Cameron Jaymes Signs With Kobalt

Pictured (L–R): Morgan Brasfield, Cameron Jaymes, Kevin Lane and Stephanie Cox

Cameron Jaymes has signed an exclusive worldwide agreement with Kobalt.

Jaymes began his career as an EMI recording artist. He later shifted to writing and production, working under his longtime friend and mentor Busbee.

He has written and produced songs across genres for Alana Springsteen, Rachel Platten, Danny Lux, Daya, Jordyn Shellhart, Nightly, Emily Reid, Sarah Reeves, For All Seasons, Robyn Ottolini, Tritonal and more. Jaymes’ work has also been featured on television shows and networks such as Gilmore Girls, Jane The Virgin, 13 Reasons Why, Good Morning America, Today, ABC, ABC Family, E! Network, Bravo and MTV as well as in Marie Claire, Seventeen Magazine and Teen People.

“Cameron is a one of a kind creative. He approaches every aspect of his career with the utmost care for not only the product, but also for the people he works with,” says Kevin Lane, Kobalt Senior Director, Creative. “His passion is infectious, and [he] has aspirations to create music that will inspire people for generations to come. It’s an honor to welcome him into the Kobalt family.”

“I’ve known Kevin from afar for the last several years and have always held great respect for how he goes about his business. When we first sat down to talk about my career, and Kobalt’s trajectory, I felt an immense sense of ease and excitement,” shares Jaymes. “Spending time with Stephanie [Cox] and Morgan [Brasfield] cemented my belief that they were the perfect creative home for me. I’m grateful and excited about being a part of what they are building, and them being a part of what I’m building.”

Banjo Great Jim Mills Passes

Jim Mills

Award-winning bluegrass musician Jim Mills unexpectedly passed away on Friday (May 3) at age 57. His cause of death has not been shared.

Throughout his career, Mills’ talented banjo playing earned him gigs with Ricky Skaggs, Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver, Barry Poss with Sugarhill Records, Bass Mountain Boys, Vince Gill, Dolly Parton and more. He was a longtime member of Skaggs’ Kentucky Thunder band and released solo material as well.

James Robert “Jim” Mills was born and raised the youngest of three boys in Raleigh, North Carolina. He started teaching himself to play banjo at 12 years old. After high school, Mills began pursuing a career in bluegrass full-time with the group Summer Wages. This led to a long career in various bands.

Mills shared his talent from the stage at the Grand Ole Opry and Carnegie Hall. He won the International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA) Banjo Player of the Year award six times as well as the IBMA Instrumental Album of the Year for his Bound To Ride album and six Grammy Awards.

Nicknamed “Smilin’ Jim” in the bluegrass community, Mills was known for his friendliness. He was also known for his knowledge of the history of banjos—even writing a book on Gibson pre-war banjos in 2009.

After retiring from the road in 2010, Mills acted as a dealer of rare banjos and guitars and held seminars on the subject.

Mills was preceded in death by his brothers Michael and Alan, father John and mother Shirley. He is survived by his wife Kimberly Mills, his step-mother Mary “Annie” Roberts, mother-in-law Linda Gregory Mills, father-in-law George Neil Mixon, brother-in-law Robert Mixon (Kate) and nieces Hannah and Emma Mixon.

A memorial service will be held at a later date.

Industry Ink: CMHOFM, Spencer Crandall, MIW

CMHOFM Hosts 45th Annual Words & Music Celebration

Tigerlily Gold with Words & Music student and songwriter participants. Photo: Courtesy of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum hosted the 45th annual celebration of its flagship educational program, Words & Music on Monday (May 6).

Words & Music allows students ranging from third graders to high school seniors to tell their stories through original song lyrics, while developing language arts skills. The program aims to embrace and showcase country music’s legacy of songwriting while passing it down to the next generation of writers and thinkers. Participants interact with a professional songwriter paired with their class in an engaging performance workshop that seeks to transform their lyrics into finished songs. Since its inception in 1979, over 160,000 students have participated in Words & Music.

The latest participants and their families gathered in the museum’s Ford Theater along with the evening’s hosts, country duo Tigirlily Gold, to hear a selection of 13 songs written by students in Nashville and its surrounding areas. The program was recorded and will be shared on the museum’s website later this summer.

Spencer Crandall’s ‘My Person’ Goes Gold

Spencer Crandall with his Gold certification plaque for “My Person”.

Independent artist Spencer Crandall was surprised with a Gold plaque for his song “My Person” at Stagecoach on April 27.

SiriusXM’s Ania Hammar delivered the news and presented Crandall with the plaque during an interview.

Crandall has collected more than 375 million global career streams to date, and recently released his latest single, “See It Like You.”

MIW Names Sarah Weaver As First Mentoring And Inspiring Women In Country Radio Mentee

Sarah Weaver

The nonprofit organization Mentoring and Inspiring Women in Radio, Inc. (MIW) has named Sarah Weaver, Program Director & Morning Show Co-Host of WKML in Fayetteville, North Carolina, as the inaugural Mentoring and Inspiring Women in Country Radio mentee.

Launched earlier this year, Mentoring and Inspiring Women in Country Radio is a year-long program that exposes the mentee to the established minds in the business through personalized conversations, connections and opportunities that seek to advance their leadership and management positions in country radio. The program also gives the mentee the opportunity to attend Country Radio Seminar (CRS) 2025 in Nashville.

Weaver started her radio career in 2013 at KMVN in Anchorage, Alaska before joining Beasley Media Group as the midday personality on WKML. She was named Co-Host of The Big Wake Up morning show in August 2017, and took on Music Director and Assistant Program Director duties before rising to Program Director in January 2023.

Cindy Walker Posthumously Inducted Into Songwriters Hall Of Fame

Cindy Walker

Songwriter Cindy Walker has posthumously been inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame.

Cindy, who passed away in 2006, was recognized for her contributions to the world of music in a special tribute held in Nashville at Columbia Studio A. The ceremony was held as a unique segment during a SHOF Master Session with 2023 inductee Liz Rose, which was hosted by Belmont University’s Mike Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business.

Rose spoke fondly of her close relationship with the late songwriter and presented the award to Cindy’s niece Molly Walker, who accepted on behalf of the family. Rose’s daughter Caitlin Rose also performed the classic hit “You Don’t Know Me,” which Cindy co-wrote with Eddy Arnold.

With numerous hits during her over-60 year career, Cindy’s songs were handcrafted with precision, often tailored for the artists she admired. Her vast repertoire included hits such as “You’re From Texas” and the poignant “You Don’t Know Me,” and other timeless standards such as “Cherokee Maiden,” “Sugar Moon,” “In the Misty Moonlight,” “Dream Baby,” “Take Me in Your Arms & Hold Me,” “Triflin’ Gal,” “Miss Molly,” and “Distant Drums.”

Artists who have recorded her songs include Arnold, Glen Campbell, Johnny Cash, Ray Charles, Cher, Ralph Emery, Mickey Gilley, Emmylou Harris, Merle Haggard, B.B. King, Alison Krauss, Kenny Loggins, Jerry Lee Lewis, Dean Martin, Anne Murray, Bill Monroe, Willie Nelson, Roy Orbison, Patti Page, Elvis Presley, Kenny Rogers, Charlie Rich, Jerry Reed, Ricky Skaggs, Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys, The Statler Brothers, Hank Snow and Jackie Wilson, among many others.

“This would’ve made her so proud, and the thing that gets me is, when we hear Cindy’s songs she’s still with us. I can’t tell you how much this would have meant to her and her family,” says Molly Walker.

The event was co-hosted by SHOF Board Member Fletcher Foster, who also chairs the SHOF Nashville Committee. “The ceremony at Columbia Studio A was warm, intimate, and respectful,” says Foster. “SHOF President and CEO Linda Moran says this now sets the stage for future posthumous inductions.”

WME Signs Singer-Songwriter Maddox Batson

Pictured (L-R): WME’s Braeden Rountree; Prosper Entertainment’s Eddie Franzoni and Nick Barr; Maddox Batson; WME’s Sloane Logue, Morgan Kenney, Jordan Stone and Sara Pincus. Photo: Courtesy of WME

WME has signed singer-songwriter Maddox Batson. The agency will represent Batson across departments including touring, brand partnerships, television, film and digital.

Born in Hermitage, Tennessee and raised in Birmingham, Alabama, the 14-year-old is known for blending country with southern rock and pop. Batson spent last summer playing over 20 shows, developing his sound and learning alongside his father, who also a musician.

He has amassed more than 200 million views in under five months and over three million followers across social media. Batson’s debut single, “Tears In The River,” went viral on TikTok and scored more than five million global streams earlier this year in addition to landing at No. 18 on Spotify’s Viral 50 U.S. playlist. His latest tune, “I Wanna Know,” reached the No. 19 spot on YouTube’s Trending page upon release.

“Maddox is unbelievably talented coupled with an infectious personality,” shares the WME team. “Not only is he charismatic, but his desire to change the world and make others feel their best reflects in his music. The world is at his fingertips, and we couldn’t be more excited to be a part of his journey.”

Additionally, Batson is signed to Prosper Entertainment and OH Creative.

Country Music Hall Of Fame & Museum Welcomes Two, Promotes Three

Pictured (L-R): Allison Moorer, Brad Henton, Paige Maillet, Jon Freeman and Kayleigh Shoemaker. Photos: Courtesy of Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum has made a series of staff additions and promotions.

Jon Freeman and Allison Moorer have joined the staff as Writer-Editors in the Museum Services department. Staff promotions include Brad Henton to Senior Director of Culinary, Event and Museum Sales; Paige Maillet to Director of Guest Experience and Kayleigh Shoemaker to Director of Public Programs.

In their roles as Writer-Editors, Freeman and Moorer will contribute to exhibitions, museum publications, public programs, online offerings, social media channels and other educational initiatives that interpret and illuminate the genre and explore the broad and ever-evolving narratives of its history and its contributions to culture.

Freeman is a Nashville-based writer and editor who most recently spent seven years working for Rolling Stone helping oversee the publication’s Rolling Stone Country online section. Freeman’s media career began with the Nashville trade publication MusicRow, and in 2012, he joined the staff of Country Weekly magazine as an Editor, where he remained through the company’s rebrand to Nash Country Weekly. A graduate of Auburn University, Freeman’s writing has appeared in Spin, NPR Music, the Nashville Scene and Vinyl Me Please, in addition to Rolling Stone.

Moorer is a singer-songwriter, producer and author who has released 10 albums and published two memoirs, Blood and I Dream He Talks to Me. She has been nominated for an Academy Award, as well as awards from the Grammys, Americana Music Association and Academy of Country Music. Moorer’s work has been published in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, American Songwriter, Guernica, No Depression, Literary Hub and The Bitter Southerner. She also received the Hall-Waters Prize for Excellence in Southern Writing in 2020 and the Alabama Library Association’s Authors Award in 2022. Moorer holds a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from The New School.

In his new role of Senior Director of Culinary, Event and Museum Sales, Henton will continue to lead the museum sales and reservations department in overseeing daily admissions to the museum, Hatch Show Print and Historic RCA Studio B. He will also take on new areas of responsibility including CMA Theater concerts and operations, private event sales and services, as well as food and beverage operations and events hosted by the museum, including its annual Medallion Ceremony. Henton joined the museum in 2004, and most recently served as Director of Museum Sales and Guest Experience. Henton has a bachelor’s degree from the University of North Alabama.

Maillet oversees all aspects of the visitor experience for the museum, Hatch Show Print, Historic RCA Studio B tours and CMA Theater shows, as well as other publicly ticketed events and programs. Her oversight includes box office sales, information and membership desks, greeters, tour guides and ushers. During her nine-year tenure with the museum, Maillet has served in many positions, most recently as Associate Director of Guest Relations. She holds a bachelor’s degree in communications from Texas Christian University.

In her new role, Shoemaker will develop and oversee the museum’s programs, working with staff writers, editors and historians to present over 200 programs annually including interviews and performances with renowned session musicians and songwriters, exhibit-related programs with content experts, and more. She joined the museum in 2017, and most recently served as Senior Public Programs Manager. Shoemaker previously worked with NSAI, Agency for the Performing Arts and Bluewater Music. She holds a bachelor’s degree from Middle Tennessee State University’s recording industry program with a concentration in music business.

DISClaimer Single Reviews: Megan Moroney Writes With ‘Creativity & Wit’

Megan Moroney. Photo: CeCe Dawson.

DISClaimer is running all the country-music bases this week—hip-hop, disco, bluegrass, rock, honky-tonk, alt-pop—you name it.

The most “country” thing in the line-up is, of course, the Randy Travis entry. But it’s rocker Dylan Taylor who has the DISCovery Award winner. The record to watch is Avery Anna’s “Blonde,” which drops tomorrow. Making it a female grand slam is Megan Moroney who wins Disc of the Day with the advance track from her upcoming sophomore album.

Having said all that, the single in this stack that is almost certainly going to be the smash hit is the Kane Brown collaboration with Marshmello.

CARSON PETERS / “Long Twin Silver Line”
Writer: Bob Seger; Producer: Randall Deaton; Label: Lonesome Day
– I have always thought that Bob Seger’s songs were somehow “country,” but I confess I never considered how cool one could sound as bluegrass track. Here’s the evidence, complete with Dobro, mandolin, fiddle, banjo and guitar. More, please.

RUSSELL DICKERSON / “Good Day To Have A Great Day”
Writers: Eren Cannata/Jesse Frasure/Justin Tranter/Russell Dickerson; Producers: Russell Dickerson/Josh Kerr; Label: Triple Tigers
– This one is a big ol’ smile. Designed to start your morning with a bopping good attitude, optimism, positivity and love. Euphoria on the hoof.

LAUREN WATKINS / “Mama, I Made It”
Writers: Lauren Hungate/Lauren Watkins/Rocky Block; Producer: Joey Moi; Label: Big Loud Records
– The jaunty track ripples along, but it’s the lyric that captures your attention. Her relationship has gone south. It’s a mess, and “Mama, I made it.” Wonderfully catchy and cool. So nice I played it twice.

RANDY TRAVIS / “Where That Came From”
Writers: John Scott Sherrill/Scotty Emerick; Producers: Jerry Douglas/Kyle Lehning; Label: Warner Music Nashville
– Country music’s first AI-generated single sounds like a miracle. Randy’s voice may be stroke-stilled, but here it is very much present and accounted for, thanks to technology. Heart-touching listening.

KEITH URBAN & LAINEY WILSON / “Go Home W U”
Writers: Breland/Keith Urban/Sam Sumser/Sean Small; Producers: Keith Urban/Sam Sumser/Sean Small; Label: Capitol Records Nashville
– It’s closing time at the bar, and he’s too loaded to drive home. So maybe she should drive him to her place. The chorus is arranged with gang vocals like it is meant to be a rowdy roadhouse sing-along.

DYLAN TAYLOR / “Damn My Heart”
Writer: Dylan Taylor; Producer: RS Field; Label: Vertical Records
– It’s a spitfire country rocker with forward-motion propulsion and a saucy female vocal. A total summer jam. Highly promising. Taylor is a SESAC writer recently signed by Bluewater Music.

MEGAN MORONEY / “Indifferent”
Writers: Ben Williams/Mackenzie Carpenter/Megan Moroney/Micah Carpenter; Producer: Kristian Bush; Label: Columbia Nashville/Columbia Records
– The creativity and wit in this woman’s songwriting always delight me. This female-empowerment romp has oomphy stadium chords, but it’s the feisty attitude that keeps you hanging on every line. Love her. Love this.

MARSHMELLO & KANE BROWN / “Miles On It”
Writers: Castle/Connor McDonough/Earwulf/Jake Torrey/Kane Brown/Marshmello/Nick Gale/Riley McDonough; Producers: Marshmello/Digital Farm Animals/Earwulf/Connor McDonough; Label: RCA Records Label Nashville
– Brown’s ready to roll, with a Chevy truck bed eager to welcome him and his gal. He wants to, “Put some miles on it/If you know what I mean.” Disco mix master Marshmello puts some rhythmic thump on the track to help make it a road-worthy, wicked-good, summertime banger.

MONTE WARDEN & THE DANGEROUS FEW / “Waxahachie Hoochie Coo”
Writers: Brandi Warden/Montgomery Warden; Producers:Erik Telford/Mas Palermo/Tim Palmer; Label: Break A Leg Records
– It’s a groovy, good-time, R&B track with horns, topped by a country vocal. Warden is a two-time Texas Music Hall of Famer, once as a member of The Wagoneers and once as a solo artist. He has a longtime residency in the honky-tonks of Austin and periodically surfaces as a songwriter for George Strait, Patty Loveless, George Jones, Travis Tritt, Josh Turner and more.

GEORGIA WEBSTER & NIGHTLY / “This Ain’t A Breakup”
Writers: Georgia Webster/Conner Moye/Spencer Rabin; Producer: King Henry; Label: Sony Music Nashville
– “If this ain’t a breakup, then why am I broken?” they both ask. Beats burble around their echoey voices in a highly electronic track. Hooky and quite engaging. Nightly is a Nashville alt-pop band fronted by singer Jonny Capeci.

RVSHVD / “Dear Mama”
Writers: Bruce Hawes/Charles B. Simmons/Joe Sample/Joseph B. Jefferson/Terence Thomas/Tony D Pizarro/Tupac Amaru Shakur; Producer: Dream Addix; Label: Sumerian Records
– This country rapper’s name is pronounced Ra-Shad. His revival of the million-selling 1995 Tupac Shakur hip-hop hit is right on time for Mother’s Day.

AVERY ANNA / “Blonde”
Writers: Avery Anna/David Fanning/Andy Sheridan/Ben Williams; Producer: David Fanning; Label: Warner Music Nashville
– So excellent! She takes the cliches of being a blonde and turns them on their heads in this drawling, winking, snarky response to a condescending male. Anna’s vocal delivery is priceless. Absolutely play this.

Jackson Nance Inks With Eclipse Music Group & Electric Feel Publishing

Pictured (L-R): Anna Thiel (Eclipse Music, Creative Coordinator), Kurt Locher (Eclipse Music Group, Founder/Partner), Penny Gattis (Eclipse Music Group, Partner), John Owen Bradley (Electric Feel, Country A&R) Jackson Nance, Austin Rosen (Electric Feel, CEO). Photo: Courtesy of Evolution PR

Singer-songwriter Jackson Nance has signed a global publishing deal with Eclipse Music Group and Electric Feel Publishing.

“Jackson is a rare talent and a triple threat,” says Penny Gattis, Partner, Eclipse Music Group. “His vocals, guitar playing and writing seamlessly transcend genres while remaining uniquely his own. Partnering with Electric Feel on this was an organic fit, and I’m eager to witness the extraordinary journey ahead with this dream team in place.”

The Mississippi native has been immersed in music since he was 10 years old. He has been paving his path in music city for seven years now, working with some of the industry’s most established mentors. Nance has had cuts with Brennan Story, Chase Rice and Halle. He has also performed with Ricky Staggs, Jeffrey Steele, Delbert McClinton and Jamey Johnson, among others.

“From the second I met Jackson, I knew he had IT,” shares John Bradley, Country A&R, Electric Feel Publishing. “He is a rare talent that effortlessly writes in any genre and conquers any challenge thrown his way. Jackson seamlessly fits into the culture Electric Feel is building in Nashville, and it couldn’t be more perfect to partner with my friends at Eclipse Music Group.”

“I feel blessed to be part of Eclipse Music and Electric Feel.  These days it’s hard to do anything but smile when thinking about my future! Praise God,” adds Nance.

Kane Brown & Marshmello Make History With ‘Miles On It’

Kane Brown & Marshmello. Photo: Courtesy of Sony Music Nashville.

Multi-Platinum country singer Kane Brown and Grammy-nominated artist Marshmello have made history with their new collaboration “Miles On It.”

The track became the No. 1 most-added song on both country and pop radio simultaneously, making Brown and Marshmello the first male artists to achieve this feat. They join the ranks of Taylor Swift and Beyoncé for this career milestone. This is also the first collaboration to receive the distinction.

YouTube video

The upbeat anthem is not the first time the two have collaborated, as they first came together for “One Thing Right” in 2019. That track went on to become five-times Platinum, amass 1.3 billion streams and gave Brown his first top 10 single in the top 40 format.

“Miles On It” is currently charting globally across all streaming platforms.

Toby Keith To Be Honored At University Of Oklahoma Commencement

Toby Keith will receive an honorary degree at the University of Oklahoma (OU)’s Commencement. His daughter, Krystal Keith, will stand in for the late singer to receive the honor during the ceremony this Saturday (May 11) at Lloyd Noble Center.

The country star first learned he was receiving the accolade last year, and was honored and happy to be acknowledged by the university that he loved and sent his children to for their education.

“He loved OU! His passion started as far back as when he was 12 [or] 13 years old, and [he] worked in the stadium selling Cokes just so he could see the games,” recalls Krystal. “For as long as I can remember, he took us to every bowl game no matter what his work schedule was. And he was on the sidelines of nearly all the different OU sporting events. He bled crimson and cream.”

Educator, economist and activist Barbara Ann Posey Jones, Love’s Travel Stops Founder Tom E. Love and Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient David Proctor will also receive honorary degrees from OU this year. Love and Jones will be honored during a ceremony scheduled for this Friday (May 10).

“Through their exceptional talents, transformative leadership and unwavering commitment to serving others, each of this year’s honorary degree recipients has left an indelible mark on the world,” says Joseph Harroz Jr., OU President. “Their profound dedication has touched countless lives, and we take great pride in conferring the university’s highest honor upon them.”