“Our approach to managing artists is ‘Let’s create the world that the music becomes connected to,’” says Jason Murray, president of full-service boutique talent management firm Vector Management, who has helmed the long-running company since January 2023.
“If you look at the just the Americana and roots space — artists including Molly, Charley, Allison, Nitty Gritty — it is, without question, 85% of our revenue,” Murray says. Still, upon joining the company, he immediately identified ways to further heighten awareness for his stable of performers. “I look at that and think, ‘What feels intuitive to a manager?’ We need advocacy and awareness at DSPs for starters. We’re not putting out 100 records a week — we’re not in a spreadsheet at a major label — so how do we go tell the story and create true connectivity to our artists? We live in the era of content, and content creation is very different now than it was four years ago; it’s all short-form.
King is among the artists who joined Vector under Murray’s tenure. In August 2023, Murray began an eight-month lead-up to what would become King’s 2024 album. What started with King sending Murray a Dropbox folder of 12 songs he had worked on with Rick Rubin, including “F—k Up My Life” and “Delilah,” soon became a quest to take the songs’ emotional arcs and translate them to visuals.
“I feel like the ceiling just raised about 13 floors in terms of what the genre means,” Murray says. “We’ve built a rich history here in Americana and it’s about great songs, great stories, and great live shows. I think those pieces mean more now to a listening audience than ever before, so it’s a bit of a perfect storm. The counterculture has become the culture. You look at the history of all music genres — rock in the ‘70s, hip-hop, punk rock… you don’t know it’s coming until you’re in it.