Season 10
8 episodes
0 min. per episode
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A passionate music producer navigates personal demons and industry politics, striving to spotlight hidden talent in a ruthless world.
Episodes
In a slight departure from the series' usual format, season ten launches with an archival concert by the late Glen Campbell, recorded in August 2008 at The Troubadour in West Hollywood. Campbell returned to the iconic club to perform songs from Meet Glen Campbell days before that album's release, treating the audience to a mix of Campbell standards like "By the Time I Get to Phoenix," "Wichita Lineman," "Galveston," and "Rhinestone Cowboy" along with instant-classic covers of hits by U2, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, The Velvet Underground, The Replacements, Green Day, Foo Fighters, John Lennon and Yoko Ono, and Scottish band Travis. Watching Campbell's last full live concert performance recorded, now four years since he passed in 2017, fans are reminded of the rare talent for phrasing and vocals this legend brought to whatever song he interpreted.
Country singer/songwriter Dustin Lynch's February 2020 concert at Analog at the Hutton Hotel is an exuberant celebration of what was already a big year for him with the release of his concept album Tullahoma one month prior.
Southern Rocker Brantley Gilbert brings his band to Analog in Nashville's Hutton Hotel for a stripped-down set of his No. 1 hits that lyrically span both the party and the pew. The very personal set list includes hits inspired by his courtship with his wife ("You Don't Know Her Like I Do," "If You Want a Bad Boy"), his nine years of sobriety ("Bottoms Up"), and more. Gilbert invites his co-writers for three of his number one hits - Mike Dekle ("Country Must Be Country Wide" and "One Hell of an Amen"), Justin Weaver and Brett James (both on "Bottoms Up") - on stage to perform with him and chat about the songwriting process, how performance can change a song, why everyone in music dresses in all black, and Gilbert's history of stage acrobatics.
Country-pop five-piece band Old Dominion mark the 5th anniversary of their first album in a performance recorded at Analog at the Hutton Hotel in Nashville. Between songs in a set that includes their biggest hits - "Never Be Sorry," "One Man Band," "Make it Sweet" and more - as well as a first-time in concert cover of Bill Withers' "Lean on Me," front man Matthew Ramsey shares stories of a lyrical mishap that brought them closer to their fans in Chicago, a soundcheck that resulted in a last-minute addition to their album Meat and Candy, and more.
Lady A, one of the 21st century's premier vocal groups with the highest certified song by a Country group (the 9X Platinum "Need You Now"), perform from a decade of hits plus four new songs including "Like a Lady" at Analog in their native Nashville. The multi-Grammy winning and three-time CMA Vocal Group of the Year trio of Hillary Scott, Charles Kelley and Dave Haywood, whose countless honors run the gamut from the Teen Choice Awards to a Tony Award nod along with membership in the Grand Old Opry, recently earned their 11th career No.1 with the Gold chart-topper "Champagne Night."
Front and Center is the critically-acclaimed concert series that was launched in the Spring of 2012. The original one hour, commercial-free, all-music program airs nationwide on public television. Through the years, it has presented an eclectic mix of Grammy winning, multi-platinum selling industry vets and chart toppers, including the likes of Jack Johnson, Train, The Avett Brothers, Cyndi Lauper, the Goo Goo Dolls and more.
