Stories Behind the Songs

Chris Blair

The Stories Behind the Songs is a division of The Listening Room Cafe in Nashville, TN. This is a weekly podcast hosted by Listening Room Founder/President, Chris Blair. After over 20 years in Nashville and over 30 years in the music business, CB has become friends with some of the biggest names in music, the writers behind the hits and amazing industry leaders. In this podcast, he sits down with those friends and shares their stories. You’ll hear about the songs you know from radio, you’ll hear from brand new artists and much more. Whether you have dreams of being in the music industry or just love great music, this podcast is for you!

  1. Jun 23

    Phil Vassar: The Writer Who Would Not Quit

    A hit song can start with a flooded kitchen, a late co-writer, and a line tossed off as a joke. Sitting down with Phil Vassar, we follow the real road behind the radio: moving from Virginia to Nashville, getting told a piano player does not belong, and pushing through anyway until the first cuts finally land and the town starts listening. If you love songwriter stories, country music history, and the craft behind a chorus that sticks, this one goes deep and stays honest.  We talk about building a career the hard way by owning a bar just to have a stage, playing every weekend, testing new songs on real people, and watching labels and artists start to show up. Phil shares what it felt like to jump from that club world to massive tours with Tim McGraw and Faith Hill, then to life on the road with Kenny Rogers, plus the pranks, personalities, and weird little moments you only get when you live inside the music business.  Then the conversation turns to longevity: why timeless songs outlive trends, why some of his favorite tracks were never singles, and how “Just Another Day in Paradise” went from chaos to a No. 1. Phil also opens up about his 2023 heart attack, the shock of “bad genes,” and how a second chance changes your perspective on life and songwriting. If you enjoy interviews about the songwriting process, Nashville, and classic country storytelling, subscribe, share this with a music-loving friend, and leave us a review so more listeners can find the show.

    1h 3m
  2. Jun 16

    Terri Clark: Trust The Process

    A single “loss” can either break you or reroute you, and Terri Clark proves it can do both. Sitting down with me on Stories Behind the Songs, Terry tells the wild true story of a Canadian talent contest that left her and her mom crying on the drive home, only for her to learn ten years later that she actually won and was disqualified because she was underage at a Budweiser sponsored event. That one hidden detail helped push her toward the boldest move of her life: leaving Medicine Hat, Alberta for Nashville at 18 with no green card, no car, and no idea what the next week would look like. We get honest about the Nashville grind behind country music success: years of waiting tables, writing late on Music Row, carrying rejection from label to label, and hanging on to every small sign that the dream is still alive. Terri shares where she was when she first heard “Better Things To Do” on the radio, why she never really says “I’ve made it,” and how momentum in a career can vanish and return with the next brave creative choice. Because this is Stories Behind the Songs, we go deep on craft. Terri explains how she picks songs she did not write, why strong character and a strong female perspective matter, and how “No Fear,” co-written with Mary Chapin Carpenter, came together from a conversation about Johnny Cash. We also talk Terri Clark Take Two, reimagining hits with collaborators like Cody Johnson, Carly Pearce, and Kelly Clarkson, plus her blunt take on today’s music business: art over commerce, play live, and do not let the content treadmill replace the work. If you love country music storytelling, songwriting process, and real career lessons from an artist who’s lived them, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs a push, and leave a review wherever you listen.

    52 min
  3. Jun 9

    How Diamond Rio Built A Signature Harmony Sound

    A country band doesn’t last 40 plus years by accident, and Diamond Rio doesn’t sound like Diamond Rio by accident either. We’re recording from a ship off Mexico, and Marty Roe and Dan Truman join me to tell the real stories behind the harmony stack, the brotherhood, and the grit it took to go from starving musicians to a band people can identify in seconds. We talk through the stepping stones that mattered: leaving the Tennessee River Boys era, surviving years of setbacks and lineup changes, and finally landing a record deal through relationships with Tim DuBois and Monty Powell. Marty explains how their instrumental identity showed up before radio ever validated them, and why bonding before success helped them stay together when other “industry-built” bands fell apart. If you care about Nashville, country music history, and how careers are actually built, this is the unfiltered version. Then we go deep on “One More Day” and the choices that reshaped it: pulling back the mandolin, adding strings, and adjusting vocals for a broader format. We also face the hard truth of how 9-11 changed the way the world heard that song, turning it into comfort for people who needed more than entertainment. We wrap with new music on the horizon, family and creativity, audience questions about the Diamond Rio name, and the advice they’d give their eight-year-old selves. If you enjoy artist interviews, songwriting craft, and stories behind iconic country songs, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show.

    59 min
  4. 12/30/2025

    Year-End Gratitude And Big News

    Time to close the books on a huge year and open the door to an even bigger one. We step back to celebrate what your support made possible at the Listening Room—862 shows, 150,000 guests, and a stack of songs that went from our stage to number one—while setting the stage for what’s next in 2026. We share why the Listening Room remains a passion project at its core and how community keeps pushing the music forward. Then we unveil plans for our 20th anniversary at the historic Ryman Auditorium on March 3, 2026, with a heavyweight lineup: Hardy, Jo Dee Messina, Mitchell Tenpenny, Blessing Offor, Jordan Feliz, plus a powerhouse bench of hitmakers like JT Harding, Rob Williford, Phil Barton, James Slater, Matt Jenkins, Brian Davis, Wendell Mobley, and Lee Thomas Miller. Expect stories behind the songs, surprise guests, and the kind of moments that turn a great night into a landmark memory. We also tease a major project two years in the making that’s almost ready to announce—built to connect artists, writers, venues, and fans in smarter, more meaningful ways. Programming will flex a bit early next year as we lock the final pieces, but the conversations won’t stop. February brings our second annual Boots on the Water cruise to Cozumel with Clint Black, Rodney Atkins, Terri Clark, Diamond Rio, BlackHawk, Chris Cagle, Phil Vassar, Deana Carter, David Lee Murphy, and more, plus TLR songwriting favorites including Liz Rose, Adam Craig, Emmett Stevens Jr., Bridgette Tatum, and Rachel Thibodeau. We’ll record at sea and bring you deck-side stories, fresh performances, and the kind of candid moments only a cruise can spark. If you love country music, songwriting, live shows, and the stories that turn a hook into a hit, you’ll feel right at home here. Grab your seats for the Ryman at ryman.com, book your cabin at bootsonthewatercruise.com, and come ride with us into 2026. If this episode moved you, tap follow, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review to help more fans find the music and the stories behind it.

    5 min
  5. Tyler Rich - From Valley Roads To Music Rows

    12/22/2025

    Tyler Rich - From Valley Roads To Music Rows

    A farm town kid with a tiny amp, a bandana from Stagecoach, and a promise to take one more swing at the dream—Tyler Rich sits down with us to unpack the road from Northern California to Nashville and what it costs to make something that truly feels like you. We trace the early wins and wipeouts: a record deal at nineteen, years of touring with homework due on a bus, an economics degree finished at warp speed, and the moment he turned down a safe, salaried future to chase a riskier one that wouldn’t let him sleep. We go inside the writing rooms and the edges where craft gets sharpened. Mentors like Daryl Brown pushed his melodies and choices with sharp, priceless notes, while a DIY marketing blitz—thousands of cards handed out at shows and a brave DM hustle—built real fans one by one. That grit fueled a fast move to Nashville, where a culture of friendly competition and structured writing turned instinct into volume and voice. From there, the double album took shape: Poppy and Iris, a project anchored to state flowers and a life split between two homes. Cowboy Tears lifts like an anthem but breaks like a diary, a tribute to distance, devotion, and a bandana that never left his pocket. Redwood grows from wildfire science into a resilience song, proof that some things only get stronger after the burn. Independence was the next leap. Tyler walks through leaving a label, rebuilding his team with fresh eyes, and releasing twenty-plus songs that aim for the gut instead of the middle. The connection shows up in rooms—fans crying, him crying—especially when Dogs Don’t Die helps people carry the love that remains. That song sparked a new lane: children’s books that translate courage, grief, and selfhood for young readers. We preview Leave The Wolf Wild and Fred Under The Bed, and look ahead to a co-headline tour with a rock powerhouse designed to bridge country heart and rock muscle. If you love stories about craft, risk, and the long route to your real voice, this one’s for you. Hit play, share it with a friend who needs courage today, and if it resonates, follow the show, leave a review, and tell us which song hit you hardest.

    1h 12m
  6. Ava Suppelsa - How A Last‑Minute Write Became A Multi‑Format Hit And Sparked A Career Surge

    12/16/2025

    Ava Suppelsa - How A Last‑Minute Write Became A Multi‑Format Hit And Sparked A Career Surge

    A last-minute writing invite, a young artist with star power, and a chorus that had to carry the whole story—Ava Sapelsa walks us through how a room with Jamie Kenny, Trent Dabbs, and Max McNown turned into a multi-format hit climbing hot AC, pop, and country radio while living on the Billboard charts for months. We trace the journey from poetic verses to a clear “brown eyes” hook, why the melody stretches across male and female ranges, and how a strong chorus can translate from TikTok buzz to radio momentum without losing its heart. From there, we rewind to Evanston and Montana, where cover sets and country storytelling shaped Ava’s instincts, then fast-forward to Nashville writers’ rounds as a crash course in modern songcraft. Ava shares the strategies behind “Salt, Lime & Tequila,” a Zoom-era co-write with Ryan Griffin and Jason Massey that snowballed from a rough title to SiriusXM The Highway’s most-played song, and how TikTok, smart pitching, and timing opened the door to radio. We also break down her outside cut with Carly Pearce on Hummingbird, proving how a clean concept and an honest lyric can move from demo to record in a week when everything aligns. Beyond charts and cuts, Ava brings purpose to Music City through Hope on the Row, a nonprofit serving unhoused neighbors with food, supplies, and pathways to stability—powered by volunteers from across the music industry. It’s a reminder that enduring careers are built on craft, community, and consistency. If you’re chasing better choruses, clearer concepts, or a stronger network, you’ll find practical takeaways and candid stories you can use on your next write. Enjoy the episode, then subscribe, share with a songwriter friend, and leave a review so more music lovers can find these stories.

    40 min
  7. 12/10/2025

    Jerry Flowers - Chasing Hits And Hard Truths

    A riff can change a room. That’s the spark Jerry Flowers chases as he walks us through the real stories behind hits for Sam Hunt, Ryan Hurd and Maren Morris, Old Dominion, Morgan Wallen, Keith Urban, and more—plus the hard turns only a long road can deliver. From the first glint of House Party’s pre-chorus to the soul-steeped simplicity of Chasing After You, Jerry shows how tempo, tone, and lived experience shape songs that last. We dig into the writing retreat that birthed Kinfolks, the late verse rewrite that made radio, and the rare week-long sprint that got Last Drive Down Main to Morgan Wallen. Jerry opens up about being fired mid-session after decades with Keith Urban, then choosing to finish Water My Flowers—and how Old Dominion’s cut turned a gut-punch day into a keeper. He shares the unexpected lineage between old-school country and R&B, why he’s often the “energy guy” in the room, and how a great demo can sit for years before the right voice brings it to life. There’s touring wisdom here too: from playing on an airport baggage carousel in Tamworth to facing 800,000 people in Philly, the takeaway is clear—be the best hang, use your downtime, and build a second lane with writing or production. Jerry’s closing advice to new writers and artists lands like a compass: figure out who you are, defend it, and let time reward the work. If you love songwriter stories, Nashville craft, and the moments where resilience becomes melody, this one hits home. If this conversation moved you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review. It helps more music fans find these stories and keeps the conversations coming.

    50 min
4.7
out of 5
14 Ratings

About

The Stories Behind the Songs is a division of The Listening Room Cafe in Nashville, TN. This is a weekly podcast hosted by Listening Room Founder/President, Chris Blair. After over 20 years in Nashville and over 30 years in the music business, CB has become friends with some of the biggest names in music, the writers behind the hits and amazing industry leaders. In this podcast, he sits down with those friends and shares their stories. You’ll hear about the songs you know from radio, you’ll hear from brand new artists and much more. Whether you have dreams of being in the music industry or just love great music, this podcast is for you!

You Might Also Like