The road from Harrisonburg to Nashville is full of twists and turns, but a bevy of JMU alumni have staked their claim in Music City and are enjoying rewarding careers on stage and in the studio.
Ross Copperman (’04), the Academy of Country Music’s 2016 Songwriter of the Year, and three of the members of the band Old Dominion, ACM’s New Duo/Group of the Year, began their careers as Dukes.
“The music department drew me to JMU,” Copperman said. “I knew I wanted to do something in music, and JMU had the best program around. Then I came up with my parents and did a tour of the school and absolutely fell in love with the campus. I knew it was meant to be.”
While at JMU, Copperman was focused on a career as a performer. “It’s where everything started for me,” he said. The talented music major was playing shows at Taylor Down Under and building a following when he got the opportunity to open for country music star Phil Vassar (’85), who was returning to his alma mater for a Homecoming concert on the heels of a 2002 ACM award for Top New Male Artist and a string of No. 1 hits.
After the show, Vassar’s keyboard player, Clay Ryder, invited Copperman to come to Nashville to record an album. “I took him up on the offer and made my first record, ‘Believe,’ in the basement studio at EMI,” Copperman said.
Copperman joined the National Association for Campus Activities touring circuit, playing colleges all over the country. That led to a record deal with Sony UK. “After two years [living and recording] in London, I decided to make the move to Nashville.” Today Copperman is one of the most sought-after songwriters in country music, having written hits for such artists as Kenny Chesney, Keith Urban and Luke Bryan.
Like Copperman, Old Dominion bassist Geoff Sprung (’01) chose JMU on the strength of its music program. “The largest part of preparing me for my career was putting me in an environment where I was surrounded by talented people,” Sprung said. “I learned a lot about music and the music business from my professors, but just as much from the people sitting next to me in the classes.”
At Madison, Sprung met drummer Whit Sellers (’00) and guitarist Brad Tursi (’02). After college, the three men would eventually find their way to Nashville separately as songwriters, performers and session players before teaming up with Trevor Rosen and Matthew Ramsey to form Old Dominion.
The band is currently touring the country in support of their acclaimed debut album “Meat and Candy,” which features the singles “Snapback” and “Break Up With Him.”
Count another Nashville-based JMU alum, Mike Meadows (’00), among Old Dominion’s fans. “Been wearing out this new record,” Meadows, a singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist, tweeted in November 2015. “Go buy it if you haven’t yet!”
After earning a bachelor’s degree in cello performance from JMU, the Danville, Virginia, native performed with the Pat McGee Band as a bassist and vocalist. In 2009, he joined Taylor Swift’s band, The Agency, on the “Fearless” tour.
Meadows continues to play guitar, banjo and other stringed instruments for Swift while also working and recording with country music artist and former “American Idol” contestant Josh Gracin. In 2015, he released a five-song EP, “When You Need Someone, Volume One.”