Riser House Entertainment Signs Jordan Rager

Pictured: John Cantu, Matt Swanson, Jennifer Johnson, Jordan Rager

Riser House Entertainment, a full-service record label, artist management and music publishing company, has signed Jordan Rager to a publishing and artist deal. Riser House’s roster of talent also includes artists Mitchell Tenpenny and Dillon Carmichael, as well as writers Michael Whitworth, Dallas Wilson, Claire Douglas, and Rob Crosby.

A Georgia native, 24-year-old Rager was discovered as a teenager by country artist Justin Moore after uploading videos of himself singing classic cover songs to YouTube. Soon after, he was opening an arena tour for Moore. Rager went on to sign with Broken Bow Records and record a song with Jason Aldean that climbed to the Top 40 of the Country Airplay chart. Rager recently released the singles “One Of The Good Ones” and “Georgia Boy.” In December, Rager will play a pair of end-of-year shows at Eddie’s Attic in Georgia.

“I have been following Jordan Rager‘s career for almost four years now and have enjoyed watching him develop not only as an artist, but as an exceptional young man. He is certainly ‘One of the Good Ones!’” said Jennifer Johnson, President, Riser House Entertainment. “We are thrilled to welcome such a highly-talented songwriter and performer to our roster and can’t wait to see what’s in store for him.”

“Riser House is young, hungry, and has something to prove. Just like me. I think that’s why I felt so at home with them. They allow me to create the music I’ve always dreamed of. We make a great team and I’m excited to see what the future holds for both of us,” said Rager.

Rager is currently preparing to go into the studio to record his 2019 release.

Pictured: John Cantu, Brandon Perdue, Samantha Cantu, Jason VanAuken, Matt Swanson, Jennifer Johnson, Megan Schultz, Lexi Sutherland, Jordan Rager

Services Set For CCM Star Kenny Marks


A Celebration of Life service for singer-songwriter Kenny Marks is scheduled for Saturday (Nov. 17); the CCM star passed away on Oct. 31 of a heart attack at age 67.

He was a Christian rocker, somewhat in the blue-collar mode of his fellow Michigan native Bob Seger. Kenny Marks was billed as “contemporary Christian music’s leading American roots-rock artist.”

A pioneer of the CCM genre, his best-known songs include “Right Where You Are,” “Soul Reviver,” “Make It Right,” “Friends,” ‘Nobody Else But Jesus” and “The Party’s Over.”
He was notable as his genre’s overseas ambassador. Kenny Marks took CCM sounds to seven continents. He had followers in Norway, Germany, England, Holland, New Zealand, Denmark, West Africa, Australia, Belgium, East Asia and Ireland.

Kenny Marks was the son of Yugoslav immigrants. Raised in Detroit, he initially came to attention in the Billy Graham organization during the 1970s. He subsequently recorded for the Word/Myrrh/Dayspring label group in Nashville.

His debut LP, Follow Him, appeared in 1982. His breakthrough occurred via 1984’s Right Where You Are. It yielded seven top-10 CCM hits, including its chart-topping title tune. In 1985, his album Attitude contained three more top-10 successes, including the No. 1 smash “Soul Reviver.”

The title tune of his LP Make It Right was the No. 1 Christian radio hit of 1987. The video for the album’s “The Party’s Over” was nominated for a Dove Award by the Gospel Music Association.

“The Party’s Over” lyric was addressed to young people and urged sexual abstinence prior to marriage. Other teen-oriented Marks messages occurred in such songs as “Growing Up Too Fast,” “Next Time You See Johnny,” “Say a Prayer for Me Tonight,” “Graduation Day” and “White Dress.”

His biggest CCM rock hit was “Nobody Else But Jesus.” It appeared on his 1990 album Another Friday Night. That collection also contained the No. 1 hit “I’ll Be a Friend to You,” whose video was another Dove nominee.

In 1992, he issued Fire of Forgiveness. Its “Turn My World Around” became the first Christian-music video to be filmed in the Soviet Union. His Kim Hill duet on the collection, “Like a Father Should Be,” was marketed as a Father’s Day ode.

The Kenny Marks hits-compilation CD Absolutely Positively was issued in 1994. The title tune of 1995’s World Gone Mad was another youth-oriented composition. The album featured contributions from members of Survivor and John Cougar Mellencamp’s band.

Later in the 1990s, Kenny Marks was a host on cable TV’s Shop-At-Home channel.

Marks is survived by children Allegra Crowder, Sebastian Marks and Shelby Nundahl; by sisters Karen Mrakovich and Kathleen German and by several nieces and nephews.

His Celebration of Life service will begin at 1 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 17, at The Village Chapel. The chapel is located at 2021 21st Avenue South. All are welcome. To send condolences or to sign the guest book, go to crawfordservices.com.

The service will be streamed online. To view the live stream, visit livestream.com. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations to the Gospel Music Trust Fund or to the American Heart Association.

Demolition Music Signs Worldwide Admin Deal With Angry Mob Music

Nashville-based Demolition Music has entered into a worldwide administration deal with Los Angeles publisher Angry Mob Music. Under the deal, Angry Mob will provide creative, administration and synch services for Demolition songwriters and its catalog.

“Demolition Music achieved one of its most important goals this year when it aligned its pool of passion and talented songwriting team with the ‘get it done’ DNA of a truly remarkable L.A. company like Angry Mob.” says Demolition President Jon D’Agostino. “It’s a bi-coastal relationship that is bridged with common threads of passion, hard work, and determination to build a winning brand of songs together. ”

“We are thrilled to begin working with the great team and songwriters of Demolition Music,” says Marc Caruso, CEO Angry Mob Music. “Our companies share an ethos to work hard, to be forward thinking, and to respect and value the American songwriter. Our teams truly complement each other and we look forward to achieving great success together.”

 

Concord Music Taps Rachel Reynolds To Lead New Creative Content Production Department

Rachel Reynolds

Concord Music has hired Rachel Reynolds to lead its new Creative Content Production department as Senior Director.

Reynolds spent the past 12 years at Los Angeles public radio outlet KCRW where she produced their flagship music show Morning Becomes Eclectic, created the popular podcast the Guest DJ Project, assisted with booking KCRW’s Summer Nights series and served as the Music Publicity Director. Additionally, she helped program and produce content from the station’s annual SXSW showcases and arranged pop-ups at the Sundance Film Festival.

In her Senior Director role, Reynolds will lead a team to serve the wide variety of content needs within the label group (Concord Records, Fantasy Recordings, Fearless Records, Loma Vista Recordings and Rounder Records). She will oversee the creation and execution of video content, podcasts, live events, and support other creative visions across the company.

Reynolds states, “I have long admired Concord Music from afar as a home to exceptional talent, a mind-blowing catalogue and a dedicated staff. Also, it is a thrill and an honor to work for someone like Tom Whalley, whose passionate and soulful approach is more akin to an artist than most executives.”

Concord Music Chief Label Officer Tom Whalley comments, “Rachel is a strategic thinker and an extremely talented producer. She and I share a vision of developing our artists’ careers in new and exciting ways. I have no doubt that her unique perspective and passion for telling stories through music will help guide the newly created Content Department to success.”

52nd Annual CMA Awards Wins Night But Ratings Drop 34 Percent From 2017

While Wednesday evening’s (Nov. 14) Country Music Association Awards was both the highest-rated program for the night and the most-watched entertainment program on ABC this season, the show hit a new low in ratings, bringing in a 2.1 rating in the 18-49 demo, with 10.06 million viewers, according to Zap2It.

Those numbers top the evening, but also mark a 34 percent drop in the 18-49 demo from 2017, and a 29.5 percent drop in total viewers from last year’s 14.29 million. It also represents more than a full point rating drop from last year’s 3.2 rating.

The awards show’s previous low came in 2016, when it brought in 12.5 million viewers and a 2.9 rating in the demo, though the show was airing opposite the World Series Game 7 that year.

Source: The Nielsen Company, posted on Zap2it.com.

CMA Awards Viewership (live and same day)

2017—14.29 million viewers
2016—12.5 million
2015—13.6 million
2014—16.1 million
2013—16.8 million
2012— 13.6 million
2011—16.3 million
2010—16.45 million
2009—17.2 million
2008 —15.9 million

 

First Company Management Adds Cochren & Co.’s Michael Cochren

Pictured (L-R): First Company artist managers Brandi Wagner and Derek Bruner; Cochren & Co.’s Michael Cochren; and First Company general manager Mike McCloskey.

Artist management firm First Company Management has signed Gotee Records artist Michael Cochren, of Cochren & Co.

Cochren will be repped by First Company managers Brandi Wagner and Derek Bruner.

Wes Campbell launched First Company Management in 1995; the firm’s roster includes Newsboys, Ryan Stevenson, 7eventh Time Down, Ashes Remain, Adam Agee and Austin French. The company also played a role in the development of the faith-based film franchise God’s Not Dead.

Cochren’s debut Gotee singles “Church (Take Me Back)” and “Grave” highlight a soulful, piano-pop sound. Cochren & Co. is featured on this fall’s “TobyMac & DiverseCity: The Theatre Tour”, which also includes fellow First Company client Stevenson.

“We are beyond excited to represent Cochren & Co.,” says Mike McCloskey, general manager, First Company Management. “From the beginning we knew they possessed something uniquely special, so it’s an honor to join the band on their journey forward.”

“Michael is a truly gifted lyricist and songwriter, and his experience in pastoral leadership adds a maturity to his message that is important in this cultural moment,” adds First Company Management’s Bruner. “It’s exciting to see so many new fans discover and embrace Cochren & Co.”

 

 

DISClaimer: Charlie Daniels, Beau Weevils Top New Tracks

Heritage artists made up half of this listening session, and they provided many of its highlights.

Three Country Music Hall of Fame members are here — Bill Anderson, Garth Brooks and our Disc of the Day winner, Charlie Daniels. Also contributing to the tally are Joe Diffie and Gary Morris.

Gary and Garth are both crooning ballads with solo-guitar accompaniment. Add Toby Keith, Whispering Bill and Kacey Musgraves to the mix, and you’ll see that slow songs were the order of the day. Despite the peppy efforts of Kelsea Ballerini and Brad Paisley.

The DisCovery Award goes to Tim Williams. It turns out that when he’s not a TV spokesperson, he’s a marvelously traditional country singer.

KELSEA BALLERINI/Miss Me More
Writers: Brett McLaughlin/Kelsea Ballerini/David Hall Hodges; Producer: none listed; Publisher: Kobalt/Sony-ATV/Audiam, no performance rights listed; Black River
– This is a feisty pop-rocker with a groovy, empowerment lyric. The relentless rhythm drives home the message of female independence, and the little echoey-electro vocal “comments” are way cool. I’m in.

GARY MORRIS/Sense Of Pride
Writers: none listed; Producers: Gary Morris/Michael Bonagura; Publisher: none listed; Spirit (track)
– The title tune of Gary’s new CD is the tale of a WWII military veteran whose medal for valor lies in a seldom-opened drawer. The old soldier keeps his feelings locked inside himself. But a note he leaves behind speaks volumes. This is a solo-guitar ballad, but it’s just as potent as any full-bodied production.

BRAD PAISLEY/Bucked Off
Writers: none listed; Producer: none listed; Publishers: none listed; Arista;
– The grinding twang of the main guitar riff is worth the price of admission, alone. The rollicking spirit and personable vocal are first-rate. Toss in a few shout-outs to George Strait and his tunes, and you have a blue-ribbon winner.

JOE DIFFIE/Quit You
Writers: Danny Bell/Jeffrey East/Andy Autsier; Producer: Phil O’Donnell; Publishers: none listed; Silverado
– This ballad is backed by echoed hand claps, throbbing bass and rifled drumbeats. Diffie’s passionate delivery of the addictive-love lyric is electrifying. He’s still a mighty, country-music hoss.

TOBY KEITH/I’ll Still Call You Baby
Writers: none listed; Producer: none listed; Publishers: none listed; Show Dog
– In case you’ve forgotten, Toby is one of the finest country singers of modern times. This power ballad gives him plenty of expressive room. Sing on, brother.

TIM WILLIAMS/Magnolia City
Writers: none listed; Producer: none listed; Publishers: none listed; Wewax
– Tim is that handsome, silver-haired guy who’s the spokesman for Trivago on TV. His debut country CD kicks off with this solid, steel-soaked honky-tonker. He’s a teensy bit pitch-y in spots, but he definitely gets the job done. Play him.

BEAU WEEVILS/Bad Blood
Writers: Charlie Daniels/Chuck Jones; Producers: James Stroud/Casey Wood; Publishers: Miss Hazel/Songs of Universal/Music of Stage Three/Warner-Tamerlane/Mike Curb, BMI; Blue Hat (track)
– The band is a new foursome comprised of Charlie Daniels, drummer James Stroud, Allman slide guitarist Billy Crain and Charlie’s longtime bass player Charlie Hayward. This sidewinding, swampy blues rocker is just one standout on a CD that’s full of audio delights. A revelatory reinvention of a living legend. The collection is called Songs in the Key of E, and you need it in your life.

KACEY MUSGRAVES/Slow Burn
Writers: Daniel Tashian/Ian Fitchuk/Musgraves; Producers: Fitchuk/Tashian/Musgraves; Publishers: none listed; MCA (track)
– I still say that Golden Hour is a very pretty pop record. But now that it’s the 2018 CMA Album of the Year, celebrate the languid, ethereal beauty of its lead-off track. Kacey’s wafting vocal glows with Texas charm. I bought the turntable version, which is pressed on clear vinyl.

BILL ANDERSON & JAMEY JOHNSON/Everybody Wants To Be Twenty-One
Writers: Johnson/Anderson; Producers: Anderson/Thomm Jutz/Peter Cooper; Publishers: none listed; TWI (track)
Anderson is this Country Music Hall of Famer’s 72nd album. At age 81, he can still cast a spell with his astonishing storytelling skills. Jamey trades verses and harmonizes with him on this contemplative ballad. It muses on the facts that youngsters wish to be older, and seniors wish to be younger. It’s easily the best written song of this listening session.

GARTH BROOKS/Stronger Than Me
Writers: Matt Rossi/Bobby Terry; Producer: none listed; Publisher: Bedroll Music/Tom and Terry Music; ASCAP; Pearl Records
– This tender ballad was a heart-tugger as a solo performance on the CMA telecast. Best lines: She lifts the weight of this whole world off my shoulder/With nothing but the touch of her hand. And the finale: I pray God takes me first/‘Cause you’re stronger than me.

Big Machine Label Group Celebrates CMAs

Thomas Rhett, Carly Pearce, Brantley Gilbert, Danielle Bradbery, Brett Young, Josh Phillips, Dan Smalley, Lauren Jenkins, Riley Green, Payton Smith and Big Machine Label Group Executives attend Big Machine Label Group Celebrates the 52nd Annual CMA Awards in Nashville at FGL House on November 14, 2018 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Jason Kempin/Contour by Getty Images for Big Machine Label Group)

Big Machine Label Group hosted their annual party at FGL House last night (Nov. 14) following the 52nd Annual CMA Awards in Nashville and celebrated a win for Thomas Rhett, who took home Music Video of the Year for “Marry Me” earlier in the day. During the ABC live broadcast, Thomas Rhett performed his latest chart-topping single “Life Changes,” Florida Georgia Line joined Bebe Rehxa for their history-making smash “Meant to Be,” which has claimed the No. 1 spot on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart for 50 weeks straight, Brett Young performed a heartfelt version of his chart-topping ballad “Mercy,” Midland honored the late Burt Reynolds with a powerful rendition of “East Bound and Down,” and Lady Antebellum presented Song of the Year and Carly Pearce bestowed Single of the Year.

As guests flocked to the Cruise Rooftop, the label’s newest signees Lady A took to the stage for a surprise performance of some of their smash hits – “You Look Good,” “Bartender” and “Need You Now” before covering Lionel Richie’s “All Night Long.”

Pictured (L-R): Jimmy Harnen, Charles Kelley, Hillary Scott, Scott Borchetta, Brett Young and Dave Haywood attend Big Machine Label Group Celebrates the 52nd Annual CMA Awards in Nashville at FGL House on November 14, 2018 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Jason Kempin/Contour by Getty Images for Big Machine Label Group )

Pictured (L-R): Charles Kelley, Hillary Scott, and Dave Haywood of Lady Antebellum perform on stage for Big Machine Label Group as they celebrate the 52nd annual CMA Awards in Nashville at FGL House on November 14, 2018 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Michael Loccisano/Contour by Getty Images for Big Machine Label Group)

Breaking: Roy Clark Dies At 85

Roy Clark

Roy Clark, the legendary ‘superpicker’, GRAMMY, CMA and ACM award winner, Country Music Hall of Fame and Grand Ole Opry member and co-host of the famed ‘Hee Haw’ television series, died Thursday (Nov. 15) at the age of 85 due to complications from pneumonia at home in Tulsa, Okla.

Roy Clark’s decade-defying success could be summed up in one word — sincerity. Sure, he was one of the world’s finest multi-instrumentalists, and one of the first cross-over artists to land singles on both the pop and country charts. He was the pioneer who turned Branson, Mo., into the live music capitol of the world (the Ozark town today boasts more seats than Broadway). And his talents turned Hee Haw into the longest-running syndicated show in television history.

But the bottom line for Roy Clark was the honest warmth he gave to his audiences. Bob Hope summed it up when he told Roy, “Your face is like a fireplace.”

“A TV camera goes right through your soul,” says the man who starred on Hee Haw for 24 years and was a frequent guest host for Johnny Carson on The Tonight Show. “If you’re a bad person, people pick that up. I’m a firm believer in smiles. I used to believe that everything had to be a belly laugh. But I’ve come to realize that a real sincere smile is mighty powerful.”

For a man who didn’t taste major success until he was 30, the key was not some grand plan but rather taking everything in its own time. “Sure,” he said, “I had dreams of being a star when I was 18. I could’ve pushed it too, but it wouldn’t have happened any sooner. I’m lucky. What’s happened has happened in spite of me.”

In fact, that’s what Clark titled his autobiography, My Life — In Spite of Myself! with Marc Elliot (Simon & Shuster, 1994). The book reminded many that there is much more to Roy Clark than fast fingers and a quick wit.

That he was raised in Washington, D.C., often surprises people. Born Roy Linwood Clark on April 15, 1933 in Meherrin, Virginia, his family moved to D.C. when he was a youngster. His father played in a square dance band and took him to free concerts by the National Symphony and by various military bands. “I was subjected to different kinds of music before I ever played. Dad said, ‘Never turn your ear off to music until your heart hears it–because then you might hear something you like.'”

Beginning on banjo and mandolin, he was one of those people “born with the music already in them.” His first guitar, a Sears Silvertone, came as a Christmas present when he was 14. That same year, 1947, he made his first TV appearance. He was 15 when he earned $2 for his first paid performance, with his dad’s band. In the fertile, diverse musical soil of cosmopolitan D.C., he began playing bars and dives on Friday and Saturday nights until he was playing every night and skipping school–eventually dropping out at 15. “Music was my salvation, the thing I loved most and did best. Whatever was fun, I’d go do that.”

The guitar wizard soon went on tour with country legends such as Hank Williams and Grandpa Jones. After winning a national banjo competition in 1950, he was invited to perform at the Grand Ole Opry, which led to shows with Red Foley and Ernest Tubb. Yet he’d always return to D.C. to play not only country but jazz, pop, and early rock’n’roll (he’s prominently featured in the recent book Capitol Rock); to play with black groups and white groups; to play fast, to even play guitar with his feet. In 1954, he joined Jimmy Dean and the Texas Wildcats, appearing in clubs and on radio and TV, and even backing up Elvis Presley.

But in 1960, he was 27 and still scrambling. An invitation to open for Wanda Jackson at the Golden Nugget in Las Vegas proved to be his big break. It led to his own tour, on the road for 345 straight nights at one stretch, and when he returned to Vegas in 1962, he came back as a headliner and recording star, with his debut album The Lightning Fingers Of Roy Clark. The next year, he had his first hit, The Tips Of My Fingers, a country song that featured an orchestra and string section. “We didn’t call it crossover then but I guess that’s what it was,” he says. “We didn’t aim for that, because if you aim for both sides you miss them both. But we just wanted to be believable.”

He was–on record and on TV, where his first appearances in 1963 on ‘The Tonight Show’ and ‘American Bandstand’ showcased his easygoing attitude and rural sense of humor. “Humor is a blessing to me. My earliest recollections are of looking at something and seeing the lighter side. But it’s always spontaneous. I couldn’t write a comedy skit for someone else.”

Throughout the ’60s, Clark recorded several albums, toured constantly, and appeared on TV variety shows from Carson to Mike Douglas to Flip Wilson. “I was the token bumpkin. It became, ‘Let’s get that Clark guy. He’s easy to get along with.'” Then came ‘Hee Haw.’ A countrified ‘Laugh-In’ with music, shot in Nashville, ‘Hee Haw’ premiered in 1969. Co-starring Clark and Buck Owens, it was an immediate hit. Though CBS canceled the show after two-and-a-half years, despite ranking in the Top 20, the series segued into syndication, where it remained until 1992. “I long ago realized it was not a figure of speech when people come up to me and say they grew up watching me since they were ‘that big’.”

A generation or two has also grown up listening to him. In 1969, Yesterday, When I Was Young charted Top 20 Pop and #9 Country (Billboard). Including Yesterday, Clark has had 23 Top 40 country hits, among them eight Top 10s: The Tips Of My Fingers (#10, 1963), I Never Picked Cotton (#5) and Thank God And Greyhound You’re Gone (#6, 1970), The Lawrence Welk-Hee Haw Counter Revolution Polka (#9, 1972), Come Live With Me (#1) and Somewhere Between Love And Tomorrow (#2, 1973), and If I Had It To Do All Over Again (#2, 1976). In addition, his 12-string guitar rendition of Malaguena is considered a classic and, in 1982, he won a Grammy (Best Country Instrumental Performance) for Alabama Jubilee.

A consummate musician, no matter the genre, he co-starred with Petula Clark at Caesar’s Palace, became the first country artist to headline at the Montreux International Jazz Festival and appeared in London on ‘The Tom Jones Show.’ Clark was amazed when guitarists from England credited his BBC specials and performances on variety TV shows with the likes of the Jackson 5 for inspiring them to play. But the highlight of his career, he said, was a pioneering, sold-out 1976 tour of the then-Soviet Union. “Even though they didn’t know the words, there were tears in their eyes when I played Yesterday. Folks there said we wouldn’t realize in our lifetime the good we’d accomplished, just because of our pickin’ around.”

When he returned in 1988 to now-Russia, Clark was hailed as a hero. Though he’d never bought a joke and doesn’t read music, the self-described, and proud of it, “hillbilly singer” was that rare entertainer with popularity worthy of a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and respect worthy of the Academy of Country Music’s Pioneer Award and membership in the Gibson (Guitar) Hall of Fame; an entertainer who could star in Las Vegas (the first country artist inducted into its Entertainers Hall of Fame), in Nashville (becoming the 63rd member of the Grand Ole Opry in 1987), and at Carnegie Hall. Roy was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2009.

Roy’s many good deeds on behalf of his fellow man led to him receiving the 1999 Minnie Pearl Humanitarian of the Year Award from TNN’s Music City News Awards. In October, 2000, he was inducted into the Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame, and he was actively involved with school children who attend the Roy Clark Elementary School in Tulsa, Okla.

From his home in Tulsa, where he moved in 1974 with Barbara, his wife of 61 years, Clark continued to tour extensively. For him — and for his legion of loyal fans — live performance was what it was all about. “Soon as you hit the edge of the stage and see people smiling and know they’re there to hear you, it’s time to have fun. I keep a band of great young people around me, and we’re not musically restrained. It’s not about ‘let’s do it correct’ but ‘let’s do it right.’”

At the end of each of Roy’s concerts, he would tell the audience, “We had to come, but you had a choice. Thanks for being here.” With responding smiles, audiences continued to thank Roy for being there, too.

Roy is preceded in death by his beloved grandson Elijah Clark who passed at the age of fourteen on September 24, 2018. Roy is survived by Barbara, his wife of sixty-one years, his sons Roy Clark II and wife Karen, Dr. Michael Meyer and wife Robin, Terry Lee Meyer, Susan Mosier and Diane Stewart, and his grandchildren: Brittany Meyer, Michael Meyer, Caleb Clark, Josiah Clark and his sister, Susan Coryell.

A memorial celebration will be held in the coming days in Tulsa, Okla., details forthcoming.

Warner Music Nashville Toasts CMAs With Post-Awards Party

Row 4 (L to R): Diego Navaira (The Last Bandoleros); Emilio Navaira (The Last Bandoleros); Jerry Fuentes (The Last Bandoleros); Derek James (The Last Bandoleros); Troy Cartwright; Ryan Griffin; Bailey Bryan; Charlie Worsham; Cale Dodds; Frankie Ballard; Dee White; Ivy Dene (Walker County); Sophie Dawn (Walker County); Wes Vause (SVP Publicity) Row 3 (L to R): Ben Dumas (The Wild Feathers); Ricky Young (The Wild Feathers); Morgan Evans; Shane Tarleton (SVP Artist Development); Chris Janson; Scott Hendricks (EVP A&R); Matt Signore (COO); Cole Swindell; William Michael Morgan
Row 2 (L to R): Brett Moore (The Wild Feathers); Taylor Burns (The Wild Feathers); RaeLynn; Brett Eldredge; John Esposito (Chairman & CEO); Dan Smyers (Dan + Shay); Shay Mooney (Dan + Shay); Cris Lacy (SVP A&R); Megan Joyce (SVP Business & Legal Affairs); Ashley McBryde; Trea Landon  Row 1 (L to R); Joel King (The Wild Feathers); Ingrid Andress; Kristen Williams (SVP Radio & Streaming); Tegan Marie; Devin Dawson; Hunter Hayes; Cody Johnson; Michael Ray     Photo Credit: Jimmy Fisco

Warner Music Nashville artists and staff celebrated following the 52nd Annual CMA Awards Wednesday night (Nov. 14) at an intimate post-show reception at Woolworth on 5th. The label received the highest number of CMA nominations in company history tracing back nearly a decade this year, and celebrated Kenny Chesney‘s win for Musical Event of the Year alongside David Lee Murphy (“Everything’s Gonna Be Alright”). WMN artists Dan + Shay, Chris Janson, Cole Swindell and Ashley McBryde all performed during the evening’s telecast.

Pictured (L-R): John Esposito (Chairman & CEO, WMN); Dan Smyers (Dan + Shay); Max Lousada (CEO Recorded Music, WMG); Shay Mooney (Dan + Shay)

Pictured (L-R): Brett Eldredge; John Esposito (Chairman & CEO, WMN); Bebe Rexha; Max Lousada (CEO Recorded Music, WMG); James Blunt

Pictured (L-R): Stephen Cooper (CEO, WMG); Cris Lacy (SVP A&R, WMN); Cole Swindell