For release: Jan. 15, 2013
MTSU editorial contact:
Roy Moore, 615-898-5872 or Roy.Moore@mtsu.edu
MURFREESBORO — MTSU
Professor Beverly Keel, an award-winning music journalist and former recording
industry executive, has been named chair of the Department of Recording
Industry, effective Aug. 1, the university announced.
Keel recently returned to MTSU after a leave of absence to
serve as senior vice president of Media and Artist Relations for Universal
Music Group Nashville. She developed extensive media campaigns for UMG
Nashville’s chart-topping roster of artists, including Lionel Richie, Scotty
McCreery, Sugarland, Jamey Johnson, Josh Turner, Kip Moore, and many more.
“I am honored to be named chair of the nation's most prestigious
recording industry program,” Keel said. “I am so excited to have the
opportunity to work with the
department's talented and experienced faculty and staff who
are dedicated to preparing students for the changing music industry
environment.
“MTSU has played such an important role in my life, both as
a student and professor, so it is extremely fulfilling to be able to work
closely with students and give back to the university that has given me so
much.”
Keel, a popular culture commentator who has covered the
music industry for more than two decades for national and regional media
outlets, also served as the director of the MTSU John Seigenthaler Chair of
Excellence in First Amendment Studies for four years and is the past president
of the International Association for the Study of Popular Music-US.
"Professor Keel brings a breath and depth of
professional and academic expertise to this important administrative position.
She's spent many years in both industry and a wide variety of academic
positions," said Roy Moore, dean of the MTSU College of Mass Communication.
"Her expertise will complement our college team well,
including outreach into the professional community as well as fundraising and
development. Her knowledge and skills in First Amendment issues, particularly
her experience as director of the Seigenthaler Chair, will serve her well not
only in the journalism community, but in electronic media and the recording
industry as well."
Keel spent a decade as the Nashville correspondent for People magazine and served as the
celebrity columnist at The Tennessean
newspaper for two years, during which time she won the Charlie Lamb Award for
Excellence in Country Music Journalism. She was an editor of American Profile magazine, for which
she wrote cover stories on President Carter, Billy Graham, Laura Bush, Andy
Griffith, John Grisham, Joe Namath and many more, and also served as editor of CMT Life.
Her work has appeared in InStyle, New York, Oxford American, Weekly Standard, Rolling Stone, USA
Today, Country Music, New Country, Country Music Today and Music Row magazines. A former music
industry columnist for the Nashville
Scene and Nashville Banner
newspapers, her journalism has received awards from the Associated Press and
the Association of American Newsweeklies.
Keel has served as a commentator on country music
personalities and events and has been featured on ABC’s “Six Degrees of Martina McBride,” CBS’
“48 Hours Mystery,” as well as
numerous shows on VH-1, Bravo, CMT, GAC and other networks.
A graduate of Leadership Music, she currently serves as a board
member of the Tennessee Performing Artist Center. She is a past member of the
Nashville Mayor’s Music Council and is a past board member of The Recording
Academy. She is an editorial board member of the Journal of Popular Music
Studies and a member of the International Women’s Forum. She is currently in
Leadership Nashville.
A Nashville native, Keel earned her bachelor’s degree from MTSU
and her master’s degree from the Columbia University Graduate School of
Journalism.
Professor Bill Crabtree will continue serve as interim chair
of the Department of Recording Industry through Aug. 1.
###
Note to media: Photo
of Keel attached
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