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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Alumna Landis Inks Publishing Deal With BMG Nashville

Songwriter Emily Landis has signed a new worldwide publishing agreement with BMG Nashville. A graduate of Belmont University, where she studied songwriting, Landis highlighted her musical skills in spring 2016, co-writing four of the eight original songs performed in the esteemed Belmont Showcase Series for the country genre.

Since then, Landis has joined the Nashville songwriting community co-writing songs with recording artists Kassi Ashton, Seaforth, Walker McGuire, Cassadee Pope, Tegan Marie and James Otto, among others.

Said Landis, “I am so excited to work alongside everyone at BMG. They are some of the most passionate individuals in the business, and those are the kinds of people you want on your team. It is an honor to call myself a BMG writer.”

Kos Weaver, EVP BMG Nashville, said, “Emily is a perfect fit for us, gifted and versatile. We are fortunate she has chosen us to shepherd her career.”

Rakiyah Marshall, Creative Director, BMG Nashville, said, “We are thrilled to have Emily join BMG. Her talent, fresh perspective and passionate work ethic have her destined for a bright career. We look forward to a long and successful partnership.”

Alumnus Trask Featured on Machine Learning and AI Podcast

Andrew Trask, a 2015 Belmont graduate with a B.S. in Applied Discrete Mathematics and B.B.A. in Finance, is the featured guest on the March 21 episode of This Week in Machine Learning & AI (TWIML&AI). Ranked among “The 10 Best AI, Data Science and Machine Learning Podcasts” by Medium.com, TWIML&AI hosts weekly conversations with researchers from Facebook, Microsoft, Google, as well as other leading corporations and universities on the cutting edge of machine learning and artificial intelligence.

Trask, currently a Google DeepMind Scholar and Ph.D. student at Oxford University, is the author of Grokking Deep Learning, which teaches readers to build deep learning neural networks from scratch. Trask is also the coauthor of the Udacity Deep Learning curriculum and founder of the OpenMined project, an open-source framework that will allow developers to gain insight from users’ data without compromising their privacy.

His conversation begins with a generous shout-out to Belmont University. The entire episode can be heard online here.

Alumnus Housman Awarded Inaugural Todd Givens Memorial Scholarship

The inaugural Todd Givens Memorial Scholarship was awarded to promising new songwriter-artist and Belmont alumnus Chris Housman recently by the Nashville Songwriters Association International (NSAI).

Housman, a 2012 music business graduate who is originally from Hanston, Kansas (population 200), taught himself to play the fiddle at age seven. Singing followed, which led to the formation of a traveling family bluegrass/gospel band, opening for major country acts, receiving national recognition for singing classical solos, and fronting a punk rock band. Since attending Belmont University, Housman is now actively songwriting and performing (upright bass and vocals) country-wide touring colleges.

“Chris is already making a name for himself in the industry,” said NSAI Membership Representative, Erin Kidd. “With instinctive writing intuition and a voice that can melt hearts, he’s one of our most signable artist/writers. From our first meeting, his talent, passion and likability has been obvious and undeniable.”

Todd Givens was the head of NSAI’s tech department and unexpectedly passed away on February 27, 2018.  Givens was involved with the Screamin’ Cheetah Wheelies, and the Eric Hamilton Band for many years.  Band members and front men Mike Farris of the Wheelies and Eric Hamilton have agreed to help mentor Housman and future scholarship recipients.

“Todd would be proud of this choice,” said NSAI Executive Director Bart Herbison. “Housman has that ‘it’ thing and an ability when performing to draw you into his world. NSAI will fund his membership, costs for all of our events and give him staff-wide attention over the next two years with the idea of helping him secure a publishing and record deal.”

Law Students Win Appellate Advocacy Regional Competition

Earlier this month, Belmont Law sent two teams to compete in the American Bar Association National Appellate Advocacy Regional Competition in Brooklyn, New York.

The team of Allyson Lynch, Paul Madden and Sarah Martin were not only crowned the best brief in the region but went undefeated the entire tournament. They are advancing to the national competition in Chicago in mid-April.

The team of Marisa Garcia, Joseph North, and Richard Swor also went undefeated until the very last round, where they missed advancing by one point on one ballot. Garcia was also named the third best advocate in the entire region.

Carter Presents at Memphis Law Review Symposium

Director of Academic Success and Associate Professor of Law Dr. Tracey Carter presented at the University of Memphis Law Review 2019 Symposium’s Voter Identification Law Panel on Friday, March 15, 2019. She discussed her forthcoming 2019 University of Memphis Law Review article, “Eliminating Barriers to Voting: How Allowing College Students to Use Their Student IDs to Vote in Certain Southeastern States Can Help Make Voting Great in America.” The Symposium reached capacity with more than 250 Memphis-area lawyers registered.

Carter Serves on Truman Scholarship Foundation Panel

Dr. Tracey Carter, associate professor of law and Belmont Law’s director of academic success, recently served on the Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation’s Regional Review Panel in Nashville. Dr. Carter, a 1993 Truman Scholar, and other panelists interviewed the 2019 Truman Scholarship Finalists from Arkansas, Kentucky, Mississippi and Tennessee, and she participated in the selection of the Truman Scholars from these states. The 2019 Class of Truman Scholars will be announced in April.

The Truman Scholarship is a highly competitive national scholarship and is considered “the premier graduate fellowship in the United States for those pursuing careers as public service leaders.” The Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation “awards merit-based scholarships to college students who plan to pursue careers in government or elsewhere in public service. Truman Scholars receive up to $30,000 for graduate or professional school, participate in leadership development activities, and have special opportunities for internships and employment with the federal government.”

Quonset Hut, Columbia Studio A Featured on Podcast

The Quonset Hut and Columbia studios along with Curb College Facility Manager Mike Porter were featured recently in an hour-long podcast by “This Week in Radio Tech.” Porter showed the microphones used in recording some of the most familiar and popular songs in history as well as provided a tour of Columbia Studio A and Studio B – the Quonset Hut – on Nashville’s Music Square. The podcast can be viewed here.

Carr Recognized With Women of Influence Award

Cheryl Slay Carr, associate dean of the Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business, has been recognized as a Women of Influence Award winner for 2019. The Nashville Business Journal honors women in nine categories who lead and make it a priority to give back, to encourage and to inspire. Carr has been selected to receive the award in the Trailblazer category.

Two Alumni, One Student Make It to ‘American Idol’ Top 40 Round

Three Belmont Bruins survived Hollywood Week and are moving on to the “American Idol” Showcase round in Hawaii. Whittled down from the 175 Hollywood contestants, the Showcase Round will feature the show’s Top 40 with performances airing on ABC Sunday, March 31.

Sophomore music education major Walker Burroughs again impressed the judges in Hollywood with solo performances of Stevie Wonder’s “Whereabouts” and Elton John’s “Your Song.” Hometown website AL.com confirmed the singer was chosen for the Hawaii round, which will cut the contestant pool down to 20.

Though her performances during Hollywood Week didn’t air on the broadcast, December 2018 commercial voice graduate Emma Kleinberg was seen with fellow Beltones member Burroughs in the room in which Idol judge Katy Perry informed contestants they had made it through to the next round. She also acknowledged her joy at moving forward in the competition on an Instagram post.

And according to the Wilson Post, music business alumnus Kason Lester also was selected for the Showcase Round following his participation on The Mamas and Papas’s song “California Dreamin‘” in the Hollywood group round.

Tune in to ABC Sunday to see alumni Kason Lester and Emma Kleinberg as well as current student Walker Burroughs compete in the Top 40 round of “American Idol.”

Dr. Susan West Speaks at Cable Leadership Luncheon

Belmont Vice President and Chief of Staff Dr. Susan West recently participated in a panel discussion at the Nashville Cable ATHENA Awards Leadership Luncheon. The topic of the luncheon was “Fearless Girl: Conquering Your Bull.”

West was featured as a panelist along with Meg Harris, senior vice president and head of strategic initiatives at AllianceBernstein. The discussion was moderated by Nancy Corley, attorney at Lyle, Levy & Langford PLC.

Dr. Lakisha Simmons, associate professor of management information systems, is nominated for the Nashville Cable 2019 ATHENA Award in the Young Professionals category.