Monthly Archives: March 2025

A Better Way for Sync?

Cipher is fixing sync licensing for social media. Social platforms are where most music discovery and viral moments happen today, but the industry hasn’t figured out how to turn that into fair revenue.

During this Lunch & Learn (exclusive for UMC UnderDogs members), we’ll be joined by Cipher founder Burke Reimann. Learn how Cipher helps artists and brands work together to make social media a win for everyone, paving the way for better licensing across all digital mediums.

This Lunch & Learn is for UMC UnderDogs members only. Become an UnderDog today!

THIS THURSDAY, 7 CT: Meet the UnderDogs!

Join us as we celebrate the creatives who make our UMC UnderDogs community unique!

The debut of our Have You Met…? series goes LIVE this Thursday, March 27 at 7 p.m. CT. This special broadcast will feature conversations with a few of our Nashville-based NEXT2RISE Artist Ambassadors. Get to know Jazzy the Uncontrolled Goddess, Kelsey Muse, and Nicolas Soul, as they share what inspires their creative journeys, and what we can expect from them going forward.

Have You Met…? is typically a benefit of UMC UnderDogs membership, but we’re giving this first one to the public for FREE!

To learn more about how to become an UnderDog, head right over here. To tune in to this Thursday’s broadcast, bookmark this post or the video below!

Music on the Move Showcase to Feature a Tribute to Larysa Jaye

Music on the Move Studios has unveiled the lineup for its April 2 all-female showcase at 3rd & Lindsley — and it features a tribute to late Nashville musician Larysa Jaye, who tragically passed away unexpectedly in December.

The tribute to Larysa Jaye will feature performances from Nashville-based artists Katie Basden, Jenny Teator, Lauren Anderson, and Sarina Joi. Joining them on the lineup will be GRAMMY-winning songwriter Melody Walker, Radio SoBro host and country artist Zoe Jean Fowler, and country/Americana singer-songwriter Caryn Dixon. As always, this all-star lineup will be supported by Music on the Move’s all-female house band, Erin McLendon & The HellCats.

Tickets for this special night start at $15, and are available for purchase here. A percentage of the evening’s proceeds will be donated to the Larysa Jaye Family Foundation.

Celebrating 6 Years of Jake’s Take! (w/ Jacob Elyachar)

Jacob Elyachar is the host of the Jake’s Take podcast, and the editor-in-chief of entertainment website jakes-take.com. Jacob recently launched Season 6 of the podcast — which has welcomed stars from across the entertainment industry — and recently surpassed 350 episodes.

We chatted with Jacob before the holidays to preview the then-upcoming Season 6. Learn about Jacob’s journey, and his plans for the road ahead!

This episode of The Quinn Spinn was recorded and produced at Helping Our Music Evolve, Nashville, TN.

Visit jakes-take.com for your entertainment industry news!

Opening theme: REVEL 9 – All I’ve Become

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Announcing Our First NEXT2RISE Artist Ambassadors!

Today, we are excited to reveal UMC’s first-ever official artist ambassadors, as part of our new NEXT2RISE Artist Ambassador Program.

We have hand-selected bright, talented, career-driven artistpreneurs to spotlight over the next calendar year. Each NEXT2RISE artist is already making moves, and our goal is to elevate them further through the UMC platform.

We have selected two divisions of NEXT2RISE artists for the Class of 2025 — one based in Nashville, and one comprised of artists from different locations around the world (our Abroad Division). Our NEXT2RISE artists will receive:

  • FREE UnderDogs community membership for the next 12 months. (Learn more about our growing community.)
  • Periodic feature opportunities through Underground Music Collective, including music reviews, playlist features, and podcast interviews.
  • More performance opportunities, including our NEXT2RISE year-end showcase in November.
  • Connections to partnership opportunities with aligned brand partners.
  • 1-on-1 and group coaching via UMC Academy and Ether Collective.
  • Additional opportunities to collaborate with partner outlets, venues, festivals, and more.

Meet the first artists in our NEXT2RISE Nashville division below. An announcement featuring artists selected in the Abroad division is coming soon!

  • Da’ Healerz: A Heal Hop duo speaking light and affirmation into the creative landscape, featuring established Nashville emcees Lord Goldie and Foundation Mecca.
  • Izzy Rage: A Hyperpunk Warrior whose music pursues themes of overcoming violence, accepting imperfection, and embracing “Radical Expression Through Peaceful Chaos.”
  • Jazzy the Uncontrolled Goddess: A poet, author, coach, and speaker previously featured by TEDx, Sound Therapy, and more.
  • Kelsey Muse: A genre-defying, award-winning singer, rapper, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist (featured by NACA, Nick @ Nite, and more).
  • Nicolas Soul: A Kenya-born, Nashville-based hip hop and R&B artist who aspires to inject honesty and soulfulness into his creations.
  • Roz Malone: Performing artist, musician, singer, songwriter, and entrepreneur
  • Write the Block: A spoken word duo featuring poets and multidisciplinary artists NewLeeMade and Karimah Ariel
  • Yonna Jones: A Chicago-born, Nashville-based rapper, singer, and dancer who creates “movement music,” aimed at motivating and inspiring with messages of perseverance.

Want to be considered for the Class of 2026? We’ll be selecting from within our community later this year. Learn more about what it takes to be an UnderDog!

Inaugural Nashville All-Starr Round Set for Apr. 3 in Madison

Calling all music lovers, songwriters, and fans of Nashville’s vibrant creative community!

We’re thrilled to be a part of the first-ever Nashville All-Starr Round at MaeMax Market (2106 Gallatin Pike, Madison, TN). This one-of-a-kind night of music, networking, and community-building will feature nine local all-star songwriters showcasing their incredible talents.

Hosted by Stephie G., night will be filled with three rounds of exciting live performances. Featured songwriters include…

6 p.m. (Folk & Americana): Mikayla Lewis, Riley Olena, & Aaron Benjamin
7 p.m. (Soul and R&B): Luke Parrish, David Skinner, & Lexi Trigg
8 p.m. (Indie Rock): Jackie Saturday, Matt Nagy, & Heather Liebensohn

The Nashville All-Starr Round is an opportunity to meet and connect with other songwriters, musicians, and creatives in the area! Whether you’re looking to collaborate, share ideas, or just enjoy the music, this event is the perfect opportunity to expand your network and be inspired.

It’s all-ages, there is delicious food onsite, and there’s FREE parking! What more could you want? RSVP here!

Sponsored by Life Literacy Education, with media support from Underground Music Collective.

WATCH: Da’ Healerz Circle ft. Jaffee Judah

Da’ Healerz Circle is back, featuring a conversation with author, environmental justice advocate, and health ambassador Jaffee Judah.

Sit down with Da’ Healerz (Lord Goldie and Foundation Mecca) as they welcome the Nashville-based entrepreneur to discuss his healing practices and journey.

Shot and edited by Nicolas Soul (IG: @nrnszn)
Follow Da’ Healerz (IG: @dahealerz615)
Follow Jaffee (IG: @rasjaffeejudah / @Bang4Liberation / @recyclereinvest‬

PREMIERE: Da’ Healerz Circle with Psychic Marita

Today, Da’ Healerz have blessed us with the series premiere of Da’ Healerz Circle.

Da’ Healerz Circle is a series where the heal hop duo — Lord Goldie and Foundation Mecca — interview different Healerz about their healing practices.

On this first episode, Da’ Healerz welcome Psychic Marita. With a dash of humor, Psychic Marita delivers clear and concise messages from Spirit. Every client is met with a compassionate heart ready to provide guidance from the other side.

Tune in and heal with us!

Da’ Healerz Circle was shot and edited by Nicolas Soul of NuRenaissance (IG: @nrnrszn)

Follow:
Da’ Healerz
Psychic Marita

#RoadtoSXSW: My ‘WrestleMania Moment’

Before the #RoadtoSXSW became but a glimmer in my eye — in fact, before Underground Music Collective or The Quinn Spinn even existed — I was a kid who cycled through dreams. I was looking for purpose and meaning, and ways to impact a large number of people. I always envisioned myself as a leader, even if I had no idea what leadership actually meant.

Throughout my youth and adolescence, I wanted to live a thousand lives. At different points, I aspired to be an all-star right fielder, a star quarterback and team captain, a lead actor, and a famous singer with the dance moves and calm, confident swagger of Jordan Knight. (OK… I still haven’t given up the ghost on that one, my 38-year-old ex-football player knees be damned.)

Right around age 12, I added “professional wrestler” to the list.

The year was 1999. WWE’s (then-WWF) Attitude Era was in full swing, and “Stone Cold” Steve Austin was at the top of the mountain. One day, the kids in my class were talking excitedly about the latest episode of Monday Night Raw, and I decided to check it out for myself.

I was instantly hooked. Finally, there was an outlet for my pre-teen suburban angst, courtesy of these larger-than-life characters and their over-the-top antics. For the next several years, I’d tune into every piece of WWE programming I could get my hands on. Raw, Smackdown, and even Sunday Night Heat were appointment viewing. Wrestling theme music became a regular part of my library (and still is to this day). Sometimes, I would convince my mom to let me order the Pay Per View events (and a couple times, I just did it myself and asked forgiveness later. Sorry, Mom!).

Eventually, I dove into the art form myself — first by participating in online-only “e-feds,” an internet-based role-playing game where we would write message board “promos” against our opponent, with victory awarded to the writer who created the most compelling argument before each match. Then, my brother and I started our own backyard wrestling federation — the infamous Long Valley Backyard Wrestling (LVBW). Blatantly ignoring WWE’s “Don’t Try This at Home” warnings, we laced up and competed in a crudely made ring with no mat in our parents’ backyard. Eventually, we met other aspiring wrestlers from around the Northeast, and traveled regionally to compete in various strangers’ backyards (who, admittedly, had built much safer rings) throughout high school.

By senior year, my interest in pursuing this career path had given way to a renewed focus on football. Nonetheless, my passion for and enjoyment of this unique, sometimes-bizarre form of entertainment has never waned. I’ve followed the action through the years and, as social media has broken down the walls of “kayfabe,” have come to root for my favorite wrestlers on- and off-screen.

The biggest date on the pro wrestling calendar is WrestleMania. If you’re a professional wrestler — or serve any function in the industry — it’s where you fight your entire career to be. It’s the reason why you put all those hours in; you’ll drive hours to wrestle in bingo halls and high school gyms for little-to-no pay, because every rep is building toward something greater. It’s building toward the moment where the eyes of the industry begin to look your way. It’s building toward the moment when you sign your first contract and have your first match with a major promotion. It’s building toward the possibility that, one day, you might get to have your own “WrestleMania Moment” — a featured spot on the Grandest Stage of Them All, where you reach the pinnacle by creating a memory that will live on through history.

Not everyone gets their “WrestleMania Moment.” In fact, most professional wrestlers don’t. That’s what makes it so special; it means that you’ve put in your 10,000 hours, have sacrificed greatly, and continue to persevere through the challenges that greet us all on our way to our visions turning into reality.

When you have that moment — one that can take years or even decades to reach — it is something to be cherished. If one thing along the journey had gone differently, you may have never gotten here. Now that you’re here, you may never get here again. All you have is now. Make the most of it.

I’ve been thinking a lot about major milestones, as the #RoadtoSXSW takes its turn into the home stretch. And, while I may not be competing for the WWE Championship in Las Vegas this April, I can appreciate what it means to travel a long, challenging road, to eventually stand before the biggest opportunity of my life.

I’m heading to Austin for my first SXSW this Friday. As a music industry thought leader, this is my first ‘WrestleMania Moment.’ This is my Super Bowl, World Series, and Stanley Cup Finals. It’s taken a long time and plenty of lessons — at least 60+, if you’re curious — to get here. There have been countless late nights and early mornings. There have been loads of triumphs, and my fair share of disasters. There have been glimmers of hope scattered through the past 11 1/2 years, and perhaps just as many moments of doubt and stress.

This is where I’ve fought my entire career to be — since the moment of singularity when this was all just a USB mic, a laptop, and an idea in my childhood bedroom, one August night in 2013.

Through it all, there has been faith. I’ve always held the belief that, if I just stay on the road a little bit longer, I’ll graduate from the “bingo halls” and “high school gyms” of my chosen industry, and have the opportunity to build this platform into one that transforms the music industry and the creative ecosystem at-large. That faith has been rewarded so many times along this journey — especially over the past couple of years — as our platform has been blessed with incredible opportunities in media and at conferences, festivals, notable venues, and more.

We’ve already made it to the big leagues. Figuratively speaking, we’ve been on Raw, Smackdown, and plenty of Pay Per Views — but this is the biggest one yet.

This is WrestleMania as I know it.

The lights are on. My music is playing. All that’s left is to walk down that 800-mile ramp to Austin, get in the ring, and create moments that live on, long after the bell rings.