3rd Annual CountryMusicIsLove Benefit Announced

Country blog CountryMusicIsLove has announced its 3rd Annual CountryMusicIsLove Concert, which will benefit City of Hope and its mission of research, treatment and education for cancer and other life-threatening diseases. The event is set for 7:30 pm next Tuesday, Feb. 21, at Nashville’s Exit/In.

Slated to perform at the benefit are JT Hodges, Craig Campbell, Casey James, Chuck Wicks, Micheal Ray, Chris Cavanaugh, Kristen Kelly, THE FARM, and Love and Theft. Whitney Duncan will host the event for a second year, in addition to performing.

For Casey James, the cause is a personal one. “My family has been massively affected by cancer,” James shares. “My Paw-Paw passed away last year from cancer. My Nana passed away from cancer and my mother is a two-time cancer survivor, thyroid and breast. It was an honor to be asked to come out and play.”

Tickets are $15 and 100% of sales will be donated to City of Hope. Purchase tickets here.

CMT and Southern Living Announce Partnership

Southern Living announced a cross-platform partnership with CMT on Tues. (Feb. 14), immediately surrounding the upcoming CMT Music Awards in June, along with additional programming and events throughout 2012.

The partnership will focus on cross-promotional opportunities and attempt to leverage both brands on print, television, and digital media.

SouthernLiving.com will generate coverage around the CMT Music Awards, the network’s highest rated show of the year, including video from the red carpet and editorial content related to CMT programming.

CMT will cross-promote related Southern Living through its digital content, which reaches more than 1.7 million fans. In addition, the network will document country music news from Southern Living on its weekly series CMT Insider. An upcoming episode of the CMT series Sweet Home Alabama, will include an appearance by Southern Living Test Kitchen Professional Norman King.

Southern Living is a rich, vibrant brand and a perfect complement to CMT’s programming and digital extensions,” says Lisa Chader, SVP, Corporate Communications, CMT. “We’re huge fans of the magazine and look forward to creating new editorial opportunities that are unique across the media landscape.”

Southern Living is headquartered in Birmingham, AL and is part of Time Inc., a Time Warner company. It reaches more than 16 million consumers each month through a variety of print, digital, mobile, tablet and event platforms. CMT, reaches more than 92 million homes in the U.S.

Keyboardist John Hobbs Honored by CMHoF

Acclaimed keyboardist John Hobbs be featured Sat., March 10, as part of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s popular series “Nashville Cats: A Celebration of Music City Musicians.”

The program, which begins at 1:30 p.m. in the Museum’s Ford Theater, is hosted by Bill Lloyd and will include a brief performance and an in-depth interview.

Illustrations from vintage recordings, photos and film clips from the museum’s Frist Library and Archive will decorate the event, which is free with admission to the museum.

For over three decades, Hobbs has contributed his talents to modern country classics such as “Whoever’s in New England,” “Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your Mind,” “You’re Still the One,” “Strawberry Wine,” and “I Try to Think About Elvis.”

Hobbs made a name for himself in the L.A. music scene early on before moving to Nashville, scoring music for TV shows and films as well as playing on records for George Jones, Tom Jones, Barry Manilow, Olivia Newton-John, Charlie Rich and Lionel Richie.

In addition to playing keyboards for Nashville’s biggest stars, Hobbs is also a talented songwriter and producer. He has written songs recorded by Ray Charles, Diamond Rio, Vince Gill, Collin Raye, McEntire and Pam Tillis. His production credits include seven records for Raye; Gill’s These Days, for which Hobbs won a Grammy in 2007; and LeAnn RimesLady & Gentlemen. Hobbs has earned Keyboard Player of the Year 10 times from the ACM. In 2000, Hobbs began his ongoing tenure as Gill’s bandleader.

Hobbs is to sign autographs in the Museum Store immediately following the program, which is to be streamed live on the Hall of Fame’s website.

 

Big 98 Presents Free Lee Brice Show

Clear Channel’s Big 98 WSIX/Nashville has put together a “Thursday Night Live” free concert featuring Curb Records country artist Lee Brice for this Thursday, Feb. 16. The event will start at 7:30 PM/CT at Dave & Busters in Opry Mills Mall.

Brice has earned back-to-back recognition for Billboard’s most popular songs in 2010 and 2011 for his own smash single “Love Like Crazy” as well as Eli Young Band’s recent hit “Crazy Girl.” Brice’s current single “A Woman Like You” is currently at No. 12 on MusicRow’s CountryBreakout chart and will be included on his upcoming sophomore album due out in April.

The Recording Academy Steps Up Digital Engagement

Grammy Live on an iPad

For the third consecutive year, The Recording Academy supplemented its Grammy week coverage with a website and app called Grammy Live. The feed offered three days of exclusive live coverage leading up to Music’s Biggest Night, and broke a social TV record with over 13 million social media comments. The show itself lived up to its nickname with 41.2 million viewers.

Three years ago when the Grammy Awards attempted to harness the ever-elusive digital fan engagement, the result was an ingenious, real-time multi-camera invitation behind the velvet rope to VIP events previously impossible to expose. Ticking sidebars of Twitter streams allowed fans the ability to interact with each other, plus offered trivia and polls surrounding events before and after the Awards.

The streams began on Fri., (Feb. 10), and ran through Sun., (Feb. 12) with hosts Alison Haislip, Drew Hinze, and John Norris’ exclusive broadcasts, blogs, tweets and news reports at the Social Media Rock Stars Summit; MusiCares Person of the Year Tribute honoring Paul McCartney; Special Merit Awards Ceremony & Nominees Reception; the Pre-GRAMMY Gala (the Clive Davis Party); the Pre-telecast ceremony; Director’s Cut; the Grammy Red Carpet; and the official Grammy after-party.

“We connect with music in very personal ways, and through shared, social experiences, fans are more eager than ever to support and follow their favorite artists in new and exciting ways,” said Evan Greene, Chief Marketing Officer for The Recording Academy.

The newly-launched mobile app, like the webpage, offered videos, news and Grammy trivia with tweets from many award contenders.

To deliver a cohesive experience the Recording Academy partnered with both open-source and proprietary technologies including Drupal, Lullabot, Ooyala, and Rackspace. Last year, YouTube live-streamed the feed, this year CBS Interactive and AEG Digital Media used the Tremolo Player in association with interactive apps with trivia and polls. Mass Relevance filtered and moderated the social content. Akamai distributed the HD network for live and on demand video. LiveU provided HD cameras with mobile backpacks transmitting wirelessly to roam free without “hard-wired” cameras.

Harnessing the attention of younger consumers and digital consumers could lead to a shift in marketing methods. The Times suggests, “If the trends hold, the long-term implications for the media industry are huge, possibly causing billions of dollars in annual advertising spending to shift away from old-fashioned TV.”

In a blog on Ooyala’s website, the company who’s logo appears below the video coverage, Greg Franzese shared, “Tablets, social video and interactive, personalized advertising is TV now. The transition from old to new distribution models is no longer a matter of if — it is a matter of when. The secret of online video is that it’s not a secret anymore. This is the new TV. And it’s already here.”

2011 Charttoppers: Who Made It And How

by Ralph Murphy

The one thing that you can count on in the music business, as in life, is change. And change was certainly the theme for 2011. The number of country songs reaching No. 1 was at an all-time high of 34 and the number of writers matched that all-time high climbing to 80.

Again this year, 50% of the singles that reached No. 1 (17) were written in whole or in part by the artist. This is good news for the publishers who are investing their money and efforts in artist/writers, not so good for standalone writers and their publishers. In speaking to publishers about what they look for in a writer, the “artist” tag seems to carry a lot of weight and apparently justifiably so.

The only downside to what happened in 2011 is that although more writers had a song go to No. 1, more writers and publishers will have to share the yearly performance money, or “split the blanket” to quote my old pal Harlan Howard. The financial reward may not be as great in some cases, but you had a No. 1 record.

Among songs that raced to the top, the pack leader was Blake Shelton’s “Honey Bee” which made it from zero to No. 1 in 10 weeks. About one-third of the records sprinted up the charts in 11-15 weeks. Fifty percent took the 16-25 week trip. Only five lasted 30-plus weeks: “A Little Bit Stronger,” Sara Evans (33 weeks); “Country Must Be Country Wide,” Brantley Gilbert (33 weeks); “Are You Gonna Kiss Me Or Not,” Thompson Square (36 weeks); and “Crazy Girl,” Eli Young Band (38 weeks). The 800-pound gorilla was Chris Young with “Voices,” which took 51 weeks to get there and made it over a year (53 weeks) on the charts.

As you would expect, because of the amount of No. 1s, 21 of the 34 only had one week at No. 1. “Honey Bee” and Zac Brown Band’s “Keep Me In Mind” both had 4 weeks at the top. Tim McGraw’s “Felt Good On My Lips,” Kenny Chesney’s “Somewhere With You,” Jason Aldean’s duet with Kelly Carkson “Don’t You Wanna Stay,” Blake Shelton’s “God Gave Me You,” and Lady Antebellum’s “We Owned The Night” all stayed No. 1 for three weeks. Residency after leaving No. 1 was generally confined to 0 to 3 weeks.

Artist/Writers
At 50% of the 34 records, it may seem that the artist/writer is the [business] way to go, but the balance that a standalone writer brings to the equation cannot be overemphasized. The artist’s need to put forward a personal view is generally tempered well by the standalone writer, who has a different perspective because he/she is not the performer and doesn’t necessarily shape the song in his/her image.

Seven of the 80 writers involved in creating the No. 1s for 2011 were women. They wrote songs for the nine records that had female artists involved.

Tempo
About 2/3 of the No. 1s were under 100 BPM (Beats Per Minute). Nineteen were 70-90 BPM and only three were under 70 BPM. Although all of 2010’s No. 1s were 4/4, this year Eli Young Band found favor at drive time and waltzed all the way to one of Billboard’s most played country songs.

Intros
Although Kenny Chesney’s “Live A Little” had a 56-second intro and  “Old Alabama” (Brad Paisley) came in second with 33 seconds, if you average all the intros together you get 17 seconds. If you take out Kenny’s intro the average falls to 15 seconds, same as 2010. I guess country radio finds that length handy.

Pronouns
You can love them, hate them, be indifferent to them, but don’t ignore them. They define the situational perception of the listener. Me, you, us, etc.— the first person ruled.

Twenty of the 34 were first person (me, you). Illustrations of this are “so listen Romeo, when you’re feelin’ kinda low, let me tell you where to go” (Reba), “Who are you when I’m not looking” (Blake Shelton) and Billy Currington saying he’s “right on the edge of giving into you” in “Let Me Down Easy.”

The third person (him/her/them) allowed Justin Moore to talk about his “long lost cousin John” and tell him about his daughter and that “she’s a doctor and he’d be proud.” Toby Keith got to talk about his dad buying “nothin’ he can’t fix with WD-40 and a Craftsman wrench.” Those pronouns did their job.

Themes
Romantic Love: “Are You Gonna Kiss Me Or Not?,” “Don’t You Wanna Stay”
Love of Family: “Voices,” “If Heaven Wasn’t So Far Away”
Love of Country: “Made In America”
Love Lost: “Someone Else Calling You Baby,” “Somewhere With You”
Love Found: “Sparks Fly,” “Let Me Down Easy”
Good Time Party: “Barefoot Blue Jean Night,” “Live A Little,” “Am I The Only One”
Revenge/Satisfaction: “Turn On The Radio”
Life Lessons: “Voices”
Morality: “Country Must Be Countrywide,” “God Gave Me You”

Song Length
Bearing in mind that on-air personalities can use as much or as little fade-time as needed to stretch to a break, 23 records settled comfortably in the three minutes and change length. Eight were over four minutes, two were under three minutes, and only one broke the five-minute barrier.

Song Forms/Shapes/Structures
These are outlines of the way listeners seem to prefer to receive their information at “worst time of day possible.” If you want to find out more about them there is a chapter on them in Murphy’s Laws of Songwriting the book.

Second Form: Verse (Verse Optional), Chorus, Verse, Chorus, Instrumental, Chorus.
Billy Currington’s “Let Me Down Easy,” Jake Owen’s “Barefoot, Blue Jean Night”

Third Form: Verse (Verse Optional), Chorus, Verse, Chorus, (Bridge Middle 8 ) Chorus (with an instrumental before or after the chorus).
Chris Young’s “Tomorrow,” Lady A’s “We Owned The Night”

Fourth Form: Verse, Lift, Chorus, Verse, Lift, Chorus, (Bridge Optional) Lift, Chorus out. ‘Lift’ can also mean Pre-Chorus, Climb, Channel, Ramp, etc.
Taylor Swift’s “Sparks Fly,” Thompson Square’s “Are You Gonna Kiss Me Or Not”

Fifth Form: Verse, Verse, Bridge, Verse (It is also called the AABA).
Tim McGraw’s “Felt Good On My Lips” took this structure, added a couple more A, B sections and did very well.

Sixth Form: Traditionally this would have been Chorus, Verse, Chorus, Instrumental, Bridge/Middle 8, Chorus Out and was called rondeau or rondo (to quote W.O. Smith in his book “Sideman”).
Blake Shelton’s “Who Are You When I’m Not Looking” (chorus, verse, chorus, verse, verse, chorus) almost did it; Jason Aldean’s “Dirt Road Anthem” starts with chorus, raps out four small verses, goes back to the chorus, then raps three small verses and goes on to chorus after chorus.

Repetition
One of the major differences between pop and country chart toppers is the number of repetitions of the title. Country has a lot less. Five No. 1s had only three uses of title, setting the minimum standard for repetition.

The maximum number of title repetitions with 19 was “Remind Me” (Brad Paisley & Carrie Underwood). I guess they really needed reminding. All the rest fell between 3 and 13 repetitions.

Because the country audience “listens into” a song, multiple repetitions over a 3-6 month period would have a high “burn factor,” so less is more I guess.

Humor/Irony/Detail
If you’re looking for humor, check out Dierks Bentley’s “Am I The Only One” where he calls “wild man Willy” “but Idol was on TV” and went to a “joint looking like a morgue.”

Irony is such a large part of country. One of many examples is Luke Bryan’s “Somebody Else Calling You Baby” when he tells her “you wanted your time and you wanted your space” which is code for “I’m really seeing someone else.”

Details set up some great stories. From “blow the speakers out your Chevy truck,” “paint your toes cause you bite your nails,” “he reminded me of Chris LeDoux,” and “that Copenhagen smile,” detail ruled.

Story/Conversation
Story songs like “Colder Weather” (Zac Brown Band), “Felt Good On My Lips” (Tim McGraw), “Barefoot Blue Jean Night” (Jake Owen), etc. were very conversational. About 15 of the 34 No. 1s were more story than conversational.

Advice/Best Bets
Writing this part of the yearly analysis is always the hardest part about doing these “perspectives” on the previous year.

Aside from the “write with the artist” approach, it is worth noting that every year, two or three artist/writers actually write No. 1s for other artist/writers. Does this mean that artist/writers are better than standalone or non-performing writers? No, it means that they are really writer/artists! This may come as a (pleasant) surprise to some of you whose publishers have mandated that you write with artists. In the best scenario, the writer/artist leaves the artist at the door and concentrates on making the song a living, breathing piece of work with a beginning, middle, and an end.

This article would not be possible without the wonderful assistance of Anna Maki and her research team of Mercedes Davis, Blake Ferguson, Lincoln Faulkner, Gracie Leathers, Lauren Perry, Chelsey Reardon, Rusty Redden, Georgie Sillem, Cami Steger, Kristen Tribble, Renee Urbanc, Kristen Westerbeck and Tania Yegelwel.

Bonnaroo 2012 Lineup Revealed

Middle Tennessee’s Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival has revealed performers for its 2012 edition, scheduled for June 7-10 in Manchester.

Headlining bands include Radiohead, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, and Phish. Also slated to perform are Best New Artist Grammy winner Bon Iver, the reunited Beach Boys (Brian Wilson, Mike Love, Al Jardine, Bruce Johnston and David Marks), Americana darlings The Avett Brothers, The Shins, Foster The People, electronic wiz Skrillex, hip-hop star Ludacris, comedian/actor Aziz Ansari, Feist, The Roots and many more. Full lineup here.

Artists making the cut from Tennessee or on Nashville labels include a reunited Ben Folds Five, The Civil Wars, Needtobreathe, Sarah Jarosz and Moon Taxi. Others will be named as the Road To Bonnaroo contest unfolds.

Tickets go on sale Saturday, Feb. 18 at 11 AM/CT at bonnaroo.com.

Artist Snapshots (2/14/12)

On February 3, many members of the Grand Ole Opry paid tribute to the Ryman Auditorium’s long-lasting stage for the final time before its replacement. Among those present for the occasion were Whisperin’ Bill Anderson and the Oak Ridge Boys, who sang the first-ever live rendition of their collaboration “Gone Away.” The song was produced by Buddy Cannon, and Anderson co-wrote it with Steve Ripley, Tim DuBois, and John Wooley.

(L-R): Oak Ridge Boys Joe Bonsall, Duane Allen, William Lee Golden, and Richard Sterban with Bill Anderson.

• • • • •

MCA Nashville’s Josh Turner recently filmed the music video for his new song “Time Is Love,” the ninth video release of his career. The single is the first off his upcoming album Punching Bag.

On the set of the “Time Is Love” video shoot are (L-R): Ted Greene (Modern Management), Peter Zavadil (Director), Renee Behrman-Greiman (Modern Management), Josh Turner, Chandra Pereira (Exec. Producer), Fount Lynch (UMG Nashville). Photo: Stephen Shepherd.

• • • • •

Big Machine Records’ trio Edens Edge (Hannah Blaylock, Dean Berner, and Cherrill Green) were recently invited to become honorary Friends and Family of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. The group’s debut single “Amen” was recently a Top 20 hit and they have toured with Brad Paisley, Reba, and Lady Antebellum. Their debut album is expected later in 2012.

(L to R) back: Jay Orr (Vice President, Programs), Sharon Burns (Vice President, Sales and Marketing), Kyle Young (Museum Director), Pamela Johnson (Vice President, Development),Virginia Davis (B.A.D Management), Whitney Cheshier (B.A.D Management) and Nikki Burns (Big Machine Label Group); front: Edens Edge Members Cherrill Green, Hannah Blaylock, and Dean Berner

Beloved Publicist Jayne Rogovin Passes

Jayne and her horse Diva. Photo: Gina Binkley

Veteran Nashville publicist Jayne Rogovin passed away last night (2/13) from incurable breast cancer.

For eight years she ran her successful Jayne Gang PR, with most recent clients including The Americana Music Association, Sunset Grill, Cabana Restaurant, Midtown Cafe and Manuel Exclusive Clothier. A devoted publicist, she was working even in recent weeks, as her condition worsened. Friends say the decline in her health was sudden.

Proof of her courageous spirit and drive, she proclaimed in a recent interview, “I’m living, not battling.”

Best friend Kay West helped Rogovin keep on living, acting as a point person for others who wanted to help. “I met Jayne when Steve West asked her to direct the first Nashville Music Awards aka The NAMMIES 17 years ago and I wrote the script,” recalls West. “We have been dear friends since. Jayne was fearless, adventurous, insatiably curious, always learning, generous, devoted to her friends and clients and a damned fine horsewoman and dancer. She lit up a room and touched countless lives. I will miss her terribly.”

Longtime friend Kay Clary agrees, “Jayne was bursting with life and seriously had the widest circle of close friends of anyone I’ve ever known! She had an hilariously quick wit, the tenderest of hearts, and sharpest of minds. Yes, she did impassioned work as a PR and marketing exec, but she’ll be remembered most by so many as a vibrant and true friend.”

Rogovin’s more than twenty-year career included time as Pecos Films Director/Producer, as well as work in media, marketing and creative services.

The New York native graduated from the University of Florida and went into broadcast journalism. Later, after a two-month stint with a TV crew covering the Branch Davidian standoff in Waco, Texas, she decided a career change was in order. She eventually landed in Nashville, and became a much-loved, hard-working member of the music community. She was passionate about horses, and indulged her caring nature with gardening, and her feisty side with salsa dancing.

Friends rallied around Rogovin during her illness, organizing the Kick the Crap Outta Cancer benefit in her honor. Held April 5, 2011 at Cabana, the event attracted performers including Raul Malo, Jim Lauderdale, Steve Cropper, and Foster & Lloyd, and raised about $30,000.

She was as devoted to the community as it was to her, working with charitable causes including UPAW (United Partnership for Animal Welfare), and Billy’s Wish Foundation, which helps children with cancer.

Ronna Rubin saw her friend as an inspiration. She says, “In good health and in bad, Jayne inspired me. I will always remember Jayne’s passion; her passion for life, for her friends, for our creative community. Those artists, songwriters and singers lucky enough to have had her as their cheerleader were gifted with a rare combination of vision and devotion.”

In recent months Rogovin continued her longtime work with the Americana Music Association, including at its September Festival and Conference. She was one of the most devoted and earliest supporters of the organization and the genre it represents. According to her blog, she also enjoyed traveling to see family in the months before her passing.

Read more about Rogovin’s history here and her recent interview here.

Arrangements have not been announced.

Americana Music Association Executive Director Jed Hilly shared this moving letter today.

Dear Jaynie,

Your friendship was unconditional. Your love was unconditional. Your professionalism unsurpassed. I am so grateful for the gifts you shared.

You never once let me down. You not being here today is unimaginable and I am figuring out how to deal with this… It’s tough. Happened too fast.

I have no doubt you would have already pulled into my driveway by now to listen and comfort me, and to advise me on how to deal with this situation. You would likely be telling me that I have to grieve, and then you would, at the right time, tell me I needed to stand up, pull it together and leave the house. You’d tell me I needed a statement. It’s making me laugh and cry.

How lucky we all have been to be your friend. You gave us such confidence. Your belief in greatness and kindness in all of us is one I cherish.

I love you and miss you so much Jayne Rogovin. Happy Valentine’s Day sweetheart.

Friends rallied aroud Jayne Rogovin at the Kick The Crap Outta Cancer benefit. (L-R): Steve Cropper, Jonell Mosser, Jayne Rogovin, Harry Stinson and Beth Hooker. Photo: Alan Mayor

Tracy Lawrence To Host CRS Benefit

Tracy Lawrence is set to headline the “Tracy Lawrence & Friends” benefit to support Operation Troop Aid on Wed. Feb., 22 at Nashville’s Cadillac Ranch during CRS. The event, which begins at 6 pm, is free and open to the public.

The performance lineup includes Lexi James, Kaleb Hensley & II Smokin’ Barrels, Stephen Cochran, Cody McCarver and additional surprise guests.

The benefit celebrates Operation Troop Aid’s fifth year promoting entertainment initiatives raising funding to send care packages to deployed US Troops.

Mark Woods, a 21-year military veteran, founded Troop Aid after being inspired by Garth Brooks’ 9/11 concert live from the USS Enterprise, where he was stationed at the time.