Zac Brown Band Teams Up For New Music

Collaboration is a key word for Zac Brown Band these days. ZBB recruited Alan Jackson for its new single, and the band is featured on the latest single from Joey + Rory. Both songs are the first new music from releases coming out next month.

ZBB’s You Get What You Give will be available Sept. 21, and a preview of the single featuring Jackson, “As She’s Walking Away,” will be open for streaming tomorrow (8/10) at ZacBrownBand.com. Jackson isn’t the only superstar guest on the outing; Jimmy Buffett appears on a song called “Knee Deep.” Brown and Keith Stegall produced the album which will be available on Atlantic Records/Southern Ground Artists, Inc.

Pre-orders for You Get What You Give are being accepted and special packages include an exclusive lithograph, a ZBB t-shirt and trucker hat, the Southern Ground Cookbook, ZBB’s Southern Ground Grub – Georgia Clay Rub, and the chance to win a cabin on ZBB’s Sailing Southern Ground cruise.

ZBB appear on Joey+Rory’s new song, “This Song’s For You.” Brown and Rory penned the tune during the Breaking Southern Ground tour and Joey + Rory debuted it on the road. The fan response prompted them to bring in Stegall and ZBB for a recording session and add it to the already completed album. Joey + Rory’s sophomore release, Album Number Two, will be in stores September 14. It’s the follow-up to their successful debut album The Life of a Song.

Fans can hear “This Song’s For You” here. “We worked it up with Zac in rehearsals for the spring tour as something to do in the encore,” says Rory of the song. “But the response to the first time we sang it on stage took our breath away. It still does. It’s not just for the fans…it’s for all the people out there who work hard for a living, are barely getting by, and who truly love this country even though it ain’t perfect.”

A video for the single was recently shot in Joey+Rory’s community near their farm in Pottsville, TN with a cast of nearly 60 area locals. Scheduled for release mid-August, the video was directed by Darren Doane, who also directed Zac Brown Band’s live DVD and last three videos.

Overton Named Chairman of Sony Music Nashville

Sony Music Nashville Chief Executive Officer Gary Overton has been given the additional title of Chairman, officially becoming Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Sony Music Nashville. Overton joined the company in May as CEO.

The title of Chairman was previously held by longtime Sony Nashville leader Joe Galante.

Based in Nashville, Overton reports directly to Rolf Schmidt-Holtz, Chief Executive Officer, Sony Music Entertainment.

Sony Music Nashville is comprised of four country label operations—RCA, Columbia, BNA and Arista Nashville—and leading Christian music company Provident Music Group. Sony Music Nashville is a division of Sony Music Entertainment and is home to superstars including Carrie Underwood, Kenny Chesney, Alan Jackson, Brad Paisley, Martina McBride and Brooks & Dunn.

Chris Young Offers First Streaming Concert

Sony Music Nashville’s invitation-only performance by Chris Young will be streamed live tomorrow night (8/10) at 5:30 PM/CT here. The acoustic set in front of industry VIPs will be Young’s first-ever live streamed performance.

Young recently debuted a new music video for his single “Voices.” The storyline centers around Young coming home for a special family gathering and includes appearances by his real family members. He says his mom was a bit reluctant to be on camera, and that having his dad in the video was especially meaningful because he had recently undergone treatment for lung cancer, but is doing well now.

The single “Voices” follows Young’s back-to-back No. 1 hits, “The Man I Want to Be” and “Gettin’ You Home.”

In more news from Young, he and manager John Lytle have parted ways. Lytle Management Group’s other clients include Gary Allan and Gene Watson. No word on where Young will ink next.

[wpaudio url=”http://prep.hearsomethingcountry.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/080810-chris-young-01-25.mp3″ text=”Chris Young: Mom in the Video” dl=”0″ autoplay=”0″]

Jackson To Recieve ASCAP Founders Award

ASCAP (American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers) will honor Alan Jackson with its prestigious Founders Award at the ASCAP Country Music Awards on Tuesday, September 14, 2010. The invitation-only gala will be held at the War Memorial Auditorium in downtown Nashville.

With album sales totaling more than 50 million, Jackson is a fitting recipient for the Founders Award, which is bestowed on songwriters and composers who have made pioneering contributions to music. During his 20-year career, Jackson has scored 34 No. 1 hits and won numerous awards, including a Grammy for Best Country Song for “Where Were You (When the World Stopped Turning),” 16 CMA Awards, and 16 ACM Awards. He is a seven-time ASCAP Songwriter/Artist of the Year and a reciepeint of the ASCAP Golden Note Award. Among his biggest hits are “Don’t Rock The Jukebox,” “Chattahoochee,” “Gone Country,” “Drive (For Daddy Gene),” and “Small Town Southern Man.”

He ranks among other renowned Founders Award recipients, including musical innovators such as Paul McCartney, Garth Brooks, Stevie Wonder, Billy Joel, Smokey Robinson, Emmylou Harris, James Taylor and Jackson Browne.

“Alan is one of the most prolific and influential artists in country music,” said ASCAP President and Chairman Paul Williams. “He has consistently topped the charts without compromising his artistry, style and love of tradition, captivating millions with songs that are honest, heartfelt and entertaining. He’s a genuine superstar, and we are very proud to honor him with ASCAP’s Founders Award.”

“Alan upholds the songwriting legacy of country music’s greatest icons,” said Tim DuBois, Vice President and Managing Executive, ASCAP Nashville. “The fact that he’s been celebrating chart-topping hits for 20 years is a testament to his ability to speak directly to his audience. I’ve had the pleasure of knowing him for more than two decades and am proud of his remarkable career achievements.”

The ASCAP Country Awards will also salute the songwriters and publishers of ASCAP’s most performed country songs from April 1, 2009 through March 31, 2010. Honors will be presented for Songwriter of the Year, Songwriter/Artist of the Year, Song of the Year and Publisher of the Year. The evening will feature performances by several award-winning songwriters and artists.

UMG Pulls Videos Off MTV Over Licensing Flap

Billboard.com is reporting today (8/6) that licensing talks have broken down between MTV and Universal Music Group (UMG), resulting in the removal of videos of “most” of UMG’s artists from MTV’s online outlets, including CMT.com.

UMG had been licensing music directly to MTV for years, but is now directing all licensing negotiations to the Vevo joint venture, which also includes Sony Music Entertainment as a stakeholder, while EMI licenses music to Vevo.

According to Bilboard’s sources, MTV’s existing licensing deal with UMG had expired and Vevo was leading the renegotiation process. But an unspecified “hang-up” scuttled the talks and UMG responded by pulling its content. The impasse does not affect videos on MTV’s cable network channels, only online properties. Some UMG videos are still up, such as for those artists nominated for MTV Music Video Awards.

MTV issued the following statement when contacted by Billboard:
“For almost 30 years, we have enjoyed long and colorful partnerships with all the music labels, including UMG and their talented roster of artists on MTV, VH1 and CMT. As the industry evolves, we continue to seek out new and innovative ways to connect artists with their fans that are mutually beneficial to everyone. However, during our recent discussions with Vevo, we were unable to reach a fair and equitable agreement for rights to stream UMG artists’ music video content. As a result, UMG has elected to pull their music videos from our web sites. We are disappointed by this move and sincerely hope that UMG will work with us toward a fair resolution and allow their artists to once again connect with the millions of music fans who visit MTV.com, VH1.com and CMT.com every month.”

A UMG statement reads:
“MTVN has been unwilling to negotiate a fair syndication deal with Vevo to carry our artists’ videos and consequently our videos will not be shown on their online properties. We believe that using Vevo as our online music video syndication platform is the best way to maximize revenue for our artists, our songwriters and ourselves, while bringing our videos to the widest possible audience. In less than 8 months since its launch, Vevo has already become the web’s #1 rated video network with over 49 million unique visitors monthly, dramatically eclipsing those on MTV’s online properties, while attracting scores of major advertisers and tens of millions in advertising dollars. As a result, our artists are enjoying tremendous exposure on Vevo on YouTube and Vevo.com, and will enjoy even more as Vevo continues to complete syndication deals supplementing the existing arrangements with leading destinations as AOL and CBS Interactive.”

Vevo CEO Rio Caraeff said talks remain ongoing. “Vevo has been in negotiations with Viacom, including BET and MTV, as a syndication partner,” he says. “We are still in negotiations with them. We hope to one day power videos we have under license for MTV properties just like you can with CBS or AOL or YouTube.”

If Vevo and MTV can’t come to an agreement, Sony may pull its content as well, although there’s no indication yet that will happen.

The standoff comes only weeks after MTV finalized a deal to sell ads around music videos owned by Warner Music Group. That deal gives MTV exclusive rights to all of WMG’s ad inventory, including that on YouTube, WMG websites, and MTV. That deal also means that all WMG video spins will be counted as MTV traffic, regardless of where the views take place.

WMG is the only major label not participating in the Vevo venture, and sources say there’s no sign that the label will capitulate anytime soon.

Read the complete Billboard.com article here.

Starstruck Adds McIntosh in Creative Media/Marketing Role

Justin McIntosh

Starstruck has announced that Justin McIntosh has been hired to fill the newly created position of Creative Media & Marketing Director. McIntosh will develop new media and marketing opportunities for Starstruck clients such as Reba, Kelly Clarkson, Blake Shelton and the Reba collection of retail brands at Dillards.

“I am thrilled to be joining a company with such a long standing history of success,” said McIntosh. “I have an enormous amount of respect for Reba, Narvel and the entire Starstruck team and roster of artists, and am continually inspired by the passion they possess not only for music, but the entire entertainment industry.”

Justin recently spent 2.5  years as Manager of Web Services & Marketing for the Big Machine Label Group, and prior to that was the Creative Services Director for Country Radio Broadcasters, Inc. He is also a Belmont University graduate.

Ralph Emery Enters Nat’l Radio Hall of Fame

The National Radio Hall of Fame (NRHOF) has announced the results of its national online balloting process for induction into America’s only National Radio Hall of Fame, and Nashville broadcasting legend Ralph Emery is on the  prestigious list. In inducting Emery the NRHOF had this to say:

“A country music icon, Emery began his career as the late-night disc jockey on country music’s flagship WSM/Nashville. The station reached much of the southern and central U.S. and the show became a launching pad for promising country artists. Emery left his overnight duties to concentrate on television, hosting the syndicated Pop! Goes the Country and Nashville Now on The Nashville Network. He also hosted a morning show for WSM Television and is the author of two best-selling books featuring his favorite memories from the shows.”

Being inducted alongside Emery are Chicago disc jockey Terri Hemmert, NPR broadcaster Carl Kasell, Radio One founder Kathy Hughes, Sun Records founder Sam Phillips and Music and the Spoken Word featuring the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.

Westwood One Radio Networks will produce and distribute the live two-hour induction broadcast on Saturday November 6, 2010 at 9:00 PM CT from The Mayne Stage in Chicago. Promotional support provided by American Airlines, the official airline of the National Radio Hall of Fame.
Ticket pricing for Radio’s Biggest Night of Year will be announced in a few weeks when tickets go on sale at www.RadioHOF.org.

Lee Ann Womack Hosting ACM Honors

The Academy of Country Music (ACM) has announced that Lee Ann Womack will host the 4th Annual ACM Honors, an evening dedicated to recognizing the special honorees and off-camera category winners from the 45th Annual Academy of Country Music Awards. The event will take place on Monday, September 20 at The Ryman Auditorium in Nashville.

This is Womack’s second time hosting the event and the first time it will be held at the Ryman, which was recognized last year at ACM Honors as Venue of the Year.

Those being honored include Special Award recipients Rod Essig, Marty Robbins, Don Schlitz, Mel Tillis, Keith Urban, Cindy Walker and the film Crazy Heart along with winners of the MBI (musician, bandleader, instrumentalist) and Industry categories, which are not presented during the live telecast of the Academy of Country Music Awards.

“We are excited to have Lee Ann back to host Honors this year.” said Michelle Goble, Director of Membership and Events at the Academy of Country Music. “Her appreciation and love of country music makes her a perfect fit to help the Academy pay tribute to those who have paved the way. ”

“It is an honor to be asked again by the Academy of Country Music to be a part of the awards honoring the people who make our business work on such a core level,” says Womack. “For the artists, the songwriters, the people who bring this music to the fans, these awards recognize the exceptional contributions of the people who create the foundation for everything we do — and any time you can recognize that kind of contribution, it is a wonderful thing to be a part of.”

The Academy of Country Music Special Awards are voted on by the ACM Board of Directors and are awarded during years that the Board of Directors feels there are clear and deserving candidates.

Honorees include:

  • Cliffie Stone Pioneer Award – Marty Robbins & Mel Tillis
  • Jim Reeves International Award – Keith Urban
  • Mae Boren Axton Award  – Rod Essig
  • Poet’s Award – Don Schlitz & Cindy Walker
  • Tex Ritter Award – Crazy Heart

The winners of the MBI awards are voted based on Academy of Country Music ballots by members classified in the Artist-Entertainer-MBI and the Producer-Engineer-Studio Manager categories.

Honorees include:

  • Audio Engineer of the Year – Justin Niebank
  • Producer of the Year – Dann Huff
  • Top Bass Player of the Year – Michael Rhodes
  • Top Fiddle Player of the Year – Stuart Duncan
  • Top Guitarist of the Year – Brent Mason
  • Top Percussionist/Drummer of the Year – Shannon Forrest
  • Top Piano/Keyboard Player of the Year – Michael Rojas
  • Top Specialty Instrument(s) Player of the Year – Randy Scruggs
  • Top Steel Guitar Player of the Year – Paul Franklin

Winners of the Industry Awards categories are voted on by the membership of the Academy of Country Music.

Honorees include:

  • Casino of the Year – Green Valley Ranch Resort, Spa and Casino (Las Vegas, NV)
  • Don Romeo Talent Buyer of the Year – Todd Boltin, Variety Attractions, Inc.
  • Nightclub of the Year – Billy Bob’s Texas (Ft. Worth, TX)
  • Promoter of the Year – Brian O’Connell, LiveNation
  • Venue of the Year – Sommet Center (Nashville, TN) – Effective March 2, 2010, this venue was renamed the Bridgestone Arena

For more information on the ACM and the Academy of Country Music Awards, visit www.acmcountry.com. For information on ACM Lifting Lives, visit www.acmliftinglives.org.

Hall of Fame Honors Red Lane

Red Lane

The Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum will spotlight prolific songsmith Red Lane on August 28 as part of the its programming series Poets and Prophets: Legendary Country Songwriters. Lane will treat guests to a rare performance and an in-depth interview at 1:30 PM on August 28. The program, which will be held in the Museum’s Ford Theater, is included with Museum admission and free to Museum members. The program will also be streamed live at www.countrymusichalloffame.org.

Museum Editor Michael Gray will host the 90-minute program, which will be illustrated with recordings, photos and film clips from the Museum’s collection. Immediately following, Lane will sign autographs in the Museum Store.

Red Lane has been composing bluesy, deeply personal country classics for over four decades, penning hits for Eddy Arnold, Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, Conway Twitty and Faron Young. Throughout the 1970s and ’80s Lane wrote classics such as “’Til I Get It Right” (Tammy Wynette), “The World Needs a Melody” (The Carter Family with Johnny Cash), “Miss Emily’s Picture” (John Conlee) and “New Looks from an Old Lover” (B.J. Thomas). Lane also collaborated with Dottie West (“Country Girl”) and Merle Haggard (“My Own Kind of Hat”). More recently, his songs have been recorded by George Strait (“Tell Me Something Bad about Tulsa”) and Lee Ann Womack (“He’ll Be Back”).

Lane is also a highly regarded session guitarist who has contributed to classic recordings by Bobby Bare, Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown, Cash, Haggard, Nelson, Billy Joe Shaver, Keith Whitley and more.

Lane was born Hollis Rudolph DeLaughter in Zona, Louisiana, (now part of Bogalusa, Lousiana) in 1939. He spent his childhood hoeing corn and cotton alongside his sharecropper father, who began teaching him to play guitar at age nine. Lane was accustomed to life on the move, as his family was always in search of the next field to harvest. In one year alone, Lane attended four different schools. In 1952, Lane and his family moved to northern Indiana, where he graduated high school and eventually joined the Air Force.

Lane was stationed in Hawaii where he served as an aircraft engine and airframe mechanic. His guitar prowess won him several Air Force talent contests, and he was asked to perform on the famous live radio show Hawaii Calls out of Waikiki Beach. In 1958, after relocating to a base in Omaha, Nebraska, Lane began playing local nightclubs six nights a week. In order to avoid problems with authorities at the Air Force base, he joined the local musicians’ union under the name “Red Lane,” and the new stage name stuck.

Upon his discharge, Lane paid his dues playing in bands around the country, including stops in Indiana, California, Arizona and Texas. He became inspired by Willie Nelson’s songwriting in the early 1960s and decided to take up the craft, primarily as a fail-safe for his career as a guitarist. Justin Tubb convinced Lane to send some of his original songs to Buddy Killen, head honcho at Nashville’s Tree Publishing Company. Killen not only signed him to a publishing deal in 1963, but he also helped Lane relocate to Nashville by scoring him a job as a guitarist and singer in Justin Tubb’s band.

Lane scored his breakthrough hit the following year with Faron Young’s “My Friend on the Right,” which earned him his first BMI songwriting award. Since then, Lane has scored a slew of country hits, and his songs have been recorded by artists spanning several genres, including Ray Charles, Elvis Costello, the Del McCoury Band, Englebert Humperdinck, Wanda Jackson, Loretta Lynn, Roger Miller, Jack Palance, Johnny Paycheck and Dennis Wilson. Beginning in the late 1960s, Lane also fronted Dottie West’s band and co-wrote dozens of songs with her.

Lane went on to work with two of his personal guitar heroes in the 1970s, scripting the Ride This Train segments with Merle Travis for the Johnny Cash Show and recording as a session musician for producer Chet Atkins, who eventually signed him to RCA records. Lane’s unflinchingly honest love song “’Til I Get It Right” was a Billboard No. 1 hit for Tammy Wynette in 1973 and has since been recorded or performed by Solomon Burke, Bob Dylan, Lorrie Morgan, Kenny Rogers, Trisha Yearwood and more. Lane also forged a partnership with Merle Haggard, who has recorded nearly thirty of Lane’s compositions, including “I Must Have Done Something Bad” and “I Didn’t Mean to Love You.” Lane also added his guitar work to many of Haggard’s recordings and live performances, and he occasionally tours with him to this day.

Red Lane was elected to the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1993. He remains active in the Nashville songwriting community.

The Poets and Prophets series honors songwriters who have made significant contributions to country music history. Previous Poets and Prophets honorees include Bill Anderson, Matraca Berg, Bobby Braddock, Jerry Chesnut, Hank Cochran, Dean Dillon, John D. Loudermilk, Bob McDill, Roger Murrah, Curly Putman, Whitey Shafer, Jeffrey Steele and Craig Wiseman.

The Poets and Prophets series is made possible by Ford Motor Company Fund. These programs are also made possible, in part, by grants from the Metropolitan Nashville Arts Commission and by an agreement between the Tennessee Arts Commission and National Endowment for the Arts.

Montgomery Gentry Ready Hits Collection 

Columbia Records duo Montgomery Gentry will release their highly anticipated 8th album, Hits And More: Life Beside A Gravel Road, on September 28. The project is a collection of previously released fan favorites with three new tracks.

Since releasing their first Greatest Hits project, Montgomery Gentry has received a Grammy nomination for their single, “Lucky Man” from their Some People Change album, and an ACM Album of the Year nomination for 2008’s Back When I Knew It All. In addition, the duo has  scored three No. 1 and three Top 5 singles. With their continuing streak of hits, it became clear that they needed to put out a second greatest hits package.

“When we put out our first Greatest Hits album, Eddie and I felt like we’d just gotten started,” Troy Gentry says. “We’re always trying to better ourselves both in the studio and on stage. If you look at the direction Montgomery Gentry has gone, we started out with the hard-driving, in-your-face, honky-tonk, hell-raising style and carried that over into more working man’s songs. We’ve really tried to connect and relate to our fans through our music over the years.”

The new album features favorites like “Lucky Man,” and “Roll With Me,” that reflect the continued maturing of Montgomery Gentry. 

“Our fans are the most important to us,” says Eddie Montgomery. “And over these last few years on the road, we’ve realized that our fans go crazy over some of the newer songs too.”

Hits And More: Life Beside A Gravel Road also includes the current single, “While You’re Still Young.”

“We weren’t about to give our fans another Greatest Hits album without some new Montgomery Gentry music to look forward to,” Gentry says. “The new songs keep to our roots. When we sing a song, it’ll always tell a story. That’s just who we are.”