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Josh Osborne Celebrates Two No. 1s at Blake Shelton Party

September 25, 2015 SMACK Songs

by Alanna Conaway
It should have been called Blake Shelton Week in Nashville, as it was near impossible to go somewhere without encountering some event related to the superstar. 

On Tuesday (Sept. 22), he celebrated his five-year anniversary as a Grand Ole Opry member with two shows inside the prestigious wooden circle. The following night (Sept. 23), he threw one of the biggest street parties ever on Music Row, drawing in 10,000 fans for his free performance. By the time Thursday (Sept. 24) rolled around, he was throwing back a few more to celebrate his most recent five No. 1 songs: “Doing What She Likes,” “My Eyes,” “Neon Light,” “Lonely Tonight” and “Sangria.”

Combined, those five songs have spent a total of 200 weeks on the charts and extended Blake’s record-breaking streak of back-to-back No. 1s. The giant party was appropriate in scale, drawing out some of Nashville’s biggest songwriters, including Kelley Lovelace, James Slater, Adam Sanders, Shane McAnally, Trent Willmon, Cole Taylor and others. Because Blake is now a multimedia celebrity, VIP guests such as Today show host Hoda Kotb were also in attendance.

The outside patio of Losers Bar in Midtown was packed with hundreds, filling the parking lot below the deck. Blake stood beneath fans (the electric kind) and sipped away on his cold Bud Light while the songwriters behind the hits got their moment in the spotlight. 

Wade Kirby and Philbilly (Phil O’Donnell) received their plaques and recognition for penning “Doin’ What She Likes,” followed by Andrew Dorff, Tommy Lee James and Josh Osborne for “My Eyes.” Andrew was also awarded for co-writing “Neon Light” with the help of Mark Irwin and Josh Kear. Songwriters Ryan Hurd and Brent Anderson had the meaningful honor of celebrating their first No. 1 song “Lonely Tonight.” Josh Osborne returned to the stage for “Sangria,” which he wrote with friends J.T. Harding and Old Dominion’s Trevor Rosen (who was in Georgia with the band).

After patiently waiting for nearly two hours, Blake thanked the key people in his life for the countless hours put into making his career what it is today, especially the 10 writers standing in his presence.

“I’m literally nothing and don’t even exist without these songwriters that write these songs for me,” Blake said. “It is important to me to continue to look for the best songs. It’s important to me that we don’t get stuck in a rut with our songs, so we keep pushing forward and looking for the best and the next thing to do. So thank you, songwriters, for pushing yourselves and giving me a chance to record your songs.”

Blake’s current single, “Gonna,” sits just outside the Top 10. His upcoming album, Reloaded: 20 #1 Hits, arrives Oct. 23.


Originally published as: "Blake Shelton Week Capped with Quintuple No. 1 Celebration"
http://www.countryweekly.com/news/blake-shelton-week-capped-quintuple-no-1-celebration

 

No. 1 Party: Back-To-Back Chart Toppers for Sam Hunt

September 24, 2015 SMACK Songs
14432005081719822240SH-Songwriters-9.23.15.jpg

Troy Stephenson • September 25, 2015 • 

Pictured (L-R): Shane McAnally, Josh Osborne, Sam Hunt, Zach Crowell, and Jerry Flowers.

It was a double celebration at The Crying Wolf in Nashville as ASCAP hosted a party to honor back-to-back (and the second and third consecutive) No. 1 songs for Sam Hunt yesterday (Sept. 23).

“Take Your Time” and “House Party” became Hunt’s second and third straight chart toppers (following his debut single “Leave The Night On”) and the songwriters and producers were recognized along with Hunt.

Mike Sistad of ASCAP first spoke about “Take Your Time,” which was written by Hunt, Josh Osborne and Shane McAnally and was produced by McAnally and Zach Crowell. Sistad stated that McAnally has been very busy since his first No. 1 back in 2010. Since then, he has become an accomplished songwriter and producer. “Take Your Time” is his 13th No. 1 song. Osborne has now been credited with eight No. 1 songs.

McAnally stated, “I could stand up here and say a million good things about Sam and Josh. It’s been fun to watch this from the very beginning. Nobody deserves this or even ‘gets it’ like Sam.”

Osborne added, “On top of all these accolades, it has been a lot of fun to write with Shane and Sam.”

Also taking time to offer congratulations were members of Universal Publishing, Three Mules Music and Black River Publishing.

Sistad returned to the stage to say that “House Party” marks Hunt’s fifth No. 1 song as a songwriter along with his third as an artist.

Pictured (front row, L-R): McAnally, Flowers, Hunt, Crowell Pictured (back row, L-R): ASCAP’s Mike Sistad, UMPG’s Kent Earls, Three Mules Music’s Chris Hunter, ASCAP’s Beth Brinker, UMG’s Royce Risser, Warner/Chappell’s Ryan Beuschel, Hunt’s manager Brad Belanger, and Combustion Music’s Chris Farren and Kenley Flynn

The hit was written by Hunt, Crowell and Jerry Flowers. Ashley Gorley of External Combustion Music texted in his words of thanks and congratulations while challenging Crowell to make a speech that lasted more than five seconds. The remark got a laugh from the crowd while Crowell, accepting for his second No. 1 as a songwriter, spoke for about 10 seconds while simply thanking everyone involved.

It was a special day for Flowers, as he celebrated his first No. 1. Flowers has been a part of Keith Urban’s band for 22 years. Flowers said the best part of being a writer on this song was that Urban now introduces him each night on stage as “the guy that wrote ‘House Party’ by Sam Hunt.”

Crowell and McAnally were producers on this song as well.

Universal Music’s Royce Risser spoke and said the has never seen a career take off like Hunt’s. Members of the Country Radio Broadcasters offered statistics of radio airplay for both songs before Hunt took to the microphone. He stated that there are so many people that are thankful for these songs. “The songs have provided jobs for the crew that is on the road with us. And each night on stage, I see that these songs are providing joy to the fans that come out to see us play.”

Pictured (front, L-R): Osborne, McAnally, Hunt, Crowell. Pictured (Back, L-R): ASCAP’s Mike Sistad, Black River’s Dave Pacula, UMPG’s Kent Earls, Three Mules Music’s Chris Hunter, UMG’s Royce Risser, Hunt’s manager Brad Belanger, and Smacktown Music’s Robert Carlton and Robin Palmer

Read more at http://www.musicrow.com/2015/09/no-1-party-back-to-back-chart-toppers-for-sam-hunt/

 

BWW Review: Moonshine: That Hee Haw Musical

September 22, 2015 SMACK Songs

by Kyle West

Last Friday, at a restaurant in downtown Dallas, the cast of Broadway's newest hit musical, MOONSHINE: THAT HEE HAW MUSICAL, celebrated their crowd-pleasing opening night amidst cocktails and cheers. Except it wasn't the celebration of their Broadway opening night they were celebrating: it was a party celebrating the press opening of Dallas Theatre Center's exciting new local production, currently being produced in hopes of soon landing on the Great White Way. Still, with the amount of talent on stage, and the brilliant writing, staging, costumes, set design, etc., this production felt a lot more "Big Apple" than "Big D."

As the title states, the show is (very loosely) based on the famous TV variety show launched in the 1970's, which I was altogether unfamiliar with before attending the musical. On stage, the show is set in fictional Kornfield Kounty, where small town sweetheart Misty Mae yearns to see what's beyond the cornfields. As she pursues her dreams, Misty Mae leaves behind her childhood love, Bucky Jr., as well as her dear Grandpa, and the rest of her tight-knit community in search of brighter lights and a bigger city. However, urban life isn't exactly what she expects. Although Misty Mae is "too strong to go home, [but] too sweet to get a tramp stamp," she soon returns to Kornfield to show off her cute, new city-beau, Gordy. Gordy quickly learns that his smooth style clashes with the Kounty's backwoods ways (where "everyone here fits in everyone here"), and Misty Mae finds herself torn between her past and present. Yes, some of the plot feels predictable, but it's a hilarious journey with plenty of twists and turns to keep even the most jaded audience member thoroughly entertained.

The show is packed with impeccable performances, but Rose Hemingway's performance as Misty Mae is star-making. Hemingway, who recently starred opposite Daniel Radcliff (and later Darren Criss, followed by Nick Jonas) in Broadway's HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS WITHOUT REALLY TRYING, has the beautiful girl-next-door looks, a stunning voice, and some kick-ass comedic chops to boot. Her role demands the skill to make the audience laugh, cry...and then laugh until you cry - and Hemingway works every moment with utter perfection. Even when she is simply reacting to her scene partners, her subtext displays as much power as the strongest notes from her best ballads.

Sharing Hemingway's spotlight is Justin Guarini (of American Idol fame). Guarini plays Misty Mae's city-slick boyfriend Gordy, who has "teeth so white they can join a country club." Although Guarini's comedic timing is often weak compared to that of his scene partner, his rich vocals are worth the price of admission. Even the over-the-top nature of his signature song in the show, "Misty," can even be overlooked because of the skill with which it is sung.

To complete the show's love triangle, Ken Clark is endearing as Bucky Jr. Playing the man who took what he had for granted until it was gone, he shines in the moments of vulnerability, as in his act one song, "Okay."

MOONSHINE's supporting cast deserves kudos, too: P.J. Benjamin (who played The Wizard in WICKED for several years) adds sweet, sincere heart to Grandpa. Ryah Nixon (a Dolly Parton/Megan Hilty doppelganger) has just what it takes to pull off a strong, fun, bosom buddy as Misty Mae's best friend, Lulu. And, as Moutaineers #1 and #2 (the untitled narrators of the show), Aaron Ramey and Rob Morrison keep the audience rolling in the aisles with their musical wit. But it's Kevin Cahoon (Jr. Jr.) who steals many of the hilarious scenes with his deadpan humor and perfect timing. Cahoon's never-ending one-liners are perfectly placed to uproarious effect, at times stopping the show. His act two song, "By The End Of This Song," which he performs with Ms. Nixon, is one of the evening's many highlights.

Frankly, it's impressive that the creative team has built such a seamless show with only a handful of preview performances under their belt. Director Gary Griffin is a musical comedy genius who keeps the show rolling at full speed. Choreographer Dennis Jones takes the somewhat small ensemble and makes exciting, full-scale (and comical) Broadway production numbers. It's likely that a few moments in the show may need updating (for example, adding some independence to Misty Mae's character, perhaps?), but Robert Horn (book), Brandy Clark and Shane McAnally (music and lyrics) have conceived one of the warmest and funniest productions in recent years. The show is so jam-packed with humor that you may miss one or two jokes while you're guffawing over the pun that came before.

MOONSHINE: THAT HEE HAW MUSICAL might sound like a redneck musical review, but the show is pure glee from start to finish. Be sure to grab a ticket soon, so you can finally be in the know of an up and coming hit before your friends in New York! MOONSHINE runs at the Wyly Theatre through October 11th. Visit www.DallasTheatreCenter.orgfor more information.

All photos courtesy of Dallas Theatre Center


http://www.broadwayworld.com/dallas/article/BWW-Review-MOONSHINE-THAT-HEE-HAW-MUSICAL-at-Dallas-Theatre-Centre-20150922

 

Brandy Clark & Shane McAnally on 'Moonshine'

September 15, 2015 SMACK Songs
Brandy Clark and Shane McAnally

Brandy Clark and Shane McAnally

by Jon Caramanica NY Times Sept. 14, 2015

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/09/15/theater/brandy-clark-and-shane-mcanally-on-moonshine-that-hee-haw-musical.html?_r=1&referrer

DALLAS — Brandy Clark and Shane McAnally sat across from each other at one end of a long conference table in a long conference room on a high-up floor at the Wyly Theater here. It was an early September morning, and they were tired.

The night before had been the first full dress rehearsal of “Moonshine: That Hee Haw Musical,” for which they had been writing songs since 2013 — an extension of the long working relationship that has made them two of the most in-demand and disruptive songwriters in country music.

For six weeks they had been at the Dallas Theater Center fine-tuning in advance of this Friday’s opening. Generally, though, their work takes place 650 miles to the northeast in Nashville, where “musical” is a four-letter word.

“I remember a big country star,” Mr. McAnally said — he turned toward Ms. Clark and whispered, “You know who I’m talking about, but I’m not going to throw him under the bus,” before continuing – “said that he hated ‘Mama’s Broken Heart’ and ‘Better Dig Two’ because they sounded like musicals.”

Ms. Clark giggled.

In 2013, "Mama's Broken Heart," about a woman losing her grip after losing her other half, was a big hit for Miranda Lambert, reaching No. 2 on Billboard's hot country songs chart. And the grim tale of toxic love "Better Dig Two" hit No. 1, putting the Band Perry on the map.

Nashvile cognoscenti rever Ms. Clark and Mr. McAnally for songs like these, with their pointillistic detail and emotional arcs that don't neatly resolve. And over the past few years, as a pair of convention-tweakers in a town in thrall to its conventions, they've had a meaningful influence, thanks especially to their work with the upstart Kacey Musgraves, and to Ms. Clark's burgeoning solo career. (She released her debut album, "12 Stories," in 2013.)

As country music progressives and sometime heretics, they were ideal candidates to take on musical theater. "We just naturally lean toward saying things that are so image-based that it lends itself to theater," Mr. McAnally said. (Both are gay, a Nashville rarity but a musical-theater shrug.)

Their brand of mild redneck revisionism is central to "Moonshine," a musical in the key of "Hee Haw," the television variety show that during its run from 1969 to 1992 painted a fun-house version of rural America, lowbrow but knowing. (Reruns are on the RFD network.)

"Moonshine" dates to 2011, when the Opry Entertainment Group wanted to extend the "Hee Haw" franchise. It hired Robert Horn to write the book for a musical based on the "Hee Haw" world, and began a search for songwriters to imbue it with genuine country authority. Ms. Clark and Mr. McAnally were hired in early 2013. (Amusingly enough, "Hee Haw" itself was developed not in Nashville but by Canadians."  

The musical needed to be “tender and honest, while also acknowledging flaws and personal differences,” said Steve Buchanan, president of the Opry Entertainment Group, which owns “Hee Haw.” He added, “We say, ‘Laugh with, not at.’ ”

The story line focuses on doe-eyed Misty Mae (Rose Hemingway), who flees her home in tiny Kornfield Kounty — and her childhood love, Bucky Jr. (Ken Clark) — for life in the big city of Tampa. There, she falls under the spell of Gordy (Justin Guarini), a slickster with bad intentions. Together, they return to Kornfield Kounty, where true love and true faith prevail.

Like Ms. Clark and Mr. McAnally’s best songs, “Moonshine” tweaks rural pieties and stereotypes. Kornfield Kounty, the same rural anywhere that was the setting of “Hee Haw,” is home to a moonshine-selling vixen, a wisdom-spouting simpleton, a genial but wise elder and more, but they all play their roles with a wink. (“We’re all straight, and we’re all white,” the opening number goes.)

Some character names derive from “Hee Haw,” as do some signature gestures, like the one in which heads poke up out of a cornfield to tell a joke. (Both “Moonshine” and “Hee Haw” merchandise is for sale in the lobby.)

Gary Griffin, the director of “Moonshine,” called “Hee Haw” “a burlesque fable about small-town life,” adding: “Burlesque doesn’t have to be cheap. It can have logic and sophistication, but it allows us to laugh at things that are base level.” (He is one of several Broadway fixtures working on “Moonshine,” a list that includes the Tony-winning orchestrator Stephen Oremus.)

Dallas Theater Center, which has lately helped develop new musicals with an eye on New York, agreed last year to stage “Moonshine,” producing it with Opry Entertainment and Fox Theatricals. Kevin Moriarty, the theater’s artistic director, sees Ms. Clark and Mr. McAnally in the Tin Pan Alley tradition of bottom-up collaborators, not top-down dictators.

The music of “Moonshine” feels very much of the Clark-McAnally oeuvre. Country music hasn’t always been at home in musical theater — think Roger Miller’s “Big River” or Dolly Parton’s “9 to 5,” but not much else — though in the age of jukebox musicals and “Hamilton,” a show steered by pop-music natives may be the next logical step.

“If this project works at whatever level — if Brandy and Shane want to make more theater pieces; if musical-theater audiences don’t say, ‘This is not my music’; if people buy tickets,” Mr. Moriarty said, “it absolutely could be an important step forward for the art form.”

The musical needed to be “tender and honest, while also acknowledging flaws and personal differences,” said Steve Buchanan, president of the Opry Entertainment Group, which owns “Hee Haw.” He added, “We say, ‘Laugh with, not at.’ ”

The story line focuses on doe-eyed Misty Mae (Rose Hemingway), who flees her home in tiny Kornfield Kounty — and her childhood love, Bucky Jr. (Ken Clark) — for life in the big city of Tampa. There, she falls under the spell of Gordy (Justin Guarini), a slickster with bad intentions. Together, they return to Kornfield Kounty, where true love and true faith prevail.

Like Ms. Clark and Mr. McAnally’s best songs, “Moonshine” tweaks rural pieties and stereotypes. Kornfield Kounty, the same rural anywhere that was the setting of “Hee Haw,” is home to a moonshine-selling vixen, a wisdom-spouting simpleton, a genial but wise elder and more, but they all play their roles with a wink. (“We’re all straight, and we’re all white,” the opening number goes.)

Some character names derive from “Hee Haw,” as do some signature gestures, like the one in which heads poke up out of a cornfield to tell a joke. (Both “Moonshine” and “Hee Haw” merchandise is for sale in the lobby.)

Gary Griffin, the director of “Moonshine,” called “Hee Haw” “a burlesque fable about small-town life,” adding: “Burlesque doesn’t have to be cheap. It can have logic and sophistication, but it allows us to laugh at things that are base level.” (He is one of several Broadway fixtures working on “Moonshine,” a list that includes the Tony-winning orchestrator Stephen Oremus.)

Dallas Theater Center, which has lately helped develop new musicals with an eye on New York, agreed last year to stage “Moonshine,” producing it with Opry Entertainment and Fox Theatricals. Kevin Moriarty, the theater’s artistic director, sees Ms. Clark and Mr. McAnally in the Tin Pan Alley tradition of bottom-up collaborators, not top-down dictators.

The music of “Moonshine” feels very much of the Clark-McAnally oeuvre. Country music hasn’t always been at home in musical theater — think Roger Miller’s “Big River” or Dolly Parton’s “9 to 5,” but not much else — though in the age of jukebox musicals and “Hamilton,” a show steered by pop-music natives may be the next logical step.

“If this project works at whatever level — if Brandy and Shane want to make more theater pieces; if musical-theater audiences don’t say, ‘This is not my music’; if people buy tickets,” Mr. Moriarty said, “it absolutely could be an important step forward for the art form.”

For six months, the two songwriters, who had never worked on a musical before, set aside Mondays to focus exclusively on “Moonshine,” a shift from the sort of for-hire songwriting that fills most of the rest of their work lives. Here, they were being asked to help invent the characters, adding shading with each new number. (Early versions of “Moonshine” included songs drawn from “Hee Haw,” like “Gloom, Despair and Agony on Me.” They are gone now.)

They were especially drawn to Lulu (Ryah Nixon), Misty Mae’s brassy moonshine-selling cousin, who drives some of the biggest twists in the show. Side characters are something of a Clark-McAnally specialty, especially since for years, before the two were in demand, they wrote songs for “this abstract artist,” Mr. McAnally said.
 

“We have a big stack of songs that no one would touch because this artist that we made up is this 40-year-old lesbian,” he said, as they both broke down laughing. “Thank God Brandy ended up making a record.”

Nashville songwriting is partly a numbers game, with an emphasis on high productivity and complete packages, the opposite of the endless revision required of a Broadway-aimed musical. But efficiency is a boon here, especially when late-game revisions require whole new songs on the fly. In fact, Ms. Clark and Mr. McAnally wrote the closing bit for the show’s narrators on the Saturday before the first preview, via text message.

Broadway veterans like Mr. Guarini have been impressed. “It will take some of the most wonderful songwriters a week” to write a song from scratch, he said. “With Brandy and Shane, it’s a half-hour.”

A version of this article appears in print on September 15, 2015, on page C1 of the New York edition with the headline: ‘Hee Haw,’ the Musical. Order Reprints|  Today's Paper|Subscribe

 

Shane McAnally vs. Shane McAnally: CMA Nominations 2015

September 10, 2015 SMACK Songs

SHANE McANALLY VS. SHANE McANALLY TAKES CENTER STAGE AT CMA AWARDS

Hit Songwriter and Producer Earns Four Nominations Including Two in Song of the Year Category, Impacts Single and Album of the Year at the 49th Annual Awards Show


NASHVILLE, Tenn. – (Sept. 9, 2015) – Shane McAnally pulled off a rare, if not unprecedented feat, Wednesday morning when he was nominated for four CMA Awards – twice in the Song of the Year category (Kenny Chesney’s “American Kids” and Sam Hunt’s “Take Your Time”), Single of the Year for “Take Your Time” as a producer and Album of the Year for Kacey Musgraves’ Pageant Material (as a producer) and unofficially squares off with himself for Song of the Year for the 49th Annual CMA Awards.

The hit songwriter and producer reached a number of milestones with his four nominations. He joins Alan Jackson as the only songwriters to have two of his songs compete in the Song of the Year category in different years. He won the 2014 CMA Song of the Year for co-writing Kacey Musgraves’ “Follow Your Arrow with Musgraves and Brandy Clark.

“Considering the amount of amazing music that was made this past year, I am so honored that we are getting this sort of love from the CMA this morning,” McAnally said. “I am so excited for these artists and their teams and still can’t believe this is my life.”

McAnally also was previously nominated twice in the Song category when Kacey Musgraves’ “Merry Go Round” and Miranda Lambert’s “Mama’s Broken Heart” were nominated in 2013. The Song of the Year nominations put McAnally in some fairly rare company in CMA history. He’s now among the awards’ most-nominated songwriters with five songs awarded nominations. Jackson and Bob McDill have written seven, Bobby Braddock, Vince Gill and Brad Paisley have six, and McAnally is tied with Don Schlitz with five. He has a total of nine career nominations.


McAnally also is up for a trophy as producer on Hunt’s single “Take Your Time” with Zach Crowell and Musgraves’ album Pageant Material with Musgraves and Luke Laird.  “American Kids,” a No. 1 song that served as the thematic launching point for Chesney’s The Big Revival album and tour, also is nominated in this category, but the award only goes to the performer and producer.

McAnally is one of Music Row’s most popular songwriters with cuts recorded by many top stars, including Tim McGraw, Carrie Underwood, Keith Urban and Darius Rucker. He and Kacey Musgraves co-produced her album Pageant Material, released earlier this year with Laird and is at work on Old Dominion’s first release, Meat and Candy, for RCA Records. He is currently serving as lyricist and composer for the Dallas-based show Moonshine: That Hee Haw Musical, which runs at The Dallas Theater Center through the Fall. 

 

First Look at Moonshine: That Hee Haw Musical

July 31, 2015 SMACK Songs

Dallas Theater Center announced today complete details for the world premiere of MOONSHINE: That Hee Haw Musical, a new musical comedy with music and lyrics by award-winning songwriters Brandy Clark and Shane McAnally and a book by Robert Horn. MOONSHINE: That Hee Haw Musical begins previews on Wednesday, September 2 and runs through October 11, with press opening on Friday, September 18. Tickets for MOONSHINE: That Hee Haw Musical are on sale now at www.DallasTheaterCenter.org.

 

"DTC is thrilled to launch our 2015-16 season with this hilarious world premiere musical," said DTC Artistic Director Kevin Moriarty. "Creating and nurturing new work is at the center of our mission at DTC. MOONSHINE is a brand new, funny, smart musical created by a team of artists who are at the center of contemporary country music in Nashville and Broadway musical theater."

Hilarious and downright irreverent, MOONSHINE: That Hee Haw Musical distills the spirit of an iconic television series and bottles it into an original musical comedy! Set in present-day Kornfield Kounty, this highly anticipated show introduces a new generation of irresistible characters as it tells the story of Misty Mae, the ultimate hometown girl who heads out to follow her dreams in the big city... of Tampa. When she returns home to introduce her slick city-boy beau to her friends and family, everything goes haywire! Featuring an original score by Grammy® Best New Artist nominee Brandy Clark and Grammy® Award winning songwriter/producer Shane McAnally (two of today's most critically acclaimed country music singer/songwriters), a book by Robert Horn, direction by Gary Griffin, choreography by Denis Jones and orchestrations by Tony® and Grammy® Award winner Stephen Oremus, MOONSHINE: That Hee Haw Musical gets the Broadway treatment with its eagerly awaited world premiere at DTC.

"We're so thrilled to get to debut MOONSHINE in Dallas, a city that we both love so much," said Clark and McAnally. "The process of writing a musical is new for us, but we're having so much fun and can't wait for audiences to get to see what we've been working on with this fantastic team."

Ken Clark; Justin Guarini, of American Idol fame; Rose Hemingway from the Tony Award®-nominated How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying; and Ryah Nixon all make their DTC debuts as the leads of this knock-out cast. Also making their DTC debuts are Mackenzie Bell; P. J. Benjamin; Kevin Cahoon; Travis Kirk Coombs; Katherine McMillan; Harris Milgrim; Rob Morrison; Adam Perry; Aaron Ramey; and Jonalyn Saxer. DTC alums John Campione (LES MISERABLES) and Julie Johnson (Sense and Sensibility; A Christmas Carol, The Rocky Horror Show and Cabaret) round out the cast.

Kornfield Kounty is brought to life by the creative and design team including David Bova (Wig Desing), Tony® Award-winner John Lee Beatty (Set Design), Mara Blumenfeld (Costume Design), Philip Rosenberg (Lighting Design), Tony® Award-winner John Shivers (Sound Design) and Tara Rubin (Casting). Beatty's set reaches out to the audience and takes them on a journey that they soon won't forget. MOONSHINE: That Hee Haw Musical is a story about community and it wouldn't be a community without the musicians on stage as a part of Kornfield Kounty as well. Musicians include Dominick Amendum (Conductor/Piano), Steve Bartosik (Drums/Percussion), Bob Baxmeyer (Steeles, Mandolin, Banjo), Peggy Honea (Upright Bass), John Lee (Guitar), and Dale Morris Jr. (Fiddle).

Tickets for MOONSHINE: That Hee Haw Musical are on sale now. Ticket prices start at $18 and are available online at www.DallasTheaterCenter.org or by phone at (214) 880-0202. All performances of MOONSHINE: That Hee Haw Musical will take place at the Wyly Theatre, 2400 Flora Street, where it runs Sept. 2 - Oct. 11, 2015. MOONSHINE: That Hee Haw Musical begins previews on Wednesday, Sept. 2 at 7:30pm with a Pay-What-You-Can performance. The press opening will take place on Friday, Sept. 18 at 8:00pm. DTC's Come Early sponsored by Wells Fargo will take place one hour before every performance and will be led by a member of the MOONSHINE: That Hee Haw Musical team. Patrons will have the opportunity to learn about the play prior to viewing the production. DTC's Stay Late presented by Dr Pepper Snapple will take place after each performance and will be led by Julie Johnson. Patrons will have the opportunity to engage with artists, learn about the production and share insights about the play in a lively discussion. Details for Come Early and Stay Late are available online.

Dallas Theater Center gratefully acknowledges Executive Producing Partners brierley+partners, Sidley Austin LLP, and Dallas Tourism Public Improvement District; and Assistant Producing Partner Lucchese Boots. MOONSHINE: That Hee Haw Musical is a recipient of an Edgerton Foundation New Play Award and a presentation of the Kimberley and Scott Sheffield Musical Theater Series.

Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/article/Photo-Flash-First-Look-at-Cast-of-MOONSHINE-THAT-HEE-HAW-MUSICAL-New-Production-Details-Announced-20150731

 

'Pageant Material' Debuts at No. 1 on Billboard Charts

July 1, 2015 SMACK Songs
14400879901843571723Kacey_Musgraves_-_Pageant_Material__Official_Album_Cover_.png

Nashville singer/songwriter Kacey Musgraves’ critically acclaimed sophomore album Pageant Material debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard country albums chart with 54,752 units sold.  Pageant Material is the follow-up to her Grammy, ACM and CMA award winning debut album Same Trailer Different Park which also debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard country albums chart.  Kacey co-wrote all of the tracks on Pageant Material as well as co-produced with Shane McAnally and Luke Laird.

Pageant Material has received critical acclaim including:

“From beginning to end, it’s an absolute charmer. Every pretty melody, every sweet tart lyric, every vocal and instrumental flourish…they definitely earn her… a 4.0”

American Songwriter – 4 out of 5 stars

“Musgraves confirms her emergence as one of Nashville’s boldest, most effective artists.”

Associated Press

“This is an even better album than her last, with more consistency and variety.”

Billboard – 4.5 out of 5 stars

“…excellent new album…”

No Depression

“Somebody find a tiara: Country has an edgy new queen.”

People

“… more calculated and confident, intent on both courting and bending the mainstream with wit and timeless arrangements.”

Rolling Stone – 45 Best Albums of 2015 So Far

“…Pageant Material, her understated sophomore masterpiece.”

Spin – 9 out of 10 stars

Kacey’s performance on NPR’s Tiny Desk Concert series will air on August 17. On August 27, she will kick off The Kacey Musgraves Country & Western Rhinestone Revue in Atlanta, Georgia.  For a full list of tour dates visit www.kaceymusgraves.com.

Read more at http://www.umgnashville.com/news/kacey-musgraves-pageant-material-debuts-no-1-on-billboard-country-albums-chart/

 

No. 1 Party: ‘Say You Do’

June 16, 2015 SMACK Songs
Shane McAnally, Trevor Rosen, Matthew Ramsey, Dierks Bentley

Shane McAnally, Trevor Rosen, Matthew Ramsey, Dierks Bentley

No. 1 Party: ‘Say You Do’

Article by Sarah Skates at Music Row Magazine

 

 

CMA Music Fest may be over, but the industry keeps on partying. Yesterday (June 15) ASCAPhosted a No. 1 party for Dierks Bentley’s “Say You Do.” Immediately afterward, his UMG Nashville labelmate Kacey Musgraves celebrated her new album with a listening party at Play, but that’s another story.

“Say You Do” is Bentley’s 13th career No. 1, and the first one he didn’t write. Accordingly, he thanked his label team and album executive producer Arturo Buenahora for conducting an extensive song search for Riser. This is the third No. 1 from the project. The title track and follow-up single went to radio yesterday.

“Say You Do” was written by Shane McAnally, Trevor Rosen and Matthew Ramsey. All three thanked Bentley for his devotion to the craft of songwriting and for being open to cutting outside songs when he is such a talented writer himself.

While McAnally was marking his eleventh No. 1 at the party, he was also basking in a twelfth charttopper—as a co-writer on Kenny Chesney’s “Wild Child” which hit No. 1 yesterday.

Old Dominion bandmates Ramsey and Rosen were toasting their first and second No. 1s, respectively. In concert, the band performs “Say You Do” and have loved the thrill of fans singing it back to them.

Rosen thanked McAnally for floating him with a monthly draw when he was between publishing deals. The no-strings-attached deal evolved into their publishing relationship. “I can’t even believe I get to be a part of this,” said Rosen.

ASCAP’s Mike Sistad led the ceremony. Publishers Music Of RPM, Rehits Music, SMACKSongs, Sonic Geo Music and Universal Music Publishing were on hand to congratulate the group. “I stand in awe of your talent,” saluted Rehits’ Ree Guyer Buchanan. UMPG’s Cyndi Forman recalled loving the song so much she played the work tape over and over. Mike Dungan represented UMG Nashville. Charlie Monk spoke on behalf of the CRB. Riser producer Ross Coppermanwas there to celebrate as well.

Ramsey recalled Sistad’s support early in his career. “Mike heard a glimmer in there,” he said. The PRO rep gave him some valuable advice which he took to heart: “Nobody works harder at this than you—except your wife.”

Ramsey also received words of wisdom from his grandfather before he moved to Nashville, who told him “to get lost on purpose.” In Ramsey’s early days he would drive around exploring the city.

He’s still following that advice, but in a more metaphorical way. When McAnally showed up to write what would become “Say You Do,” he was working with the lines “Say you might/ For tonight,” but didn’t know where the lyrics were going. They decided to get lost on purpose and find out. Turns out it led straight to No. 1.


Read more at http://www.musicrow.com/2015/06/no-1-party-say-you-do-writers-find-hit-by-getting-lost/

 

Josh Osborne Signs With SMACKSongs As Partner

June 8, 2015 SMACK Songs
(L-R): SMACKSongs Creative Manager Robert Carlton, Kobalt Music Group Senior VP Whitney Daane, Josh Osborne, SMACKSongs Creative Director Robin Palmer, Shane McAnally, attorney Jason Turner, ASCAP Nashville VP Michael Martin and attorney Jordan Kell…

(L-R): SMACKSongs Creative Manager Robert Carlton, Kobalt Music Group Senior VP Whitney Daane, Josh Osborne, SMACKSongs Creative Director Robin Palmer, Shane McAnally, attorney Jason Turner, ASCAP Nashville VP Michael Martin and attorney Jordan Keller. Photo: Jason Krupek

SMACKSongs President and CEO Shane McAnally announced the signing of songwriter Josh Osborne as a full partner of the music publisher today (June 8).

Osborne’s No. 1 songs include Kenny Chesney’s “Come Over,” Billy Currington’s “We Are Tonight,” Eli Young Band’s “Drunk Last Night” and Blake Shelton’s “My Eyes.” He is a frequent collaborator of Sam Hunt (co-writing his No. 1s “Leave the Night On” and “Take Your Time”) and Kacey Musgraves (co-writing the GRAMMY-winning “Merry Go Round”). Osborne currently has three songs on the charts: Chesney’s “Wild Child,” Jake Owen’s “Real Life” and Shelton’s “Sangria.”

Kobalt, an independent music publishing and global music rights management services company, will serve as the exclusive worldwide administrator for SMACKSongs.

“Since the first time working with Josh, we always knew we wanted to someday build a partnership beyond just writing songs together,” said McAnally. “This partnership marks a new beginning for SMACKSongs and we are excited to welcome him to the SMACK family.”

“Becoming a partner at SMACK is an incredible opportunity,” said Osborne. “To get to be a part of so many projects I believe in professionally, and so many people that I believe in personally, is more than anyone in our business could ask for.”

“The addition of Josh Osborne to the SMACKSongs family further solidifies its position as one of the hottest indie publishers on Music Row,” said Kobalt Senior Vice President of Creative (Nashville), Whitney Daane. “Kobalt is proud and privileged to be a part of the team!”

Founded in 2012 by McAnally, SMACKSongs represents the songwriting catalogs of McAnally, Osborne, Matthew McGinn and Jo Smith. It also represents the works of Matthew Ramsey and Trevor Rosen, members of Sony/RCA’s Old Dominion. The creative team consists of music publishing veterans Robin Palmer and Robert Carlton, with Michael Baum in business affairs and Tiffany Young running operations. SMACKSongs currently has 10 songs on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart.

Osborne was previously signed to Black River Publishing, which he joined in 2010.

Article from Music Row Magazine. http://www.musicrow.com/2015/06/hit-writer-josh-osborne-signs-with-smacksongs-as-partner/

 

Rolling Stone Songwriter Spotlight: Shane McAnally

February 19, 2015 SMACK Songs

Article by Sarah Rodman, Rolling Stone Country

When he was a kid, after school Shane McAnally used to wander around the parking lot outside the clothing store his mother and grandmother owned and entertain himself by making up songs. "I must've looked like a little weirdo," says the Texas native with a laugh, thinking back on his 9-year-old self, happily composing among the cars.

That little weirdo was on to something, however. McAnally grew up to be a Grammy, CMA and ACM award-winning songwriter who has had a hand in writing dozens of hit songs for artists like Miranda Lambert ("Mama's Broken Heart"), Kenny Chesney ("American Kids," "Somewhere With You," "Come Over"), the Band Perry ("Better Dig Two"), Sam Hunt ("Leave the Night On"), Lady Antebellum ("Downtown") and Kacey Musgraves ("Follow Your Arrow," "Merry Go Round").

Although his family was not musical, McAnally says, "I weirdly, innately understood how to do a verse, how to do a chorus." He even recalls one of the songs he wrote, a play on words called "Holly Would." "It was about a girl named Holly who 'would,' like 'Holly would make you crazy, Holly would make you cry.' The fact that I knew to do that, at 12 years old, I just feel like I was made to do this."

But McAnally didn't realize being a songwriter was a job, and as someone who admittedly enjoys being the center of attention, he pursued a career as an artist. He played clubs every weekend from the age of 12, appeared on Star Search at 14 singing Dan Hill's very adult "Sometimes When We Touch" ("Again, what was I doing? Why was I so serious? I did not win," he quips) and moving to Branson, Missouri, for a time at 15.

He landed in Nashville at 19 and tenaciously knocked on doors until he got a record deal, releasing his debut album in 2000 to the resounding sound of crickets. After a six-year stint in Hollywood, McAnally returned to Music City, this time as a songwriter, scoring the 2008 Lee Ann Womack cut "Last Call," and establishing his name in town in a new way. "When Kenny cut 'Somewhere With You,' I felt like somebody kicked the door down and then everything I was doing seemed to make sense," he says. Six years, and many hits, later he was crowned ACM Songwriter of the Year.

McAnally himself can scarcely believe his second-act luck. "I was songwriter who had a record deal that failed and who left town and came back," he says. "To me that seemed like a bigger mountain to climb than if I had just showed up when I was 33 and started brand new, because I had all this baggage of 'Oh, we've heard him, we know him, we've seen him.' It was a complete reinvention of what I was."

That luck extends from his professional life to his personal life where he has amassed a strong group of friends in the Nashville songwriting community including Josh Osborne, Musgraves, Hunt and Brandy Clark — with whom he is composing the music for an adaptation of Hee Haw.

"This sounds so cheesy but, I swear, sometimes I think, how did all of these songwriters end up being people that I would want to be related to?" McAnally says. "Thank God they all do the same thing so that we crossed paths. But it's much more than writing songs together, we're a family."

Rolling Stone Country asked the 10-time chart topper to tell the stories behind some of his most notable hits.

"American Kids," Kenny Chesney (Rodney Clawson, Luke Laird, McAnally)
"Rodney and Luke and I sat down and they are the two biggest songwriters in town, and I thought if we can't write a hit in this room, I just don't know," says McAnally of his co-writers who have dozens of Number One hits between them. "None of us had a hook or anything to go on. We sat there for two hours listening to grooves and I came across a page of titles way down in my notes and I started reading them off all together: 'Trailer Park, Truck Stop, Map Dots.' The guys had similar things and we all started digging through our notes for titles that went with that and that is why it feels like snapshots, because there wasn't a linear idea. It was more about feeling like you were watching a slide show."

McAnally says he sent the demo to Chesney in an e-mail but didn't hear back. In the interim, Little Big Town began working up the song. "I was in St. John with Kenny writing 'Wild Child' and on the plane home, he said, 'I feel like we have a lot of good songs, but we don't have a first single.' And he was looking through his e-mails and he was like, 'Oh, here's a song that you sent me a while back that I never listened to.'" McAnally says his heart sank. "He didn't get to the first chorus, he pulled his headphones off and said, 'This is the song, it's going to be the single, this is the song.'" McAnally nervously went to Little Big Town and, he says, "They were very gracious and said you have to let him have it."

"Leave the Night On," Sam Hunt (Hunt, McAnally and Josh Osborne) 
"It was a hook that Sam told me on the phone one day," he says of his most recent Number One. "I was like, you wrote a song called 'Leave the Night On Without Me'? I can't believe you would offer that hook to somebody else. I was being funny but I was mad," he admits. "He said, 'No, no I haven't written it; I just have an idea.' And I was like, 'Oh my God, thank you because I think that's the best lyric I've ever heard.' So we got with Josh Osborne and that was just a typical writing day. We were hashing it out and trying to find the phrasing and it went through some different phases, but that song is pretty close to the way it was written the day we wrote it."

"Merry Go Round," Kacey Musgraves (McAnally, Musgraves, Osborne)
"We were doing a writing trip in Texas for Kacey's first album and Josh and I went out early. My family lives close to where we were going and we were there for July 4th at my mom's house," McAnally says. "Her neighbor had a bunch of cars in the driveway that were blocking the way. And Josh asked my mom, 'What are all those cars next door?' And my mom said, 'I don’t know, Josh, they're selling Mary Kay or Mary Jane or something.' We were in the car trying to come up with every 'Mary' metaphor possible. But when we told Kacey we thought it was going to be a funny song she heard it differently and said, 'It feels like to me you're just talking about the routine of these small towns and how Mary represents everybody.' And that was where that song started."



Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/features/songwriter-spotlight-shane-mcanally-tells-stories-behind-the-hits-20150219#ixzz3fnvuhdIE 

Old Dominion Electrify at Sold-Out Nashville Concert

January 15, 2015 SMACK Songs

By Annie Reuter January 15, 2016 12:00 PM

A year can change everything, and this fact is not lost on Old Dominion.

The quintet celebrated their first No. 1 as a band Thursday night (Jan. 14) with “Break Up With Him” at Nashville’s Marathon Music Works, and shortly after played to a sold-out crowd. It was a night Old Dominion — made up of songwriters Matthew Ramsey, Trevor Rosen, Whit Sellers, Geoff Sprung and Brad Tursi — will likely never forget.

“So far 2016 is pretty damn cool,” frontman Ramsey said several songs in. “The first show we played in 2015 there were maybe 25 people there, so this is a welcomed sight.”

The band’s set included 20 songs, both their own and several No. 1 hits that members of the the band wrote for other artists, further showcasing their talents in the country genre. Their current single — the energetic “Snapback” — kicked off their performance and had the crowd dancing along before they segued effortlessly into slower jam “Shut Me Up.”

While their blend of country songwriting, rock guitar riffs and hip-hop beats kept the audience engaged, it was the sheer magnitude of hits they have written that at times was hard to fathom. Members of Old Dominion had a hand in writing Tyler Farr’s “A Guy Walks Into a Bar,” Kenny Chesney’s “Save It for a Rainy Day,” Dierks Bentley’s “Say You Do,” Blake Shelton’s “Sangria,” Sam Hunt’s “Ex to See” and Craig Morgan’s “Wake Up Lovin’ You,” all of which they played while putting their own signature sound on each track.

A band of friends, throughout their set each member was all smiles, frequently leaning up against each other for guitar interludes or sharing animated facial expressions in between each song. Their hometown show was even more special thanks to the fact that the crowd was filled with family and friends.

“Tonight’s a special night,” Ramsey said. “Not only are we in Nashville. Not only did we have a No. 1 party for one of our songs. But tonight, I believe is the first night that every single one of our mothers is in the crowd. Our mamas, we’ve been telling them that people show up when we play and they don’t believe us. So thanks for proving us right.”

While the nostalgic “Nowhere Fast” and “We Got It Right” showcased Old Dominion’s sensitive sides, their playfulness was shown throughout the evening, too. Tracks like the sexy “Wrong Turns” and “Dirt on a Road” amped up the crowd with catchy beats and bass parts alongside sweeping guitar interludes, while the island-esque “Said Nobody” and laid-back “Crazy Beautiful Sexy” continued to show their versatility. It was on their No. 1 single “Break Up with Him,” though, that had the entire venue singing along word for word. Their breakout hit and first No. 1 as a band, which was celebrated in that very room earlier that evening, no doubt held special meaning for Old Dominion.

“This has been a hell of a way to kickoff the year y’all,” Ramsey concluded. “Thanks for coming out.”

Maren Morris opened the night and impressed with songs off her self-titled EP. Tracks like the catchy “Drunk Girls Don’t Cry,” which tells a friend to say goodbye to a terrible guy, caught the audience’s attention while her earworm of a song, “80’s Mercedes” showcased Morris’ staying power. Tapped for Keith Urban‘s upcoming Ripcord Tour, Morris’ command of the stage was impressive. Meanwhile, her powerful storytelling came through with the incredibly honest “I Wish I Was” before her ethereal debut single “My Church” converted the packed venue into a church choir singalong.

Read More: Old Dominion Electrify at Sold-Out Nashville Concert | http://tasteofcountry.com/old-dominion-nashville-concert-2016/?trackback=tsmclip 

Kobalt Music Publishing Inks New Deal with Shane McAnally

January 13, 2015 SMACK Songs

Kobalt Music Publishing has welcomed ACM Songwriter of the Year 2014 Shane McAnally back to its fold in a new worldwide admin and creative services deal.

Covering all new works from July 2014, the deal also finds Kobalt retaining works from 2009-2012, which have been with the company from the start through an earlier admin deal). Additionally, the agreement covers all works from McAnally’s publishing company SMACKSongs, which represents writers including Jo Smith, Matt McGinn, and Matthew Ramsey.

McAnally said of the deal: “Kobalt’s model is one that is often imitated, but has yet to be perfected by anyone else. The combination of their incredible creative team along with the accuracy and reach of their collection methods, make them an undeniable perfect partner for me and the Smack family. We are all very excited to be working together again!”

Kobalt Senior VP, Creative (Nashville) Whitney Daane added: “The opportunity to work with Shane McAnally again, as well as to partner with the team at SMACKSongs, is fantastic. We started this journey with Shane in 2009, and to be a part of the profound impact he has had on contemporary country music and help him continue to expand his career as both a writer and producer is thrilling. His talent and passion for music are inspirational.”

Read more at http://www.musicrow.com/2015/01/kobalt-music-publishing-inks-new-deal-with-shane-mcanally/ 

 

 

 

SMACK Celebrates 3 Grammy Nominations

December 5, 2014 SMACK Songs

The nominees have been announced for the 2015 Grammy Awards that will take place February 8, 2015. The nominations include:

Best New Artist - Brandy Clark
Best Country Song - "American Kids" Rodney Clawson, Luke Laird & Shane McAnally
Best Country Album - "12 Stories" Brandy Clark

Spotify Honors Shane McAnally

November 3, 2014 SMACK Songs
Josh Osborne, Shane McAnally, Kacey Musgraves, Dierks Bentley, Jake Owen

Josh Osborne, Shane McAnally, Kacey Musgraves, Dierks Bentley, Jake Owen

On November 2nd, Spotify took over The Rosewall in Nashville for a special night to honor the craft of songwriting. Over 150 industry and influencer guests came out to celebrate Spotify and kick off CMA Week. The night was curated by Shane McAnally and included a live show with conversation about song’s Shane has written. The timing could not have been more perfect with Shane’s current success on the charts! 

Shane was introduced by Cody Allen from CMT followed by live performances by Shane & Josh Osborne, Jake Owen, Kacey Musgraves and Dierks Bentley. 

But why stop there?  Spotify has released a playlist of Shane’s backstories, anecdotes, demos and personal commentary from the featured artists along with their own hit tracks.  Spotify has called it “SongCraft”, and hope it becomes the first of many episodes honoring the art of the song.

To get Shane’s Inspirations Playlist as well, text “SpotifyCMA” to 444999.

Read more at http://spotify.tumblr.com/post/101765705872/on-november-2nd-spotify-took-over-the-rosewall-in 

Kenny Chesney Returns With "American Kids"

August 28, 2014 SMACK Songs

Lead Single from Upcoming Project Celebrates How We Live


Kenny Chesney knew - when he took a year off - when he came back, he wanted his music to hit a whole new level; but he also wanted to make sure he was speaking to the people who have always invested their lives in his music. The result? "American Kids," a multi-tempo celebration of the spirit of young America that packs not one, but two hooks and an innovative lyrical scan. 

"When I heard it, I knew I was gonna cut it," says the man whose won 4 consecutive Academy of Country Music and 4 Country Music Association Entertainer of the Year Awards. "It was unlike anything I'd ever heard - and I listen to a lot of songs. The rhythms, the images, the way the melody moved... It just grabs you and holds on, but even more importantly, it feels really good." 

Written by Rodney Clawson, Luke Laird and Shane McAnally, Chesney heard the song on a writing trip with McAnally, whose also written Chesney's #1s "Come Over" and "Somewhere With You." While evoking iconics of a certain generation, the song also embraces the in-the-moment lifestyle of today's teens and 20-somethings with complete abandon. And with a chorus that contains the line - "we're all a little messed up, but we're all alright" -- Chesney once again brings the indomitability of the human spirit to the forefront. 

"Hey, life is hard," Chesney says. "People work long hours, have all kinds of stuff going on in their personal lives. But if there's one thing I've seen over the last ten years, looking out at the faces in the crowd: you can't keep my fans down. These are people who no matter what are in love with life, and they're gonna find the good times no matter what. 

"It's not a perfect world. We are all a little screwed up, but we're all okay. I love the idea of the screw up as part of it, because honestly it makes the parts that're great, that much better. You appreciate those things that much more." 

Again co-producing with Buddy Cannon, Chesney is putting the finishing touches on his 16th studio release. With an emphasis on great songs, pushing the boundaries without betraying who he is, the man deemed "The King of the Road" by The Wall Street Journal is looking forward to playing a lot of the new songs on the road in 2015. 

SMACKSongs Signs Matthew Ramsey

August 27, 2014 SMACK Songs
Mike Sistad (ASCAP), Robin Palmer (SMACKSongs), Matthew Ramsey, Shane McAnally (SMACKSongs), Robert Carlton (SMACKSongs 

Mike Sistad (ASCAP), Robin Palmer (SMACKSongs), Matthew Ramsey, Shane McAnally (SMACKSongs), Robert Carlton (SMACKSongs 

Shane McAnally‘s publishing company, SMACKSongs, has signed ASCAP songwriter and artist Matthew Ramsey. Ramsey is the lead singer of the Nashville-based band Old Dominion.

He has penned songs for The Band Perry (“Chainsaw”), Craig Morgan (“Wake Up Lovin’ You”), Dierks Bentley (“Say You Do”), Kenny Chesney and Luke Bryan. Old Dominion’s recently released single, “Shut Me Up,” co-written by Ramsey, has exceeded one million streams on Spotify.

 

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