Ted Jarrett
As a recording artist, songwriter, producer, manager and record label executive, Ted Jarrett was one of the leading figures of the Nashville R&B community. He died Saturday, March 21, at age 83. Jarrett’s many contributions were highlighted by the award-winning 2004-2005 Night Train to Nashville exhibit and record albums by the Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum. He wrote “You Can Make it If You Try,” a 1958 r&b smash for Gene Allison that was later covered by The Rolling Stones. Jarrett also wrote Webb Pierce’s No. 1 country hit from 1955, “Love, Love, Love.” Ruth Brown, The Midnighters and Louis Brooks all had R&B hits with Jarrett’s “It’s Love, Baby (24 Hours a Day)” in 1955, and it went on to become a blues standard. Jarrett’s “Every Night in the Week” has been recorded by Lou Ann Barton, Christine Kittrell, Larry Birdsong, Earl Gaines, Marion James and several others. His songs were also recorded by Fats Domino, Roscoe Shelton, Solomon Burke, Freddie Waters, Pat Boone, Jerry Butler, Bobby Bland, Delbert McClinton, Carl Smith, Goldie Hill, Gail Davies, Johnnie Ray and many more. With the help of Ruth White, Jarrett authored his 2005 autobiography You Can Make it If You Try. Funeral arrangements are incomplete.
Ed Dye
Bluegrass headliner Ed Dye died of cancer on Wednesday, March 18, at home in Montgomery, Alabama, surrounded by his family. He was 72. Noted for his wildly entertaining, zany sense of humor, Dye was a regular presence at The Station Inn throughout the 1980s. He sang lead in The Nashville Jug Band, which recorded an album for Rounder Records in 1987. He was also a member of The Bluegrass Band with Alan O’Bryant and Blaine Sprouse. Born in Dothan, Alabama, Dye was a Navy veteran who worked in television production in Manhattan, San Francisco and Los Angeles. While in San Francisco, he joined Bob and Ingrid Fowler in forming the group The Styx River Ferry, said to be the Bay Area’s first hippie country band. While in Nashville, Dye was the ringleader of The Station Inn’s weekly, Tuesday-night, all-star jam sessions. He played Dobro and rattled bones on his signature tune “Alabama Jubilee.” This was captured on the 1994 CD The Sidemen: Almost Live at The Station Inn.
The Nashville Jug Band, Dye’s most famous group, also included Michael Henderson, David Olney, Tommy Goldsmith, Jill Klein, Sam Bush, the late Dean Crum, Fred LaBour, Tom Roady, Brent Truitt and the late Roy Huskey Jr. Dye returned to his native Alabama about 10 years ago. Since then, he has performed with The Kudzu Kings, The Taylor Grocery Band, The Sincere Ramblers and other regional groups. A celebration of his life is currently in the planning stages.
AARP Magazine Spotlights Dolly
/by LB CantrellThe ever-youthful Dolly Parton is no stranger to magazine covers, but the singer’s appearance on the cover of the May/June issue of AARP Magazine may turn a few grey heads. In the cover story, Parton, 63, is candid about growing up poor, never having children, and clearing up rumors about her closest relationships. She also touches on the current state of the music business and what she’s doing about it. While discussing how she created her own record label to produce her latest CD, the singer commented, “The music business is not what it used to be. After you reach a certain age, they think you’re over. Well, I will never be over. I’ll be making records if I have to sell them out of the trunk of my car. I’ve done that in my past, and I’d do it again.” The May/June issue of AARP Magazine hits newsstands March 24 and is available online at www.aarpmagazine.org.
Mechanical Royalties Suffer
/by LB Cantrell“2008 was another tough year for the music industry, and HFA was no exception,” said Gary Churgin, HFA President & CEO. “The decline in the market had slowed in 2007, but in 2008, as the overall economy suffered, we saw the effects on the music sector accelerate. The growth of digital sales, while still robust, is also slowing, so we do not expect digital to offset the losses of CD sales any time soon.”
EMI Digital Chief Merrill To Exit
/by LB CantrellLifenotes: Ted Jarrett and Ed Dye
/by Robert K OermannTed Jarrett
As a recording artist, songwriter, producer, manager and record label executive, Ted Jarrett was one of the leading figures of the Nashville R&B community. He died Saturday, March 21, at age 83. Jarrett’s many contributions were highlighted by the award-winning 2004-2005 Night Train to Nashville exhibit and record albums by the Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum. He wrote “You Can Make it If You Try,” a 1958 r&b smash for Gene Allison that was later covered by The Rolling Stones. Jarrett also wrote Webb Pierce’s No. 1 country hit from 1955, “Love, Love, Love.” Ruth Brown, The Midnighters and Louis Brooks all had R&B hits with Jarrett’s “It’s Love, Baby (24 Hours a Day)” in 1955, and it went on to become a blues standard. Jarrett’s “Every Night in the Week” has been recorded by Lou Ann Barton, Christine Kittrell, Larry Birdsong, Earl Gaines, Marion James and several others. His songs were also recorded by Fats Domino, Roscoe Shelton, Solomon Burke, Freddie Waters, Pat Boone, Jerry Butler, Bobby Bland, Delbert McClinton, Carl Smith, Goldie Hill, Gail Davies, Johnnie Ray and many more. With the help of Ruth White, Jarrett authored his 2005 autobiography You Can Make it If You Try. Funeral arrangements are incomplete.
Ed Dye
Bluegrass headliner Ed Dye died of cancer on Wednesday, March 18, at home in Montgomery, Alabama, surrounded by his family. He was 72. Noted for his wildly entertaining, zany sense of humor, Dye was a regular presence at The Station Inn throughout the 1980s. He sang lead in The Nashville Jug Band, which recorded an album for Rounder Records in 1987. He was also a member of The Bluegrass Band with Alan O’Bryant and Blaine Sprouse. Born in Dothan, Alabama, Dye was a Navy veteran who worked in television production in Manhattan, San Francisco and Los Angeles. While in San Francisco, he joined Bob and Ingrid Fowler in forming the group The Styx River Ferry, said to be the Bay Area’s first hippie country band. While in Nashville, Dye was the ringleader of The Station Inn’s weekly, Tuesday-night, all-star jam sessions. He played Dobro and rattled bones on his signature tune “Alabama Jubilee.” This was captured on the 1994 CD The Sidemen: Almost Live at The Station Inn.
The Nashville Jug Band, Dye’s most famous group, also included Michael Henderson, David Olney, Tommy Goldsmith, Jill Klein, Sam Bush, the late Dean Crum, Fred LaBour, Tom Roady, Brent Truitt and the late Roy Huskey Jr. Dye returned to his native Alabama about 10 years ago. Since then, he has performed with The Kudzu Kings, The Taylor Grocery Band, The Sincere Ramblers and other regional groups. A celebration of his life is currently in the planning stages.
Dolly Unveils Sha-Kon-O-Hey!
/by LB CantrellSony ATV Signs Stegall
/by LB CantrellStegall is also the co-producer of The Foundation from the Zac Brown Band. The band’s debut single, “Chicken Fried,” spent two weeks at the top of the charts, giving Stegall his third No. 1 for the year. Currently, Stegall is in the studio with a new group, The Harters, and working on the followup to Clay Walker’s 2007’s album, Fall.
Pedal Steel Guitarist Bill Johnson Dies
/by LB CantrellWilliam Donald “Bill” Johnson, acclaimed pedal steel guitarist for artists including Red Sovine, George Jones and Marty Robbins, died March 17 in Tallassee, Alabama. In addition to his steel playing, Johnson made his mark as a songwriter, most notably with “A Wound Time Can’t Erase,” which was recorded by over 150 artists, including Jack Greene, Johnny Cash, Stonewall Jackson and Ricky Skaggs. Funeral services were held Saturday (3/21), in Camp Hill, Alabama.
SOURCE Names 2009 Honorees
/by LB CantrellSOURCE, the nonprofit organization of executive women in the Nashville music industry will honor Joyce Jackson, Peggy Lamb, Pat McCoy, Sandy Neese, Margaret Parker, and the late Marion Keisker MacInnes with its 2009 Foundation Awards. The 7th annual awards dinner will be held Thursday, July 30 at the Musician’s Hall of Fame and Museum.
Jackson’s career included time at Jim Reeves Enterprises, Floyd Cramer and Ernest Tubb Record Shop. Lamb’s experience includes Music City News and Sony/Acuff Rose Music. McCoy worked in television production, for AFM Local 257, and she continues to work with her husband, Charlie, at Charlie McCoy Enterprises. Neese worked with the Charlie Daniels Band and at Polygram/Mercury Records. Parker was a veteran employee of WSM and Gaylord Entertainment, and Keisker MacInnes served as office manager at Sun Records where she was the first to meet Elvis Presley, who had come to record a song for his mother in 1953.
Cox Radio Going Private
/by LB Cantrell615 Unveils New Site and Search Engine
/by LB Cantrell