An experienced songwriter and performer, Belmont alumna Jamie Floyd is now getting the opportunity to showcase her talents on national television. USA Network’s new show “Real Country” is set to premier later this month, and Floyd will perform as a contestant selected by award-winning country artist Jake Owen who serves as a panelist on the show.
“Real Country” is a talent-based show featuring artists who focus on and perform real country music. Both solo and group performers will be featured and will compete for the opportunity to be named one of the next breakout acts of country music. Joining Owen as panelists will be Grammy Award-winning artists Shania Twain and Travis Tritt.
Speaking about her opportunity to be on the show, Floyd said “I got to sing songs by writers and artists I respect, and I even got to sing my own songs. I had the time of my life and am opening my heart to whatever this all leads to.”
Floyd is a graduate of Belmont’s Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business and has been working as a singer-songwriter in Nashville for several years. She has released an EP as well as written many songs recorded by artists like Miranda Lambert, Kellie Pickler and Brian McKnight. Her songs have also been featured on several televisions shows and movies, like ABC’s hit drama “Nashville.”
The “Real Country” series premiere will air on November 13 at 9 p.m. central on USA Network.
In celebration of its 25th anniversary, Middle Tennessee-based healthcare interior design company Inner Design Studio provided funding for a new scholarship recognizing a student enrolled in the O’More School of Design at Belmont University during the 2018-2019 academic year. The chosen recipient of the scholarship is Unionville native Chalie Horton who plans to pursue a career in interior design. Faculty in Belmont’s O’More School of Design awarded the one-time $2,500 scholarship for the 2018-2019 academic year after considering candidates with career interest in the healthcare interior design industry.
“I can’t think of a better way to celebrate our company’s 25-year milestone than by giving back to the school that encouraged me to pursue a career in the healthcare design industry in the first place,” said Rebecca Donner, owner and founder of Inner Design Studio and alumna of the O’More College of Design’s Interior Design program. “Chalie is a bright, enthusiastic and driven student, and I feel honored that my firm will be able to contribute to her success this school year.”
“We’re grateful for this opportunity to partner with Inner Design Studio and for their support of our students,” said Rebecca Brewer, program chair for the O’More School of Design’s Interior Design program. “We are constantly striving to provide our students with opportunities to grow and succeed in their studies, and both of those objectives are brought to life by generous donors such as Inner Design Studio.”
CJ Solar, a Belmont songwriting graduate, was recently featured in Music Row Magazine for co-writing his first No. 1 radio single, “Up Down,” featuring country music artists Morgan Allen and Florida Georgia Line.
To celebrate the song, ASCAP and BMI hosted a party to honor the record’s artists and songwriters on Wednesday, Oct. 17. Michael Martin, ASCAP vice president of membership group nashville, offered congratulations to Solar by presenting him with an ASCAP-branded YETI cooler.
After interning for Sea Gayle Music, an independent music publishing company in Nashville while studying at Belmont, Solar was signed to a publishing agreement with the company.
Solar has been named as one of the “New Artists You Need To Know” by Rolling Stone Country and has also recently premiered his single “American Girls” music video on popculture.com.
According to Architectural Digest, Belmont University ranks among the 50 most beautiful colleges in America. Belmont is ranked along with a wide range of colleges from several different states and settings. Highlighted in the article is the Belmont Mansion, an important landmark for both the University and the local community.
Architectural Design compiled this national ranking on the basis of criteria that looked specifically at individual school’s settings and their architectural legacy. The article also mentions that many colleges focus efforts on creating technologically advanced, modern buildings while still retaining more traditional architectural themes across their campuses. In recent years Belmont has reflected this theme, opening state-of-the-art buildings that support students’ needs while also building facilities that are aesthetically stunning inside and out.
The article focuses on the Belmont Mansion which is an antebellum-style architectural design with a variety of elements that can also be seen on several buildings throughout campus. Belmont beat out several schools, such as Brown University, the United States Naval Academy and the University of Hawaii, to rank at the No. 40 spot.
On October 25, Associate Professor of Management Information Systems Dr. Lakisha Simmons received the Nashville Black Chamber of Commerce’s Rising Star Award at the 20th Year Anniversary and Awards Luncheon.
The award was presented to Simmons by NBCC President Carolyn Walker.
On November 1, five students including Angie Aldredge, Sydney Branch, Colby Brandt, Liam McDermott, and Alyssa Pennington were inducted into Belmont’s Xi Alpha Chapter of Phi Alpha Theta, the National History Honor Society. The ceremony, held in Belmont Mansion, was attended by faculty from the History Department, including the chapter’s faculty advisor, Dr. Cynthia Bisson, along with family and friends of the inductees.
The annual Phi Alpha Theta lecture followed the induction ceremony and was given by guest speaker Dr. Jeff Johnson, director of the Graduate History Program at Providence College. Johnson’s topic was the 1916 Preparedness Day Bombing in San Francisco.
Belmont’s Occupational Therapy Doctorate (OTD) students made dreams come true at the 2018 Nashville Buddy Walk. They created superhero stickers with the children and their families to place on the front of their sweaters or jackets. Kids could be a variety of popular superheroes, or they could create another type of sticker from dinosaurs to flowers.
The Nashville Buddy Walk is a yearly event to inform the public about Down Syndrome and celebrate children with Down Syndrome and their families. Professor of Occupational and Physical Therapy Dr. Natalie Michaels and her students work the Belmont OT/PT table each year to interact with the children and families and to inform the public about Belmont University and the benefits of Occupational Therapy and Physical Therapy.
Students working with Dr. Michaels this year included Kara Reed, Amanda McCutchin, Chantè Bowens, Hailey Scandin, Searcy Fox, Abigail Hamblen, Julia Bilotta, Emma Mace, Erica Williams, Nicole Versace, Savannah Carroll, Kerri Reid, Savannah Peters, Sylvia Aslup and Molly Schneider-Adams. Dozens of kids were eager for a sticker and to meet the Belmont OTD students.
Assistant Professor of Entertainment Industry Studies Dr. Sarita M. Stewart recently had her first paper published from her dissertation research on artist-fan engagement in the October 2018 edition of the International Journal of Music Business Research. The paper, titled “The Development of the Artist-Fan Engagement Model,” detailed her initial research, which was completed in March 2013.
The article discusses the initial findings, as well as how to move the model forward, given the widespread changes in the music industry over the past five years. Stewart plans to re-run the initial survey in 2019, then work on an academic textbook which delves into the various facets of the model.
Belmont’s undergraduate and graduate audio engineering programs made a strong presence at the 2018 International Audio Engineering Society conference in New York by winning top honors in both research and music production. Professor of Audio Engineering Technology Wesley Bulla and recent MSAE graduate Paul Mayo were awarded “Best Peer-Reviewed Paper” for innovative research on how loudspeaker placement interacts with our sense of elevation.
In the student recording competition, two student teams won 1st and 2nd place in the Traditional Studio Recording category. Russell Scarborough, with his collaborators Cameron Row and Max Ingersol, took the Gold award for their Jazz/Pop recording of “Bad Bad News,” and Hannah Wright, with her team Rocco Fiorentino, Adam Krulewicz, and Reggie Ecklund, took the Silver award for the Modern/Country recording of “Thoughts of You.”
This year continues a five-year streak for the AET program with awards across multiple categories including Sound for Visual Media (2017 Silver and 2016 Bronze, Kerrick Crace), Modern Studio Recording & Electronic Music (2015 Silver, Nick Lobel), Traditional Studio Recording (2014 Gold, Cory Wilhite) and an Honorable Mention for Modern Studio Recording (2014, David Villa).
Each year, about 30,000 neuroscientists gather to discuss the recent discoveries, training and funding initiatives of their industry at the Annual Meeting of the Soceity for Neuroscience (SFN). This year, the conference was held from November 3-7 and Professor of Biology Dr. Lori McGrew and six Belmont undergraduate students, representing biology, neuroscience and psychology, presented posters and participated in a variety of meeting events.
The opening panel discussion, “Music and the Brain,” included Jazz musician Pat Metheny, SFN President Dr. Richard Huganir and neurosurgeon Dr. Charles Limb. The effects of music on brain activity have become an increasingly popular area of research. Some important take-aways from this session were that brain activity is different when a musician is playing a piece of music as written in comparison to activity when a musician is improvising. Focusing on playing music as written requires the musician to engage in a high level of self-monitoring, inhibiting impulses to stray from the pre-determined notes. Improvisation, though, results in an increase of circuits that control self-expression and the inhibition of self-monitoring circuits. Neuroscientists are interested in understanding the control of these brain areas to help those who struggle with disorders involving those circuits including impulse control, vocal and motor tics and autism spectrum disorders.
Another lecture provided updated information on “Bidirectional Interactions between the Brain and Implantable Computers” given by Dr. Eberhard Fetz. The presentation discussed the benefits and problems that arise due to neural plasticity associated with implanted devices. One significant benefit is that people learn to better control prosthetics as they practice and fine-tune the neural circuits that interface with the machine. However, when the neural implants are downstream in the circuit, neural plasticity can cause a decrease in response. The dynamic nature of the circuits will be critical for continued advancement in implanted electronics.
One over-arching theme for much of the research presented this year focused on gender-dependent differences in research studies. This is due to the National Institutes of Health formal policy issued in 2016 which mandated that research data account for sex as a biology variable. Some examples presented include female rats showing different patterns in traditional tests of anxiety behavior when compared to male rats, female rats showing no increase in metabolism in response to caffeine administration (male rats do), and estrogen receptors interacting with oxytocin receptors during stress responses. Collectively, these studies demonstrate the importance of considering sex as a biological variable and suggest that some research paradigms may undergo revision based on the results.
Students present their poster at the 2018 Annual Meeting
In addition to studies with humans and rodents, there were also many studies presented in which Danio rerio (zebrafish) served as the model organism. These studies were of particular interest to McGrew and her students since they utilize Danio rerio for their research. Some studies showed the interaction between excitatory and inhibitory circuits, helping to explain the duality of the fear response. Freezing is the result of the inhibitory circuit while erratic movements result from the activation of the excitatory circuit. Both can occur when the fish are frightened and the predominant effect seems to depend on the Danio’s surroundings and other fish in the shoal. The group came away with a number of insights and ideas to investigate upon their return.
In addition to attending the conference, McGrew and the students presented their own posters. McGrew’s presentation, “Electronics in the Classroom – Use It or Lose It?” was part of the conference’s history and teaching theme. Her poster discussed a variety of applications for integrating phones and computers into class activities.
McGrew’s students, Nardeen Fayik, Unique Ellis and Brent Hillier, along with Assistant Professor of Psychology Dr. Tim Schoenfeld’s students, Hannah Branthwaite, Aditi Buch and Jonathan St. Louis, presented posters during the Faculty for Undergraduate Neuroscience poster session. Team McGrew described the effects of caffeine, apomorphine and blue light on anxiety levels in zebrafish.
Both groups had the opportunity to share research ideas with students and faculty from other institutions during the poster session and, as a result, further their understanding of their own projects in addition to their knowledge of neuroscience.