2018 Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame Class Includes Ronnie Dunn, K.T. Oslin & More

2018 Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame Class Includes Ronnie Dunn, K.T. Oslin & More

The Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame announced its class of 2018 on Aug. 7: Ronnie Dunn, K.T. Oslin, Byron Hill, Wayne Kirkpatrick and Joe Melson.

The fivesome will be inducted on Oct. 28 at the Music City Center, joining the more than 200 existing members of the organization, including Johnny Cash, Dolly Parton, Kris Kristofferson, Loretta Lynn, Garth Brooks and more.

Byron Hill and Wayne Kirkpatrick were selected in the Songwriter category, while Joe Melson secured his spot in the Veteran Songwriter category. Ronnie Dunn and K.T Oslin were elected in the Songwriter/Artist category.

Partial Songwriting Credits

Ronnie Dunn of Brooks & Dunn
“Neon Moon,” “My Next Broken Heart,” “Red Dirt Road,” “Cowgirls Don’t Cry”

K.T. Oslin
“’80s Ladies,” “Come Next Monday,” “I’ll Always Come Back,” “This Woman”

Byron Hill
“Fool Hearted Memory” (George Strait), “Born Country” (Alabama), “Nothing On But the Radio” (Gary Allan)

Wayne Kirkpatrick
“Boondocks” (Little Big Town), “Wrapped Up in You” (Garth Brooks), “Lead Me On” (Amy Grant)

Joe Melson
“Blue Bayou” (Roy Orbison), “Only the Lonely” (Roy Orbison), “Crying” (Roy Orbison)

Bios are below, courtesy of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame.

Byron Hill
Winston-Salem, N.C., native Byron Hill moved to Nashville in 1978 and soon signed with ATV Music Group, where he enjoyed his first cuts with “Pickin’ Up Strangers” by Johnny Lee and George Strait’s first #1 “Fool Hearted Memory” in 1982. Byron left ATV in 1984, but his songwriting resume continued to expand with “Nights” by Ed Bruce, “Born Country” by Alabama, “Alright Already” by Larry Stewart, “Lifestyles Of The Not So Rich And Famous” by Tracy Byrd, “High-Tech Redneck” by George Jones, “If I Was A Drinkin’ Man” by Neal McCoy, “Nothing On But The Radio” by Gary Allan and “Size Matters (Someday)” by Joe Nichols. Other artists who have recorded Byron’s songs include Jason Aldean, Randy Travis, Keith Whitley, Rhonda Vincent, Don Williams, Trace Adkins, Toby Keith, Porter Wagoner, Brooks & Dunn, The Oak Ridge Boys, Ricky Skaggs and Reba McEntire. To date, Byron’s songs have generated more than 700 recordings, earned 91 RIAA certified Gold and Platinum awards, 10 ASCAP awards, 34 U.S. and Canadian Top-10 chart hits and numerous hits in other global markets.

Wayne Kirkpatrick
At age 14, Wayne Kirkpatrick moved with his family to Baton Rouge, La. After a guitar lesson at a Florida Bible camp, Wayne began spending hours after school writing songs and playing younger brother Karey’s acoustic guitar. Both brothers eventually moved to Nashville, where Karey helped Wayne secure some of his first cuts. Since then, Wayne has had nearly two dozen chart-topping Contemporary Christian and Pop singles, including “Every Heartbeat,” “Good For Me” and “Takes A Little Time” by Amy Grant and “Place In This World” by Michael W. Smith (the 1992 Dove Song of the Year). In 1996, Wayne’s co-written “Change The World” by Eric Clapton was featured in the film Phenomenon and earned the 1996 Grammy for Song of the Year. In 1999 Wayne sang, played and co-wrote eight songs on Garth Brooks’ In The Life Of Chris Gaines project, including “Lost In You” and “It Don’t Matter To The Sun.” In 2002 he began a longtime collaboration with Little Big Town that yielded hits such as “Boondocks,” “Bring It On Home” and “Little White Church.” In 2010, Wayne and Karey began working on the musical Something Rotten!, which opened on Broadway in 2015 and earned 10 Tony Award nominations, including Best Musical and Best Original Score. The show launched a U.S. tour in 2017.

Joe Melson
Joe Melson grew up in Bonham, Texas. He began writing and singing his own songs at an early age. He spent much of his young adult years working at Standard Oil by day then playing high-school dances and local night clubs with his Rockabilly band by night. In 1957, Joe met and began writing with a then-unknown Roy Orbison. In 1960, their song “Only The Lonely (Know The Way I Feel)” launched Orbison into superstardom. The first operatic rock ballad in history, that single was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1999. In 1961, the team created the smash “Crying.” It became a giant hit for Orbison, was revived as a pop hit by Jay & The Americans five years later and entered the country repertoire via versions by Ronnie Milsap and Don McLean, among many others. Orbison’s single was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2002. In 1963, the duo’s “Blue Bayou” became another hit for Orbison (and, years later, Linda Ronstadt). Joe’s song catalgoue also includes “Blue Angel,” “Running Scared,” “Lana” and “I’m Hurtin’” (all hits for Orbison), as well as “Run Baby Run (Back Into My Arms)” by The Newbeats and the Glenn Barber singles “Unexpected Goodbye” and “I’m The Man On Susie’s Mind.” In 2002 Joe was inducted into the Rockabilly Hall of Fame.

Ronnie Dunn
Ronnie Dunn was born in Texas, but Tulsa, Okla., became his hometown. He began playing guitar and performing in Country bands when he was in his teens. After winning the Marlboro Talent Search, Arista Records expressed interest in him. The label teamed him with singer-songwriter Kix Brooks, and the two recorded as Brooks & Dunn from 1991-2011. The mega-duo sold millions of records and was named CMA Vocal Duo 14 times. The Brooks & Dunn hits “Neon Moon,” “Hard Workin’ Man,” “She Used To Be Mine,” “She’s Not The Cheatin’ Kind” and “Little Miss Honky Tonk” were all written solo by Ronnie, as was “Boot Scootin’ Boogie,” which was named ACM Song of the Year in 1992. Ronnie was BMI’s Country Songwriter of the Year in 1996 and 1998. Co-written Brooks & Dunn hits include songs such as “Brand New Man,” “My Next Broken Heart” and “Believe,” which was the ACM Song of the Year in 2005 and the CMA Song and Single of the Year in 2006. In 2011, Ronnie resumed his solo career as a singer-songwriter with “Cost Of Livin’.” Ronnie was inducted into the Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame in 2003.

K.T. Oslin
Kay Toinette Oslin was born in Crossett, Arkansas. After her father died, she moved with her mother to Houston, where she later attended college as a drama major. In 1966, she joined the road company of Hello Dolly!. When the musical returned to Broadway, K.T. remained in the cast. During the next two decades, she appeared as a chorus girl in musicals such as Promises, Promises and West Side Story. She also sang commercial jingles around New York and began writing songs. By 1981, she was signed to Elektra Records and released two singles with modest success. She also had songs recorded by Gail Davies, The Judds and Dottie West. By 1987, K.T. had moved to Nashville and signed with RCA Nashville. She scored big with her self-penned “80s Ladies,” which was named 1988 CMA Song of the Year, making her the first female writer to win the award. That album also launched the singles “Do Ya” and “I’ll Always Come Back.” Her second album generated five singles, including “Money,” “Hey Bobby,” “This Woman,” “Didn’t Expect It To Go Down This Way” and “Hold Me,” which earned the 1988 Grammy for Best Country Song. K.T.’s third album generated the hits “Come Next Monday” and “Mary And Willie.” She was named 1988, 1989 and 1991 SESAC Songwriter of the Year. K.T. is a 2014 inductee into the Texas Heritage Songwriters Hall of Fame.

photo courtesy of AFF-USA.com

Lady Vols in the WNBA Update: August 7

Lady Vols in the WNBA Update: August 7

Credit: UT Athletics

Candace Parker was named Western Conference Player of the Week on Monday for the second time this season following a week in which she averaged 18.5 points, 12 rebounds and six assists per game while leading the Los Angeles Sparks to a 2-0 mark.

The two-time WNBA Most Valuable Player opened the week by registering game highs of 23 points, 10 rebounds, and three blocks as the Sparks defeated the Lynx 79-57 on Aug. 2.  Parker then nearly recorded a triple-double on Sunday, logging 14 points, 14 rebounds and eight assists as Los Angeles topped the Phoenix Mercury at home, 78-75. During that game she also scored her 5,000th career point, becoming just the 20th player in WNBA history to reach that mark.

In other notable performances by LVFLs, Glory Johnson tallied a double-double on Sunday, recording 10 points, 11 rebounds and four assists as Dallas came up just short of the Washington Mystics, 76-74.

In upcoming WNBA action, three former Lady Vols will hit the court on Tuesday. Jaime Nared and the Aces will look to get back in the win column as they face Atlanta on the road at 7 p.m. ET (NBA TV, Fox Sports South). Fellow rookie Mercedes Russell will also be in action as the first-place Storm plays at Indiana at 7 p.m. ET (League Pass), and Diamond DeShields and the Chicago Sky will host the Minnesota Lynx at 8:30 p.m. ET (Twitter, The U Too).

On Wednesday Parker will look to extend the Sparks’ win streak to three, as they face the Liberty in New York at 7 p.m. ET (League Pass, MSG+, SpecSN), and two former Lady Vols will square off when Johnson and the Wings host Shekinna Stricklen and the Connecticut Sun at 8 p.m. ET (NBA TV, FSSW).

 

Diamond DeShields

Chicago Sky | G | 1st Season

DeShields has started 27 games for the Sky and is averaging 13.8 ppg. Chicago is currently in fourth place in the Eastern Conference with a record of 10-18.

 

Isabelle Harrison

Las Vegas Aces | F/C | 3rd Season

Harrison remains on the Aces’ roster but is taking a personal leave of absence due to medical reasons, per an April 28 report from the franchise.

 

Glory Johnson

Dallas Wings | F | 6th Season

Johnson has appeared in 23 games this season, starting 15, and is averaging 8.6 ppg and 6.3 rpg. She posted double-doubles in two of her last three games, logging 11 points and 14 rebounds against Chicago and recording 10 points and 11 rebounds against the Mystics.  Dallas is currently residing in fifth place in the Western Conference with a record of 14-14.

 

Jaime Nared

Las Vegas Aces | G/F | 1st Season

Nared has appeared in 26 games for the Aces, averaging 9.0 mpg, 2.4 ppg and 1.3 rpg. Her season high of 10 points came on June 8 against Atlanta.

 

Candace Parker

Los Angeles Sparks | F/C | 11th Season

Parker has logged 10 double-doubles on the season and ranks ninth in the WNBA in scoring (18.1 ppg) and seventh in rebounding (7.9 rpg).  She leads the Sparks in scoring through 23 games, averaging 17.6 ppg. With a record of 17-11, the Sparks currently rank second in the Western Conference.

 

Mercedes Russell

Seattle Storm | C | 1st Season

Originally drafted 22nd overall by New York, Russell saw action in two games for the Liberty before signing with Seattle. Through a total of 18 WNBA appearances she is averaging 5.4 mpg, 1.3 rpg and 1.4 ppg. At 22-7, Seattle currently owns the best record in the WNBA.

 

Shekinna Stricklen

Connecticut Sun | G/F | 7th Season

Stricklen has seen action in 28 games for the Sun, starting 24 and averaging 18.4 mpg and 6.6 ppg. She logged a season-high 24 points on July 22 in a win over Dallas. The Sun is currently in third place in the Eastern Conference with a record of 16-12.

Thomas Rhett and Keith Urban Join Season 15 of “The Voice” as Advisors

Thomas Rhett and Keith Urban Join Season 15 of “The Voice” as Advisors

Thomas Rhett and Keith Urban will be coming to a TV screen near you this fall.

News came down the pike on Aug. 6 that TR and Keith will serve as advisors on Season 15 of The Voice, which premieres on Sept. 24 on NBC.

TR will join coach Kelly Clarkson’s team, while Keith will handle advisor duties for coach Blake Shelton. Advisors typically assist the contestants with song arrangement and stage presence, among other variables, during the battle rounds. Coaches Jennifer Hudson and Adam Levine selected Halsey and CeeLo Green, respectively, as their advisors.

Thomas Rhett photo by Jason Simanek; Keith Urban photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Brett Young Finds the Top of the Country Charts for the 4th Time as “Mercy” Hits No. 1

Brett Young Finds the Top of the Country Charts for the 4th Time as “Mercy” Hits No. 1

Brett Young scored the fourth No. 1 single of his career as “Mercy” ascended to the top of both the Billboard Country Airplay chart and Mediabase chart. The breakup ballad, which was co-penned by Brett and Sean McConnell, features simple piano accompaniment with Brett’s stripped-down vocals that beckon his love interest to end their relationship with “mercy.”

“We knew pretty early that ‘Mercy’ had to be a single because of the way the fans respond when I played it live,” said Brett. “I wrote this song from a really vulnerable and honest place, so to see it go number one is really special.”

“Mercy” follows previous chart-toppers “Sleep Without You,” “In Case You Didn’t Know” and “Like I Loved You” from Brett’s 2017 self-titled debut album.

“Falling in love or falling out of love—those are the easiest songs to write because it’s just straight from personal experience,” says Brett to Nash Country Daily. “I think everybody’s felt both of those. Everybody’s been in love, everybody’s had heartbreak. We noticed that when we put together the 12 songs that would make the [self-titled debut] record, there was not a party song on this record. I’ve written a ton of party songs and not that there’s anything wrong with that. I think, in trying to tell my story and let people get to know me, it seemed like we should talk about things that I’ve lived.”

photo by Jason Simanek

Dolly Parton’s $37-Million Expansion at Dollywood Will Feature New Roller Coaster, Climbing Structure, Restaurant & More

Dolly Parton’s $37-Million Expansion at Dollywood Will Feature New Roller Coaster, Climbing Structure, Restaurant & More

At a media event on Aug. 3, Dolly Parton revealed plans for a $37-million expansion dubbed Wildwood Grove at her Dollywood theme park in Pigeon Forge, Tenn.

Wildwood Grove, which is slated to open in 2019, represents the largest capital investment in Dollywood’s 32-year history. Wildwood Grove will feature 11 new experiences for guests, including a new restaurant, climbing structure and roller coaster called the Dragonflier.

“This area is going to give families a place to explore, play and imagine together—but more importantly—it’s a place where they can spend more time together,” Dolly said. “I believe everyone has a song in their heart that needs to be set free. Wildwood Grove will be a place where families can learn together about what their heart song truly is.”

Wildwood Grove’s Featured Attractions:

  • Wildwood Tree: A 55-foot tree that grows from a cluster of natural rocks and boulders, which will serve as the area’s focal point and feature a nighttime show and concerts. Its canopy will be adorned with thousands of butterflies.
  • The Dragonflier: A suspended 453-meter roller coaster that lets guests soar like a dragonfly.
  • Black Bear Trail: A ride where kids can hop on the backs of mechanical bears for a trek around the area.
  • Sycamore Swing: A leaf boat swing which will swing guests back and forth.
  • Treetop Tower: A ride that sends guests 40 feet into the air in giant acorns and spins them around to see the Smoky Mountains.
  • Mad Mockingbird: A ride that spins guests in circles, and they can control their experience by moving a sail.
  • Frogs & Fireflies: A ride where guests can hop on frogs and ride them as they race each other around a lily pad.
  • Hidden Hollow: A 4,000-foot indoor, climate controlled climb structure with slides and games.
  • Wildwood Creek: An oasis with pop jets and splashing pools.
  • Four new costumed characters and entertainment including Flit and Flutter, butterfly ambassadors for the Wildwood Tree, and Benjamin Bear.
  • Till & Harvest: A restaurant featuring fresh Southwest items including burritos, salads, pulled pork, slaw, a topping bar with salsas and a walk-up window with churros and ice cream.

Take a look at some photos from Dolly’s Wildwood Grove media day on Aug. 3, courtesy of Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com.

photos by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com

Kacey Musgraves, John Prine, Anderson East & More to Be Featured on Upcoming Season of “Austin City Limits”

Kacey Musgraves, John Prine, Anderson East & More to Be Featured on Upcoming Season of “Austin City Limits”

Kacey Musgraves, John Prine, Anderson East and more will be featured on the the 44th season of Austin City Limits this fall.

The upcoming season of ACL, which is the longest-running music program in television history, premieres on Oct. 6 on PBS with St. Vincent, before John Prine (Oct. 13), Anderson East (Oct. 20) and Kacey Musgraves (Nov. 10) take the stage.

The complete line-up for the full 14-week season, including eight new episodes to air beginning on Dec. 31, will be announced at a later date.

ACL Season 44 Fall Schedule

Oct. 6 – St. Vincent
Oct. 13 John Prine
Oct. 20 Sam Smith / Anderson East
Oct. 27 Brandi Carlile
Nov. 3  Miguel / Alessia Cara
Nov. 10 Kacey Musgraves / Lukas Nelson and Promise of the Real

photo by Carissa Riccardi/NCD

Brothers Osborne Expand Headlining World Tour With Stops in the U.S., Canada & U.K

Brothers Osborne Expand Headlining World Tour With Stops in the U.S., Canada & U.K

Brothers Osborne will hit the road for a string of headlining dates in the U.S., Canada and the U.K. beginning on Aug. 26.

The reigning CMA and ACM Vocal Duo of the Year will make more than 25 stops, including dates in Louisville, Toronto, London and more. The Wild Feathers and Luci Silvas will serve as support on various dates.

Brothers Osborne is currently on the road as part of Dierks Bentley’s Mountain High Tour.

Brothers Osborne World Tour

Aug. 26 – Charlottesville, VA – Jefferson Theatre
Aug. 31 – Laramie, WY – University of Wyoming Arena Auditorium
Sept. 5 – Bethlehem, PA – Levitt Pavilion SteelStacks
Oct. 7 – Paso Robles, CA – Vina Robles Amphitheatre
Oct. 17 -Spokane, WA – Knitting Factory Concert House*^
Oct. 18 – Abbotsford, BC – Abbotsford Centre*
Oct. 19 – Penticton, BC – South Okanagan Events Centre*
Oct. 20 – Calgary, AB – MacEwan Hall*
Oct. 21 – Edmonton, AB – Shaw Conference Centre*
Oct. 24 – Saskatoon, SK – O’Brian’s Event Centre
Oct. 25 – Winnipeg, MB – Burton Cummings Theatre for the Performing Arts
Oct. 26 – St Paul, MN – Palace Theatre^
Oct. 27 – Madison, WI – The Sylvee^
Oct. 28 – Grand Rapids, MI – 20 Monroe Live^
Nov. 1 – Toronto, ON – Rebel Complex*
Nov. 2 – Kitchener, ON – Elements*
Nov. 3 – London, ON – London Music Hall*
Nov. 8 – Asheville, NC – Thomas Wolfe Civic Center Auditorium^
Nov. 9 – Louisville, KY – Palace Theatre~
Nov. 10 – Fort Wayne, IN – Clyde Theatre^
Nov. 25 – Glasgow, Scotland – O2 Academy Glasgow+
Nov. 27 – Newcastle, England – O2 Academy Newcastle+
Nov. 28 – Manchester, England – Academy Manchester+
Nov. 30 – Nottingham, England – Rock City+
Dec. 1 – Porthcawl, Wales – Planet Rock Festival
Dec. 2 – London, England – O2 Kentish Town Forum+

* Support from The Wild Feathers
+ Support from Lucie Silvas
^ Pre-sale Aug. 7 at 10 a.m. local time, general on-sale Aug. 10
~ Pre-sale Aug. 14 at 10 a.m. local time, general on-sale Aug. 17

photo by Jason Simanek

Jimmy’s blog: Tyson Helton will get play-calling input from Pruitt

Jimmy’s blog: Tyson Helton will get play-calling input from Pruitt

By Jimmy Hyams

Tennessee offensive coordinator Tyson Helton shared play-calling duties last season at USC with former Vols quarterback Tee Martin.

The former Houston quarterback called plays at Western Kentucky (2014-15) under the guidance of head coach Jeff Brohm.

As UT’s signal caller, he will get input from several members of the offensive staff – and perhaps a bit from another source: Jeremy Pruitt.

“Everybody talks about Coach Pruitt being a great defensive coach,’’ Helton said. “He’s a great all-around coach.

“Just over the eight months that we’ve had a chance to sit down and talk football, about what’s important about offensive football, what we need to do, how we need to attack people, he brings a lot to the table in that area.’’

You might think, as a defensive coach, Pruitt would have a conservative approach to playing offense. Not necessarily, said Helton.

“He’s a guy that says, `Hey, you have to be aggressive. You have to be able to attack people,’’’ Helton said.

Pruitt will also say “you have to understand the situations that you’re in,’’ Helton said.

“There’s times you say, `Hey, we gotta run the cock. We gotta bleed the clock. We gotta pound the football.’ So he understands all those situations.

“I think sometimes people say, `Well, a defensive coach wants you to go run the football and win the game 10-3.’ That’s not his style. His style is do what’s best to put the team in situations to go win games and that’s what he’s brought to the table for us.’’

So when it comes to picking a starting quarterback, will that be Helton’s decision or Pruitt’s call?

“At the end of the day, that’s coach’s decision,’’ Helton said. “That’s why he’s the head football coach. But we’ll sit down as a staff. He’ll ask everybody’s opinions.

“I think he does a great job of that, of taking information from everybody, of different perspectives. He and I will sit down at some point in time and he’ll say, `Alright Tyson, what do you think?

“At the end of the day, he’ll make that decision and we’ll be on board with it and we’ll go from there.’’

As a play caller, Helton can draw from his experience of playing at Houston for his dad, Kim. From working at USC with older brother Clay. From coaching at Western Kentucky with Brohm. From coaching at Hawaii with June Jones.

“I think you take all of those experiences and apply it here,’’ Helton said.


Sponsored by Big Kahuna Wings: The wings that changed it all

Booyah! Watch Scotty McCreery & Wife Gabi Play “Fast Money” to Benefit St. Jude Hospital on “Celebrity Family Feud”

Booyah! Watch Scotty McCreery & Wife Gabi Play “Fast Money” to Benefit St. Jude Hospital on “Celebrity Family Feud”

Scotty McCreery took his “survey says” talents to Celebrity Family Feud on Aug. 5 in an effort to raise $25,000 for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.

Scotty and his family—wife Gabi Dugal, father-in-law Merrick Dugal III, father Mike McCreery and grandmother Paquita McCreery—were pitted against the family of SNL alumni Chris Kattan.

After winning the preliminary round against Chris Kattan’s family, Scotty’s family earned a spot in the Fast Money round and the chance to win $25,000 for St. Jude.

“My family and I were honored to play Celebrity Family Feud on behalf of St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital,” said Scotty. “St. Jude provides innovative medical treatments for kids with catastrophic diseases, and they do it for free. I’ve visited the hospital and met some of the patients. It is truly a place of healing.”

Watch Gabi and Scotty team up to play Fast Money below.

photo courtesy of ABC Entertainment

Kenny Chesney’s “Songs for the Saints” Debuts at No. 1 on Billboard Country Chart: “It’s an Album About Hope”

Kenny Chesney’s “Songs for the Saints” Debuts at No. 1 on Billboard Country Chart: “It’s an Album About Hope”

Kenny Chesney’s new album, Songs for the Saints, debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Top Country Albums chart, selling 77,300 equivalent album units, according to Nielsen Music.

The catalyst for the new 11-song offering was Hurricane Irma, which devastated a number of Caribbean islands in September 2017, including Kenny’s home on St. John. Proceeds from the album benefit Kenny’s Love for Love City Foundation, which funds relief efforts in St. John and the Virgin Islands.

“It is an album about healing,” says Kenny. “It’s an album about hope, it’s an album about moving forward, it’s an album about community, and it is full of my life experiences and my love for this island and a lot of the islands surrounding it that didn’t necessarily get a whole lot of attention after the storms.”

The album, which also debuted at No. 2 on the all-genre Billboard 200 chart, has already spawned the No. 1 hit, “Get Along.” Kenny wrote or co-wrote five songs on the album, which he co-produced with Buddy Cannon.

Kenny shares exactly what his new album is about in the video below.

photo by AFF-USA.com

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