CMT Crossroads is crossing up its playbook for an event in downtown Nashville on June 4 that will feature headliner Brooks & Dunn teaming with a number of country artists.
Instead of collaborating with a cross-genre artist—as is the norm on CMT Crossroads—Ronnie Dunn and Kix Brooks will join forces with a number of stars featured on their recent Reboot album, including Brett Young, Cody Johnson, Jon Pardi, Luke Combs, Midland and Brandon Lancaster from LANCO.
Fans are invited to attend the CMT Crossroads taping on June 4 at the corner of 5th and Broadway in downtown Nashville. The taping begins at 8:30 p.m. CT. Fans should arrive early, as the event is standing-room only and entrance is on a first-come, first-served basis.
The hour-long show will will premiere on CMT on June 28 at 10 p.m. ET.
In addition to releasing their new No. 1 album, Brooks & Dunn have kept busy this year with a number of shows in Las Vegas as part of their residency with Reba McEntire. The duo will be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in the fall.
Eli Young Band scored its fourth No. 1 single as “Love Ain’t” ascended to the top of both the Billboard Country Airplay chart and Mediabase chart this week.
The emotionally charged tune, which was penned by Ross Copperman, Ashley Gorley, and Shane McAnally, is the band’s first No. 1 single since “Drunk Last Night” topped the charts more than five years ago in December 2013.
“Getting back here to the top again is a blessing that both country music fans and country radio have given us,” says EYB’s frontman Mike Eli. “We do not take this for granted. It’s a blessing that carries on to our families and our teams that have been behind us every single step of the way. We humbly thank you all for making this happen for us.”
The video for “Love Ain’t” follows the love story of Taylor Morris—an explosive ordnance disposal technician with the Navy who became a quadruple amputee after an explosion in Afghanistan in 2012—and his girlfriend of more than a decade, Danielle, who remained by Taylor’s side. The inspiring clip, which has more than 6 million views on YouTube, features personal videos of Taylor’s rehab, his 2013 homecoming in Cedar Falls, Iowa, and marriage to Danielle.
After scoring four Top 5 singles—including two No. 1 hits—with his 2016 No. 1 album, California Sunrise, Jon Pardi revealed that he will release his third studio album, Heartache Medication, on Sept. 27.
On June 3, Jon will ship the album’s title track to country radio as his lead single. Co-written by Jon, Barry Dean and Natalie Hemby, “Heartache Medication” finds the singer drowning his sorrows at a dive bar.
“The single ‘Heartache Medication’ has an ’80s George Strait ‘Fool Hearted Memory’ feel to it, and is something people can dance to,” says Jon. “That’s something I really wanted for this album. There really are no sad songs on this record—it covers a range of subjects, but is ultimately about moving on, and having a good time.”
Listen to “Heartache Medication” below.
In addition to the album and single, Jon will launch his Heartache Medication Tour with back-to-back shows at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium on Oct. 2 and 3, followed by additional stops in Milwaukee, Seattle, San Diego, Phoenix and more. Riley Green will serve as direct support.
Ticket pre-sale begins on May 28, with tickets to the general public going on sale on May 31. Every online ticket purchase will come with one Heartache Medication CD.
Heartache Medication Tour Dates
Oct. 01 | Nashville, TN | Ryman Auditorium
Oct. 02 | Nashville, TN | Ryman Auditorium
Oct. 04 | Minneapolis, MN | The Armory
Oct. 05 | Milwaukee, WI | Eagle’s Ballroom*
Oct. 10 | Oklahoma City, OK | The Criterion
Oct. 11 | Houston, TX | White Oak Music Hall
Oct. 12 | Helotes, TX | Floores Country Store*
Oct. 24 | Seattle, WA | Paramount Theatre
Oct. 25 | Boise, ID | Revolution Concert House and Event Center
Oct. 26 | Salt Lake City, UT | The Depot*
Oct. 31 | Phoenix, AZ | Comerica Theatre*
Nov. 1 | San Diego, CA | Cal Coast Credit Union Open Air Theatre*
Nov. 2 | Bakersfield, CA | Rabobank Theater
*Does not include Riley Green; support to be announced soon
Garth Brooks continues to achieve feats of Garthonian proportion with his current Stadium Tour.
photo by 8 Ten, Inc
On May 18, Garth performed in front of more than 75,000 fans at Pittsburgh’s Heinz Field, making it the biggest ticketed show in the history of the Steel City, according to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. The previous record was set during the Pitt vs. Penn State football game in 2016 with 69,983 tickets sold.
The Pittsburgh show follows Garth’s previously sold-out concerts in St. Louis, Glendale, Gainseville and Minneapolis (x2). Upcoming sold-out shows include Denver (June 8), Eugene (June 29) and Boise (July 20).
Garth’s two-plus-hour set in Pittsburgh featured more than 20 of his hits, as well as a few covers, including Bob Seger’s “Night Moves” and George Strait’s “Amarillo, By Morning.”
If the Academy of Country Music’s Industry Awards are any indication, Nashville is living up to its Music City moniker.
The Academy revealed the winners of the ACM Industry and Studio Recording Awards on May 20, and Nashville sites swept the three Venue of the Year categories: Ryman Auditorium (small capacity), Ascend Amphitheater (medium capacity) and Bridgestone Arena (large capacity).
The Nashville venues will be recognized during the 13th annual ACM Honors ceremony, an evening dedicated to the special honorees and off-camera category winners from the 54th ACM Awards on August 21 at the Ryman Auditorium.
Below is a complete list of the Industry and Studio Recording Award winners for the 54th Academy of Country Music Awards.
Industry Award Winners
Casino of the Year | Small Capacity: Choctaw Casino & Resort | Durant, Ok
Casino of the Year | Large Capacity: Mohegan Sun Arena | Uncasville, Ct
Don Romeo Talent Buyer of the Year: Nicole More | Wilson Events, Inc.
Festival of the Year: Faster Horses | Brooklyn, Mi
Nightclub of the Year: Joe’s on Weed St | Chicago, Il
Promoter of the Year: Ed Warm | Joe’s Bar
Venue of the Year | Small Capacity: Ryman Auditorium | Nashville, Tn
Venue of the Year | Medium Capacity: Ascend Amphitheater | Nashville, Tn
Venue of the Year | Large Capacity: Bridgestone Arena | Nashville, Tn
Studio Recording Award Winners
Bass Player of the Year | Glenn Worf
Drummer of the Year | Matt Chamberlain
Guitar Player of the Year | Derek Wells
Piano/Keyboards Player of the Year | Dave Cohen
Specialty Instrument(s) Player of the Year | Ilya Toshinskiy
Steel Guitar Player of the Year | Mike Johnson
Audio Engineer of the Year | F Reid Shippen
Producer of the Year | Jay Joyce
The Academy of Country Music Industry Awards are voted on by all professional members of the Academy. The Studio Recording Awards are voted on by professional members of the Academy classified in the artist-entertainer/musician-bandleader-instrumentalist categories and the producer-engineer-studio manager sub-category.
Travis Tritt was aboard his tour bus on May 18 when it was sideswiped during an auto accident that killed two people on Veterans Highway in Myrtle Beach, S.C.
After Travis performed a Friday evening (May 17) show in North Myrtle Beach, his bus was slightly damaged as it tried to avoid a crash caused by a driver going the wrong way. Two people died during the multi-vehicle crash at 3:30 a.m., while a third person sustained minor injuries.
According to police reports, a Jeep traveling in the wrong direction crashed into a Chevrolet truck head-on, killing the Jeep’s driver, Charles “Cody” Wade, 25, and a passenger in the truck, Tonda Cross, 61.
No one on Travis’ bus reported any injuries.
Travis posted a series of tweets moments after the accident, noting that “God was obviously watching over us tonight” and that he was “incredibly sad for those who lost their lives tonight.”
We sustained minor damage as we tried to avoid the crash site in front of us. Bus damage can be fixed, but lives cannot be replaced. I’m so incredibly sad for those who lost their lives tonight.
I’m told that two people were killed in tonight’s accident as the the result of someone who was obviously driving drunk or impaired. Just a sober reminder to everyone to never drive if you’ve been drinking or impaired in any way. Uber or Lyft is just a phone call away.
We only were sideswiped in tonight’s accident. It could’ve been so much worse. God was obviously watching over us tonight. I praise God for keeping us safe!
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – The City of Sparta, Tenn., and the Sparta Chamber of Commerce are hosting a “Welcome Home” celebration for local native and Lady Vol head basketball coach Kellie (Jolly) Harper on June 6 at the White County High School gymnasium.
The University of Tennessee Athletics Department is excited to be part of the festivities and will add a Big Orange element to the evening by making it one of its stops on the Summer of Smokey tour. Admission is free.
The event will highlight the return of Harper, who hails from Sparta and is a 1995 graduate of WCHS and a 1999 graduate of UT.
Doors open at 5:30 p.m., and the celebration will run until 7 p.m. There will be BBQ, snow cones and ice cream vendors on site.
At 5:30 p.m., fan activities will begin, featuring jersey try-ons, a prize wheel, drawings and appearances by Smokey and the UT spirit team. The Vol Shop will be on hand with merchandise, there will be UT Athletics posters and season ticket information available, and fans can take selfies with stand-up cut-outs.
The evening’s program begins at 6:15 and includes an introduction of Coach Harper, recognition from the mayor and remarks from Coach Harper via a question and answer session. The program is slated to conclude at 7 p.m.
Harper was a five-time AAU All-American in high school and went on to play point guard for the legendary Pat Summitt at UT from 1995-99, appearing in 132 games and helping the Lady Vols win NCAA National Championships in 1996, 1997 and 1998. She was part of a senior class that helped the Big Orange forge a 131-17 overall record as well as win two SEC regular season titles (1998, 1999) and three SEC Tournament crowns (1996, 1998, 1999).
On April 9, Harper became only the third Lady Vol head coach in the NCAA era of women’s basketball. She took the reins at Tennessee after six years of leading the Missouri State Lady Bears, capped by an impressive march to the 2019 Missouri Valley Conference Tournament title and magical run to the NCAA Sweet 16.
Carrie Underwood knows a thing or two about winning over the crowd—and judges—on American Idol.
After winning Season 4 of the reality competition in 2004, Carrie returned to the show during the Season 17 finale on May 19 to perform her new single, “Southbound.” Decked out in a colorful sequined dress, Carrie delivered a rousing performance of the new tune, prompting judges Katy Perry, Luke Bryan and Lionel Richie to get out of their seats to shake a leg.
Penned by Carrie, David Garcia and Josh Miller, “Southbound” is currently No. 35 on the Billboard Country Airplay chart after three weeks.
Wade Bowen scored one of the best albums of 2018 with the release of Solid Ground, an 11-song offering that was produced by Keith Gattis. The gritty collection of tunes—Wade co-wrote 10—serves as a love letter to his home state of Texas by incorporating many of his musical influences, everyone from Guy Clark to ZZ Top.
“This song has always been on the back burner for me waiting for an album,” says Wade. “I’ve loved this song since Sean McConnell and I wrote it. It was a tad too happy for the record for the original release but I feel it was maybe the best song on the album. Sometimes we have to cut our favorites to make the album make sense. I’m glad this song is finally being heard by the world. Love the lyrics and maybe my favorite melody I’ve ever had the pleasure writing.”
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – No. 12-seeded Tennessee came out on top, 2-0, in yet another pitcher’s duel against North Carolina in the NCAA Knoxville Regional final on Sunday to advance to the program’s 11th Super Regional.
Caylan Arnold spun a gem of a shutout in the circle, throwing 6.0 innings to pick up her 10th win of the season. In the seventh inning, the Orange and White called on Matty Moss to deliver one final shutout frame.
In the start, Arnold allowed just four hits and struck out six while Moss earned her fourth save of the year and fanned two of her three batters. The duo did not allow a runner to advance past second base.
At the plate, Tennessee was led by Kaili Phillips (2-for-2) and Aubrey Leach(2-for-3) who each totaled two hits while Ashley Morgan came up clutch in a key situation, drilling a two-RBI single to center field to give UT the lead.
The Lady Vols (42-15) went 4-1 on the weekend to advance to the Gainesville Super Regional where they will face the Florida Gators this coming weekend. To start SEC play back in March, UT took the series at Katie Seashole Pressly Stadium and looks to repeat for a tip to the 2019 Women’s College World Series.
After a quiet first inning, North Carolina moved runners into scoring position in the second and third frame. The Tarheels relied on a hit-by-pitch and bunt single to get runners on. In both situations, UNC then sacrifice bunted the runners to second but was held scoreless by UT.
Likewise, the Lady Vols moved runners into scoring position in the bottom of those two frames.
In the second stanza, Haley Bearden hit a one-out single to center and advanced to second on one of Phillips’ singles before the inning ended with a strikeout. Again, with one out in the third, Tennessee put runners on second and third thanks to back-to-back hits from Leach and Jenna Holcomb. The pair was left stranded as a strikeout and flyout to left were recorded.
In the fifth inning, the Lady Vols broke open the shutout, scoring two runs on two hits. Holcomb first reached base on a fielder’s choice and then advanced to second on Chelsea Seggern’s walk. With runners on first and second, Ashley Morgan roped a two-RBI double center field, giving Tennessee its first lead of the day.
It wasn’t until the top of the seventh inning that North Carolina put another runner in scoring position as Berlynne Delamora led off with a double. UT then turned to Moss for the save and the Greeneville, S.C., native delivered, retiring her three batters faced.
The Super Regional against Florida will either take place on Thursday-Saturday or Friday-Sunday. Details will be released once all Regional competition is finished. All updates will be posted to UTSports.com, Twitter (@Vol_Softball) and Facebook (Facebook.com/TennesseeSoftball).
Co-Head Coach Karen Weekly
Opening Statement:
“Well, I said it on the first day of the regional event…Just how proud I am to be a part of the University of Tennessee system and the athletic department and what a first class job they do sponsoring, putting on this event, hosting it. The compliments that we received from all the other teams that participated just really makes you proud and there’s a lot of people that are part of that, that never get any credit. You don’t see them, you don’t know their names, but I just want to give them a shout out because it makes me super proud to wear the orange and know how much work goes into everything that they do. Today, the whole day was just really, really tough, and we knew it was going to be that way. North Carolina has an exceptional softball team. This game all starts in the circle. Brittany Pickett is one of the best pitchers that we faced all year and our kids just battled. They just battled and battled and that was kind of our theme, just fight the fight, and just keep fighting. In the first game, I felt like we were getting to her in the seventh inning and just kind of ran out of time, and they just kept fighting and just really, really proud of them but ton of respect for North Carolina. They battled really hard too. It was a tough game for anybody to lose.”
On Caylan Arnold’s performance:
“She did and she’s been pitching really well lately. I don’t think she has the wins to show for it, but the last probably four or five outings I think, like she said, she’s back to her normal self and we need all of our pitchers to be at their best this time of year. I think you saw this weekend how we needed every single one of them at different points in time. When I think back to just not only today but we faced North Carolina three times now, and we gave up one run—the run today—and that’s a real credit to this pitching staff. When we needed it the most our backs were to the wall, and she gave us an awesome performance.”
On facing an SEC opponent in Super Regionals:
“We are kind of used to it. It’s the fourth year in a row that when you look at the pairings when they are announced on that Sunday night that we are matched up with an SEC opponent. So, I do not think it’s any surprise and it’s four for Florida too as a matter of fact. It is a familiar opponent, and I guess the if there is anything good about it, we played down there this year. So, all of our kids have been in that venue. They know what it is like. Nothing is going to be new and different. We had success down there. That is not something that we can puff out our chest about. It is going to be really, really tough, just like today was. I turned to somebody in the dugout in about the fifth inning and said, ‘welcome to postseason softball.’ This is what it’s all about, nail biter games that turned on one mistake.”
First Baseman Ashley Morgan
On her two-RBI double:
“I knew that we really needed these runs and I was just going to have to fight the entire at-bat. She was not giving anything, for the most part, and once I got two strikes, I knew that, hey, I was going have to foul off some pitches and I was going to have to drill the one she gave me, so that’s what happened. It felt good off the bat and when I was finally on second base, it felt great to know that we finally got some runs on the board and, you know, just seeing everyone in the dugout was awesome.”
On figuring out Brittany Pickett’s speed:
“Her speed was really good, and her movement was really great and especially her being a lefty, that was a different look that we’ve seen. So, I think we just kept fighting and finally got to her.”
Pitcher Caylan Arnold
On her performance:
“It was amazing. I’ve worked really hard this year to get back to feeling like myself and going out there and attacking and being dominant. To have my teammates behind me like that and to make such awesome plays like Kaitlin Parsons made, and she did absolutely amazing, and then have Kaili Phillips behind the plate working her butt off for me, that’s what really pushed me and what kept me going and what kept me fighting the way that I did for this team.”
On Kaitlin Parsons’ plays at second base:
“I mean, the first one that she made, I was just like, ‘wow, like that was amazing. That was awesome like holy crap.’ And then the second one I literally just squatted in the middle of the circle and was, I was just blown away because she just did such an awesome job. I know Chelsea came over and she’s like, ‘I know bud, I know. I know it’s just crazy, just get up.’ I was like what the heck, and she is just awesome. To see my team fighting like that, it just pushed me even more.”
North Carolina Head Coach Donna J. Papa
“I thought it was two really well-played games. I thought the defense was outstanding on both sides. When we looked at Game 1, with Brittany Pickett and Ashley Rogers, they pretty much had identical stats. And we came out on the winning end of that one. I thought Brittany did a great job in Game 2. We had opportunities in the game and didn’t get that hit, and they had an opportunity and Ashley Morgan came through and got a double and scored. The games were so well played, I thought, and when you have a 1-0 and a 2-0 game, it’s not a ton of offense, and it’s a lot of good pitching and good defense.”
On what fighting despite a loss means to the program:
“Yeah, I mean, you know, it was great. I mean, for our program, this is another step for us. This is the furthest we’ve ever gone. And to come out of the loser’s bracket after a tough, 1-0 game that Brittany, I thought, pitched well enough to win. And, you know, yesterday we said there’s no tomorrow unless you get it done today. And that was kind of what we just kept on doing and trying to, you know, stay in our moments and create our own opportunities. And this team is a very connected team. They have a lot of fun with each other. We had a great time. I, for the first time in my career, loved the lightning delay and the rain that we had with Ohio State because it gave us the opportunity in between the Longwood and Ohio State game to get a little bit of a break and these guys had a blast in the dugout. They’re just a very loose team and they truly care about one another. They spend a lot of time with one another, they love one another. I can’t say I’ve had other teams that are like this team in particular and a lot of the credit goes to our seniors Leah Murray, Berlynne Delamora, Destiny DeBerry and Kiani Ramsey. The four of them made a huge difference. They made a big commitment this summer with our team and investing in them and more in the culture than anything. It showed a lot of benefits for us because that’s half the battle. If you really like each other out on the field, you’re going to play great together regardless of if we don’t have big hitters, big home run hitters. We have a lot of speed and we kind of create chaos a little bit with our speed and our slappers and hopefully we’ll get some hits to help them. I mean, I’m just extremely proud of what we accomplished. I certainly am not satisfied that we’re sitting here and Tennessee’s moving on to the Super Regional but kudos to them. They played a great second game. They got the runs they needed to win and move on, but to come out of the loser’s bracket and come to the championship game and go to the second game is pretty big.”
Pitcher Brittany Pickett
On Tennessee’s go-ahead two-run double:
“I think she saw the ball well. I thought it was a well-executed pitch too on my end. That’s kind of where I was looking to throw anyways. But kudos to her, she got her hands through and stayed with an off speed and got some runs on the board for her team. But overall, it wasn’t the heat or anything, it was just kind of battling through it all and trying to pull out a win on our side.”
On the defensive support she had behind her in both games:
“It’s great. I think, overall, all of us played really loose from inning one to inning seven and that’s all you can really ask for. Making routine plays as well, that’s a big part of the game and making the ESPN plays are fun, but bringing the momentum back into the dugout off of defensive plays like that, that’s really important too.”
On whether Tennessee made adjustments in the second game:
“Yes, most definitely. I think they came out swinging early. And you know, that’s kind of what we would do on our end if we were to lose the first game. They adjusted well, but I think I handled it well enough until they scored late in the game. I know my go-to pitch, obviously it being a curve, but they sat on that well, then just being able to mix it in with slower pitching and my off-speed stuff, that kind of handled them. I saw that adjustment pretty early in the game.”