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MusicRow Podcast Episode 5: Hayley Orrantia

HayleyOrrantia podcast

Hayley Orrantia may be best known for her role on ABC-TV’s hit comedy series The Goldbergs, but music is her first love. In the latest MusicRow podcast, she calls owner/publisher Sherod Robertson while house-hunting in Nashville.

“I am a singer first and foremost, and music’s always been so important to me,” she says. “I kind of fell into acting, in a way, because of music. I was going on auditions a lot, going out to Los Angeles during pilot season while I was in high school. By the time I was 19, I happened to get the audition for The Goldbergs, and the minute I got the script, I knew that it was a role that I really connected with. I’m still happy to be working on it because it’s such a funny show.”

Sponsored by SunTrust Bank’s Sports & Entertainment Group, this episode of the MusicRow podcast is the fifth in a series. All of the MusicRow podcasts are available on iTunes.

Click here to listen to episodes online.

Click here to listen on iTunes.

About the MusicRow podcast:
From Nashville’s leading music industry trade publication, The MusicRow Podcast features in-depth conversations with artists and the key industry members behind their music. Hosted by MusicRow Magazine Publisher Sherod Robertson, the series offers unique perspectives from iconic legends and rising talent to key decision makers and gatekeepers in the Nashville music industry.

Weekly Chart Report (12/11/15)

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Click here or above to access MusicRow‘s weekly CountryBreakout Report.

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Exclusive: Dave Cobb, One Day Before the CMA Awards

Dave Cobb. Photo: Michael W. Bunch

Dave Cobb. Photo: Michael W. Bunch

Dave Cobb sat down with MusicRow at his Nashville home studio just one day before his big win at the 49th annual CMA Awards in early November. Although he was nominated as a producer for Chris Stapleton’s Traveller, Cobb’s prediction about the following day’s ceremony seemed clear: “There’s no way they’re going to give it to us!”

Of course, Stapleton ended up sweeping all three categories he was nominated in—including album of the year for the Cobb-produced Traveller. The acclaimed project has sold nearly 375,000 copies since the live ABC award show, with a total of 470,000 moved to date. On Monday (Dec. 7), Traveller received Grammy nominations for Album of the Year and Best Country Album, while the title track will compete in the categories of Best Country Solo Performance and Best Country Song. Cobb also nabbed a Producer of the Year nomination.

A native of Savannah, Georgia, Cobb has also produced albums like A Thousand HorsesSouthernality, Jason Isbell’s Something More Than Free and Southeastern, in addition to Sturgill Simpson’s Metamodern Sounds in Country Music.

Read the full interview with Cobb in MusicRow’s 2016 Next Big Thing print issue.

On being a Nashville outsider:

I’ve always been an outsider in country but I feel like everybody has been really sweet and accommodating. They seem to be interested in these records in a good way.

When my [go-to session players] all got hired away from California and came here, I had to move too. They make me look really good. They aren’t a part of the Nashville establishment. Not that I don’t want to be a part of it, but I feel safe with those guys. It’s fun to work with them and I give a lot of credit for the sound to them. Of course

Vance Powell came in to engineer Stapleton’s record and Justin Niebank mixed Thousand Horses’ Southernality.

On his recording approach:

Most of my records are based around the singer. The band has to play to them. It may work for some people to record like a modern assembly line—cutting instruments separately—but I just like that live vocalist. At the end of the day, people listen to the singer more than anything else. Why not put them first? People also talk about how an artist may be so much better live than on the records. Why does it have to be any different? Someone told me a long time ago that records happen in the live room, not the control room. So I have that philosophy.

Records like “Wichita Lineman” send chills down my spine. I’m digging for that with every artist, whatever that is. If you get the track and groove right, the singer sings right. A lot of it is clearing the path for the singer so they can relax and enjoy themselves.

On his early influences:

My parents were Pentecostal so they listened to a lot of ‘50s, Elvis and the Oak Ridge Boys. My first loves though were the Beatles and The Rolling Stones. When I met Shooter [Jennings], he got me into “good country music”: Waylon [Jennings], his mother Jessi Colter and Paul Kennerley’s White Mansions [a 1978 concept album about the Civil War] changed my life. I kept digging and found Jerry Reed. I love country music that has heart and a rock ‘n’ roll spirit. Lately it’s been chasing anything of Alan Lomax’s field recordings, ‘30s prison gangs, front porch recordings, and mountain recordings.

All those Stones, Zeppelin, or Beatles records were made by figuring it out in the studio. That’s why I don’t like demos. When you hear a demo, you get used to how things are, as opposed to your gut reaction about finding the right tempo or adding parts. Those ideas begin to disappear the more you hear a demo.

Same way with pre-production because when you land on a riff for the first time, that’s when you play it with the most conviction. You can tell those ‘70s Waylon records were made just by figuring it out in the studio and figuring out when the vibe was right. I’m very much a student of those old albums. They’re more human.

On A Thousand Horses:

I did an EP for them in 2010 when they were on Interscope. Jeff Sosnow in A&R introduced me to them. We hit it off because we were all from the South. One of the guys is from Savannah too. It was like people from the same backyard goofing off in Los Angeles. I consider those guys like little brothers. We stuck together after Interscope and made some demos, which became Southernality.

On Jason Isbell:

The lyrics of the Drive-By Truckers song, “Outfit,” crushed me. I was really homesick for the South in California. When I got to Nashville, Jason’s manager, Traci Thomas connected us. That was a stroke of luck. Ryan Adams was supposed to produce him. That fell through and we were just fortunate enough to cut [2013’s] Southeastern in the middle of this incredible point in his songwriting.

On Sturgill Simpson:

Shooter pointed Sturgill out at a concert, saying, “That’s the best singer in Nashville.” We met again a few days later and started going in the studio. I didn’t think twice about it—he has a natural gift.

On Chris Stapleton:

When I heard his voice, I was stopped in my tracks. He is the ultimate cool. There are songs on Traveller where he was literally just testing the mics. It’s frightening how good he is.

DISClaimer: Rhonda Vincent Tops Holiday Music Releases

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The holidays will be here before you know it, so here’s the first installment of DISClaimer’s seasonal music guide.

There are some dandy tracks here, notably from John Berry, Mickey Guyton, Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver and the duo of Kenny Rogers & Jennifer Nettles.

But nobody tops Rhonda Vincent. She has the uncontested Disc of the Day.

ROBBY JOHNSON/Happy Xmas (War Is Over)
Writers: John Lennon/Yoko Ono; Producer: James Stroud; Publisher: none listed; CMR
-His vocal is clear and strong, and he gives this plenty of country heart.

ERIC HEATHERLY/Christmas To Me
Writers: Eric Heatherly; Producer: none listed; Publisher: Psychobilly, ASCAP; Town & Country
-It has an r&b groove and a bluesy vamp. A bump-and-grind for the holidays.

LESLIE COURS MATHER/Santa Baby (You’ll Be Mine)
Writers: none listed; Producer: none listed; Publishers: none listed; Lion Eyes
-Saucy sounding. Best line: “I’m about to make your sleigh bells ring.”

RHONDA VINCENT/Dreaming of Christmas
Writer: Rhonda Vincent; Producer: Rhonda Vincent; Publisher: Sally Mountain; BMI; UM (track)
-Vincent’s Christmas Time CD has four of her original tunes alongside eight holiday standards. This lilting ditty kicks off the set with scintillating fiddle, mandolin, dobro and guitar work, lovely harmonies and an instantly lovable melody. Check out her all-star “Twelve Days of Christmas” featuring Dolly Parton, Willie Nelson, the Oaks, Ronnie Milsap, Larry Gatlin, Jeannie Seely, Lorrie Morgan, Pam Tillis, Bill Anderson, Charlie Daniels, Gene Watson and EmiSunshine. Hands down, the best new Yule CD of 2015.

CLAIRE PETRIE & T. GRAHAM BROWN/He Would Be King
Writers: James Larson/Roger True; Producer: Mark Moseley; Publisher: Woodgrain, ASCAP; Mosrite
-Claire wisely lets his mighty T-ness take the lead most of the time, since his charisma is unstoppable. The song is quite uplifting.

JAMES ROBERT WEBB/Wonderful Christmas
Writer: Paul McCartney; Producers: James Robert Webb/Daniel Kleindienst; Publisher: MPL, ASCAP; Bison Creek (CDX)
-This McCartney favorite lends itself quite nicely to a country arrangement. Webb sings with warmth, and the session musicians are superb. Nice job.

KENNY ROGERS & JENNIFER NETTLES/Here It Is Christmas/Baby It’s Cold Outside
Writers: Kenny Rogers/Frank Loesser; Producers: Kyle Lehning/Warren Hartman; Publishers: Lilonsmate/Wixen/Frank, ASCAP; Warner Bros.
– As usual, Rogers is tops as a duet partner. Nettles does her part with deliciously jazzy phrasing. The strings are nicely done, too. Jennifer Nettles hosted ABC’s Country Christmas special last week, and tonight she’s in the spotlight on NBC in the TV movie of Dolly Parton’s “Coat of Many Colors.”

DOYLE LAWSON & QUICKSILVER/It’s Christmas Time
Writers: Charlie & Ira Louvin; Producers: none listed; Publishers: Central Songs, BMI; Mountain Home
-Lordy, these men can harmonize. This gorgeous ballad is decorated with both superb singing and poetic dobro and twin-fiddle accents. Spine tingling.

MICKEY GUYTON/Do You Want To Build A Snowman
Writers: Robert Lopez/Kristen Anderson-Lopez; Producer: Byron Gallimore; Publishers: Wonderland, BMI; Capitol (CDX)
-Swirling, echoey production backs a heavenly sweet vocal performance. Wistfully romantic.

JOHN BERRY/Blue Christmas
Writers: Billy Hayes/Jay W. Johnson; Producers: John Berry/Robin Berry; Publishers: Judy J Olmstead Trust/Universal Polygram, ASCAP; JB (CDX)
-Simple guitar, piano and brushed drums back him. And with a voice this splendid and a song this great, that’s all he needs. Masterful.

Exclusive: Craig Wiseman Shares His Big Loud Vision

Craig Wiseman. Photo: Amy Allmand

Craig Wiseman. Photo: Amy Allmand

The full vision for Craig Wiseman’s enterprise is coming to fruition at 1111 16th Avenue South in Nashville.

That’s where the 2015 Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame inductee oversees his Big Loud headquarters, offering a true 360-degree artist experience with in-house publishing, management, label, and music production.

“People might demonize 360 deals,” says Wiseman on a late November morning inside the plaque-saturated walls of his three-story office building. “Although this was our first venture together [with Joey Moi, “Chief” Zaruk and Seth England], every entity came in pretty seasoned. Nobody is riding anyone’s coattail in this instance.”

Now with a staff of over 20 in the 16th Avenue complex, the Big Loud Shirt publishing group encompasses the third floor with a songwriter roster that includes Moi, Rodney Clawson, Chris Tompkins, Matt Dragstrem, Sarah Buxton and the Warren Brothers. Chris Lane and Florida Georgia Line’s Brian Kelley and Tyler Hubbard are signed for publishing with Big Loud Mountain.

Wiseman thanks longtime friend and writer Buxton for helping him realize the current business structure.

“Sarah was the only artist I ever produced,” recalls Wiseman of a 2007 six-track EP. “We had 11 songs that we threw over the fence for the label to release in 2005. Everything I feared, overthinking and all that, happened. I stepped back from that saying, ‘Never again!’ If I ever contribute that much heart and soul again, it will be a situation I have far more control of. But when you say that, you’ve gotta get your checkbook out.

“The wheels were falling off the industry that whole time. For us, it came down to: if you want to fish, you better be running a hatchery. When Seth England came along to start this new publishing model—getting good bands in clubs—the old model started working like crazy with Rodney Clawson and Chris Tompkins kicking ass with Blake, Luke, Jason, and Carrie cuts. Though, we still had more great songs than we knew what to do with.”

Soon, the largest-selling digital country song of all time came knocking to not only change the trajectory for Big Loud, but the modern Nashville industry altogether.

“My mother could’ve told you ‘Cruise’ was a hit,” Wiseman says. “But we were lucky that FGL was our first attempt at the new model. Here were two kids starving to death, killing themselves wearing out a Chevy Tahoe. We figured if we put out one independent single, their club date booking price would double and we would recover our investment. We were just trying to keep things simple.

MusicRow: How did FGL’s success light the fuse for Big Loud Records?

Wiseman: The whole goal was to put good music together, pay for it ourselves and do our own thing because when you take outside money, you take an outside timetable, expectations, fears and overthinking. What eventually happened with FGL was supernatural. It’s a perfect storm of so many elements coming together that is unrepeatable. You just thank God that you’re lucky to be anywhere in the vicinity when lightning strikes.

Partnering with Republic Nashville allowed us to scale up. When we partnered with Big Machine, we sold 20,000 single downloads that week. We always wanted to do a label here, but FGL exploded so quickly, you really get acquainted with the phrase “easier said than done.” We could have got greedy, but it would have been a disservice to the guys.

After we got FGL on their way [with Republic], it was Seth’s genius to go after Clay Hunnicutt to run Big Loud Records with [flagship artist] Chris Lane. People aren’t pushing back as hard as I thought they would. We’ll probably get a few more acts out there. But this [enterprise] is more than enough for me right now. We’re at a point where I don’t have to ask anyone’s permission for anything. I’ll live and die by it, that’­s fine—it’s my money. I hope to piss people off and make people smile a little.

Has your success sunk in?

Behind all this, I feel like I’m in the middle of the largest practical joke ever. I literally can’t believe it all. The weird thing was when I asked Tim McGraw and Ronnie Dunn to come sing at the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame induction, they both said, “You’re not already in there?”

That honor was amazing, as was the 2014 Heritage Award for the most-performed country music songwriter of ASCAP’s first 100 years. It’s like, “Are you fucking kidding me?” There are some real songwriters out there, and I’m just me.

What keeps you motivated?

I have been incredibly blessed. I spent my first week in town sleeping in a van. In 2000, Almo/Irving [where Wiseman signed his first publishing deal a decade prior] sold. Before I went to BMG, I sold my catalog for million[s], yet it was the most uncomfortable time of my life. I thought, “Is that it? I’m just going to make that pile bigger?”

I was in my mid 30s—didn’t have to worry about where my next house, meal or car would come from—but on an intuitive level I felt like such an ass, using these blessings to make myself comfortable. The story in the Bible about the three individuals entrusted with wealth and one buries it while the others invest it [helped decide the next step].

All I knew was I loved songs and songwriters. So I put $1 million in a business checking account and bought a piece of property on 17th Avenue South with the intention of throwing parties. I was watching all the old publishing companies fall away and I would love to go to these parties they would throw because they brought together a community.

I love watching new artists getting their dreams and prayers answered. And whether or not I help them, just to be around them—who doesn’t need to be reminded that prayers get answered and that angels fly low? I naively didn’t realize the staff answering phones would advance and realize their own dreams, too. Our employees are given the opportunities and in return are given the rewards. There are so many dreams coming true and people working hard. To see the look in their eyes when they catch fire is great to be around.

In 2014, you partnered with Round Hill. Why was that the right decision?

We sold a portion of copyrights but our business is still here. I still own every song. We more or less did a co-venture going forward and kind of a co-venture going back.

The brilliance of Round Hill is they partner. They have a very effective admin and sync organization of about 20 people. I pay very close attention to admin—I owned my own for years. They just run everything through their pipes. Ultimately, I just wanted to be left alone and to be an extremely low-maintenance partner to make us both money. We’re looking at future areas to partner with them. Since, Round Hill has made some very aggressive moves in Nashville.

Are you part of the trend of publishers being the artist developers?

When millions turn into billions, lawyers and investors come in and screw things up and then it’s left to the creative people who love the music to build it back and fix it. Shane McAnally is having major success at development, as is Luke Laird. It’s great to see.

I’m of the old school Nashville publishers who think if you care about an act, you will do anything for them to get them somewhere. That’s where artist development comes in at the publisher level.

‘MusicRow’ Reveals 2016 Next Big Thing Artists

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MusicRow is proud to announce today the 2016 Next Big Thing print issue. This year’s 11 Next Big Thing artists range from established hitmakers prepping their next moves, to newcomers ready to claim their turns in the spotlight.

Be sure to pick up your copy of the print magazine here, or receive your copy with the purchase of a yearly subscription.

“As we open the doors to 2016, we are excited to cast a spotlight on a deserving new class that we have deemed The Next Big Thing,” says MusicRow Publisher/Owner Sherod Robertson. “Whether basking in the national spotlight for the first time or escalating to a much bigger stage in 2016, these 11 artists have the talent and skill to reach higher ground.”

In addition to spotlighting artists as MusicRow‘s Next Big Thing, this issue offers exclusive editorial content including a Pentatonix/Cracker Barrel partnership, a spotlight on the burgeoning Nashville neighborhood of Berry Hill, and the video gaming industry’s foray into Music City. CMA-winning, Grammy-nominated producer Dave Cobb also sits down to discuss his successes with Chris Stapleton, Jason Isbell, A Thousand Horses and Sturgill Simpson.

MusicRow‘s 2016 Next Big Thing Artists

· A Thousand Horses (Republic Nashville)
· Kelsea Ballerini (Black River Entertainment)
· Brothers Osborne (EMI Records Nashville)
· Cam (Arista Nashville/RCA Records)
· Dan + Shay (Warner. Bros Records/Warner Music Nashville)
· Mickey Guyton (Capitol Nashville)
· Chris Janson (Warner Bros. Records/Warner Music Nashville)
· Old Dominion (RCA Nashville)
· Mo Pitney (Curb Records)
· Granger Smith (Wheelhouse Records)
· Chris Stapleton (Mercury Records)

Grammy Nominees Revealed: Sam Hunt, Chris Stapleton and More

58th Grammy Logo

Sam Hunt, Chris Stapleton, and Meghan Trainor landed Grammy nominations in major categories on Monday morning (Dec. 7).

Hunt and Trainor will compete for Best New Artist, while Stapleton’s Traveller is up for Album of the Year.

Hunt’s Montevallo and Stapleton’s Traveller are joined by Little Big Town’s Painkiller, Ashley Monroe’s The Blade and Kacey MusgravesPageant Material in the Best Country Album category.

sam hunt montevallo

In addition, “Girl Crush” is nominated in the overall Song of the Year category, an award that is presented to songwriters. Hillary Lindsey, Lori McKenna and Liz Rose – also known as the Love Junkies — are the writers of “Girl Crush.”

In the category of Best Country Solo Performance, nominees are: Cam’s “Burning House,” Stapleton’s “Traveller,” Carrie Underwood’s “Little Toy Guns,” Keith Urban’s “John Cougar, John Deere, John 3:16” and Lee Ann Womack’s “Chances Are.”

Nominees for Best Country Duo/Group Performance are: Brothers Osborne’s “Stay a Little Longer,” Joey + Rory’s “If I Needed You,” Charles Kelley, Dierks Bentley and Eric Paslay’s “The Driver,” Little Big Town’s “Girl Crush” and Blake Shelton and Ashley Monroe’s “Lonely Tonight.”

Contenders for Best Country Song are: “Chances Are” (written by Hayes Carll), “Diamond Rings and Old Barstools” (written by Barry Dean, Luke Laird and Jonathan Singleton), “Girl Crush,” “Hold My Hand” (written by Brandy Clark and Mark Stephen Jones), and “Traveller” (written by Chris Stapleton).

Chris Stapleton Traveller

Taylor Swift is nominated in a multitude of categories, including: Album of the Year and Best Pop Vocal Album for 1989; Record of the Year, Song of the Year, and Best Pop Solo Performance for “Blank Space”; Best Pop Duo/Group Performance for “Bad Blood,” featuring Kendrick Lamar; and Best Music Video for “Bad Blood.”

Dave Cobb is nominated in the Producer of the Year category. Cobb produced Stapleton’s Traveller, as well as A Thousand Horses’ “Smoke” and Southernality and Jason Isbell‘s Something More Than Free. Also nominated in the Producer of the Year category is Jeff Bhasker, whose credits include Cam’s “Burning House” and “Runaway Train.”

Final-round Grammy ballots will be mailed Dec. 16 and awards will be presented Monday, Feb. 15, 2016, live from STAPLES Center in Los Angeles and broadcast on CBS.

See the full list.

Weekly Chart Report (12/4/15)

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Click here or above to access MusicRow‘s weekly CountryBreakout Report.

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DISClaimer: Randy Rogers Band, Ray Price and Ashland Belle

Randy Rogers Band

Randy Rogers Band

The indie acts are in the spotlight today.

Whether they are big-label veterans like Randy Rogers Band and Ray Price, or freshly-minted newcomers, they are all plying their trade via independent companies.

The Disc of the Day belongs to Jamie Floyd, whose superbly-written songs have attracted an excellent-sounding group of supporting studio players. Music this good deserves major-league support. Somebody sign this woman at once and give her a ton of money.

The DisCovery Award goes to a band called Ashland Belle, a country-rock group based in Buffalo, New York, with booking and p.r. in Nashville.

RANDY ROGERS BAND/San Antone
Writer: Keith Gattis; Producer: Buddy Cannon; Publisher: Pioneer Town Songs/Sony/ATV Tree Publishing (BMI); Tommy Jackson/Thirty Tigers
-The new Randy Rogers Band CD drops next month. The set, titled Nothing Shines Like Neon, features celebrity guests like Alison Krauss, Jerry Jeff Walker and Jamey Johnson. But on this rolling, breezy lead-off track, the band is on its own. And sounding better than ever.

RAY PRICE/No More Songs to Sing
Writers: Robert Ellis Orrall/Roger Springer/Tony Ramey; Producer: Fred Foster; Publishers: Ten Ten/Orrall Fixation/ole Red Cape/Drop Tyne/BMG Sapphire/Fast Horse, ASCAP/BMI; Amerimonte
-Ray Price’s final album is packed with emotional performances. This wistful, end-of-life ballad is one of its highlights. A keepsake from one of the all-time greats.

JAMIE FLOYD/The Blade
Writers: Allen Shamblin/Marc Beeson/Jamie Floyd; Producers: Brad Hill & Jamie Floyd; Publisher: WB Music Corp. (ASCAP)/Erin’s Dream Music (ASCAP)/Crazy Blue Egg (ASCAP). All rights admin. by WB Music Corp. (ASCAP)/Built On Rock Music (ASCAP) (admin. by ClearBox Rights)/Jamie Floyd Music (SESAC); JFM
-This former Epic artist is on her own now, with her own publishing company and label. Her six-song EP is called Sunshine & Rainbows and features this powerful throbber that is the title of the current Ashley Monroe album. Floyd’s own rendition trembles with emotion and aches with longing. Awesome.

Ashland Belle Press Photo

ASHLAND BELLE/Fastest Car
Writers: Jimmy Yeary/Zac Maloy; Producer: Zac Maloy; Publisher: EMI Blackwood Music Inc./Great Day At THiS Music/Beattyville Music, BMI & Leo Rosewater/Warner Chapell, ASCAP; Ashland Belle

-This band shows real promise. There is fire and energy in the instrumental work, and the lead singer bites into the rebel-love lyric with gusto. This rocks in all the right places.

KAREN TAYLOR-GOOD/Hope in the Garden
Writers: Karen Taylor-Good/Rachael Good; Producer: none listed; Publisher: none listed; Abe’s Garden
-Abe’s Garden is now open on Woodmont Boulevard in West Nashville as an Alzheimer’s and Memory Care Center of Excellence. This is the title tune of a CD compiling songs about this tragic disease. It’s a lovely piano ballad with strings. Support this worthy charity.

CHLOE COLLINS/All Over Again
Writer: Chloe Collins; Producer: Mikey Reaves; Publisher: Collins House, BMI; Collins House
-She’s 15, and she solo-wrote all five songs on her EP. This lead-off track and first single is an instantly catchy ditty about a no-regrets romance. I dig her conversational delivery and her down-to-earth lyrics. This gal has the goods.

IMAJ/Colorblind
Writers: Ron Grimes/IMAJ/Jennifer Lynn; Producers: IMAJ & Mills Logan; Publisher: Timeless Creations/Love IMAJ/Jennifer Lynn, BMI/SESAC; Thomas Triomphe
-It’s a message ballad about spreading love and not being racist. She sings well, but the song is weak and repetitive. In mid-song, a news-announcer voice butts in and then she starts talking about her philosophy. Which is sonically totally weird.

SHALO LEE/Hometown Girl
Writers: Shalo Lee/Owen Sartori; Producer: none listed; Publisher: Owen Sartori & Shalo Lee; SL
-Recorded in Minneapolis, this is a pop-flavored female “attitude” number with a cool guitar figure running through it. It’s not gritty enough to be Americana, rhythmic enough to be pop/rock or twangy enough to be mainstream country.

JOHNNY REED FOLEY/Hillbilly Rockstar
Writer: Johnny Reed Foley; Producer: Billy Chapin; Publisher: Johnny Reed Foley, BMI; Inferential
-Have I mentioned how much I dislike country rapping?

TWO MILES SOUTH/Anywhere But Here
Writers: Billy Chapin/Matt McKeown/Camryn Wessner; Publisher: Funkamongus, BMI; Producer: Billy Chapin
-This is a female duo comprised of 18-year-old twins. The whole bouncy, boppy thing sounds slightly flat.

Exclusive: Producer/Engineer Mickey Jack Cones’ Career Goes Full Throttle

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Mickey Jack Cones. Photo: mickeyjackcones.com

“I’ve been performing since I was about 10 years old,” says Nashville producer/engineer Mickey Jack Cones. “It definitely runs in my family.”

In the late 1980s, Barry Beckett (a Muscle Shoals rhythm section member, Bob Dylan producer, and former Warner Bros. Records A&R Director) produced the Cones Sisters, a family group comprised of Mickey Jack’s mother Jackie and her sisters. At one point, the group was signed to RCA.

As a teen, Cones played guitar for the trio before making the move to Nashville in 1996. The Texas native has long since made a name for himself in the Nashville music community, engineering recordings for Jason Aldean, George Strait, Luke Bryan, Carrie Underwood, Steven Tyler, Blake Shelton, and Lionel Richie, and producing albums for Dustin Lynch, Joe Nichols, Trace Adkins, Exile, and more. He also has numerous credits as a musician and vocalist to his name.

Cones also owns and operates Westwood Sound Studio in Nashville’s Berry Hill area. It seems that Cones will spend plenty of time in the studio in 2016, working again with Adkins and Lynch, as well as Jackie Lee, Craig Campbell, and others. He also recently launched a new management and publishing venture, Cor Entertainment.

Life’s A Dance

In the mid-‘90s, Cones was a band leader on the Texas dancehall circuit. “When people think dance hall circuit, they think honky-tonks,” Cones says. “There were 3,000 people in this dance hall, and the band had pyros and huge stages. There are bands with record deals that don’t play with that kind of production. I was 19, making great money, playing three or four nights per week.”

When he moved to Nashville to enroll in Belmont University, the music scene in Music City came as a dramatic change. “You can’t really play here in town and make money, nothing compared to what I had just done, so I remember going downtown to get a job. I went to Planet Hollywood, and I remember Will Hoge was waiting tables at the time. He got me a job working there.”

Determined to break into the Nashville music scene, Cones worked multiple jobs, in addition to schoolwork and music work. He began by writing music for a pop act managed by Mark Chesnutt’s management company. The act got a recording deal, and Cones inked a publishing deal with EMI. In 1998, Cones signed on as a staff engineer with David Malloy and J. Gary Smith at Malloy Boys.

He worked as a staff engineer until 2002, when a gig writing with and producing Julie Roberts turned into a radio tour gig after she signed a deal with Mercury Nashville. He worked with Roberts on tour for a few years before turning his focus to co-production efforts with Trace Adkins.

In 2009, Cones purchased Westwood Sound Studio with David Malloy and Marti Frederiksen. In 2014, he bought them out, becoming the sole owner.

Pictured (L-R): Mickey Jack Cones and Dustin Lynch. Photo: Shalacy Griffin

Pictured (L-R): Mickey Jack Cones and Dustin Lynch. Photo: courtesy of Mickey Jack Cones

Risky Business

Cones recently celebrated two No. 1 songs for BBR Music Group artist Dustin Lynch as a producer on “Where It’s At (Yep, Yep)” and “Hell of a Night.” The edgy, rock-based production on “Hell of a Night” was a risk for Lynch, who broke through at country radio with the traditional sound of his debut single, “Cowboys and Angels.” “I said I was all in because I’m a rock guy anyway, but we hoped his fans would receive it,” Cones says. “It’s awesome to see that ‘One Hell of a Night’ went No. 1.”

According to Cones, Lynch also has one hell of a work ethic. “I’ve worked with a lot of hard-working artists, but when you are sick, you have to push through. Some people don’t have the ability to do it, but through bad health, good health, little sleep, lots of sleep, missing vacations and holidays, Dustin brings his best. And he’s been so appreciative of everything all along the way. That’s fewer and far between these days.”

Mickey Jack Cones and Joe Nichols. Photo: Chase Lauer

Mickey Jack Cones and Joe Nichols. Photo: courtesy of Mickey Jack Cones

Heavy Mettle

Cones’ creative muscle and physical stamina were put to the test during his work on Joe Nichols’ first Red Bow Records release, 2013’s Crickets. At the request of legendary producer Tony Brown, Cones produced four sides on Nichols. “It was after he had gotten off of Show Dog, but before he had his deal with BBR,” said Cones. “That session got him his deal and two of those songs were picked to become part of the record.”

Cones recorded most of the album, and handled mixing, background vocals, and overdubbing. When lead single “Sunny and 75” began climbing the charts at a faster-than-expected pace, Cones says “they moved the [album] deadline up like two months on me, at the last minute. I could have gotten someone else to mix it but we didn’t want to jeopardize that sound.”

According to Cones, he had 16 days to finish the better part of the album, including six songs with no lead vocals laid down at that point. “I had only finished ‘Sunny and 75’ and one other song at that point,” recalls Cones.

While Nichols returned to the studio the next day to begin working on lead vocals for the rest of the album, Cones had a conversation with BBR Music Group founder and leader Benny Brown. ‘I told him I would do whatever he needed me to do. I also know that, in this town, sometimes a CD of finished work is turned in and can sit for two months before a label will do anything with it. I remember saying, ‘If I’m going to do this, I’ll need to sleep at the studio and work round the clock. I’ll do it because it’s so important, but the day I finish it and walk it into the studio, it better go in a FedEx bag.’ Now, we were laughing of course, but I said, ‘If it doesn’t go out that day, I might burn down your building, cause I’m going to lose like 10 years off my life to meet this deadline.’”

Cones recalls the hours spent working under tight deadlines to finish the project. “I slept on the couch [in the studio] from 6 a.m. to 7:30 a.m. I did it again the next day, and for 14 days straight. I would mix from 7:30 a.m. until 4 or 5 p.m., then start overdubbing guitar stuff, then start singing background vocals and then when I finished singing background vocals at about 6 in the morning, I would take them off and sleep for an hour and a half, then lay those background vocals into the mix, close the mix, and do it all again. I did that for 14 days straight. When I’m passionate about a project, an artist, I have to put everything I’ve got into it.”

The album produced two No. 1 singles for Nichols, including “Sunny and 75” and “Yeah.” “I am so proud to hang those plaques on my wall,” says Cones.

The hard work involved in the production of Nichols’ album is embedded into the history of Westwood Sound Studio, literally. “We put new floor in the tracking room, and they had to lay this leveling stuff down before they put the floor down. I took a couple of Joe Nichols’ CDs and put them in zip lock bags and put them in there. It’s literally buried in the floor here. I was like, ‘This is permanent, I’ve got to do something to commemorate it.’”

Cones and Westwood Sound Studio are featured in MusicRow‘s upcoming Next Big Thing issue.

Pictured (L-R): Brady Tilow, Mickey Jack Cones, Jason Aldean, and Michael Knox at Westwood Sound Studio. Photo: Courtesy of Mickey Jack Cones.

Pictured (L-R): Brady Tilow, Mickey Jack Cones, Jason Aldean, and Michael Knox at Westwood Sound Studio. Photo: Courtesy of Mickey Jack Cones.