IMPORTANT NOTE: These are the archived stories for Belmont News & Achievements prior to June 26, 2023. To see current stories, click here.

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Alumnae Company EVAmore Selected for Brandery’s National Batch 10 Cohort

The Brandery, a nationally-ranked accelerator that invests in high-growth startups, recently announced the five companies selected from 697 applicants for its Batch 10 cohort, a program that helps startups grow and get exposed to the startup ecosystem. Among them is EVAmore, founded by Belmont alumnae Channing Moreland and Makenzie Stokel.

EVAmore is a technology-driven platform connecting event planners with vetted, live entertainment. Its SaaS platform automates booking professional entertainment for corporate and private events. Entertainment and events are matched based on the company’s analytics and a custom bidding process. EVAmore facilitates the contract and payment process from start to finish. Notable companies using EVAmore include DELL, ESPN, BMW and Pearson.

In addition to being selected for the Batch 10 cohort, Moreland and Stokel were recognized for EVAmore by the Thomas F. Cone Center for Entrepreneurship at their inaugural event honoring the Top 100 Alumni Entrepreneurs on Oct. 10. Overall, Belmont entrepreneurs represent more than 500 businesses in 74 cities and five countries.

“Neither one of us expected to start a business at Belmont, but we were so inspired by the support here that we decided to take our idea and run with it,” said Stokel at the Top 100 event. “As entrepreneurs here tonight, we all understand each other. We understand what it takes. It’s one of the best communities to be a part of.”

The companies selected for the Batch 10 cohort will relocate to Cincinnati, Ohio, for the duration of the 12-week program. The cohort features company from Nashville, Cincinnati, Charlotte, Tampa and Toronto. Including EVAmore, 60% of the cohort is led by a female founder and CEO.

In the beginning of the program, each startup is paired with one of The Brandery’s Batch 10 agency partners. Managing Director of the Brandery Jeff Boeh said, “This partnership continues to be a hallmark characteristic of The Brandery’s program and, combined with the large network of investor and mentors, has been critical in maintaining our national ranking as one of the ‘Top 25’ accelerators in the country.”

Throughout the first three weeks, the five startups will meet with more than 100 mentors and supporters. The program concludes on December 18 with “Demo Day.”

Also at the Top 100 Entrepreneurs event, Moreland said, “We get asked all the time ‘why did we do it?’ It’s because it’s what we love the most. And we hope we can inspire others to do what they love the most, as well.”

About The Brandery:

The Brandery is a seed stage startup accelerator that leverages the expertise of the Cincinnati region, namely branding, marketing and design. We believe that building your brand—and not just a product—is a way startups can be more resource efficient and increase their probability of success. In addition to anelite mentor list, startups will be paired with world-class creative agencies and have access to some of the biggest companies in the world, including Procter & Gamble and Kroger. The Brandery runs one, 12-week accelerator program a year for a group of 5-7 startups selected from a highly competitive applicant pool. Startups receive a $100k equity investment, a year of free office space and over $200k in additional benefits. The Brandery is a SILVER-tier accelerator in the U.S. as ranked by the Seed Accelerator Rankings Project.

Student, Alumni Music Festival Raises Money for Best Buddies of Tennessee

Belmont University’s Best Buddies chapter put on a music festival event at Rocketown’s White Building on Oct. 18. The show was part of several projects within Belmont’s Music Business Concert Promotion and Booking course, and the event raised $1,600 for Best Buddies of Tennessee.

“This is one of the most successful shows we’ve had. The charity and performers really made this a memorable show,” shared Assistant Professor Dr. David Herrera.

The venue was packed with more than 160 attendees coming to see Belmont students and alumni perform. The Thing with Feathers, Parrotfish, Tyra Madison, Ali Henderson and country blues songwriter Frankie Ballard performed, and each performer was accompanied with a “buddy” on a cover song requested by the buddy.

Student leader Dylan Hilliker commented, “It was stressful, but it all came together in the end for a great cause.”

Belmont PRSSA Receives Five National Awards at Conference

Belmont PRSSA received five national awards at the Public Relations Student Society of America International Conference, held Oct. 18-22 in San Diego, California.

The Chapter received the Dr. F. H. Teahan Community Service Award for its promotion of the nonprofit With Purpose, which works to improve treatments for childhood cancer. Belmont PRSSA also received a Star Chapter Award, recognizing 10 criteria of excellent including ethics advocacy, high school outreach and community service.

The Chapter’s professional adviser, Keith Miles of MP&F Strategic Communications, received the Dr. F. H. Teahan Outstanding Professional Adviser Award, for which the Chapter nominated him. Miles received this national award once previously.

The 11,000-member pre-professional organization awarded seven PRSSA National Gold Key Awards for outstanding leadership and contributions. Recipients included Ally Langley and Chelsea Lomartire, officers in Belmont PRSSA. Nine Belmont students and faculty adviser Dr. Bonnie Riechert attended the conference, which attracted 700 students from more than 300 Chapters internationally.

The 2020 PRSSA International Conference will be held Oct. 23-27 in conjunction with the Public Relations Society of America International Conference at Gaylord Opryland Resort & Convention Center in Nashville. Belmont PRSSA members and the PRSA Nashville Chapter will be involved in conference planning and hosting.

Carr Elected to Nashville Opera Company Board of Directors

Cheryl Carr, associate professor of music business and associate dean of the Curb College of Entertainment & Music Business at Belmont, has been elected to the Nashville Opera Company’s Board of Directors. 

“The Nashville Opera’s contributions are part of Nashville’s Music City identity. I look forward to supporting this sector of the music industry,” Carr shared.

Alumna Releases New Novel ‘Duel’

In crime, timing is everything, and the timing of author alumna Ashley Sargeant Hagan’s novel couldn’t be more perfect with fall in the air and Halloween around the corner. Second in the Backstage Mystery Series, “Duel” released on October 8, 2019. Hagan graduated from Belmont in 1997 with a Bachelor of Arts in English.

The book is available at local stores such as Bound Booksellers and Home Panache, as well as online with Amazon and B&N. 

Her latest book “Duel” features a story within a story and takes place at an English country estate where American actress Anna McKay is filming a period drama. When a series of practical jokes on set turns deadly, Anna isn’t sure who to trust or if she will make it off the “Cavendish Manor” set alive.

Nashville author Ashley Sargeant Hagan has been described as having the mind of Agatha Christie with the soul of Mark Twain. Her love of history, tea and nineteenth century novels informs her writing, as evidenced in her first novel, “Pedestal.” She is an active member of Historic Nashville and is a volunteer in educational programming for the Land Trust for Tennessee’s Glen Leven Farm. 

Hagan will sign books on November 9 at 4 p.m. at Bound Booksellers, 158 Front Street, Suite 106, in Franklin, TN 37064. Additional local book signings and more information about Ashley and her writing can be found at ashleyshagan.com.

Alumnus Matt Fiedler Grows Passion Project Vinyl Me, Please to Noteworthy Business

Belmont alumnus Matt Fiedler, class of 2011, launched Vinyl Me, Please as a passion project in January 2013. Little did he know, his passion project–which seeks to help people explore, experience, and enjoy music on a deeper level–would soon be a huge hit.

Later in 2013, Fiedler accepted a job with a tech company in Boulder, Colorado. So, Vinyl Me, Please moved to Colorado with Fiedler and gained significant momentum in 2014. It soon became too big to ignore, so Fiedler and his team decided to quit their jobs to pursue it full time.

Fiedler shared one thing he is most proud of is the team Vinyl Me, Please has built. The company has about 23 people employed full time, and Fiedler says he is honored to call them his peers. He shared, “They all have their own gifts and strengths they’ve brought to our company. It’s because of their hard work and dedication that we’ve been successful.”

Beyond that, Fiedler is really proud of being included on the INC 5,000 Most Inspiring Companies and FastCompany’s Most Innovative Companies lists. He carries a lot of pride in those because he remembers being a student at Belmont and researching companies on those lists. He was always hoping to be a part of something like that one day. Forbes even published a feature about how he grew his $10 million business in five years.

Fiedler was also recognized by the Thomas F. Cone Center for Entrepreneurship as on of the top 100 alumni entrepreneurs at an inaugural event.

“I don’t often put much weight in those kinds of things, but I know a younger version of myself would be very proud of those accomplishments,” stated Fiedler.

While attending Belmont, Fiedler studied music business and entrepreneurship. He said, “Belmont definitely carries recognition within the industry. People know it by name and have a lot of respect for the music business program. I studied both music business and entrepreneurship, so my education has helped me tremendously. At the end of the day though, you have to be willing to put in the work. Belmont gave me a great platform from which to jump, but it doesn’t mean anything was given to me or Vinyl Me, Please.” 

Fiedler had internships during his time at Belmont working on a variety of projects in different areas of the music industry. While he learned a lot, he was not passionate about much of the work he was doing. Fiedler said, “I am at my best when I’m working on things I’m passionate about because that’s what fuels me to do great work. When it became clear I would have to find passion in other ways, I became less interested in making it in music and more interested in working with music in other ways.”

“A question I often get is how we started,” explained Fiedler. “People naturally assume starting a business is something you need to know how to do before and that it’s really ‘hard.’ The reality is, we knew very little before getting started, and it wasn’t that difficult to launch. We simply had an idea and found a way to make it happen. There’s no operating manual to being an entrepreneur. It’s a game of perseverance and sustainability.”

When asked about the future of his company, Fiedler replied, “The mission behind Vinyl Me, Please is about experiencing music more deeply. It’s about truly listening, understanding and appreciating music. It sounds simple but it’s actually quite counter-cultural in a world dominated by technology. Whereas so much of the music industry is focused on streaming, our aspiration is to be the champions of vinyl. To me, vinyl is about taking the time to invest in what you’re listening to, being willing to sit in stillness and letting the music do its work on you. That kind of experience is rare in today’s world, but it’s an experience that can define a life. That’s what we’re trying to create at Vinyl Me, Please.” 

For students pursuing entrepreneurship, Fiedler shared, “The single best piece of advice I can give is to be endlessly curious and to embrace your own naivety. So much of my experience and success is a product of me being willing to ask the silly questions and do something only because we didn’t know any better.”

Hobson Publishes “Two New Books” with Pan Am Historical Foundation

English Professor Dr. Eric Hobson recently published an article called “Two New Books” with the Pan Am Historical Foundation. The article reviews recently published aviation history books within the context of Pan American Airway activities, overt and clandestine, on the cusp of and during World War II.

Six books and more than 50 articles have been published on Hobson’s research on issues of student motivation to learn, reading and writing as essential communication, and academic skills. His research received the International Writing Centers Association’s Research Award (1999) and the Robert J. Menges Research Award (2001) from the Professional and Organizational Development Network in Higher Education.


Hobson writes and leads workshops at colleges and universities around the country that focus on active and collaborative learning, student motivation, writing across the curriculum, abilities-based education, and outcomes-based assessment.

Alumnus Luke Putney Launches Miraculous Walk-a-Thon to Support International Music Education

If dictionaries included images with the words they defined, then Luke Putney would be the face of “Perseverance.”

A Presidential Scholar, Putney graduated summa cum laude from Belmont in May 2017 with a degree in music performance. Blind since he was a teenager, he never let his disability slow him down—he won the high school “Titan Cup” wrestling championship in Georgia, started his own nonprofit, Instrumental Horizons, while he was at Belmont and even won a regional Emmy for his original composition in a TV program. During his college years he also participated in Jazz Band, Jazzmin, Chamber Singers and Rock Ensemble.

Luke Putney

Even though he was juggling ensembles, classes and other interests, his philanthropic work through Instrumental Horizons was making an impact from the start. “I formed Instrumental Horizons as an official 501(c)(3) nonprofit in the State of Tennessee while I was attending Belmont because I knew my life’s mission was to make the world a better place through music. My nonprofit shares the joy of music by donating musical instruments and volunteering services to socioeconomically and medically challenged communities in the United States and around the world. My first official fundraiser for Instrumental Horizons was part of a group project in a music business class during my senior year. We did a benefit concert and were able to raise enough money to buy a keyboard for the Music Therapy Department at Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital.”

The fundraiser also allowed him to purchase a few new instruments for a school system in Santa Rosa del Sur in Colombia, South America. Combining those purchased instruments with a grant and additional gifts of gently-used instruments, Putney took his first international humanitarian trip with Instrumental Horizons to that community in South America shortly after graduation. 

Luke in the hospital

“That school was located in a remote part of the country that did not have easy access to quality instruments. They truly appreciated the instruments, and their music instructor was able to train the kids in that school to become a nationally-recognized and award-winning band.”

But that’s when everything took a devastating turn for Putney. Returning to the U.S. in July 2017, a headache thought to be a migraine was diagnosed as a brain tumor the size of a human fist. Though the surgery went well and the tumor was benign, complications arose. A stroke and seizure left Luke in Vanderbilt University Medical Center intensive care for 48 days followed by 99 days at the Shepherd Center in Atlanta and months of outpatient rehabilitation. Then more complications and more surgeries, nine in total.

Putney, who is now continuing his recovery at his home in East Nashville, said, “During that time, it was unknown whether I would talk normally or sit up or be able to walk again. I also developed a condition called Central Nerve Pain syndrome which causes severe pain on a daily basis. Thanks to God, my family and medical doctors, I keep getting a little better every day.”

Still, it has been a long and incredibly difficult two years. But Luke Putney doesn’t quit. He’s working hard to recuperate and to reignite his nonprofit work. “This recovery has been extremely difficult, but I sincerely believe that my easiest days have been days when I have been able to help others, and not think about the daily pain that I experience. Being ‘in the moment’ helps me to find an equilibrium that is tolerable. The gratefulness and positivity that I attempt to emanate is returned to me tenfold. You cannot imagine the number of people and the quality of the people who have been a part of my recovery. God has surrounded me with incredible individuals who have given of themselves in amazingly generous and thoughtful ways.”

Luke in rehab

Helping others continues to be his driving motivation. For his latest Instrumental Horizons project, he secured five-time Grammy winner Victor Wooten to produce and a group of all-star musicians to record “Cape Town,” a song he wrote before his medical crisis. He hopes to use that song, and a month-long walkathon, to raise funds for another community in need of music education.

“When I was recovering at Shepherd Center, they asked me what my goal was for recovery,” Putney recalls. “I told them I wanted to get back to my charity work through Instrumental Horizons. I wanted to go to South Africa where I had traveled as a kid and help children in marginalized communities there with music education and musical instrument donations. So this fall, I decided to use my recovery as a way to do fundraising for South Africa.”

Though confined to a wheelchair mere months ago, Putney is planning to walk a mile a day for 26 days and ask people to donate to his “marathon” to support the Instrumental Horizons South Africa project. Individuals who donate to the marathon will receive the “Cape Town” song as a thank you gift, and 100% of the money raised will go to support the project, which is partnering with MusicWorks in South Africa for implementation.

With the song now complete and the walkathon starting this month, Putney is overwhelmed with gratitude. “I am not just grateful, I am blown away by all of the people who have literally jumped in and volunteered to help on this project, including Bakithi Kumalo (bass/vocals for Paul Simon), Bob Franceschini (sax for George Benson, Chaka Khan, more), Jeff Coffin (sax for Dave Matthews Band), Darren English (trumpet/keys and winner 2018 Global Peace Song), Derico Watson (drums for Victor Wooten and Belmont faculty member), Brad Covington (percussion for Luke Putney Trio, and Belmont graduate), Don Cobb of Independent Mastering and five-time Grammy Award winner, Victor Wooten, who produced the record.”

Luke Walking with his mom in the park
Putney walks with his mother, Nancy Hoddinott

He also recognized Belmont University President Dr. Bob Fisher (his mentor as a Presidential Scholar), music business faculty member Mark Maxwell and Ocean Way Nashville Studios’ Pat McMakin and Tate Sablatura for their efforts in helping him complete the “Cape Town” song. “Belmont is filled with incredible people who not only teach, they inspire and lead by example. They truly understand the meaning of servant leadership.”

Now, as he prepares to tackle a marathon in the midst of his recovery, Putney keeps his focus on what has gotten him this far: “Take life one day at a time and be grateful for every moment.”

Visit instrumentalhorizons.com/marathon to learn more about this project and to donate to the cause. View local coverage of Luke’s story on The Tennessean’s website.

College of Pharmacy Students Make High-Risk Medication Clinical Decision Support Available to Local Hospital

Belmont University College of Pharmacy Healthcare Informatics students are partnering with Nashville General Hospital at Meharry to develop a Clinical Decision Support (CDS) tool which supports the safe use of medications in the hospital environment.

Third-year pharmacy students Joshua Page, Julie Nguyen, Grant Harder, Raven McKinnie and Kenyatta Cleark created a database of maximum and minimum dose ranges for high-risk drugs most commonly used by hospital formularies. This information can be used in many ways in the Electronic Health Record (EHR) to help avoid potentially harmful medication errors.

The work was closely supervised by Associate Professor Dr. Anthony Blash, PharmD., CPHIMS, with each medication parameter undergoing multiple checks for safety and accuracy. “Any clinical decision support should be independently verified and approved by hospital pharmacist teams before including in the EHR, but the creation of this type of CDS is a big step towards increased patient safety,” Blash said.

“Implementation of standardized Dose Range Checking parameters within healthcare system’s EHR has the potential to drastically improve patient safety by reducing the rate of medical dosing errors,” said Harder.

Clinical decision support tools are designed to transform the most current medical research into recommendations that clinicians can use to ensure that their patients receive the best quality care. Many large hospitals and clinics have access to full-time healthcare informatics staff who develop and manage this type of tool for their providers. Smaller and more rural facilities may not have resources available to create, verify and implement this custom CDS in their electronic health record.

Blash said the clinical decision support the team is able to provide at this scale and level of expertise is much sought after in the healthcare community. “We estimate that the project at Nashville General Hospital will provide between 250 – 1500 additional patient safety protections daily,” he said. “We were excited to be able to partner with Nashville General Hospital at Meharry and if there is an opportunity to help another hospital in the future, we would consider that as well.”

The Belmont University College of Pharmacy informatics program provides training that is specialized, and students choosing to pursue the informatics concentration receive both didactic and hands-on training on healthcare technology and its use in pharmacy practice.

Nguyen said this is a real project doing real work for healthcare-related institutions. “This informatics class hands us opportunities we wouldn’t be able to find in a regular classroom. It really empowers us to make a difference even before we graduate and prepares us for the projects we’ll be doing in practice,” she said.

All five students are in their third year and will be looking for continued training in pharmacy residencies or fellowships upon graduation in May 2021.

“We’re very proud of the accomplishments of the students,” Blash said. “This project aligns with one of Belmont’s guiding principles of cherishing the privilege of service to others and the importance of work.”

Belmont Launches Website Focused on 2020 Presidential Debate

As Belmont President Dr. Bob Fisher was announcing last Friday that the University was selected to host a 2020 Presidential Debate, a new website was launched to be a clearinghouse of related resources for the coming year. The campus is scheduled to hold the third and final presidential debate of the 2020 election cycle, and BelmontDebate2020.com will provide a centralized space for information needed by the campus, community and media, including details related to academic programming in advance of the debate.

The site also includes a countdown clock to the debate’s 9 p.m. Eastern/8 p.m. Central start time next October 22 as well as the event’s official hashtag: #BelmontDebate2020.