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Jason Gray was born and raised in southern Minnesota. He grew up on the road with his mother, who used to make her living by performing in bar bands. As disagreements between his parents led to a bitter divorce and custody battle when Gray was just six, he developed a stuttering impediment.
A Way to See in the Dark is a music album by Jason Gray released September 13, 2011. It is his ninth solo record and his third major label national release with Centricity Music . It was produced by Jason Ingram and Rusty Varencamp, the same production team from his previous release, Everything Sad Is Coming Untrue .
In 1940, when ASCAP tried to double its license fees again, radio broadcasters formed a boycott of ASCAP and founded a competing royalty agency, Broadcast Music Incorporated (BMI). During a ten-month period lasting from January 1 to October 29, 1941, no music licensed by ASCAP (1,250,000 songs) was broadcast on NBC and CBS radio stations
ASCAP, a non-profit, noted that of that $1.327 billion brought in, $1.213 billion in royalties was distributed to publishers, composers and songwriters, an increase of 2.5% for the year. “2020 ...
Everything Sad Is Coming Untrue is a music album by Jason Gray released September 1, 2009. It is his seventh solo record and his second major label national release with Centricity Music . It was produced by Jason Ingram and Rusty Varencamp.
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Eight tracks of the 12-track album All the Lovely Losers are taken from Jason's 2005 independently released album The Better Part of Me with altered track-listing. The four other tracks – "Sing Through Me", "You Are Mercy", "Into the Mystery" and "Someday (The Butterfly)" – are new tracks not found in the earlier album.
Wagener said ASCAP licenses are "tailored to different establishments." Typically, he said, establishments pay an average of $2 a day, or about $730 a year, giving a business the right to play ...