40th Annual American Music Awards on Sunday

The 40th Anniversary American Music Awards is scheduled for Sunday, Nov. 18 with appearances from Florida Georgia Line, Carrie Underwood, Hayden Panettiere, Luke Bryan, Lady Antebellum, Gavin DeGraw, Backstreet Boys, and Cyndi Lauper among others listed below.

The event, which airs live on ABC at 8 pm ET/PT from L.A.’s Nokia Theatre, will include the television debut of Carrie Underwood’s new single “Two Black Cadillacs.” The song appears on Underwood’s album Blown Away, which is nominated for Favorite Country Album. See a full list of nominees here.

Also scheduled to appear are 50 Cent, Ashley Benson, Brandy, Colbie Caillat, Elisha Cuthbert, Eric Stonestreet, Ginnifer Goodwin, Heidi Klum, Jennifer Morrison, Jenny McCarthy, Karmin, Kerry Washington, Lucy Hale, Neon Trees, Ne-Yo, Paula Abdul, Phillip Phillips, Ryan Seacrest, Stacy Keibler and will.i.am.

The “Coca-Cola Red Carpet LIVE! @ The 2012 AMAs” pre-show will stream online starting at 4 pm/CT. Fans will be able to tune in through a variety destinations including ABC.comAMAs365.comCokemusic.comLivestreamUstreamPOPSUGAR.comYouTube, and AP Live Entertainment.

A weekly web series, hosted by Lance Bass, Kimberly Cole and Megan Turney, called AMAs On Demand, has been published to YouTube and ABC.com, including breaking news, artist spotlights, fashion retrospectives, acceptance speeches, red carpet and backstage interviews. Additionally, clips from the program’s past 40 years are available at www.abcmedianet.com.

MusicRow No. 1 Song

Some guys will do just about anything to win a woman’s affection. Just ask Greg Bates, whose “Did It For the Girl” is the MusicRow Chart’s No. 1 song and the Republic Nashville newcomer’s first as an artist. Bates co-wrote the song with Lynn Hutton and Rodney Clawson, and it appears on his self-titled EP.

In “Did It For the Girl,” Bates goes to such crazy lengths as getting a haircut, splashing on cologne, and even shining up the car to woo his lady friend. Okay, so it’s really not all that crazy. It’s more about the details and execution: making himself presentable (sans ball cap) and giving her an unforgettable date (with George Strait’s help), all to see her dancing in the sunset and hopefully receiving a kiss or two. You fellas taking notes?

Bates is currently wrapping up his opening slot on Brantley Gilbert’s “Hell on Wheels” tour, which finishes this weekend in Beaumont, Texas. See upcoming dates here.

McBee Exits Sony Music Nashville

Heather McBee has exited Sony Music Nashville after 20 years with the label group as the company’s VP, Marketing & Web Initiatives to pursue her next opportunity.

She joined BNA Nashville in 1991 as an intern and over the years brought her interest and expertise in digital marketing to the forefront helping grow the careers of such artists as Kenny Chesney, Jake Owen, Chris Young, Love and Theft, Brad Paisley, Carrie Underwood, Martina McBride, Lonestar, Sara Evans and others.

McBee can be reached at 615-584-8741 or at [email protected].

MusicRowPics: The Cadillac Black Artist Visit

Before heading out to play a show with Florida Georgia Line at the Exit/In, The Cadillac Black stopped by MusicRow headquarters yesterday (11/15) to warm up. The trio is made up of three Nashville natives Jaren Johnston, Neil Mason and Kelby Ray, who released their self-titled debut album earlier this year.

The Cadillac Black played a stripped down acoustic set including album tracks “I’m Southern” and “Turn It On.” They concluded by introducing their new single “Get Your Buzz On.”

Johnston also co-wrote Keith Urban’s No. 1 hit “You Gonna Fly,” which earned him a nomination for Breakthrough Songwriter of the Year at the 2012 MusicRow Awards this summer.

The band’s next show is today (11/16) in Little Rock, AR. For more information about The Cadillac Black and their tour dates, visit thecadillacblack.com.

[slide]

Weekly Chart Report (11/16/2012)

For the third year, B100 teamed up with Martin's Supermarket selling Pink Light Bulbs in an effort to raise $6,800 for Susan G Komen for the Cure of Northern Indiana. Pictured (L-R): Deb Miles (B100 morning co-host), Barb LeVan (Martin's Supermarket), Madeline Catanzarite (B100 Sales Rep), and Sheri Miller Story (Northern, IN Susan G Komen Executive Director)

SPIN ZONE
Republic Nashville keeps the No. 1 spot this week on the MusicRow Chart with Greg Bates‘ “Did It For The Girl” succeeding last week’s chart-topper Florida Georgia Line‘s “Cruise,” now at No. 3. Written by Bates, Lynn Hutton and Rodney Clawson, “Did It For The Girl” is Bates first single from his debut self-titled album and first No. 1. The chart’s top 10 didn’t allow any new entries this week; however, Rascal Flatts‘ “Come Wake Me Up” climbed up to the No. 2 spot. Likewise, Dierks Bentley‘s “Tip It On Back” also gained a spot to No. 4 and Kip Moore‘s “Beer Money” rounds out the top 5.

Big movers this week include Jason Aldean‘s “The Only Way I Know” jumping from No. 36 to No. 21 with 577 new spins. Leaping from No. 51 to No. 32 is Tim McGraw‘s “One Of Those Nights” gaining an additional 484 spins. Moving up from No. 28 to No. 20 with 426 new spins in its 3rd week on the chart is The Band Perry‘s “Better Dig Two.” Toby Keith‘s “Hope On The Rocks” adds another 394 spins climbing 18 spots to No. 40.

Making its debut this week, Kelly Clarkson‘s (with Vince Gill) “Don’t Rush” landed at No. 68. Other debuts include Vince Hatfield‘s “Sometimes You Gotta Get Away” (No. 78), Jana Kramer‘s “Whiskey” (No. 79) and Steve Holy‘s “Hauled Off And Kissed Me” (No. 80).

Frozen Playlists: KGKL, KMKS, KGMN, KXBZ, KYKX

Upcoming Singles
November 19
Dustin Lynch/She Cranks My Tractor/Broken Bow Records

November 26
Carrie Underwood/Two Black Cadillacs/Sony Nashville

December 3
Lee Brice/I Drive Your Truck/Curb
Jillian Kohr/What You’ve Done

Holiday Singles
Lorrie Morgan/Wrapped Up In Love/Octabrook Records
Craig Morrison/Santa Claus Boogie/Lucky 53s-GMV Nashville
Clinton Gregory/Peace On Earth Again/Melody Roundup Records
Kyle Park/Winter Wonderland

New On The Chart—Debuting This Week
Artist/song/label — chart pos.
Kelly Clarkson w/ Vince Gill/Don’t Rush/19 Recordings-RCA Nashville – 68
Vince Hatfield/Sometimes You Gotta Get Away/Blue Moon – 78
Jana Kramer/Whiskey/WMN – 79
Steve Holy/Hauled Off And Kissed Me/Curb – 80

Most Added
Artist/song/label — New Adds
Tim McGraw/One Of Those Nights/Big Machine – 30
Toby Keith/Hope On The Rocks/Show Dog-Universal – 29
Jason Aldean/The Only Way I Know/Broken Bow – 22
Kelly Clarkson w/ Vince Gill/Don’t Rush/19 Recordings-RCA Nashville – 20
Carrie Underwood/Two Black Cadillacs/19-Arista Nashville – 16
George Strait/Give It All We Got/MCA – 15
Brantley Gilbert/More Than Miles/Valory – 14
Thompson Square/If I Didn’t Have You/Stoney Creek – 13
The Band Perry/Better Dig Two/Republic Nashville – 13

Greatest Spin Increase
Artist/song/label — spin+
Jason Aldean/The Only Way I Know/Broken Bow – 577
Tim McGraw/One Of Those Nights/Big Machine – 484
The Band Perry/Better Dig Two/Republic Nashville – 426
Toby Keith/Hope On The Rocks/Show Dog-Universal – 394
Zac Brown Band/Goodbye In Her Eyes/Southern Ground-Atlantic – 247

On Deck—Soon To Be Charting
Artist/song/label — spins
Lizzie Sider/Butterfly/Blue Steel – 203
Michael Dean Church/Still Not Over You/MDC – 196
Hillbilly Vegas/Little Miss Rough And Tumble/Red Dirt Music Company – 193
Luke Pilgrim/Back Road Lullaby/MMG – 193
Brinn Black/That Should Have Been Us/SMG – 163

California native, Heidi Newfield, paid a visit to San Jose’s Rodeo Club for KRTY-FM. Pictured (L-R): Roger Fregoso (Sidewalk Records), Tina Ferguson (KRTY), Heidi Newfield, and Nate Deaton (KRTY GM/MD)

Kenny Chesney celebrated his CMA win for Musical Event of the Year with Tim McGraw with friends, as his new single “El Cerrito Place” climbs the charts. Pictured (L-R): Sheila Jeffries, Chesney and Jan Jeffries (Cumulus SVP Corporate/Programming)

Charlie Worsham visited with WZZK/Birmingham during the Southwest leg of his first radio tour. Pictured (L-R): Paul Orr, Summer Orr, Charlie Worsham, Jamie Boyd

Top Digital Companies Form Strategic Partnership

Five digital music leaders have combined forces to become a sort of music biz Voltron, which established artists can take into battle every day. The strategic partnership, involving Topspin, Artist Growth, Firebrand, Ingrooves Fontana, and Pledgemusic, was announced by Topspin CEO Ian Rogers yesterday (11/15) at Billboard’s FutureSound conference in San Francisco.

“Increasingly, artists and managers need an end-to-end solution to fund their projects, then market and distribute them, then hit the road,” said Rogers. “The Internet has given artists the ability to connect directly with fans, bundle their rights to create new value, and keep a daily eye on their business — without licensing their rights. But artists still need to work with experts who add real value to make the most of this Internet-created opportunity.”

By combining tools for funding, distribution, and marketing, the new partnership will allow users to combine rights for recorded music and merchandise, raise funds, build fanbases, and make money without having to surrender ownership. The relationship between the companies is non-exclusive. Artists looking for a one-stop solution are encouraged to contact any of the partners and mention the integrated marketing partnership for more info.

Charlie Cook On Air: The CD

One of my fondest memories as a kid was jumping around an album—those were big round plastic things that mysteriously held music captive until you dropped a needle on the album and sound was created from the collision of the two entities—and listening to my favorites from that particular artist. I am not even going to admit to playing 45 rpms as a VERY young kid. That would put me mere years after Edison’s invention of the phonograph and I am not going there.

This “playing disc-jockey” continued with CDs as I would jump around the disc passing up songs that I didn’t particularly like to get to one that would stop me in my tracks (excuse the pun). There was an anticipation of knowing the song that I was going to hear and then actually experiencing it.

Stop for a second and think of your favorite song. Then hear it in your mind. Even that is an incredibly enjoyable experience. Even that makes you feel good. Actually add the sound of the song and the next 4 minutes is great.

I can remember the first time I heard “Roundabout” from the album Fragile by Yes. First of all, it is about 8 and one half minutes. And it takes you through about 10 emotions. I sat on the floor and just played it over and over all night. And no, I was not high. I’m pretty sure I wasn’t. Even today I will stop whatever I am doing and just listen to the song if I run across it.

Where am I going with this?

The CD is dead. The album is long dead.

That experience is dying.

Today music listeners will get “in the ballpark” of that experience. I know that if want to hear “Roundabout” I had better be listening to a Classic Rock station. WUSN is not going to play it. And even then my chance is about 1 in 4000.

Yeah, I can program Pandora for a Yes Channel and “Roundabout” is going to come up at some point.

Yeah, I can go on Spotify and “ask” for “Roundabout.”

Yeah, I can go to my iPod and play “Roundabout.”

Why does none of that feel the same?

Last week The NPD Group, a consumer research firm, published a study showing that Internet and on-demand services (Pandora, Spotify and YouTube) are pushing the CD off the shelves in America.

Our friends on Music Row can vouch for this.

So far these services are far behind radio but they are going in different directions and The NPD Group found radio listening down 4% year to year. Even digital downloads were reported down 2%

From an article I read (online) from the San Francisco Chronicle, NPD SVP Russ Crupnick said, “Although AM/FM radio remains America’s favorite music-listening choice, the basket of Internet Radio and Streaming services that are available today have, on a whole, replaced the CD for second place.”

With even digital downloads losing some ground music listeners have decided that owning the music is not important. Having access to the music is more important.

The thing about all of these services it that the revenue model is still shaky. I have Pandora. I have Spotify. I use YouTube. I have the free version of all of these channels.

I do not want the artist to be compromised by my not paying for the service but it seems like the artist payment is so far down the road on some of these services that me putting up with a commercial every 15 minutes or so is not going to impact them.

Artists reportedly get about 1/3 of a penny per stream on iTunes Match, but that is for playing a song you have already purchased once.

Want to make a dollar from Spotify? Hope that your song streams hundreds of times.

I like broadcast radio. I like the streaming services but both should be sources for introducing music to the consumer who then goes out and BUYS the music so that they can sit on the floor and play their favorites over and over and over.

(The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of MusicRow)

People’s Choice Awards Nominees

Jason Aldean helped announce the PCA nominees.

Taylor Swift, Carrie Underwood and Blake Shelton received all-genre nominations for the People’s Choice Awards 2013. Jason Aldean, who is nominated for Favorite Country Artist, joined other celebrities to reveal the news.

Fans cast more than 93 million votes to pick new categories and determine the slate. Justin Bieber, Maroon 5 frontman Adam Levine, Channing Tatum, Emma Stone and Jennifer Lawrence are among the top nominees.

Fans can vote for winners without leaving their favorite social media outlets, including Facebook, which has a custom app, and Twitter, through the use of specific hashtags. This is a significant step forward for fan-voted shows, which in the past have relied mainly on website voting.

• Website – PeoplesChoice.com continues to be the main voting platform
• Facebook – Facebook.com/PeoplesChoice features a custom application where fans can personalize their voting experience and share their votes with friends.
• Twitter – Fans can cast official votes by tweeting a specific series of hashtags based on the nominee’s name and category. Details at PeoplesChoice.com/pca/vote.
• Mobile – Fans can vote in all categories on the People’s Choice Awards mobile site, and via the official voting application for Android and iOS devices.

Voting will end on Dec. 14, 2012. Winners will be revealed during the live broadcast from the Nokia Theater L.A. Live on Wednesday, Jan. 9, 2013 (9:00-11:00 PM, ET/delayed PT) on CBS.

Favorite Male Artist
Blake Shelton
Chris Brown
Jason Mraz
Justin Bieber
Usher

Favorite Female Artist
Adele
Carrie Underwood
Katy Perry
P!nk
Taylor Swift

Favorite Country Artist
Blake Shelton
Carrie Underwood
Jason Aldean
Taylor Swift
Tim McGraw

Favorite Song
“Call Me Maybe,” Carly Rae Jepsen
“One More Night,” Maroon 5
“We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together,” Taylor Swift
“We Are Young,” Fun. ft. Janelle Monae
“What Makes You Beautiful,” One Direction

Favorite Album
Believe, Justin Bieber
Blown Away, Carrie Underwood
Overexposed, Maroon 5
Some Nights, Fun.
Up All Night, One Direction

Tickets to the awards show are available for purchase through Ticketmaster.

Primetime ‘Nashville’: Episode 106

Juliette and Sean sneak away to Miami.

Episode 106: “You’re Gonna Change (Or I’m Gonna Leave)”
First aired: November 14, 2012

Nashville finally picked up the pace last night, with interesting new characters and storylines. As usual, the music made a phenomenal centerpiece, with new songs by characters Avery and Rayna.

Characters hitting the Music City scene were squeaky-clean NFL rookie Sean Butler, new-to-town hit rock producer Liam McGuinnis, and artist manager Marilyn Rhodes, a cougar on the prowl for (un)suspecting young singers.

Liam (played by Treme’s Michiel Huison) initially dismissed Rayna as a “moms and SUVs” singer, but he was intrigued after she convinced him to listen to the new song she wrote “Buried Under” (actually by Natalie Hemby and Chris DeStefano). A whiskey fueled recording session helped him see her as a true artist and helped her tap into her reason for singing in the first place. The result was an edgy sound that pleased labelhead Marshall Evans, until he found out who produced it. The subplot shares a lot of parallels with Black Keys singer Dan Auerbach, who has a studio here and produced Rayna’s version of the Lucinda Williams song “Bitter Memory” for an upcoming episode.

Juliette agreed to a date with Sean as a strategic PR move, but things got interesting when they ditched the café and hopped a jet to Miami. Sean wasn’t as boring as she thought when he grabbed a guitar and started strumming her song “Black Mascara Tears.” Later, he fought off the paparazzi outside a nightclub, and she returned the favor by paying the photog $25K not to sell the photos.


Elsewhere, potentially damaging photos of Peggy (Kimberly Williams Paisley) and Rayna’s doormat husband Teddy landed in the hands of his mayoral race rival Coleman. He’s considering leaking the pics after his campaign was damaged by Lamar (to whom avid watcher David Ross refers as the Belle Meade Monster). During a traffic stop Lamar orchestrated, police found a bottle of Oxycontin in Coleman’s car. Ironically, he was pulled over on his way to the “clean campaign” event. In a no-good-deed-goes-unpunished scenario, Coleman had possession of the pills because his addiction recovery sponsoree, Deacon, surrendered them.

At The 5 Spot Avery’s (Jonathan Jackson) howling vocals shined on groovy, cool new song “Kiss” (written by Sean McConnell) and caught the attention of manager Marilyn. Avery and Scarlett called it quits after she suspected him of cheating on her with Marilyn—or at least wanting to.

Actors Clare Bowen (Scarlett) and Sam Palladio (Gunnar) are set to make their Grand Ole Opry debut this Saturday (11/17) at the Ryman Auditorium.

The episode also included a performance of “The Day You Die” by Lindi Ortega at The 5 Spot. It’s available for free download here.

Big Machine Records will release the Nashville soundtrack on Dec. 11, featuring music performed by cast members Connie Britton, Hayden Panettiere, Charles Esten, Jonathan Jackson, Clare Bowen, and Sam Palladio. A full track listing is here.

Nashville needs extras on Tues., Nov. 20, at Bridgestone Arena. Details at nashvilleextras.com.

Actor Charles Esten (Deacon) made his Grand Ole Opry debut Sat., Nov. 10 at the Ryman Auditorium. He sang “Back Home,” a song he has performed on the show, and Buck Owens’ “Act Naturally.”

Christmas Tree Lightings

Christmas in Rockefeller Center

Trace Adkins, Mariah Carey, CeeLo Green, Rod Stewart, Billy Crystal and Bette Midler are among the guests appearing on NBC’s 15th Annual Christmas in Rockefeller Center to air at 8 pm/ET, Wednesday, Nov. 28.

Al Roker and Savannah Guthrie will co-host the celebration, featuring an 80 ft. Norway Spruce estimated to be about 80 years old.

CMHoF Celebrates Lighting 

The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum will officially kick off its winter celebrations with a Christmas tree lighting featuring Craig Morgan on Friday, Nov. 23.

Morgan is also scheduled to perform and sign copies of his latest CD during the free event, which begins at 4 pm. The festivities begin a season of holiday programs at the museum. Further details are available here.

 

•   

Annual National Christmas Tree Lighting

James Taylor, Kenny “Babyface” Edmonds, Colbie Caillat and Phillip Phillips are among the performers announced for the 90th annual National Christmas Tree Lighting on Thursday, December 6 at the Ellipse at President’s Park in Washington, D.C.

The 2012 ceremony will air on public television throughout the December, and can also be viewed live online, with a pre-show beginning at 4:30 pm/ET.

The Lighting Ceremony is the first in a four-week holiday series presented at President’s Park by the National Park Service and the National Park Foundation from President Calvin Coolidge’s 1923 tradition.

Additional guests are forthcoming.