National Folk Festival Starts Tonight

The 73rd Annual National Folk Festival starts this evening (9/2) at the Bicentennial Mall in downtown Nashville, offering a wide selection of music, dance, arts, food, and more.

Performers for the free event include Green Fields of America (Irish-American music/dance), Mariachi Los Camperos de Nati Cano (Mexican mariachi), The Holmes Brothers (blues/gospel/r&b), Dale Ann Bradley (bluegrass), BeauSoleil avec Michael Doucet (cajun), Road Mountain Hilltoppers (Appalachian string band), and many more. Events begin at 7 pm tonight (9/2), and Noon on Saturday (9/3) and Sunday (9/4). A full schedule is available here.

The Festival has also partnered with the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum to present a unique program for the Tennessee Folklife Stage and Demonstration Area sponsored by SunTrust. Titled “Nashville’s Musical Roots and Branches,” the stage will explore the city’s musical heritage with interviews and performances from gospel, bluegrass, early country, songwriter, and r&b artists. Each year this area plans to celebrate a different facet of Tennessee heritage and culture.

Part of a three-year tenure with the National Council for the Traditional Arts (NCTA), the National Folk Festival will call Nashville home for 2011, 2012 and its 75th anniversary in 2013.

Sea Gayle/BNA Announces New Signing

(L-R): Scott Safford, Safford Motley PLC; Bryan Frasher, VP Promotion BNA Records; Gary Overton, Chairman & CEO Sony Music Nashville; Scott Kernahan, Rogue Music Group; Liz O’Sullivan, Sea Gayle; Pete Olson, Rogue Music Group; Skip Bishop, SVP Promotion Sony Music Nashville; and seated, Wade Bowen.

Sea Gayle Records / BNA Records officially announced the signing of Wade Bowen. The Texas-bred singer-songwriter has been in the studio finishing his sixth album—his first project for a major label.

The hard-touring artist has built a large fan base by performing 200-plus nights a year. He has scored seven No. 1s on the Texas Music Chart, and multiple awards including 2009 Texas Music Awards’ Male Vocalist of the Year and the 2010 LoneStarMusic Awards’ Live Act of the Year.

For his upcoming release, Bowen collaborated with one of his biggest influences, Guy Clark, on a duet.

Weekly Chart Report (9/02/11)

Amber Hayes (FUNL Music) Learns a 'Magic Beer Trick' during a visit to WBYT/South Bend, Ind. (L-R): Pat (owner of local Irish pub Mulligan’s), Hayes

SPIN ZONE
Keith Urban might be a prophet. About three months ago he tunefully predicted that it was “gonna be a long hot summer” and well, it definitely has been. The song moves up to the CountryBreakout Chart’s No. 1 spot just as September arrives, and we’ve (thankfully) still got a little summer left in the tank.

Positions 3-9 hold fast, with Kenny Chesney’s “You And Tequila” on top of the heap at No. 3. Jake Owen’s “Barefoot Blue Jean Night” still looks strong at No. 5, tacking on a few more spins and closing in on Brad Paisley’s “Remind Me.”  Blake Shelton’s “God Gave Me You” also has some legs, as it picks up a 180 spin gain and moves to No. 10.

Kudos to Capitol Records on an impressive debut for Luke Bryan’s “I Don’t Want This Night To End,” which lands at No. 70 in its first week being reported. Bryan’s labelmates Lady Antebellum also have a nocturnally-themed single called “We Owned The Night,” and it’s up to No. 30 in its third week on the chart.

Frozen Playlists: KITX, KXIA, KZTL, WDGG, WKWS, WQNZ, WTCM, WYVY

Upcoming Singles
September 6
Jason Aldean/Tattoos On This Town/Broken Bow

September 12
Kevin Fowler/That Girl/Average Joes
Chris Young/You/RCA
Ashley Gearing/Me, My Heart and I/Curb
Crystal Shawanda/Love Enough/Sun/Nine North
Andy Gibson/Wanna Make You Love Me/R&J

• • • • •

New On The Chart—Debuting This Week
Artist/song/label — chart pos.
Luke Bryan/I Don’t Want This Night To End/Capitol — 70
Chris Young/You/RCA Nashville — 74
Jason Sturgeon/The Cover/Toolpusher/Spinville — 78
Marlee Scott/Beautiful Maybe/CO5 — 80

Greatest Spin Increase
Artist/song/label — spin+
Lady Antebellum/We Owned The Night/Capitol — 456
Jason Aldean/Tattoos On This Town/Broken Bow — 381
Luke Bryan/I Don’t Want This Night To End/Capitol — 350
Eric Church/Drink In My Hand/EMI Nashville — 330
Miranda Lambert/Baggage Claim/Columbia — 288

Most Added
Artist/song/label — New Adds
Luke Bryan/I Don’t Want This Night To End/Capitol — 32
Jason Aldean/Tattoos On This Town/Broken Bow — 23
Lady Antebellum/We Owned The Night/Capitol — 22
Chris Young/You/RCA Nashville — 14
Eric Church/Drink In My Hand/EMI Nashville — 14
Steel Magnolia/Bulletproof/Big Machine — 13
Reba/Somebody’s Chelsea/Starstruck/Valory — 10
Tyrone Vaughan/Downtime/Kick It Up — 10

On Deck—Soon To Be Charting
Artist/song/label — spins
Bomshel/Halleluy’all/Curb — 218
Cash Creek/Unlikely Angel/Ohana — 209
Justin Haigh/All My Best Friends Are Behind Bars — 205
Coleman Brothers/Beer—Thirty/PVI — 200
The O’Donnells/She Leaves The Light On/Song Valley Music — 195
Jesse Keith Whitley/Kentucky Thunder/Octabrook Records — 190
Tyrone Vaughan/Downtime/Kick It Up — 184

Warner Bros. Records artist Jason Jones recently stopped by CMT to give the staff a “Ferris Wheel” spin. The singer/songwriter treated staff to performances of songs from his forthcoming Brett Beavers-produced debut album, including his current single “Ferris Wheel.” (L-R): Jensen Arrowsmith (Warner Music Nashville Associate Director, Publicity), Stacey Cato (CMT Music Strategy), Jason Jones, Stephen Linn (CMT Music Strategy), Kelli Cashiola (Warner Music Nashville VP Brand Management), Justin Luffman (Director On-Line Marketing), Jennifer Danielson (CMT Music Strategy) and Cris Lacy (Warner Music Nashville VP A&R). Photo Credit: Courtesy of CMT

Frankie Ballard with US Army Black Knights—who parachuted in next to the stadium right before Frankie took the stage at the Appalachian Fair in Johnson City, TN

Casey James (BNA Records) was recently at KXKT/Omaha to share his debut single, "Lets Don't Call It A Night." (L-R): KXKT PD Erik Johnson, James and MD Hoss Michaels.

Robertson Taylor Founder Renews Contract

Bob Taylor

Co-founder Bob Taylor has renewed his contract with Robertson Taylor, the insurance broker that provides specialist products for the entertainment and music industries.

Andy Wallin, Managing Director, Robertson Taylor, said, “We are delighted that Bob is continuing in the business. His experience and industry knowledge is unparalleled and there is a huge amount of affection and respect for him from both the music industry and the insurance industry.  We have some incredibly talented people coming up through the business who will also benefit from the guidance he can provide.”

“We have seen huge changes in the industry from the late seventies when vinyl ruled and bands trashed hotels, to the dawn of the digital age,” says Taylor. “Bands today need to be professionals in an increasingly competitive world. But we have always been available when things have gone wrong for our clients. I truly believe that this has been the source of our success. Our willingness to be there…without question getting on a plane at short notice to travel anywhere in the world—that has always set our company apart, and continues to do so today.”

Taylor, the late Willie Robertson, along with Ian France, established Robertson Taylor in 1977 as a dedicated specialist broker for the music and entertainment industry. Today the company has offices in Los Angeles, Nashville, New York, Las Vegas, and London.

 

Charlie Cook On Air

“Fans Like Free Media”

August is the month of state and county fairs. Headlining: bad food. Iowa has a new dish this year of Fried Butter. Really? Plain butter isn’t enough to drive up health care costs in the state?

State fairs are populated by not only by questionable gastronomic challenges but by scores of thrilling rides. Rickety roller coasters, ferocious Ferris wheels and titillating tilt-a-whirls. This August the real thrilling ride came, not from state fairs but the stock market.

But this is not a financial column. If it were, you might want to quickly turn away.

It is a column about Country radio and records and the listener/consumer. We know what the state and county fairs have in common with radio, records and the listener. Country performers make their careers in Pelham, AL; Pueblo, CO; and Sussex County, NJ. Country radio is broadcasting remotes and giving away tickets to listeners, who flock to the rides, snacks, petting farms and performances. It is often the best money spent, fun for one low price.

How does this tie into Wall Street? The fans are also flocking to free media.

Associated Press did an analysis of cable and satellite companies, after quarterly earnings reports, and found that consumers are abandoning their clickers in increasing numbers. The loss is not yet earth-shattering but it is the first down-tick in the industry. And this was for a reported quarter BEFORE the stock market scared the heck out of every wage earner in America.

It is also important to note that the consumer is not abandoning TV—just paying for it. They are finding their programming online. When the DVR has become one of the most important electronic toys in a household, what does a consumer’s willingness to forgo cable and watch programming online, on his own schedule, tell us about media consumption?

We know that older Americans have already gone away from purchasing recorded music as in the past. The last few weeks’ No. 1 debut country CD sales failed to top 150,000. We have adjusted our expectations so that this is a successful launch.

This is at the same time that Country Radio stations are setting new ratings highs. Listening to (free) radio is up almost everywhere. Atlanta has a combined cume of over 1.5 million. Detroit is just short of a million cume with only one station. Boston set a ratings record. Los Angeles has stabilized at over one million. Dallas, Chicago, Houston and the list goes on and on. Country radio is way up—free Country radio.

Nashville record companies would like to find another path to the listener, one without the gate keepers of program directors and consultants. But both industries can thrive with an even more powerful partnership.

The consumer is choosing free more often and radio and records can help drive this with creative cooperation. I am not asking for either partner to give up anything for free but what about Country radio and record companies thinking how to drive both listenership and purchasing.

In order to keep it free, maybe we need to find a sponsor that also benefits from the association. What is going to be important, however, is for radio and records to find something that we’re willing to share with each other. It is going to take more than giving an act exposure for a concert.

I like the conference room concerts that artists do for stations because we get to meet the act and bond a little, but stations should use these new acts for lunchtime or after work shows at a sponsor and invite listeners. It’s free for the listener and the station. Plus, it takes a committed record company expense and maybe turns it into an opportunity to build a base in the market.

I wrote awhile back about the lack of connection that radio is making with artists because of programmer reluctance to chance the PPM ratings system with additional talk. I said then and this was a recipe for decreased ratings down the pike. Committing your station to a new act, maybe not on air interviews but with a real chance to interact with the listener/consumer is better than a day at the State Fair.

Hot Combos Vince/Sting, George/Martina, Faith/NBC

Another great pairing: Martina and Target, who are teaming to offer this exclusive edition of her upcoming album with added content and a blue album cover.

George Strait and Martina McBride will hit the road together in January 2012. Tour dates and on-sale information will be announced soon. Strait is prepping for next week’s release of his 39th studio album Here For A Good Time. McBride’s new effort Eleven will debut on Oct. 11. She is also teaming with Target for an exclusive version with a custom blue cover, video content, and four additional tracks: “You‟re In My House Now,” “Closing Time,” “Ask The Boy,” and “I Give It To You.”

Vince Gill and Sting are teaming up for a new episode of CMT Crossroads. The show will be taped in New York City at an invitation-only event and will premiere in November. It has been five years since the series taped an installment in the Big Apple. Both stars have new releases hitting stores this fall. Together they have earned over 35 Grammys, and sold over 125 million albums.

Faith Hill will perform the opening theme for NBC’s Sunday Night Football for the fifth year in a row. The theme, “Waiting All Day for Sunday Night,” debuts this season on Sunday, Sept. 11 when the Packers take on the Saints.

Apple Promotes Eddy Cue

Apple has promoted Eddy Cue, the longtime leader of iTunes, to Sr. VP of Internet Software and Services. This move, which comes in the wake of Steve Jobs’ recent resignation, leaves Cue reporting to newly-appointed CEO Tim Cook.

Under the new title, Cue oversees Apple’s industry-leading content stores including the iTunes Store, App Store and the iBookstore, as well as iAd and Apple’s innovative iCloud services.

Cue, a 22-year Apple veteran, played a significant role in creating the Apple online store in 1998, the iTunes Music Store in 2003 and the App Store in 2008.

Industry Ink Thursday (9/1/11)

Rachel Holder and her producer Wilbur Rimes have been visiting MusicRow CountryBreakout chart reporters all over the country to promote her single "Chocolate." Pictured (L-R): Wilbur Rimes, Rachel Holder and Colby Erickson KVWF/Wichita, KS

Digital services company ground(ctrl) has added two employees to its Nashville team. Wyatt Thomas, most recently of Sony Music Nashville, has joined the staff, and Eddy Boer is expanding his role to full-time after overseeing marketing strategy for the last several months. Ground(ctrl) clients include Sugarland, Martina McBride, Nicki Minaj, Matchbox Twenty, Jake Owen and Backstreet Boys. The company is also planning to move to a new location near Music Row later this year. Reach them at [email protected] or [email protected], or by calling 1.877.GND.CTRL. www.groundctrl.com

• Jay Frank—expected to reveal details about his new gig next month—is set for an Oct. 7 presentation at the Digital Music Forum West in Los Angeles. Along with BigChampagne CEO Eric Garland, he will lead a segment titled “The Label of the Future.”

• Scott Borchetta, CEO Big Machine Label Group, will be honored with the TJ Martell Foundation’s Spirit of Excellence Award at the New York Honors Gala on Nov. 3 at the Marriott Marquis Times Square. In related news, Big Machine Records celebrates its sixth anniversary this week.

• SAE Institute Nashville and PCG Nashville have teamed for the Music Row Master Series of informational seminars about the country music industry. The monthly sessions include a 40-minute lecture followed by Q&A at the SAE Institute in Nashville (7 Music Circle N.). Dave Pomeroy, president of the Nashville Musicians Association (AFM Local 257), was the August speaker. The upcoming Sept. 16 session will feature John Ozier, Director Of A&R, Curb Records.

• Rhonda Vincent & The Rage will headline the R.O.P.E. Awards Show on Oct. 6 at the Al Menah’s Shriner’s Temple. For tickets, call (615) 860-9257.

The Jägermeister Get UR Country On Club Tour rolls through Nashville tonight (9/1) at 3rd & Lindsley. Rick Monroe will be joined by Gary Ray on the 15-city trek.

The Crook & Chase television show is expanding into more than 130 syndicated markets for the 2011-2012 broadcast season. Cable/satellite scheduling on RFD-TV brings total television coverage of Crook & Chase to more than 90 million U. S. households. Meanwhile, radio’s Crook & Chase Countdown is heard on more than 220 stations in the U. S. and Canada, and on Sirius XM, by more than one million weekly listeners.

The Nashville Live Music app launched by the Nashville Convention & Visitors Bureau is now available to Android users. The app has been available on the iPhone, iPod touch and iPad since early June and has already been downloaded by nearly 4,000 people.

• Red Dirt Music Company has relocated its offices to 1622 16th Ave. S. Suite 100. Company head Ben Ewing has tapped Richie Owens for A&R duties, and Matt Rizor to serve as Artist Develop Manager. Red Dirt has also signed Andy Velo and Johnny Solinger to the management division. Contact [email protected].

• Art Wasem’s Foothill Entertainment Group and Artists on the Edge are hosting a benefit concert for victims of Hurricane Irene tonight (9/1), 6 – 9 p.m. at Red Rooster featuring Mason Douglas, Kelly Murray, Amanda Page Cornett, Ayla Brown, Bryan Edwards, Brittany Schiavone, Bronson Bush, Brandon Maddox, Tyler Matl, Amanda Christine, and Mark Lonsway.

The Society of Leaders in Development (SOLID) kicked off the Music Row Habitat for Humanity Build recently with 32 music industry volunteers working on the new home in north Nashville.

 

The Doc Is In At Nine North

Doc Gonzales

Nine North Records Nashville has announced the addition of Doc Gonzales to the Director of Promotion, SE/SW position effective today. He joins the team of Larry Pareigis, Tom Moran, Jim Dorman and Will Robinson.

“I am very excited to begin working with Larry Pareigis at Nine North Records and look forward to bringing my work ethic and experience in both management and record promotion to add to the team,” says Gonzales. “I am ready to get out there and see my great friends at radio in the Southeast and Southwest.”

Gonzales brings 30 years experience to Nine North, including 16 years in promotion, marketing, management and artist branding at Graham Management Company. He describes owner Herb Graham as his “mentor and friend.”

Reach Gonzales at his new cell 615-678-2522 or [email protected].

Nashville Gets A New “Label”

Renee Layher and Gary Allan. Photo: HBPR

The Label, Nashville’s newest men’s boutique, opens today in the 12South District at 2222 12th Ave S.

Country artist Gary Allan and long-time stylist Renee Layher joined forces to bring a new crop of design talent to Nashville. Their high-end, exclusive men’s boutique offers cutting edge design in clothing, jewelry and home furnishings. During a trip to LA with his stylist Layher, who serves as the store’s General Manager, the two discussed the need for such designs in Nashville. Through that conversation, the concept for The Label was born.

Tony Sartino, designer for celebrities such as Prince, Kings Of Leon, Bon Jovi and Goo Goo Dolls, will create custom suits, pants and shirts. Sartino resides in Los Angeles, but he will be available regularly at The Label.

Designer offerings also include DAO Home by Su Chitpanich, Leather apparel from Logan Riese, Stand and Deliver by Corey Parks, Marcelo Pequeno, Prophetik by local designer Jeff Garner, Naga jewelry and Moods Of Norway. Many of the designers represented in the store are sold exclusively.