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You know what’s not easy to do in a town known around the world as “Music City”? Become one of its most respected live music destinations. Yet that’s exactly what The Listening Room Cafe has done. Famous for putting the focus on songs and songwriters, it brings locals and tourists alike deep inside Nashville’s songwriting scene, pulling back the curtain on our most iconic (yet least-understood) craft — and often hosting stars before they break. Early next month, the venue will celebrate a special milestone.
Marking The Listening Room’s 20th anniversary on March 3 at the Ryman Auditorium, the unique venue-bar-restaurant will recreate its twice-daily “writers’ round” on a historic stage, welcoming Listening Room alumni like HARDY, Mitchell Tenpenny, Jo Dee Messina, and more. Each will be there to pay tribute to an authentic (if unlikely) piece of Nashville’s musical fabric that has played a role in countless careers.
“Obviously, I still have to pinch myself every now and then,” founder Chris Blair says of the anniversary. “Just thinking through everybody that’s come across that stage in the last 20 years who are now household names on country radio, Hall of Fame songwriters, Grammy Award winners — all of that kind of thing. It’s super special.”
A songwriter and former artist himself, Blair opened The Listening Room Cafe in 2006. He had “fallen in love” with songwriting after his artistic hopes dried up and began performing at writers’ rounds all over the city. They were already a uniquely Nashville experience for fans.
Sometimes called a “guitar pull,” these acoustic shows generally feature three or four professional songwriters who take turns performing tunes they’ve written while also sharing the story behind the song. Often centered on hits for big-name stars, fans love the insight, and Blair loved the format.
There were already a few venues famous for the style, which Blair still sings the praises of today. But with a family background in the restaurant business, he figured these events could be taken to another level.
“It could be done differently — bigger,” Blair explains. “And really, at a lot of places I felt like the music was secondary. So, I just jumped all in, and that’s where it started.”
With a great sound system, an off-Broadway location on Fourth Avenue, and a full menu that went far beyond standard deep-fried fare, fans would come for the music and stay for the hospitality. It took some time, but key to The Listening Room Cafe’s ultimate success was Blair’s philosophy: passionate advocacy for songwriters and emerging artists.
Basically, it meant he committed to paying his performers while his competition stuck with a tip-based strategy. That helped young artists and writers pay their bills while they honed their onstage chops, and many became devoted to Blair’s cause.
Over the years, The Listening Room Cafe claims to have hosted fans from 53 countries and every U.S. state, with more than 1,500 shows and 2,000 songwriters taking the stage. They range from Vince Gill, Trisha Yearwood, and Garth Brooks to Chris Stapleton, Lainey Wilson, HARDY, and countless professional songwriters whom fans would otherwise never see in action. Big stars would make a point of coming back after their careers took off, and slowly but surely, the venue took on a music-first identity, giving fans from around the world a different kind of experience from what they’d find in a rowdy honky-tonk.
“I get stuff all the time from people who come to Nashville and say, ‘We were in town for three days, and we had all these things planned, but we canceled everything and came to The Listening Room three nights in a row,’” Blair says with pride. “Maybe it’s a song you’ve never heard, or maybe it’s a huge hit on the radio, but when you hear it performed by the person who wrote it — and the emotion and the connection to that lyric — it’s completely different. You never hear it the same way again.”
Now, one of Nashville’s new favorites is teaming up with one of its oldest. The 20th anniversary celebration at the Ryman on March 3 will give fans the full Listening Room experience, plus a few can’t-miss twists. Along with HARDY, Tenpenny, and Messina, a talented cast, including Blessing Offor, Phil Barton, Brian Davis, J.T. Harding, Matt Jenkins, Wendell Mobley, James Slater, and more are set to shed light on their biggest songs. More guests are expected to be announced before the show, and Blair hints at several secretive plans.
“Maybe it’s a song you’ve never heard, or maybe it’s a huge hit on the radio, but when you hear it performed by the person who wrote it — and the emotion and the connection to that lyric — it’s completely different. You never hear it the same way again”
“It’s going to be such a special night,” Blair says. “We’ve got so many surprise guests popping in. There is zero chance I make it through that night without tears being shed on that stage.”
According to him, it’s yet another pinch-me moment, and proof his instincts were right. There were no guarantees The Listening Room Cafe would take off and many tough moments to overcome. Blair even says he could have made more money by following conventional wisdom and focusing on bar sales. But it wasn’t just about the bottom line for him.
He knew what it was like to scrape by as an aspiring writer and artist in Nashville — and how lonely it can be. Creating something to help the dreamers was just as important.
“It’s about supporting live music, original music, songwriters, watching friends like Mitchell Tenpenny and HARDY, and everybody who’s come across the stage playing songs and then watching them become these big artists,” he says. “Getting to hear them in interviews talk about The Listening Room, and that they are where they are because The Listening Room helped pay their rent because they actually got paid to play — that’s why I do it.”
It might have grown into something special, but looking forward, Blair says The Listening Room Cafe won’t change. It will keep giving fans two shows each weeknight (and two on Saturday mornings) in one of Nashville’s most authentically “Music City” experiences. It will keep giving new talent a place to grow and call home, and keep giving back, as Blair continues the Sound Good Do Good charity series. The ultimate goal remains simple: to let music lovers hear great songs — loud and clear — like they’ve never heard them before.
“That’s always our goal,” he says. “We want to provide this experience where people leave feeling moved, and it’s not a matter of if, but when can we get back and do this again?”