A Nashville live-event production company built on a simple promise — go the extra mile.
Elite Multimedia Productions is a full-service event production company headquartered in Nashville with more than fifteen years operating across country music tours, broadcast events, corporate productions, and live wrestling. The company's identity, in its own words, is straightforward and specific:
The last line is the one that matters. Anyone can have the right equipment. In a category where the dominant pitch is gear list and rack count, Elite Multimedia built its reputation on what the gear list doesn't capture — the crew, the field decisions, the willingness to solve the problem the venue didn't tell anyone about until two hours before doors.
The company sits inside an ownership structure that is unusually well-positioned: same founder, Jeremy Byrd, also owns PixelFlex LED — a Nashville-based LED display manufacturer whose products include the UFC Octagon Fight Clock and trophy installs at ESPN Monday Night Football, the Grand Ole Opry, and the Alan Jackson tour. Elite has direct access to PixelFlex hardware at a cost basis its competitors cannot match.
Ownership is now exploring options. The company is available as an independent transaction or as part of a paired transaction with PixelFlex.
Full-service live-event production, with capability across audio, video, lighting, LED video walls, staging, and on-site crew. The customer mix spans country touring, live wrestling broadcast, corporate event production, and one-off branded experiences in the Nashville market.
Nashville is the country-music touring capital and a fast-growing destination for corporate events, broadcast production, and faith-based gatherings. Elite Multimedia sits inside that ecosystem with a local crew base and venue familiarity that out-of-market service companies cannot match without an acquisition.
Independent trade-press coverage in live-production.tv documents Elite Multimedia providing what was described as “compelling dimensionality” on the Alan Jackson tour. Sound & Video Contractor documents the company’s entry into the Impact Wrestling ring.
Elite Multimedia and PixelFlex LED share common ownership. In practical terms, Elite has first-look access to PixelFlex’s product roadmap, deploys PixelFlex hardware operationally as a rental-and-staging asset, and shares a Nashville logistics footprint with the OEM. For a buyer of Elite alone, the supply relationship continues on commercial terms; for a buyer of the pair, the integration is already in place.
The company’s public positioning leads with the crew rather than the rack. That is uncommon in this category. It reflects a service-quality moat that does not show up in a product-line comparison spreadsheet but does show up in repeat business.
Jeremy Byrd maintains a low public profile. The Elite brand and its trade-press credits carry the message. For a strategic buyer with an institutional sales motion, this is a clean inheritance — no public-figure key-person PR risk.
Nashville hosts a deepening roster of convention hotels and event venues — Gaylord Opryland, the Music City Center, the Omni, the JW Marriott, and the planned expansions that follow. Many of those venues operate with externally contracted AV vendors on a per-event basis. A buyer with a venue-contract motion (Encore, NEP, Solotech’s Morris L&S adjacency) could convert Elite’s capability into preferred-vendor or in-venue contracts at one or more sites.
Elite’s production credits on the Alan Jackson tour are a foothold in a country-music touring market that is structurally underserved by national rental houses. A buyer with touring-fleet capital and artist relationships (PRG, Solotech, NEP’s Bexel) could deepen Elite’s share of the Nashville-anchored touring calendar.
Impact Wrestling is one recurring sports-entertainment client. Adjacent broadcast and combat-sports work — including UFC Fight Night events at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena — is a category with structural demand and a small competitive set in Nashville. A buyer with broadcast-services capability could convert capability into recurring rights-holder contracts.
Elite Multimedia is owned and operated by Jeremy Byrd, who founded the company and also owns PixelFlex LED. He is exploring options that include:
Process timing and structure will be set in consultation with Next Chapter.
Qualified buyers — live-event production roll-ups, ProAV integrators, broadcast-services strategics, and private-equity sponsors with live-event theses — are invited to begin a confidential dialogue with Next Chapter.