
Keith Levy
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.
At Wasserman Music, Nashville-based agent Keith Levy has developed a distinguished roster that includes Tyler Childers, Caamp, Shakey Graves, Bob Weir, Blackberry Smoke, Sierra Ferrell, Nikki Lane, Natalie Hemby, Langhorne Slim, The Milk Carton Kids and Madi Diaz, among others. Levy has helped Childers and Caamp grow into festival headliners in a few short years, and has worked with Shakey Graves for more than a decade, building him into a perennial strong ticket seller who spans genres and audiences.
A Vanderbilt graduate, Levy previously worked at C3 Presents, the Nancy Fly Agency and New Frontier Touring before joining Paradigm Talent Agency in 2015; he remained with the company through Wasserman’s acquisition of Paradigm’s music division in 2021. A musician in his own right who booked his high school band into Baltimore’s Recher Theater as a teenager, Levy was named to MusicRow’s Next Big Thing Class of 2022 and Leadership Music’s Class of 2024.

MusicRow: Where did you grow up?
I grew up in Baltimore, Maryland.
Were you musical?
Yep, my whole life. I’ve been playing the drums since I could walk and then guitar at 12 or 13.
I started playing in bands and writing songs and all that kind of stuff. There’s always the person in the band who seems to book the shows or do the business stuff, and that was me. At age 14, my dad would drive me to local venues around Baltimore—like The Recher Theatre in Towson—and I’d go talk to the booker and they would give me hard tickets to sell at school or wherever I could sell them. You had to come back with a certain amount of money to be able to get [a gig]. So I’ve been doing that since I was 14 years old.

Photo: Courtesy of Levy
Where did you go to college? What did you study?
I went to Vanderbilt. I had visited a few schools and was very attracted to Vandy in Nashville because of how much music there was. It was Rites of Spring weekend—I’m sure it wasn’t a coincidence that it was also visiting weekend for prospective students. I saw Derek Trucks‘ band and a band called Bang Bang Bang who became American Bang and are now The Cadillac Three.
I came down here without a plan of what to study beyond liberal arts in general. At Vanderbilt, you can design your own major if they don’t have an existing one. They didn’t have a music business major, so I designed a music management and communications curriculum with the help of the Deans. I minored in Spanish. I spent a summer living in Madrid with a Spanish family.
How did you start your career?
I started interning when I was a junior for an alumnus who had his own record label called Severe Records. I did that for a semester, and it was like a crash course in everything not to do.
It’s funny looking back, because I remember this very vividly. He would say to me, “You should work at an agency, not at a record label.” It sort of piqued my interest. I was taking this business of music class [at the time] taught by Jim Foglesong. Every week he would bring in either a manager, a publicist, a publisher, a songwriter or an agent, so we learned what these people did. It clicked for me that these people have jobs and fairly regular lives, families and stuff, and they get paid to do this.
I always thought the idea of having your own roster was really cool—and I realized an agent has his own roster. I started paying attention then. I was also playing in bands the whole time I was in college—I had a cover band called Shotgun Sally made up of mostly fraternity brothers of mine. We would play at the fraternities, but then we would go downtown and look for bars that were empty. We would go in there [and ask the manager], “Can we play two Thursdays from now? We’ll bring 300 people.” Eventually one of the bars agreed—it was called Jesse Zane’s. We would put a pledge at the door, charge five bucks a head and we’d make like $3,000 on a Thursday night. So that was when this went from hobby to [realizing] there’s a real business here.
I went to South by Southwest during spring break of my senior year. I just thought it was the coolest thing in the world. I saw a hundred bands and acts I’d never heard of. That was one of those light bulb moments where I realized, “Wow, there’s all these people doing this in all these different capacities. I need to get into this.” So I moved to Austin when I graduated. It was almost like a gravitational pull.

Photo: Emma Delevante
What did you do in Austin?
I kept playing music and I was in a band down there. That was my entry point into meeting promoters at clubs. At age 21 or 22, I was cutting deals to play these shows—$500 versus the door or a hundred percent of the door. I didn’t know there was a language for that, I just kind of did it.
I started bartending at a Mexican restaurant and was playing with the guys I had moved down there with. It took me three or four months, but I got an internship at C3 Presents. I did that for like a year and a half. That was unpaid, so I kept bartending and playing shows. They eventually would pay me as a contractor to work some of their festivals and events. I was a runner at [festivals like] ACL or Lollapalooza. I would run catering in a golf cart. That became a real entry point into making some relationships that I still have today.
I was still trying to get into the agency side of things. Huston Powell, who’s the Lollapalooza booker, I would walk into his office, sit on his couch and read him names of agents. I’d be like, “What do you think about this person? Can you make a phone call? Can you get me an interview?” He would do it. He pointed me in the direction of like 10 people in Austin who had real businesses. And one of them eventually called me back. Her name was Nancy Fly. She had a small agency that she ran out of her garage. She had about 15 artists, and she offered me a job one day.
She wanted me to come in and do marketing stuff for her acts. We went out to dinner and sat there for a couple hours. By the end of it she was like, “Why don’t you just come be an agent? Talk to these friends of yours that are in bands and see if they’ll let you be their agent and book all their shows?” So that’s what I did.
What was that chapter like?
I signed a band called Uncle Lucius. I ended up working with them for six years. I was their first agent and I was their manager for three or four of those years. I would go to the office every day and I would log into Pollstar or Celebrity Access and just try to learn as much as I could about who’s who, who books what, who the promoters are and what’s a venue in Boise, Idaho to get from Utah to Seattle. Very elementary stuff. I worked for her for a year and a half. Eventually, I went to Nancy and said, “Can you help me find a job at at a bigger agency?”
She made some phone calls and she helped me get a couple interviews, the first of which was with Paul Lohr who owns New Frontier Touring in Nashville. So I interviewed with Paul, I interviewed with Steve Levine at ICM in Los Angeles and then Huston from C3 helped me get a couple other interviews—one at WME in L.A. I got offered a job in the mail room at WME in L.A. or to come back to Nashville and book a territory for Paul Lohr at New Frontier—so that’s the job that I took.
What was coming back to Nashville like?
It was the very beginning of 2011. Paul books a band called The Avett Brothers and they were starting to go into arenas and amphitheaters, and getting very busy. He was very focused on that, so he had divided the rest of his roster into territories. He had me and three other younger guys like me that were booking the rest of the roster in territories.
So [we were booking] the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Darrell Scott and Paul Thorn. Paul let me bring Uncle Lucius and he was very supportive in us signing acts. There weren’t really a whole lot of rules as long as you showed up in the morning when he wanted you to and got your work done. I did at least one of those things.
I was 25-years-old and I was an agent with a territory. We had a lot of freedom, so it was really fun. It was a learn it by doing it atmosphere. The fifth or sixth act I signed when I was there was Shakey Graves, who I’ve booked for over 10 years now. Paul was great because he let us fail on our own, and subversively, he let us succeed on our own. That’s kind of what happened with Shakey. That’s an artist that I had seen when I was living in Austin that I kept in touch with. It took a few more years, but I was watching closely and paying attention, and eventually we decided to work together. Here we are today 10 years later, and that’s been a very fruitful, successful relationship.
By 2013, I had signed some other artists like Willie Watson and the Band of Heathens. I had an artist named Cody Chesnutt who had success in a previous life with a song called “The Seed.” I started trying to pick my head up and figure out what was happening around me. That led me to some other conversations with other agencies and agents, primarily with Jonathan Levine.

Photo: Courtesy of Levy
What happened next?
Jonathan and I had met before, but in the summer of 2014, we met up at Newport Folk Festival. We had a beer and we talked for like an hour. I knew who Jonathan was because one of my all time favorite bands is The Black Crowes, and he was the agent at the time. Beyond that, I was raised on the Grateful Dead. Jonathan was the agent for Bob Weir and Phil Lesh—he’s still their agent and I get to work on Bob with him now, which is very much a dream come true.
At that time in Nashville, there were not a lot of agents or agencies that were doing non-country stuff, so I was paying attention to what Jonathan was doing. He had signed Sturgill Simpson around that time. That led to other conversations and lunches and eventually a job offer. I went to work at Paradigm—which is now Wasserman—in 2015.
When did you pick up Tyler Childers?
February of 2017. I had been at Paradigm for a couple years at that point. I had brought Shakey with me and eventually Willie Watson. I signed a couple acts. I had been a fan of Tyler’s. I was introduced to him through some friends of mine from college, one of whom is from Kentucky and he would play him around the house all the time. I just became a fan. I brought a video of Tyler into a meeting one day Paradigm.
Everybody reacted positively, but Jonathan pulled me aside after that meeting and was like, “Hey, we need to keep our eye on this. Sturgill is a fan of his and wants to be more active in producing records. Let’s keep our eye on this.”
This went on for six or eight months. Tyler and his manager, Ian Thornton, would make quarterly Nashville trips. I would help him get shows—I got him a slot on AmericanaFest before we were working together. We just got to know each other. We met in my office, the three of us, and we talked about the future and their goals.
Eventually he made Purgatory. I heard the record and thought it was really good. Jonathan was getting all this info from the Sturgill side as it was happening. We spoke to each other at the beginning of 2017 and said, “Let’s do this.” So that’s what we did.
And boy, has it taken off.
Yeah! That was seven years ago, so it didn’t happen overnight. It did happen quickly, relatively, but we didn’t skip steps and we built a real foundation for Tyler. There was a pandemic in the middle there, which certainly delayed things, but at the same time, the way streaming consumption started happening in bigger numbers during the pandemic, it accelerated a lot of things too. We just announced an arena tour with 12 arenas that all sold out in 30 minutes or less. That’s two nights at Madison Square Garden and two nights at Bridgestone and The Forum. It’s an awesome place to be.
What is the most fulfilling part about what you get to do?
The most fulfilling part is going to the show. That doesn’t matter if it’s at the Echo or the Forum, at Mercury Lounge or Madison Square Garden. It always feels good when the artist is in a position to win. The nature of my job is asking: What’s the venue? What’s the ticket price? What city are we playing in? These are the things we can control. When we get it right and the show sells out and it’s the right venue at the right time, you put the artist in a position to win and thrive. Being there in that moment is super rewarding.
Industry Ink: ACM, Song Suffragettes, Perkins Publicity, More
/by Lorie HollabaughACM’s Damon Whiteside Leads ‘Future Of Country’ Panel At Club CMO Fall Summit
Pictured (L-R): ACM CEO Damon Whiteside, Capitol Nashville’s Mickey Guyton, mtheory CEO Cameo Carlson. Photo: Courtesy of Brand Innovators and Lucy Brumberger
Academy of Country Music CEO Damon Whiteside hosted a panel about the future of country at the Club CMO Fall Summit at Conrad Nashville on Oct. 24, joined by mtheory CEO Cameo Carlson and Capitol Nashville’s Mickey Guyton. Club CMO is a community for senior marketing executives with a membership of more than 900 Chief Marketing Executives representing both B2B and B2C brands.
Whiteside highlighted the record-breaking success country has seen this year and brought out Carlson for a look at trends across the industry and impactful efforts to make the business more inclusive and diverse, including the ACM’s successful LEVel Up and OnRamp professional development programs. Guyton then took the stage for a live performance before joining the panel for a discussion about her experience in the industry, career highlights and what she’s looking forward to in the year ahead.
Song Suffragettes Perform At London’s Bush Hall
Pictured (L-R): Song Suffragettes’ Founder Todd Cassetty, performers Catherine McGrath, Brooke Eden, Harper Grace, Simeon Hammond Dallas, AEG Presents UK’s Rachel Lloyd. Photo: Phoebe Seston
All-female singer-songwriter collective Song Suffragettes celebrated their return to Britain’s Country Music Week with a show on Saturday night (Oct. 21) at London’s Bush Hall. The sold-out show included performances from BMG Nashville’s Brooke Eden and Curb Records’ Harper Grace along with respected U.K. artists Catherine McGrath and Simeon Hammond Dallas.
Produced by AEG Presents UK and presented by C2C (Country to Country), the Song Suffragettes show was their 15th performance in the U.K. to date.
Carissa Bauman Joins Perkins Publicity As Director
Carissa Bauman
Carissa Bauman has joined Perkins Publicity as Director of Publicity. In this newly appointed role, Bauman will lead the strategic development of publicity campaigns, media relations and promotional opportunities for the firm’s clients. Proir to joining Perkins, Bauman spent the last 10 years in management working with artist Dylan Jakobsen.
“We are excited to welcome Carissa Bauman to our team as the new Publicity Director,” shares Trevor Perkins, CEO of Perkins Publicity. “Her impressive track record and passion for the industry align perfectly with our commitment to providing top-tier publicity services to our clients. With Carissa leading our publicity efforts, we are confident that we will continue to deliver exceptional results and expand our presence.”
Johnny Gates Extends Publishing Deal With Deluge Music
Johnny Gates
Singer-songwriter Johnny Gates has extended his exclusive worldwide publishing agreement with Deluge Music. Gates signed his original deal with Deluge in May 2020, releasing his LP East Music Row in 2021.
He recently released his indie-rock EP Nervous Wreck under the alt-name Johnny Was Here. In addition to his writing and performing, Gates hosts a monthly residence at Soho House Nashville, where he provides live show opportunities for up-and-coming artists. His solo-penned song “Loretta Lynn” will be released this week by Average Joe’s artist Sam Grow.
Jake Bush Inks With Four17 For Management
Jake Bush. Photo: Gabriel Muniz Photography
Jake Bush has signed an exclusive management deal with Four17. The U.S. Army Veteran has seen six of his songs rise to number one on the Texas Radio Chart since 2020. The Pasadena, Texas native’s upcoming single “My Country,” featuring Glen Templeton and Jesse Raub Jr., will be released to all streaming platforms on Nov. 10.
In addition to his new management deal, he has released a new cover of the Keith Whitley song, “Kentucky Bluebird,” featuring Lorrie Morgan. An acoustic version will be released to all streaming platforms on Nov. 3.
“I have been following Jake and his music for quite some time now and am excited to add him to the Four17 roster,” says Four17’s Brandyn Steen.
Hunter Metts Signs Label Deal With Position Music
Pictured (L-R): J Scavo (GM, Recorded Music), Joe Brooks (Position Music), James Robinson (Manager, Shelter Music Group), Hunter Metts, Jackson Stubner, Manager, Shelter Music Group), Tyler Bacon (President & CEO), Mark Chipello (Partner, Head of A&R). Photo: Delia Bush
Hunter Metts has signed a label deal with Position Music. Metts has previously released tracks such as ”The River,” “Open” and “Paper Moon,” and will release his next single “Thread” in early December. He will be releasing more tracks eventually leading up to his first full-length LP in 2024.
“In Hunter, we have a true artist in every sense of the word; a writer, producer, and performer of the highest caliber. I’m honored to be able to play a part in the next chapter of his career. When I first heard Hunter’s voice, I was instantly captivated and put the work in motion to sign him as I knew he would be a great fit for Position Music,” says Position Music’s Joe Brooks.
Taylor Swift, Morgan Wallen, Zach Bryan Lead 2023 Billboard Music Awards Finalists
/by LB CantrellThe finalists for the 2023 Billboard Music Awards (BBMAs) were revealed today (Oct. 26).
Determined by year-end performance metrics on the Billboard charts dated Nov. 19, 2022 through Oct. 21, 2023, the top finalists include Taylor Swift, Morgan Wallen, SZA, The Weeknd, Drake and Zach Bryan.
Swift, the most decorated female BBMAs artist of all time with 29 wins, leads as a finalist in 20 categories. Her chart-topping hit “Anti-Hero” is up for five awards, including Top Hot 100 Song. With 29 previous wins, Swift could surpass Drake for most wins of all-time if she wins at least five this year.
Wallen is the leading male finalist this year up for 16 awards with 17 entries, including Top Artist, Top Male Artist, Top Billboard 200 Artist and Top Hot 100 Artist. His album One Thing At A Time is up for two awards, while his song “Last Night” is up for three awards, including Top Hot 100 Song.
Bryan, a first-time finalist, bows with recognition as a finalist up for 13 awards with 14 entries, including Top New Artist, Top Male Artist, Top Hot 100 Songwriter and Top Streaming Songs Artist. His song “Something In The Orange” is a finalist for three awards, including Top Streaming Song, Top Country Song and twice in the Top Rock Song category.
For the night’s top honor, Top Artist, Wallen and Swift are joined by Luke Combs, Drake and SZA. In the Top New Artist category, Bryan is joined by Bailey Zimmerman and Jelly Roll, alongside Ice Spice and Peso Pluma.
For Top Country Artist, Wallen, Bryan, Swift, Combs and Zimmerman are nominated. Combs, Wallen and Bryan make up the Top Country Male Artist category; while Swift, Lainey Wilson and Megan Moroney are in the Top Country Female Artist. Old Dominion, Parmalee and Zac Brown Band are finalists for Top Country Duo/Group.
Wallen and Combs are joined by George Strait in the Top Country Touring Artist. Combs earned two nods in the Top Country Album category, alongside Wallen, Bryan and Swift. Notably, Bryan, Jelly Roll, Hardy and Noah Kahan are nominated alongside Steve Lacy for Top Rock Album. Jelly Roll, Bryan and Kacey Musgraves are also included in the Top Rock Song category.
In the new Top Hot 100 Songwriter category, Nashville’s Ashley Gorley is present alongside Bryan, Swift, Jack Antonoff and SZA. In the new Top Hot 100 Producer category, Joey Moi represents Music City along with Bryan, Swift, Antonoff and Metro Boomin.
First-time country finalists include Zimmerman, who is up for Top New Artist, Top Country Artist and Top Country Song, and Oliver Anthony, who is up for Top Selling Song and Top Song Sales Artist.
The 2023 Billboard Music Awards will take place on Sunday, Nov. 19 on BBMAs.watch. Performances and awards will roll out across BBMAs and Billboard social channels as well.
For a full list of this year’s finalists, visit billboard.com.
Select BBMA Finalists:
Top Artist
Drake
Luke Combs
Morgan Wallen
SZA
Taylor Swift
Top New Artist
Bailey Zimmerman
Ice Spice
Jelly Roll
Peso Pluma
Zach Bryan
Top Male Artist
Drake
Luke Combs
Morgan Wallen
The Weeknd
Zach Bryan
Top Female Artist
Beyoncé
Miley Cyrus
Olivia Rodrigo
SZA
Taylor Swift
Top Country Artist
Bailey Zimmerman
Luke Combs
Morgan Wallen
Taylor Swift
Zach Bryan
Top Country Male Artist
Luke Combs
Morgan Wallen
Zach Bryan
Top Country Female Artist
Lainey Wilson
Megan Moroney
Taylor Swift
Top Country Duo/Group
Old Dominion
Parmalee
Zac Brown Band
Top Country Touring Artist
George Strait
Luke Combs
Morgan Wallen
Top Country Album
Luke Combs – Gettin’ Old
Luke Combs – Growin’ Up
Morgan Wallen – One Thing At A Time
Taylor Swift – Speak Now (Taylor’s Version)
Zach Bryan – American Heartbreak
Top Country Song
Bailey Zimmerman – “Rock and A Hard Place”
Luke Combs – “Fast Car”
Morgan Wallen – “Last Night”
Morgan Wallen – “You Proof”
Zach Bryan – “Something In The Orange”
Top Rock Artist
Jelly Roll
Noah Kahan
Stephen Sanchez
Steve Lacy
Zach Bryan
Top Rock Album
Hardy – The Mockingbird & The Crow
Jelly Roll – Whitsitt Chapel
Noah Kahan – Stick Season
Steve Lacy – Gemini Rights
Zach Bryan – American Heartbreak
Top Christian Artist
Brandon Lake
Elevation Worship
For King & Country
Lauren Daigle
Phil Wickham
Top Gospel Artist
CeCe Winans
Elevation Worship
Kanye West
Kirk Franklin
Maverick City Music
Sophia Scott Makes Grand Ole Opry Debut & Releases Debut Album
/by Liza AndersonSophia Scott during her Grand Ole Opry debut. Photo: Chris Hollo/Grand Ole Opry
Friday (Oct. 20) was a milestone day for country singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Sophia Scott as she made her Grand Ole Opry debut and released her debut album, Barstool Confessions, via Empire Nashville.
Scott was first introduced to the Opry by her grandmother who traveled from Colorado with her parents to be in the audience for this special moment.
Stepping into the circle for the first time in snow-white, floor-length dress accentuated with feathers, she performed her single, “Lipstick on You,” a clever ballad that puts a twist on the classic breakup using makeup as a metaphor for dashed hopes. Scott followed with the emotional track, “Watering Roses,” which was was featured on CMT for the premiere of its official music video yesterday (Oct. 25). Both songs are included on the new project.
WSM Radio’s Charlie Mattos greeted her for a brief on-stage interview. Full of joyful tears, the artist was speechless, and then shared, “It’s really surreal. I’ve been waiting on this for a really really long time.”
Artist Action: Tyler Hubbard, Brian Kelley, Riley Green, Tyler Braden
/by Liza AndersonTyler Hubbard Goes Gold & Sells Out Tour In Canada
Tyler Hubbard receives Gold certification plaque from the Universal Music Canada team. Photo: Evan Mattingly
Tyler Hubbard‘s debut self-titled album was recently Gold-certified in Canada. The album includes his hit single, “Dancin’ In The Country,” which reached No.1 at Canadian country radio earlier this year and stayed atop the charts for four weeks, and “5 Foot 9,” which also hit No.1 at Canadian country radio.
The multi-Platinum artist also sold out his first solo Canadian headline tour. On Tuesday (Oct. 24), Hubbard performed the final show of the Canadian dates, where he celebrated his radio hits reaching No. 1 and Gold-certified album in Toronto with plaque presentation from the team at Universal Music Canada.
Hubbard will hit the road again in 2024 to support Kane Brown‘s “In The Air Tour” across the U.S. and Canada, including a stop in Toronto on April 5.
Brian Kelley Visits Franklin High School With CMA Foundation & Music Has Value
Pictured (L-R): Brian Kelley, Franklin High School’s Briana Vogt, Dr. Michael Holland, Big Machine Label Group & Music Has Value’s Scott Borchetta, Sandi Borchetta, CMA Foundation’s Tiffany Kerns and Mr. Holland’s Opus Foundation’s Todd Shipley. Photo: Drew Noble/CMA
Brian Kelley visited music students and teachers at Franklin High School in Franklin, Tennessee on Wednesday, Oct. 18 with the CMA Foundation, the philanthropic arm of the Country Music Association, and Scott and Sandi Borchetta’s Music Has Value to support furthering music and arts education across the country.
During the visit, Kelley emphasized the impact and power of music through music education with a Q&A session discussing his songwriting process, his journey in the music industry as well as advice around starting a career in country music. The artist was also treated to four performances by Franklin High School students, including: Skylar DeCuir, who performed an excerpt from “Deleclusiastics For Solo Snare;” Ty Henry, Ethan Hill and Clara Zaccari, who performed an original song written by Hill; singer-songwriter Madison Johnson, who sang her original song “Summer Nights” and Lukas Varden, who performed an excerpt from “Messager’s Solo de Concours.”
The organizations gifted the high school new instruments as part of a $120,000 pledge to benefit music education programs in Tennessee public school districts.
“My high school music teacher greatly impacted my life, and to be able to visit these talented students at Franklin High School and see them perform was truly an honor,” shares Kelley. “I will forever believe music is healing and brings people together. Seeing the CMA Foundation and Music Has Value give the gift of music to these young musicians and support them in further chasing their dreams was an unforgettable experience.”
Riley Green Celebrates Album Release & Certifications
Pictured (L-R): Dan Huff, Big Machine Label Group’s Scott Borchetta, Mike Rittberg, Riley Green, Big Machine Label Group’s Allison Jones and BMLG Records’ Jimmy Harnen.
Riley Green recently released his latest project, Ain’t My Last Rodeo, on Friday, Oct. 13. The day before (Oct. 12), he celebrated with a special release show at the Walk of Fame Park.
Backstage, he and his team also celebrated his recent certifications, including Gold-certified deep cut “When She Comes Home Tonight.”
Tyler Braden’s Third Annual Engine Co. 18 Golf Outing Raises Over $35K
Tyler Braden joins the Brentwood Fire Department’s Aaron Wallenburg, Derek Hershner, Matthew Gehne and Terry Call at the Engine Co. 18 Golf Outing. Photo: Marisa Taylor
Firefighter-turned-country artist Tyler Braden hosted his third annual Engine Co. 18 Golf Outing on Monday (Oct. 23) at The Governors Club in Brentwood, Tennessee.
This year’s event raised over $35,000 for the National Fallen Firefighters Foundation and Hungry Heroes, marking the outing’s highest fundraising total yet.
The sold-out function drew 36 teams across the industry and 144 golfers. Following the tournament, Braden hosted a writers’ round featuring Matt Koziol, Halle Kearns, Derek Austin, Brian Davis and Willie Tate.
“I am so proud to be able to give back to my brothers and sisters in the first responder community,” Braden shared. “I know first-hand the incredible sacrifices they make in their work, and it means a lot to me that the Nashville music industry is showing up for them. A huge thanks to our sponsors and everyone who participated. This event has grown so much over the past three years… just wait ’til 2024!”
Curb | Word Music Publishing Signs Rotundo
/by LB CantrellPictured (L-R): Curb’s Calista Miller, Rotundo, Curb’s Sarah Schumacher, Curb’s Colt Murski
Curb | Word Music Publishing has signed singer-songwriter Rotundo to its publishing roster.
An Ohio native, Rotundo grew up singing and playing piano as a hobby. After graduation from high school, he joined the U.S. Army where he served for four years on active duty. Still enthralled with music, Rotundo taught himself guitar and moved to Nashville in 2019.
He soon joined the duo After Midtown, during which time he opened for artists like Florida Georgia Line, Hardy, Billy Currington, Kip Moore, Mitchell Tenpenny and more. Now, Rotundo has focused his creative output to pursue his country singer-songwriter solo career.
He will release his debut heartbreak single, “Break Even,” on Friday (Oct. 27). The tune was co-written by Curb | Word Music Publishing’s Brian Bunn and Rose Falcon.
“I’m someone that gets beautifully lost in the art of songwriting. I love writing songs that make you feel something,” shares Rotundo. “I grew up on my grandparents’ farm and at my family’s house in a smalltown suburb. I feel like you can truly hear both of those influences in my music. I relate to the storytelling of country music, and at the same time, very modern and atmospheric production.”
“We are thrilled to welcome Rotundo, who brings with him a relentlessly positive collaborative energy and work ethic, to the Curb | Word family,” shares Senior Creative Director, Country Publishing, Sarah Schumacher. “We look forward to supporting him in achieving his songwriting goals as he launches his exciting solo artist career.”
Milestone Publicity Promotes Three Staffers
/by Lorie HollabaughLily Collins, Taran Smith, Campbell Jenkins
Milestone Publicity has promoted several staff members at the company. Taran Smith and Lily Collins have both been promoted to Account Executives, and Campbell Jenkins has been promoted to Associate Publicist.
Collins, a University of Texas graduate, joined Milestone in August of 2022 and has recently been instrumental in national and tour campaigns for Lonestar, Gin Blossoms, Sugar Ray, Uncle Kracker, The Dryes, Amanda Stewart and others.
A graduate of Belmont University with a BBA in Music Business, Smith joined Milestone in April of 2022, and has worked with Leftover Salmon, Shaylen, Michael Cleveland, Robbie Fulks, Theo Kandel, Gaby Moreno and many others.
“Both Lily and Taran have been essential parts of our team,” says Founder/CEO Mike Gowen. “Their daily contributions further underscore why the industry trusts us with artists and projects; dedication to clients coupled with an undeniable work ethic to pull in media coverage and opportunities for all of their clients at Milestone.”
After earning her Bachelor’s degree at Belmont University, Jenkins worked with a PR agency in Los Angeles, before making her way back to Nashville and joining Milestone Publicity, where she has assisted other publicists on several of Milestone’s client campaigns.
“Campbell is a great addition to the Milestone team because of her exceptional communication skills, attention to detail, and initiative,” says VP of Publicity Jessica Bonner. “She is further solidifying our strong foundation of publicists at the company, and we look forward to watching her grow.”
Chris Stapleton Extends ‘All-American Road Show’ Through Summer
/by Lorie HollabaughChris Stapleton. Photo: Andy Barron
Chris Stapleton is extending his “All-American Road Show” tour through next summer.
Newly-confirmed shows include San Diego’s Petco Park, Minneapolis’ U.S. Bank Stadium, Seattle’s T-Mobile Park, L.A.s’ Hollywood Bowl, Cleveland’s Blossom Music Center and Philadelphia’s Freedom Mortgage Pavilion, as well as a Nashville Bridgestone Arena show on Aug. 9, among many others.
Special guests on the tour include Sheryl Crow, Elle King, Marcus King, Nikki Lane, Willie Nelson and Family, Grace Potter, Allen Stone, Marty Stuart, Turnpike Troubadours, The War and Treaty and Lainey Wilson. Tickets for the new dates will go on sale next Friday, Nov. 3, and details can be found at chrisstapleton.com/tour. Citi cardmembers will have access to pre-sale tickets beginning Oct. 31 through Nov. 2 through the Citi Entertainment program.
The 8x Grammy, 15x CMA and 15x ACM-winner will release his new album, Higher, Nov. 10 on Mercury Nashville. He could add to that count since he’s nominated for three more awards at this year’s upcoming 57th Annual CMA Awards for Entertainer of the Year, Male Vocalist of the Year and Musical Event of the Year (“We Don’t Fight Anymore” with Carly Pearce).
“All American Road Show Tour” Added Dates:
March 2 —San Diego, CA—Petco Park
April 3 —Winnipeg, MB—Canada Life Centre
April 4 —Grand Forks, ND—Alerus Center
April 6 —Minneapolis, MN—U.S. Bank Stadium
May 9 —West Palm Beach, FL—iTHINK Financial Amphitheatre
May 22 —Rapid City, SD—The Monument
May 31 —Cleveland, OH—Blossom Music Center
June 6 —Philadelphia, PA—Freedom Mortgage Pavilion
June 7 —Bristow, VA—Jiffy Lube Live
June 12 —Kansas City, MO—T-Mobile Center
June 26 —Los Angeles, CA—Hollywood Bowl
July 11 —Buffalo, NY—Darien Lake Amphitheater
July 12 —Pittsburgh, PA—The Pavilion at Star Lake
July 18 —Toledo, OH—Huntington Center
July 19 —Columbus, OH—Schottenstein Center
July 25 —Nampa, ID—Ford Idaho Center Arena
July 26 —Portland, OR—RV Inn Styles Resort Amphitheater
July 27 —Seattle, WA—T-Mobile Park
August 1 —Gilford, NH—BankNH Pavilion
August 2 —Gilford, NH—BankNH Pavilion
August 9 —Nashville, TN—Bridgestone Arena
August 21 —Birmingham, AL—The Legacy Arena at the BJCC
August 22 —Little Rock, AR—Simmons Bank Arena
My Music Row Story: Wasserman Music’s Keith Levy
/by LB CantrellKeith Levy
At Wasserman Music, Nashville-based agent Keith Levy has developed a distinguished roster that includes Tyler Childers, Caamp, Shakey Graves, Bob Weir, Blackberry Smoke, Sierra Ferrell, Nikki Lane, Natalie Hemby, Langhorne Slim, The Milk Carton Kids and Madi Diaz, among others. Levy has helped Childers and Caamp grow into festival headliners in a few short years, and has worked with Shakey Graves for more than a decade, building him into a perennial strong ticket seller who spans genres and audiences.
A Vanderbilt graduate, Levy previously worked at C3 Presents, the Nancy Fly Agency and New Frontier Touring before joining Paradigm Talent Agency in 2015; he remained with the company through Wasserman’s acquisition of Paradigm’s music division in 2021. A musician in his own right who booked his high school band into Baltimore’s Recher Theater as a teenager, Levy was named to MusicRow’s Next Big Thing Class of 2022 and Leadership Music’s Class of 2024.
MusicRow: Where did you grow up?
I grew up in Baltimore, Maryland.
Were you musical?
Yep, my whole life. I’ve been playing the drums since I could walk and then guitar at 12 or 13.
I started playing in bands and writing songs and all that kind of stuff. There’s always the person in the band who seems to book the shows or do the business stuff, and that was me. At age 14, my dad would drive me to local venues around Baltimore—like The Recher Theatre in Towson—and I’d go talk to the booker and they would give me hard tickets to sell at school or wherever I could sell them. You had to come back with a certain amount of money to be able to get [a gig]. So I’ve been doing that since I was 14 years old.
Photo: Courtesy of Levy
Where did you go to college? What did you study?
I went to Vanderbilt. I had visited a few schools and was very attracted to Vandy in Nashville because of how much music there was. It was Rites of Spring weekend—I’m sure it wasn’t a coincidence that it was also visiting weekend for prospective students. I saw Derek Trucks‘ band and a band called Bang Bang Bang who became American Bang and are now The Cadillac Three.
I came down here without a plan of what to study beyond liberal arts in general. At Vanderbilt, you can design your own major if they don’t have an existing one. They didn’t have a music business major, so I designed a music management and communications curriculum with the help of the Deans. I minored in Spanish. I spent a summer living in Madrid with a Spanish family.
How did you start your career?
I started interning when I was a junior for an alumnus who had his own record label called Severe Records. I did that for a semester, and it was like a crash course in everything not to do.
It’s funny looking back, because I remember this very vividly. He would say to me, “You should work at an agency, not at a record label.” It sort of piqued my interest. I was taking this business of music class [at the time] taught by Jim Foglesong. Every week he would bring in either a manager, a publicist, a publisher, a songwriter or an agent, so we learned what these people did. It clicked for me that these people have jobs and fairly regular lives, families and stuff, and they get paid to do this.
I always thought the idea of having your own roster was really cool—and I realized an agent has his own roster. I started paying attention then. I was also playing in bands the whole time I was in college—I had a cover band called Shotgun Sally made up of mostly fraternity brothers of mine. We would play at the fraternities, but then we would go downtown and look for bars that were empty. We would go in there [and ask the manager], “Can we play two Thursdays from now? We’ll bring 300 people.” Eventually one of the bars agreed—it was called Jesse Zane’s. We would put a pledge at the door, charge five bucks a head and we’d make like $3,000 on a Thursday night. So that was when this went from hobby to [realizing] there’s a real business here.
I went to South by Southwest during spring break of my senior year. I just thought it was the coolest thing in the world. I saw a hundred bands and acts I’d never heard of. That was one of those light bulb moments where I realized, “Wow, there’s all these people doing this in all these different capacities. I need to get into this.” So I moved to Austin when I graduated. It was almost like a gravitational pull.
Photo: Emma Delevante
What did you do in Austin?
I kept playing music and I was in a band down there. That was my entry point into meeting promoters at clubs. At age 21 or 22, I was cutting deals to play these shows—$500 versus the door or a hundred percent of the door. I didn’t know there was a language for that, I just kind of did it.
I started bartending at a Mexican restaurant and was playing with the guys I had moved down there with. It took me three or four months, but I got an internship at C3 Presents. I did that for like a year and a half. That was unpaid, so I kept bartending and playing shows. They eventually would pay me as a contractor to work some of their festivals and events. I was a runner at [festivals like] ACL or Lollapalooza. I would run catering in a golf cart. That became a real entry point into making some relationships that I still have today.
I was still trying to get into the agency side of things. Huston Powell, who’s the Lollapalooza booker, I would walk into his office, sit on his couch and read him names of agents. I’d be like, “What do you think about this person? Can you make a phone call? Can you get me an interview?” He would do it. He pointed me in the direction of like 10 people in Austin who had real businesses. And one of them eventually called me back. Her name was Nancy Fly. She had a small agency that she ran out of her garage. She had about 15 artists, and she offered me a job one day.
She wanted me to come in and do marketing stuff for her acts. We went out to dinner and sat there for a couple hours. By the end of it she was like, “Why don’t you just come be an agent? Talk to these friends of yours that are in bands and see if they’ll let you be their agent and book all their shows?” So that’s what I did.
What was that chapter like?
I signed a band called Uncle Lucius. I ended up working with them for six years. I was their first agent and I was their manager for three or four of those years. I would go to the office every day and I would log into Pollstar or Celebrity Access and just try to learn as much as I could about who’s who, who books what, who the promoters are and what’s a venue in Boise, Idaho to get from Utah to Seattle. Very elementary stuff. I worked for her for a year and a half. Eventually, I went to Nancy and said, “Can you help me find a job at at a bigger agency?”
She made some phone calls and she helped me get a couple interviews, the first of which was with Paul Lohr who owns New Frontier Touring in Nashville. So I interviewed with Paul, I interviewed with Steve Levine at ICM in Los Angeles and then Huston from C3 helped me get a couple other interviews—one at WME in L.A. I got offered a job in the mail room at WME in L.A. or to come back to Nashville and book a territory for Paul Lohr at New Frontier—so that’s the job that I took.
What was coming back to Nashville like?
It was the very beginning of 2011. Paul books a band called The Avett Brothers and they were starting to go into arenas and amphitheaters, and getting very busy. He was very focused on that, so he had divided the rest of his roster into territories. He had me and three other younger guys like me that were booking the rest of the roster in territories.
So [we were booking] the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Darrell Scott and Paul Thorn. Paul let me bring Uncle Lucius and he was very supportive in us signing acts. There weren’t really a whole lot of rules as long as you showed up in the morning when he wanted you to and got your work done. I did at least one of those things.
I was 25-years-old and I was an agent with a territory. We had a lot of freedom, so it was really fun. It was a learn it by doing it atmosphere. The fifth or sixth act I signed when I was there was Shakey Graves, who I’ve booked for over 10 years now. Paul was great because he let us fail on our own, and subversively, he let us succeed on our own. That’s kind of what happened with Shakey. That’s an artist that I had seen when I was living in Austin that I kept in touch with. It took a few more years, but I was watching closely and paying attention, and eventually we decided to work together. Here we are today 10 years later, and that’s been a very fruitful, successful relationship.
By 2013, I had signed some other artists like Willie Watson and the Band of Heathens. I had an artist named Cody Chesnutt who had success in a previous life with a song called “The Seed.” I started trying to pick my head up and figure out what was happening around me. That led me to some other conversations with other agencies and agents, primarily with Jonathan Levine.
Photo: Courtesy of Levy
What happened next?
Jonathan and I had met before, but in the summer of 2014, we met up at Newport Folk Festival. We had a beer and we talked for like an hour. I knew who Jonathan was because one of my all time favorite bands is The Black Crowes, and he was the agent at the time. Beyond that, I was raised on the Grateful Dead. Jonathan was the agent for Bob Weir and Phil Lesh—he’s still their agent and I get to work on Bob with him now, which is very much a dream come true.
At that time in Nashville, there were not a lot of agents or agencies that were doing non-country stuff, so I was paying attention to what Jonathan was doing. He had signed Sturgill Simpson around that time. That led to other conversations and lunches and eventually a job offer. I went to work at Paradigm—which is now Wasserman—in 2015.
When did you pick up Tyler Childers?
February of 2017. I had been at Paradigm for a couple years at that point. I had brought Shakey with me and eventually Willie Watson. I signed a couple acts. I had been a fan of Tyler’s. I was introduced to him through some friends of mine from college, one of whom is from Kentucky and he would play him around the house all the time. I just became a fan. I brought a video of Tyler into a meeting one day Paradigm.
Everybody reacted positively, but Jonathan pulled me aside after that meeting and was like, “Hey, we need to keep our eye on this. Sturgill is a fan of his and wants to be more active in producing records. Let’s keep our eye on this.”
This went on for six or eight months. Tyler and his manager, Ian Thornton, would make quarterly Nashville trips. I would help him get shows—I got him a slot on AmericanaFest before we were working together. We just got to know each other. We met in my office, the three of us, and we talked about the future and their goals.
Eventually he made Purgatory. I heard the record and thought it was really good. Jonathan was getting all this info from the Sturgill side as it was happening. We spoke to each other at the beginning of 2017 and said, “Let’s do this.” So that’s what we did.
And boy, has it taken off.
Yeah! That was seven years ago, so it didn’t happen overnight. It did happen quickly, relatively, but we didn’t skip steps and we built a real foundation for Tyler. There was a pandemic in the middle there, which certainly delayed things, but at the same time, the way streaming consumption started happening in bigger numbers during the pandemic, it accelerated a lot of things too. We just announced an arena tour with 12 arenas that all sold out in 30 minutes or less. That’s two nights at Madison Square Garden and two nights at Bridgestone and The Forum. It’s an awesome place to be.
What is the most fulfilling part about what you get to do?
The most fulfilling part is going to the show. That doesn’t matter if it’s at the Echo or the Forum, at Mercury Lounge or Madison Square Garden. It always feels good when the artist is in a position to win. The nature of my job is asking: What’s the venue? What’s the ticket price? What city are we playing in? These are the things we can control. When we get it right and the show sells out and it’s the right venue at the right time, you put the artist in a position to win and thrive. Being there in that moment is super rewarding.
Sara Benz Joins Big Machine Records As Project Manager
/by LB CantrellSara Benz
Big Machine Label Group has elevated Sara Benz to Project Manager for the Big Machine Records imprint, effective immediately.
Benz most recently served as Senior A&R Coordinator at Universal Music Group in Los Angeles following her time working with Andy Grammer at Small Giant Records + Management. The University of North Carolina Wilmington alum first began her career selling merch on tour with Misterwives and Smallpools.
In her new role, Benz will oversee strategy, development and execution of release campaigns to drive consumption and audience growth for the Big Machine Records’ artist roster including Tim McGraw, Carly Pearce, Brian Kelley, Jackson Dean and Midland, among others.
“Sara comes to the Big Machine team with a ton of energy and a wealth of experience. She has hit the ground running and is making a huge difference with our team and our artists. This is truly only the beginning for her,” says Big Machine Records’ GM, Clay Hunnicutt.
“A huge thank you to the amazing team at Big Machine Records for welcoming me with open arms,” shares Benz. “I can’t wait for this next chapter in Music City!”
Benz is based in Nashville can be reached at sara.benz@bmlg.net.
Sound Healthcare & Financial Now Booking Free Appointments
/by Liza AndersonSound Healthcare & Financial (SH&F) is currently booking free appointments to help individual music professionals, seniors and corporate groups navigate healthcare solutions.
SH&F has been providing services to those actively working in the music industry for over 17 years. Coverage may also include spouses and dependent family members. Additionally, proprietary True Group benefit options are available exclusively through SH&F for members of the Nashville Musicians Association, AFM 257.
The Marketplace enrollment period starts Nov. 1 and ends Jan. 15, and the Medicare enrollment window is open now through Dec. 7. For coverage starting Jan. 1, the enrollment process must be completed no later than Dec. 15.
To book an appointment, call 615-256-8667 or email info@soundhealthcare.org.