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Trace Adkins Finds New Label Home With BBR Music Group

(Pictured, L-R): Almon & Pike’s Orville Almon; Vector Management’s JW Williams; BBRMG EVP Jon Loba; BBRMG General Manager Rick Shedd; BBRMG’s Colton McGee; Trace Adkins; BBRMG President & CEO Benny Brown.

(Pictured, L-R): Almon & Pike’s Orville Almon; Vector Management’s JW Williams; BBRMG EVP Jon Loba; BBRMG General Manager Rick Shedd; BBRMG’s Colton McGee; Trace Adkins; BBRMG President & CEO Benny Brown. Photo: BBR Music Group

Multi-talented recording artist, actor, author, and spokesperson Trace Adkins has signed a new recording contract with BBR Music Group.

Adkins is currently working on his 13th studio album with producer Mickey Jack Cones, who has produced Joe Nichols and Randy Houser.

“Trace Adkins has built a career and a legacy doing things his own way, never bowing to trends or society. He’s a straight shooter whose philosophy aligns with BBR Music Group’s independent, hands on approach. The music is what matters at BBR Music Group and that’s a viewpoint we share with Trace. We’re excited to welcome Trace to the BBR Music Group family and look forward to collaborating on new, amazing music,” said Benny Brown, President/ CEO of the BBR Music Group.

Adkins is managed by Vector Management, booked by Creative Artists Agency (CAA) and represented by publicity agency Sunshine Sachs. He is an ASCAP-affiliated songwriter.

Adkins entered the music scene with the 1996 release of Dreamin’ Out Loud on Capitol Nashville, his label home for more than a decade. He went on to become one of country music’s most distinctive vocalists, selling more than 10 million albums, and notching hits including “Every Light in the House Is On,” “Songs About Me,” “Honkytonk Badonkadonk,” “Ladies Love Country Boys,” and more.

He later recorded albums for Show Dog-Universal and released a Christmas project, The King’s Gift, on the Caliburn label in 2013.

Adkins parlayed his music success into television and movies, as a runner-up on the 2008 season of Donald Trump’s The Celebrity Apprentice, and later won The All-Star Celebrity Apprentice. Adkins has appeared in The Lincoln Lawyer alongside Matthew McConaughey, Wyatt Earp’s Revenge, Mom’s Night Out, and more.

He served as a spokesperson for The American Red Cross and Wounded Warriors. Adkins also penned an autobiography entitled A Personal Stand: Observations and Opinions from a Free-Thinking Roughneck, which was released in late 2007.

“When you’ve been doing this as long as I have, you don’t always get the feeling that the sky’s the limit,” said Adkins. “I feel that way right now. When I sign up for something, I go all-in. Since Benny, Jon and I shook hands and said ‘let’s do this thing,’ we’ve been all-in together.”

“Trace Adkins is not only a Country music megastar but an accomplished film and TV actor who has become a highly-recognizable celebrity. In this incredibly fractured entertainment environment, it’s an extraordinary accomplishment to have achieved touch points across multiple forms of media. The BBR Music Group is ecstatic to add an artist of international acclaim to its roster,” said BBR Music Group EVP Jon Loba.

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DISClaimer: A Celebration of Songwriting

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Toby Keith

It all begins with a song.

The thing that unites all of the standout records this week is that they all feature the craftsmanship that good country music has always boasted.

Whether it’s Zane Williams’s outstanding story lyric, Chris Stapleton’s road tune, Rich Karg’s cool description of momentary love without commitment, Toby Keith’s meditation on decaying society or Steve Azar’s musing about lost innocence these discs contain writing that makes me proud to be a country fan.

Throughout the career of Toby Keith, the consistent excellence of his songwriting has beamed brightly. He wins the Disc of the Day.

The DisCovery Award goes to Rich Karg. His CD is full of unexpected pleasures.

DIANA UPTON-HILL/Do Love Well
Writers: Mitchell T. Goudy; Producer: Bryan White; Publishers: Bread N Pants, ASCAP; Third Floor (track)
-Sunny and sugary. Sorry, I’ve never had much of a sweet tooth.

LADY ANTEBELLUM/Long Stretch of Love
Writers: Dave Haywood/Charles Kelley/Hillary Scott/Josh Kear; Producers: Nathan Chapman/Lady Antebellum; Publishers: Beards and Bullets/30A Getaway/Hobbs Hill/Kobalt/Global Dog/Book of Spells, ASCAP/SESAC; Capitol Nashville
-The multiple audio layers make it sound like there are a lot more than three voices on this. Dense sounding, but highly commercial.

Rich KargRICH KARG/Beautiful Distraction
Writers: Weston Burt/R. Karg/S. Mitchell; Producer: Rich Karg; Publishers: Rich Karg/Green Hills Music Group/Grin Like Dog, SESAC; RK (track)
-This Nashville singer-songwriter is selling a CD titled U Turn at his gigs. It contains this deliciously melodic power ballad about hooking up with no strings attached. You big-time stars and producers out there need to be mining this and the other tunes on this collection for gold. Recommended listening.

JOSH GOODLETT/Why You Gotta Be That Way
Writers: Bobby E. Boyd/Brad Wolf/Phillip Moore; Producer: Bobby E. Boyd; Publishers: Boyd Where Prohibited/Green Dog, BMI; Good
-The country-rocking production is on the money, and he is a fine country singer. The song doesn’t do much for me, but overall this is a perfectly OK effort.

TOBY KEITH/35 MPH Town
Writers: Toby Keith/Bobby Pinson; Producers: Toby Keith/Bobby Pinson; Publishers: Tokeco/Bobby’s Lyrics Land & Livestock/Do Write, BMI; Show Dog (CDX)
-This is an extremely well written song about a mother who doesn’t like what she sees around her these days. She cautions her boy that things aren’t like they used to be. Toby’s vocal is a masterpiece of urgent phrasing, and the dramatic production totally kicks butt. Play it again.

STEVE AZAR & SOPHIE YOUNG/The Sky Is Falling
Writers: Steve Azar; Producer: Steve Azar; Publishers: Steve Azar, BMI; Ride (CDX)
-Their duet about lost youth and forgotten innocence glides on wafting wings of sound. Ear catching.

CASEY JAMES/Fall Apart
Writers: Will Bowen/Joshua Carter/Zach Carter; Producers: Chris Lindsey/Casey James; Publishers: Vaughn Fenwick/Little Extra/Ten Thousand Hours/Petite-T/Music of Parallel, BMI; Columbia (CDX)
-Pleading with a broken heart, he sings the fire out of this. But I’m sorry: “Every time I run into you, I fall apart” is not exactly the most original idea in songwriting history.

TYLER HAMMOND/Wild One Tonight
Writers: Chris Jones; Producer: Chris Jones; Publishers: Chris Jones, ASCAP; Milley (CDX)
-I like the moody, thumpy production and the up-close-and-personal quality in his singing. I also like the way it builds in sonic complexity. I’m intrigued. Send more.

CHRIS STAPLETON/Traveller
Writers: Chris Stapleton; Producer: Dave Cobb; Publishers: WB/Ken Tucky, ASCAP; Mercury (CDX)
-He remains one of the most gripping vocalists on today’s scene. This lonely-wanderer song is right up his alley. The tempo rolls along appropriately. Super listenable.

ZANE WILLIAMS/Jayton and Jill
Writers: Zane Williams; Producers: Zane Williams/Tom Faulkner; Publishers: Born Into Love/Be Original, ASCAP; Be (CDX)
-I love a good country story song, and this one is a pip. Jayton is an everyday guy working at a filling station and feeling suicidal. Jill is preacher’s daughter gone wild. They meet, talk all night and save one another’s troubled souls. A dandy, an instant classic.

Sugar Hill, Vanguard Purchased By Concord Music Group

concord sugar hill vanguardRecord labels Sugar Hill and Vanguard have been purchased by Concord Music Group. Both entities were previously owned by Welk Music Group.

In Nashville, Sugar Hill’s operations and label team will be merged under Concord’s Rounder Label Group. Cliff O’Sullivan, General Manager of Sugar Hill prior to the acquisition, will be the label group’s Chief Operating Officer and will report to group president, John Virant.

In Los Angeles, Vanguard’s operations and label team will be merged under Concord’s Fantasy Label Group. Dan Sell, General Manager of Vanguard prior to the acquisition, will continue to lead the label’s operations as Vanguard’s Chief Operating Officer. He will report to Fantasy Label Group president, Margi Cheske.

Welk’s president Kevin Welk will remain engaged with Vanguard and Sugar Hill as Chief Creative for the labels. He will also continue to contribute to development and optimizations of the labels’ artist rosters.

Nashville-based Sugar Hill’s roster includes Sarah Jarosz, Lee Ann Womack, Liz Longley, Corey Smith, Kasey Chambers, Sam Bush, moe., Bryan Sutton, Black Prairie and more.

Vanguard’s current roster includes Indigo Girls, Chris Isaak, John Butler Trio, John Fogerty, Andrew McMahon in the Wilderness, Matt Nathanson, O.A.R., Barenaked Ladies, Sallie Ford, Marc Broussard, Jerry Lee Lewis and Trevor Hall, among others.

Other labels under Concord Music Group include Nashville-based Rounder Records, as well as Stax, Fantasy, and more. Currently, Sugar Hill’s Nashville-area offices are located at The Factory at Franklin, and Rounder’s offices are in the Gulch.

The acquisition of Vanguard and Sugar Hill closely follows the recent merger of Concord Music Group and The Bicycle Music Company, a leading independent music publisher, record label and rights manager, into Concord Bicycle Music. In connection with the merger, Concord Bicycle Music raised $100 million in added capital to fund additional growth through music rights acquisitions and artist development investments.

“Concord is strengthened today by the addition of Vanguard and Sugar Hill’s acclaimed artist roster, renowned catalog and gifted executives,” stated Concord Music Group CEO Glen Barros. “This acquisition further establishes Concord Music Group as a home for extraordinary artists. We welcome Vanguard and Sugar Hill into the Concord family and look forward to building upon their great legacies.”

“Strategically, we couldn’t find a better home for Vanguard and Sugar Hill,” stated Kevin Welk. “Not only will they care for our historic catalog and distinguished artists, their desire to grow the new artist business was paramount in the decision. Combining the executive talent of both companies will strengthen Concord’s ability to nurture new talent and be a force in this business.”

Vanguard’s catalog includes hundreds of pivotal titles from Joan Baez, Doc Watson, Levon Helm, Buddy Guy, Country Joe and the Fish, Big Mama Thornton, Mississippi John Hurt, John Fahey and Buffy Sainte-Marie amongst many others.

A sampling of classics from the Sugar Hill catalog includes albums from Nickel Creek, Don Williams, Doc Watson, Dolly Parton, Guy Clark, New Grass Revival, Robert Earl Keen, Tim O’Brien and Tony Rice.

 

The Producer’s Chair: Cactus Moser

Cactus Moser with wife Wynonna Judd on Friday (3/20) during SXSW at St. David's Bethel Hall. Photo: SAG-AFTRA

Cactus Moser with wife Wynonna Judd

Cactus Moser and special guest Wynonna appeared on The Producer’s Chair, Thursday, April 9, 2015 at Douglas Corner at 6 p.m.

The charismatic driving force behind Highway 101, Cactus Moser is one of the most multi-talented drummers to ever hit the Row—not to mention one of the most passionate.

Astonishingly, Cactus was back on tour playing drums with wife Wynonna three months to the day after the horrific 2012 motorcycle accident that took his left leg and almost destroyed his left hand. His pace has not slowed since.

Prior to forming Highway 101 with Paulette Carlson, Curtis Stone and Jack Daniels, Moser was a full-time session player in L.A., who honed his producer chops following a 9-week course in music engineering. Propelled by his love for all things music, Cactus started writing songs and soon got his first publishing deal with Warner Bros., which lasted five years. Then he signed with Sony Tree for another five, garnering about 20 cuts per deal, not including the songs he wrote and produced for Highway.

Warner Bros. signed the band to their first record deal in 1987 and released four albums over the next seven years. They entered a new deal with Liberty under Jimmy Bowen in 1993 and then with Intersound Records in 1996 and FreeFalls records in 2000.

In all, the band had 16 consecutive top 10 singles, four of which went No. 1. Highway won the award for Vocal Group of the Year at the 1987 and 1988 CMA Awards.

Today, Moser is a producer, engineer, musical arranger, multi-instrumentalist, singer and actor, who has appeared in 11 films and documentaries. He he has scored several soundtracks for TV and film. Not bad for a cowboy from Colorado.

Inspired by a local band, Cactus started playing guitar at age 9. The next year his parents left their struggling cattle ranch and moved to Denver. Cactus went to live with his grandmother and started playing drums.

“That year for my birthday, I got a tiny Japanese drum set,” explained Moser. “As soon as I had enough practice under my belt, I joined a band. I also started playing in the stage band at school and the school orchestra.

“When I was 19, I played my first session. It was in Boulder at Northstar studio for a session being produced by Chris Hillman from The Burritto Brothers and The Byrds. Chris was married to one of Elton John’s managers. That led to going to L.A. Fast-forward I wound up playing on a ton of things and touring. I eventually went back to Bolder and put a band together and we were offered two deals.

“We chose Asylum right before Black Friday, which was when all the labels got gutted. We probably should have signed with Michael Nesmith, who had the other record company. He told us he was going to do these things called videos for this thing called MTV. We thought he was nuts.

“Asylum was gutted and our deal was blown, so I stayed in Colorado for another couple of years because of that band and started going to Nashville to do concerts. We opened for everybody. Later when that fell apart, I moved to LA.”

Producer’s Chair: When did it hit you that you wanted to be a producer?

Cactus Moser: The thought began when I was recording with those bands and we produced ourselves. We made records/demos and I learned the process. I would listen to every record that came out and sit inside of it, and think, “Why does this sound like that and what is happening?”

During that period we were playing on records by Amy Grant, Phil Keaggy and Twila Paris’s classic recording “The Warrior is a Child,”  thanks to our Steve Taylor connection.

In Highway, I learned a lot from Paul Worley. We were at Sound Emporium and he was the first one to say, “Don’t think this is a session. Just be a band…bring it.” He had a lot of impact with that one comment. We already had a hit with “The Bed You Made for Me.” We recorded that in L.A. then we came down here and I saw the creativity of that environment. I started watching how Paul worked and how he thought—focusing on what we did naturally.

When did you move to Nashville?

We decided to separate with our first lead singer Paulette Carlson, so Worley and Martha Sharp (A&R at Warner) said it would be a lot easier to move forward with the new singer and the label, if I moved to Nashville. I was already spending a lot of time here writing songs because I saw that’s how you make money. I had a single or two by then and wanted to keep that up so, as much as I loved L.A., I made the jump in 1991.

Tell me about your writing. Did you have a publishing deal?

I got a publishing deal with Warner down here because of the band signing. I had a few outside cuts, but mostly wrote for the band’s records with Curtis and Paula. Then Worley became the head of Tree. So after five years with Warner, I signed at Tree for five years and got into the whole walking into a room, pulling down your pants and writing with strangers. We were producing a lot of demos. I had Pam Tillis as one of my demo singers. That’s where you learn how to cut five songs in three hours.

When you moved, were you strictly focusing on Highway or were you also doing session work for other people?

All of the above. There was some resistance because I had my face on the record and they didn’t think I [had the skills] to be a session guy too. In those days, guys in bands didn’t play on their own records, so the fact that we did was kind-of off the grid.

With producing, you just had to make your own way. Highway’s career was settling due to record company politics. So I started venturing into other musical landscapes–writing edgy modern rock in the ‘90s and started going back to L.A. I sort-of dropped off the map because I felt very burnt. I got into a funk about this town and turned down some cool production gigs because I wanted to break ties. So I started writing with signed rock guys to re-energize myself to like music again, because I got to the point where the business was all I thought about.

Was it session work or production that you wanted to get back to?

Both. I had a chip on my shoulder to prove that I could play on all these records. Then I met Chuck Howard, who was doing Billy Dean and a bunch of stuff. He started hiring me. Highway finally got off Warner and we went to Capital (Liberty). When I told Bowen I wanted to produce he said, ‘Well…I’d like somebody else in there with you.’

I wrote seven of the 10 and I co-produced with Chuck [Howard]. It was finally our chance to re-establish Highway. Jimmy wanted to spend the money, and we were both proud of the project. We had the record release party at my ranch. TNN and CMT were there, and the only person missing was Jimmy because he wasn’t feeling well. He ended up having a quadruple bypass and deciding to quit the business. There went deal number two, because the new guys coming in didn’t care about who was already there. That is where my funk began.

I remember sitting in a diner on the east coast with Curtis and Nikki, our fresh new singer. I said, ‘I’m going to be honest, I want to do something else before I’m too old. I don’t like this music anymore and I don’t like this game.’ Curtis was kind of the same and Nikki wanted to keep going.

In hindsight, we should have gone to Tony Brown at Universal or somebody and shopped the record around. Instead we quit. So that’s when I went into that darkness and spent some real hard years, trying to figure out what to do.

After Liberty, the band signed to Intersound. How did that come about?

The original singer Paulette wanted to come back because this management guy from L.A. wanted the original four back together for a reunion. Warner Bros. got wind of it and said, ‘If you guys guarantee us 18 months, we’ll give you a nice chunk of money.’ I said, ‘nope, can’t do it.’ So that deal didn’t happen and Intersound signed them without me. Curtis and I had ownership so I leased them my half. It was basically a re-packaging of four new songs and all the stuff I was on, yet the credits ironically said that the guy who played on the four new songs played on the rest of the songs too.

Two years later people were still booking the band and Curtis said, ‘Do you want to come back? Paulette’s gone again.’ I suggested we try another girl, so we did, and we made a cool record called Big Sky for Free Falls Records for Bob Freeze, who was one of the executives from Liberty.

How did you meet Wynonna?

In the golden Warner years, we toured with Randy Travis our first year, George Strait the second year and then with The Judds for a whole year in ‘89. Wy and I hit it off as buddies—we had a little spark. Naomi Judd was sick and getting ready to go to the Mayo Clinic, so on the last night of the tour I offered to go with them but Wy said, ‘No, I just have to take care of my mom.’ So I went back to L.A. Later, we’d see each other at award shows, but it would just be hello. When I moved here, I kept my horses at her place while I built fences.

There was a long gap but in 2009, I’m playing at Puckett’s for these fun classic rock gigs andWy comes walking in with Naomi. So we got together and went on a couple of dates. 

When was your first gig back after the accident?

Three months to the day that I got on the bus for our Christmas tour. We did 18 cities. It was later that we went back and played Deadwood, SD and I met the guy who saved my life.

Did you need any special equipment to play with a prosthetic?

For the first tours, I used two hi-hats in front of me, one tighter and one open and they had these clutches that had been designed that would open and close. But later we had to do a TV show where I’d show up and have to play someone else’s kit, so I eventually went back to playing normally.

Did your playing change?

My head changed. I started hearing the whole song more clearly. When I’m in the studio playing drums, I don’t think about trying to get what I would have done before. I think about the sounds, I think sonically. I think, how do I make this feel great. I think more of the whole and less of the singular player. I played differently and I played better than ever did before, more musically. I stay inside the song more than just playing a drum part.

How did end up producing Wynonna’s next album?

Wy was doing another tour with her mother and they had this reality show on Oprah’s network. So the network suggested we write a song for Naomi and surprise her with it. I had discovered a group called The Henningsens. Worley and I re-united and started writing with them and recording them at my house. So Brian Henningsen, Wy and I wrote a song called ‘Love It Out Loud’ that we recorded for that show. Curb heard the song and I was given the keys, to go in and see what I could do, but it didn’t feel right because I wanted to make a record that didn’t care about country radio. Next thing you know, the label cleans house and the new regime comes in, including Jim Ed Norman–who I’d been with at Warner–I did my sales pitch to get out of the box of modern rockin’ country and make music that sounds like a woman who’s got some life experience. I don’t think everybody has to hear about spring break. So I stuck my producer balls on and said, ‘If I sink, I sink. But at least it’ll be on my terms.’ So that’s what we’ve done and that’s where we are now.

Jim Ed told me that the best producer isn’t somebody who comes up with the best arrangements and parts, it’s the guy who spends the most time looking for songs. 

What’s the biggest challenge facing Wynonna, now?

To re-introduce. It’s a lot easier to tell the artist’s story the first time, 30 years in. Granted you have a built-in audience but getting the business to allow that artist to be seen again is vastly challenging.

Has producing Wynonna been an easy or challenging transition for the two of you?

It’s been very easy, shockingly so. She’s a gem. She’s an amazing woman. Using time wisely is a big part of our marriage.

What other projects have you been working on?

I produced five or six songs for a soundtrack for a docu-drama about Afghanistan called The Hornet’s Nest. I wrote a song called ‘Follow Me’ which Wy and I got nominated for an Oscar and a Grammy. I acted in a film this year called Union Bound, and I’ve scored a lot of movies, which is a huge passion.

The director of The Hornet’s Nest introduced me to the artist Pete Scobell and we used one of his songs for the movie’s closing credits.

I’m recording Pete’s album as well and this week I’m in the midst of picking the last half of the songs.

Also, we were asked to record a song for the movie American Sniper, coincidentally with Pete as well. That ended up being a duet with Wy and was perfect for the film except Clint Eastwood felt that point in the movie should be silence. It was the last scene, final funeral scene, so the song was taken out. We decided to release it as an iTunes single and it went to No. 1 without a major label which was incredible.

What do you think are the biggest challenges facing our industry today?

The age-old challenge is that you’ve got to accept that things change all the time. How do you play the game this month, as opposed to last month? And how do you make the money that is allowed, workable? You don’t have to spend beaucoup dollars. We all have to get paid and that’s a real hard thing. How do we make money elsewhere? Producing used to be a fat job. It’s now an hourly wage, unless you get a hold of a Taylor Swift or Luke Bryan or this new guy Hozier, who’s blowing up everywhere. You need to get one artist who is going to move product, because it can still happen. Otherwise, you have to figure out how to keep yourself employed.

I love the concept of not having just radio, because part of my dark years were me thinking, there’s got to be another way to do this where I don’t have to wait for the phone to ring as a session player, for the cut to come in from the publisher, or scratch and claw and bite and beg for people to listen to my song. And that’s where I feel I’ve finally come to.

Artists Sign On For Jay Z’s TIDAL

TIDALJason Aldean and Jack White are a few of the artists who have jumped on board music mogul Jay Z‘s recently announced streaming music service, TIDAL, which is aimed to compete with Spotify, Pandora, Beats Music, iTunes and others. Additionally, BMLG artist Taylor Swift‘s music (with the exception of her latest album 1989) remains available on TIDAL, as well as on other subscription-based services.

TIDAL was announced this afternoon via a press conference.

The hip-hop artist and business exec Jay Z bid $56 million for the service and parent company Aspiro last month. Scandinavian company Aspiro operates two services, including Tidal in the U.S., Canada and the U.K., as well as WiMP in Norway, Sweden, and other areas of Europe. The two services will now be operated under the name TIDAL worldwide.

Other artists who have signed on include Beyoncé, Alicia Keys, Will Butler (Arcade Fire), Calvin Harris, Chris Martin (Coldplay), Daft Punk, Jay Cole, Madonna, Kanye West, Nicki Minaj, Usher and Rihanna.

TIDAL charges $19.99/month for unlimited listening of high-resolution, “lossless” music, with no free listening tier. The company has licensed 25 million tracks thus far.

The service offers three different sound qualities, including “Standard” (96 kbps-AAC+), “High Quality” (320 kbps-AAC), and HiFi (Flac 1411 kpbs-lossless).

Tidal has integration agreements with 35 audio brands, including: Anthem, Airable by Tune In Media, Astell & Kern, Audeze, Audiovector, AudioQuest, Auralic, Aurender, Autonomic, Bel Canto, Bluesound & NAD, Dan D’Agostino, Definitive Technology, Denon HEOS, DTS Play-Fi, Dynaudio, Electrocompaniet, Harman Omni, HiFiAkademie, ickStream, JH Audio, Linn, McIntosh, Meridian, MartinLogan, Paradigm, Polk, Pro-ject, PS Audio, Raumfeld, Simple Audio, Sonos, Steinway Lyngdorf, Wren Sound Systems.

Aldean and Swift each pulled music from streaming service Spotify last year.

For more, information, visit tidal.com. Watch the press conference below.

YouTube video

Striking Matches Sparks A Fire With Debut Project

Striking Matches album 2015“It feels like your wedding day,” says Justin Davis of new duo Striking Matches, in describing an artist’s anticipation of album release day. Davis and musical partner Sarah Zimmermann released their first full-length album, Nothing But The Silence (I.R.S. Records) on March 23. “You go so long and look forward to it as a thing of the future. Finally that day arrives, and you know it doesn’t end on that day, because there is so much more to come. You try to slow down just long enough to realize you’ve achieved this thing that you’ve wanted forever.”

They won’t have much time for slowing down. The project landed at No. 1 on the iTunes UK Country Albums chart, thanks in part to the duo’s recent performances overseas, including a return to the CMA Songwriters Series at C2C in London.

In the years leading up to album release day, Zimmermann and Davis have evolved from fledgling college musicians to a duo with numerous songs, including “When The Right One Comes Along” and “Hanging On A Lie,” featured on the ABC drama Nashville. Striking Matches’ versions of both songs are included on their debut.

Early on, the duo teamed with music executive John Grady, who later signed them as the first act on his Nashville-based label, I.R.S. Records. Grady was instrumental in pairing the duo with T Bone Burnett, producer for artists including Los Lobos, The Wallflowers, as well as Robert Plant and Alison Krauss’ Grammy-winning album Raising Sand. Burnett also served as the executive music producer for television drama Nashville.

“T Bone was doing music for the first season of Nashville,” Grady recalls. “I sent him worktapes of Striking Matches and he said, ‘Grady, that’s the only band I’ve heard that I’ve liked since I’ve been here doing this.’ We kept sending him music, and one day I asked him what he thought about producing them. He does that a couple of times a year, where he’ll produce somebody completely unknown.”

Burnett signed on for the project. “His vision lined up with ours,” Davis says. “The mark of any great producer is making you as an artist feel like you can do anything you imagine. What I wasn’t anticipating is how nurturing he is to new artists in the studio.” Burnett kept the duo’s guitar prowess and irresistible harmonies center stage, augmented by only bass and drums. The setup allowed the duo to stake their claim as musicians from the first bluesy guitar vamp of “Trouble Is As Trouble Does.” Guitar solos shimmer throughout the project on tracks like “Make A Liar Out of Me.”

“It was an experience for them because it allows them to set a bar for the rest of their career for what they will accept or won’t accept, out of themselves or out of the recording experience,” Grady says.

Nothing But The Silence’s stripped down, harmony- and guitar-centric sound was refined through previous recordings; opening slots for Ashley Monroe, Train, Vince Gill; and international gigs in the UK. “We found that the more production and editing we did, it took away from what we were doing as a duo,” Zimmermann says. “It hid our guitar voice, in a sense. We both draw heavily on guitar playing, and that makes us different as a duo. It’s a big part of our songwriting as well.

“You’re not going to listen to our record, and then go to the live show and hear something completely different,” Zimmermann continues. “It’s important to us to make sure our voices and playing are center stage.”

Zimmermann and Davis first crossed paths as freshmen in a college music class, where the two guitar aficionados were randomly paired to improvise a piece of music. Zimmermann was the only female guitarist in the class. Davis’ initial response?

“I thought, ’Oh great, I’m the one who got the girl.’ None of us wanted to end up with the girl, because there were very few examples we could call upon of great female guitarists, except maybe Bonnie Raitt,” Davis recalls. “I asked if she knew any blues, and she pulled out her slide and proceeded to annihilate everybody. Musical chemistry is like social chemistry. Some people you just click with.”

Davis and Zimmermann continued to regularly jam and write songs together, though it took nearly two years before they decided to officially try their luck as a duo.

“Neither of us endeavored to be artists because that was kinda the ‘diva’ thing to do,” Davis explains. “At the same time, we are musicians, we love to write and sing, and love being in the studio. We started thinking, ‘Who gets to do all of that? Oh god, that’s the artist.’ Eventually, we realized we wanted to be artists all along. Songwriters usually only get to write songs; they don’t usually play. Many times, musicians play with other people, but the creative control is very limited. The one person who gets to do all of it is the artist.”

“We played writer’s rounds together, and people kept asking us what our band name was,” Zimmermann recalls of those early shows. “That’s when we decided to give it a shot.”

With more international tour dates, as well as a co-headlining U.S. tour with The Secret Sisters on the books, the duo is already thinking ahead to album number two.

“It would be fun to work with T Bone again, if he’s up for it and feels stimulated artistically,” Davis says. “It was a blast. We will experiment a little sonically, but we want to retain this identity. Maybe more epic guitar solos.”

Kenny Chesney’s Big Revival Shakes Up Nashville

Kenny Chesney launches The Big Revival Tour in Nashville. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Kenny Chesney launches The Big Revival Tour in Nashville. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

“Feel the vibration of the No Shoes Nation,” warned an old New Orleans street preacher in the opening video of Kenny Chesney’s show at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville last night (March 26).

The vibration that ensued was more like an earthquake as Chesney celebrated the opening night of his tour—and his birthday—with a three-hour, sold-out show that included surprise guests Joe Walsh, Taylor Swift, Uncle Kracker, David Lee Murphy, and Grace Potter. It was the first of a two-night run at the arena.

“To say I missed you guys is an understatement,” said the performer who had taken a break from the road since 2013.

Kenny Chesney welcomes Taylor Swift during his Nashville concert. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Kenny Chesney welcomes Taylor Swift during his Nashville concert. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Back with the aptly named The Big Revival Tour, Chesney was a sleeveless-shirted preacher sprinting across the stage under a spinning disco ball, telling his congregation to live in the moment God gave them. It’s that offering of escapism—and too many hits to count—that make him the entertainer of every year. Just like his song “Reality” advises, “everybody needs to break free from reality.”

His “No Shoes, No Shirt, No Problems” attitude permeated, singing the worry-free hits “Beer in Mexico,” “Keg in the Closet” and “Summertime.” Even when he offered the moody “Somewhere With You,” he rebounded with upbeat “I Go Back.”

As the night went on, Chesney went further back in his catalog, leading singalongs of early career hits “There Goes My Life,” “How Forever Feels” and “Never Wanted Nothing More.” Murphy appeared to offer the songs he made famous, “Dust On The Bottle” and “Party Crowd.”

Grace Potter joins Kenny Chesney onstage in Nashville. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Grace Potter joins Kenny Chesney onstage in Nashville. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Potter joined him for their current hit “Wild Child” as well as “You And Tequila.” Uncle Kracker came out for “When The Sun Goes Down.”

Walsh led the crowd in “Happy Birthday” and performed four other songs, closing out the concert with “All Night Long.”

By the end of the show, everyone wanted to move to No Shoes Nation, but were forced back to reality in the chilly night.

Joe Walsh joins Kenny Chesney for several songs in Nashville. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

David Lee Murphy joins Kenny Chesney for several songs in Nashville. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Chesney’s Sony Music Nashville labelmates Jake Owen and Chase Rice opened with strong performances.

Owen’s beach scene set included palm trees—an inviting backdrop as he reminded how many hits he’s tallied, including “Alone With You,” “Don’t Think I Can’t Love You,” “Days of Gold,” “Barefoot Blue Jean Night,” “The One That Got Away” and a spotlight solo of “What We Ain’t Got.”

The tour continues for an encore tonight in Nashville, before hitting cities across the country this summer.

Kenny Chesney Kicks Off "The Big Revival" Tour

Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

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DISClaimer: Close Calls and Country Music

blake-shelton1featuredThere are tough decisions to be made among the platters on tap this week.

For someone who makes a living speaking his mind, I had a awful hard time making mine up.

Let’s start with the DisCovery Award. There are two extremely worthy contenders, both from Texas. They are Cody Riley and Sim Balkey. I liked them both and wrestled mentally over this, but in a close call, I choose Sim Balkey for this week’s honor.

The choice for Disc of the Day was also between two super efforts. This time, I wound up in a deadlock. I can’t decide, so I’m calling it a tie between the Eli Young Band and Blake Shelton. Both of them stole my heart, and my ears.

CODY RILEY/Walls Don’t Build Themselves
Writers: Cody Riley/Dylan Riley; Producers: Wade Bowen/Ross Smith; Publishers: Thirty Ought, ASCAP; CR
-The track rocks with a terrific backbeat and unrelenting propulsion. By contrast, his twangy tenor has a tender-hearted, shy, pleading, boyish earnestness that is as country as grits. Also: The song is quite well written. Different sounding and oddly endearing.

LITTLE TEXAS/Young For A Long Time
Writers: D.Gray/P.Howell/D.O’Brien; Producer: Little Texas; Publishers: Del Yeah/P-90/Songs O’Brien, ASCAP; Goldenlane (track)
-These ‘90s “young country” favorites are back with a new collection that pairs 11 new songs with remakes of “God Blessed Texas” and “What Might Have Been.” The title tune is a lively rocker that sings the praises of being eternally youthful. Effervescent.

sim balkey

Sim Balkey

SIM BALKEY/How ‘Bout We Do That Tonight
Writers: Simon Balkey/Sarah Balkey; Producer: Kim Copeland; Publishers: Around the Cooler, BMI; SB (track)
-He has a solid honky-tonk baritone and a song with hooks a-plenty. The track simmers with pent-up energy and barely controlled fire. This kid has the goods. Spin him.

BLAKE SHELTON/Sangria
Writers: J.T. Harding/Josh Osborne/Trevor Rosen; Producer: Scott Hendricks; Publishers: Songs/Mighty Seven/Heavy Metal Disco/Might Seven/Songs of SMP/One Little Indian Creek/Songs of Black River/ReHits/Smacktown/Smack Blue, ASCAP; Warner Bros.
-Can someone please explain to me why this man is not nominated for Entertainer of the Year at the ACM’s? He stars on a huge hit TV show (The Voice), co-hosts one of country’s biggest specials (the ACM show, itself) and — unlike the men who are nominated — is a stupendous country-music vocalist. Blake’s swaying, romantic new single is head-and-shoulders above efforts by most of his peers. An atmospheric performance to get lost in.

PAT WATERS/Crazy That Way
Writers: David Lee/Eric Church/Tony Lane; Producer: Eric Paul; Publisher: Harmony, no performance rights listed; Big Valley Agency
-It’s rather preachy for my taste.

DARIUS RUCKER/Southern Style
Writers: Darius Rucker/Rivers Rutherford/Tim James; Producer: Frank Rogers: Publishers: Universal/Cadaja/Memphianna/Warner-Tamerlane/T-Brid’s, ASCAP/BMI; Capitol (track)
-The title tune of Rucker’s new CD sounded like a winner when he debuted it at CRS. It still does. His singing is more relaxed and breezy this time around. The melody is wonderfully lilting. And the lyric is loaded with vivid Dixie imagery.

MANDY ROWDEN/Haunt You
Writers: Mandy Rowden/Billy Abel; Producers: Mandy Rowden/Joe Carroll; Publishers: none listed, BMI; MR (track)
-This Austin gal has a new CD called These Bad Habits. It features this languidly-paced tune where she seems to approach each note with caution. She is a little pitchy. The steel playing by Lloyd Maines dominates the track and is what will truly “Haunt You.”

Photo: Republic Nashville

Photo: Republic Nashville

ELI YOUNG BAND/Turn It On
Writers: none listed; Producers: none listed; Publishers: none listed; Republic Nashville
-How do they do it? Every time this band comes up with the catchiest song on the country scene, it manages to find yet another one. This one sends your brain into a dizzy, fizzy stratosphere of sound. The rapid-fire lyric is matched by a swirling instrumental track and rhythm that doesn’t let up for one second. Thrilling.

THE LACS/God Bless A Country Girl
Writers: none listed; Producers: none listed; Publishers: none listed; Average Joes
-It’s a combination of rap and bro country. Just what we need.

AUDREY AULD/I Am Not What I Have Done
Writers: Gary Harrell/Juan Meja/Joey Barnes/Rolf Kissmann/Gino Sevacos/Justus Evans/Michael Littlebear/Andrew Vance/Khalifah Christensen/Felix Lucero/Kevin Sawyer/Joe Askey/Audrey Auld; Reckless (track)
-Auld has been conducting songwriting workshops in San Quentin Prison since 2006. She has included five compositions that she created with inmates on her new CD Hey Warden. This one asks for simple understanding and compassion. It is a simple guitar-vocal, but elsewhere on the album she is joined by notable Nashville sidemen such Kenny Vaughan and Dennis Wage.