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Meridian Magazine : : Home

Missed By an Inch or Won By a Mile?
Oft-repeated Nashville Saga has a BYU Ending
by Ron Simpson

Utahn Dan Cahoon moved to Nashville when he was sixteen. It was about 1999. “Mentored” by Dave and Robin Osborn, parents of the country-charting Utah-born sisters known as SheDaisy, and parents who had seen their firstborn, Kristin, make the same Music City move at the same age, Bill and Jeanine Cahoon of Woods Cross, a Salt Lake suburb, took a leap of faith. On the encouragement of Brett Manning, Dan’s Salt Lake vocal coach, who had recently moved to Nashville himself, the Cahoons decided to let Dan take an early shot at the big time.

Manning had heard Kenny Rogers talking about forming a Nashville-based boy-band singing group, and it seemed to Manning that young Dan Cahoon from Utah would be a perfect candidate.

*  *  *  *  * 

A knock on my office door proves to be a welcome visit from songwriter/producer Tyler Castleton. “So what’s going on?” he asks. [Tyler Castleton heads Deseret Book’s Music Division.]

“Well...” (I’m afraid nothing new is going on today.) Then I catch myself, smile, and take a stab: “Well, for one thing, it looks like we’ve just admitted one of the members of Marshall Dyllon into the media music program at BYU.”

“Really? No kidding? The Utah guy...the redhead?” “Exactly,” I answer, “Dan Cahoon. And you’re already one big step ahead of me. I didn’t even know there was a Utah guy in Marshall Dyllon until I saw the application supported by the same Marshall Dyllon CD that I have on my shelf.”

Both of us, it turns out, had been very interested in the beginnings of Marshall Dyllon, a very well thought out, well funded “boy band” singing group that was to be Nashville’s entry in the genre made popular by the likes of pop icons ‘NSync and Backstreet Boys.

Marshall Dyllon was the brainchild of Kenny Rogers, whose self-owned label, Dreamcatcher Records, had just spawned a surprise number-one record for the aging superstar.  “Buy Me a Rose” was a story in itself. Written by two Utah songwriters, Eric Hickenlooper and Jim Funk, who reportedly had never even been to Nashville, the song had come to Rogers’ attention via a circuitous marketing route one could only describe as something of a miracle.

Marshall Dyllon was to be Kenny Rogers’ next big thing. Many music business watchers wondered how they could not succeed, given Rogers’ broad connections and recent Midas touch.

“I thought they were great,” Tyler says, sitting down and still thinking about Marshall Dyllon. “First of all Phil Vassar [Nashville singer/songwriter/producer] was all over the project...” “Yeah, it seemed like everyone was,” I added. “Brent Maher and Chris Farren both produced tracks, Michael D. Clute was there...”

But sometimes a project can have everything going for it, and still nothing happens. Or it happens, but so gradually that the investors lose interest and pull the plug.

And so, despite a fully-funded start-up that most new artists can usually only dream about, Marshall Dyllon ultimately couldn’t survive the timing of being launched at what might have been the worst possible moment. Though not obvious until later, a triple-decker record business meltdown was about to happen: first came a sudden national downturn in the whole boy-band phenomenon, which arguably had run its course. Second, there was a slump in the music industry, a delayed reaction to several factors, including free downloads. The resulting contraction of the entire record business is still going on. The third factor–the straw that broke the camel’s back?–was Nashville’s era of pop crossover, which had blurred the once-sacred borders between country and the other pop-related genres. When Nashville’s pop crossover mini-boom showed signs of slowing, the backlash left country proportionately weaker, with many established artists losing their record deals. And Marshall Dyllon, it must be noted, had been produced and positioned precisely as a pop crossover country group.       

*   *   *   *   *

As vocal coach Brett Manning predicted, Kenny Rogers and his people responded to Dan Cahoon and kept him on the hot list as they continued to search the country for the rest of the individuals who would complete the Marshall Dyllon lineup. Soon Dan and the other finalists were relocated to Florida, into a talent-development system that has become legendary. Housed in an apartment in Orlando and given an allowance, the group was put through its paces to see if it would jell into a record-quality, radio-worthy group. Marshall Dyllon had boiled down to a roster that in addition to Dan, included Jesse Littleton, brothers Michael and Paul Martin, and Todd Sansom. In March of 2000 the guys were flown to Nashville and received definite contract offers from Dreamcatcher.

“For a long time everything was great,” says Jeanine Cahoon. Before long the group’s debut album, Enjoy the Ride, was under way with a blue-ribbon list of songwriters and individual track producers aboard.

Dan Cahoon, the youngest in the group, was well liked. “We got us our own Mormon prophet,” quipped Kenny Rogers, and, by this time having forsaken stronger drink, Rogers would compare notes with Dan on their choices among the available non-alcoholic beverages.

Marshall Dyllon’s debut single was “Live it Up,” which had Phil Vassar’s creative imprint all over it. It climbed solidly into the country Top 40. But compared with, say, Diamond Rio a few years earlier, whose first single, “Meet in the Middle,” had soared, astonishingly, all the way to number one, this outcome was disappointing.

Dreamcatcher and Jim Mazza, former head of RCA Records and Kenny Rogers’ go-to guy, pressed ever onward, knowing the group would eventually find its bigger radio audience. Marshall Dyllon was on the road, doing appearances, shooting videos, and posing for photo shoots, enjoying the ride indeed. Each Sunday, Dan Cahoon quietly slipped off to Church. Often his late-sleeping bandmates didn’t even notice. At other times they would be incredulous. In New York, after Dan came in from a Sunday morning subway-and-bus trip to Church at Lincoln Center, they said, “You what? You went to Church?”

A subsequent Marshall Dyllon single and video, “You,” was a song co-written by Jimmy Olander of Diamond Rio. The song was produced to feature Dan’s lead vocal, but again, the outcome at radio was less than they hoped for. Meanwhile Dan Cahoon found a friend in Diamond Rio keyboardist Dan Truman, a BYU graduate and returned LDS missionary. Diamond Rio and Marshall Dyllon had in common that they were both managed by Dreamcatcher.

Gradually, by the fall of 2001, the Marshall Dyllon investment partners, Transcon in New York and Lou Pearlman, who had also been in on the development of ‘N Sync and Backstreet Boys, began to lose their enthusiasm and the regular advance payments to the singers stopped coming.

Jim Mazza began covering the group’s expenses with his own money, while all the time receiving assurances from  Transcon. “Don’t worry,” they’d say. “You’ll get your money.” But Dreamcatcher finally announced to Marshall Dyllon that they would need to become self supporting. Dan Cahoon signed up for music classes at Belmont University and got a job in a health foods store at a Nashville mall. During that time, a young co-worker and son of a minister began asking Dan questions about his lifestyle, about his religion. Before long, the young colleague was baptized.

Meanwhile in Salt Lake it was Olympics time, 2002. Greg Ericksen gave Marshall Dyllon a cut on his silver-and-gold Olympics compilation CD and there was talk of the group being part of the opening ceremonies. Plane tickets to Salt Lake were promised, but never arrived.

“That’s how we found out Marshall Dyllon was over,” says Dan’s mom. “No way to get to Salt Lake. When we pestered them, they finally had to tell us. Dreamcatcher was $700,000 in the hole with their own money. Transcon was out. Pearlman wasn’t returning calls. It was over.”

Marshall Dyllon had missed by an inch.

After this veritable lifetime of music business experience, Dan Cahoon was a whopping nineteen years old. He approached his Nashville bishop, initiated paperwork, and soon was serving as Elder Daniel Cahoon, a full-time missionary. I believe it’s a major tribute to young Dan’s character that, while living far away from family and friends, and in the fast lane that is the entertainer’s way, he kept himself apart, worthy in every way to serve.

And so now, soon to be released from missionary service, Elder Dan Cahoon has decided to give BYU’s media music program a try. He will stay in music, but take his next shot from a broader, more flexible educational platform. “That’s fantastic,” smiles Tyler Castleton, himself a product of the program. “Isn’t it just,” I agree.

Well done, Elder. From our point of view it seems like you’re coming home a big winner.

Author Ron Simpson coordinates the Media Music Division for the School of Music, BYU.

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© 2004 Meridian Magazine.  All Rights Reserved.

 

 

 

 

About the Author:

Ron Simpson is a Utah songwriter advocate and General Manager of Tantara Records. Click here to read more about Ron.

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