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Country

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As Eric Church gears up for the opening of Chief’s, his downtown Nashville restaurant, bar and music venue located at 200 Broadway, the CMA entertainer of the year-winning artist gave premium members of his Church Choir fan club a surprise. Tens of thousands of Church fans were sent deeds of ownership to individual bricks that make up the physical framework of the six-story Nashville venue.

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Additionally, fans received access to a virtual fan community and the first in a series of digital collectibles, including a digital version of their brick, which offers access to exclusive content such as previously unheard demos, unreleased video footage, and priority entrance to Chief’s. Other digital collectibles some fans can receive include Vinyl For Life, which gives fans first-edition vinyl of Church’s catalog and a copy of every new piece of vinyl released going forward, including all color variants. Other prizes include a signed guitar (which also grants access to content including a video guitar lesson from Church’s guitarist Driver Williams, and videos of performances from Church playing the guitar). Other prizes include year-long subscriptions to SiriusXM and an opportunity to record a guest DJ set at Chief’s studio as part of Outsiders Radio “Insiders Hour.”

According to Rolling Stone, the virtual component also serves as a database for concerts on Church’s tours, giving fans the ability to “check in” to shows they have attended, view setlists and view tour posters for each concert.

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“You’ve helped me build my career brick by brick, and I want the whole world to know that the building is yours,” Church said in a message to fans. “This is not just another club downtown. This is our house. I’ve been involved in every step of restoring this historic building into a place we can call our own and, because you’ve been with me every step of my career, I’m proud to dedicate a physical brick of the Chief’s building to each and every one of you.”

In 2022, Church announced the upcoming venue, for which he has partnered with real estate developer and hospitality entrepreneur Ben Weprin of AJ Capital. Chief’s will include not only a ticketed music venue, but also additional live entertainment throughout the building, as well as a studio to be used for broadcasting (including for Eric Church Outsiders Radio on SiriusXM), with the capability to host broadcasts from various media partners. Street-level windows will also offer fans a behind-the-scenes look into seeing the broadcast in action. Chief’s will also honor Church’s Carolina roots via a partnership with Rodney Scott. Scott’s Whole Hog BBQ will overlook Nashville’s downtown from its “Hell of a Q” rooftop position. An opening date has yet to be set for the venue.

Giving his fans a stake in ownership — not simply fan-fueled allegiance — has been a cornerstone of Church’s career, most notably back in 2015, when Church surprise-released his album Mr. Misunderstood, by sending copies of the album directly to his Church Choir fanclub members before anyone else heard the project.

“My songs are mine, until I release them, and then they’re never mine again. And this building’s a lot that way,” Church further added in a statement. “It’s been mine in the building of it, in the cultivating with the stories, the challenges, and the successes. But once Chief’s opens, it’s not mine anymore. It belongs to the Choir. It belongs to the fans. It belongs to the patrons. It belongs to the stories they create there. It belongs to the music they listen to there and share from there. So, my story ends where theirs begins and that’s the essence of what you do musically and what we’re trying to do at Chief’s.”

Zach Bryan had a surprise for concertgoers who attended the opening show of his headlining The Quittin’ Time Tour on Tuesday night (March 5) at United Center in Chicago. Bryan welcomed Kacey Musgraves to join him to perform their Grammy-winning song “I Remember Everything” together live for the first time. Explore See latest videos, charts […]

Country careers are built, as The Oak Ridge Boys like to say, on “three minutes of magic.” And the next most important ingredient for career longevity, as The Oaks also like to say, is “three more minutes of magic.”

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George Birge found his first three-minute life-changer with “Mind on You,” a mysterious-sounding 2022 release about romantic obsession that peaked at No. 2 on Country Airplay on Jan. 6, 2024.

Of course, the three-minute creations don’t usually appear through magic. Songwriters typically spend hours – months sometimes – working on songs that never get heard outside the publisher’s office. And even when they do get into public circulation, a song that feels seamless may not reflect the amount of time that went into its creation.

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“As songwriters, we go into the deepest, darkest corners of these things, trying to create magic and trying to create stuff that people feel,” Birge says. “You never know if that extra two hours or three hours you spend on a 10-second part of the song, or direction, is even going to resonate, or if people are ever gonna catch it.”

That provides a solid framework for what’s likely to become Birge’s second “thee minutes of magic.” “Cowboy Songs,” released by RECORDS Nashville to country radio via PlayMPE on Feb. 22, is – like “Mind On You” – a mysterious-sounding song about romantic obsession, but its 187-second script required perhaps 17 hours to write on its date of creation, and then another six months or so to fully develop its final sonic persona.

Birge leaned into it with three fellow writers on Feb. 3, 2023, in a retreat at a Tims Ford lake house, between Lynchburg and Winchester, south of Nashville. By leaving town, Birge says, “I can turn the real world off for a second [and] have a lot more fruitful songwriting.”

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The time of year helped that effort.

“It was dead of the winter, and I think that was the best thing for us,” says co-writer Michael Tyler (“Somewhere On A Beach,” “Girl Like You”). “All we did the whole time was write. I think we wrote three or four songs in two days. And we knew instantly that this was the one. If it was during the summertime, I don’t think we would have wrote any of those. We would just be out on a boat.”

“Cowboy Songs” originated with songwriter/producer Matt McGinn (“Bury Me In Georgia,” “7500 OBO”), who had the hook – “she only dances to cowboy songs” – but thought it would work best if the music was somewhat antithetical to the lyrical theme.

“We wanted it to be something you wouldn’t expect,” Tyler says.

Songwriter/producer Lalo Guzman (Sammy Arriaga, Dylan Schneider) whipped out a track he’d created that he believed would be too far afield, but he liked it and figured it would at least give them a starting place to explore the sound’s direction. His co-writers all jumped in on that very track.

“I was like, ‘For real?’” Guzman recalls. “It was just wild.”

Tyler sang what became the hook at the start of the chorus, and they knocked out a good part of that stanza before jumping to the opening verse, where they set up the scenario. The protagonist had staked out a place in a bar, where he’d ordered a mystery woman’s favorite drink and brought a lighter to attend to her smoking needs. The guy didn’t know her name or if she’d even show up, but he was prepared if she did.

“As a younger kid, when I first started going out to bars and stuff with a fake ID, you would see this girl that’s just like magic,” Birge remembers. “She’s captivating a room. Everybody’s looking at her – and this is back when Austin had these cash-only bars and it was smoking, and edgy, and jukebox. I was immediately transported back to that scene, and I was like, ‘Okay, how do I capture that in a song?’ and like, ‘Who is she? And who’s watching her?’”

When they got back to the chorus, they revised the foundation a bit to change things up. “We were singing the chorus over the same verse chords for a second,” Tyler says. “I can’t remember who it was – maybe it was Lalo, the producer – that was like, ‘What if we went somewhere completely different for the chorus chords?’ It really lifted and took that chorus into a different space, and made it made it a lot more hooky.”

Birge dropped in a Waylon Jennings reference – “I definitely was very heavily influenced by Waylon, so it’s probably not an accident,” Birge says – and they kept a Texas-based narrative in verse two, with a note that “She makes love like an Amarillo rain.”

“In Texas, rain is very hard to come by, and you’re always praying for it,” Birge explains. “You’re begging for it to come, and then when it does rain, it’s long and steady, and it lasts forever. That was the vision I had.”

Much of the 17 hours on the retreat was devoted to the demo, which included enough steel guitar and Dobro to insert a little Western flare into the mysterious sound. They worked on the master multiple times, with Andy Ellison providing steel at the beginning and Birge spending three hours on the vocal track, drinking tequila to set the barroom mood and focusing on specific inflections. They blended three different basses to get the low end sound, but they kept going back to the studio in an attempt to get the drums right. Originally, it had no live drums, then Guzman oversaw a session that took the percussion too far afield. Finally, McGinn worked with drummer Phil Lawson, who held back during much of the three minutes, but pounded the snares when it fit.

“Matt took it to where it needed to go to,” Guzman says. “I was almost envisioning it a little too pop – like The Weeknd kind of drums. For some reason, the groove wasn’t clicking. Matt brought in that space that I wasn’t hearing.”

Sometime after the song’s completion, McGinn was arrested Oct. 31 on a domestic violence charge. He has, Birge says, dedicated himself to recovery.

Meanwhile, Birge began playing “Cowboy Songs” live during the fall, planning it as his next single. It debuted at No. 55 on the Country Airplay chart dated March 9, two weeks ahead of the label’s impact date. “I’ve never had a song that we play live react like this,” he says. “I go to the meet and greet line, and every single person in line would be like, ‘This song, “She only dances to cowboy songs,” when does that come out?’”

Thus, early indications suggest that the 17-hour writing session and the months of agonizing over drums sounds may have given Birge what he most needed from “Cowboy Songs”: three more minutes of magic.

Kacey Musgraves is taking fans farther into her Deeper Well.
Musgraves’ has an upcoming interview on Sunday TODAY With Willie Geist, and Billboard has an exclusive clip of the conversation. The chat took place at New York City’s iconic Electric Lady Studios, where Musgraves recorded her upcoming album, Deeper Well, out March 15 via Interscope Records/MCA Nashville.

Electric Lady Studios, in Greenwich Village, was commissioned by Jimi Hendrix in 1968. Though Hendrix spent only 10 weeks recording in the studio prior to his death in 1970, the studio has gone on to become a beloved creative and recording oasis for artists including Stevie Wonder, Led Zeppelin, David Bowie, The Rolling Stones, AC/DC, Billy Idol, Questlove, Adele, Keith Richards, Lady Gaga and Taylor Swift.

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“This was the studio that we kind of inhabited for the few months that we spent working on this,” Musgraves tells Geist in the exclusive clip. “It was truly an amazing experience.”

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Musgraves says of drawing inspiration from Electric Lady Studios, “Every studio has its own energy, but this one has such a storied past. This building — and it literally being Jimi Hendrix’s apartment — right here, that’s some seriously good mojo. I just know so many amazing creatives are drawn to creating here, and there’s a reason.

Geist comments that the colorful murals on the studio walls are from when Hendrix had the studio created, while Musgraves noted, “I don’t think it’s been touched. I think it’s pretty original … He commissioned these, which they still look amazing. They still look space-agey.”

She also discusses the studio’s location in the heart of Greenwich Village. “As you know there’s such a rich folk-music history, songwriter history, poets, activism — all of that happened here,” Musgraves said. “I was very drawn to getting out of Nashville and creating somewhere where there was a different energy, a different life kind of bubbling around you. I just think New York is one of the most unique cities in the world. It’s inspiring for sure.”

Musgraves recently released the album’s title track, and performed both “Deeper Well” and “Too Good to Be True” during an appearance on Saturday Night Live.

The full interview between Musgraves and Geist airs Sunday, March 10, on NBC. Watch the clip from the interview below:

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Typically, the moment a song debuts on Billboard‘s Hot Country Songs chart marks a milestone — the early edges of an artist and their team’s work to push the song as far aloft a music chart as they can — with the ultimate goal of the song reaching the chart’s penthouse and staying there as […]

Shania Twain has been a role model to her fans for nearly 30 years — but now Barbie has made it official. 
The musical superstar is a 2024 Barbie role model, selected by Mattel to receive her own one-of-a-kind Barbie doll to honor her work breaking down barriers and inspiring women to accomplish their dreams. Not available at retail, Mattel has been creating the one-of-a-kind Barbies annually since 2018 in conjunction with March 8’s International Women’s Day. Also among the eight honorees this year are actresses Helen Mirren and Viola Davis, as well as pop icon Kylie Minogue.

The role models are part of Barbie’s 65th anniversary, to be celebrated on Mar. 9, which also includes introducing a retail collection that celebrates the most popular Barbie career dolls over the past 65 years, and bows new dolls inspired by classic Barbie looks.

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Twain, speaking from Los Angeles via Zoom with her Barbie by her side, says she was so flattered to be selected: “I take being a role model, seriously because I know the impact one can have on somebody else’s life can be negative or positive. I choose to aim for the positive.” 

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But that doesn’t mean sugarcoating things, the country legend stresses. “I want to make people feel good and happy, even if that means sometimes sharing difficult or unhappy things about my own life to make others feel that they’re not alone,” she says. Key to being a role model is also Twain’s belief in self-empowerment, “because those times when you feel alone or are genuinely alone, you’ve got yourself — so you better know how to self-empower. It’s such an important vital tool and skill to have.” 

Her Barbie sports Twain’s signature top hat, long black coat and thigh high boots from 1999’s classic “Man! I Look Like a Woman!” video. Twain picked that era, because of the message she felt the song and the look imparted. “Man! I Feel Like a Woman!” is “a fun party song” for a lot of people, she says, but there’s a deeper meaning behind the tune.

“That is the joy of getting in touch with your self courage, and saying, ‘I’m not afraid to be myself.’ That’s why I wrote the song in the first place,” she explains. “I was really starting to come into my own, not as a confident female, but I was just starting to feel confident in my female body. I was very self-conscious before that in all of my youth.”

The video was a way of embracing her femininity and her strength. “I’m going, ‘OK, I have a lot to say. I want to be taken seriously. But I’m also a woman and I have curves and I don’t want to have to hide behind them,” she continues. “I want to enjoy fashion as a woman. I want to be able to dress up. I wasn’t thinking Barbie — I couldn’t have imagined that — but it’s such a perfect fit, because it’s a manifestation of dreams and imagination.”

Her Barbie comes with a modern update that meant the world to her, the singer says, as she removes the hat to reveal cascading pink hair she sometimes sported during last year’s The Queen of Me tour— as opposed to the brunette locks in the video.

“The video and styling for ‘Man! I Feel Like a Woman!’ was all about peeling off layers and the structure and letting lose and sharing what is also underneath all of that. On The Queen of Me tour, I went crazy with all the hair on the tour,” she says. She praises Barbie team for combining the old and new. “They allowed my new contemporary take on myself to enter the world of Barbie and I just am really flattered by that,” she says. 

More than 25 years since the video’s release, Twain sees shared themes between the “Man! I Feel Like a Woman!” clip and this summer’s Barbie movie. “What I love most about [the movie], which is also what I did with the song and video, was, ‘OK, let’s not diminish the aesthetics. Let’s be true to our Barbie beauty, our beauty aesthetics, the attention to detail in all its Barbie glory and still say something meaningful.’”

Twain returns to her Come On Over residency at Planet Hollywood’s Bakkt Theater in Las Vegas on May 10. It follows the Queen of Me tour, which grossed more than $110 million dollars and was the fifth biggest country tour of 2023, according to Billboard Boxscore.

Tucker Wetmore had never appeared on a Billboard chart before this week, but now, he’s already a Billboard Hot 100-charting hitmaker thanks to his breakthrough single, “Wine Over Whiskey.” Explore Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news Released Feb. 23 on Back Blocks Music, the song debuts at No. […]

Beyoncé may have snagged a second week atop the Billboard Hot 100 with “Texas Hold ‘Em,” but that’s not the only major story in country music this week. Following the announcement of a new collaboration between Carly Pearce and Ryan Hurd, the “Hummingbird” singer took to X (formerly Twitter) to clarify rumors of a feud […]

Elle King has returned to the spotlight, as the singer-songwriter performed at two events over the weekend. On Friday (March 1), the “Ex’s and Oh’s” singer took the stage during the Extra Innings Festival in Tempe, Ariz., and on Saturday (March 2), opened a show on Chris Stapleton’s All-American Road Show Tour in San Diego, Calif.
King’s sets marked her first performances since her controversial Grand Ole Opry set in honor of Dolly Parton‘s 78th birthday in late January, where King, seemingly inebriated, forgot the lyrics as she attempted to sing the country icon’s 2001 song “Marry Me.”

“I don’t know the lyrics to this thing in this f–king town. Don’t tell Dolly ’cause it’s her birthday,” King had said during the Opry performance.

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It appears that King didn’t comment on the Opry show during her Extra Innings set. Wearing a long-sleeve, red shirt and a snakeskin skirt, King delivered songs including “Love Go By” and a cover of the Charlie Daniels Band’s “Long Haired Country Boy,” according to footage from the set on social media. Social media footage also showed her drinking from a bottle of water throughout the show.

During a recent interview with Extra, Parton offered up her thoughts on King’s Opry performance, offering grace and encouragement. “Elle is a really great artist. She’s a great girl,” the country star said. “She’s been going through a lot of hard things lately, and she just had a little too much to drink.”

Parton went on to advise, “So let’s just forgive that and forget it and move on, ’cause she felt worse than anybody ever could.”

Next up for King is a series of overseas shows, with performances as part of the Country 2 Country festival in Europe. In addition to her pop hits, King has earned two Billboard Country Airplay hits: “Drunk (And I Don’t Wanna Go Home)” with Miranda Lambert, and “Different For Girls” with Dierks Bentley.

The Academy of Country Music Awards will return to Texas on Thursday, May 16, streaming live again from Ford Center at The Star in Frisco, Texas, via Prime Video, globally and exclusively.

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“Frisco, Texas, and The Star District proved to be the perfect new home for the evolution of this Emmy-nominated ‘Party,’ bringing music’s biggest global superstars to the passionate and loyal Texas Country Music fans!” ACM CEO Damon Whiteside said in a statement. “We’re thrilled to bring ACM Awards week to life again at the home of America’s Team, the Dallas Cowboys, along with our best-in-class partners at Amazon Prime Video, Amazon Music, Dick Clark Productions and our Executive Producer, Raj Kapoor, to make this year’s show even bigger and better. Fans will certainly want to be there in person to experience all the incredible moments we have in store, and we can’t wait to see everyone in Texas!”

“We all experienced firsthand last year what a perfect fit the Academy of Country Music Awards are with Ford Center at The Star, not only inside for the show, but out and around The Star District and Frisco as well,” added Dallas Cowboys Owner, President and General Manager Jerry Jones. “The stars of country music shine very brightly here in Texas, and we’re honored to be the home of this amazing celebration once again. We can’t wait to host all of the great artists and fans at Country Music’s Party of the Year!”

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ACM Awards pre-sale tickets will be available to ACM A-List subscribers, beginning Wednesday, March 6, while general on-sale will begin at 11 a.m. ET on Friday, March 8, at SeatGeek.

In 2023, the Academy of Country Music Awards were hosted by Garth Brooks and Dolly Parton, and was a two-hour concert event that streamed live globally on Prime Video and the Amazon Music channel on Twitch. The night featured 18 performances from 25 artists.

The evening’s big winners included Chris Stapleton earning his first ACM entertainer of the year trophy. HARDY won two accolades (as artist and co-producer) in the music event of the year category, for “wait in the truck,” his collab with Lainey Wilson. HARDY and Wilson also won visual media of the year for “wait in the truck,” while HARDY also won in the new artist-songwriter of the year category. Wilson also won for female artist of the year and album of the year (for her set Bell Bottom Country).

Additional details for this year’s ACM Awards, including hosts, nominees, performers, and ticketing information for additional ACM events surrounding the awards have yet to be announced.

DCP is owned by Penske Media Eldridge, a Penske Media Corporation (PMC) subsidiary and joint venture between PMC and Eldrige. PMC is the parent company of Billboard.