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Don Henley Makes Mark In Music City

don-henley-event-invitation

Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame member Don Henley has become the latest superstar to be charmed by the ease of Nashville recording.

John Sebastian was dead right in 1966 when he wrote [the Lovin’ Spoonful hit] ‘Nashville Cats,’” said Henley on Thursday afternoon. Speaking at a celebration party for his new Cass County album, he added, “I enjoyed making this record more than any record I’ve made in my career..

“Most of it was done in Nashville. I had an amazing team of people working on this record. I certainly plan on recording more here in the future.”

He wrote many of the songs’ lyrics upstairs in the old Jack’s Tracks studio on Music Row. Garth Brooks bought this and has renamed it Allentown in honor of producer/songwriter Allen Reynolds.

During a question-and-answer session with Nashville journalist Beverly Keel, Henley addressed the inevitable question about whether Cass County is his “country” record.

“I don’t really want to put it in a category,” he said. “I’m associated with California, but I was born and raised in Cass County, Texas, and I am a Texan. So this is a natural progression for me. This is my where-I-come-from album.”

Don Henley returned to his home state 21 years ago, moving to Dallas so that his four children could be raised there. He owns his grandmother’s old house and contributes funds to help restore his hometown. Henley was born in Gilmer and raised in Linden, the Cass county seat.

His album includes contributions from such fellow Texas natives as Miranda Lambert, Lee Ann Womack, Molly Felder and steel guitarist Milo Dearing. One song is an homage to Texas-born Buck Owens.

“There’s a lot of Texas on this record.

“There are Cass counties in nine different states. But my Cass County is in the northeast corner of Texas, near Louisiana and Arkansas. It is a musical and cultural crossroads. Growing up there, I listened to the radio from Shreveport, the KWKH Louisiana Hayride. That was my country-music education.”

He said another influence was WNOE broadcasting r&b music from New Orleans. His first Texas band was a Dixieland-music ensemble.

“It was a good place to grow up,” he said. “I think what’s missing from a lot of records today, they haven’t gone back to school to the early stuff.”

His album includes collaborations with such legends as Dolly Parton, Mick Jagger and Merle Haggard. Other guests include Martina McBride, Ashley Monroe, Vince Gill, Lucinda Williams, Alison Krauss and Trisha Yearwood.

“I chose people whose work I respect, musically,” Henley commented, “people who can really sing when called upon to sing. I was flattered and flabberghasted when all of them said yes. People that I admire, that’s the kind of people I wanted on this record.

“It’s been 15 years since my last solo album: I believe in quality over quantity,” Henley said with a chuckle. “We started working on this record in 2010. I worked on it in between Eagles tours. The record’s been done for about a year now,” except for mixing and remixing its tracks. Henley co-produced it with his frequent songwriting collaborator Stan Lynch, who rose to fame as the drummer in Tom Petty’s Heartbreakers.

“When you can’t stand to listen to it anymore, that’s when you know it’s done,” Henley quipped.

Cass County will be released by the L.A. division of Capitol Records. Its country marketing will be handled by Nashville’s I.R.S. Records imprint.

“It’s going to be interesting to see what’s going to happen with this record. I have no idea.

“I’m in a pretty good place, right now,” added the 67-year-old icon. “I’m looking forward to whatever comes next…I’m still goofy enough to hope that my best work is ahead of me. I would like to continue to write and record for a long time. I’m going to keep doing this until I get it right.

“It’s not a hobby, it’s a calling.”

Bobby Karl Works CMA Fest: SunTrust HOT Dog Day, Fan Fair X, LP Field

Elektra Records artist Jana Kramer helped kick off CMA Music Festival on Thursday with a performance at the Bud Light Stage where she performed her new single "I Got The Boy." After the show, Jana met backstage with Warner Music Nashville President & CEO, John Esposito, Kramer, WMN EVP of A&R, Scott Hendricks and manager Greg Hill.

Elektra Records artist Jana Kramer helped kick off CMA Music Festival on Thursday at the Bud Light Stage where she performed new single “I Got The Boy.” After the show, she met backstage with (L-R): Warner Music Nashville President & CEO John Esposito, Kramer, WMN EVP of A&R Scott Hendricks, and manager Greg Hill.

Chapter 492

Despite the endless walking, walking, walking downtown, I never lose weight at the CMA Music Festival.

Do you think it might have something to do with my all-weenie lunch diet? That’s right, for the third straight day, I chowed down on hot dogs. That’s more than I normally eat in a year.

On Thursday (June 11), the reason was the 17th annual Hot Dog Day, presented on Music Row by SunTrust Bank and the Country Music Hall of Fame. A large tent full of tables and chairs was erected on the bank’s parking lot. There were air-circulating fans, but there was no getting away from the scorching temperature.

SunTrust Sports & Entertainment Staff at the company's 17th Annual Hot Dog Day.

SunTrust Sports & Entertainment staff at the company’s 17th Annual Hot Dog Day.

I felt sorry for weenie chef Earle Simmons, who was turning pink behind the blazing frankfurter cooker. That is, until I got a load of poor Andrew Kintz sweltering in a full-length, polyester hot-dog costume. He was on stage, greeting everyone and introducing the music being made by such Warner-Chappell writers as Lance Miller and Derek George.

Pat Higdon, Linda Edell-Howard, Bobby Rymer, Doak Turner, Ben Vaughn, Jim Zumwalt, Sherrill Blackman, Bill Stevens, Becky Harris and Leslie Roberts were working the room. MusicRow staged a triple attack with Sherod Robertson, Eric Parker and Troy Stephenson all on the scene.

Tatum Hauck Allsep was manning her informative Music Health Alliance booth at the rear of the tent. Randi Perkins now has a perfect attendance record for showing up at key events on all four days of the week thus far.

After that simmering, sizzling event, air conditioning sounded pretty good. So I headed for the Music City Center for the first day of Fan Fair X. This is the portion of the CMA fest about promotional booths and indoor stages. As I entered, Katie Ohh was dong her original songs on the AT&T U-Verse Stage. The Swon Brothers were meeting and greeting in the Belk Lounge. Jeannie Seely was emoting on the Durango Music Spot Stage.

Ashton Shepherd performs. Photo: Bev Moser

Ashton Shepherd performs. Photo: Bev Moser

Are you seeing the trend of brand placement here? In days of yore, the booths were mainly put together by stars’ fan clubs. Now just about every place in the exhibit hall is occupied by someone trying to sell you something.

The hall also suggests that there are now several different CMA Music Festivals going on. Inside the Music City Center are the older, fatter and more infirm fans. Down at Riverfront and on the streets of Lower Broadway are hard-partying young people. In the evening at LP Field, the ticket holders appear to be fresh and unsullied by the afternoon heat. I suspect that their agenda features more conventional tourist activities during the day with the night concerts serving as their only attachment to the fest.

Autographing at the Music City Center for that first festival sub-audience were Kayla Adams, Ashton Shepherd, Chase Tyler, Branch & Dean, The Kentucky HeadHunters, The Springs, Florida Georgia Line, Gwen Sebastian, Ali Dee, Dustin Craig, Ray Scott, Little Big Town, Macy Martin, Chris Young and Hannah Belle. Troupers Lynn Anderson, The Oak Ridge Boys and Bill Anderson maintained their nearly perfect records of having shown up at almost all of the 43 CMA Music Festival/Fan Fair celebrations.

Over on the Close-Up Stage, Aaron Tippin was telling stories behind such hits as “Kiss This” and singing them splendidly. Wife Thea Tippin and son Teddy sang backup and interjected their own witticisms. “Kiss This” co-writer Philip Douglas was in the audience, by the way.

Jordyn Stoddard performs. Photo: Bev Moser

Jordyn Stoddard performs. Photo: Bev Moser

Lee Roy Parnell took over from Seely on the Durango stage. Carissa Leigh warbled with an acoustic trio at the AT&T U-Verse spot. I headed back out into the heat.

After a saunter through the Country Music Hall of Fame’s shops, I hit the Belk Stage in the Walkway of Stars park. By this point, I felt the weather was amost unbearable.

The medics confirmed this. They had their busiest opening day in fest history, treating more than 100 people for heat-related issues and sending nine to the hospital.

On stage was Lucas Hoge, who has just returned from entertaining our troops in the Middle East. “You think it’s hot here?” he asked the crowd. “Over there, it’s 110 in the shade.” Forget I ever complained.

And just think of how hot it is for all of those hippies at Bonnaroo, which kicked off its music at 5:30 on Thursday. More than 80,000 are expected at the site near Manchester, Tenn.

Among my personal favorites booked at the CMA Fest that afternoon were Ashley Monroe, Dan + Shay, Drake White & The Big Fire, Exile, Rose Falcon & The Van Lears, Teea Goans, Eric Paslay, Kristian Bush and Kip Moore.

UMGN's Cindy Mabe and Tom Becci honor Alan Jackson's 25 years in music backstage at LP Field.

UMGN’s Cindy Mabe and Tom Becci honor Alan Jackson’s 25 years in music backstage at LP Field. Photo: Bev Moser

Next we hit the Don Henley listening party (more on that here and the full review here), and it would have been lovely to stay and bask in that atmosphere, but duty called.

We arrived back at the CMA fest just in time to catch Alan Jackson’s opening set at LP Field. After performing a spirited “Good Time,” he thanked the fans for his 25 years in the biz. This was the perfect segue into the poignant “Here in the Real World,” the song that kicked off his amazing hit string in 1990.

He also sang a bit of “Pop A Top,” the 1967 Jim Ed Brown hit that Jackson revived in 1999. Grand Ole Opry great Brown, who is among this year’s Country Music Hall of Fame inductees, died of cancer on Thursday. “We’re going to miss you, Jim Ed Brown,” said Jackson. “God bless you.”

Dierks Bentley at LP Field. Photo: Bev Moser

Dierks Bentley at LP Field. Photo: Bev Moser

If the fans didn’t know who Sam Hunt was when he took the stage, they did when he left it, still vibrating from his turn in the spotlight. Rascal Flatts sang hit after hit – “Riot,” “Bless the Broken Road,” “Banjo” and the like – to the crowd’s delight. Dierks Bentley, Florida Geogia Line and Jason Aldean rocked the stadium into the night.

Working the VIP Lounge were such dignitaries as Troy Tomlinson, Brandi Simms, Ron Stuve, Joanne Berry, Dennis Banka, David & Susana Ross, Randall Himes, Hank Adam Locklin, Aaron Hartley, Tim McFadden, Bill Wence, Karen Tallier, Frank Myers, Rudy Gatlin (The Gatlin Brothers sang the national anthem to christen the evening).

Plus Frank Bumstead, Mayor Karl Dean & Anne Davis, Steve Lassiter, Ron Cox, Anthony Martin, Charles Dorris, Dan Eckbaak, Melissa Maynard, Moore & Moore, Jeff Walker, Jeff Stevens, Paul Barnabee and Paul Zamick.

British music manager Peter Conway was experiencing his first visit to Nashville. “You picked the perfect week,” I said.

Florida Georgia Line’s Brian Kelley and wife, Brittney Kelley, presented their "bohemian chic" Tribe Kelley collection of clothes and accessories Thursday at a pop-up shop inside the Lucchese Bootmaker store in Nashville’s trendy Gulch neighborhood.    Tyler Hubbard, the other half of the Florida Georgia Line super-duo, showed his support by attending the lively event with fiancé Hayley Stommel.   Brian wore never-before-seen pieces he designed from the upcoming Tribe Kelley men’s collection, out later this month, and handmade Lucchese eastern diamond rattle snake boots. Brittney wore her Tribe Kelley designs with handmade Lucchese sable python booties. Photo:  Ed Rode

Florida Georgia Line’s Brian Kelley and wife Brittney presented their “bohemian chic” Tribe Kelley collection of clothes and accessories Thursday at a pop-up shop inside the Lucchese Bootmaker store in Nashville. Brian wore pieces he designed from the upcoming Tribe Kelley men’s collection, out later this month, and handmade Lucchese eastern diamond rattle snake boots. Brittney wore Tribe Kelley designs with handmade Lucchese sable python booties. Photo: Ed Rode

DisClaimer: No Denying Miranda Lambert And Rainey Qualley

miranda lambert smokin and drinkinThe tomatoes win this round.

Both of our award winners today come from female country artists. They had tough competition from the men of A Thousand Horses and Brushville. But there was no denying that the Miranda Lambert record with Little Big Town singing harmony is the Disc of the Day.

Similarly, no one even touched the hem of Rainey Qually’s gown as she swept up to the podium as this week’s DisCovery Award winner. Her “Me and Johnny Cash” rocks in all the right places.

ERICA NICOLE/I’m Making Mine
Writer: Emily Weisband; Producer: Kent Wells; Publisher: WB/Thankful for This, ASCAP; GTR (CDX) (www.ericanicolemusic.com)
I have liked several of this gal’s upbeat, danceable, tuneful performances in the past. It turns out that she’s equally potent when essaying stirring, thoughtful lyrics. 

BRUSHVILLE/Dangerous
Writer: Ben Hayslip/Rhett Akins; Producer: Klye Lehning; Publisher: WB/Get a Load of This/EMI Blackwood, ASCAP/BMI; Brushville (CDX) (www.brushville.com)
—It seems that what is “dangerous” isn’t risky driving, drinking, night swimming or even making love. It’s falling in love. Smartly executed in every way.

IRLENE MANDRELL/We Will Stand
Writer: Eric Homer; Producer: Pat Holt; Publisher: Blue Chameleon, ASCAP; CDX (www.irlenemandrell.com)
—She was always overshadowed vocally by sisters Barbara and Louise. But in her own modest and tentative way, Irlene holds her own on this patriotic outing.

ROWDY McCARRAN/Eyes Wide Open
Writer: none listed; Producer: Fred Vail; Publisher: none listed; RM (track) (615-297-0700)
—Veteran producer Vail’s latest discovery is a rootsy country romper with a personable drawl and a solid CD title song. Give this guy a deal.

THE KENTUCKY HEADHUNTERS & JOHNNIE JOHNSON/Meet Me in Bluesland
Writer: R.Young/G.Martin/A.Kenney/D.Phelps/F.Young/J.Johnson; Producer: The Kentucky HeadHunters; Publisher: BMG Firefly/Bughouse/Them Young Boys/Song Garden/BMG Bumblebee/Bug/Mr. Erik/I.B. Headed/JFJ, ASCAP/BMI; Alligator (track) (www.kentuckyheadhunters.com)
—The late Johnnie Johnson was Chuck Berrry’s right-hand man as a high-octane piano pounder and sometime songwriting collaborator. He was inducted into the Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame in 2001 and died in 2005. His 2003 blues sessions with the HeadHunters are now being released as a CD with this stately outing as the title tune. His piano work still captivates, and his shouted, down-home blues vocal is equally riveting. The country group proves to be surprisingly adept as an r&b backing band.

JB AND THE MOONSHINE BAND/Shotgun, Rifle and a .45
Writer: J.B. Patterson; Producer: JB and The Moonshine Band; Publisher: JBMB, BMI; Thirty Tigers (track) (www.jbandthemoonshineband.com)
—Too busy. It sounds like a cluttered demo tape. Clean up your production.

MIRANDA LAMBERT & LITTLE BIG TOWN/Smokin’ and Drinkin’
Writer: Natalie Hemby/Luke Laird/Shane McAnally; Producer: Frank Liddell, Chuck Ainley & Glenn Worf; Publisher: EMI Blackwood/Wruckestrike/Songs of Universal/Creative Nation/Twangin and Slangin/Smack Ink, BMI/ASCAP; RCA (track)
—Strings sigh, a steel guitar moans and a drum kit shuffles along while electric guitar notes pierce the evening atmosphere. Languid, liquid vocals lounge in nostalgia and misty memory. Enchanting. Seductive. Dreamy.

RAINEY QUALLEY/Me and Johnny Cash
rainey qualleyWriter: Rainey Qualley/John Ramey/Jeffrey East; Producer: Russ Zavitson & John Ramey; Publisher: Zavitson/Rainey Qualley/Tazmaraz, ASCAP/BMI; Cingle (track) 
—This puts pedal to the metal and boasts a delicious backbeat, plus stuttering fiddle and banjo, deep-twang guitar and a wailing, wide-open vocal. A highway song for a red-hot summer. This is going places.

A THOUSAND HORSES/Drunk Dial
Writer: Michael Hobby/Corey Crowder/Neil Mason/Cale Dodds; Producer: Dave Cobb; Publisher: Warner-Tamerlane/Carolina June/Greatshakin/Universal/Crowder Taylor/Nettwerk One B/Revelry/Nevada House/Cale Dodds, BMI/ASCAP; Republic Nashville (track) 
—“Smoke” was a dynamite career launcher. The follow-up, due at the end of the month, is just as cool. “(This Ain’t No) Drunk Dial” is sung with rough-edged soul and shrouded in echoey, mysterioso guitars. Ear grabbing in the extreme.

OLIVIA LANE/You Part 2
Writer: Danny Myrick/Ilya Toshinsky/Olivia Lane; Producer: Ilya Toshinsky; Publisher: Round Hill/Warren Piece/Liv Write Play/Lane Train, BMI/ASCAP/SESAC; Big Spark (www.olivialane.com)
—Choppy rhythms, a quasi-spoken vocal with a hip-hop vibe and a minimal melody. It’s too far on the pop side of things for my taste, but I won’t deny that it’s very listenable.

2015 CMT Awards Welcome Underwood Back To The Fold

Carrie Underwood. Photo: Bev Moser.

Carrie Underwood. Photo: Bev Moser.

Carrie Underwood has returned from her maternity break with a bang, if last night’s (June 10) CMT Music Awards is any indication.

The idol was the lead nominee and recipient at the video awards at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena, taking home Video of the Year, Female Video of the Year, and Collaborative Video of the Year (with Miranda Lambert).

“This is my first awards show since little Isaiah has been in the world,” beamed Underwood as she accepted Female Video of the Year. “I’m sure he’s napping on the bus right now, but I should definitely say he’s inspired me so much.”

Underwood performed “Little Toy Guns” to close the evening’s events, displaying powerful vocals and raw believability that rivaled an earlier performance by queen Reba (“Goin’ Out Like That”), who returned to the CMT stage after a 10-year hiatus.

Lady Antebellum kicked off the evening with their unrelenting “Long Stretch of Love” before transitioning into EDM keyboardist, Zedd’s “Beautiful Now.”

Pictured (L-R): Dave Haywood, Kelli Haywood, Chris Tyrell, Hillary Scott, Charles Kelley, Cassie McConnell. Photo: Bev Moser.

Pictured (L-R): Dave Haywood, Kelli Haywood, Chris Tyrell, Hillary Scott, Charles Kelley, Cassie McConnell. Photo: Bev Moser.

Pictured (L-R): Brittney Marie Cole, Brian Kelley, Tyler Hubbard, Hayley Stommel. Photo: Bev Moser.

Brittney Marie Cole, Brian Kelley, Tyler Hubbard, Hayley Stommel. Photo: Bev Moser.

David Spade as Joe Dirt. Photo: CMT

David Spade as Joe Dirt. Photo: CMT

Since the show began at 7:00 p.m. CT, some of the outdoor performances were illuminated by daylight, including Florida Georgia Line’s (“Anything Goes”) and Darius Rucker’s (“Homegrown Honey”). The former of which saw Brian Kelley rivaling Underwood for the night’s most frizzy hair. Later, Kenny Chesney took advantage of the night sky and performed before a backdrop of full-scale fireworks on Nashville’s lower Broadway.

Speaking of hair, David Spade took the stage in “Joe Dirt” form: sporting a mullet and sideburns. His sketch introduced Keith Urban: “He’s so close to having a mullet, why don’t you just do it, man?” The Aussie made his television debut of new single “John Cougar, John Deere, John 3:16), written by Ross Copperman, Shane McAnally and Josh Osborne. The three tunesmiths plus Ashley Gorley are also behind Jake Owen’s “Real Life.” Last night Owen’s performance of the song included crowd surfing to the CMT stage.

A production highlight of the evening was a pre-filmed sketch of “Guuber,” Nashville’s fictitious car service. The star-studded piece included show hosts Erin Andrews and Brittany Snow, Kristen BellArnold Schwarzenegger, Steven Tyler, Alan Jackson, Tom Arnold, Hunter Hayes, James Corden, Justin Bieber, Big & Rich and Rick Springfield.

Luke Bryan, Zac Brown Band, Jason Aldean, Sam Hunt and Eric Church also performed. Newcomers took to the Nationwide side stage with their current singles as the show went to commercial break. To keep the tune fresh in viewer’s minds, a riff of the single ushered viewers back from break too. Rising artists who performed during these spots included Frankie Ballard (“Sunshine & Whiskey”), Maddie & Tae (“Girl In A Country Song”), Chris Janson (“Buy Me A Boat”), Kelsea Ballerini (“Love Me Like You Mean It”), and RaeLynn (“God Made Girls”).

Pictured (L-R) Kelly Lynn Janson, Chris Janson. Photo: Bev Moser.

Pictured (L-R) Kelly Lynn Janson, Chris Janson. Photo: Bev Moser.

With a slew of new programming coming to CMT, including new series from Kellie Pickler (I Love Kellie Pickler) and Billy Ray Cyrus (Still The King), comedian Ron White said, “Go ahead and bust the nobs off your TV because there’s no reason to ever change the channel again.” White is hosting his Fifth Annual Salute To The Troops event on CMT, Friday, June 12.

In addition to viewing the show online, additional CMT broadcasts include Thursday, June 11 at 6:30 p.m.; Friday, June 12 at 5:30 p.m.; Saturday, June 13 at 12 p.m.; Saturday, June 13 at 12 a.m.; Sunday, June 14 at 6:30 a.m.; Sunday, June 14 at 8:00 p.m. Teen Nick will run an encore on Sunday June 14 at 10:30 p.m.

See a full list of winners here.

Pictured (L-R): Laura Bell Bundy, Danielle Bradbery, Lee Ann Womack, RaeLynn, Maddie & Tae, Ashley Monroe. Photo: Bev Moser.

Pictured (L-R): Laura Bell Bundy, Danielle Bradbery, Lee Ann Womack, RaeLynn, Maddie & Tae, Ashley Monroe. Photo: Bev Moser.

Pictured (L-R): Luke Bryan, Cole Swindell, Dierks Bentley, Sam Hunt. Photo: Bev Moser

Pictured (L-R): Luke Bryan, Cole Swindell, Dierks Bentley, Sam Hunt. Photo: Bev Moser

Brett Eldredge, Thomas Rhett. Photo: Bev Moser.

Brett Eldredge, Thomas Rhett. Photo: Bev Moser.

Pictured (L-R): Kellie Pickler, Kyle Jacobs. Photo: Bev Moser.

Pictured (L-R): Kellie Pickler, Kyle Jacobs. Photo: Bev Moser.

Pictured (L-R): Little Big Town's Phillip Sweet, Kimberly Schlapman, Karen Fairchild, Jimi Westbrook. Photo: Bev Moser.

Pictured (L-R): Little Big Town’s Phillip Sweet, Kimberly Schlapman, Karen Fairchild, Jimi Westbrook. Photo: Bev Moser.

Pictured (L-R): Jason Aldean, Brittney Kerr. Photo: Bev Moser.

Pictured (L-R): Jason Aldean, Brittney Kerr. Photo: Bev Moser.

Pictured (L-R): Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban. Photo: Bev Moser.

Pictured (L-R): Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban. Photo: Bev Moser.

Pictured (L-R): The Band Perry's Neil, Kimberly, Reid. Photo: Bev Moser.

Pictured (L-R): The Band Perry’s Neil, Kimberly, Reid. Photo: Bev Moser.

Pictured (L-R): Michael Caussin, Jana Kramer. Photo: Bev Moser.

Pictured (L-R): Michael Caussin, Jana Kramer. Photo: Bev Moser.

Carrie Underwood Is Big Winner At 2015 CMT Music Awards

Carrie Underwood at the CMT Music Awards. Photo: Bev Moser

Carrie Underwood at the CMT Music Awards. Photo: Bev Moser

The CMT Music Awards were presented tonight (June 10) at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena, airing live on CMT. Erin Andrews and Brittany Snow hosted the event.

Carrie Underwood was the leading nominee with five nominations. With her wins tonight, she has earned 13 CMT belt buckles throughout her career, more than any other artist in the show’s history.

Winners are determined by fan voting at CMT.com. Voting for most categories closed on Monday, June 8. Voting for Video of the Year was conducted throughout the live telecast (ET/CT only) to select the night’s big winner.

Read MusicRow‘s full coverage of the live event here.

Winners below in RED.

Video of the Year
Carrie Underwood, “Something In The Water,” Directed by Raj Kapoor
Dierks Bentley, “Drunk On A Plane,” Directed by Wes Edwards
Florida Georgia Line, “Dirt,” Directed by Nigel Dick
Jason Aldean, “Burnin’ It Down,” Directed by Wes Edwards
Luke Bryan, “Play It Again,” Directed by Michael Monaco
Miranda Lambert w/ Carrie Underwood, “Somethin’ Bad,” Directed by Trey Fanjoy

Male Video of the Year
Dierks Bentley, “Drunk On A Plane”
Eric Church, “Talladega”
Jason Aldean, “Burnin’ It Down”
Keith Urban, “Somewhere In My Car”
Kenny Chesney, “American Kids”
Luke Bryan, “Play It Again”

Female Video of the Year
Carrie Underwood, “Little Toy Guns”
Carrie Underwood, “Something In The Water”
Lee Ann Womack, “The Way I’m Livin'”
Miranda Lambert, “Little Red Wagon”
RaeLynn, “God Made Girls”
Reba, “Going Out Like That”

Group Video of the Year
A Thousand Horses, “Smoke”
Eli Young Band, “Dust”
Lady Antebellum, “Bartender”
Little Big Town, “Day Drinking”
The Band Perry, “Chainsaw”
Zac Brown Band, “All Alright”

Duo Video of the Year
Big & Rich, “Look At You”
Brothers Osborne, “Rum”
Florida Georgia Line, “Dirt”
Florida Georgia Line, “Sun Daze”
Maddie & Tae, “Girl In A Country Song”
The Swon Brothers, “Later On”

Breakthrough Video of the Year
Chase Rice, “Gonna Wanna Tonight”
Frankie Ballard, “Sunshine & Whiskey”
Kelsea Ballerini, “Love Me Like You Mean It”
Maddie & Tae, “Girl In A Country Song”
RaeLynn, “God Made Girls”
Sam Hunt, “Leave The Night On”

Collaborative Video of the Year
Blake Shelton Featuring Ashley Monroe, “Lonely Tonight”
Brantley Gilbert Featuring Justin Moore and Thomas Rhett, “Small Town Throwdown”
Jennifer Nettles Featuring Brandy Clark, “His Hands”
Kenny Chesney with Grace Potter, “Wild Child”
Miranda Lambert with Carrie Underwood, “Somethin’ Bad”
Tim McGraw Featuring Faith Hill, “Meanwhile Back at Mama’s”

CMT Performance of the Year
Bob Seger and Jason Aldean, “Turn The Page” (from CMT Crossroads)
Brett Eldredge, “Beat of the Music” (from CMT Ultimate Kickoff Party)
John Legend with Lee Ann Womack, “You and I (Nobody in the World)” (from CMT Crossroads)
Katy Perry with Kacey Musgraves, “Roar” (from CMT Crossroads)
Keith Urban, “It’s a Man’s Man’s Man’s World” (from CMT Artists of the Year)
Kenny Chesney, “American Kids” (from CMT Instant Jam)
Lady Antebellum and Aloe Blacc, “Wake Me Up” (from CMT Ultimate Kickoff Party)
Lady Antebellum and Chris Stapleton, “Drink A Beer” (from CMT Artists of the Year)

Ashley Monroe Slays Hearts During Live Album Preview

Ashley Monroe and band. Photo: Yahoo!

Ashley Monroe and band. Photo: Yahoo!

With a cream pantsuit jacket contrasting the steel and mahogany strapped around her shoulder last night (June 9), Ashley Monroe broke a few hearts at Nashville’s 3rd and Lindsley.

Her wedding diamond sparkled on her hand, cautioning too affectionate admirers, while her songs told a similar story of heartache and desire.

With an easy saunter in snakeskin ankle boots, she took the mic and introduced “I Buried Your Love Alive,” a song from her forthcoming Vince Gill and Justin Niebank produced sophomore effort, available July 24 via Warner Bros.

“I love sad songs,” proclaimed Monroe. “Makes you feel stuff, don’t it?”

She toured through her Pistol Annies days, performing “Unhappily Married” and the No. 1 “Heart Like Mine,” co-written with best friend Miranda Lambert.

A five-member band, complete with stand-up bass, backed her on new material including “If The Devil Don’t Want Me,” “Bombshell,” “Winning Streak,” and “Mayflowers.”

“Here’s a fast song, get ready,” teased the 28-year-old talent, introducing her upbeat single “On To Something Good.” She continued with outstanding new titles, including the easy ride of “If Love Was Fair,” and “The Blade,” a freshly-written perspective on a broken heart.

Longtime manager John Grady ushered Monroe back to the stage for an encore of “Weed Instead of Roses” and an acoustic finale of “Hickory Wind.”

The evening was professionally recorded, and broadcast live by Yahoo!

Bobby Karl Works Music Fest: CMA World GlobaLive! And NATD Picnic

At CMA World GlobaLive! trophies were present to event host Morgan Evans, who received the CMA Global Country Artist Award, and CMA Board member and CEO of Big Machine Label Group Scott Borchetta, who received the Jo Walker-Meador International Award. (L-R): Frank Bumstead, Chairman Flood Bumstead McCready & McCarthy, Inc. and CMA Board Chairman; Scott Borchetta; Sarah Trahern, CMA Chief Executive Officer; Rob Potts, CEO and Manager Director of Rob Potts Entertainment Edge, and CMA International Committee Vice Chairman; Jeff Walker, CEO/Founder of AristoMedia, CMA World GlobaLive! Executive Producer, and CMA Board member; David Ross, President of BossRoss Media and CMA Board member; and Morgan Evans. Photo: John Russell / CMA

At CMA World GlobaLive! trophies were presented to event host Morgan Evans, who received the CMA Global Country Artist Award, and CMA Board member and CEO of Big Machine Label Group Scott Borchetta, who received the Jo Walker-Meador International Award. (L-R): Frank Bumstead, Chairman Flood Bumstead McCready & McCarthy, Inc. and CMA Board Chairman; Scott Borchetta; Sarah Trahern, CMA Chief Executive Officer; Rob Potts, CEO and Manager Director of Rob Potts Entertainment Edge, and CMA International Committee Vice Chairman; Jeff Walker, CEO/Founder of AristoMedia, CMA World GlobaLive! Executive Producer, and CMA Board member; David Ross, President of BossRoss Media and CMA Board member; and Morgan Evans. Photo: John Russell / CMA

Chapter 490

Day Two of the CMA Music Festival week echoed Day One with its even mix of industry schmoozathons and fan events.

NATD PICNIC

The Nashville Association of Talent Directors (NATD) launched a new Fan Fair tradition by staging a picnic in the pavilion at Fannie Mae Dees Park (you probably call it “Dragon Park,” like the rest of us). At noon on Tuesday (6/9), its members and their guests gathered to share traditional fixin’s such as hot dogs, coleslaw, baked beans, barbecue, potato salad, pickles, chips and cookies.

Several artists were there, including singer-songwriter Randi Perkins, Saturday Night Live alumnus Victoria Jackson, Moore & Moore (agents as well as singers) and Opryland veterans Russ & Becky Jeffers, who now work for Hemphill Coaches.

“We are artists as well as professional hot-dog cookers,” proclaimed the bespectacled duo The Professor & The Bull. They were, indeed, the picnic’s frankfurter preparers. And are highly entertaining as an act.

Bonnie Sugarman, Dick Beecham, Ray Shelide, Bob Battle, Shelly Mullins, Dave Barton, Marge Bell, Travis Wolf, Annette Clark, Rod Harris, Dan Wunsch, Robert Williams and Fred Vail were among those working the room.

Attendee Ed Salamon has a new book, Pittsburgh’s Golden Age of Rock & Roll. So does NATD member Dean Unkefer of Special Promotions. His is a novel titled 90 Church: The True Story of the Narcotics Squad From Hell. Universal Pictures has picked up the movie rights for it. Wow—from the Colgate Country Showdown to Hollywood in one easy step.

NATD president Steve Tolman announced that the 57-year-old organization’s annual gala will be held on Nov. 10 this year. During the next 30 days, the group will be choosing its honorees. So if you have any suggestions, give Tolman a ring at LogiCom.

Past banquets have saluted Charlie Daniels, George Jones, TV’s Demetria Kalodimos, the Symphony’s Alan Valentine, Martina McBride, Alabama, Michael W. Smith, top agents and managers, sports figures, politicians and more. This year will be the fifth annual NATD Honors gala.

CMA WORLD GLOBALIVE

Meanwhile, downtown, the Festival fans gathered at Walk of Fame Park for a Tuesday afternoon of music. This was the rescheduled “CMA World GlobaLive!” concert. It had been rained out on Monday.

Above the stage hung the flags of the participating countries—Australia, Brazil, Ireland, The Netherlands, Britain, New Zealand and Canada. I heard a spirited set by the rockin’ Dutch outlaw-bluegrass band Stringcaster.

The sun was shining brightly. The humidity was at the usual CMA Fest level. A respectably sized crowd of a couple hundred lounged on the grass, on hammocks scattered throughout the lawn, on the walls flanking the park and on comfortable lawn furniture beneath a large green shade tent.

These artists, who have come so far to participate in CMA Fest, were greeted with enthusiastic applause. It must be quite an experience for them.

The Netherlands sent us Femke as well as Stringcaster. Brazil’s entry was a group called Indiana. From Canada came MacKenzie Porter and The Lovelocks. The Shires and Ward-Thomas represented the U.K. and Ireland. The New Zealand and Australian acts were The Adam Eckersley Band, Cam Luxton, Mickey Pye and show host Morgan Evans.

In the evening, the industry reclaimed the spotlight. Warner Bros. Records took over 3rd & Lindsley to showcase the forthcoming second album by the divine Ashley Monroe. She topped the charts dueting with Blake Shelton on “Lonely Tonight.” Now, please, let it be her turn to shine as a solo female country star.

On Lower Broadway later that night, Kenny Chesney and Florida Georgia Line delighted fans with their outdoor rehearsals for the CMT Awards. These superstar soundchecks were totally free. So are their televised performances from the Broadway stage on Wednesday night during the awards. The rest of the CMT stars will be performing in front of a sold-out audience in Bridgestone Arena.

25-Story Building Proposed for Noshville Midtown

Twentieth Avenue/Broadway and 1922 Broadway. Photo: Land Development.com Inc. and Hastings Architecture Associates.

Twentieth Avenue/Broadway and 1922 Broadway. Photo: Land Development.com Inc. and Hastings Architecture Associates.

A 25-story boutique hotel and residence may soon replace the midtown parcel occupied by J&J’s Market, Noshville, and the former storefront of clothier Manuel, according to the Nashville Post.

Brentwood-based developer Ardavan Afrakhteh (Land Development.Com Inc., Land South TN) is seeking to upgrade the mixed-use site (1912, 1918 and 1922 Broadway) to mixed-use intensive. Land Development.com Inc. is said to currently own one of the three properties, while acquisition of the parcels occupying Noshville and J&J’s is needed.

The Metro Planning Commission will review the proposal on Thursday, June 11 for the project, currently called Twentieth Avenue/Broadway and 1922 Broadway.

Nashville-based Hastings Architecture Associates and Dale & Associates have been tapped for designing the building and land planning/engineering duties, respectively.

“Afrakhteh has not yet announced whether the residential units would be condos, apartments, or a combination,” notes Nashville Post writer William Williams. “He has said parking will be included in the tower, with some spaces possible devoted to the general public…[and has] not disclosed an estimated start date or a hotel operator.

“The Midtown project would be Afrakhteh’s first large-scale urban project. To date, the developer has focused on small-scale infill (particularly in Gatlinburg) and on preserving thousands of acres in Tennessee.”

It was previously reported that Noshville would move into the new building once it is complete.

Bobby Karl Kicks Off CMA Fest With Ryman Unveiling, CAA Party

Photo_credit_Steve_Lowry_Ryman_Auditorium

Ryman photos by Steve Lowry

CHAPTER 489

The CMA Music Festival doesn’t officially start until Wednesday (or Thursday, depending on who’s counting), but make no mistake, the fans are already here in droves.

What’s more, the music biz has already cranked up its own events celebrating the fest. On Monday (6/8), downtown Nashville was alive with both festival goers and industry mavens. Lower Broadway is already blocked off, and fans crowded its sidewalks on Monday afternoon, many bearing shopping bags full of early souvenirs.

RYMAN RENOVATION

Just in time for Nashville’s biggest tourism event, we have a new attraction. The hallowed Ryman Auditorium has retooled itself with a $14 million injection to become a must-visit museum, café and gift shop. The gig celebrating this new tourist mecca took place late Monday afternoon and featured a bevvy of politicos as well as our own fabulons.

Rep. Jim Cooper, Tennessee General Assembly Speaker of the House Beth Harwell, Chip Forrester, Hank Adam Locklin, mayoral candidates Bill Freeman and Jeremy Kane and the Convention & Visitors Bureau’s Butch Spyridon were there. As were celebs such as Ricky Skaggs, T.G. Sheppard & Kelly Lang, Jeannie Seely, John Conlee and Chip Esten.

“It’s an incredible day in the ongoing history of the Ryman Auditorium,” said the venue’s manager Sally Williams.

The new tour through the Ryman begins in a theater off the balcony’s lobby. A wrap-around “Soul of Nashville” experience of video, slides and 3-D images introduces you to the venue’s distinguished history. The Fisk Jubilee Singers, Vince Gill, Sheryl Crow and Darius Rucker sing during it.

Next, the balcony’s hallway/vestibule hosts an exhibit celebrating Nashville Show Prints. As you walk along the back wall of the balcony, Trisha Yearwood narrates a video about Tom Ryman and Sam Jones, who founded the place in 1892. Photos and artifacts are in an adjoining case.ryman in 2015

Nicole Kidman narrates the next mini documentary. This one is about Lula C. Naff, who transformed the Union Tabernacle into a premier performing-arts venue in 1906-1955. In the vestibule on the far side of the balcony is a spectacular timeline, loaded with stunning graphics. This section also contains a narrative of the building’s renovation in 1994.

Down a flight of stairs you encounter a “Ryman Recording Studio” booth where you can record yourself and emerge with a Ryman Records CD with a professional-looking label. Too shy to sing? You can have your photo taken at the iconic mic, center stage.

On the back wall of the auditorium, your first stop is a Grand Ole Opry history lesson taught by Marty Stuart and Ricky Skaggs. The Ryman began hosting the Opry on June 5, 1943. The exhibit cases accompanying the video feature artifacts of Minnie Pearl, Roy Acuff, Uncle Dave Macon, Marty Robbins, Kitty Wells, Porter Wagoner, Bill Monroe, Loretta Lynn, Hank Williams and Hank Snow.

I believe this is the spiritual Ground Zero of Nashville,” said Skaggs at the opening’s press conferenece. “The music I hold nearest and dearest to my heart—bluegrass music—was birthed right here [in 1945].” Skaggs has lost 68 pounds, by the way. Without cutting his hair.

Next comes “Stage to Screen,” a video narrated by Chip Esten that tells the story of how the venue has been used for TV shows and movie locations.

“We call it a ‘location,’ but it’s way more than a location,” said Estin to the press. “It’s almost a character on our show.” The ABC-TV Nashville series, which stars him as “Deacon Claybourne,” goes into its fourth season next fall.

Exhibit artifacts in this section come from Coal Miner’s Daughter, Honkytonk Man, Sweet Dreams and the Johnny Cash TV show, as well as Nashville.

The last mini documentary is hosted by ABC’s Robin Roberts. She tells the tale of how the Ryman has become one of the premier concert venues in America. The neighboring cases house artifacts from Gregg Allman, The Black Crowes, Miranda Lambert, Ryan Adams, Buck Owens, Brad Paisley and more.

As you exit, you pick up your photo, peruse the excellent gift shop (where you can make your own custom t-shirt) and perhaps visit the new Lula Café (named for Lula Naff).

“This building is truly revered,” said Ryman Hospitality CEO Colin Reed. “Its…123-year…history is to be celebrated and shared.”

“This whole project will make sure that people know where they have been,” said Esten.

“This is truly one of the best places for people to hear good music,” said Jubilee Singers director Paul Kwame.

“The Mother Church of Country Music is really the mother of ALL music now,” said Mayor Karl Dean. “The Ryman is a must-see stop on any visit to Nashville.”

Murmuring approval were the Nashville Public Library’s Kent Oliver, Steve Lowry, Steve & Ree Guyer Buchanan, Tim O’Brien, Brenda Colladay and Barry Mazur.

We snacked on items from the Lula Café—deviled eggs, sliders, chicken salad and other tasty bites. See a video of the renovation.

Cafe Lula

Cafe Lula

CAA BBQ

I didn’t eat much, because the unofficial debut CMA fest event was next door, the annual CAA barbecue party. I was amazed at how many ways they served barbecue—in tacos, as dip for crackers, as sandwiches, in waffle cones. The event took place in a street-level party tent, as well as in the company’s penthouse offices at 401 Commerce Street.

This event also featured a mayoral candidate: Megan Barry. Not to mention Rod Essig, John Huie, Fletcher Foster, Dan Hill, Will Witherspoon, Justin Smith, John Briggs, Randi Perkins, Kay West, Ron Cox and Mike Vaden. Like me, Pete Fisher had migrated from the Ryman party next door. Heads up: Jody Williams is greeting us with a fist bump, due to a gardening arm injury.

I enjoyed listening to Erika Wollam-Nichols and Shannon Casey reminiscing about their days as underlings at The Bluebird Café. The former now runs it, and the latter is now a CAA princess. Mike Kraski was squiring his promising new duo UnBrake-able. Similarly, Gillie Crowder brought her management client, pop singer-songwriter Josh O’Keefe.

I also must give a shout-out to attendee Aaron Scherz, because he is breaking out as a songwriter. He co-wrote both “Girl in a Country Song” with Maddie & Tae and the new Reba/Jennifer Nettles duet

Due to the PM thunderstorm, The CMA World GlobaLive! Show was cancelled. So the first of the hundreds of festival concerts became the Darius Rucker & Friends event to benefit St. Jude’s at The Wildhorse Monday night.

Pictured (L-R): Darin Murphy, CAA; Donna Jean Kisshauer; Marc Dennis, CAA

Pictured (L-R): Darin Murphy, CAA; Donna Jean Kisshauer; Marc Dennis, CAA

In Her Own Words: Taylor Talks Tour

taylorTaylor Swift’s 1989 World Tour is in full swing and will visit eight countries and span four continents by the time it wraps. Swift is upping the ante on everything this go-round, including playing stadiums as well as arenas, and weighs in on the bonuses of hitting those super-sized crowds.

Almost leaves you breathless.

“The benefits of playing stadiums are kinda endless,” says Swift. “It’s so many people — you’re looking out into this packed football stadium of seventy thousand people. The energy coming at you from seventy thousand people is the most unbelievable feeling in the world. It’s almost like…it almost leaves you breathless knowing that many people would want to come see you play a show so we’ll start there, that’s a benefit of playing a stadium. Also, you know you don’t have to play as many shows in a week if you’re playing stadiums so it gives you time to recharge and down time and leaves you generally not that overworked when you’re doing a stadium tour.”

Swift has also changed her thinking regarding costuming for the 1989 Tour. The fashion plate artist is working her street style into the show a bit more this time around and says she’s toning it down a notch in a sense.

More fashionable than anything done before.

“We decided on costumes for each song based on kind of the mood that they evoked. It all starts with the emotional DNA of a song and we take it from there. And I knew that I wanted this tour to be more fashionable than anything we’ve done before. In the past, our tour show clothes have seemed more like costumes and this one with the show it just seems more like really insane moments of you know, fashion, things I would love to wear on a red carpet, things I would wanna wear walking down the street. You know, I definitely wanted to pull it back into that world rather than like a Halloween costume vibe (laughs).”

Swift admits she is also very specific about ensuring that the sounds you hear on her records are replicated in the live show, meaning hours of meticulous rehearsals before the show ever gets off the ground.

I want to be as true to this album as possible.

“The first month of rehearsals was just musical so we’re in a recording studio trying to figure out how to get the live band to sound exactly like the album, ’cause I want to be as true to this album as possible. I want the drum sounds to be exactly the same drum sounds that you heard on the album etc… So, then we moved into production rehearsals which is doing all the choreography, learning all the changes in between the songs you know, finding a flow to the show. But a year in advance is when we draw up the stage and when we figure out what the stage is gonna look like. So it’s a pretty extensive, long process.”

Nashville fans will get to experience 1989 when the tour comes to town September 25-26 at the Bridgestone Arena.