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Nashville music publishing executive Linda Patterson “Pat” Rolfe, who became one of the first women to lead a major music publishing company in the early 1970s, died of cancer on Friday (May 24) at age 77.
Rolfe, a Waverly, Tenn., native, was born July 27, 1946. She graduated from Waverly Central High School in 1964 and moved to Nashville, launching her music industry career in 1966 at music publishing company Hill & Range. While at the company — which became a dominant music publishing player in country music in the 1950s and 1960s — she joined Lamar Fike, a member of Elvis Presley‘s entourage who worked in lighting and helped oversee Presley’s music publishing. She also worked on hit songs by Johnny Cash, Marty Robbins, Eddy Arnold and bluegrass pioneer Bill Monroe.

Rolfe was elevated to a leadership role at Hill & Range — rare for a woman executive in that era — when she was named GM at Hill & Range in 1972. She also brought Celia Froehlig into the company fold, with both staying on until Chappell Music acquired the Hill & Range companies in 1975. Froehlig would go on to hold senior roles at EMI Music Publishing and Black River Entertainment.

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Following the acquisition, Rolfe continued at Chappell Music, which was named ASCAP publisher of the year seven times during her tenure. She rose to the role of vp and held that role until 1987, when Warner Bros. Music acquired the company.

That same year, longtime ASCAP Nashville head Connie Bradley offered Rolfe a position as director of membership relations. While at the performing rights organization, Rolfe rose to the role of vp, bringing such songwriters and singer-songwriters as Dierks Bentley, Brad Paisley, Wynonna Judd, Tony Mullins, Trevor Rosen, Hillary Lindsey, Gerry House, Josh Kear, Michael Knox and Chris Tompkins into the fold. She retired in 2010.

In 1991, seeking to further elevate women in the music industry, Rolfe teamed with Judy Harris and Shelia Shipley Biddy to co-found SOURCE, a nonprofit organization that supports women professionals in the Nashville music industry. She was inducted into the SOURCE Hall of Fame in 2012.

“We are heartbroken over the loss of one of our beloved Founding SOURCE members Pat Rolfe,” said SOURCE Nashville president Kari Barnhart in a statement. “Pat’s heart for recognizing and elevating the Women Behind the Music is a legacy that will continue to live on through the organization she lovingly helped build with our other founding members Judy Harris and Shelia Shipley-Biddy over 33 years ago. Pat remained dedicated to the organization as a member of the Source Awards Committee through the years.”

Rolfe also served on the boards of organizations including the Nashville Songwriters Association International (NSAI), Nashville Music Association and Copyright Society of the South.

Rolfe is survived by her husband of 54 years, Mack, as well as stepchildren John (Vanessa), Jim (Mary K) and Dick (Michelle); seven grandchildren; brothers Jim, Mike, Joe and Charlie Patterson; and sister Margaret Simmons. She was preceded in death by her parents, Marie and George Patterson, her brother Jerry Patterson and sister-in-law Ann Patterson.

A visitation with the family will be held on Wednesday (May 29) from 9:30 a.m. until 11:00 a.m. at Green Hills Community Church in Nashville, with the funeral service set to begin at 11:00 a.m. In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations go to the Bonaparte’s Retreat Dog Rescue, the Green Hills Community Church or a charity of your choosing.

As a former firefighter, it’s easy to think of Tyler Braden as a community-minded guy who’s not afraid of perilous situations.
That background provides automatic authenticity for “Devil You Know,” a country single with strong, early-2000s rock overtones. The sound is dangerous, and so is the message to any listener who might test the singer’s limits: “Don’t mistake my kindness for weakness.”

“I’m not gonna be some person that’s gonna flip the switch very easily and yell all the time and be angry,” Braden says. “But at the same time, I’m not gonna let myself be pushed around.”

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“Devil You Know” is “the anthem for the underdogs,” says writer-artist Graham Barham, and that’s an appropriate sort of song to emerge from the creative crew behind it. Braden is a developing Warner Music Nashville artist, and all four of the song’s Warner Chappell writers – Barham, Jon Hall, Zack Dyer and writer-producer Sam Martinez – are experiencing personal landmarks with “Devil.”

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“We’re all underdogs,” notes Barham, a Sony Music Nashville artist. “This is all our first song on radio as writers. And I think this is one of Tyler’s best ones to date. So I mean, for this to be the anthem for us to come out with is really freaking cool.”

Barham is actually the artist they were targeting when the four writers met up at Warner Chappell in July 2023. None of them brought any specific ideas to the appointment, but they knew they wanted to create something dark. Hall leaned into an unsettling chord progression, and Martinez tweaked it just a hair.

“The last chord in the progression is kind of ambiguous,” Martinez says, noting that it’s neither a major nor a minor triad. “It’s kind of a rock thing from the ‘90s and 2000s. Like, that one chord in this song is actually suspended, and there is no third.”

Martinez layered the sound with a repetitive, three-note pattern on acoustic guitar that became an identifiable part of the intro. That hook never quite resolves, adding to the tension. Barham started singing a melody that would become the chorus, though they still didn’t have any words or message.

As they sorted through concepts, Hall thought the word “devil” fit, and Dyer started scrolling through titles he’d saved on his phone.

“I came across this ‘Better the devil you know than the devil you don’t’ [idea],” Dyer recalls. “We had this rhythmic thing on the end of [one] line, and I was just kind of messing with different titles in that spot. And I was like, ‘What about this idea? It kind of works with some of the lines we’re messing with,’ and we just rolled with that.”

Initially, they tried to make it a song about picking between different types of alcohol – bourbon, gin, tequila, etc. – to find the devil of choice. But it morphed into a good-guy-with-a-quiet-power story. “Everybody’s got their tipping point,” Hall reasons, “and without being a fighting song, it does a good job of politely saying, “I’ll kick your ass if you if you mess with that side of me.’”

They wrote the bulk of the chorus first, promising the listener that “there’s a hell on the other side” if the good guy gets crossed. With a couple lines unfinished in the middle of that chorus, they turned to the opening verse, creating a plot in which the singer owns his quiet-hero image. But when it broke into a melodically ascendant pre-chorus, the attitude changed with the melody – it’s where they introduced the “don’t mistake my kindness for weakness” line.

Unlike most country songs, they didn’t include any “furniture” – no specific items that provide a sense of time or place. The closest they came was in verse two, as the protagonist dares the listener: “Go on pull the trigger/ Try your luck.” Given the song’s menacing tone, it could be perceived as a real gun.

“That’s definitely a metaphor,” Barham says. “I got better s–t to do than kill people.”

“Songwriting,” he adds, “we exaggerate everything.”

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The unfinished lyric they had left in the chorus finally got completed during a break when Hall and Dyer shot hoops on the Warner Chappell basketball court. “That lyric came to me: ‘Dare you to light that fuse/ ‘Cause I can be a loose cannon,’” Hall says.

The fuse and cannon lined up allegorically, while “fuse” and “loose” established an internal rhyme that indirectly enhanced the song’s rough-cut nature. “It just adds this new element with the cannon not rhyming,” Hall explains. “It makes it pretty cool.”

Martinez produced the demo with Barham singing lead and Hall handling the bulk of the harmonies. As they finished the preliminary work at Warner Chappell, they collectively agreed that it needed a post-chorus. They settled on a haunting, rising melody, all of them singing in unison. When Martinez finished the demo later, Barham suggested using that section in the intro, too, underscoring the song’s darkness.

In October, Braden spent a day listening to outside songs, and “Devil You Know” stood out. He contacted Martinez about recording his voice in place of Barham’s on the demo to see how it sounded. They booked a date at Nashville’s Starstruck Studios and treated it like a master session with Martinez paying attention to every vocal detail. Braden mostly replicated Barham’s melodic nuances, though he brought a smoky rock resonance that replaced Barham’s twang.

“It wasn’t [always] my first melodic instinct, so I would do it differently and Sam would stop me because he really liked the original,” Braden says. “He kind of honed in on it, and so it took kind of a real focus.”

Martinez wasn’t a total taskmaster. Braden sang the word “dust” idiosyncratically in the first verse – it sounds like “doost” – and Martinez kept that enunciation. “It does have a funky little thing to it,” Martinez allows. “Those are the things that give us that much more identity.”

Braden’s team thought highly of the performance and wanted to tease it on social media. Some of the songwriters were nervous – if it didn’t go over, it was likely that no one else would be willing to cut it – but they ultimately decided Braden was worth the risk. “He sounds amazing on it,” Dyer says. “He sang his ass off. We’re just like, ‘Let them have it.’”

Braden shot a video in what looks like the woods in mid-January; it’s actually about 15 feet from his back porch. “A lot of people would comment, ‘You’re copying Oliver Anthony,’ I guess because of the beard and the trees,” Braden says with a laugh.

Indeed a lot of people saw it – that first video has 3.5 million views on TikTok alone – and Warner wanted a master recording for quick release. Martinez had little more than a week to pull it off. He used Braden’s existing vocals, the group vocals from the demo and about half of the demo’s instrumental parts, including the repeating three-note guitar hook. He brought in musicians to cut new parts one at a time, beginning with fiddler Kyle Pudenz, who injected Cajun spirit into the rock texture.

“Devil You Know” went to digital service providers Feb. 2, scoring 25.5 million plays on Spotify, and WMN shipped it to country radio via PlayMPE on March 26. It ranks No. 33 on the Hot Country Songs chart dated May 25, giving underdogs a biting song they can call their own.

“It’s been cool to watch people that say, ‘Hey, this is our anthem,’” Braden notes. “The best part of music in general is that we can all hear the same song, and it means something different to every one of us.”

Darius Rucker is speaking out about his February arrest, which found the country star facing two misdemeanor charges related to an instance of alleged drug possession more than a year ago. While promoting his new memoir Life’s Too Short on TODAY Tuesday (May 28), Rucker recounted how he was initially pulled over in Tennessee in […]

Morgan Wallen‘s mom is not having it. The country singer’s mother took to Instagram last week to do some mama bear-ing after the Nashville Metro City Council voted to deny the singer’s request to install a large exterior sign (or “aerial encroachment” as they put it) for his soon-to-open This Bar and Tennessee Kitchen due […]

This week’s stack of new country music includes a new one from the prolific Zach Bryan, as well as new tunes from Jamey Johnson, Midland, 49 Winchester and Shaylen.

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Zach Bryan, “Pink Skies”

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The prolific Bryan is known for releasing music sporadically, with little-to-no leadup to an album in terms of promotional singles (think his previous self-titled LP and its Billboard Hot 100-topping Kacey Musgraves collab “I Remember Everything,” released for the first time as part of the album). But as he releases his new song, “Pink Skies,” stadium-headliner Bryan noted on social media that he’s set to soon release a new project, The Great American Bar Scene.

The harmonica-dipped, acoustic guitar-driven track — which Bryan previously previewed on social media under the title “Elegy”– describes preparing for a funeral, but in true Bryan fashion, infuses his melancholia-hued lyrics with stately percussion, lifting the somber track to crowd singalong status. A collection of memories tie together as Bryan sings to the departed familial patriarch on lyrics like, “You’d be proud/ But you’d think they’s yuppies/ Your funeral was beautiful/ I bet God heard you coming.” The new song seems poised to become another fan-favorite, cementing Bryan’s current ranking as a top-tier purveyor of conversational, poetic heartland rock.

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Jamey Johnson, “21 Guns”

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Jamey Johnson releases his first new music in nearly a decade, turning his potent songwriting talent and burnished voice to paying homage to military members who gave the ultimate sacrifice. Johnson wrote the song with Jim “Moose” Brown, inspired by the funerals that Johnson (who served in the U.S. Marines for nearly a decade) has attended for many of his fellow servicemembers whose lives were cut short. The song depicts attending a service for a fallen comrade, as the preacher gives the eulogy and the serviceman is given a customary 21 gun salute, before Johnson goes directly for heart-crushing truths on the line “The rifles fire and your life flashes right before my eyes,” adding, “I don’t need no one to tell me you’re a hero/ Hell I’ve known that ever since you were young.”

Johnson, one of the top songwriters of this generation, won two CMA song of the year honors for crafting “Give It Away” and “In Color.” Here, he offers his masterful songwriting pen and world-weary vocal in service to the memory of his fellow service members, speaking truth with a grizzled grace.

Midland, “Old Fashioned Feeling”

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The Texas-formed trio returns with their first new music since 2022 with this sumptuous slow-burn they recorded at Savannah, Georgia’s Georgia Mae Studios, with Dave Cobb producing. Lead singer Mark Wystrach depicts coping with the last embers of a burned-out relationship by turning to a dim-lit bar, a stiff drink, and a cavalcade of memories. The track is brimming with old-school, soulful country sounds, and spearheaded by the trio’s harmonies, which are as smooth and warm as any top-shelf bourbon.

49 Winchester, “Fast Asleep”

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Sextet 49 Winchester dusts off one of the group’s earliest songs and revitalizes it with help from the Prague-based Czech National Symphony Orchestra. The song launches with pared-back instrumentation, featuring little more than acoustic guitar and lead singer Isaac Gibson’s plaintive vocal, depicting the struggle and resolution of romantic ties, before the rest of the group and the orchestra joins in on the choruses, with the orchestra lending further heft to the band’s alright exemplary musicianship. The song is featured on the group’s upcoming album Leavin’ This Holler, out Aug. 2, via New West Records.

Shaylen, “Let Me Let You”

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This Chattanooga, Tennessee-born, Dallas-raised singer-songwriter deftly blends elements of country, soul and punk on this new track. Shaylen wrote this track with Brett Tyler and Lindsay Rimes, pouring out the angst of someone who’s trying to pick up the pieces of a shattered relationship and transition to a new life chapter, only to find her ex keeps showing up at her door. “When it’s 2 a.m. missing me again/ Why you gotta let me know?” she sings. Shaylen’s strong, confident vocal inhabits a punk edge and ripples over polished country-pop construction of careening rock guitar, eruptive percussion and a chorus tailor-made to get audiences chanting along.

Lana Del Rey is gearing up to release her upcoming country album, Lasso, and the superstar opened up about her incredible career trajectory in a new interview with NME. Explore Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news When asked about how she feels about proving haters wrong amid her […]

Morgan Wallen was slated to open his downtown Nashville bar during Memorial Day weekend, but those plans have been postponed.
Wallen’s This Bar & Tennessee Kitchen, located at 107 4th Ave. N., won’t open this weekend as planned, according to representatives for TC Restaurant Group, the organization that teamed with Wallen to open the establishment, and which is also behind other Nashville celebrity bars from Luke Bryan, Miranda Lambert and Jason Aldean. No new opening date has been given.

A statement from Wallen’s This Bar & Tennessee Kitchen issued to Billboard read, “We’re proud of our team who has worked tirelessly to prepare Morgan Wallen’s This Bar & Tennessee Kitchen for opening. The ground-up construction of a six-story venue launching with hundreds of team members is a tremendous amount of work and a complex process.”

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The statement continues, “When we open, we want This Bar to be an exceptional experience for guests. Unfortunately, the process requires more time, and we are not able to open and provide that experience this Memorial Day weekend. Rest assured it will be well worth the wait. We look forward to welcoming guests soon.”

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A source tells Billboard that the restaurant/bar is awaiting final inspections, but declined to address whether TC Restaurant Group had been denied a catering license (which allows an establishment to sell liquor, wine and beer), as had been reported by online site, Scoop Nashville, or had even applied yet. The source did confirm that the postponement of the grand opening is not related to the Nashville Metro Council’s decision earlier this week to deny approval for an external sign for the bar.

On Tuesday (May 21), the council rejected plans for Wallen’s 20-foot external sign–labeled an “aerial encroachment” that would have encroached on the sidewalk, which is city property– for the six-story building. Thirty members of the council voted against the sign, with only three members voting in favor of it and four abstaining. Some members of the council cited Wallen’s past controversial incidents, including his use of a racial slur in January 2021 and his arrest on felony charges last month for throwing a chair off the six-story roof off of Eric Church’s Chief’s bar, as reasons for rejecting the sign.

Wallen announced the bar’s opening on May 4 at one of his three sold-out Nissan Stadium shows in Nashville, though never specified the exact date. “It’s over off 4th Ave. just beside the Ryman [Auditorium], and it’s going to be opening Memorial Day weekend, so I hope I see y’all there,” Wallen said from the stage. The bar’s official instagram picked up the video of Wallen making the announcement, but has since taken it down, and now has only a post with a video of downtown Nashville with the name of Wallen’s bar and the words “Coming Summer 2024.”

Wallen’s representative referred inquiries to TC Restaurant Group.

As of late, country superstar Jelly Roll has been embracing a healthier lifestyle. But the “Halfway to Hell” singer says the key to his success lies in balance and knowing what works for him.

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In a new interview with Taste of Country Nights, Jelly Roll was asked if he is still smoking marijuana in the midst of his aim of living a healthier lifestyle. “I get in trouble for this, all the time, but my stance on marijuana will always be the same. I believe marijuana has helped me in so many regards, with my anxiety,” he said. “This is a hot button topic, but truly, marijuana has kept me sober.”

Jelly Roll added, “I think a world without weed, Jelly Roll’s drinking codeine and popping Xanax and snorting cocaine again. But a world with weed, I’ll be alright.”

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He further noted that he has “friends that don’t do that. I have friends that are in the program that are totally against any kind of mind-altering anything. I respect that. I have so much respect for those people. That’s just not how my sobriety worked out.”

Earlier this month, the singer finished his first 5K race, taking part in the 2 Bears 5K in Los Angeles. He’s also committed himself walking more regularly and eating healthy.

Jelly Roll is currently working on a new project, telling the outlet he wrote more than 150 songs in the process of creating the new record. He’s slowly been offering glimpses of the new music, debuting a new song, “I Am Not OK,” which centers on mental health, on The Voice. He also performed the song “Liar,” which aims at addiction, during the Academy of Country Music Awards.

He’s also on the verge of adding another Billboard Country Airplay No. 1 to his arsenal, with “Halfway to Hell.” He’s already notched three Country Airplay chart-toppers “Son of a Sinner,” “Need a Favor,” and “Save Me” (with Lainey Wilson).

Lainey Wilson, who graces the cover of this year’s Billboard Country Power Players issue, has solidified her status as a top-tier performer, singer, songwriter and all-around entertainer. She’s the reigning entertainer of the year at both the CMA Awards and the ACM Awards; in the process of winning the ACM’s entertainer of the year accolade, […]

Eric Church, Lainey Wilson and ZZ Top are among the top-tier performers at the upcoming Field & Stream Music Fest, slated for Oct. 4-6, 2024 in Winnsboro, S.C.

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Also on the bill for the three-day festival are: Lynyrd Skynyrd, Riley Green, Bailey Zimmerman, Shane Smith & The Saints, Kameron Marlowe, Larry Fleet, Colt Ford, David Lee Murphy, Ole 60, Tucker Wetmore, Ashland Craft, Boy Named Banjo, Cole Goodwin and Eli Winders.

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Given the festival’s namesake, it will be far beyond the typical music-and-camping style event. Though the fest will offer camping, cabins and RV rentals, it also has a range of outdoor excursions, including bass fishing, off-road adventures, mountain biking, 3D archery and fly casting.

In January, it was revealed that Church and Morgan Wallen had purchased the Field & Stream outdoor lifestyle brand, as part of an ownership group that purchased the retail side of the trademark from Dick’s Sporting Goods and the media platform from Recurrent; that purchase brought the Field & Stream brand under the same ownership for the first time in its 150-year history.

“I can remember my grandfather kept a few of his favorite Field & Stream magazines on the dash of his truck,” Church said in a statement when the Field & Stream brand purchase was revealed. “That truck took us on hundreds of outdoor adventures and I all but memorized every story and every picture on every page. They were my Bible. It is the honor of my life to make sure that legacy carries on. It is both this responsibility to an American icon and also to a young boy in his papaw’s truck that will be the compass that guides our steps.” 

“There’s nothin’ I love more than being with friends around a campfire, on a boat or in a deer stand — and Field & Stream represents all of those to me,” Wallen added. “Being part of its future is incredible and we want to keep bringing people together outdoors, makin’ memories, for generations to come.” 

Check out the full 2024 Field & Stream Music Fest lineup below.