Tag Archive for: featured-2
The Producer’s Chair: Paul Worley

Paul Worley.
Paul Worley made his second appearance on The Producer’s Chair on Thursday, April 30, 2015 at Douglas Corner at 6 p.m.
Paul Worley’s career his earned five Grammys, a plethora of CMA & ACM trophies and multiple Producer of the Year Awards, including one from MusicRow magazine.
His career first took hold when he became part of Jim Ed Norman’s rhythm section. Jim Ed moved to Nashville from L.A. to head up Warner Bros., hiring Paul because he loved the vibe and sound of Worley’s rhythm section. After logging all those hours in the studio, Paul got “the producer bug.” His production career began with Gospel artist Cynthia Clawson, Riders In The Sky, Burl Ives and Tennessee Ernie Ford.
“The studio bug” followed. As his production discography blossomed, Paul partnered with famed drummer Eddie Bayers and built The Money Pit studio in 1984. It was where Martina McBride and Paul’s 20-year collaboration started, which eventually yielded 13 albums. It’s where Worley first met Clarke Schleicher, who has been on his desk for more than 25-plus years. Among those who recorded there are Sara Evans, Big and Rich, Pam Tillis, Bruce Hornsby and Kid Rock.
Along the way, he worked at Tree Publishing Company with songwriters Harlan Howard, Curly Putman, Don Cook and Kix Brooks. CBS bought Tree, and then Sony bought CBS. So Worley went on to become a Vice President at Sony BMG from 1989-1997. Five years later (2002), Paul took on his second major label position as Chief Creative Officer at Warner Bros. Records.
In 2004 Worley teamed with producer/publisher/hit songwriter/artist manager Wally Wilson and two other partners, to found Skyline Music Publishing. They have earned countless BMI and ASCAP Awards, and today the catalog boasts the works of Hugh Prestwood, Jimmy Yeary, The Henningsens, Jon Stone,Kelleigh Bannen, Tay Barton, Lisa Brokop, Adam Browder, Don Cook, Michael Davey, George Ducas, Jeremy Easley, Jen Foster, James Harrison, Sara Haze, Randy Houser, Tammy Hyler, Brandon Kinney, Jacob Lyda, Kelsey Mathews, Kim McLean, Hudson Moore, Paul Nelson, Terry Radigan, Chick Rains, Kevin Welch, Emma White, and Skylar Wilson.
A partial list of Worley’s production clients includes Lady Antebellum, Dixie Chicks, The Band Perry, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Collin Raye, Blake Shelton, Highway 101, Carolyn Dawn Johnson, Cyndi Thomson, John Anderson, Gary Morris, Marie Osmond, Neil Diamond, Eddy Raven, Lisa Brokop, Desert Rose, Emmylou Harris, Hank Williams, Hank Williams Jr. and Willie Nelson.
Collectively, Worley has achieved well over $1 billion in retail record sales during his career, so far. But discovering and developing new talent is the core of what he instinctively loves. And judging by the overwhelming response, it looks like Worley and Wilson’s latest venture, the live streaming online concert series Skyville Live is a perfect launch-pad.
The Producer’s Chair: How did Skyville Live originate?
Paul Worley: Skyville Live is something that Wallystarted dreaming of about a year and a half ago. The first show we had Gladys Knight, Martina McBride, and Estell. But ultimately, the real reason we want to develop Skyville Live as a brand is not just to serve up icons and stars, but to do artist development—to be a lens by which people discover new talent.
Wally is developing Skyville Live because we see that it’s something that people are hungry for. They’re hungry for really good quality audio and video performances on the internet. We all sit there and mess around with YouTube and 90 percent of it is crap. It’s just stuff to laugh at. But, Skyville Live will be really great music being really well performed with great audio. It is not designed to be listened to on your iPhone or computer. You can if you want to, but if you pull it up on your smart TV and listen on your stereo, you will be watching a concert that has that level of quality. Turns out that people love it. We’ve had real smooth sailing launching. So there may be an icon series and then we might develop Skyville II that’s all about new artists, and not necessarily artists we’re working with, just artists that we like.
We have a lot of big platforms and major organizations that are coming to us saying, “We want you.” It’s nice. Then there are all the questions, like “Will we have to change?” We are having those conversations.
PC: How was the second Skyville Live show with Kris Kristofferson, Lady Antebellum and Jason Isbell?
Worley: The show honored Kris Kristofferson. All of these great artists sang his songs, but the most incredible moment was him singing “Sunday Morning Coming Down.” Just getting up there and croaking it out, sort of singing, but sort of not. Sort of reciting the poetry of the song. You realize that great songwriting is also poetry. It’s a literary endeavor as well as a musical one. Of course, that’s how the music business began—as a song publishing business before there was recording. It was all about songs and sheet music.
PC: From what I understand, someone can log on and watch the show live for free. So is it sponsor driven?
Worley: That could all change. We’ll continue to have sponsors and attract revenue that way, but we could also graduate to where there are different levels, the way Spotify does it, with basic but maybe with the premium you could view six different camera feeds and enjoy the show according to your own perspective. So, that would be a way of monetizing that. It can really grow. The danger is not outgrowing the quality of the experience.
PC: What’s in it for the artists, other than the experience and the exposure?
Worley: The artists are invested in the show that they’re in. They have an ongoing equity position. So, you know, every intention is that once we collect this content and find a partner on a platform that wants to do something bigger with it, we can package it differently and offer it up as a menu.
PC: What else is going on at Skyville?
Worley: We’ve tried a lot of stuff over the years but, including being a record company, but that failed. What we are now is an artist development company.
Our studio, which used to just be a rehearsal room, is a really good studio. So, I’ve got a whole new sound thanks to some of my friends that made me go and cut over here. It’s more like Motown or Memphis sound or Stax. It’s a small room. Everybody’s bleeding into everybody. You’ve got to get it right. But it sounds awesome, and the playing is fantastic because you’re just that close together.
PC: Are you developing artists for other labels?
Worley: Yeah. Honestly it’s anybody that will have me. I’m just open and grateful to be making music. Generally, if I’m not making music I’m not a very happy person. So, I spent a whole lot of the last two and a half years working for free. Like 90 percent of it. But I’ve been here before. This is where you retool and reinvent yourself, hopefully.
PC: Who are you working with right now?
Worley: I’m currently working with Chris Issak. Chris is an icon and I’ve always admired him. The last two days with Chris have been fantastic. It’s great when you get in the studio with someone who has had a long career, has experience making records and knowledge of himself as an artist.
I’m also going to be working with Ryan Kinder. Ryan is a new artist at Warner. The others are Fiona Culley, Taylor Watson, they’re unsigned, and Shelley Skidmore. We made music, and now they’re looking to either get signed or do it the indie way.
PC: How do producers make a living today?
Worley: I didn’t get into it because it was profitable. I starved for eight years like everyone else, and then got by for another 10. I did it because I love it. It’s all I ever wanted to do. All I can say is, you just have to do that and be happy with the life that you’re given. The new guys—if you’re not a hit songwriter you may never make the kind of money that I made as a standalone producer, but if you water down your music because you decide for business reasons that you have to be a writer, you’re going to produce a lot of crap. I don’t want to know how that feels.
If I was starting out now I would recognize that I have to be a writer and I have to be a publisher in order to be a producer. In fact, I’m trying to create an artist development company that does those things as part of the recipe of developing artists. Unfortunately, I am not a songwriter.
Who knew five years ago that streaming was going to be the thing? And because there’s no negotiation about royalties relative to streaming, the producers are just cut out. So, even if I have a hit, people will probably stream it or buy the one song. The days of creating an album with ten songs and people buying that big chunk of music and taking time to sit down and listen are—I hope just temporarily—behind us.
So, I’m thankful that I made my bones and my living in the ‘70s, ‘80s, and ‘90s. But anyway, I think it’s temporary. I still wake up hopeful every day.
But unfortunately for us, we’ve lost a whole generation of country listeners. We’ll have to gain them back. That’s going to show itself over the next five years.
PC: Have we lost them because the artists they love don’t get enough airplay?
Worley: What’s getting airplay is a narrow slice of music that’s attractive to a small slice of the people overall that would listen to country music. So, we’ve left a lot on the table. Music has a way of fighting its way out.
The good thing about streaming is that you can create your own playlists. You can go in and graze and discover new music. Or maybe you say, “I’d like to spend today listening to Steely Dan.” And bam it happens! So, there’s a lot of good. It’s just that it hasn’t been figured out, and nobody’s anxious to hurry up and pay us for our art. But they will eventually.
PC: What is the most important lesson you learned about running a label?
Worley: Don’t. And I had to do it twice to learn it. Creative people should be creative. You get mired inside the business structure and it can contaminate your mind, heart and soul. It’s marketing, and it’s relevant. Because without a hit at radio, careers don’t happen. But it shouldn’t have anything to do with the creative process.
PC: What concerns you about our music community, long-term?
Worley: I think the really great writers will always be. I’m more worried about the musicians in the community, they are really suffering. They’re getting paid shit.
Back in the day there was a musician’s special payments trust fund created by the record labels. It was a pool of money. Today, the labels are demanding that they get paid less and less. They’re getting no royalties, no job security, no benefits.
It is sick, but nobody is talking about paying the musicians—these wonderful, gifted, dedicated people.
What do you tell artists about song selection and songwriting?
Artists that don’t write get signed all the time, but that doesn’t stop them from writing.
I tell artists until I’m blue in the face: Don’t be concerned about where your songs come from. It doesn’t matter to anybody but you, whether you wrote the song or not. The main thing is that you should always do great songs. If you’re in a down cycle as a writer and you’re not writing great songs, be smart enough to realize that and go refresh yourself with some great songs. That will feed you. You’ll get back into your game as a writer, if you get out of the rut you’re in, but you’re going to have to get some external information in your soul, in order to do that.
PC: What are the keys to songwriter development?
Worley: Well, you’ve got to look for somebody that has their own spark, to start with. That’s got something more than, “I want to be a songwriter.” It’s got to be somebody who has their own melodies and their own points of view. You can’t teach genius. The guys and gals that have been around for a while just sit and listen to songs and go, “The second verse ought to be the first verse. Throw away the first verse. Now you’ve got to write a second verse. It’s going to be hard. You’ve got to amplify the story. If you’re going to write a bridge, it better be a song unto itself. If it’s not, then you don’t need a bridge. Just throw a solo in there, and get the hell out.” Go back and listen to songs. Go back for decades. Listen to Tin Pan Alley songs. Listen to every kind. Understand what it is in these timeless songs that makes them timeless.
DISClaimer: An Eclectic, Star-Studded Lineup

Brett Eldredge
Is it because of Sunday’s ACM telecast that so many stars are lined up for this week’s column?
George Strait, Brett Eldredge, Jason Aldean and Luke Bryan are all on tap. As are such familiar names as Emerson Drive, Kid Rock and Little Texas.
Sure enough, one of them has the Disc of the Day. It’s Brett Eldredge. By the way, the reason there are so many writers and publishers listed on the disc is that it interpolates some of the 2006 Gnarls Barkley pop smash “Crazy.”
The winner of this week’s DisCovery Award is a burly-looking Indiana fellow named Allan Craig Miller. I don’t know when I have heard a debut single that is this consistently excellent on so many levels.
LUKE BRYAN/Games
Writers: none listed; Producer: none listed; Publishers: none listed; Capitol Nashville
-They play juvenile head games with one another, to the point where he doesn’t know if he’s winning or losing. Who cares? How come they always wind up at the same bars and the same parties? And why is this performed as if this was all something deeply profound?
KID ROCK/First Kiss
Writers: R.J. Ritchie/M. Young; Producer: Kid Rock/Dann Huff; Publishers: RJR/Kobalt/Jo Ray Dean/Bluewater, BMI; Warner Bros.
-Blue-collar rock, like most of his singles. He doesn’t have much range as an artist, but what he does, he does well.
GEORGE STRAIT/Let It Go
Writers: George Strait/Bubba Strait/Keith Gattis; Producers: Chuck Ainlay/George Strait; Publishers: Day Money/Horipro/Living for the Night/Sony-ATV Tree/Pioneer Town, ASCAP/BMI; MCA Nashville
-The loping, lackadaisical pace suits his laid-back delivery and the song’s easy-going philosophy. He still sounds great. I wish there were more like him.
COREY SMITH/Feet Wet
Writers: Corey Smith; Producer: Keith Stegall; Publisher: Shooting Moon, ASCAP; Sugar Hill (track)
-Ten albums into his career, this singer-songwriter turns to country pro Stegall as his producer. The result is a wonderfully catchy single with built-in sunshine. Come on in, the water’s fine.
BRETT ELDREDGE/Lose My Mind
Writers: Brett Eldredge/Heather Morgan/Ross Copperman, others; Producers: Ross Copperman/Brett Eldredge; Publishers: Sony-ATV Countryside/Paris Not France/EMI Blackwood/Songs by Red Room, BMI, others; Atlantic
-I love how “alive” and in-your-face his vocal sounds. That’s especially cool because of the really snazzy production that’s behind it. A very, very hip and forward-looking record.

Allan Craig Miller
ALLAN CRAIG MILLER/Between Saturday & Sunday
Writers: Erik Halbig/Todd Taylor; Producer: Erik Halbig; Publishers: Curucu/Magic Mustang, BMI; Gray Area (CDX)
-This is a splendid, jaunty, bouncing, blue-collar thumper just made for dancing. The lyric hook is ultra-cool: “I need one more day between Saturday and Sunday.” Don’t we all? Play this. Country fans are gonna love it a heap.
LITTLE TEXAS/Can’t Get In A Hurry Here
Writers: D. Gray/P. Howell/D. O’Brien; Producers: Anthony Martin/Little Texas; Publishers: Del Yeah/P-90/Writer’s Den/Songs O’Brien, ASCAP; Cleopatra (CDX)
-Listless and sleepy. Maybe that’s the whole idea behind the song, but I still wanted to nod off.
JASON ALDEAN/Tonight Looks Good On You
Writers: none listed; Producer: none listed; Publishers: none listed; Broken Bow (ERG)
-The terrific, deep-sonic, echoey, full-blooded production is the finest of his career to date. It creates the perfect cushion for his delivery of the deliriously romantic lyric. A smash.
GARTH SHAW/California Dreamin’
Writers: John Phillips/Michelle Phillips; Producers: Garth Shaw/Dan Mitchell; Publisher: Universal, ASCAP; Roadie (track)
-He’s billed as, “the original singing roadie.” Shaw has been road managing for decades with stars such as Kenny Rogers, Sawyer Brown and The Starland Vocal Band. Now, at age 65, he’s releasing his first EP. It contains three of his original tunes, a couple of Rick Nelson covers and this Mamas & Papas classic. The original had those big echo-chamber vocals. Shaw’s “dry” delivery gives the familiar song the quality of a folk tune.
EMERSON DRIVE/Who We Are
Writers: none listed; Producers: none listed; Publishers: none listed; Big Star (ERG)
-In praise of everyday folks who go to happy hour, wear ball caps, save their pennies and treat each other kindly. Nice thump in the backbeat, banjo droplets and spoken-word encouraging interjections. Quite listenable.
Weekly Register: Reba’s Back With No. 1 Debut

Reba had plenty of visibility during release week, including winning an ACM Milestone Award.
Reba’s first new studio album in five years sailed to the top of the country charts; Love Somebody debuted at No. 1 with sales of 58K/total activity of 62K. The Nash Icon artist had momentum from lead single “Going Out Like That,” which has already sold more than 100K downloads. She also scored with a sassy performance on Sunday night’s (April 19) ACM Awards, blending the single with her modern-classic hits “Fancy,” “Is There Life Out There,” and “The Night The Lights Went Out in Georgia.”
Also scoring a solid debut is Dwight Yoakam’s Second Hand Heart (WBR) coming in at No. 2 country with sales of 21K. These debuts helped give country album sales a 33 percent bump week-over-week.
Rounding out the top five country albums are No. 3 Sam Hunt (18K), No. 4 Florida Georgia Line (13K) and No. 5 Now That’s What I Call ACM Awards 50 Years (12K).
Little Big Town gave a stellar performance of “Girl Crush” on the ACM Awards, reeling in 97K downloads and landing at No. 1 on the country tracks this week, pushing the song past the gold goalposts with 522K RTD. This is the best one-week sales tally for a country track in 2015.
Interestingly, Meghan Linsey’s cover of the same song from The Voice is this week’s top country debut, coming in at No. 3 with 44K. George Strait, who also had a notable ACM performance, debuts single “Let It Go” at No. 9 country, selling 27K. Hanging in the top 5 are: Sam Hunt “Take Your Time” (58K), Zac Brown Band “Homegrown” (39K) and Florida Georgia Line “Sippin’ On Fire” (35K).

“Girl Crush” earned the best one-week sales tally for a country track in 2015.
Spirit Music’s Daniel Hill Talks Acquisitions, Artist Development

Spirit Music Nashville’s Daniel Hill.
Since being named president of Spirit Music Nashville, Daniel Hill and his team have focused on expanding the company’s artist management, production and publishing capabilities. Hill, former Cal IV Entertainment president, assumed his post following Spirit’s acquisition of Cal IV last year.
“We chose Spirit as much as they chose us,” says Hill, who worked at Cal IV since 2000. “I knew we wanted to keep the momentum we had going with Cal IV. We had great artists, development happenings and other ventures with the management and production as well as publishing. Instead of just letting a larger company absorb the roster, we saw that Spirit Music was a great fit because they didn’t have a presence in Nashville. They wanted a catalog, so we offered them essentially a turnkey operation. They also have a plan to expand the catalog and writers, so it’s nice to be in an expanding, building mode, so we can take advantage of opportunities.”
Since opening the Nashville office, Spirit Music has wasted no time growing its song catalog. Spirit Music Group acquired StyleSonic’s catalog, a collection that contained hits including “Drink To That All Night” “Feel That Fire,” “It Felt Good On My Lips,” and “Highway Don’t Care,” as well as “a treasure trove of uncut songs,” according to Hill. “There’s a lot of low-hanging fruit to get placed, and we should have some great success having new cuts as well as mining the hits that are already in there.”
Spirit Music Group also acquired West Main Music, brimming with potential hit songs for the CCM market. The acquisitions bolster the company’s stable of potential hits in what has increasingly become a singles-driven market over the past several years.
“Sales peaked back in 2000 and we’ve seen a steady decline for the past 15 years. With the decline of album sales, it’s more and more about single sales and performance royalties. The market has changed to a singles market, which changes the dynamics of making deals…writer deals…because traditionally we recoup out of mechanical sales. It’s really hard for a writer to recoup these days. Whereas before we could have a songwriter with a few album cuts on some multi-platinum records and they paid almost as well as a hit single, as far as what they would be recouping. Now, you really have to be creative and it’s more and more about getting the hit song. That has changed how we think about the roster.”
Still, the company continues to nurture new writers. “We pride ourselves in finding talent early and not just paying for big-name marquee writers. But acquiring catalogs helps us to do the nurturing because you have the cash flow, so it goes hand in hand.”
Among the artists and songwriters signed to the publishing company are Jim Collins, Rose Falcon, Chris Wallin, and Triple Run members Brittany Taylor, Eric Knutson, and Matt Singleton. Spirit Music is one of many publishers that has seen an increase in the number of singer-songwriter signees who also have aspirations to be artists. “More and more labels are not signing green artists,” Hill says. “They want most of the blood, sweat and tears to be done, so they can then put their own blood, sweat and tears into it.”
Many A&R duties traditionally handled by labels now fall to publishers. “We have to do demos, so oftentimes we will do limited pressings, which are easier and less costly to upgrade to a master,” Hill says. “We have a studio here, so that allows us to spend more time getting the vocals right, overdubbing and experimenting. You normally wouldn’t do that with the average songwriter deal. A key part of the development process is keeping the end-game in mind; we are trying to make a record, not just a demo.”
Taking it a step further, they oftentimes enlist aid in the areas of imaging, hair/makeup, wardrobe, and photography, and then bring all of those elements together to present the artist in a professional, developed light.
Offering multiple services is not only a boon for aspiring artist/writers, but it means increased potential future earnings for Spirit Music Nashville as well. “If we can develop an artist on a major label who is a great songwriter themselves, then we might get 11 songs on the album instead of one.”
Regardless of a new client’s star potential, Hill maintains that it is always about the song. “The first thing we ask is, ‘Is this person a great songwriter first?’ That’s because we are a publisher first. That’s at the core of our artist development.”
Touchdown! ACM Awards Score At Dallas Stadium

Co-hosts Luke Bryan and Blake Shelton are ready to take on Dallas Cowboys QB Tony Romo.
Last night’s (April 19) ACM Awards proved that everything is bigger in Texas. The 50th anniversary event, staged at AT&T Stadium, home of the Dallas Cowboys, was a performance-packed extravaganza with more than 70,000 fans in attendance.
Country music was glossier than ever, with co-hosts Luke Bryan and Blake Shelton looking spiffy throughout the night. Watching in the audience, Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood seemed like the president and first lady of country.
The energy in the stadium was strong, and the top-notch sets were filled with plenty of flash and video. With a football field’s worth of floor space, there were multiple stages and room for artists to run through the crowd.
The genre’s history was on display throughout the night, starting with Eric Church and Keith Urban’s opening number “Pledge Allegiance to the Hag.” They went straight into current single “Raise ‘Em Up,” maintaining the balance between saluting the past and keeping it current.
Texas King George Strait performed his classic, “All My Ex’s Live in Texas,” and then “Let It Go,” the lead single from his upcoming album.
Florida Georgia Line gave new meaning to ring of fire, with their performance of current single “Sippin’ On Fire” while pyrotechnics blazed around them in a circle.
Martina McBride reminded us that she’d been singing about spectacular fires since 1994, offering her modern country classic “Independence Day” with as pristine a voice as when she first recorded it.
Miranda Lambert, a four-time winner last night, was a Texas spitfire onstage. As usual, she gave one of the evening’s best showings, blending “Mama’s Broken Heart” and “Little Red Wagon” with an eye-catching black and red set and wardrobe. When her tune “Automatic” won Song of the Year, she accepted with co-writer Natalie Hemby, who looked gorgeous for the occasion, and they saluted fellow co-writer Nicolle Galyon, who is home with her new baby with husband Rodney Clawson.

Miranda Lambert accepts ACM 50th Anniversary Milestone Award for Most Awarded Solo Female Artist.
Medleys were a big part of the show, as producers kept the momentum at a maximum with hit after hit. Reba melded “Fancy,” “Is There Life Out There,” “The Night The Lights Went Out in Georgia,” and new single “Going Out Like That.” Four decades after signing her first record contract, the girl’s still got it.
Jason Aldean kept the party going with “Hicktown”/ “My Kinda Party”/ “She’s Country”/ “Tonight Looks Good On You.”
Shelton (“Sangria”), Kenny Chesney (“Young”/ “Wild Child”) and Bryan (“I See You”) were engaging as always. Brooks & Dunn reunited for “My Maria” and Alan Jackson was solemn but impactful on “Where Were You (When The World Stopped Turning).” Offering new songs, Lady A’s “Long Stretch of Love” had a cool, Fleetwood Mac-esque groove, and Brad Paisley gave the live TV debut of “Crushin’ It.” New artist nominee Thomas Rhett exhibited some slick dance moves during “Make Me Wanna.”
Garth Brooks’ performance of “All-American Kid” was a major highlight, with members of the military marching out, while a section of the audience held up cards that formed a picture of the American flag. Given his recent return to country music, the lyric about the “all-American comeback kid” is especially appropriate.

Garth Brooks accepts Milestone Award—Most Awarded ACM Entertainer Of The Year.
A few artists took the less-is-more approach with their sets. Little Big Town and Dierks Bentley went low tech for “Girl Crush,” and “Riser,” respectively, letting the lyrics do the talking. Bentley was looking hip with his wavy Eurohawk ‘do.
Joining country from the outer realms were Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo, Reese Witherspoon, Sofia Vergara, Christina Aguilera, Nick Jonas, Taylor Swift and mother Andrea Swift.
Dan + Shay teamed with Jonas for the latter’s hit “Jealous.” Xtina sang “Riot” with Rascal Flatts. (The pop star/The Voice coach is also in the middle of starring in an arc on Nashville. With so many current Music City connections, observant insiders can’t help but wonder: Is Christina going country?) Speaking of, newly signed BMLG/Dot Records artist Steven Tyler was on hand for the grand finale, presenting Luke Bryan his second Entertainer of the Year trophy.
For a full list of last night’s winners, click here.

ACM co-hosts Blake Shelton and Luke Bryan, with Milestone Award winners Reba, Miranda Lambert, Kenny Chesney, trophy/ jewelry designer David Yurman, George Strait, Taylor Swift and Brooks & Dunn.
Photos: courtesy of ACM
50th Annual Academy of Country Music Awards Winners List

Luke Bryan wins Entertainer of the Year at this year’s ACM Awards.
The Academy of Country Music Awards celebrated 50 years last night with a star-studded show at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.
Luke Bryan, who co-hosted with Blake Shelton, took home Entertainer of the Year, while Jason Aldean earned Male Vocalist of the Year.
Miranda Lambert earned Female Vocalist of the Year, as well as Album of the Year (for Platinum), and Song of the Year (for “Automatic,” which she co-wrote with Natalie Hemby and Nicolle Galyon).
Meanwhile, Lee Brice‘s “I Don’t Dance” was named Single Record of the Year.
Florida Georgia Line earned the Vocal Duo of the Year honor, as well as Vocal Event of the Year, for “This Is How We Roll” featuring Luke Bryan.
Little Big Town earned Vocal Group of the Year, while Cole Swindell was named New Artist of the Year. Earlier in the evening, Dierks Bentley‘s “Drunk On A Plane” garnered Video of the Year honors.
Throughout the evening, the ACM paid homage to several of country music’s biggest trailblazers, honoring them with the ACM Milestone Awards. Those honored during the evening included George Strait, Miranda Lambert, Reba McEntire, Taylor Swift, Garth Brooks, Kenny Chesney, and Brooks & Dunn.
Read MusicRow‘s full review here.

Miranda Lambert took home multiple trophies at the 50th Annual ACM Awards.
Nominees (Winners Marked In Bold):
Milestone Awards
George Strait
Miranda Lambert
Reba McEntire
Taylor Swift
Garth Brooks
Kenny Chesney
Brooks & Dunn
Entertainer of the Year
Jason Aldean
Garth Brooks
Luke Bryan
Miranda Lambert
Florida Georgia Line
Male Vocalist of the Year
Jason Aldean
Dierks Bentley
Luke Bryan
Eric Church
Brad Paisley
Blake Shelton
Female Vocalist of the Year
Brandy Clark
Miranda Lambert
Martina McBride
Kacey Musgraves
Carrie Underwood
Vocal Duo of the Year
Brothers Osborne
Dan + Shay
Florida Georgia Line
Maddie & Tae
The Swon Brothers
Vocal Group Of The Year
Lady Antebellum
Little Big Town
Rascal Flatts
The Band Perry
Zac Brown Band
New Artist of the Year
Cole Swindell
Sam Hunt
Thomas Rhett
Album of the Year [Awarded to Artist(s)/Producer(s)/Record Company–Label(s)]
Old Boots, New Dirt – Jason Aldean
Producer: Michael Knox
Record Label: Broken Bow Records
Pain Killer – Little Big Town
Producer: Jay Joyce
Record Label: Capitol Records Nashville
Platinum – Miranda Lambert
Producers: Chuck Ainlay, Frank Liddell, Glenn Worf
Record Label: RCA Nashville
Riser – Dierks Bentley
Producers: Ross Copperman, Jaren Johnston
Record Label: Capitol Records Nashville
The Outsiders – Eric Church
Producer: Jay Joyce
Record Label: EMI Records Nashville
Single Record of the Year [Awarded to Artist(s)/Producer(s)/Record Company–Label(s)]
American Kids – Kenny Chesney
Producers: Buddy Cannon, Kenny Chesney
Record Label: Blue Chair Records/Columbia Nashville
Automatic – Miranda Lambert
Producers: Chuck Ainlay, Frank Liddell, Glenn Worf
Record Label: RCA Nashville
Dirt – Florida Georgia Line
Producer: Joey Moi
Record Label: Republic Nashville
Drunk On A Plane – Dierks Bentley
Producer: Ross Copperman
Record Label: Capitol Records Nashville
I Don’t Dance – Lee Brice
Producer: Lee Brice
Record Label: Curb Records
Song of the Year [Awarded to Songwriter(s)/Publisher(s)/Artist(s)]
American Kids – Kenny Chesney
Songwriters: Rodney Clawson, Luke Laird, Shane McAnally
Publishers: Big Red Toe Music (BMI), Creative Nation Music (BMI), Farm Town Songs (BMI), Smack Ink (ASCAP), Songs Of Universal, Inc. (BMI), Twangin And Slangin Songs (BMI), Universal Music Corporation (ASCAP)
Automatic – Miranda Lambert
Songwriters: Nicolle Galyon, Natalie Hemby, Miranda Lambert
Publishers: EMI Blackwood Music, Inc. (BMI), Pink Dog Publishing (BMI), Sony/ATV Tree Publishing (BMI), Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp. (BMI), Wruckestrike (BMI)
Drink A Beer – Luke Bryan
Songwriters: Jim Beavers, Chris Stapleton
Publishers: House of Sea Gayle Music (ASCAP), Sony/ATV Tree Publishing (BMI), WB Music Corp. (ASCAP)
Follow Your Arrow – Kacey Musgraves
Songwriters: Brandy Clark, Shane McAnally, Kacey Musgraves
Publishers: 351 Music (BMI), Highway 508 Songs (ASCAP), House of Sea Gayle Music (ASCAP), Smack Ink (ASCAP), Universal Music Corporation (ASCAP), Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp. (BMI)
Give Me Back My Hometown – Eric Church
Songwriters: Eric Church, Luke Laird
Publishers: Creative Nation Music (BMI), Longer And Louder Music (BMI), Songs Of Universal, Inc. (BMI), Sony/ATV Tree Publishing (BMI), Twangin And Slangin Songs (BMI)
I Hold On – Dierks Bentley
Songwriters: Dierks Bentley, Brett James
Publishers: Atlas Holdings (ASCAP), Big White Tracks (ASCAP), External Combustion Music (ASCAP), Songs of Brett (ASCAP), WB Music Corp. (ASCAP)
Video of the Year [Awarded to Producer(s)/Director(s)/Artist(s)] *(Off Camera Award)
American Kids – Kenny Chesney
Director: Shaun Silva
Producer: Don Lepore
Cop Car – Keith Urban
Director: John Urbano
Producer: Michelle Abnet
Drunk On A Plane – Dierks Bentley
Director: Wes Edwards
Producer: Clarke Gallivan
I’m Not Gonna Miss You – Glen Campbell
Director: James Keach
Producer: Julian Raymond
Somethin’ Bad – Miranda Lambert Duet With Carrie Underwood
Director: Trey Fanjoy
Producer: Trent Hardville
Vocal Event of the Year [Awarded to Artist(s)/Producer(s)/Record Company–Label(s)]*(Off Camera Award)
Lonely Tonight – Blake Shelton Featuring Ashley Monroe
Producer: Scott Hendricks
Record Label: Warner Bros. Records
Meanwhile Back At Mama’s – Tim McGraw Featuring Faith Hill
Producers: Byron Gallimore, Tim McGraw
Record Label: Big Machine Records
Somethin’ Bad – Miranda Lambert Duet With Carrie Underwood
Producers: Chuck Ainlay, Frank Liddell, Glenn Worf
Record Label: RCA Nashville
The South – The Cadillac Three Featuring Florida Georgia Line, Dierks Bentley & Mike Eli
Producers: Dann Huff, Justin Niebank
Record Label: Big Machine Records
This Is How We Roll – Florida Georgia Line Featuring Luke Bryan
Producer: Joey Moi
Record Label: Republic Nashville
[Updated]: LifeNotes: Contemporary Christian Music Innovator Billy Ray Hearn Dies

Billy Ray Hearn
[Update]:
Visitation for Billy Ray Hearn will take place Friday, April 24 from 4 p.m.-7 p.m. at BMI, located at 10 Music Sq. E.
Funeral services will take place Saturday, April 25 at 11 a.m., at Brentwood Baptist Church, located at 7777 Concord Road, Brentwood, TN.
[Original post, Thursday, April 16, 2015]:
Billy Ray Hearn, an innovator in the Contemporary Christian music industry, has died. He was 85.
Hearn began one of Contemporary Christian Music’s first record labels, Myrrh Records (part of Word Record Co.) in the 1970s. Myrrh released the early albums from Christian star Amy Grant, among others. Hearn was the director of music promotion and music publishing for Word until 1976, when he founded Sparrow Records. The company opened a Nashville office in 1986, and in 1991, Hearn moved the entire operation to Nashville. In 1992, Hearn sold Sparrow to EMI Music.
Today, Billy Ray’s son Bill Hearn continues as president/CEO of Capitol Christian Music Group, home to Amy Grant, Michael W. Smith, tobyMac, David Crowder, Chris Tomlin, and more. A division of Universal Music Group, Capitol CMG includes Capitol CMG Label Group (Sparrow Records, ForeFront Records, sixstepsrecords, and Hillsong), Capitol CMG Publishing, Motown Gospel, and Capitol Christian Distribution.
Billy Ray Hearn was inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame in 1997, and has been honored with the Gospel Music Association’s Lifetime Achievement Award.
The Hearns created the Martell Best Cellars Dinner, which has raised more than $2 million for the Frances Preston Labs at Vanderbilt Ingram Cancer Center. They also created the Sparrow Foundation, which has donated to institutions including Baylor University and New Hope Academy.
Earlier this year, Billy Ray Hearn and Bill Hearn were honored with the Frances Preston Lifetime Music Industry Achievement Award from the T.J. Martell Foundation, which battles life-threatening illnesses. He was also the founder of T.J. Martell’s Best Cellars Dinner that has raised millions of dollars across the country in support of leukemia, cancer and AIDS research.
Funeral arrangements are pending.

Billy Ray Hearn accepts his Special Citation of Achievement at the 2010 BMI Christian Awards. Photo: Kay Williams/BMI

Sparrow Music Publishing Songwriting Achievement Awards presentations to Charlie Peacock, Steven Curtis Chapman, Andrae Crouch, and Michael W. Smith. Billy Ray Hearn is pictured on the right next to his son Bill Hearn.
DISClaimer: Outlaws and Loser’s Lyrics Sound Good

Whitey Morgan
Spring has sprung, and country sounds fill the air. My favorite thing about this listening session is that there was no shortage of worthy DisCovery Award contenders. New to the column this week are 2 Steel Girls, Rainey Qualley, Bryan Hayes and Monty Byrom, any one of whom could have captured the crown.
But I’ve gotta go with the outlaw sound of Whitey Morgan & The 78s. This is the “honky-tonk alter ego of Eric David Allen,” who grew up in hard-luck Flint, Mich., and cut his extraordinary CD in Texas. Welcome to the party, son: You’ve got the goods.
The Disc of the Day belongs to Thomas Rhett, who manages to marry a loser’s lyric to a winner’s audio sunshine.
MONTY BYROM/Meet Me at Midnight
Writers: Monty Byrom/Paul Kalman; Producer: Monty Byrom; Publishers: Byrom, SESAC; WTF (track)
-Remember the Bakersfield band Big House and its groovy 1997 hit “Cold Outside?” The group’s Monty Byrom now leads The Buckaroos at The Crystal Palace once a month and has his own blues-rocking combo The Road Pilots. With the latter, he has recorded his debut solo CD, 100 Miles South of Eden. That’s where you’ll find this swampy, soulful ballad beckoning a belle to sex and sadness. Very cool. The album’s last track, by the way, features the late Buck Owens singing with Byrom on a 1998 version of “Big In Vegas.”
COLE SWINDELL/Let Me See Ya Girl
Writers: Cole Swindell/Michael Carter/Jody Stevens; Producer: Michael Carter; Publishers: Sony-ATV Tree/243/Sony-ATV Cross Keys; BMI/ASCAP; Warner Bros.
-He wants to see her “dance” in the bed of his truck, “movin’ your hips like the wind moves cotton.” It may not be the most romantic invitation in the world, but it is lively and tuneful.
BRYAN HAYES/Farther Down the Line
Writers: Bryan Hayes; Producer: Andy Hunt; Publishers: none listed; BMI; BH (track)
– The title tune to his new CD finds this tenor Tennessee troubadour questioning the future of a relationship with plenty of catchy hooks. It has been seven years since his last collection because he wrote these 11 new songs while serving in Iraq. Welcome home, bro.

Thomas Rhett
THOMAS RHETT/Crash and Burn
Writers: Jesse Frasure/Chris Stapleton; Producers: Dann Huff/Jesse Frasure; Publishers: Rio Bravo/WB/Ken Tucky; BMI/ASCAP; Valory
– Jaunty and bopping, featuring hand claps, whistling and a dandy rhythm track. The lyric is about a love crashing and burning, but heartache has never sounded quite this bouncy. Delightful.
RAINEY QUALLEY/Turn Me On Like The Radio
Writers: Rainey Qualley/John Ramey/Jeffrey Easy; Producers: Russ Zavitson/John Ramey; Publishers: Russ Zavitson/Rainey Qualley/Tazmaraz, ASCAP/BMI; Cingle (track)
– Instantly familiar, with a melody that grabs your ears and won’t let go. An automatic add and a sure-fire hit for a newcomer with a winning, throaty, alto range.
LIVEWIRE/Quit You
Writers: Andy Eutsler/Danny Bell/Jeffrey Joseph East; Producers: Paul Carabello/Clif Doyal; Publishers: Real Man/Parrot Island/Tazmaraz; BMI; Way Out West
-I remain a fan. This time, LiveWire takes on a dark ballad with the theme of love being like an addiction. Slowly insinuating.
WHITEY MORGAN & THE 78s/Waitin’ ‘Round to Die
Writers: Townes Van Zandt; Producer: Ryan Hewitt; Publisher: Silver Dollar, ASCAP; WM (track)
-Morgan previews next month’s Sonic Ranch CD with a video of this dark, doom-drenched and completely gripping ballad. You’ll hang on every line, probably because it’s written by a master song craftsman. In addition to Van Zandt, the singer-songwriter covers tunes by Tom T. Hall, Frankie Miller and Waylon Jennings, with whom he shares a dramatic “outlaw” vocal personna. Highly recommended.
2 STEEL GIRLS/Mad Black Magic
Writers: none listed; Producers: none listed; Publishers: none listed; 2SG
-This is a mother-daughter duo — Allison and Krystal Steel — who competed on Team Blake during the 2012-13 season of The Voice. Their new single combines deep-thump rhythm and feisty-female “attitude” vocals. It drops on Tuesday, April 21. I’m intrigued.
TY BATES/Tongue Tied
Writers: Ty Bates/Thomas Archer; Producer: Rogers Masson; Publishers: none listed; TB (track)
– I dig his Georgia drawl. The song’s idea is a clever play on stuttering and kissing. I like it, even though it is somewhat wordy and could use a more memorable chorus.
ADRIAN DUFFY & THE MAYO BROTHERS/United We Fall
Writers: Adrian Duffy/Melvin Duffy; Producers: Adrian Duffy/Melvin Duffy/Matt Kemp; Publishers: none listed; SR (track)
– The three Duffy brothers from Ireland have been tantalizing me with their excellent singles for a couple of years. Now they have a crowd-funded full album at last. Its title tune is chock full of harmony vocals, ringing guitars and echoey atmosphere. These guys have vocal, songwriting and production chops in abundance.
Weekly Register: Rucker’s ‘Southern Style’ Reigns For Second Week
This week was lackluster for new releases, and both the overall tracks and overall albums charts saw significant dips.
On a brighter note, Neilsen’s country albums tally saw Darius Rucker’s Southern Style reign supreme for a second consecutive week, moving 17k units. Rucker sold 52k during the project’s debut week.
Also in the Top 5 this week are Sam Hunt’s Montevallo (15k), Now That’s What I Call ACM Awards: 50 Years (11k), Luke Bryan’s Spring Break…Checkin’ Out (10k), and Florida Georgia Line’s Anything Goes (7.4k)
Top country debuts this week went to Will Hoge at No. 15 (3.7k), Kristian Bush at No. 16 (3.7k), and Pokey LaFarge at No. 28 (1.4k).
Also worth noting is Lee Brice who jumped from No. 21 to No. 7 this week, selling 7.1k (an upward swing of 179 percent), on the strength of a Google Album of the Week promo, on sale for $2.99.
The Original Soundtrack from the movie Furious 7 topped the overall album chart, selling 111k this week. The top debut on the overall album chart was All Time Low at No. 2, selling 80k. All Time Low was the only debut in the top 10 this week.
Compared to last week, overall album sales were down 1.7 percent, while overall digital sales were up 2.6 percent. Country album sales were down 13.2 percent, while country digital sales were down 7.5 percent.
This time last year, the top overall album was Frozen, which sold 133k that week. On the country charts one year ago, Martina McBride’s Everlasting topped the country album chart, selling 21k.
Tracks
Sam Hunt’s “Take Your Time” tops the country tracks tally this week, with 55k units moved. Little Big Town’s “Girl Crush” moved 43k this week, followed by Zac Brown Band’s “Homegrown” (40.5k), Thomas Rhett’s “Crash and Burn” (40k), and Cole Swindell’s “Ain’t Worth The Whiskey” (35k).
Wiz Khalifa earns a second week at No. 1 on the overall tracks chart with “See You Again,” which sold 464k. The top overall and country debut this week is Thomas Rhett’s “Crash and Burn” (40k). The track debuted at No. 4 on the country tracks chart and at No. 31 overall.
Year-to-date, overall track sales have fallen 9.7 percent, while country tracks have fallen 16.5 percent.
This time last year, Pharrell Williams’ “Happy” topped the overall track chart, selling 257k, while Luke Bryan’s “Play It Again” topped the country tracks chart, selling 108k.




