The Tennessee Supreme Court Could Decide the Fate of Nashville's Home Recording Studios
The city's restrictions threaten one of the world's most vibrant music scenes.

The Tennessee Supreme Court could soon decide whether home recording studios can keep making music in Music City.
On Wednesday, the court heard oral arguments in a lawsuit challenging Nashville's restrictions on client visits to home-based businesses. The plaintiffs argue that the city's regulations arbitrarily and unfairly deprive them of their right to earn a living.
"I've been doing this for 30 years here, so I've already sunk my entire life's career and family into this," says Lij Shaw, one of two plaintiffs suing Nashville over the rules. "For me and most people I know, we can't stop making music. We're artists, and we love to do this."
Shaw, who Reason profiled in 2019, has been fighting to save his business, The Toy Box Studio, since 2015. That's the year Nashville's code enforcers informed him that the law barred him from recording musicians for pay at his home. Presented with the choice of either shutting down his operation or fighting back, Shaw chose the latter.
In 2017, he and Patricia Raynor—whose home hair salon business was similarly targeted—sued Nashville to overturn its prohibition on client visits.
Their lawsuit argues that neither business has caused any injury to its neighbors by receiving customers at their homes, making Nashville's restriction on client visits arbitrary.
The city, Shaw notes, places no limits on how many people you can invite into your home for free, which allows for much more disruptive activities.
"It would technically be legal to hire the entire symphony orchestra to come to my studio, park all over the neighborhood like a football party, and record all weekend," says Shaw. "But if they paid me $1 for a thank you, it would be illegal."
Shaw and Raynor's complaint also says that Nashville's policy is unfair to their particular businesses, given that the city allows home-based businesses such as short-term rentals to have up to 12 paying customers onsite. This unequal treatment, they argue, violates the Tennessee Constitution.
In 2019, a Davidson County Chancery Court judge ruled against Shaw and Raynor. Because Nashville could articulate potential harms from allowing home-based businesses to serve clients onsite, the judge said, the prohibition was rational and, thus, constitutional.
Home-based businesses received something of a reprieve the following year. In July 2020, Nashville's Metro Council voted to amend its client visit prohibition to allow home businesses like Shaw and Raynor's to service up to six customers onsite per day.
That's an improvement over the status quo, says Keith Diggs, an attorney at the Institute for Justice, a public interest law firm representing Shaw and Raynor. (The Tennessee-based Beacon Center is also working on the case.) But it's still unequal treatment, he notes.
"Pat and Lij can only have six clients a day," Diggs notes, while "day care homes [and] historic home events can have up to 12 more clients a day." The city's ordinance also sunsets in January 2023. It is unclear whether client visits will be flatly prohibited or totally unregulated after the law expires.
An attorney for Nashville told the Tennessee Supreme Court yesterday that while the ordinance is ambiguous, it's her interpretation that there will be no restrictions on client visits once the law expires.
Diggs says that Nashville has taken conflicting stances on what happens after the law sunsets. That ambiguity—and the fact that the city could easily reimpose explicit restrictions on client visits in the future—still makes this a live issue, he says.
During yesterday's hearing, the justices spent most of their time exploring whether Shaw and Raynor's case is moot given that Nashville has lifted its blanket prohibition on client visits and given that the new six-client-a-day limit is set to expire next year.
They could choose to dismiss the case, send it back to a lower court, or rule outright on the merits of Nashville's restrictions.
The hope, says Diggs, is that the state Supreme Court will issue a decision saying that "facts actually matter."
At no point, he says, has Nashville been able to show that Shaw or Raynor's home businesses were negatively impacting their neighbors. Without that, he argues, the city shouldn't be able to impose restrictions on what business owners can do on their own property.
Shaw says a ruling protecting home businesses would add much-needed certainty for his studio, which he has sunk some $50,000 into since Nashville passed its temporary rules allowing client visits. He says it would also help preserve the unique music scene that has made his city famous.
"Music City is still a rare gem in the world where the world's musicians get together face-to-face in front of microphones," he says. "Without the ability to have a musician come to my home studio, I'll be forever stuck in a world of Zoom calls and computer living. I don't want to let the old music die."
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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Likely some transplant from California ratted the guy out.
Lady A can't risk some indie artist taking away from the album sales.
Neil Young strikes again
“At no point, he says, has Nashville been able to show that Shaw or Raynor's home businesses were negatively impacting their neighbors.”
Sounds like no neighbor ratted him out.
Likely some commercial recording studio reminded someone on the city council where his campaign contributions come from.
A couple of months ago, I watched Ken Burns’ “Country Music” documentary. There were several eras where the big record and radio companies trying to tightly control everything about country music, and ultimately losing.
But that’s not the interesting part — the interesting part is how often that lack of control ended up ultimately saving the big record and radio companies.
I watched that documentary, very interesting.
The record execs kept trying to make country music refined and professional sounding ("country-politan" was the term, reminds me of "liberal-tarian").
Willie Nelson had done 14 albums in Nashville but didn't hit it big until he went back to Texas and starting making albums with a less refined and more authentic sound (and teaming up with the "outlaw" Waylon Jennings).
After Nelson and Jennings became the biggest thing in country music, Nashville record labels started scrambling to dig up their old recordings of those guys from the basement and putting out albums with their songs.
Exactly.
And then a few decades later, the small studios in Nashville saved the industry again with Garth Brooks and similar acts.
Nah. I've lived in Tennessee for a little over two years now, having previously lived in Florida, Texas, Missouri, Arizona, Mississippi, and Michigan. I've found Tennessee to be a pretty authoritarian State compared to those others. Lots of pinch-faced bible thumpers here who love to tell others what they can and can't do. Lots of State regulations and gubbmint mother-may-I's you have to obtain if you want to do this and that. They'll still throw you in the pokey for one joint of weed here.
That said ... I have as little to do with the government and bible-thumpers as possible, East Tennessee is a beautiful place, no State income tax, low property taxes, and I love it here otherwise.
Did ya'll see in the news where some yoyo they were trying to stop from walking on the side of the freeway here had a boxcutter and was shot by NINE police officers the other day? NINE! And they had an Officer with a Taser present who didn't fire. That's Tennessee for ya. Step out of line and they'll light your ass up!
Nashville, as I suspected, has a Democratic mayor, and voted for Biden in 2020.
Democrats. Feh.
I suspect this has more to do with internal politics within the country music biz.
I doubt that, this seems like older country music not the modern pop country music that propels the industry
I suspect that it is part of the Democrats war on small businesses. It wasn't only recording studios impacted by this.
the correct wheels were not greased.
Yup. You gotta have some juice or know somebody who does here in Tennessee if you want pretty much anything from the State or local gubbmint. Otherwise you'll find it to be a much more authoritarian State than you might think.
And now you know why we have so many pop country singer on the radio. It's because Nashville's gone Hollywood. I blame Garth Brooks for it. I love Garth's earlier stuff, real country western music, but then he had a couple big crossover hits and he started changing his music to be more crossover, and then a lot of other stars followed suit, and what do we have now, Florida-Georgia Line. King George and Alan Jackson got it right in 1999 when they sang about murder on music row.
On a related note, I am glad to see Blake has gotten past his bro country phase and is returning to his country roots. And also, damn first Miranda and now Gwen, the dude has got game.
I and 10 of my friends can rent an Air B&B and throw a wild football party but one woman can’t cut some old lady’s hair in her kitchen? Yeah, that makes sense. Maybe they should just call their kitchen and music studio a ‘short term rental property’ and throw in the haircut and recording for ‘free’? Instead for free popcorn and coffee, they get a demo track and a perm.
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It's because they're running a business in a residentially zoned area and or without licenses or permits. I just moved to SE Tennessee from Charleston, SC and it's a LOT worse down there!
A 15yr old black boy was arrested for selling a sweetgrass basket for $10 his grandma hand made bc he sold it within Charleston city limits.... they shut his grandma's basket stand down, fined her $1000 and almost took HER to jail bc of violating a new ordinance they passed the previous year. She had been making/selling sweetgrass baskets and such for at least four decades at her shack style basket stand on her property just off hwy 17 in the unincorporated part of Charleston county.
Dorchester county fined my neighbor $400 for selling a dozen eggs from his chickens without a business license bc they recently changed the laws. It didn't used to be like that, especially out in the country areas, and it's usually about the money from taxes and fees.
For 30yrs me and my family bred and sold exotic birds, boarded horses and sold supplies without a problem but not anymore. This is happening all across the US and only gonna get worse...now they're pushing this covid bs with restrictions, mandates and forced shots in the arm that destroy you immune system.
I need more coffee
Legally speaking, can't this kind of regulation be worked around fairly easily, though? Phone consultation, $10,000. Local symphony orchestra recording party in my backyard, free (BYOI).