Underwood Added To Grammys; Bradley, Lynn To Be Honored

cuWith the Grammy Awards coming up on Sunday, Jan. 31, more performers are being revealed, and surrounding special events are being finalized. Carrie Underwood has been added to a Michael Jackson tribute along with Celine Dion, Jennifer Hudson, Smokey Robinson, and Usher. The performance will feature the 3-D mini-movie for “Earth Song” that was created by Jackson as the centerpiece of his much anticipated This Is It tour, but was never seen by the public. This will be the first time a major awards show broadcasts in 3-D. CBS, which is airing the show has partnered with Target to offer free 3-D Grammy Glasses for viewers at home. From Sunday, Jan. 24, through Sunday, Jan. 31, Target stores nationwide will have the same glasses which will also be worn by the live audience at the LA Staples Center.

The MJ tribute joins previously announced performances by nominees Beyoncé, the Black Eyed Peas, Bon Jovi, the Dave Matthews Band, Green Day, Lady Antebellum, Lady Gaga, Maxwell, P!nk, Taylor Swift, and the Zac Brown Band.

The Recording Academy will also salute Nashvillians Harold Bradley and Loretta Lynn at the Special Merit Awards Ceremony. Lynn will receive a Lifetime Achievement Award and Bradley will be honored with a Trustees Award. Also being honored that day at the Wilshire Ebell Theater are Leonard Cohen, David “Honeyboy” Edwards, Walter C. Miller, the late Bobby Darin, the late Thomas Edison, and the late Florence Greenberg; as well as representatives of AKG Acoustics Gmbh.

Among the Grammy’s promotional tools to promote the show is the WereAllFans.com Web site, which uses the FanBuzz Visualizer to compose pictures of Grammy-nominated artists using real-time, fan-generated YouTube, Twitter, and Flickr postings.

New Albums: Jo Dee Messina, Easton Corbin

Jo Dee Messina

Jo Dee Messina

The first single from Jo Dee Messina’s forthcoming album, Unmistakable, is “That’s God,” which will be released on Jan. 25. In preparation for the April 13 release of Unmistakable, Messina will perform seven shows in New York City during a five night residency at Feinstein’s at the Regency Hotel March 16-20. Messina will also take the stage at various tour dates scheduled to begin February 12 in Salt Lake City and continue through October 16 in Cerritos, CA.

EC_Cover_300cmykEaston Corbin’s self-titled debut album is slated for release March 2nd on Mercury Nashville. His four song EP, which features single “A Little More Country Than That,” is already available. He wrote four of the eleven tracks on the album and it is produced by Carson Chamberlain. People Magazine named the newcomer to their “Buzz-Worthy” artist list last fall and featured “The Way Love Looks,” a track co-penned by Corbin, in their “Hot Songs” section.

Charlie Daniels Recovering From Mild Stroke

cdCharlie Daniels was vacationing in Colorado when he suffered a mild stroke while snowmobiling on Friday, Jan. 15. He was treated at Mercy Regional Medical Center in Durango, CO then airlifted to Swedish Medical Center in Denver, CO. Daniels was released from Swedish Medical Center on Sunday, Jan. 17. He is recuperating at his home in Colorado, where he has been on vacation since Dec. 27.

Daniels has no plans to cancel any concert dates. He is doing well and looking forward to beginning The Charlie Daniels Band 2010 concert dates on Feb. 27 in Ft. Pierce, FL and Feb. 28 in Brooksville, FL. Daniels and his family say they are grateful for everyone’s thoughts and prayers during this time.

Swift, Urban On Superstar Concert For Haiti

kuTaylor Swift and Keith Urban are among the A-list celebs set to sing on the all-star television concert special Hope for Haiti Now: A Global Benefit for Earthquake Relief. For the two-hour telethon this Friday, Jan. 22, at 8/7 CT, there will be performances by Wyclef Jean, Bruce Springsteen, Jennifer Hudson, Mary J. Blige, Shakira, and Sting in New York City; Alicia Keys, Christina Aguilera, Dave Matthews, John Legend, Justin Timberlake, Stevie Wonder, and Swift, and a group performance by Urban, Kid Rock, and Sheryl Crow in Los Angeles; and Coldplay, and a group performance by Bono, The Edge, Jay-Z, and Rihanna in a newly added London location. The show will air on all the major networks, many cable channels, and will be streamed online at a number of sites (complete list below).

All musical performances will be available for purchase for $.99 per song through the Apple® iTunes® Store beginning Saturday, Jan. 23, with all proceeds benefiting Haiti relief funds managed by “Hope for Haiti Now” charities.

tsIn addition to musical performances, Wyclef Jean in New York City, George Clooney in Los Angeles, and CNN’s Anderson Cooper reporting from Haiti, Hope for Haiti Now will feature more than one hundred of the biggest names in film, television, and music supporting the cause with testimonials and by answering phones during the telethon.

Hope for Haiti Now is on schedule to be the most widely distributed telethon in history, both internationally and across media platforms. It will air on ABC, CBS, NBC, FOX, CNN, BET, The CW, HBO, MTV, VH1, CMT, PBS, TNT, Showtime, COMEDY CENTRAL, Bravo, E! Entertainment, National Geographic Channel, Oxygen, G4, CENTRIC, Current TV, Fuse, MLB Network, EPIX, Palladia, SoapNet, Style, Discovery Health, Planet Green, and international networks. The event will be live streamed on YouTube, Hulu, MySpace, Fancast, AOL, MSN.com, Yahoo, Bing.com, BET.com, CNN.com, MTV.com, VH1.com, and Rhapsody and on mobile via Alltel, AT&T, Sprint, Verizon, and FloTV.

Middleworth Exits EMI; Sherrod Leaves Major Bob

After a twelve year tenure with Major Bob Music, Inc., Sr. Director, A&R Scot Sherrod is exiting the company to pursue new opportunities. Owner, Bob Doyle says, “Throughout his time at Major Bob Music, Scot has been an integral part in the growth of our company, its writers and its catalog. We are excited for him and wish him well in his future endeavors.”

“Being part of Major Bob’s family for well over a decade has been an amazing experience,” adds Sherrod. “To all the writers connected to Major Bob – current and past; representing you and your songs has been a great honor. As I forge a new chapter in my career, I am looking forward to new opportunities where I can apply my talents and experience.” Sherrod can be reached at 615-533-6291 or [email protected].

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Glenn Middleworth has exited his role at EMI Music Publishing where he served as Sr. Advisor to A&R. He spent a total of ten years with the publisher, including time from 1994- 2002, and again from 2008 until present. During 2002-07 he headed Famous Music Nashville as Vice President, until the company was sold to Sony/ATV. His career started with almost ten years at Jerry Bradley’s Forrest Hills Music, followed by a brief time at Acuff-Rose/Opryland. Middleworth is pursuing new opportunities and can be reached at [email protected].

Gretchen Wilson Sets Date For New Album

Wilson made a stop at WTQR in Greensboro recently to promote her “Work Hard, Play Harder” single from her upcoming I Got Your Country Right Here album. Pictured: Wilson (L) WTQR PD John Roberts (R). Photo: Kathy Miller, One Shot Photography

Wilson made a stop at WTQR in Greensboro, NC recently to promote “Work Hard, Play Harder." Pictured: Wilson (L) WTQR PD John Roberts (R). Photo: Kathy Miller, One Shot Photography

Gretchen Wilson will release her fourth studio album entitled I Got Your Country Right Here, on March 30. Produced by Wilson, John Rich and Blake Chancey, the 11-cut disc will be the first release on her recently launched Redneck Records. The first single from the album is “Work Hard, Play Harder.”

“This is the album of my career,” said Wilson. Her previous three releases, Here for the Party, All Jacked Up, and One Of The Boys, each debuted at No. 1 on the country album chart.

Wilson sang the national anthem and performed a set during the halftime festivities at the AFC Divisional playoff game between the Indianapolis Colts and Baltimore Ravens Jan. 16. The game and performance was carried on CBS and on Country 97.1 HANK FM in Indianapolis.

Book Review: “W.C. Handy” by David Robertson

wcW.C. Handy: The Life And Times Of The Man Who Made The Blues by David Robertson. Knopf, 2009.

In Memphis there is a statue of W.C. Handy, “the Father of the Blues,” in Handy Park on Beale Street. Handy named his autobiography, The Father of the Blues but, according to author David Robertson in his new biography of Handy,

“He was not properly the Father of the Blues, as he was later acclaimed, but he was certainly the maker of the blues in the early twentieth century. He made the blues as a consciously composed art—working as an ‘American composer’—and he also made them in that word’s sense of guaranteeing their success and of commercially promoting this music.”

William Christopher Handy was born in 1873 in Florence, Alabama and learned the cornet, which was the electric guitar of its day—an essential part of any band that wanted to be heard—and moved to Clarksdale, Mississippi when he was 29. At a train station one night waiting to catch the train back to Clarksdale, Handy heard “the weirdest music I had ever heard.” This was Handy’s first exposure to what is now known as “Delta blues.”

Author Robertson elaborates, “While Handy and his musicians took an intermission to smoke cigarettes, a rustic-looking black string band consisting of players of a bettered bass, mandolin, and guitar, led ‘by a long-legged chocolate boy,’ in Handy’s description, took the stage and began to play the new music later known as the blues… ‘a rain of silver dollars began to fall around the outlandish, stomping feet’… ‘my idea of what constitutes music was changed by the sight of that silver money cascading around the splayed feet of a Mississippi string band.’”

This was Handy’s blind light on the road to Damascus. Handy moved to Memphis, where he toured on the black vaudeville circuit run by the Brasso family through their Theater Owners Booking Association, known as the “TOBA circuit” and often referred to as the “Tough On Black Asses” circuit.

In Memphis, Handy teamed up with Harry H. Pace, a former banker who became his business partner. Handy needed a partner who could handle business and Pace played a major role in the success of Handy as the two established a publishing company and promoted Handy’s songs. This was the era of sheet music, so music had to be written down and printed on sheet music in order to make any money. Handy’s first success was “Memphis Blues,” originally written for Boss Crump, the legendary Mayor of Memphis for many years.

Other Handy songs included “Yellow Dog Blues,” “Joe Turner Blues,” “Beale Street Blues,” and “St. Louis Blues,” which became one of the most performed songs of the early twentieth century.

In 1918 Handy and Pace moved to New York where Pace established Black Swan Records in 1921, the first record label owned by African-Americans. The label only lasted two years but was the forerunner of Motown Records.

The book details Handy’s loss of the publishing of “Memphis Blues” by two white businessman as well as Handy obtaining the rights back in 1940. The music business is a difficult business and being an African-American made it even more difficult.

Author Robertson notes that during his career Handy “learned three hard, constructive lessons. First, never sell a copyright….Second, he learned that even should he succeed in keeping the copyright and obtaining an honest publisher with national distribution for this sheet music, he needed his compositions to be identified with a white performer to gain national acceptance by retailers or audiences…[the] third lesson learned by the composer from the loss of ‘The Memphis Blues’ was that he was in sore need of a trustworthy partner with a greater business sense than his own.”

Henry Pace left the record business when Black Swan folded in 1923 and returned to the banking business, where he had a successful career. W.C. Handy went blind and his songs fell out of favor as R&B became the preferred sound for African-Americans. He died in 1958 and his funeral “was one of the largest public occasions in the history of New York City to that decade,” according to author Robertson.

W.C. Handy by David Robertson is a valuable addition to the history of the blues and Handy’s role in popularizing that genre. And after reading this biography, you may be inspired to go to Memphis and see the statue of W.C. Handy that was put up in 1931.

Bill Mayne’s Company Running CRB In Interim

Bill Mayne

Bill Mayne

Bill Mayne’s Nashville-based firm, Mayne Street Consulting, will continue to oversee the general operations of Country Radio Broadcasters leading up and through CRS 2010, running Feb. 24-26, 2010. Mayne Street Consulting assists companies in the radio and music industries with strategic planning, marketing, management and artist development opportunities.

“I have served on the Country Radio Broadcasters board for many years, and I am passionate about the future of this organization and the benefit it brings to our industry,” says Mayne, a 30-year industry veteran with experience including radio, label GM, promotion VP and artist manager. “We have a great staff and Board who are committed to serving the interests of our constituents in Country radio and the Country music industry, both now and for the future.” In addition to his duties as a CRB Board member, Mayne serves as current President of the Academy of Country Music.

The CRB was previously headed by Executive Director Ed Salamon who exited the organization in late October.

Macias Named Pres. of New Americana Board

David Macias

David Macias

As the Americana Music Association prepares for its Festival and Conference, coming Sept. 8-11, 2010 to Nashville, the organization has announced its new Executive Committee. Holding one-year terms for the 2010 calendar year will be Board President David Macias (Thirty Tigers); Vice Pres. Tim McFadden (Tim McFadden Management); Secretary Sylvia Giannitrapani (GO2 Management); and Treasurer Pam Matthews (DuVoyant Music); with Jessie Scott (Music Fog) and Al Moss (Al Moss Promotion) as Executive Committee Members-At-Large.

The Board of Directors consists of 19 industry representatives elected by the Americana Music Association membership to two-year terms. The 2010-2011 Board brings newly elected Ashley Capps (AC Entertainment), Joan Kornblith (Voice of America), artists Chip Taylor, Rodney Crowell, Raul Malo and Buddy Miller, as well as Exec. Committee’s Matthews and Macias.

americana logoJohn Allen (Bug Music) is newly re-elected and joins returning Board Members Kay Clary (BMI), Tamara Saviano (Ellis Creative), Amanda Hale-Ornales (New West Records), Tift Merritt (artist), Brad First (SXSW), Fred Boenig (Artist Development Group), Giannitrapani, McFadden, Scott, and Moss.

The Americana Music Association says it intentionally sought to add directors from music communities outside Nashville this year, to work alongside local board members. The professional non-profit trade organization’s mission is to promote awareness, provide a forum, and advocate for the creative and economic vitality of the Americana music genre. The Association produces events throughout the year including the annual Americana Music Festival and Conference.

Stars Offer New Web sites, Movies, More

Lady A's Hillary Scott, and Taylor Swift. Swift has been posting pics she takes with her new Sony camera as part of her endorsement deal with the electronics giant.

Lady A's Hillary Scott, and Taylor Swift. Swift has been posting pics she takes with her new Sony camera as part of her endorsement deal with the electronics giant.

Taylor Swift’s “Today Was A Fairytale” is out now at iTunes. The song is from the film and soundtrack Valentine’s Day, being released by her label Big Machine. She also appears in the new movie. Swift graces the cover of PEOPLE’s Star Style Special Issue, on stands now. She also has a totally revamped web site.

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Lady Antebellum sold out their headlining Ryman debut minutes after the March 11 show went on sale. So the band added a second show, set for March 10, and both nights sold out within 30 minutes.

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Brooks & Dunn have a new web site, developed, designed and managed by Sparkart Group, Inc. Ryan Bitzer, Sparkart Nashville’s VP of Business Development, works locally for the Oakland-based company whose other music clients include Jason Aldean, Carrie Underwood, Evanescence, Janet Jackson, and The Killers. Brooks & Dunn’s The Last Rodeo tour launches April 23.

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TouchTunes Interactive Networks, the digital jukebox company, is hosting The Miranda Lambert Join The Revolution Sweepstakes. Fans can enter for a chance to win a fly-away trip for two to see Lambert in concert with Brad Paisley. Fans can enter on the digital jukeboxes or through the TouchTunes Facebook page.
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Kenny Chesney: Summer in 3-D is set to open across the nation on April 21. He has been at Sony Studios in Los Angeles working on the project.

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New UMG Nashville artist Laura Bell Bundy debuts “Giddy On Up,” her first music video and digital single this week. Check out this clip of her characters from Cooter County talking about the world premiere of her music video. Bundy has already found success on Broadway, playing “Elle Woods” in Legally Blonde.