Benefit Photos: St. Jude, WIL

Late in December 2011, The St. Jude Country Music Marathon & Half Marathon presented by Nissan hosted a holiday party for runners and guests at Nashville’s Red Rooster. Country singers Jo Dee Messina and Darren Warren performed a short set and Warren spoke about his experience with St. Jude, where he was treated for non-Hodgkins Lymphoma as a teenager. Attendees also heard the story of Ally Cameron, who was treated by St. Jude after being diagnosed with neuroblastoma at age 1. She is now eight years old and cancer free. This year’s Country Music Marathon will take place in Nashville April 28.

(L-R): Ally Cameron, Darren Warren and Jon Cameron

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Prior to the holiday break, WIL/St. Louis held its annual “Cornbread’s Kids Crusade” to benefit St. Louis Children’s Hospital and its Child Life Services. In just 28 hours, the event raised $214,718. The station has raised over $500,000 through the event in the last two years. WIL morning show host Cornbread notes, “I’m humbled by the generosity of the WIL listenership, who poured out their love for the kids of St. Louis Children’s Hospital.”

Sponsors drop off a check benefiting St. Louis Children’s Hospital during WIL’s Cornbread’s Kids Crusade.

Pandora Debuts Concert Series

Pandora debuted a concert series last month, hosting a free, live show for fans and streaming content at pandora.com/pandorapresents. The concerts will move about the country throughout 2012, showcasing a variety of artists in different cities.

The first concert was held Dec. 13 in Portland, Ore. with emerging rockers Dawes (“Time Spent In Los Angeles”). As the official launch sponsor, Budweiser presented the inaugural concert free of charge to more than 230 fans, and is now bringing the experience online through a hub on Pandora.com.

All artists that participate in the live concert series will be showcased on the Pandora Presents hub. Behind-the-scenes video of Dawes includes interviews with the band and fans, and footage of the band hanging in Portland. The hub also features a curated “mixtape” of songs selected by Dawes and Pandora music analysts.

Pandora determines the artists and locations for the live concert series from spin and thumbs-up data. Listeners who have created stations and thumbed-up songs for a specific artist or similar artists are invited to attend the exclusive free shows.

Klout Creates New Class Of Brand Promoters

If you are a frequent social networker, chances are you already know your Klout score which is measured on a scale of 1-100. The average score is 20, says the ratings site. New York Post writer Garett Sloane opines, “Having a higher Klout score than a rival is the latest form of business one-upmanship.”

Now about 2 years old, Klout monitors your Twitter, Facebook, Google Plus and other social networking accounts to see what kinds of reactions you get and how often people are engaged by what you are posting. “Adding more networks…can only increase your score,” claims the site’s online information which also explains, “Klout measures influence online using data from your social networks. Anywhere you have an online presence, you have the opportunity to influence people by creating or sharing content that inspires actions such as likes, retweets, comments and more. The more engagement your posts receive, the more influential you are. Klout uses this information to provide you a Klout Score that measures your overall influence.” Joe Fernandez, Klout CEO/Founder told the Post, “Ultimately, we look at things like how far does your message spread, what proportion of content you create gets acted upon and how influential are the people acting on your message.”

Recently Klout altered its methodology which resulted in the lowering of many individual scores and understandably upset many of those who were downgraded. Expected to soothe the ruffled feathers is a deeper, more transparent look from the company into exactly how the scores are created and tabulated slated to arrive in mid-January 2012.

TechCrunch contributor Semil Shah noted in a Klout editorial, “It’s worth remembering that Klout only claims to measure one’s online influence, and I tend to think that much of the backlash against the company is rooted in the misconception that one’s Klout score maps to the offline world. It’s easy to grandstand and take a publicly moral stance against what Klout is doing, but as it is with entrepreneurship and certainly the web, there are no rules. Companies and users are making the rules as they go, and that’s just the way it should be.”

Mashable’s Samantha Murphy playfully suggests that those with higher scores tend to be the ones most satisfied with the methodology. “It seems as though it’s those with lower Klout scores that detest the concept, while members with higher scores are reaping the benefits of the platform. Some have even gotten job offers, free products and gift certificates from companies that want to keep the Klout influencers on their radar,” she says. “Obtaining a high Klout score is becoming more of something to strive for, with some even highlighting their number on resumes.” Murphy has created a 7-point list of how to get more Klout. “Build a network and create meaningful content,” she advises. “If you keep focused on your network strategy and your content strategy, you’ll succeed.” (See her complete list here.)

Klout scores describe a very limited aspect of a person’s personality and/or lifestyle. However, it seems that marketers are beginning to realize that enlisting social networkers with high scores who broadcast their messages to a large audience can be extremely influential in promoting a brand or a product such as music.

Artists Tweet Holiday Happenings

Artists are hooked on Twitter. Here’s some of the biggest news and most re-Tweeted posts they shared with Followers over the recent holidays.

Don’t forget to keep track of who has the most Twitter Followers and Facebook Likes via MusicRow’s Twitter/Facebook Chart.

 

 

Singled Out (1/2/2012)

Sony Music Nashville looks to have a busy promotional schedule early in 2012, with a handful of new singles slated to hit radio. First up is Miranda Lambert’s “Over You,” the second single from her acclaimed Four The Record collection. Lambert penned the deeply personal song with her husband Blake Shelton, about Blake’s brother who died in a car accident.

Miranda says, “I’ve never cried writing a song, and I don’t know that I ever will again. After we wrote it, Blake said he couldn’t record this song for himself or sing it on stage every night but he would be honored for me to. ‘Over You’ is one of the most special songs I’ll ever be a part of.” Starting January 12, Lambert will kick off her headlining On Fire tour in Rockford, IL with Chris Young and Jerrod Niemann.

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Across the hall at Arista Records, Ronnie Dunn’s “Let The Cowboy Rock” will go for adds January 16. The third single from Dunn’s self-titled debut solo album, it follows up the reactive “Cost Of Livin'” which was the theme of episodes of Dr. Phil and The Doctors in December.

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Also vying for adds in these early weeks of January is Show Dog-Universal’s JT Hodges, whose new single is “Goodbyes Made You Mine.” Back in November, Hodges made his Grand Ole Opry debut and his single “Hunt You Down” climbed to No. 28 on MusicRow’s CountryBreakout Chart.

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Following the group’s first big No. 1 song “Crazy Girl,” Eli Young Band will be sending “Even If It Breaks Your Heart” to country radio. Written by Will Hoge, the song is the second single from EYB’s first Republic Nashville album Life At Best.

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Also part of the Sony camp, BNA will be rolling out “Hot Mess,” the debut from newcomer Tyler Farr, in time for a February 6 add date. Farr’s song “That’s What They’re Bitin’ On” was also an unofficial single, and made it to No. 46 on MusicRow’s CountryBreakout Chart.

Swift, Civil Wars Combine Forces On New Song

Santa must have been paying attention, because we got a whopper of a present right before departing for the holiday break. On December 23, Taylor Swift released a new song called “Safe & Sound” to iTunes, which quickly became the digital retailer’s No. 1 seller. Featuring breakout duo The Civil Wars, “Safe & Sound” is the lead single from the soundtrack to the highly anticipated Lionsgate film The Hunger Games, based on the novel by Suzanne Collins. Swift wrote the song with Joy Williams, John Paul White and T Bone Burnett.

Taylor revealed the news exclusively to her fans via Twitter. Thirty minutes prior to the song’s release, she posted that she was very excited about something that was “going to be happening VERY soon,” then posted a link to the iTunes download. Listen to the track here.

Burnett is producing the soundtrack, which will be released by Universal Republic and feature all newly written songs. Also appearing on the collection will be The Decemberists and Grammy winners The Arcade Fire. The Hunger Games soundtrack will debut in advance of the film’s theatrical release on March 23.

Curb Shares Details of New McGraw Project

Curb Records revealed details of the upcoming Tim McGraw album today. The Jan. 24 release is a 12-track studio effort titled Emotional Traffic.

McGraw’s longtime producer Bryon Gallimore helmed the project which has already resulted in the No. 1 “Felt Good On My Lips.”

R&B star Ne-Yo guests on the song “Only Human,” which was produced by Darran Smith. According to the label, other stand-out tracks include “Touchdown Jesus” (Rhett Akins, Dallas Davidson, Ben Hayslip), and “I Will Not Fall Down” (McGraw, Martina McBride, The Warren Brothers).

“…Lips” has already been certified Gold for paid digital downloads, and now two more album tracks are available on iTunes—“Right Back Atcha Babe,” and current single “Better Than I Used To Be,” which is at No. 35 on MusicRow’s CountryBreakout chart.

With a track record that includes 32 No. 1 singles and 44 million albums sold, McGraw previously announced plans to release music separately from his previous label Curb Records. The superstar and record company split in late 2011.

Track listing for Emotional Traffic:
1. Halo
2. Right Back Actha Babe
3. One Part, Two Part
4. I Will Not Fall Down
5. The One
6. Better Than I Used To Be
7. Touchdown Jesus
8. The One That Got Away
9. Felt Good On My Lips
10. Hey Now
11. Only Human
12. Die By My Own Hand