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Thursday, July 5, 2018

Appaloosa Music Festival, D.C.’s 4th Annual Roots Music Fest, Announces Lineup Featuring Gaelic Storm, Mandolin Orange, Scythian, Town Mountain, Humming House, Six-String Soldiers, Karikatura, Fireside Collective, and more!

 
Appaloosa Music Festival, D.C.’s 4th Annual Roots Music Fest, Announces Lineup Featuring Gaelic Storm, Mandolin Orange, Scythian, Town Mountain, Humming House, Six-String Soldiers, Karikatura, Fireside Collective, and more!

Labor Day Weekend (Aug. 31 - Sept. 2) at Skyline Ranch Resort in Front Royal, Virginia

Appaloosa Music Festival, D.C.’s premier roots music festival will take place Labor Day Weekend (Aug. 31 - Sept. 2) at Skyline Ranch Resort in Front Royal, Virginia. The three-day fest is located just five miles from the entrance of Skyline Drive and George Washington National Forest, an hour drive from Washington D.C. The grounds provide the perfect backdrop for a roots music camping experience in the Shenandoah Valley.

The Virginia Tourism Corporation (VTC) has awarded Appaloosa Festival a substantial grant as part of its 2018 Music Festival Sponsorship Program-- Virginia is for Music Lovers-- building Virginia’s reputation as a music destination, and putting Appaloosa on the map as Virginia’s premier Roots Music Festival.

2018’s lineup features two sets by festival hosts Scythian, Gaelic Storm (Saturday headliner), Mandolin Orange (Sunday headliner), Town Mountain, Humming House, Six-String Soldiers, Karikatura, Fireside Collective, Upstate Rubdown, The New Familiars, The Gina Clowes Project, Cake For Dinner, Tajci, The Hillbilly Thomists, Ben-David Warner, Will Overman, Mountain Duo, Jack Dunlap Band, Kentucky Avenue, and The Williams Brothers Band + a few surprises.

Allen & Heath Makes Waves in California at Agenda Festival

The Agenda streetwear and action sports festival made waves in Long Beach, California on June 30th as over 15,000 fans gathered to take in a wide array of music, brands and experiences. The Agenda Festival is a one-day event which can be thought of as a curated mall of pop-up shops dropped in the middle of a music festival. Over 500 of the most influential street and lifestyle brands in the world drew crowds alongside live music from featured acts such as Brockhampton, Lil Yachty, Yung Lean, and 16-year-old rising star Billie Eilish.


 

An Allen & Heath dLive S5000 handled front of house duties while another S5000 supported monitors for Billie Eilish’s highly-anticipated performance. A dLive fan and Los Angeles native, the indie electro-pop wunderkind has over 100 million streams on Spotify alone and her music has been featured on the Netflix series, “Thirteen Reasons Why.”

According to Mike Bangs, Touring / Live Sound Manager for Allen & Heath USA, “Billie has been out with dLive for a while now and since she was local for this show she opted to go big with a pair of S5000 surfaces with DM48 and DM0 MixRacks. The fully redundant configuration was straightforward using a digital split over gigaACE, with 96kHz audio passing through the system around the arena as needed."


Swedish artist Yung Lean opted for a more portable approach, flying in an Allen & Heath C1500 from Europe to use on his shows in the United States. Bangs commented, “We had a C1500 running off of a DM0 at front of house for Yung Lean, who brought it all the way from Sweden. They’ve been taking this all over the US, which puts an exclamation point on how portable the system is.” Using just four rack spaces, the DM0 dLive MixRack is targeted at distributed audio scenarios and digital splits, housing Allen & Heath's XCVI processing core along with audio I/O, control and audio networking ports.

“The Agenda Festival is all about the next big thing, so it’s fitting to see dLive showing up with multiple artists on the bill,” says Jeff Hawley, Marketing Manager for Allen & Heath USA. “From the flyable C1500 all the way up to S7000, dLive is the intuitive, powerful and reliable festival console choice no matter which artist steps out on the stage.”

Nashville: A Songwriter's Paradise?


Nashville, TN - Bright, young singer/songwriter and Audient ASP4816 console owner, Lizzy McAvoy takes us around the city that she's made her home, and give us a glimpse of what it means to her.

I've had the amazing opportunity to live in Nashville, Tennessee for close to eleven years. I moved here when I was sixteen years old, a bright-eyed dreamer. I remember my first trip to Nashville, I was eleven years old. I was writing a few songs and singing back in my hometown of Newark, Ohio. My parents heard of a place called "Music City". When Spring Break rolled around, we packed up our car and drove six hours south. Looking back on that first trip, I don't think my parents were expecting this city to have the impact it did on me, but once I was bit by the bug, I had to come back. So much so, I graduated high school early, I focused on nothing but singing and writing songs and somehow convinced my parents to move two states away to follow this crazy dream. Three months after we moved to Nashville, I met my first publisher, Major Bob Music.
Music City has such a rich history there wouldn't be enough space in a lifetime to talk about it all. As I began writing this article, I was reminded how special this town is. Music City has changed a lot in my decade here and if you were to talk to my songwriting friends who've been here a few decades, it's reallychanged. But the one thing that hasn't been lost with the times is the music. This is a songwriter's town. These streets and buildings are filled with music and stories. As you read this, hit songs are being cranked out of Music City.
I want this journey to focus primarily on Music Row, the heart of Music City. This is the 'Songwriters Paradise'. Music Row is two streets (16th Ave S and 17th Ave S) lined with 1920's Craftsman-style homes, post-Victorian architecture and some classic 1980's office buildings mixed in. #1 Song Banners greet you as you walk up to the front door of publishing companies. Songwriters can be found writing their next hits in the small bedrooms of these converted houses. 
In the 90's, at the height of Music Row, I heard the most unfathomable stories. Songwriters would start their day at 10am, write a smash first verse and chorus then it was time to take a break. They'd grab a bite at Maude's Courtyard to see anybody who was somebody in the biz or grab a cold beer at Bobby's Idle Hour.Then it would be back to the publisher's office to finish their song. It was a laidback community of transplants and dreamers.


I heard stories of publishers running their writers down the street (guitar in hand) to play their songs for a record label exec, 10 mins later playing that song for a multi-platinum artist over the phone, a semi-truck driving down Music Row stacked with brand new Jaguars (gifts from Garth Brooks) and artists being discovered at The Bluebird Cafe. 
Then the internet came and the 90's Music Row changed dramatically. Publishing companies began to struggle. They were either bought out or just closed their doors. Songwriters and artists were being dropped and moving back home. But through that change and struggle the essence of Music City was still alive in the air, attracting the next generation. 
Today's Music Row is slightly different, but still one of a kind. You'll find it lined with the top record labels (Big Machine, Warner Brothers and Curb), the top major publishing companies (Universal, Sony, Word, Starstruck) and the small boutique companies (Big Yellow Dog, Creative Nation and Major Bob Music). New, incredible companies are being developed here, changing the face of the Music Business. RCA Studios, Ocean Way Studios and Allentown Studios still reside on The Row, even in the wake of professional home studios. Producers and songwriters from LA, NYC and the UK started moving to Music City. You may have heard, Justin Timberlake moved here :) Instead of being a country town, we're a Pop, Country, Americana and Rock town. We're truly living up to our name: Music City.
Publishing houses still have their songwriters cranking out smash hits five days a week. Bobby's Idle Hourstill has it's doors wide open andEdgehill Cafehas become the new "hang". Great live music can be heard every night. If you're looking for classic country hits, check out Tootsiesor Rob's Western World. Want to learn to Line Dance? Wildhorse Saloonhas got you covered. Take a step away from the neon lights of Broadway and grab a songwriters' night at The Listening Room, Douglas Corner Cafeor The Bluebird Cafe. I promise you'll probably hear a song there before it hits the radio in a few months. 
The talent never stops flowing in this town. The waitress taking your breakfast order probably has the most amazing voice you've ever heard, the guitar player jamming down on Broadway may well be an incredible studio musician. It's a town bursting full of some of the best talent in the world; we are truly unique. 
 
Step into a writing room and it's an unspoken knowledge that the song will be split equally among the writers. So, two writers in the room, 50/50, three writers in the room 33/33/33... and so on. There's a saying in Nashville "a word for a third", which basically means, we don't line count, you get a piece of the pie. 
You may hear us musicians talking to each other in numbers. Things like "Sixty-Four-Fifteen" or "one, four, five". Have no fear, we haven't been abducted by aliens and beamed back down speaking a different language. We're communicating the Nashville Numbers System. Basically our chord system and charting system. 
We've experienced a lot of change here. Part of Music Row is being torn down to build the next big skyscraper. So in turn we are saying goodbye to a part of music history. But with change comes new opportunities. I've heard we're becoming a tech town with new technology companies opening their doors. We have the incredible Vanderbilt University and Belmont University, which bookend our precious Music Row. Tourists are flocking by the thousands for CMA Music Festival, Pilgrimage Festival, The Opry and The Ryman. 
Thanks to the TV sensation, Nashville for the new boom in tourism and the spotlight on our tiny little town. Tour buses can be seen driving up and down Music Row sharing our rich history and inspiring the new generation of dreamers and listeners. We may be saying goodbye to pieces of our town but the one thing that has always stayed true in Music City is the music. Great songs are being born here every day, shaping the course of music and paving the way for the next generation.
I hope you'll visit us someday soon - or come back for another visit. 
Happy Music Making from Music City!

Let Ya Fall by Astro Raph now released