
Tin Pan South 2026 has announced the 10 local spots that have been secured as official venues for the upcoming five-day event, scheduled for March 24-28.
Participating venues include 3rd and Lindsley Nashville (stage presented by Jack Daniel’s), 1865 Club, Anzie Blue, Analog at Hutton Hotel (stage presented by Tennessee Entertainment Commission), The Bluebird Cafe (stage presented by Southbound Tequila), The Commodore Grille (stage presented by beyerdynamic), The Cowan at Topgolf (stage presented by Nashville Convention & Visitors Corp), Cross-Eyed Critters Watering Hole (stage presented by Musicnotes), Love and Exile (stage presented by Nashville Scene), and Station Inn (stage presented by Custom House at Guitar Center).
The full festival lineup and schedule will be released on Feb. 26. Ticket on-sale will begin the following week, starting March 3 and will rollout at tinpansouth.com according to the following schedule:
Tuesday, March 3 at 8 a.m. CT – Onsale begins for March 24 Shows
Wednesday, March 4 at 8 a.m. CT – Onsale begins for March 25 Shows
Thursday, March 5 at 8 a.m. CT – Onsale begins for March 26 Shows
Monday, March 9 at 8 a.m. CT – Onsale begins for March 27 and March 28 Shows
Tin Pan South is NSAI’s largest annual fundraising event to support its mission of protecting the rights and future of songwriting. As a way to give back and support another organization in need, each year a local non-profit is selected by the festival as a partner and beneficiary. In the past, ticket proceeds from a single show raised donation funds, but for this year, all attendees will have the opportunity to donate to the worthy cause with any ticket purchase. This year, the charity was carefully selected as it holds a special place for NSAI Board President, Lee Thomas Miller, and family, who suffered the loss of Miller’s son Levi in 2025. The mission of ShowerUp, an organization originally founded in Nashville, was extremely important to Levi, and the festival has chosen it in his honor.
ShowerUp provides showers, laundry, hygiene necessities and personal care to those experiencing homelessness and who are in need. The organization has grown to provide services in additional cities and states since its founding in 2016. With any 2026 ticket purchase, buyers will have the opportunity to add a donation amount of their choosing to the purchase, to directly support ShowerUp and their mission of elevating dignity and igniting hope for individuals who are in need, whether unhoused, in shelters, or affected by disasters.
“ShowerUp is an incredible organization serving Nashville in a unique way,” says Lee Thomas Miller, NSAI Board President. “Through our son Levi’s struggles with mental health he became burdened with the unhoused and once spoke of them as “unseen” the same way he felt “unseen.” ShowerUp is boots on the ground here at home and I love this opportunity for NSAI to showcase their work as part of this year’s Tin Pan South festival.”
Alex Miller Builds On Traditional Foundation With New Project ‘More Country Than You’
/by Lorie HollabaughAlex Miller is expanding on his traditional country roots with his latest album, More Country Than You, set for release on April 10.
The 10-song collection opens with Miller’s interpretation of “Too Much Fun,” the 1995 top 5 hit by the late Daryle Singletary. Rising star Emily Ann Roberts and Miller embrace a classic country male/female back and forth on the title track, and “As Far As His Mem’ry Lets Her Go” is a decades-old, never-before-recorded tear-jerker about how pain from the past can limit hope for new love.
“Just A Mom” is a mid-tempo tribute to women who rock the cradle and rule the world, dedicated to Miller’s mom. “The Byrd” features buddy Tracy Byrd in a fast-moving track that brings back the energy of the great “Moe & Joe” duets of the past, and rolling ballad “Why Does My Heart Ache” asks, If time heals, tears dry, why does my heart ache? “Money Well Wasted” ups the tempo with a humorous take on one man’s version of retail therapy, and “Secondhand Smoke,” his current radio single, is a twangy tale of heartbreak on the horizon. “Memories And Gin” sparks with tasty guitar licks, and lilting fiddle and steel, cementing Miller’s love of twang. And the album closes with “The Ones That Take Me Home,” Miller’s love letter to country music, and a reminder to hold your memories of home close.
A former competitor on American Idol, Miller moved to Nashville in May 2024 and made his debut on the Grand Ole Opry the following month. In early 2025, he released “The Byrd,” which spent two weeks at No. 1 on the CDX True Indie Chart and hit the Top 50 on the Mediabase Activator Chart. Last year summer he was also chosen as a brand ambassador with the Kentucky Department of Agriculture’sKentucky Proud program.
More Country Than You Track List:
1. “Too Much Fun” (Jeff Knight, Curtis Wright)
2. “More Country Than You” (Alex Miller, Emily Ann Roberts, Bill Whyte)
3. “As Far As His Mem’ry Lets Her Go” (Doodle Owens, Jerry Salley)
4. “Just A Mom” (Wood Newton, Steve Williams)
5. “The Byrd” (Alex Miller, Jerry Salley)
6. “Why Does My Heart Ache” (Alex Miller, Jerry Salley)
7. “Money Well Wasted” (Robert Arthur, Alex Miller, Conner Sweet)
8. “Secondhand Smoke” (Alan Jackson, Jim McBride)
9. “Memories And Gin” (Alex Miller, Bill Whyte)
10. “The Ones That Take Me Home” (Mark BonDurant, Alex Miller, Jerry Salley)
Max Martin Inks With Big Loud Publishing
/by Lauryn SinkPictured (L-R): Sydney Burdette (Creative Manager, Big Loud Publishing), Kimberly Gleason (SVP, Big Loud Publishing), Katie Flynn (Creative Director, Big Loud Publishing), Max Martin, Sara Knabe (SVP of A&R, Big Loud Records), Mike Giangreco (VP of A&R, Big Loud Publishing).
Max Martin has signed with Big Loud Publishing.
“I’m super excited to be signing with the incredible team at Big Loud,” Martin shares. “I have always been a fan of the work they have done and cannot wait to see what the future holds.”
“From the moment Max began collaborating with our writers, his great ideas, work ethic and positivity stood out and showed he was the perfect addition to the Big Loud team,” adds Katie Flynn, Creative Director, Big Loud Publishing.
Hailing from Atlanta, Martin draws inspiration from the sounds of The Foo Fighters, Darius Rucker and more. He initially moved to Nashville in 2021 to attend Lipscomb University.
Do Write Music Transitions Copyright Administration To Music Admin Inc., Marghie Evans Retires
/by Lauryn SinkMarghie Evans.
Do Write Music, LLC has transitioned its copyright administration to Music Admin Inc. as Co-Founder Marghie Evans steps into retirement.
Evans co-founded Do Write Music alongside Dwight Wiles, providing copyright administration, licensing, royalty collection and related services for songwriters, independent publishers and select audiovisual clients.
The transition reflects Evans’ retirement after more than 35 years as a respected music publishing executive. Evans has served as a past board member and secretary of Leadership Music and as chair of the Copyright Society of the South. Originally based in London, she relocated to Nashville in 2001. Prior to her move, Evans served as Head of Rights & Clearances for Universal Pictures Home Video (U.K.), overseeing rights work for high-profile home video releases including An American Werewolf in London, as well as documentaries and live concert projects featuring artists such as The Who, Dire Straits, Bon Jovi, and INXS.
Do Write Music’s roster has included songwriters such as Jeffrey Steele, Tom Paxton, Jon Vezner, Kathy Mattea, Robin Zander (Cheap Trick), Gary Burr, Victoria Shaw, and Old Crow Medicine Show, alongside catalogs from multiple independent publishers. Do Write songs have been recorded by artists including Toby Keith, Blake Shelton, Luke Bryan, Riley Green, Montgomery Gentry, Lainey Wilson, Rascal Flatts, Tim McGraw, and Christina Aguilera, among others.
Tin Pan South Announces 2026 Venues, Charity Partner
/by Lorie HollabaughTin Pan South 2026 has announced the 10 local spots that have been secured as official venues for the upcoming five-day event, scheduled for March 24-28.
Participating venues include 3rd and Lindsley Nashville (stage presented by Jack Daniel’s), 1865 Club, Anzie Blue, Analog at Hutton Hotel (stage presented by Tennessee Entertainment Commission), The Bluebird Cafe (stage presented by Southbound Tequila), The Commodore Grille (stage presented by beyerdynamic), The Cowan at Topgolf (stage presented by Nashville Convention & Visitors Corp), Cross-Eyed Critters Watering Hole (stage presented by Musicnotes), Love and Exile (stage presented by Nashville Scene), and Station Inn (stage presented by Custom House at Guitar Center).
The full festival lineup and schedule will be released on Feb. 26. Ticket on-sale will begin the following week, starting March 3 and will rollout at tinpansouth.com according to the following schedule:
Tuesday, March 3 at 8 a.m. CT – Onsale begins for March 24 Shows
Wednesday, March 4 at 8 a.m. CT – Onsale begins for March 25 Shows
Thursday, March 5 at 8 a.m. CT – Onsale begins for March 26 Shows
Monday, March 9 at 8 a.m. CT – Onsale begins for March 27 and March 28 Shows
Tin Pan South is NSAI’s largest annual fundraising event to support its mission of protecting the rights and future of songwriting. As a way to give back and support another organization in need, each year a local non-profit is selected by the festival as a partner and beneficiary. In the past, ticket proceeds from a single show raised donation funds, but for this year, all attendees will have the opportunity to donate to the worthy cause with any ticket purchase. This year, the charity was carefully selected as it holds a special place for NSAI Board President, Lee Thomas Miller, and family, who suffered the loss of Miller’s son Levi in 2025. The mission of ShowerUp, an organization originally founded in Nashville, was extremely important to Levi, and the festival has chosen it in his honor.
ShowerUp provides showers, laundry, hygiene necessities and personal care to those experiencing homelessness and who are in need. The organization has grown to provide services in additional cities and states since its founding in 2016. With any 2026 ticket purchase, buyers will have the opportunity to add a donation amount of their choosing to the purchase, to directly support ShowerUp and their mission of elevating dignity and igniting hope for individuals who are in need, whether unhoused, in shelters, or affected by disasters.
“ShowerUp is an incredible organization serving Nashville in a unique way,” says Lee Thomas Miller, NSAI Board President. “Through our son Levi’s struggles with mental health he became burdened with the unhoused and once spoke of them as “unseen” the same way he felt “unseen.” ShowerUp is boots on the ground here at home and I love this opportunity for NSAI to showcase their work as part of this year’s Tin Pan South festival.”
CMHOFM Elevates Four Staff Members
/by Lauryn SinkMaggie Banker, Meredith Rife, Denise Alvis & Nancy Cason. Photo: Courtesy of CMHOFM
The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum has elevated four staff members within the its guest relations, human resources and marketing teams.
Maggie Banker has been elevated to Senior Director of Marketing. In this role, Banker oversees the museum’s owned and paid media strategies, leading integrated campaigns to expand the museum’s reach to new and existing audiences. Banker joined the museum’s marketing team in 2018 and most recently served as Director of Marketing. Banker has over 12 years of marketing experience in the tourism, nonprofit, music and entertainment industries. She holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism and mass communication from the University of Iowa.
Meredith Rife has been named Associate Director of Social Media. In this role, she oversees the museum’s social media strategy, including organic content development, audience engagement and performance analysis. Since joining the museum in 2023, Rife most recently served as senior social media manager, supporting the social media presence of the museum and its properties. She has over six years of marketing experience focused on social media, including real estate marketing and work for Vanderbilt University. Rife holds a bachelor’s degree in interactive media from Middle Tennessee State University.
Denise Alvis has been named Director of Human Resources. In this role, she leads and implements human resources programs including recruiting, training, career development, performance management and internal processes and more. Prior to joining the museum in 2022, Alvis worked as director of human resources for National HealthCare Corporation. She holds a bachelor’s degree in psychology from the University of Tennessee at Martin.
Nancy Cason has been promoted to Associate Director of Guest Experience. She oversees all aspects of the visitor experience for the museum, Hatch Show Print and Historic RCA Studio B, as well as other publicly ticketed events and programs. Cason’s responsibilities include overseeing the institution’s box-office operations, information and membership desks, guest experience staff and tour guides. During her 10 years with the museum, she has held roles in reservations, ticketing and guest experience, and most recently served as senior guest experience manager. She holds a bachelor’s degree in history from Eastern Michigan University.
Jonah Kagen Delivers Heartfelt Set To Sold-Out Nashville Room
/by Madison HahnenJonah Kagen
On Thursday night (Feb. 12), Jonah Kagen delivered a commanding set to a sold-out Basement East crowd as part of his “Sunflowers & Leather Tour.”
From the opening notes of “Simon,” the crowd was already tuned in. “The Reaper” followed with a pulsing intensity that got the room moving. He followed his opening tunes with “Candy Land,” “You Again” and “Matches,” keeping the momentum steady. Kagen’s voice kept gravelly and grounded throughout the night.
“There’s a lot of people in here!” Kagen exclaimed from the stage. “I’ve played here before and there was about 1/16 of the crowd in here than there is now. I’m so happy to be here. This tour has been a shock to the system, I feel like I have imposter syndrome.”
Midway through the set, Kagen shifted the energy by sitting down with the band. “Black Lung” landed heavy, drawing an energy over the room that only deepened for “Anvil,” which saw Kagen swap guitar for banjo. The acoustic moment added a raw, front-porch vibe to the evening.
When the band exited stage left and Kagen eventually found himself alone, he went solo for “Krissy,” a song dedicated to his mom. Then came one of the first songs he ever wrote, “Colorado,” played at the crowd’s request.
“Same Wind” began with just Kagen before the band rejoined halfway through, earning one of the loudest applause breaks of the night. “The Roads” carried that lift forward, and by the time he reached band introductions, the smiles onstage mirrored the ones in the crowd.
The final stretch included “Save My Soul” and Gold-certified breakout hit “God Needs the Devil,” both with the audience singing along.
For the encore, Kagen returned with tour and album namesake “Sunflowers & Leather.” Then came “Burn Me” to wrap up the night, elevated by a surprise appearance from Vincent Lima.
Kagen’s “Sunflowers & Leather Tour” will resume March 3 in Oklahoma City.
Casey Wasserman To Sell Agency
/by LB CantrellAmid fallout over his previously reported contacts with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell, Casey Wasserman has begun the process of selling the global talent agency Wasserman, according to a memo confirmed to MusicRow by the company.
In a company-wide memo sent by Wasserman on Friday evening (Feb. 13), he wrote to the agency’s 4,000 employees, “I’m deeply sorry that my past personal mistakes have caused you so much discomfort. It’s not fair to you, and it’s not fair to the clients and partners we represent so vigorously and care so deeply about.
“At this moment, I believe that I have become a distraction to those efforts. That is why I have begun the process of selling the company, an effort that is already underway. During this time, Mike Watts will assume day-to-day control of the business while I devote my full attention to delivering Los Angeles an Olympic Games in 2028 that is worthy of this outstanding city.”
Wasserman and the talent agency he founded have been under scrutiny since reports surfaced about email exchanges between him and Maxwell from 2003, and a humanitarian trip on Epstein’s plane to Africa the year prior.
Since then, clients including Chappell Roan, Orville Peck and Sylvan Esso have exited the agency, according to reports.
The full memo is below.
Jelly Roll To Receive 2026 CRB Artist Humanitarian Award
/by Lauryn SinkJelly Roll will receive this year’s Artist Humanitarian Award presented by Country Radio Broadcasters. This honor will be presented during CRS 2026, taking place March 18–20 in Nashville.
This year’s award recognizes the triple Grammy-winning artist for his commitment to addiction recovery, mental health and community.
The Artist Humanitarian Award was established in 1990 to honor country artists whose philanthropic efforts have significantly improved the effectiveness and impact of the causes they support. Past recipients include Eric Church, Luke Combs, Kane Brown, Jason Aldean, Luke Bryan, Kenny Chesney, Carrie Underwood, and more.
More information about CRS, including registration, is available here.
Joybeth Taylor Jumps Into Top 10 On MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart
/by Madison HahnenJoybeth Taylor
Joybeth Taylor has moved into the top 10 on the MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart. Ella Langley’s “Choosin’ Texas,” “Dandelion” and “girl you’re taking home,” BigXthaPlug’s “Hell At Night,” and Gavin Adcock’s “Never Call Again” all put the songwriter at No. 7 this week.
Zach Bryan remains at No. 1 for the fourth consecutive week with all solo-penned “Appetite,” “Bad News,” “Plastic Cigarette,” “Say Why” and “Skin.” Chase McGill stays at No. 2 with “20 Cigarettes,” “Brunette,” “I Got Better,” “It Won’t Be Long,” “McArthur,” “the hell you are” and “Water At A Wedding.”
Blake Pendergrass (No. 3), Ty Myers (No. 4) and Randy Montana (No. 5) round out this weeks top five.
The weekly MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart uses algorithms based upon song activity according to airplay, digital download track sales and streams. This unique and exclusive addition to the MusicRow portfolio is the only songwriter chart of its kind.
Click here to view the full MusicRow Top Songwriter Chart.
Jason Aldean Notches 31st No. 1
/by Lauryn SinkJason Aldean. Photo: Spidey Smith
Jason Aldean has notched his 31st No. 1 track with his latest single “How Far Does A Goodbye Go,” topping both the Billboard and Country Aircheck/Mediabase charts.
“Man, I thought 30 was a milestone…now we’re sitting at 31 number one songs. That’s pretty wild. Thank you to country radio, my team, our streaming partners, the songwriters and every one of y’all who’ve listened and turned these songs into something bigger than we ever imagined,” says Aldean.
The track served as the first preview of Aldean’s new album Songs About Us, set for release April 24. The song was co-penned by John Edwards, John Morgan, Kurt Allison and Tully Kennedy, with production from Michael Knox.
On the Billboard Country Airplay chart, Aldean now ties George Strait, Alan Jackson and Luke Bryan for the fourth-most No. 1s since the chart began in 1990.
Aldean will kick off the Australia and New Zealand dates of his “Full Throttle World Tour” on Thursday (Feb. 19) in Auckland.