
Keith Urban
In the four years since the release of Keith Urban‘s last studio album, The Speed of Now Part 1, the four-time Grammy winner has had quite a journey chasing down the muse for his 13th studio project.
The muse proved elusive this time around, with Urban even scrapping the makings of an album in 2022. But today (Sept. 20), the hitmaker has proudly released a 12-song opus of wildly-creative and full-hearted music. He titled the project High because of the euphoria he felt in the creative process that resulted in the 40-minute collection, but another meaning could be assigned to the caliber of what he’s created.
The record kicks off with the 12-second sound of an alarm clock on a track called “Blue Sky.” Urban is heard waking up, saying, “just give me some blue sky… please.” Track two, “Straight Line” (Urban, Chase McGill, Greg Wells, Jerry Flowers), immediately starts up next with it’s jovial banjo-picking, lively production and message about escaping the monotony of life.
“I really wanted to open the album with ‘Straight Line.’ There’s an intentional musical familiarity about that song when it comes to me and my sound,” Urban tells MusicRow. “It felt very comfortable to me, so it wasn’t surprising that lyrics leapt out about being in the moment and not missing out on life despite responsibility, commitments and obligations draining some of the color out of it.
“When we got into mixing, we experimented with different ways to open the song. I remember thinking maybe we should set up what the song’s meant to do,” he adds. “I asked myself, ‘What’s the kind of song that you hope would come on your alarm clark radio in the morning? It might be the first thing that makes you feel motivated and good.'”
Thus, Urban invites listeners into a place where they can be fully present with the rest of the album. He cuts deep right away with outside song “Messed Up As Me” (Jessie Jo Dillon, Shane McAnally, Michael Lotten, Rodney Clawson), which is the album’s current single.
The stirring track shares the all-too-familiar feeling of yearning for an ex whose no good for you. Urban was hooked by it on first listen.
“When I heard ‘when I get blue, I get dark blue,‘ I was in. With the next line, ‘when I have one, I always have a few’—I know that life extremely well,” he shares. “I can still feel that way metaphorically about things in my life.”

Notably, “Messed Up As Me” has some intriguing cover art, featuring of a birds-eye-view of a couple, naked, gripping each other for dear life in the bed of a pickup truck. According to Urban, the single rollout images for the album were a fun point of creativity.
“I wanted to find photographs that didn’t say anything using words, just an image that conjures up your own interpretation,” he says. “For ‘Messed Up As Me,’ my Creative Director, Patrick Tracy, found this image from a 1970s Japanese Playboy Magazine cover. It was these naked people in a pickup truck on a freeway. I just loved it.”
Another piece of media, the 2003 film School of Rock, loosely inspired a fun track on the album “Wildside” (Urban, David Garcia, Ashley Gorley, Ernest).
“Prior to my wife, I dated a lot of people and lots of them were these very southern, very Christian, well-raised girls that had this other side to them,” Urban says with a laugh. “That’s always stayed with me—this other side of these girls that is unleashed on a Friday or Saturday night. Monday, they’re right back to being professional, focused, responsible and diligent, and you never know. That, blended with Joan Cusack‘s character on School of Rock, manifested that song.”
On the album’s only collaboration, “Go Home W U,” Urban brings in fellow country superstar Lainey Wilson to duet about a wild night with a flickering flame. The song wasn’t originally meant to be a duet, though.
“I wrote that with Breland, Sam Sumser and Sean Small in 2020 when we had nowhere to go and nothing to do. On the demo, I sang both verses,” he says. “I had Lainey in my mind for a long time trying to find something to do with her. A friend of mine, Dan McCarroll, said, ‘What about that ‘Go Home W U’ song? Could you make that a duet?’ I sent her the song, she loved it and it was done.”
A stand-out on High is Urban’s ’80s-inspired jam “Chuck Taylors” (Urban, McGill, Flowers, Wells).
“Chuck Taylors” was the song that revitalized Urban as he transitioned from his scrapped album, and its energy shows it. He set up a write with Wells, with whom he crafted his 2016 hit “Wasted Time,” and close collaborator Flowers, who suggested they bring in McGill, an at-the-time new hit songwriter on Music Row.
“I was driving to the studio in Berry Hill and was thinking, ‘God, I don’t have any ideas. I don’t know who this Chase McGill guy is, and I get nervous writing with people I don’t know,'” Urban recalls. “In my head, I heard this simple chord progression and sort of punk, flailing bass. I got the whole chorus down but with zero lyrics—I had no idea what the song was about, but I was very adamant that the melody was right.
“I showed up with that and Chase says, ‘I’ve got this idea for a song called ‘Chuck Taylors.’ I’ll just read you what I’ve got,'” Urban says. “As he read it, I’m hearing this melody in my head. I picked up the bass, sang my melody and as I was looking at the words, they just fit. It was insane. Those words were just waiting for that melody.”
On another stand-out, “Daytona,” Urban taps into that old familiar ache for summer love. Written by Nathan Barlowe and Steven Lee Olsen, the tune has had a long road to the track list.
“Steven Lee and Nathan wrote that song back in 2016 I believe. Nathan sent it to me in January of 2017 and I loved it immediately,” Urban says. “I recorded it and tried to put it on the Graffiti U record,. I just didn’t feel like it fit with everything and I had to give them the sad news that I was leaving it off. In 2020, when I was making The Speed of Now, it didn’t quite fit on that record either. Four years later, it finally found its way onto an album.”
Urban brings to the surface a universal truth with the song “Love Is Hard.” Written by Shane McAnally, Justin Tranter and Eren Cannata, the track has tender, somewhat melancholy verses with an emotional, rocking chorus, featuring an angsty vocal from Urban that compliments the song well.
“There’s an emo, middle-finger rawness to the chorus because that’s exactly what it’s like. The verses have a quiet, sensitive intimacy,” he says. “Shane texted me that song when were almost done with the album. I was driving and barely got through the first chorus before I called him back.”
High closes with an extremely-profound song about generational trauma. Written with Marc Scibilia, “Break The Chain” finds Urban at his most vulnerable, examining what he’s inherited and what he wants to take forward.
Notably, the song was the result of Urban and Scibilia’s first meeting, arranged by Troy Tomlinson.
“I walked in to his studio and as I’m saying hi to him, I looked down and saw this guitar that I’ve never seen before. It was a really old acoustic, but it had a rubber bridge and flat round strings. I picked it up and start playing this riff. He grabbed a mic and hit record. We had literally said nothing except hi to each other.
“The lyrics just started coming. I grabbed a legal pad and sat on his couch. I had no idea what I was writing about, things were just coming out that seemed to be about working through coming from an alcoholic family,” Urban recalls, sharing that his father passed in 2016 from alcoholism and he himself has been sober for 18 years.
“I just burst out crying, sitting on this guy’s couch. Marc looks over at me and all he said was ‘Hmm. Must be true.’ Then he went right back to work again. His reaction was perfect because it was supportive but it let me stay where I was. It was so beautiful.”
Between the depth of feelings of generational trauma, fragmented love and toxic codependency, and the jubulent feelings of escapism, burning intimacy and good times with friends, Urban’s High is an exceptional collection.
To sum, Urban shares, “This one feels like a bigger excavation and capturing of my life. I hope it’s loved.”
Blake Shelton Signs With BBR Music Group/BMG Nashville
/by Liza AndersonBMG team with Blake Shelton. Photo: Sonny Alvarez/BMG
Blake Shelton has signed with BBR Music Group/BMG Nashville.
Shelton is currently climbing the charts with Post Malone collaboration “Pour Me A Drink.” His resume includes 28 No. 1 singles, 11 billion global streams, 52 million singles sold and 13 million albums sold. The country star has also received various accolades, including CMA Entertainer of the Year and five consecutive Male Vocalist of the Year wins.
The signing news follows he and Warner Music Nashville’s amicable decision to part ways earlier this month.
“Blake is one of the biggest personalities and presences in media,” says Jon Loba, President, Frontline Recordings, Americas, BMG. “America first got to know him through incredible, timeless songs and live shows and then fell in love with him and his sense of humor through TV. We are so excited he’s joining the BMG Global family and cannot wait to share his incredible new music with the world. He’s been laser-focused on delivering some of the best of his career and it shows. We have been dancing through the office, literally not just figuratively, since we heard the first couple songs he played for us!”
“A huge thanks to Jon, Peter [Strickland], JoJamie [Hahr], Katie [Kerkhover] and the BMG family for being as excited as me about this new chapter we will write together,” expresses Shelton. “I felt their passion and love for music when I met with them, and I knew I was home. I am READY TO GO!”
Additionally, he plans to kick off his “Live In Las Vegas” residency at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace as well as his “Friends & Heroes 2025 Tour” in February.
Range Music Publishing Signs Exclusive Global Administration Deal With UMPG
/by Liza AndersonRange Music Publishing has signed an exclusive global administration deal with Universal Music Publishing Group (UMPG). The new agreement expands on Range Media Partners’ existing relationships with Universal Music Group (UMG)’s Capitol Music Group and Virgin Music Group.
Established in 2023 and led by Casey Robison, Range Music Publishing has sought to build a curated, full-service, boutique music publishing company to take advantage of synergies within the Range ecosystem with the help of Managing Partners Matt Graham, Jack Minihan, Tyler Henry, Melissa Ruderman, Chris Thomas, Evan Winiker, Cory Litwin and Shawn McSpadden as well as Partners Rachel Douglas, Ace Christian, Joel Zimmerman and Jared Cotter, VP of A&R + Publishing Sam Drake, Director of A&R/Artist Manager Federico Morris and A&R Coordinator Megan Simon.
Its roster includes Sean Cook, Geoff Warburton, Luke Grimes, Dylan Gossett, Grant Averill, Tyler Dopps, Two Fresh, Luke Niccoli, Simon Oscroft and Rudey, the latter six of whom will be included in this deal.
In the past six months, Range Music Publishing has celebrated five top-charting songs across multiple radio formats and genres, including country, rhythmic, hot AC and dance. The signing follows Cook’s 10th-straight week on top of Billboard‘s Hot 100 chart with Shaboozey’s “A Bar Song (Tipsy).” The publishing divison has also seen success with Cook’s work on Paul Russell’s “Lil Boo Thang” in addition to Warburton’s credits, such as Tyler Hubbard’s “Back Then Right Now” and Luke Bryan’s “But I Got a Beer in My Hand,” and Dopps’ work on Loud Luxury and Charlieonnafriday’s “Young & Foolish.”
“We’re thrilled to be partnering with our friends at UMPG as we build Range Music Publishing and grow our global footprint,” says Robison. “UMPG’s impressive team will help us maximize creative opportunities while providing first-class administration for our growing roster of artists and songwriters. We couldn’t be more proud to call UMPG our partners.”
Graham adds, “On behalf of our partnership we are thrilled to be formalizing our longstanding relationship with UMPG. The collaboration ensures greater creative support and administration for our writers, producers and artists. Together, we are committed to connecting the dots across our myriad of talent as well as the varying facets of our film, television, sports and gaming relationships.”
“In the short time Range has focused on publishing, they have already made a strong impact in the marketplace,” says Jennifer Knoepfle, UMPG EVP/Co-Head of A&R. “Casey, Sam, Matt and team have a great ethos and vision, and we are happy to be their admin partner on current and future endeavors.”
On The Row: Jordan Fletcher Infuses ‘Classic’ Soft-Rock Sounds Into Sophomore EP
/by Liza AndersonJordan Fletcher. Photo: Jacqueline Justice
Jordan Fletcher is one of the talented creators mixing multi-genre flavors into country music. Drawing from influences such as Jack Johnson and Jason Isbell, his acoustic soft rock-country blend is soothing yet upbeat.
Earlier this year, Fletcher released his Cuts & Covers collection featuring popular songs that he co-wrote along with a cover of a favorite by Post Malone while preparing his sophomore EP, Classic. Accompanied by the Triple Tigers team as well as collaborator and producer Austin Nivarel, Fletcher recently swung by the MusicRow office to tell his story and share some tracks from the forthcoming project.
He grew up listening a variety of music, but became truly aware of its healing power after purchasing Johnson’s famous In Between Dreams album while his late father was battling cancer. Fletcher describes wearing the record out during the drives back and forth from his hometown of Jacksonville, Florida to the treatment center in Tampa.
Pictured (L–R): MusicRow‘s Madison Hahnen, Liza Anderson, LB Cantrell, Jordan Fletcher, MusicRow‘s Sherod Robertson, Madison Hahnen and John Nix Arledge
“That project is so peaceful, and it was so medicinal for me because I was in such a weird place,” he notes. “That knowledge of what music can do is something I can reach for when I’m writing something, which is good because it pushes me.”
Fletcher initially moved to Nashville as a drummer and quickly hit the road. He then started selling merchandise and opening for Muscadine Bloodline, going from 15-minute sets to 30–45-minute sets. A year later, Fletcher signed his first publishing deal with Sea Gayle Music.
His agreement had ended, and he had just welcomed his first son, when the COVID-19 pandemic hit. Fletcher found himself pressing pause on his career and planned to move back to Florida with his family.
While walking his dog with a newborn baby strapped to his chest, the songsmith got a call from J.R. Schumann, who was at SiriusXM’s The Highway at the time, regarding one of Fletcher’s acoustic tracks. With the artist’s blessing, Schumann sent it to Triple Tigers’ George Couri and within a few months, Fletcher had a new management and record deal, and had resigned with Sea Gayle. Since then, he has sought to push the country envelope and define his individual sound with collections like Classic.
Fletcher started developing the EP in Nivarel’s attic. Over a five-year period, he penned tunes that he felt couldn’t be found anywhere else.
“I’ve gotten to see all different eras of Jordan and watch him try different things,” Nivarel expressed. “I feel so fortunate to have been a part of this record. He’s the most positive and uplifting person to work with and you can hear that in the songs, so I just try to bring that energy to life.”
Jordan Fletcher & MusicRow‘s Sherod Robertson
When reflecting on the curation of Classic, Fletcher says that as the concepts matured throughout the six songs, so did he. “It’s me in a nutshell in terms of my growth and experience as an artist.”
He kicked off the preview with “No Place Like Home,” which was inspired by the transition period between leaving the place you were raised in and moving to a new place that eventually becomes your home. The song led Fletcher to the realization that he had already made that transition from Florida to Tennessee.
“I always say that my songs are smarter than I am because, when they’re all said and done, they say something that I wasn’t originally intending to say,” he shared. “As you get older, you realize that home isn’t just a ‘where,’ it’s also a ‘when,’ and this song just recognizes that.”
Fletcher moved on the heartbreakingly-clever “About Jill,” which he wrote with Nora Collins. Unveiled last month, the tune tells the story a single mother by depicting the contrast between her lifestyle and the lifestyle of her son’s seemingly-estranged father. He then shared the title track, with a verve reminiscent of the early 2000s, as well as another previously-released number, “Fall In The Summer,” which marked his highest streaming debut to date. The full EP is set for release this Friday (Sept. 27).
Belmont University’s Fisher Center Promotes Gage Baxter To Managing Director
/by John Nix ArledgeGage Baxter
The Fisher Center for the Performing Arts at Belmont University has promoted Gage Baxter to Managing Director. Baxter most recently served as Director of External Affairs and has been with the center since its inception. The Fisher Center aims to serve both the Nashville community and Belmont University through storytelling and the arts.
In his new position, Baxter will oversee marketing, ticketing, patron experience and audience development. He will also focus on cultivating new revenue opportunities, partnerships and cultural alliances. The Nashville native began his career at Belmont in 2019 as a part of the Development team, and has played a significant role in raising funds for the Fisher Center’s Capital Campaign and the school’s College of Music & Performing Arts. Baxter previously held performing arts development positions in Charleston, South Carolina, including at the Charleston Gaillard Center.
“Gage has been an essential part of the Fisher Center’s story,” says Chaz Corzine, Executive Director, Fisher Center for the Performing Arts. “His extensive experience in the arts and deep understanding of our mission have been a vital part of our growth and success. I look forward to seeing how his leadership and commitment to education will continue to elevate the Fisher Center as a cultural hub in Nashville and beyond.”
Morgan Wallen Wraps Record-Breaking, Epic Two-Night Stand At Neyland Stadium
/by Lorie HollabaughMorgan Wallen on stage at Neyland Stadium on Friday night (Sept. 20). Photo: John Shearer/Getty Images
For Morgan Wallen, there was no place like home this weekend, as he concluded his two-show-run at Neyland Stadium and made history with Knoxville’s largest weekend on record.
Morgan Wallen’s first-of-two nights at Neyland Stadium concludes with fireworks show. Photo: John Shearer/Getty Images
The two monumental shows totaled 156,161 fans across both nights, surpassing the record previously held by The Jackson 5 across three shows in 1984 (148,407).
Wallen charged down the gauntlet during Friday night’s show (Sept. 20) making his first-of-two weekend walk-outs flanked by the 2024 National Champion Tennessee Volunteers baseball team and Coach Tony Vitello—trophy in hand. The crowd of more than 70,000 enthusiastically welcomed them all home, cheering at a volume that registered 114 decibels.
Eric Church joins Morgan Wallen on night one at Neyland Stadium. Photo: John Shearer/Getty Images
“Before we get any further I want to make sure you make some noise for my band and crew who show up here early in advance to make sure we get to play the music y’all love,” said Wallen.
“I have a lot of people here who mean a lot to me,” he added. “I’ve got my little boy here, both my grandmothers here, my mom, my dad, my sisters, my nieces. I have been very fortunate to do a lot of great things over the last few years, but I know that this right here is going to be extremely hard to top as one of the coolest things I’ve ever gotten to do.”
Along with a bevy of hits, Wallen added his unreleased song “Love Somebody” to the setlist for the night, revealing its release date of Oct. 18 to fans from the stage. 12 songs in, Wallen welcomed the first entertainer he ever saw in concert in his hometown, Eric Church, to the acoustic stage for their Dangerous cut “Quittin’ Time,” before being joined by Hardy and Ernest for “Up Down” and “Flower Shops” and “Cowgirls,” respectively, back on the main stage.
Morgan Wallen and Miranda Lambert on night two at Neyland Stadium. Photo: John Shearer/Getty Images
On Sunday night (Sept. 22), Wallen fired up the crowd during the first opening moments, as two-time Super Bowl champion and former University of Tennessee Knoxville quarterback Peyton Manning joined for the second-of-two weekend walkouts, donning his retired college uniform and flanked by current UTK football coach Josh Heupel, quarterback Nico Iamaleava and wide receiver Bru McCoy—as their alma mater eagerly welcomed the All Vols walk-out back on their turf.
As he transferred to a more intimate B-Stage towards the back of the venue during the show for a stripped-down performance of his four-times Platinum rendition of Jason Isbell’s “Cover Me Up,” Wallen reflected on his career, which was first kindled in local bars throughout Knoxville.
“When me and the boys first started playing shows, we started out playing bars, real small venues. Worked our way up to places like Cotton Eyed Joe. Then we worked our way up to clubs, theaters, arenas and amphitheaters—we pretty much played any kind of venue there is, and all of a sudden you guys went and sold out Neyland today. Thank you. One thing that I miss though about the smaller shows is I could walk out on stage and I could look pretty much everybody in the eyes, so this is my attempt at trying to recreate some of that. To come back here and look some more of y’all in the eyes and say thank you for supporting me and my music.”
Morgan Wallen and Darius Rucker on night two at Neyland Stadium. Photo: John Shearer/Getty Images
After “Cover Me Up,” Wallen welcomed his first surprise guest of the evening, Miranda Lambert, for a live performance of their No. 1 hit “Thought You Should Know,” which Lambert co-wrote alongside Wallen and Nicolle Galyon.
Returning to the main stage, Wallen once again welcomed Hardy and Ernest back again for “Up Down” and “Cowgirls,” respectively, before singing cuts off of Dangerous: The Double Album, including “Talkin’ Tennessee,” an homage to his roots which was added to his setlist only for his Neyland Stadium shows. Near the end of the epic two-night stand, Darius Rucker surprised the crowd, joining Wallen for a joint performance of his Diamond-certified rendition of “Wagon Wheel” to rousing reception.
Wallen has three shows remaining on his “One Night At A Time 2024 Tour,” including one night at Tampa’s Raymond James Stadium on Oct. 4 and two consecutive nights at Charlotte’s Bank of America Stadium on Oct. 18-19.
Jerry Douglas Releases First Album In Seven Years
/by Lorie HollabaughAlbum Art: Willy Matthews
Jerry Douglas has released his first album in seven years, The Set, via Nolivian Records.
On The Set, Douglas showcases five new tracks and six revitalized songs from his catalog. The lead single, “While My Guitar Gently Weeps,” finds The Jerry Douglas Band delivering a rendition of the Beatles’ 1968 classic. Last month, Douglas released the second single from the album, “Something You Got,” which was originally written and performed by R&B artist Christopher Kenner in 1961. “Something You Got” reimagines the 2012 collaboration between Douglas and Eric Clapton, with Douglas taking lead vocals.
“I’ve left no stone unturned,” he says. “I’ve been producing records for a long time, so I really, really put on that hat for this record. Usually, I like instrumentalists to have free rein in whatever they do. It’s the way they speak. If anybody had an idea, we chased it down to the end. I feel like it’s really finished. I’m really happy with the outcome of this whole experience.”
For the new project, Douglas also turned to his bandmates for material, including Mike Seal’s “Renee,” Christian Sedelmyer’s “Deacon Waltz,” and Daniel Kimbro’s “Loyston.” Additionally, the four musicians collaborated on “The Fifth Season,” a concerto commissioned by the FreshGrass Foundation. The Set concludes with two instrumentals, “Pushed Too Far” and “Sir Aly B,” and is available on all DSPs, CD and 180-gram vinyl.
Douglas is set to be inducted into the Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame this Thursday (Sept. 26).
The Set Track Listing:
“Gone to Fortingall”
“Renee”
“What Might Have Been” featuring Aoife O’Donovan
“From Ankara to Ismir”
“Something You Got”
“Deacon Waltz”
“The Fifth Season”
“While My Guitar Gently Weeps”
“Loyston”
“Pushed Too Far”
“Sir Aly B”
Brett Eldredge To Embark On ‘Glow: Welcome To The Family Tour’ This Winter
/by Liza AndersonBrett Eldredge. Photo: Alysse Gafkjen
Brett Eldredge has announced his 12-date “Glow: Welcome To The Family Tour.”
With support from Stacey Ryan, Eldredge will take the stage on multiple nights at famous venues, including The Chicago Theater, New York’s Beacon Theatre and Boston’s Wang Theatre, before closing at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena. The announcement follows the news of his third Christmas album, Merry Christmas (Welcome to the Family), out this Friday (Sept. 27) via his own Warm and Cozy Records.
“I feel honored that these Christmas shows have became such a tradition for so many families to get in the spirit of the season,” Eldredge shares. “This upcoming tour is going to be sprinkled with some extra magic, new original Christmas songs and classic holiday stories. My goal is for everyone to feel right at home and leave as part of one BIG beautiful family! Merry Christmas, welcome to the Family! Let’s Glow!”
In addition to the album release, tickets for the journey will go on sale this Friday. For more information, click here.
“Glow: Welcome To The Family Tour” Dates:
Nov. 29 – Boston, MA – Boch Center Wang Theatre
Nov. 30 – Boston, MA – Boch Center Wang Theatre
Dec. 1 – Philadelphia, PA – The Met Philadelphia, presented by Highmark
Dec. 6 – Chicago, IL – The Chicago Theatre
Dec. 7 – Chicago, IL – The Chicago Theatre
Dec. 8 – Chicago, IL – The Chicago Theatre
Dec. 10 – Detroit, MI – Fox Theatre
Dec. 12 – New York, NY – Beacon Theatre
Dec. 13 – New York, NY – Beacon Theatre
Dec. 14 – New York, NY – Beacon Theatre
Dec. 18 – St Louis, MO – Fox Theatre
Dec. 20 – Nashville, TN – Bridgestone Arena
Keith Urban Takes Over Broadway To Celebrate New Album
/by LB CantrellKeith Urban performs on Nashville’s lower Broadway. Photo: John Shearer
Approximately 25,000 fans filled the streets of downtown Nashville on Thursday night (Sept. 19) to celebrate the release of Keith Urban‘s new album High.
With just hours between Urban announcing the show on social media and its start time, attendees got settled for the free show. For nearly 90-minutes, the entertainer gave first-time performances of songs from High.
Keith Urban performs on Nashville’s lower Broadway. Photo: John Shearer
The pop-up on lower Broadway was just another in a series of pop-up shows that have seen Urban surprise crowds in Dallas, Chicago, Minneapolis, BNA Airport (in Nashville), Sydney, Brisbane and a Buc-ee’s parking lot in Alabama. In addition to his pop-up and club shows and driving excursions, by the end of the month Urban will have stopped in Sydney, Brisbane, Nashville, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, New York and Toronto for national television appearances, digital content and collaborations, podcasts and network television specials.
Tomorrow (Sept. 24), Urban will appear on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, and he will hit The Kelly Clarkson Show on Thursday (Sept. 26).
Jim Kuzmich Joins Thompson Burton
/by Madison HahnenJim Kuzmich
Entertainment and corporate attorney Jim Kuzmich has joined Thompson Burton, PLLC as a Partner. He will create both the Intellectual Property and Entertainment Law practice areas at Thompson Burton.
“We are excited to welcome Jim to Thompson Burton and appreciate the expertise he brings for our clients,” says Walt Burton, Partner, Thompson Burton. “We look forward to his leadership in the Intellectual Property and Entertainment Law practice areas.”
Kuzmich has provided legal counsel to small and mid-sized businesses, advising on both challenges and growth opportunities for owners. He also has advised acquisitions and sales of companies, as well as overseeing business partnerships. Kuzmich has assisted startup companies faced with a plethora of legal issues, including entity formation and structure, commercial leasing, intellectual property protection and general operational matters.
He also brings experience representing musicians, YouTube influencers, producers, songwriters, entertainers and professional athletes. He has extensive knowledge of trademark, copyright, endorsement and licensing law, presenting practical solutions to some of the most common legal issues that musical artists and other creatives face in business. He previously served as In-House Counsel and Vice President to a mid-sized baseball agency specializing in athletic representation. During his time there, he assisted with negotiating player contract salaries, endorsements contracts and preparing salary arbitration cases.
Keith Urban Releases Creatively Euphoric New Album [Interview]
/by LB CantrellKeith Urban
In the four years since the release of Keith Urban‘s last studio album, The Speed of Now Part 1, the four-time Grammy winner has had quite a journey chasing down the muse for his 13th studio project.
The muse proved elusive this time around, with Urban even scrapping the makings of an album in 2022. But today (Sept. 20), the hitmaker has proudly released a 12-song opus of wildly-creative and full-hearted music. He titled the project High because of the euphoria he felt in the creative process that resulted in the 40-minute collection, but another meaning could be assigned to the caliber of what he’s created.
The record kicks off with the 12-second sound of an alarm clock on a track called “Blue Sky.” Urban is heard waking up, saying, “just give me some blue sky… please.” Track two, “Straight Line” (Urban, Chase McGill, Greg Wells, Jerry Flowers), immediately starts up next with it’s jovial banjo-picking, lively production and message about escaping the monotony of life.
“I really wanted to open the album with ‘Straight Line.’ There’s an intentional musical familiarity about that song when it comes to me and my sound,” Urban tells MusicRow. “It felt very comfortable to me, so it wasn’t surprising that lyrics leapt out about being in the moment and not missing out on life despite responsibility, commitments and obligations draining some of the color out of it.
“When we got into mixing, we experimented with different ways to open the song. I remember thinking maybe we should set up what the song’s meant to do,” he adds. “I asked myself, ‘What’s the kind of song that you hope would come on your alarm clark radio in the morning? It might be the first thing that makes you feel motivated and good.'”
Thus, Urban invites listeners into a place where they can be fully present with the rest of the album. He cuts deep right away with outside song “Messed Up As Me” (Jessie Jo Dillon, Shane McAnally, Michael Lotten, Rodney Clawson), which is the album’s current single.
The stirring track shares the all-too-familiar feeling of yearning for an ex whose no good for you. Urban was hooked by it on first listen.
“When I heard ‘when I get blue, I get dark blue,‘ I was in. With the next line, ‘when I have one, I always have a few’—I know that life extremely well,” he shares. “I can still feel that way metaphorically about things in my life.”
Notably, “Messed Up As Me” has some intriguing cover art, featuring of a birds-eye-view of a couple, naked, gripping each other for dear life in the bed of a pickup truck. According to Urban, the single rollout images for the album were a fun point of creativity.
“I wanted to find photographs that didn’t say anything using words, just an image that conjures up your own interpretation,” he says. “For ‘Messed Up As Me,’ my Creative Director, Patrick Tracy, found this image from a 1970s Japanese Playboy Magazine cover. It was these naked people in a pickup truck on a freeway. I just loved it.”
Another piece of media, the 2003 film School of Rock, loosely inspired a fun track on the album “Wildside” (Urban, David Garcia, Ashley Gorley, Ernest).
“Prior to my wife, I dated a lot of people and lots of them were these very southern, very Christian, well-raised girls that had this other side to them,” Urban says with a laugh. “That’s always stayed with me—this other side of these girls that is unleashed on a Friday or Saturday night. Monday, they’re right back to being professional, focused, responsible and diligent, and you never know. That, blended with Joan Cusack‘s character on School of Rock, manifested that song.”
On the album’s only collaboration, “Go Home W U,” Urban brings in fellow country superstar Lainey Wilson to duet about a wild night with a flickering flame. The song wasn’t originally meant to be a duet, though.
“I wrote that with Breland, Sam Sumser and Sean Small in 2020 when we had nowhere to go and nothing to do. On the demo, I sang both verses,” he says. “I had Lainey in my mind for a long time trying to find something to do with her. A friend of mine, Dan McCarroll, said, ‘What about that ‘Go Home W U’ song? Could you make that a duet?’ I sent her the song, she loved it and it was done.”
A stand-out on High is Urban’s ’80s-inspired jam “Chuck Taylors” (Urban, McGill, Flowers, Wells).
“Chuck Taylors” was the song that revitalized Urban as he transitioned from his scrapped album, and its energy shows it. He set up a write with Wells, with whom he crafted his 2016 hit “Wasted Time,” and close collaborator Flowers, who suggested they bring in McGill, an at-the-time new hit songwriter on Music Row.
“I was driving to the studio in Berry Hill and was thinking, ‘God, I don’t have any ideas. I don’t know who this Chase McGill guy is, and I get nervous writing with people I don’t know,'” Urban recalls. “In my head, I heard this simple chord progression and sort of punk, flailing bass. I got the whole chorus down but with zero lyrics—I had no idea what the song was about, but I was very adamant that the melody was right.
“I showed up with that and Chase says, ‘I’ve got this idea for a song called ‘Chuck Taylors.’ I’ll just read you what I’ve got,'” Urban says. “As he read it, I’m hearing this melody in my head. I picked up the bass, sang my melody and as I was looking at the words, they just fit. It was insane. Those words were just waiting for that melody.”
On another stand-out, “Daytona,” Urban taps into that old familiar ache for summer love. Written by Nathan Barlowe and Steven Lee Olsen, the tune has had a long road to the track list.
“Steven Lee and Nathan wrote that song back in 2016 I believe. Nathan sent it to me in January of 2017 and I loved it immediately,” Urban says. “I recorded it and tried to put it on the Graffiti U record,. I just didn’t feel like it fit with everything and I had to give them the sad news that I was leaving it off. In 2020, when I was making The Speed of Now, it didn’t quite fit on that record either. Four years later, it finally found its way onto an album.”
Urban brings to the surface a universal truth with the song “Love Is Hard.” Written by Shane McAnally, Justin Tranter and Eren Cannata, the track has tender, somewhat melancholy verses with an emotional, rocking chorus, featuring an angsty vocal from Urban that compliments the song well.
“There’s an emo, middle-finger rawness to the chorus because that’s exactly what it’s like. The verses have a quiet, sensitive intimacy,” he says. “Shane texted me that song when were almost done with the album. I was driving and barely got through the first chorus before I called him back.”
High closes with an extremely-profound song about generational trauma. Written with Marc Scibilia, “Break The Chain” finds Urban at his most vulnerable, examining what he’s inherited and what he wants to take forward.
Notably, the song was the result of Urban and Scibilia’s first meeting, arranged by Troy Tomlinson.
“I walked in to his studio and as I’m saying hi to him, I looked down and saw this guitar that I’ve never seen before. It was a really old acoustic, but it had a rubber bridge and flat round strings. I picked it up and start playing this riff. He grabbed a mic and hit record. We had literally said nothing except hi to each other.
“The lyrics just started coming. I grabbed a legal pad and sat on his couch. I had no idea what I was writing about, things were just coming out that seemed to be about working through coming from an alcoholic family,” Urban recalls, sharing that his father passed in 2016 from alcoholism and he himself has been sober for 18 years.
“I just burst out crying, sitting on this guy’s couch. Marc looks over at me and all he said was ‘Hmm. Must be true.’ Then he went right back to work again. His reaction was perfect because it was supportive but it let me stay where I was. It was so beautiful.”
Between the depth of feelings of generational trauma, fragmented love and toxic codependency, and the jubulent feelings of escapism, burning intimacy and good times with friends, Urban’s High is an exceptional collection.
To sum, Urban shares, “This one feels like a bigger excavation and capturing of my life. I hope it’s loved.”