The Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame announced its Class of 2019 on Aug. 7: Larry Gatlin, Dwight Yoakam, Marcus Hummon, Kostas, Rivers Rutherford and Sharon Vaughn.
Class of 2019 (with partial songwriting credits)
Songwriters
- Marcus Hummon: âCowboy Take Me Awayâ (The Dixie Chicks), âBorn To Flyâ (Sara Evans) and âBless The Broken Roadâ (Rascal Flatts)
- Kostas: âTimber, Iâm Falling In Loveâ (Patty Loveless), âBlame It On Your Heartâ (Patty Loveless) and âAinât That Lonely Yetâ (Dwight Yoakam)
- Rivers Rutherford: âReal Good Manâ (Tim McGraw), âWhen I Get Where Iâm Goingâ (Brad Paisley w/ Dolly Parton) and âAinât Nothing âBout Youâ (Brooks & Dunn)
Songwriter/Artist
- Dwight Yoakam: âGuitars, Cadillacs,â âFast As Youâ and âYouâre The One,â
Veteran Songwriter
- Sharon Vaughn: âMy Heroes Have Always Been Cowboysâ (Willie Nelson), âYâall Come Back Saloonâ (The Oak Ridge Boys) and âLonely Too Longâ (Patty Loveless)
Veteran Songwriter/Artist
- Larry Gatlin: âAll The Gold In California,â âStatues Without Heartsâ and âBroken Ladyâ
Check out the bios for the Class of 2019, courtesy of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame.
Marcus Hummon
Washington, D.C.-born Marcus Hummon has enjoyed a successful career as a songwriter, recording artist, producer, studio musician, playwright and author. A diplomatâs son, Marcus spent his youth in Africa and Italy. After several years playing in various bands, he found his way to Nashville. As a songwriter, Marcus has co-written hits such as âCowboy Take Me Awayâ and âReady To Runâ by The Dixie Chicks, âBorn To Flyâ by Sara Evans, âOne Of These Daysâ by Tim McGraw, âOnly Loveâ by Wynonna, âThe Cheap Seatsâ by Alabama and âLove Is The Right Placeâ by Bryan White. âBless The Broken Roadâ by Rascal Flatts earned Marcus a 2005 Grammy for Best Country Song, as well as NSAI Song of the Year. A 2007 version by Selah w/ Melodie Crittenden, was a Top 5 Christian song and earned NSAIâs 2007 Song of the Year. Marcus has written an opera (Surrender Road, staged by The Nashville Opera Company in 2005) and six musicals, three of which were featured as part of the New York New Musical Festival in 2005, 2006 and 2011 respectively. Marcus has scored two films: Lost Boy Home and The Last Songwriter, a documentary that he co-produced.
Kostas
Kostas Lazarides was born in Thessaloniki, Greece. When he was seven years old, his family immigrated to Billings, Montana. Fascinated by music, the only child was drawn early to the songs of Buddy Holly and the Everly Brothers. As a youth, Kostas began slipping into local honky-tonks to play with live bands. By the early â70s, he was performing his original songs on the Northwest club circuit and had built a solid following. After nearly two decades of modest success one of his songs crossed the desk of producer Tony Brown, who was searching for material for Patty Loveless. In 1989, Loveless recorded Kostasâ âTimber, Iâm Falling In Love,â making it his first cut, first single and first chart-topping song. Loveless would later take more Kostas songs to the Top 10: âThe Lonely Side Of Love,â âOn Down The Lineâ and âBlame It On Your Heart,â which was named the 1994 BMI Country Song of the Year. Other Kostas hits include âAinât That Lonely Yetâ and âTurn It On, Turn It Up, Turn Me Looseâ by Dwight Yoakam, âGoing Out Of My Mindâ and âLove On The Loose Heart On The Runâ by McBride & The Ride, âLord Have Mercy On The Working Manâ by Travis Tritt and âI Can Love You Betterâ by the Dixie Chicks. He was named 1989 NSAI Songwriter of the Year.
Rivers Rutherford
Born and raised in Memphis, Tennessee, Rivers Rutherford began his musical education at the age of seven, when he took up the piano and guitar. At age 15, he was hired to play piano on the Memphis Queen riverboat. From there he played clubs on Beale Street before attending the University of Mississippi on a piano scholarship. A songwriting workshop with producer/writer Chips Moman led to a publishing contract and later to a first cut with The Highwaymen. In 1993, Rivers moved to Nashville. A staff songwriting deal followed three years later and by 1998 a string of hits began: âShut Up And Driveâ by Chely Wright, âIf You Ever Stop Loving Meâ by Montgomery Gentry, âLadies Love Country Boysâ by Trace Adkins, âLiving In Fast Forwardâ by Kenny Chesney, âReal Good Manâ by Tim McGraw, âStealing Cinderellaâ by Chuck Wicks, âThese Are My Peopleâ by Rodney Atkins, âUnconditionalâ by Clay Davidson and âWhen I Get Where Iâm Goingâ by Brad Paisley w/ Dolly Parton. His co-written âAinât Nothing âBout Youâ by Brooks & Dunn was named the 2002 ASCAP Country Song of the Year. Rivers was named 2006 ASCAP Country Songwriter of the Year.
Sharon Vaughn
Sharon Vaughn is a Florida native whose first notable success as a songwriter came in 1976 when Waylon Jennings recorded her âMy Heroes Have Always Been Cowboysâ on countryâs first platinum album, Wanted: The Outlaws. (Willie Nelsonâs version would top the charts in 1980.) Sharonâ first hit single was with The Oak Ridge Boysâ 1977 smash âYâall Come Back Saloon.â Since then, Sharon has written more than a dozen Top 40 Country hits, including âBroken Promise Landâ by Mark Chesnutt, âTil A Tear Becomes A Roseâ by Keith Whitley & Lorrie Morgan, âIâm Not That Lonely Yetâ by Reba McEntire, âLonely Too Longâ by Patty Loveless, âOut Of My Bonesâ by Randy Travis, âPowerful Thingâ by Trisha Yearwood and âTrip Around The Sunâ by Jimmy Buffett & Martina McBride. In 2008, Sharon provided Pop tunes to famed American Idol alumni Clay Aiken and Jon Peter Lewis. She has lived and worked for years in Stockholm, Sweden, where her song âRelease Meâ by Agnes became a hit in over 40 countries. In addition to more than 100 cuts over the past several years, Sharon has also written songs for musical theater.
Larry Gatlin
Larry Wayne Gatlin began his musical career at age 7 singing Gospel music in West Texas with his younger siblings. After college, Larry joined the Imperials and was performing with them in Las Vegas when he was discovered by Dottie West. Once she heard his songs, she sent him a plane ticket to Nashville and signed him to her publishing company. His early songs were recorded by West, Johnny Cash, Kris Kristofferson, Elvis Presley (âHelp Meâ) and Johnny Rodriguez (âI Just Canât Get Her Out Of My Mindâ); however, as an artist himself, Larry had 28 self-penned hits reach the Top 20 between 1975 and 1990. The vast amount of Larryâs catalog is solo-written. Among his signature songs are âAll The Gold In California,â âIâve Done Enough Dyinâ Today,â âStatues Without Hearts,â âI Just Wish You Were Someone I Love,â âNight Time Magic,â âHouston (Means Iâm One Day Closer To You),â âThe Lady Takes The Cowboy Every Timeâ and âBroken Ladyâ (1976 Grammy for Best Country Song). Larry starred on Broadway in The Will Rogers Follies in 1993. In recent years, his Gospel songs have been recorded by many artists. Larry was inducted into the Texas Country Music Hall of Fame in 2006 and the Texas Heritage Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2007.
Dwight Yoakam
Dwight Yoakam was born in the coal mining community of Pikeville, Kentucky, and raised in Columbus, Ohio. During high school, he took part in the music and drama programs; also singing and playing guitar in a variety of local bands. After graduation, he briefly attended Ohio State University before dropping out to move to Nashville in the late 1970s. When Dwightâs brand of modern honky tonk failed to mesh with the pop-oriented âUrban Cowboyâ climate of the time in Music City, he moved to Los Angeles. There he met a kindred spirit in guitarist Pete Anderson. Their edgy band found success in the cityâs rock and punk clubs. By the mid-1980s, Dwight had signed with Reprise Records. When his debut album, produced by Anderson, was released in 1986, it launched him to stardom. Throughout his career Dwight has written most of the songs on most of his albums. His credits as a songwriter/artist include âGuitars, Cadillacs,â âLittle Ways,â âPlease, Please Baby,â âI Sang Dixie,â âI Got You,â âIt Only Hurts Me When I Cry,â âTry Not To Look So Pretty,â âA Thousand Miles From Nowhere,â âFast As Youâ and âYouâre The One,â also recorded by Flatt Lonesome and named the 2016 IBMA Song of the Year.
photo by NCD