Brad Paisley Pays Homage to the South With New Song, “Heaven South” [Listen]

Brad Paisley Pays Homage to the South With New Song, “Heaven South” [Listen]

Brad Paisley has fallen in love with the South, and “Heaven South” is his ode to that special place below the Mason-Dixon line.

“Heaven South” pays homage to the easygoing life in the South with lyrics like “Beer battered chicken, sweet ice tea / Night crawlers, crickets and a Zebco 33 / Old Glory waving at you / As you’re driving by the court house / And it’s just another day in Heaven South.”

The new tune, written by Brad, Brent Anderson and Chris DuBois, is the second offering from Brad’s upcoming 11th studio album, Love and War, due out April 21.

Listen to “Heaven South” below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zdKYBq31b9g

Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images

Jason Aldean’s Wife, Brittany, Posts Video Tribute in Honor of Two-Year Wedding Anniversary [Watch]

Jason Aldean’s Wife, Brittany, Posts Video Tribute in Honor of Two-Year Wedding Anniversary [Watch]

Jason Aldean and Brittany Kerr are celebrating their two-year wedding anniversary today. The happy couple was married on March 21, 2015, in Playa del Carmen, Mexico.

In honor of the occasion, Brittany posted a video on Instagram that features snippets from the beachfront wedding, including Duck Dynasty’s Willie Robertson conducting the ceremony.

Watch the video below.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BR5somkBPWa/?hl=en

photo and video courtesy Brittany Kerr’s Instagram page

Carrie Underwood Sends “Today” Show Host Hoda Kotb the Cutest Little Pair of Cowboy Boots for Baby Girl

Carrie Underwood Sends “Today” Show Host Hoda Kotb the Cutest Little Pair of Cowboy Boots for Baby Girl

It’s good to have friends in high places.

Today show host Hoda Kotb, who adopted a baby girl, Haley Joy, earlier this year, received the cutest gift from her friend Carrie Underwood. The “Church Bells” singer sent Hoda a mini pair of pink cowboy boots and a monogrammed baby blanket for her little girl.

After Carrie sent the present, Hoda posted a picture on her social media accounts thanking the country superstar for the gift.

“Hey @carrieunderwood !!! Haley Joy loves her very first pair of cowboy boots!!! 🤠Can’t wait until you meet her ! Thank you 😍👶🏼❤️❤️,” Hoda captioned the post.

Check out Haley Joy’s first little pair of pink boots from the ever-thoughtful Carrie Underwood.

Watch Melissa Etheridge, Cam, Lindsay Ell & More Jam on Chuck Berry’s “Johnny B. Goode” at “Skyville Live”

Watch Melissa Etheridge, Cam, Lindsay Ell & More Jam on Chuck Berry’s “Johnny B. Goode” at “Skyville Live”

To celebrate the musical power of women, innovative online music series Skyville Live held a concert last night (March 20) with an all-female ensemble featuring Melissa Etheridge, Cam, Lindsay Ell, Orianthi and Troi Irons. Filmed in front of an intimate studio audience, the show was live-streamed to online viewers on Rated Red’s Facebook page.

Cam and Melissa Etheridge

In addition to standout solo performances from the troupe, the ladies collaborated on a number of tunes, including Melissa and Cam on “Come to My Window” and Melissa, Lindsay and Orianthi on “Rock Me Baby.” The blockbuster night also included a tribute to the late Chuck Berry with a full ensemble performance of “Johnny B. Goode,” which you can watch below.

photos and video courtesy of Skyville Live

William Michael Morgan Talks the Long Road to No. 1 for “I Met a Girl,” Getting Engaged and New Single, “Missing”

William Michael Morgan Talks the Long Road to No. 1 for “I Met a Girl,” Getting Engaged and New Single, “Missing”

Jim Casey talks with William Michael Morgan about cowboy hats, his debut album, Vinyl, new single, “Missing,” recent engagement to Runaway June’s Jennifer Wayne and more.

Show Participants

  • William Michael Morgan
  • Jim Casey, NCD managing editor

Show Notes & Links

The Writers Room, Ep. 65, 16 minutes
photos by Jason Simanek

Luke Bryan, Jason Aldean and Little Big Town To Headline Pepsi Gulf Coast Jam

Luke Bryan, Jason Aldean and Little Big Town To Headline Pepsi Gulf Coast Jam

Sun, surf and sand are three things you can experience this Labor Day Weekend (Sept 1-3) when you head out to the Pepsi Gulf Coast Jam at Frank Brown Park in Panama City Beach, Fla.

You will also get to enjoy the music of three of country’s hottest acts. Luke Bryan, Jason Aldean and Little Big Town have been announced as the superstar headliners for the three-day country concert.

“This is the most exciting line up of headliners we’ve had in our five year history,” said Pepsi Gulf Coast Jam Executive Producer Rendy Lovelady. “Add the fourth – and biggest – headliner, the beautiful Gulf Coast beaches, and you have the best concert experience in the country.”

Past performers of the festival have included Lady Antebellum, Miranda Lambert, Keith Urban, Blake Shelton, Carrie Underwood, Dierks Bentley, Toby Keith, Brantley Gilbert and many more.

Tickets for the three-day festival will be available April 2 and will include General Admission, VIP, Skybox, Side Stage, Golden Circle and the new VIP Pit Experience.

Courtesy Schmidt Relations

Who’s New: Michael Tyler

Who’s New: Michael Tyler

Age: 23
Hometown: Thayer, Missouri
Lives: Nashville
Single: “They Can’t See”
Album: 317
Twitter: @MichaelTyler93
Website: themichaeltyler.com
Influences: Backstreet Boys, *NSYNC, Jason Aldean, Tesla, Cinderella, Poison

THE SCOOP

At the age of 13, Michael Tyler—a big fan of Jason Aldean—wrote a message to Jason’s producer, Michael Knox, via MySpace in hopes of making a connection. Knox wrote back and that connection was formed. After 10 years of mentoring the young lad, Knox now produces and manages Michael’s career. The product of their relationship is Michael’s current single, “They Can’t See,” from his debut album, 317, which was released on—you guessed it—March 17.

SMALL TOWN BOY

“I grew up in Thayer, Missouri. It’s got like 2,200 people, I believe. The closest mall is an hour and a half away. The closest airport is three hours away, so if we were going school shopping, it was a day trip, for sure. We just grew up hunting and fishing and doing the most random things we could to keep ourselves busy because there was nothing to do. My family would come over and we’d have big dinners and stuff and hang out. After everyone was hanging out, they’d pull out the guitars and start playing. Me and my brother would kind of sit there and just watch. When my brother got old enough to pick a guitar, my grandpa taught him three chords. And that’s all it took. Of course he was teaching me after my grandpa taught him. So, we started playing together.”

DESCENDANT OF JIMMIE RODGERS

“It’s actually crazy how we found out [about the relation to Jimmie Rodgers]. We’re actually second cousins four times removed, if you can keep up with that. It’s mom’s side. My mom, my uncle, great uncle, grandpa, all on that side play music and sing and stuff. My grandpa had no clue we were related to Jimmie Rodgers either. I was already at Peer Music [Publishing Company] for a year. I brought my mom down to come hang out and see where I’d been working after I moved from Missouri. There was a picture of Jimmie Rodgers hanging on the wall. She walked up and she’s like, ‘Hmm, we’re related to a Jimmie Rodgers.’ My producer, Michael Knox, is like, ‘Um, you mean the one that died in the ’50s?’ She’s like, ‘No, ours died in 1933.’ Michael Knox is like, ‘That’s Peer’s Jimmie Rodgers. That’s the Jimmie Rodgers.’ So we did the ancestry thing and looked it up and sure enough—way down the line. And of course Jimmie Rodgers was his first guy Ralph Peer signed and 90 years later, this year, I’m with Peer Music and I didn’t even know it. So that’s pretty creepy.”

THE PERFECT WOMAN

“My single, ‘They Can’t See,’ for me, was just like trying to picture the perfect woman that I would want to spend the rest of my life with and slipping some positive messages in the song. Just about as you get older, you understand it’s not about what people look like. But it’s the conversation after that. You’ve got to like the person, you’ve got to like what’s going on on the inside. That’s what it’s all about. That’s what keeps you there for 60 years—say my grandparents (laughs). I just came in [to the songwriting session] with that idea. I kind of had that idea in my head for a while. I got in the room with a couple guys I write with all the time and one of the dudes had a cool guitar lick. We laid that down and I kind of started singing my idea to that. Sometimes you just luck out and things like that happen. You’ll be working on an idea for two or three weeks and then a certain situation will come up where it fits and then it’s just cake.”

WHAT’S IN A NAME

“The reason I named [the album] 317 is because one of the first times I actually drove from Thayer, Missouri to Nashville by myself, I loaded up my car with all my stuff and my favorite chair—It’s this brown, ugly, rocking chair. Metal that screeches every time you rock but it’s really comfortable— into my little Mazda and the first time I pulled in, I kind of looked down at my trip odometer and it was around 317 miles. So I always remembered that.”

SOUND MIXING

“I just wanted every song to sound different. It’s cool whenever all the songs are a certain sound and you identify it with an album and you know they’re all from the same album. I just didn’t want to do that. Because there was one point we were recording a song and they’re like, ‘Well, it doesn’t sound like all the other songs.’ I’m like, ‘Good.’ I want it all to sound different. I want you to go through a serious phase, and then a party phase, and then just have fun with the songs. [My sound] is a combination of John Mayer mixed with Jason Aldean mixed with Keith Urban mixed with a little Sam Hunt, maybe? It’s just different. It’s hard to explain, until you listen to it.”

OPRY DEBUT

“It was insane. I never get super nervous, so when I was standing there backstage my hands were numb. I was like, ‘I’m not going to be able to play. What do I do? Somebody help.’ But I was standing back there and one of the guys comes up to me and they are like, ‘You nervous?’ I’m like, ‘Yeah.’ He’s like, ‘Good. If you ain’t nervous, you don’t belong out there.’ That’s a good way of thinking. I went out there and I thought I knew everything I wanted to say and it was going good and then I looked down at the circle. You know, you hear about it all the time, artists talking about that feeling you get when you stand there and you kind of take it in. I was kind of at a loss for words and I just lost train of thought. I forgot what song I was playing next. I kind of just looked down for a minute, like, ‘Wow.'”

HIS FIRST NO. 1

“‘Somewhere On a Beach’ was going to be my first single. We brought it to Michael Knox, my producer and manager, he was looking around the room and he was listening to it and he was like, ‘All right, this song’s on lockdown.’ He’s pointing at all the writers in the room saying, ‘I’m emailing all your publishers right now. Don’t pitch this song.’ A couple weeks later we got an email from Dierks Bentley’s manager that was like, ‘Hey, Dierks really loves ‘Somewhere On a Beach.’ He really wants it to be the first single for his new album.’ We were like, ‘Alright, we have to talk about this.’ I’m like, ‘No, we don’t, it’s Dierks’. It’s Dierks’ [song] because I’m a massive Dierks fan.’ It’s just weird. My life is weird. I used to ride the school bus listening to Dierks back when they had little CD players, back when those were a thing. I just got to stand backstage with him and talk about the song at the Opry last year and it’s really cool. I’m just having a ball.”

317 TRACK LISTING with Songwriters:

1. “Here’s To The Nights” (Michael Tyler/Jaron Boyer/Adam Shoenfeld)
2. “Crazy Last Night” (Michael Tyler/Jaron Boyer/Josh Mirenda)
3. “Long Drive Home” (Michael Tyler/AJ Babcock/Pete Good)
4. “They Can’t See” (Michael Tyler/Jaron Boyer/Brandon Hood)
5. “Love Myself” (Michael Tyler/Jaron Boyer/Alexander Palmer)
6. “Songs About Missouri” (Michael Tyler/Jacob Rice/Jimmy Yeary)
7. “Hey Mama” (Michael Tyler/Jaron Boyer/Adam Argyle)
8. “Secret” (Michael Tyler/Phil Barton/Preston Brust/Lindsay Rimes)
9. “Good at Being Young” (Michael Tyler/Jaron Boyer/Josh Mirenda)
10. “Play That Party Song” (Michael Tyler/Jessi Alexander/Gordie Sampson)
11. “Interstate” (Michael Tyler/Jaron Boyer/Nathan Chapman)

Comfortable in Her Own Skin, Lauren Alaina Scores First Top 5 Hit With “Road Less Traveled”

Comfortable in Her Own Skin, Lauren Alaina Scores First Top 5 Hit With “Road Less Traveled”

Lauren Alaina has scored the first Top 5 hit of her career with her current single, “Road Less Traveled,” which is currently No. 4 on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart. The anthemic tune, which was penned by Lauren, Jesse Frasure and Meghan Trainor, was released in June and explores topics of self-acceptance—a message that’s especially personal to Lauren, 22, who has been in the spotlight since her teen years on American Idol and has dealt with bulimia, the divorce of her parents and online bullying.

Lauren spoke to Nash Country Daily about her sixth career single and why she won’t be bullied on social media ever again.

“I’ve had quite the journey with insecurities and self-worth and self-acceptance,” said Lauren to NCD. “I think a lot of people have the same problem. I wanted to write a song that addresses that, because it’s a real thing. It can be really horrible if it’s severe. I struggled with an eating disorder for about five years, and so I was really sick. I had to get a lot of help and get better.”

As a teenager on American Idol in 2011, Lauren was thrust into the spotlight during a formative period in her life. An unfortunates side effect of her Idol notoriety came in the form of online bullying.

“I am obsessed with social media,” said Lauren. “I love it. I will never bash it, but it was one of the biggest things that affected my health at that time [I had bulimia], because people are not always nice. They’re just not. Usually, that stems from their own insecurities and their own issues that they’re dealing with. Yeah, and they can say things, and they think you don’t read them. I think that honestly some of the things that are said aren’t meant to hurt your feelings. I think people put things on my pages, and they don’t think that I actually run those pages. I run all of my social media. Occasionally, my team will post for me, but they put on there that they’ve posted for me. That is really, really rare. I do all of it myself, so I see all the comments. When I was a 16-year-old girl, someone saying that ‘She looks fat in that dress’ as just a statement, they weren’t saying, ‘Lauren, you’re fat and ugly,’ but that’s what I heard when I saw that.

“Girls in high school and guys in high school who are being bullied online, and it’s just so easy for people to have access to that now. Social media is a beautiful thing if it’s used correctly, and it’s not always. I love it. I love the direct connection I have with my fans and how I get to share what I want to share of my life with them. They get to share with me as well. It’s a really cool thing, but it can be a bad thing as well. It’s like everything.”

A quick glance on Lauren’s Instagram page is proof she’s comfortable in her own skin today. With many of her pics garnering more than 10,000 “Likes,” Lauren is having the last laugh now.

“Any kind of small comment, when you’re insecure about something, it’s a direct hit to that. I think that we all need to be more aware of that. I’ve learned to ignore it. I laugh at those things now, or I just delete them and move on.”

photos courtesy of Lauren Alaina’s Instagram

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