Episode Details
Back to EpisodesMaggie Rose: From Tomato Gate to Grammy Nominations
Description
She started at 16 belting Bruce Springsteen covers in a tribute band, spent a decade inside Nashville's tightly controlled country radio machine, and finally earned Grammy nominations by throwing out the rulebook. Maggie Rose's path through mainstream country music is one of the most striking reinventions in modern Americana.
Her story collides head-on with 2015's infamous Tomato Gate, when radio consultant Keith Hill urged programmers to play fewer female artists, calling women the tomatoes in country radio's salad. Rather than keep fighting the gatekeepers, Rose ditched the auto-tune and corporate filter entirely, recording live with a 13-piece band and proving creative liberation could succeed where playing the game failed.
• Began at 16 fronting a Bruce Springsteen tribute act, all raw sweat-on-the-stage energy
• Endured 150-show years and 7 a.m. acoustic sets in conference rooms for radio gatekeepers
• Tomato Gate: a top consultant told radio to only sprinkle a few women into playlists
• Cut her Grammy-nominated music live in one take with players from Kelly Clarkson and Steven Tyler's bands