NEW YORK — Even before The Recording Academy
opened the red carpet Sunday for the 60th annual Grammy Awards, MTSU
President Sidney A. McPhee said his university walked away a winner.
McPhee,
reflecting on the fifth annual Grammy trip by MTSU’s College of Media and
Entertainment, said this year’s venture again helped raise the profile of the
university among recording industry leaders and reconnect with alumni.
“The quality
of our Recording Industry program speaks for itself, but it doesn’t hurt to
repeat it in person while we’re with executives and artists at the biggest
weekend for the music business,” McPhee said.
McPhee, Dean
Ken Paulson and Recording Industry Chair Beverly Keel had even more
opportunities to tell MTSU’s story, as the university again helped present a
pre-Grammy concert with partner Americana Music Association honoring music
great Emmylou Harris late Saturday night.
A host of
Americana artists, including Keb’ Mo’, Brandi Carlisle, Jennifer Nettles, Mary
Chapin Carpenter and Steve Earle, performed Harris’ music in a tribute revue
before a sold-out, standing-room-only crowd at New York’s City Winery.
McPhee hosted
an MTSU Alumni Association reception before the concert, which attracted
graduates from Media and Entertainment and other colleges. Attendees included
alumna Carla Moore, a vice president for Home Box Office, and Jasmine Sanders,
co-host of the nationally syndicated D.L. Hughley radio show.
Paulson, who
brokered MTSU’s partnership with the Americana Music Association, appeared on
stage to start Saturday night’s concert, extending the university’s
congratulations to Harris and telling the New York audience about his college.
“This
weekend’s events, and our similar outreach throughout the year, are critical to
engaging the industries that hold the future for our talented graduates,” he
said.
Jed Hilly, the
association’s executive director, said the annual pre-Grammy concerts, also
co-presented by Vector Management, have “really become a wonderful tradition.”
He also applauded the Americana format that MTSU’s public radio station, WMOT,
adopted in 2016.
“MTSU has a
great program for students, simple as that,” Hilly said. “The Americana Music
Association could not partner with a better institution than MTSU to support
the next generation of artists and music business professionals.”
Also, MTSU
alumnus Garry Hood, who has spent the last three decades as the head stage
manager for the biggest award shows on TV, was in charge behind the scenes at
Sunday’s Grammys event.
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