Stories Behind the Songs – Détails, épisodes et analyse
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See all- https://alclair.com/
140 partages
- https://www.chrisblair.com/
135 partages
- https://www.sennheiser.com/en-us
130 partages
- https://www.instagram.com/chrisblairmusic
134 partages
- https://www.instagram.com/sbtsongs
133 partages
- https://www.instagram.com/listeningroomcafe
85 partages
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119 partages
- https://www.tiktok.com/@thelisteningroomcafe
44 partages
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Year-End Gratitude And Big News
mardi 30 décembre 2025 • Durée 04:57
Time to close the books on a huge year and open the door to an even bigger one. We step back to celebrate what your support made possible at the Listening Room—862 shows, 150,000 guests, and a stack of songs that went from our stage to number one—while setting the stage for what’s next in 2026.
We share why the Listening Room remains a passion project at its core and how community keeps pushing the music forward. Then we unveil plans for our 20th anniversary at the historic Ryman Auditorium on March 3, 2026, with a heavyweight lineup: Hardy, Jo Dee Messina, Mitchell Tenpenny, Blessing Offor, Jordan Feliz, plus a powerhouse bench of hitmakers like JT Harding, Rob Williford, Phil Barton, James Slater, Matt Jenkins, Brian Davis, Wendell Mobley, and Lee Thomas Miller. Expect stories behind the songs, surprise guests, and the kind of moments that turn a great night into a landmark memory.
We also tease a major project two years in the making that’s almost ready to announce—built to connect artists, writers, venues, and fans in smarter, more meaningful ways. Programming will flex a bit early next year as we lock the final pieces, but the conversations won’t stop. February brings our second annual Boots on the Water cruise to Cozumel with Clint Black, Rodney Atkins, Terri Clark, Diamond Rio, BlackHawk, Chris Cagle, Phil Vassar, Deana Carter, David Lee Murphy, and more, plus TLR songwriting favorites including Liz Rose, Adam Craig, Emmett Stevens Jr., Bridgette Tatum, and Rachel Thibodeau. We’ll record at sea and bring you deck-side stories, fresh performances, and the kind of candid moments only a cruise can spark.
If you love country music, songwriting, live shows, and the stories that turn a hook into a hit, you’ll feel right at home here. Grab your seats for the Ryman at ryman.com, book your cabin at bootsonthewatercruise.com, and come ride with us into 2026. If this episode moved you, tap follow, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review to help more fans find the music and the stories behind it.
Tyler Rich - From Valley Roads To Music Rows
lundi 22 décembre 2025 • Durée 01:12:01
A farm town kid with a tiny amp, a bandana from Stagecoach, and a promise to take one more swing at the dream—Tyler Rich sits down with us to unpack the road from Northern California to Nashville and what it costs to make something that truly feels like you. We trace the early wins and wipeouts: a record deal at nineteen, years of touring with homework due on a bus, an economics degree finished at warp speed, and the moment he turned down a safe, salaried future to chase a riskier one that wouldn’t let him sleep.
We go inside the writing rooms and the edges where craft gets sharpened. Mentors like Daryl Brown pushed his melodies and choices with sharp, priceless notes, while a DIY marketing blitz—thousands of cards handed out at shows and a brave DM hustle—built real fans one by one. That grit fueled a fast move to Nashville, where a culture of friendly competition and structured writing turned instinct into volume and voice. From there, the double album took shape: Poppy and Iris, a project anchored to state flowers and a life split between two homes. Cowboy Tears lifts like an anthem but breaks like a diary, a tribute to distance, devotion, and a bandana that never left his pocket. Redwood grows from wildfire science into a resilience song, proof that some things only get stronger after the burn.
Independence was the next leap. Tyler walks through leaving a label, rebuilding his team with fresh eyes, and releasing twenty-plus songs that aim for the gut instead of the middle. The connection shows up in rooms—fans crying, him crying—especially when Dogs Don’t Die helps people carry the love that remains. That song sparked a new lane: children’s books that translate courage, grief, and selfhood for young readers. We preview Leave The Wolf Wild and Fred Under The Bed, and look ahead to a co-headline tour with a rock powerhouse designed to bridge country heart and rock muscle.
If you love stories about craft, risk, and the long route to your real voice, this one’s for you. Hit play, share it with a friend who needs courage today, and if it resonates, follow the show, leave a review, and tell us which song hit you hardest.
From RV Breakdowns To Platinum Hits: Jeff Middleton On Songwriting, AI, And The Long Road In Nashville
Épisode 138
mardi 21 octobre 2025 • Durée 54:07
Some songs take the long way home. Jeff Middleton joins us to map that winding route—Jersey kid to Nashville lifer—through a Warner deal with The Dirt Drifters, a thousand-dollar RV that literally went up in flames, and the four-year journey of Drowns The Whiskey from a bus write to a multi-week No. 1 with Jason Aldean and Miranda Lambert. It’s a story of grit, timing, and how a better demo can change fate.
We dig into the changing economics of songwriting—how streaming thinned the middle class that once survived on album cuts—and what it takes to keep going when the money and momentum don’t line up. Jeff shares how co-writing became a learned craft, why he now “lets the room be the room,” and how switching from road mode to writer mode saved his best work. He also pulls back the curtain on American Knights, co-written with Austin Jenckes and Mike Walker, and the unusual path that gave the song multiple lives with Morgan Wallen and Lee Brice.
Then there’s AI. Jeff doesn’t flinch from it—he uses Suno for fast, pitch-ready demos and even built Song Script AI to help writers with better prompts. But he’s clear-eyed about the line: algorithms look backward; great songs reach forward. The job is still to move people, to write from the heart, and to make music that feels undeniably human. If you’re an aspiring songwriter, you’ll get field-tested advice, sharp reality checks, and a reminder that authenticity isn’t a brand; it’s the work.
If this conversation hit a nerve, follow the show, share it with a friend who writes, and leave a quick review so more people can find these stories. Your support helps us keep bringing songwriters and their hard-won lessons to the mic.
From “Gonna Love You” to “Devil Don’t Go There”: Abram Dean on hits, hustle, and the doors that opened
Épisode 137
mardi 14 octobre 2025 • Durée 35:27
What if the song that changes your life starts with a brief, a laugh, and a note you weren’t sure you could sing? We sit down with songwriter Abram Dean and trace the unlikely trail from church costumes and a middle-school talent win to LA’s genre-blend grind, a Warner publishing deal, and a move to Nashville that felt less like strategy and more like calling.
We unpack the room where “Gonna Love You” took shape for Parmalee—a “power ballad” request that turned into a simple, soaring promise, a months-long hunt for the right bridge, and a cut day that proved how the right voice can unlock a song. Abram shares how that track later became a conduit for the band to tell a painful family story, showing how country songs carry more than romance—they hold resilience. Then we pivot to “Devil Don’t Go There,” where a stubborn idea flipped POV, landed with Laney Wilson, and raced from Friday write to Monday cut under Jay Joyce. The hook is sharp, but the lesson is sharper: trust your co-writers and write the truth the artist can live.
The ride doesn’t smooth out from there. Abram talks turkey hunts that led to Dylan Marlowe’s “Record High,” an Andy Grammer session that turned into his first major cut with “Red Eye,” and the wild “My Side of Town” saga—instant holds, a Morgan Wallen cut that missed the final tracklist, and a rebirth with Josh Ross. Along the way, we get field-tested advice for new writers: show up to writer rounds, know your role in the room, let simple ideas breathe, and don’t force doors that won’t open.
If you love the craft behind country hits, co-writing dynamics, and real talk about the highs and gut-punches of modern songwriting, this one’s for you. Subscribe, share with a songwriter friend, and leave a review to help more listeners find the show. What part of Abram’s journey hit you hardest?
From Parkville Bars to Viral Breakthroughs: Roman Alexander’s Roadmap to an Independent Country Career
Épisode 136
mardi 7 octobre 2025 • Durée 01:03:36
A guitar from his uncle’s country band, open mics before he could legally walk into the bar, and a stubborn ear that learned by listening—Roman Alexander’s road to Nashville wasn’t polished, it was practiced. We sit down to unpack the exact moves that turned a Missouri kid into a touring artist and a credible songwriter: washing cars at an Audi dealership to meet gatekeepers, selling merch on a midnight bus to learn tour life, and sending a bold “manager” email that led to a hard no—then a full-circle label meeting years later.
The conversation dives into the writing grind at 126, where two-a-day sessions forged his sound and revealed the collaborators who fit. Roman breaks down how “Party Mode” was born on a retreat deck and found its way to Dustin Lynch, why “Between You and Me” became an 11-month mainstay on Spotify’s Hot Country and a launchpad for national touring, and how he thinks about choosing songs that are truly his. We talk Midwest Calling—the weather, the breakups, and the small-town weight that never leaves—and the stories behind “Way Over You,” “Mama Smoked Cigarettes,” and “Country Dreaming” with Old Dominion’s Brad and Trevor and writer Matt Jenkins.
There’s heart and humor here: the viral video of his mom hearing “Mama Smoked Cigarettes” for the first time, the door-to-door sorority play that packed rooms on college runs, and the Maui BMI night where Willie Nelson calmed his shaking hands with a quiet nod beside Kris Kristofferson. Beyond the hype cycles and algorithms, Roman makes a case for touring as the anchor, for songs with staying power, and for learning the business with the same intent as the craft. If you’re building an independent career, this is a blueprint you can use—and a reminder to enjoy the full-circle moments when they arrive.
Enjoy the episode? Follow, rate, and share it with a friend who loves great songwriting. Your reviews help us bring on more artists and stories you care about.
Remembering Brett James: A Musical Legacy Cut Short
Épisode 135
mardi 23 septembre 2025 • Durée 18:17
Some losses leave us searching for words where there are none. The sudden passing of Brett James Cornelius, along with his wife and her daughter, in a plane crash on September 18, 2025, has left Nashville's music community reeling in grief. This special episode stands as a raw, heartfelt tribute to a songwriter whose pen crafted some of country music's most enduring hits, and whose heart crafted friendships that defined the Nashville community.
Brett James wasn't just a Grammy-winning songwriter behind Carrie Underwood's "Jesus Take the Wheel," Kenny Chesney's "When the Sun Goes Down," or Dierks Bentley's "I Hold On"—he was a presence you felt. Born in Missouri and twice attempting medical school before answering Nashville's persistent call, Brett approached songwriting with humility that elevated everyone in the room. "Some days you write something nobody will ever hear," he once said, "and then one day you write 'Jesus Take the Wheel.' That's the job, that's the beauty."
This episode weaves through Brett's musical journey, from his self-titled solo album in 1995 to his 2020 EP "I Am Now," featuring the moving "True Believer." Through tears and memories, we explore the stories behind his biggest hits and the profound impact of his genuine character. The episode concludes with a poignant performance of "Fall Into His Hands," the last song shared when Brett and I performed together earlier this year—a fitting reminder that while we may never understand such profound loss, music remains our collective solace.
Join me in honoring a true Nashville legend whose voice may be silenced but whose songs will forever echo in the hearts of millions. Share his music, remember his spirit, and keep his family in your prayers as we navigate this unthinkable loss together.
The Art of Vulnerability: Colbie Caillat's Musical Evolution
Épisode 134
mardi 16 septembre 2025 • Durée 40:31
Grammy-winning artist Colbie Caillat sits down for an intimate conversation about the winding road from MySpace sensation to seasoned songwriter. With her trademark warmth and authenticity, she reveals how music was always coursing through her veins—singing at the top of her lungs every morning as a child and eventually being guided toward songwriting by her father's wisdom that it would "be more meaningful."
The conversation takes us through the unexpected explosion of "Bubbly" that catapulted her career, to touring with John Mayer in 2009, to her transformative relationship with vulnerability on stage. "I was taught to try to be extroverted and don't let anyone know that you're nervous," Colbie shares, describing how writing "Try" became the turning point that freed her from hiding her true self. "I just tell the audience everything on stage now. It feels so nice."
Colbie's upcoming album "This Time Around" (releasing September 26th) reimagines her greatest hits as duets with artists including Maren Morris, Hillary Scott, Walker Hayes, and Mitchell Tenpenny—many of whom had personal connections to her songs before the collaboration. "Mitchell was so cute because when I asked him to sing on 'Realize,' he's like 'that's my favorite song, I sang it in high school,'" she recalls with genuine delight. The album also features three new original songs, including one written with Lee Brice and another featuring Maddie & Tae.
Whether discussing the creative process behind her Grammy-winning duet "Lucky" with Jason Mraz, her Christmas tour with best friend Gavin DeGraw, or the first song she ever wrote ("Someday," which she plans to release someday), Colbie's reflections on her journey offer wisdom for creators at any stage: "Trust yourself and have fun with it and really embrace who you are." Connect with Colbie at colbiecaillat.com to follow her continuing musical evolution.
Finding Your Voice: Abbie Callahan's Journey Through Music and Self-Discovery
Épisode 133
mardi 9 septembre 2025 • Durée 39:49
The first time Abbie Callahan heard Dolly Parton perform live, something clicked. At just 14 years old, watching from the audience with her mother and grandmother, Abbie experienced what she describes as an epiphany: "I saw that and I was like, 'oh, that's what I want to do.'" That moment set her on a path from Iowa City to Nashville, where she's now carving out a distinctive space with what she calls "Kaleidoscope Country."
Abbie's debut EP "Grossly Aware" showcases her remarkable ability to blend Americana, indie pop, bluegrass, and folk into something uniquely her own. Her journey hasn't been straightforward—moving to Nashville during COVID meant isolation instead of the typical music scene immersion. Yet that solitude shaped her songwriting process, leading to deeply personal tracks like "I'll Bring Flowers," which she describes as "journaling when your therapist tells you to write in the morning."
When her playful, suggestive song "Mary Jane" went viral, it created both opportunities and pushback. Some questioned whether her music belonged in country, but Abbie turns criticism into creative fuel: "When someone says 'you can't do that,' I think, 'I have to prove everyone wrong.'" This determination has taken her from grueling nights playing Broadway bars until 3 AM (then attending 8 AM classes at Belmont) to performances at CMA Fest and Bonnaroo.
What stands out most about Abbie is her authenticity—her voice doesn't sound like anyone else's, and her lyrics reflect genuine experiences rather than manufactured emotions. As she prepares for her Americana Fest showcase and upcoming collaborations (including a reimagined "Mary Jane" with a special guest), she remains committed to the advice she'd give her younger self: "Try to be yourself more and not someone that people like, because that just doesn't work out."
Ready to experience Kaleidoscope Country for yourself? Stream "Grossly Aware" now and follow Abbie's journey as one of Nashville's most captivating new voices.
Blake Pendergrass: Faith, Perseverance, and 15 Morgan Wallen Cuts
Épisode 132
mardi 2 septembre 2025 • Durée 50:08
What does it take to go from waiting tables to writing chart-topping hits for country music's biggest stars? In this compelling conversation, songwriter Blake Pendergrass opens up about his remarkable year since his last appearance on the podcast – a year that's seen him secure 15 cuts on Morgan Wallen's latest album (including his first #1 hit), pen songs for Jelly Roll, Tucker Wetmore, and Post Malone, and have eight singles charting simultaneously on country radio.
Behind these impressive statistics lies a deeply human story of perseverance through doubt. Pendergrass shares how after 13 years in Nashville with minimal success, his faith kept him going when logic suggested otherwise. The emotional high point comes when he discusses "The Dealer," a song he wrote entirely by himself during a period of uncertainty. "I wasn't really planning on writing a full song," he reveals, his voice breaking slightly. "I was in a season of feeling defeated... I sat down essentially to prove to myself I can still write songs." That vulnerable moment produced a powerful track that became one of his proudest accomplishments.
The conversation delivers fascinating insights into the mechanics of modern country songwriting – from the collaborative process of creating Morgan Wallen's "Just In Case" with multiple established writers to pushing genre boundaries with Tucker Wetmore's "Brunette." Pendergrass explains how writing changes when working with artists at different career stages and how he approaches rooms with multiple strong creative voices. His perspective on balancing artistic exploration with commercial sensibility provides valuable wisdom for creators in any field.
Whether you're an aspiring songwriter, a music industry professional, or simply a fan curious about how your favorite songs come together, this episode offers an authentic glimpse into both the craft and the heart behind today's biggest country hits. Listen now to experience the stories behind songs that are shaping the soundtrack of modern country music.
From Scotland to Nashville: Callum Kerr's Musical Journey
Épisode 131
mardi 26 août 2025 • Durée 54:05
From the rolling hills of Scotland to the hallowed circle of the Grand Ole Opry, Callum Kerr's musical journey defies conventional paths. Our conversation reveals the beautiful synchronicity of events that led this actor-turned-country artist to find his true calling.
Callum shares how his musical awakening happened at 17 when a Texas sports camp job unexpectedly introduced him to country music. "I was just blown away," he recalls of hearing artists like Dierks Bentley and Zac Brown Band for the first time. "This is the sound that I've been looking for." His authentic passion is palpable as he describes moving between acting jobs in the UK and musical adventures in the American South.
The pivotal turning point came when Callum landed a role as a Texas country singer on Fox's "Monarch" alongside Trace Adkins. Being in the studio with Nashville session players sparked something profound: "If I'm good enough to be in their TV show with a budget of 10 million per episode, maybe I could do this." This realization brought him to Nashville, where he immediately felt at home.
We dive deep into Callum's songwriting process, his philosophy of "best song wins" regardless of who wrote it, and the meaningful stories behind tracks like "Used to Love This Town" and "It Ain't Working" from his Dan Huff-produced EP. The conversation culminates with his emotional recounting of making his Grand Ole Opry debut—a dream realized on the very same day his EP was released.
Whether you're fascinated by the creative journey, drawn to authentic country storytelling, or simply love discovering artists on the rise, Callum's story will resonate. His final advice to his younger self speaks volumes: "If you like it, then it's cool. One day people are going to find that cool." Listen now and witness the beginning of what promises to be a remarkable career.





