17?
I have always been very driven. My parents were divorced and my dad lived in Atlanta. He was one of the most successful lawyers in the world at that point. My mother was a school teacher. At 17, I was just looking for the next good time.
I went to the University of Georgia, and I got my real estate license when I was in college because I wanted to go make money. I transferred to Georgia Southern. Luke Bryan and I went at the same. That’s where the music started.

Photo: Courtesy of Davidson
How did you meet Luke?
When we were teenagers, we both [unbeknownst to each other] had gotten permission to hunt this dude’s farm. I had gotten permission from the owner and he had gotten permission from the farmer.
I kept seeing this truck parked and these tire tracks. I was like, “Who is this jack ass poaching on my land?” I wrote this really nasty letter and put it under his windshield wiper. The guy that called me was Luke. That’s how we met.
Later on, when I transferred from UGA to Georgia Southern, he had finished up junior college in Albany. We became best friends. I ended up being his first unofficial manager when he was playing bars and clubs in the area. My passion started by going to his shows and seeing that. I never wanted to be on stage, I just loved the action and hustle of it all.
When did you start writing songs?
I got a credit on one of the songs on his first CD, which was under his band Neyami Road, named after the halfway point between New York and Miami that ran right through our hometown. On the inside cover of the CD, he thanked me for helping him write a song. I don’t think I really helped write it, I was just hanging around enough to throw a few words in here and there. I wasn’t quite there yet when it came to songwriting.
Before he came to Nashville in 2002, I threw him a going away party at my house. I followed him in my truck with a U-Haul up to Nashville and helped him carry his 7,000 pound couch up two flights of stairs in his first apartment.

Photo: Courtesy of Davidson
Then you went back home.
Yep, I went back to back to Leesburg and kept selling real estate. One night I was on the way back from a friend’s wedding. My dumb ass friend threw trash out of the window and I got pulled over. I got a DUI—the judge threw the book at me and put me on house arrest. I could not leave or go to work, so my stepmother bought me a $200 guitar. I taught myself how to play during those 30 days. While I was learning the chords, I naturally started singing and mumbling. I would call Luke and he would give me honest feedback, but I got better. One day he called me and was like, “Some of these people don’t speak my language.” I was just dumb amd naive enough to think that I had a shot, so I moved to Nashville on Jan. 7, 2004 to try to work in the music business.
What happened when you got here?
My third night in town, I went to this bar called Tin Roof. Brian Cole and Alicia Pruitt were going to a big party at The Fontanel for John Rich‘s birthday. They snuck me into the party. I ended up meeting Kid Rock and a bunch of other people that night. I thought I had died and gone to heaven.
Big & Rich is important to my journey because when “Save a Horse (Ride a Cowboy)” came out, I remember thinking I could write whatever I wanted. I love country music in all its forms, from Hank Williams to Garth Brooks, but that opened my eyes. Three months after I moved to town, Jamey Johnson, Randy Houser and I wrote “Honky Tonk Badonkadonk.” Without “Save A Horse, Ride A Cowboy,” we probably never would’ve gone down that path.

Photo: Courtesy of Davidson
Then you were off to the races.
After that song hit, I was immediately painted into a corner as the guy that wrote “Honky Tonk Badonkadonk.” I’m still a painted in that corner sometimes, which I don’t like.
It was my second hit, “Start A Band” with Brad Paisley and Keith Urban, that proved that it wasn’t luck. It was my first actual No. 1, because “Badonkadonk” went to No. 2. After I got that “one hit wonder” off my back, then it happened fast. And it never really stopped.
It’s interesting that you still feel painted into a corner. You’ve had 27 No. 1 hits.
Even today, sometimes I’ll get introduced as the “Honky Tonk Badonkadonk” guy. It was interesting because I had to write my way out of it. But I like that side of country music, and my style became to write the feel-good music, which became the Peach Pickers sound that was later named “Bro Country.” That was another corner I got painted into. Looking back now, I shouldn’t have let whoever was writing the negative stuff about me [and the songs I was writing] matter that much, but when you’re in your twenties and early thirties and your songs are your babies, you care a lot about what people think. You want people to like you.

Photo: Courtesy of Davidson
By focusing on writing the kind of songs I like, I wrote “Gimmie That Girl,” “If Heaven Wasn’t So Far Away” and “Put A Girl In It.” I did “Country Girl (Shake It for Me)” several hits down the road, so I painted myself back into the corner. [Laughs]
Tell me about The Peach Pickers, your work with Ben Hayslip and Rhett Akins.
Me and Rhett Akins wrote “Kiss My Country Ass,” which Blake Shelton cut. Rhett wanted me to meet his best friend, Ben Hayslip. They’re both from Valdosta, Georgia, so we were three boys from the Peach State, all picking guitars. Tom Luteran was the one that named us the Peach Pickers. We spoke the same language—I’m talking about finishing each other’s sentences. God blessed us by putting us all together.
We had such a great run. For over a decade, we wrote every Wednesday. We wrote so many songs, and those songs just keep getting recorded. We became the greatest of friends and then we started touring together, opening up for Luke Bryan. I didn’t play this year, but it was our 14th year on “Farm Tour.” I missed out for the first time because I quit drinking about a year ago. It sucked to miss, but they had a good time. We’ll do year 15.

Photo: Courtesy of Davidson
Looking back on the songs, are there any that stand out as your most proud work?
“Rain Is A Good Thing.” When I would go into a write during that time, I would be the first one there. I’d grab a guitar and come up with a bunch of ideas. I tried to be really prepared when my co-writer showed up. I would call my buddies back at home that morning and talk to them about their lives. I wanted to write songs that made them proud of me, so that had to reflect on what they did. “Rain Is A Good Thing” was the perfect song to make my friends proud of their boy. I also wrote it with one other person named Luke Bryan, who is my best friend. It was our first No. 1 together—just two boys that came from the same place stood up on stage at the No. 1 party and celebrated that song.
I’m also proud of “Play It Again,” “If Heaven Wasn’t So Far Away,” “Just a Kiss” and “Huntin’, Fishin’ and Lovin’ Every Day.”
When did you start Play It Again Music?
2015. With the publishing deals I had been through, there were a lot of things I loved and there were a lot of things I didn’t like about the way things were run. I felt like I had been given a gift by the Nashville, by music and by God, so I started the company to give others a chance. I wanted to run it the way I wish that I had been treated. Still to this day, when I do a deal with a songwriter, I always put my songwriter hat on so I can sit across from the writer and give them fair deals.

Photo: Courtesy of Davidson
Kyle Fishman with my first writer. Kyle wound up writing for me for nine years. That was a great relationship. His co-written “Small Town Boy” was our first No. 1 as a publisher.
After we started having success, Dylan Marlowe came into my life through another amazing [former PIA singer-songwriter] Trea Landon. We signed Dylan as a writer and saw his potential early on. Organically, we started managing him. I wanted to give Dylan the opportunity to get bigger and I felt like I could help him do that.
His songs got better and better and his artistry and brand started coming together, so we did a development deal with him. Next thing you know, we wake up one morning and he’s got a million streams on TikTok. We took him to Sony and did a JV with them on the records side of things, and we just did a deal with Hardy and his publishing company Relative Music. That’s how Play It Again Music went from just publishing to all things music.
Who have been some of your mentors?
Don Schlitz took a chance on me early on. We met when he came and watched me play a round. I didn’t play “Honky Tonk Badonkadonk” because I was ashamed. He came up to me after the show and said, “I came to watch you play ‘Honky Tonk Badonkadonk.'” I said, “Why? You wrote some of the biggest classic country hits ever.” He said, “I wanted to see you play that. Always play your hits.” That developed into a friendship and a lot of co-writes.

Photo: Courtesy of Davidson
Brett Johnson gave me my first shot. He was the first one that really put me in the pros, so to speak. Ben Vaughn really coached me up, gave me confidence and believed in me. Ben Hayslip’s longtime publisher Rusty Gaston was a mentor. Brian Wright, too. My mother and father are mentors. My dad was the one that really taught me country music, and my mother was Motown.
Luke Bryan would be my top mentor, even though I forget that sometimes because we’re buddies. He taught me a lot and mentored me in the ways of handling things appropriately.
What is the best advice you’ve ever gotten?
Be yourself. Don told me to write what you know, and I repeat that to my writers all the time. I won ACM Songwriter the Year in 2011 and Don introduced me. He said, “Dallas is writing these songs and it’s a party where everybody’s invited.” That’s how he described my music. That made me proud that I have continued to write stuff that I wanted write.
What is your favorite part of your job now?
100% watching the smile on people’s faces when we get a win, whether it’s Cade Price, Dylan Marlowe, Faith Hopkins or Alyssa Ramsey. That’s what drives me today, seeing other people succeed.
Mark Your Calendar—December 2024
/by Madison HahnenSingle/Track Releases & Radio Add Dates:
Ashley McBryde. Photo: Katie Kauss
December 2
Jason Scott & The High Heat/Me & The Bottle (Hungover You)/Leo33
Eden Delia/Perfect Day/James Lugo Music
December 6
Ashley McBryde/Ain’t Enough Cowboy Songs/Warner Music Nashville
Ty Myers/Can’t Hold Me Down/RECORDS Nashville
Tyler Rich/Home We Choose/ONErpm
Cody Cozz/O Holy Night
Sheyna Gee/Lonely
Neil Perry/Easy Love
Carrie Brockwell/Things Are Getting Good
December 13
Hayden Coffman/If You Know Her, You Know
Lane Smith/Stone Cold Sober
Album/EP Releases:
Alana Springsteen. Photo: Chase Denton
December 6
Alana Springsteen/Alana Springsteen: Live From NPR’s Tiny Desk/Columbia Records/Sony Music Nashville
Braxton Keith/Blue/Warner Music Nashville
The Castellows/Alabama Stone/Warner Music Nashville/Warner Records
J.R. Carroll/Dark Cloud
Rotundo/The Valley
Timmy McKeever/Devils & Angels/Droptine Recordings
Kip Moore Slates European Tour For Spring
/by Lorie HollabaughKip Moore. Photo: PJ Brown
Kip Moore will head out on his “Solitary Tracks World Tour” in the UK and Europe beginning in May.
Kicking off in Stockholm, Moore will play shows around Europe, including Norway, Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands and the UK. The tour announcement arrives just after Moore received the 2024 International Artist Achievement Award recently at the 58th Annual CMA Awards.
The award caps off a busy touring year for Moore, who also just released a video for his latest song “Wildfire.” He released the track following the CMA Awards along with “Flowers in December,” which was co-written with Erich Wigdahl and co-produced by Jaren Johnston. The pair of tracks are a taste of new music on the horizon for Moore, who will close out his whirlwind two-year run of “The Nomad World Tour” this month with dates in Asbury Park, Philadelphia, New York and Boston.
Tickets and VIP packages are on-sale now.
“Solitary Tracks World Tour” Dates:
05/17 – Stockholm, SW- Nalen
05/18 – Oslo, NO- Rockefeller Music Hall
05/21 – Hamburg, DE- Docks
05/23 – Cologne, DE- E-Werk
05/24 – Stuttgart, DE- Im Wizemann – Halle
05/25 – Zurich, CH- Kaufleuten
05/28 – Tilburg, NL- 13
05/30 – Birmingham, UK- Academy
05/31 – Leeds, UK- Academy
06/01 – Belfast, UK- SSE Arena
06/04 – Newcastle, UK- City Hall
06/05 – Glasgow, UK- OVO Hydro Arena
06/07 – London, UK- Brixton Academy
06/08 – Manchester, UK- Apollo
Voting For CRS New Faces Of Country Music Show 2025 Now Open
/by Lorie HollabaughVoting is now open for the Class of 2025 New Faces of Country Music Show through Dec. 6 at CountryRadioSeminar.com.
This year’s nominated artists for the 2025 New Faces of Country Music Show are Ashley Cooke (Big Loud/Back Blocks), Bryan Martin (Average Joes), Chase Matthew (Warner Music Nashville), Chayce Beckham (19 Recordings/BBR/BMG), Dasha (Warner Records), Drew Baldridge (Lyric Ridge/BMG/Stoney Creek), Dylan Marlowe (Sony Music Nashville), Tucker Wetmore (UMG Nashville/Back Blocks), Warren Zeiders (Warner Records) and Zach Top (Leo33).
CRS New Faces showcases five emerging artists who have achieved notable success on country radio during the qualification period, which spans from Nov. 1, 2023 to Oct. 31, 2024 for the 2025 edition. The final lineup for the New Faces of Country Music Show 2025 will be determined based on the five acts with the most votes. Eligible voters must be full-time employees primarily involved in the programming, promotion and distribution of country music.
The New Faces of Country Music Show has played a pivotal role in the careers of nearly every major country star since its inception in 1970.
Alana Springsteen To Release ‘Live From NPR’s Tiny Desk’ EP
/by Madison HahnenAlana Springsteen will release her latest EP, Alana Springsteen: Live From NPR’s Tiny Desk, this Friday (Dec. 6) via Columbia Records/Sony Music Nashville.
The four song EP was recorded live during Springsteen’s appearance on NPR’s Tiny Desk Concert series this past August. Tracks include “Ghost In My Guitar” and “Twenty Something” from her three-part debut album Twenty Something, alongside newly released single “Hot Honey” and unreleased song “Feels Good.”
“Being invited to play Tiny Desk by Robin [Hilton] and the team at NPR Music will forever be a highlight of my life,” says Springsteen. “The fact that they connected with my songs enough to want me to play for them means the world. I love the feeling of performing without relying on anything but myself and my band. There’s something so special about delivering songs that way and we don’t see that enough anymore.
“That’s why it was so important for me to put this out as a project, as perfectly imperfect as it is,” she continues. “I’m so proud to be able to be creative with these musicians and am so grateful for their talent. The real stars of this performance are Alec Parrish, Gideon Klein, Daniel Cooper and Josh Beatty.”
Creative Director: Luke Reynolds
Music Direction: Alec Parrish
Ella Langley & Riley Green Notch Fifth Week Atop MusicRow Radio Chart
/by LB CantrellElla Langley and Riley Green backstage in the winner portrait booth at The 58th Annual CMA Awards. Photo:
“You Look Like You Love Me,” the duet between Ella Langley and Riley Green, tops the MusicRow CountryBreakout Radio Chart for the fifth consecutive week.
The tune was written by the pair and Aaron Raitiere, and appears on Langley’s debut studio album Hungover. It was awarded Musical Event of the Year at the CMA Awards last week, where the two also performed it.
“You Look Like You Love Me” currently sits at No. 9 on the Billboard Country Airplay chart and No. 4 on the Mediabase chart.
Click here to view the latest edition of the MusicRow Weekly containing the MusicRow CountryBreakout Radio Chart.
Artist Action: Jake Owen, Tracy Lawrence, Craig Morgan
/by Lorie HollabaughJake Owen Foundation’s “Flamingo” Event Raises Raises Over A Million Dollars
Jake Owen at this year’s “Flamingo” event
The Jake Owen Foundation hosted its third annual “Flamingo” fundraiser last weekend (Nov. 22-24) in Vero Beach, Florida, bringing in more than one million dollars.
The event spanned three days, and featured a “Golf Classic” that welcomed 176 golfers as well as a sold-out concert for 1,500 attendees, including performances by Owen and Zach Top, Scotty Emerick, Styles and Wynn Williams, followed by a “Songwriter’s Jam.” A “Comedy Jam,” hosted by Ryan Parsons with appearances by Jon Reep and Sheena Reagan, a “Family Fun Run” and a fishing tournament also took place.
Tracy Lawrence Showcases New Marinade On Fox & Friends
Pictured (L–R): Fox & Friends’ Charlie Hurt, Rachel Campos-Duffy, Tracy Lawrence, Fox & Friends’ Brian Bernberg and Rick Reichmuth
Tracy Lawrence joined Fox & Friends on Sunday (Nov. 24) to showcase his brand-new, all-natural marinade, benefiting his Mission:Possible charity.
The product is gluten free, with no seed oils, no artificial ingredients, no MSG and no sugar. Additionally, Lawrence hosted his 19th annual “Turkey Fry & Benefit Concert” yesterday (Nov. 26) at the Nashville Fairgrounds.
Craig Morgan Salutes The Troops At NFL Games
Craig Morgan performsing the national anthem before the Tennessee Titans and the Minnesota Vikings game. Photo: Jessie Rogers/Tennessee Titans
Craig Morgan performed the national anthem during the “Salute To Service” games for the Tennessee Titans on Nov. 17 at Nissan Stadium and the Green Bay Packers on Nov. 24 at Lambeau Field.
Prior to becoming a country artist, Morgan spent seventeen years serving in the Army and Army Reserve and enlisted again in 2023, continuing his military career as a Warrant Officer in the Army Reserve with the 313th U.S. Army Band. He has made more than sixteen overseas trips to perform for our troops, and is a member of the U.S. Field Artillery Hall of Fame as well as a recipient of the USO Merit Award.
Tracy Lawrence Raises $250K At 19th Annual Mission:Possible Turkey Fry & Benefit
/by Lorie HollabaughPictured (L-R): Meghan Patrick, Russell Dickerson, Tracy Lawrence, Glenn Cranfield (Nashville Rescue Mission President & CEO), Shawn Parr and Halfway To Hazard. Photo: Sean O’Halloran
Tracy Lawrence‘s 19th annual Mission:Possible Turkey Fry and Benefit Concert took place in Nashville yesterday (Nov. 26), raising $250,000 to help those in need in Music City for the third year in a row.
Tracy Lawrence’s 19th annual Mission:Possible Turkey Fry. Photo: Sean O’Halloran
At the Nashville Fairgrounds, Lawrence and 300 volunteers came together to cook over 1,600 turkeys on-site. The turkey fry also drew in notable names who volunteered to help like Charles Esten, Terri Clark, Clint Black, Maddie Font (of Maddie & Tae), Chase Matthew, Frank Ray and more, who all assisted Lawrence in dropping turkeys. In addition, over 1,000 frozen turkeys were distributed to food shelters throughout Middle Tennessee, providing a record-breaking 25,000 meals to those in need.
Later that night, Lawrence was joined by Russell Dickerson, Meghan Patrick, John Schneider and Halfway To Hazard for a benefit concert at Luke Combs’ Category 10, raising and donating $250,000 for the Nashville Rescue Mission, Mission:Possible’s longtime partner.
“I love to be in an industry and a town that cares so much about its citizens,” says Lawrence on stage. “To see the hundreds of volunteers show up year after year, a lot of folks have been coming since this thing began 19 years ago. I can’t even begin to tell you, from the bottom of my heart, how much it means to me. We should all be proud of the wonderful city that we live in.”
My Music Row Story: Play It Again Music’s Dallas Davidson
/by LB CantrellDallas Davidson
Multi-Platinum songwriter, father of three and songwriter rights advocate Dallas Davidson has written over 700 noteworthy, cross-genre tracks recorded. With over a billion radio impressions to his name, his illustrious songwriting repertoire massively influenced the modern country music of today.
He has penned 27 No. 1 singles, including nine No. 1 hits performed by Luke Bryan like “That’s My Kind of Night” and “I Don’t Want This Night To End.” Other hit songs written by Davidson include “Boys Round Here” (Blake Shelton), “Just A Kiss” (Lady A), “I Don’t Dance” (Lee Brice), “Running Out Of Moonlight” (Randy Houser) and many others. He has written songs with and for megastars like Morgan Wallen, Darius Rucker, Lady Gaga, Jason Aldean, Sabrina Carpenter, Jewel, T-Pain, Trace Adkins, Teddy Swims, Florida Georgia Line, FloRida, Tim McGraw, Keith Urban and Blake Shelton.
The Georgia-born lyricist’s writing chops have won him countless awards and honors since he made his way to Nashville in 2004, including a Grammy Award, six CMA Triple Play, two ACM Songwriter of the Year honors, Billboard’s Hot Country Songwriter of the Year, two BMI Songwriter of the Year awards, NSAI Songwriter of the Year, two BMI Song of the Year trophies, two NSAI “Songs I Wish I Had Written” and others.
In 2021, Davidson launched his full-service music company, Play It Again Music (PIA), whose name is inspired by Bryan’s eight-times platinum smash hit of the same name, which Davidson co-penned. He and his PIA team champion rising artists and songwriters, helping them discover and strategically execute their goals and creative vision. With two decades of industry-altering success under his belt, Davidson is now keen on forging the way for emerging storytellers and artists.
MusicRow: Where did you grow up?
I was born in Atlanta and raised in Albany, Georgia, which is southwest Georgia.
Photo: Courtesy of Davidson
Were you musical growing up?
No. I played sports, hunted and fished. My mother played piano and always tried to get me to play. Where I was from, if you played piano, you were a little wimp. I have learned that I should listened to my mother because, man, did I miss out on that one.
What was your dream when you were 17?
I have always been very driven. My parents were divorced and my dad lived in Atlanta. He was one of the most successful lawyers in the world at that point. My mother was a school teacher. At 17, I was just looking for the next good time.
I went to the University of Georgia, and I got my real estate license when I was in college because I wanted to go make money. I transferred to Georgia Southern. Luke Bryan and I went at the same. That’s where the music started.
Photo: Courtesy of Davidson
How did you meet Luke?
When we were teenagers, we both [unbeknownst to each other] had gotten permission to hunt this dude’s farm. I had gotten permission from the owner and he had gotten permission from the farmer.
I kept seeing this truck parked and these tire tracks. I was like, “Who is this jack ass poaching on my land?” I wrote this really nasty letter and put it under his windshield wiper. The guy that called me was Luke. That’s how we met.
Later on, when I transferred from UGA to Georgia Southern, he had finished up junior college in Albany. We became best friends. I ended up being his first unofficial manager when he was playing bars and clubs in the area. My passion started by going to his shows and seeing that. I never wanted to be on stage, I just loved the action and hustle of it all.
When did you start writing songs?
I got a credit on one of the songs on his first CD, which was under his band Neyami Road, named after the halfway point between New York and Miami that ran right through our hometown. On the inside cover of the CD, he thanked me for helping him write a song. I don’t think I really helped write it, I was just hanging around enough to throw a few words in here and there. I wasn’t quite there yet when it came to songwriting.
Before he came to Nashville in 2002, I threw him a going away party at my house. I followed him in my truck with a U-Haul up to Nashville and helped him carry his 7,000 pound couch up two flights of stairs in his first apartment.
Photo: Courtesy of Davidson
Then you went back home.
Yep, I went back to back to Leesburg and kept selling real estate. One night I was on the way back from a friend’s wedding. My dumb ass friend threw trash out of the window and I got pulled over. I got a DUI—the judge threw the book at me and put me on house arrest. I could not leave or go to work, so my stepmother bought me a $200 guitar. I taught myself how to play during those 30 days. While I was learning the chords, I naturally started singing and mumbling. I would call Luke and he would give me honest feedback, but I got better. One day he called me and was like, “Some of these people don’t speak my language.” I was just dumb amd naive enough to think that I had a shot, so I moved to Nashville on Jan. 7, 2004 to try to work in the music business.
What happened when you got here?
My third night in town, I went to this bar called Tin Roof. Brian Cole and Alicia Pruitt were going to a big party at The Fontanel for John Rich‘s birthday. They snuck me into the party. I ended up meeting Kid Rock and a bunch of other people that night. I thought I had died and gone to heaven.
Big & Rich is important to my journey because when “Save a Horse (Ride a Cowboy)” came out, I remember thinking I could write whatever I wanted. I love country music in all its forms, from Hank Williams to Garth Brooks, but that opened my eyes. Three months after I moved to town, Jamey Johnson, Randy Houser and I wrote “Honky Tonk Badonkadonk.” Without “Save A Horse, Ride A Cowboy,” we probably never would’ve gone down that path.
Photo: Courtesy of Davidson
Then you were off to the races.
After that song hit, I was immediately painted into a corner as the guy that wrote “Honky Tonk Badonkadonk.” I’m still a painted in that corner sometimes, which I don’t like.
It was my second hit, “Start A Band” with Brad Paisley and Keith Urban, that proved that it wasn’t luck. It was my first actual No. 1, because “Badonkadonk” went to No. 2. After I got that “one hit wonder” off my back, then it happened fast. And it never really stopped.
It’s interesting that you still feel painted into a corner. You’ve had 27 No. 1 hits.
Even today, sometimes I’ll get introduced as the “Honky Tonk Badonkadonk” guy. It was interesting because I had to write my way out of it. But I like that side of country music, and my style became to write the feel-good music, which became the Peach Pickers sound that was later named “Bro Country.” That was another corner I got painted into. Looking back now, I shouldn’t have let whoever was writing the negative stuff about me [and the songs I was writing] matter that much, but when you’re in your twenties and early thirties and your songs are your babies, you care a lot about what people think. You want people to like you.
Photo: Courtesy of Davidson
By focusing on writing the kind of songs I like, I wrote “Gimmie That Girl,” “If Heaven Wasn’t So Far Away” and “Put A Girl In It.” I did “Country Girl (Shake It for Me)” several hits down the road, so I painted myself back into the corner. [Laughs]
Tell me about The Peach Pickers, your work with Ben Hayslip and Rhett Akins.
Me and Rhett Akins wrote “Kiss My Country Ass,” which Blake Shelton cut. Rhett wanted me to meet his best friend, Ben Hayslip. They’re both from Valdosta, Georgia, so we were three boys from the Peach State, all picking guitars. Tom Luteran was the one that named us the Peach Pickers. We spoke the same language—I’m talking about finishing each other’s sentences. God blessed us by putting us all together.
We had such a great run. For over a decade, we wrote every Wednesday. We wrote so many songs, and those songs just keep getting recorded. We became the greatest of friends and then we started touring together, opening up for Luke Bryan. I didn’t play this year, but it was our 14th year on “Farm Tour.” I missed out for the first time because I quit drinking about a year ago. It sucked to miss, but they had a good time. We’ll do year 15.
Photo: Courtesy of Davidson
Looking back on the songs, are there any that stand out as your most proud work?
“Rain Is A Good Thing.” When I would go into a write during that time, I would be the first one there. I’d grab a guitar and come up with a bunch of ideas. I tried to be really prepared when my co-writer showed up. I would call my buddies back at home that morning and talk to them about their lives. I wanted to write songs that made them proud of me, so that had to reflect on what they did. “Rain Is A Good Thing” was the perfect song to make my friends proud of their boy. I also wrote it with one other person named Luke Bryan, who is my best friend. It was our first No. 1 together—just two boys that came from the same place stood up on stage at the No. 1 party and celebrated that song.
I’m also proud of “Play It Again,” “If Heaven Wasn’t So Far Away,” “Just a Kiss” and “Huntin’, Fishin’ and Lovin’ Every Day.”
When did you start Play It Again Music?
2015. With the publishing deals I had been through, there were a lot of things I loved and there were a lot of things I didn’t like about the way things were run. I felt like I had been given a gift by the Nashville, by music and by God, so I started the company to give others a chance. I wanted to run it the way I wish that I had been treated. Still to this day, when I do a deal with a songwriter, I always put my songwriter hat on so I can sit across from the writer and give them fair deals.
Photo: Courtesy of Davidson
Kyle Fishman with my first writer. Kyle wound up writing for me for nine years. That was a great relationship. His co-written “Small Town Boy” was our first No. 1 as a publisher.
After we started having success, Dylan Marlowe came into my life through another amazing [former PIA singer-songwriter] Trea Landon. We signed Dylan as a writer and saw his potential early on. Organically, we started managing him. I wanted to give Dylan the opportunity to get bigger and I felt like I could help him do that.
His songs got better and better and his artistry and brand started coming together, so we did a development deal with him. Next thing you know, we wake up one morning and he’s got a million streams on TikTok. We took him to Sony and did a JV with them on the records side of things, and we just did a deal with Hardy and his publishing company Relative Music. That’s how Play It Again Music went from just publishing to all things music.
Who have been some of your mentors?
Don Schlitz took a chance on me early on. We met when he came and watched me play a round. I didn’t play “Honky Tonk Badonkadonk” because I was ashamed. He came up to me after the show and said, “I came to watch you play ‘Honky Tonk Badonkadonk.'” I said, “Why? You wrote some of the biggest classic country hits ever.” He said, “I wanted to see you play that. Always play your hits.” That developed into a friendship and a lot of co-writes.
Photo: Courtesy of Davidson
Brett Johnson gave me my first shot. He was the first one that really put me in the pros, so to speak. Ben Vaughn really coached me up, gave me confidence and believed in me. Ben Hayslip’s longtime publisher Rusty Gaston was a mentor. Brian Wright, too. My mother and father are mentors. My dad was the one that really taught me country music, and my mother was Motown.
Luke Bryan would be my top mentor, even though I forget that sometimes because we’re buddies. He taught me a lot and mentored me in the ways of handling things appropriately.
What is the best advice you’ve ever gotten?
Be yourself. Don told me to write what you know, and I repeat that to my writers all the time. I won ACM Songwriter the Year in 2011 and Don introduced me. He said, “Dallas is writing these songs and it’s a party where everybody’s invited.” That’s how he described my music. That made me proud that I have continued to write stuff that I wanted write.
What is your favorite part of your job now?
100% watching the smile on people’s faces when we get a win, whether it’s Cade Price, Dylan Marlowe, Faith Hopkins or Alyssa Ramsey. That’s what drives me today, seeing other people succeed.
Lineup Announced For Jackalope Jamboree 2025
/by Liza AndersonThe lineup has been announced for Jackalope Jamboree 2025, taking place June 26–28 at Happy Canyon Arena in Pendleton, Oregon.
The festival will feature over 30 performances by Americana and country music acts like Midland, Paul Cauthen and 49 Winchester as well as Christian Hayes, Sarah Shook & the Disarmers, Vandoliers, Taylor Hunnicutt and more across three stages.
In addition to performances on the festival grounds, each day will kick off and conclude with free-to-the-public pre-party and after-party shows downtown at Great Pacific and on Main Street outside of the Rainbow Café.
Gates for Jackalope Jamboree will open at different times depending on the stage and area. The gates for the Queens Barn Stage, presented by George Dickel, and the food court will open at 1 p.m. The gates for the Hodgen Stage and the Blue Mountain Stage will open later at 4 p.m.
Vendors will be onsite with vegetarian options, and Oregon-based craft beer sponsor pFriem Family Brewers will have beverages available for purchase. Domestic beer and local wine will also be available. Additionally, attendees can shop local merchant booths for clothing, jewelry, art and more.
Presale tickets will go on sale this Monday (Dec. 2) at 11 a.m. CT, with general sales following on Tuesday (Dec. 3) at the same time. For more information, click here.
Jason Aldean, Blake Shelton, Bailey Zimmerman To Headline Alberta’s Big Valley Jamboree
/by Lorie HollabaughBlake Shelton, Jason Aldean and Bailey Zimmerman are set to headline Northern Alberta’s Big Valley Jamboree on July 31-Aug. 3.
The Big Valley lineup will also include Tyler Hubbard, Ashley McBryde, Nate Smith, Clint Black and Drew Baldridge, along with Canadian country artists Tyler Joe Miller, Tim Hicks, James Barker Band, Tommy Charles, Owen Riegling, Lindsay Ell, Nice Horse, Savannah Jade and Teigen Gayse. Fans can purchase tickets at bigvalleyjamboree.com
“As we head into the 32nd year of the festival, we’re proud to be bringing globally-recognized talent to our loyal fans in Camrose,” says Country Thunder CEO Troy Vollhoffer. “BVJ is one of Canada’s most historic music festivals and we are honoured to bring it to life each year. Country music fans deserve the best and we truly feel that we have delivered just that for this year’s festival.”