GEORGE JONES DEAD AT 81

georgejonesCountry Music Hall of Famer, Grand Ole Opry member, and Kennedy Center Honoree George Glenn Jones died Friday, April 26, 2013 at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee. He was hospitalized April 18 with fever and irregular blood pressure.
[MusicRow gathers reflections and reactions from artists and the Country Music industry]
 
Born September 12, 1931, Jones is regarded among the most important and influential singers in American popular music history. He was the singer of enduring country music hits including “She Thinks I Still Care,” “The Grand Tour,” “Walk Through This World With Me,” “Tender Years” and “He Stopped Loving Her Today,” the latter of which is often at the top of industry lists of the greatest country music singles of all time.
“A singer who can soar from a deep growl to dizzying heights, he is the undisputed successor of earlier natural geniuses such as Hank Williams and Lefty Frizzell,” wrote Bob Allen in the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s “Encyclopedia of Country Music.”
Jones was born in Saratoga, Texas, and he played on the streets of Beaumont for tips as a teenager. He served in the U.S. Marine Corps before returning to Texas and recording for the Starday label in Houston, Texas. In 1955, his “Why Baby Why” became his first Top 10 country single, peaking at number four and beginning a remarkable commercial string: Jones would ultimately record more than 160 charting singles, more than any other artist in any format in the history of popular music.
Jones’ first number one hit came in 1959 with “White Lightning,” a Mercury Records single that topped Billboard country charts for five weeks. He moved on to United Artists and then to Musicor, notching hits including “She Thinks I Still Care,” “The Race Is On,” “A Good Year for the Roses” and “Walk Through This World With Me.”
Jones signed with Epic Records in 1971 and worked with producer Billy Sherrill to craft a sound at once elegant and rooted, scoring with “The Grand Tour,” “Bartenders Blues” and many more. Sherrill also produced duets between Jones and his then-wife Tammy Wynette, and in the 1970s they scored top-charting hits including “We’re Gonna Hold On,” “Golden Ring” and “Near You.”
By the time “Golden Ring” and “Near You” hit in 1976, Jones and Wynette were divorced, and Jones was battling personal demons. His solo career cooled until 1980, when he recorded “He Stopped Loving Her Today,” a ballad penned by Curly Putman and Bobby Braddock that helped Jones win Country Music Association prizes for best male vocal and top single. “He Stopped Loving Her Today” revived a flagging career, and Jones won the CMA’s top male vocalist award in 1980 and 1981. He also earned a Grammy for best male country vocal performance.
In 1983, Jones married the former Nancy Ford Sepulvado. The union, he repeatedly said, began his rehabilitation from drugs and alcohol and prolonged his life. He signed with MCA Records in 1990 and began a successful run, and he was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1992. His guest vocal on Patty Loveless’ “You Don’t Seem To Miss Me” won a CMA award for top vocal event in 1998, and it became his final Top 20 country hit.
In 1999, Jones nearly died in a car wreck, but he recovered and resumed touring and recording. He remained a force in music until his death, playing hundreds of shows in the new century and collecting the nation’s highest arts award, the Kennedy Center Honor for lifetime achievement, in 2008. In late 2012, Jones announced his farewell tour, which was to conclude with a sold-out, star-packed show at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena on November 22, 2013. Alan Jackson, Garth Brooks, Randy Travis, Charlie Daniels, Kenny Rogers, Sam Moore, The Oak Ridge Boys and many others were set to perform at Jones’ Bridgestone show.
Jones is survived by his loving wife of 30 years Nancy Jones, his sister Helen Scroggins, and by his children, grandchildren, nieces and nephews.

Bobby Karl Works The Johnny Cash Museum

Tommy Joanne Cash11

Tommy Cash and Joanne Cash Yates


Let’s get the “reviewing” part of this story out of the way, right away. Are you ready? Here’s the review: The new Johnny Cash Museum is awesome.
That’s it. Seven words. Now I’ll tell you why. At Thursday morning’s Private Viewing of Nashville’s newest attraction (April 25), a treasure trove of memorabilia was unveiled. In addition to items from the old House of Cash museum in Hendersonville, the new facility includes contributions from fans, artifacts taken from other museums and, most of all, the stunning collection of a man named Bill Miller.
“I became a fan and a collector as a boy,” said Miller at the event. “I saw my first Johnny Cash show at age 12. And I kept going back, again and again. Eventually they said, ‘Just give him a backstage pass.’ So I got to know Johnny, and Johnny was also a collector. We swapped things.”
Miller says “We’ve scoured the world” for the items on display in this terrific  museum on 3rd Avenue South, just off Broadway downtown.
You enter and depart through the gift shop, which has the coolest Cash t-shirts ever, by the way. Your first stop inside is the Dyess, Arkansas section of the museum, which spotlights Johnny’s childhood. Vintage family photos are displayed, alongside the star’s Sears guitar, his boyhood toys, a cotton-picking sack filled with cotton bolls and the family’s wooden radio. Nearby is a case displaying the instruments of The Tennessee Three.
Johnny’s sister, Joanne Cash Yates, became teary-eyed as she looked at the memorabilia. His brother, Tommy Cash, graciously accepted compliments from attendees.
The next section of the museum spotlights Johnny’s years in the Air Force. His uniform, service papers and transmitter are in cases. Many of the items have never been seen by the public before.
Cash inside11In the Memphis/Sun Records section are Johnny’s J-200 Gibson guitar as well as collectible 45 r.p.m. and 78 r.p.m. records. “Johnny Cash may be the only artist who charted in every format while he was living, including digital downloads,” Miller said.
The San Quentin exhibit spotlights the recordings that Johnny made at prison concerts. It includes jailhouse tin cups, a set list, guard badges, a cell door, the lyrics to “Folsom Prison Blues” and the Grammy Award that resulted.
A section spotlighting the 1960s showcases a red silk shirt, his “Man in Black” suit, his first custom-made leather boots, Maybelle Carter’s autoharp, Johnny and June Carter’s wedding license, posters, letters, lyrics and manuscripts. Nearby is a wall of Gold and Platinum records. In front of it are Johnny’s CMA Awards in individual display cases.
A video room is dedicated to the star’s patriotism. Another room displays posters from the various films he appeared in, as well as a wealth of costumes and hats. The museum also contains antique furniture from Johnny and June’s home. The old sign from the House of Cash museum is there as well.
“It had been taken to Arkansas, but we got it back,” said Johnny’s niece Kelly Hancock, who used to work at the old museum. “So now I’m back at the House of Cash.”
In another room, there are artifacts from Johnny’s time spent in The Highwaymen with Waylon Jennings, Kris Kristofferson and Willie Nelson. Beyond that are items relating to his late-career revival with producer Rick Rubin. A studio console, books written by Cash, his paintings and drawings and various other artifacts are also there.Cash Inside 2 photo11111
Scattered throughout the museum are listening stations and video viewing stations highlighting everything from “I Walk the Line” to “Hurt.” There is an event space available for rent behind the exhibit area.
“We’re having a ‘soft’ opening tomorrow [Friday, April 26] and then a Grand Opening in June, when there are more people in town,” said Kelly. “The Johnny Cash [postage] stamp comes out on June 5.
“There will be a lot more,” she promised. “We’re still adding things.”
“The collecting continues,” confirmed Bill Miller. “My wife thinks it’s a sickness.”
Peter Cooper, Sherod Robertson, Shannon Miller, Tom Roland, Chuck Dauphin, Pam Lewis, Mark Logsdon and the other members of the media at the preview event were enthusiastically taking notes and snapshots.
Here’s my advice: Go and experience The Johnny Cash Museum NOW, before the rest of the world finds out that it’s open and it becomes too crowded to enjoy properly.
[slide]
 
 
 
 
 

Weekly Chart Report (4/26/13)


SPIN ZONE

Show Dog Universal’s Joel Crouse recently shared his debut single, “If You Want Some” with KWOF PD, Jonathan Wilde.

Show Dog Universal’s Joel Crouse recently shared his debut single, “If You Want Some” with KWOF PD, Jonathan Wilde.


Darius Rucker‘s infectious hit “Wagon Wheel,” featuring the members of Lady Antebellum on background vocals, topped the MusicRow CountryBreakout Chart this week. Eric Church‘s “Like Jesus Does” comes in at No. 2, followed by Tim McGraw with Taylor Swift‘s “Highway Don’t Care” and Kenny Chesney‘s former No. 1 “Pirate Flag,” at No. 3 and No. 4, respectively. Brantley Gilbert‘s “More Than Miles” holds at No. 5 again this week, while The Band Perry‘s “Done” rises from No. 8 to No. 6. Jake Owen‘s “Anywhere With You” ups one notch from No. 9 to No. 8. The Henningsens‘ “American Beautiful” breaks into the Top 10 this week, while Kelly Clarkson featuring Vince Gill‘s “Don’t Rush” remains at No. 10.
Luke Bryan has brought quite the party to the charts–his single, “Crash My Party,” is the greatest gainer again this week, with 516 spins, jumping from No. 26 to No. 16. Carrie Underwood‘s “See You Again”  rises from No. 30 to No. 23, with additional 426 spins. Underwood’s tourmate, Hunter Hayes,” has his own swiftly rising single with “I Want Crazy” climbing from No. 40 to No 31. Little Big Town‘s “Your Side of The Bed” jumps from No. 33 to No. 27, while Blake Shelton‘s “Boys Round Here” rises two spots from No. 14 to No. 12 this week.
Eric Paslay has the top debut this week with “Friday Night” at No. 55, followed by Lee Brice‘s “Parking Lot Party” at No. 68, Joanna Smith‘s “Girls Are Crazy” at No. 73, Chris Cagle‘s “Dance Baby Dance” at No. 77 and Casey Donahew Band‘s “Whiskey Baby” at No. 79.
Frozen Playlists:  WWBE, WOOZ, KWEY, WDHR, WRHT
 
Upcoming Singles
April 25
Steve Richard/Keep On Rollin’/Force MP
April 29
Joanna Smith/Girls Are Crazy/RCA
IMAJ/Guess Who’s Coming To Dinner/Triomphe Records
Dakota Bradley/Somethin’ Like Somethin’/Streamsound
David Shelby/Kick A Little Dirt Around/Highway South
Morgan Frazier/Yellow Brick Road/Sidewalk
May 6
Scotty McCreery/See You Tonight/Mercury-19-Interscope
Chuck Wicks/Salt Life/McGhee
Thomas Rhett/It Goes Like This/Valory
May 13
Joe Nichols/Sunny and 75/Red Bow
Chris Young/Aw Naw/RCA
June 16
Travis Tritt (feat. Tyler Reese)/Sometimes Love Just Ain’t Enough
• • •
New On The Chart—Debuting This Week
Artist/song/label — chart pos.
Eric Paslay/Friday Night/EMI Nashville – 55
Lee Brice/Parking Lot Party/Curb – 68
Joanna Smith/Girls Are Crazy/RCA Nashville – 73
Chris Cagle/Dance Baby Dance/Bigger Picture Group – 77
Casey Donahew Band/Whiskey Baby – 79
Most Added
Artist/song/label — New Adds
Eric Paslay/Friday Night/EMI Nashville – 24
Hunter Hayes/I Want Crazy Atlantic/WMN – 17
Lee Brice/Parking Lot Party/Curb – 14
Carrie Underwood/See You Again/Arista – 13
Luke Bryan/Crash My Party/Capitol-UMG Nashville – 13
Little Big Town/Your Side Of The Bed/Capitol – 12
Chris Weaver Band/So Damn Beautiful/Tygart Music – 12
Steve Richard/Keep On Rollin’/Force MP – 12
Kacey Musgraves/Blowin’ Smoke/Mercury Nashville – 10
Thomas Rhett/It Goes Like This/Valory Music Group – 10
Greatest Spin Increase
Artist/song/label — spin+
Luke Bryan/Crash My Party/Capitol-UMG Nashville – 516
Carrie Underwood/See You Again/Arista – 426
Hunter Hayes/I Want Crazy/Atlantic-WMN – 404
Little Big Town/Your Side Of The Bed/Capitol – 307
Blake Shelton/Boys Round Here/Warner Bros. – 305
On Deck—Soon To Be Charting
Artist/song/label — spins
Emerson Drive/She’s My Kind Of Crazy/Open Road Recordings – 171
Jason Cassidy/Blame It On Waylon/Blake Records – 157
Breelan Angel/It’s My Turn/MisBhavin’ – 155
Scotty McCreery/See You Tonight/19 Ent.-Mercury – 154
Katie Armiger/Playin’ With Fire/Cold River – 145
 
Blaster Record’s Jared Ashley recently visited WGAR in Cleveland for a visit and performance to promote his latest single, "Last Train To Memphis." Pictured (L-R): Dave Collins (Blaster Records), Jared Ashley, Charley Connolly (PD, WGAR), Tom Porter (CEO, Blaster Entertainment), Dan Barbera (Management, Blaster).

Blaster Record’s Jared Ashley recently visited WGAR in Cleveland for a visit and performance to promote his latest single, “Last Train To Memphis.” Pictured (L-R): Dave Collins (Blaster Records), Jared Ashley, Charley Connolly (PD, WGAR), Tom Porter (CEO, Blaster Entertainment), Dan Barbera (Management, Blaster).


LandStar Entertainment's Adam Fears visited the staff at WUSY Chattanooga and performed his new single "There's a Girl Out There.” Pictured (L-R): Cowboy Kyle, Styckman, Gator Harrison, Adam Fears, Melissa Wagner, Bill "Dex" Poindexter.

LandStar Entertainment’s Adam Fears visited the staff at WUSY Chattanooga and performed his new single “There’s a Girl Out There.” Pictured (L-R): Cowboy Kyle, Styckman, Gator Harrison, Adam Fears, Melissa Wagner, Bill “Dex” Poindexter.


 
 

Charlie Cook On Air: Radio Can Help

CCook-onair-sm11Can’t we all be friends? As much as record and radio people talk each week about music, their respective families and whatever is going on out in the real world, there still seems like a fence that separates our interests.
I have often said I would have a hard time being a record promo person putting up with radio folks who promise and fail to deliver. Who ask for “stuff” in a non-quid pro quo world and who have favor slots for what always seems like the “other guy.” I know that being on the radio side has its challenges as there is only so much room on the radio and we are often made to feel like we’re either ingrates or idiots for not “hearing” a record that is being pitched that particular week. I also know as a radio programmer I get frustrated when I do hear a song, take a chance on it early and then have to wait 10-12 weeks before the label’s marketing plan for it and other songs on the chart gets its turn. I’m not sure who to blame.
Then there is the Music First deal. I love their positioning statement. “We are artists, musicians, civil rights leaders, organizations and community leaders who believe in fair pay for our work.” Apparently when Congress was not moved by just the singers, a more wide range of constituents was necessary to continue this push toward finding a new source of paying for past errors in judgment. Both in picking acts who failed to sell and in not seeing the trend away from physical copies of music early enough.
That’s actually for another time. I want to play nice today. Yet another study finds radio is the artist’s best friend. Maybe not some of the older performers who were shorted, not by radio airplay, but by their employers and partners. But today’s artists and those still learning a C chord in their bedrooms should realize radio is a great friend. I did an air shift Monday (April 22) on WKKW.  I am not a disc jockey any more. Well I guess I actually am. I love being on the air. I haven’t done a daily air shift since before iTunes took over the landscape. When there is an opening, I get to jump in when I want to. I wanted to on Monday.
I love Country Music. I love the performers and have been blessed to meet some of them and have conversations with them. I know this is not a big deal to many of you reading this, but because I have had access to some of the performers and because I care about their success, I talk about their accomplishments, their tours, their CDs and how many of them give back to the communities on the air.
I talked about Darius Rucker holding a benefit concert for St. Jude in June, and Zac Brown Band coming to Pittsburgh in July and playing Stagecoach this weekend in Indio, Calif. I talked about Thompson Square’s new CD and how Pioneer is a great CD for the The Band Perry. I talked about how their concert, outside of Boston, went off Friday night despite the tragedy 30 miles away and how the kids stepped up for the fans.
A recent study of over 1,000 people from the NPD group found 54 percent of them said radio announcements would spur them to buy more music. I want my radio stations to lead the way with information about the artists and how much the relationship between country radio, country artists and the fans is paramount to all of us. Less than one in five listeners look to online recommendations and less than that number to Facebook for new music choices.
I strongly believe we have to talk about the music and the artists and make them come to life. The hard core fans will search out this information but the casual listener needs to have someone show them the way. Radio is the way. I hope programmers step up and allow their disc jockeys to tell the listener about the music. I did it and I never stopped the music once where the clock didn’t call for it because of commercials.
The No. 1 CD of the week should not debut with 100,000 sales. We have to help get it back to 300,000 or 400,000 sales. Radio can help.
(The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of MusicRow.)
 

On The Cover: Kenny Chesney (Apr/May 2013)

KCKenny Chesney never intended to make this record. There was never a point when any of these songs were in danger of becoming an album. Until life shifted and some songs he put on tape arose, Life On A Rock was just the moments in his life the songwriter/singer from Luttrell, Tenn. wanted to capture for himself.
“It’s easy to let those moments go,” says the man who’s sold over a million tickets to each of his past 10 tours, won the Country Music Association and Academy of Country Music’s Entertainer of the Year Award a combined eight times, had 24 No. 1 hits and sold over 30 million albums. “You get busy and let moments go. Other things come up, the moments pass…”
Written over time, written for no one but himself, Life On A Rock is a handful of postcards from the life Kenny Chesney has led when he’s not being the biggest ticket-seller of the 21st century. Culled from people, places, moments and feelings of a driven man at rest, it celebrates what life gives when you yield to its inherent rhythms and the joy of friendship, the world around you and slowing down.
“Most of these songs were written, but I didn’t have an emotional center or something that held them together,” Chesney allows of the most revealing project of his career. “Then, well, things happen… and you start to look at life differently, and you realize how precious what you have, what you had is.” There’s no getting around Chesney being the biggest ticket-seller of the 21st century, but part of what’s made him connect like very few artists is his ability to know where the fans are: to capture their lives and the dignity of being where you are. Joy, yes, absolutely, but also the deeper truth of small towns, real moments, the honest connection between friends, lovers, those moved on.
“I kind of believe the fans and their friends are just like the rest of my friends… There’s that certain place that’s the thread of their lives, but no matter where you go, that place stays with you: who you were, what you went through, the friends you made, loves you lost.”
CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE YOUR COPY OF THE 2013 INCHARGE
Like so much of Life On A Rock, the songs came together unconventionally. Having come of age as a young writer with the likes of Whitey Shafer and Dean Dillon, Chesney has a deep reverence for the creation of songs. He understands the process of writing for albums, but he also recognizes the power of capturing a small truth that holds a lot of lives.
“In that, I was able to really soul search, to evaluate – and really ask, ‘What do I want? What kind of artist do I want to be?’ You don’t think about that when you’re going 100 miles an hour, but when you do…”
When you do, you make Life On A Rock, an album of reflection, of fun, of laughter shared. You can embrace the euphoria of “Coconut Tree,” a duet with the ever quixotic Willie Nelson, the Tom Petty-esque swagger of “Pirate Flag,” the album’s one true insurrection-where-you-are anthem, or the contemplative “Happy On The Hey Now (A Song For Kristi).”
“That’s what I want: people to find their lives and their friends, their challenges, letting go’s and good-byes,” says Chesney. “In the end, I think we’re all so much the same different as we are, and that’s what this is about. If I can touch your heart or your life or your soul, then that’s what music is all about.”
Artist Name: Kenny Chesney
Label: Blue Chair Records/Columbia Nashville
Current Album: Life On A Rock
Current Single: “Pirate Flag”
Current Video: “Pirate Flag”
Current Producer(s): Buddy Cannon & Kenny Chesney
Hometown: Luttrell, Tenn.
Management: Morris Artists Management, Clint Higham
Booking: Dale Morris & Associates, Mike Betterton
Recent Hits: “Come Over,” “You And Tequila,” “Feel Like A Rock Star”
Awards: Four CMA Entertainer of the Year Awards and four ACM Entertainer of the Year Awards. He has nine Billboard Touring awards including seven ‘Top Package’ Awards for his tours
RIAA Certs to date: Kenny has sold more than 30 million albums including three that have been certified quadruple platinum. Additionally, he has more than 20 million digital transactions
Birthday: March 26
Interesting Facts: Produced two sports documentaries for ESPN, Boys of Fall and Color Orange: The Condredge Holloway Story.

Billy Currington Indicted For Elderly Abuse

billy currington mugshot1Billy Currington has turned himself in after a Savannah judge issued a warrant for his arrest, according to the Chatham County Sheriff’s Office. The singer, whose bond is set at $27,700, has been indicted on felony charges of terroristic acts and threats, and a count of abuse, neglect and exploitation of an elderly person. Under Georgia law, each charge is a felony punishable by one to five years in prison.
The charges came after a 70-year-old tour boat captain, Charles Harvey Ferrelle, said he was chased by the entertainer from a waterfront home on Tybe Creek in Chatham County, Ga., to a dock where Currington threatened him while shouting profanities. Ferrelle, a charter boat captain, was giving a boat tour around Tybee Island, when he passed Currington’s property on April 15, according to a police report. The report continues that Currington yelled at the boat from shore and then jumped in his own boat and followed as Ferrelle went to his slip at a nearby dock.

Ferrelle says he “feared for his life,” and that Currington threatened that “he was going to (expletive) Mr. Ferrelle up,” according to the police report.

Currington addressed the situation on Twitter on April 24, thanking fans for their support. “hey guys, I wanted to thank everyone for the huge amount of support that I have received already. Unfortunately, I can’t comment on this situation as this is an ongoing legal matter. It means a lot to me to have your support during this time.”He previously commented on the situation via Twitter on April 17, saying, “Harrassing (sic) artist often at their home by boat should be illegal. thas (sic) all i know.” Currington is a native of Georgia and has enjoyed success with several hit singles, including “Pretty Good At Drinkin’ Beer,” “People Are Crazy,” “Good Directions,” and several others.

Combustion Music Promotes Kenley Flynn

Combustion Music

Pictured (L-R): Chris van Belkom, Kenley Flynn, Chris Farren

Combustion Music announces the promotion of Kenley Flynn to the position of Creative Director. Flynn has been with Combustion since 2010 where he began as an intern and was later promoted to Office Manager. He will continue to help oversee the creative management of Combustion’s roster of songwriters including Ashley Gorley, Blair Daly, Brett James, Matthew West, Kelly Archer, Matt Jenkins, Zach Crowell, Russell Dickerson and Native Run.

“Kenley’s creative instincts, and his presence and respect within the community have all skyrocketed over the past couple years, and we are thrilled to be partnering with him in a long-term arrangement,” says Combustion President Chris Farren. Flynn can be reached at 615-515-5490.
 

The Producer’s Chair: Anthony Smith

Anthony Smith

Anthony Smith


By James Rea
I’m sure everyone on Music Row who knows Anthony Smith must have smiled when Curb announced on Rowfax he was producing Sweetwater Rain. Nashville labels and artists have been after Smith to produce for the past seven years and with good reason. Smith has produced over 500 sessions since he got his first publishing deal with Almo-Irving in 2000 including his own album, which got him signed as an artist to Mercury in 2003. In his first year with Almo-Irving, Smith had 45 cuts, three ASCAP Awards and he won MusicRow Breakthrough Songwriter of the Year.He penned George Strait’s hits “Run” and “Cowboys Like Us,” Trace Adkins’ “Chrome” and “I’m Tryin’,” Tim McGraw’s “Kristofferson” and “Kill Myself,” Montgomery Gentry’s “Whattaya Think About That” and Rascal Flatts’ “My Worst Fear.” He has penned songs for Faith Hill, Trick Pony, Kenny Rogers, Sammy Kershaw, Lorrie Morgan, Lonestar, Van Zant, Shooter Jennings, Josh Gracin, Trisha Yearwood and others.
Born in Warsaw, Ind. and raised in Oneida, Tenn. from age 2, Smith picked up his first guitar at the tender age of 5. “Being a musician, from the time that I was kid I was writing melodies and arranging music,” says Smith. “I got my first electric guitar when I was 10 and I became the bandleader in church when I was 13, teaching harmony parts to 30-year-olds.”
In 1996, he bought a cheap guitar, packed up his songs and headed for Nashville when he was 28. Smith landed a job working for the cable company and began performing at writer’s nights. 
“When I first came to town there was a publishing company that would always say things like: ‘We’re looking for another “Indian Outlaw” for Tim McGraw,’ so I was trying to please them and go down that road instead of being that creative person that I was inside,” says Smith. “One day I got fed up with it and decided to write what I wanted to write, no matter what. After playing for a couple of weeks at the Broken Spoke, publishers who had heard about me started offering deals.”
One of those deals involved Barbara Cloyd. “I had been talking to about five different publishers who want to sign me,” says Smith. “She made me promise that I’d talk to Scott Gunter at Almo-Irving, so I took him two songs. He wanted me to go and write something by myself. I wrote two songs, brought them in and Scott signed me to a one-year deal. I had never really co-written but Gunter put his job on the line when he signed me and I’m forever grateful that he challenged me.”
Smith quickly hit his stride as a writer in his first year and 75-percent of everything he wrote got cut.
“I was just writing for me, but I was still getting cuts,” says Smith. “I didn’t think publishers wanted to sign me as an artist, so I was reluctant to let anybody know that was what I really wanted to do. But I was producing my own demos with Bobby Terry. We spent more time on them because we had access to his studio and we were developing a sound. Bobby is a true genius in the studio and it became evident through the demos that we needed to shop it. By that time, the publishing company had figured it out. We did introductions to the record labels and played them a few songs and in no time, everybody was offering me a deal. That was in 2003 and I was overwhelmed.”
Producer’s Chair: What was the process?
Anthony Smith: We were mainly sending my demo to the labels and they’d call back and say, ‘Dreamworks, Sony and Mercury have offered you a deal.’ I think that was powered by all the success I’d had as writer. Lyric Street asked me, ‘Who do you want to produce you?’ and they started throwing out names and I said, ‘I’m only interested in a deal with Bobby Terry.’ Labels weren’t used to having artists come in dictating the terms and I saw a few jaws drop but they couldn’t deny the music and I signed with Mercury in 2003. The label’s roster included Mark Wills, Steve Azar, James Otto, Marcelle, David Nail and Shania Twain.
PC: Who signed you to Mercury?
AS: Luke Lewis, but I think Mercury signed me because everybody else wanted to. I don’t think they really got the record. I had pulled a bunch of songs that I had on hold with Faith [Hill] and Tim and Alan Jackson, to put them on my record. On my first radio tour with several of the promotion staff, they asked me about two particular songs and said, ‘What does this song mean?’ I was devastated so I excused myself from the table. I talked to my manager and said, ‘It’s over.’ He said, ‘What do you mean, we just got started.’ I said, ‘The label doesn’t even get my record.’ Radio promotion guys want the safest thing because it’s the easiest to work and these songs were unsafe and a little ahead of their time because I’m always trying to reinvent.
PC: In 2005, after releasing three Top 40 singles, the label wanted Smith to make another record but he asked to be released from the label and took a few years off when his family suffered two tragedies. Smith unexpectedly lost both his father and his brother, in a short period of time. Smith heard that Porter Wagoner was playing his music between sets at the Grand Ole Opry, and Smith was later asked to perform on the Opry stage.
AS: I did two songs and Porter came out and asked me to do a third song. I took a Sharpie out of my pocket and asked Porter to sign my guitar, and I was later honored to have him sing on my Sunshine album. Porter had just been inducted into the Hall of Fame and this was one of his last songs before he passed. We used to sit and talk on his front porch and Porter and I became really good friends.
PC: Do you prefer to be in the studio, or on stage?
AS: My favorite thing is to be in the studio, arranging music, talking to fellow musicians and sharing ideas. I’m very hands-on in the studio, so it was a natural evolution for me. After hearing my demos, labels started approaching me about producing. But I still had the artist bug in me and I was writing for myself more than anybody else, so I couldn’t take on any artists.
PC: When did you decide to immerse yourself in producing?
AS:  About three years ago, I decided that’s what I was going to do. Before that, I couldn’t take on the responsibility of somebody’s career. Producers, early on, have got a lot of mentoring to do in some cases when a new artist is not signed yet, or even if they are signed.
PC: Do you have a favorite engineer?
AS: Brian Tankersley, he’s one of the best in the world. He’s done a lot with Shania and Mutt Lang. He was the one responsible for all those re-mixes back in the ‘90s.
PC: Will the industry survive the lack of album sales?
AS: I was just on a panel the other day for Renee Grant-Williams with Paul Worley and he made a great point. He said historically, before recordings, there was only sheet music. When recordings came along publishers panicked, not knowing what to do. It took a while but after a little changeover period, they were able to make more money on recordings. The same thing happened when records went to disc. We’re just in another transition. The way that iTunes and these other companies pay will have to change, so that it’s fair to the writers and publishers and artists. As iTunes’ competition grows that will change and the internet will probably become a large source of revenue for publishers and writers, but for now, we’re still in the interim stages.
If songwriters can’t make a living, there’s going to be fewer songwriters. Fewer songwriters mean fewer good songs. People who believe in downloading for free must realize that if artists like Elvis or Elton John or The Eagles didn’t have a budget to work with, from potential monies that would come in, we would have never heard those masterpiece records. There never would have been a “Hotel California.” There has to be something to finance that kind of recording and that kind of talent.
PC: Putting out an album takes an enormous amount of time. Can the process be sped up?
AS: If you sign a record deal, you gotta find songs. That’s been the traditional way. But many artists are writing their own songs, so it’s beginning to get a little quicker. The process of finding 12 songs, for a record that you’re really proud of, can take a year. Then when you are finished the label has to set up a single and shoot a video and that usually takes about four or five months. Generally, that’s about the going timeframe.
PC: Do artists have a better chance of getting a deal if they bring private money to the table?
AS: What the labels want is an established act with a following. They want to sign artists who are building up a fan base from touring and social networking. If you’re doing 500-seaters and you’re getting a crowd and the label sees you selling out venues, they know that they can move 100,000 records. It lowers the risk.
PC: How important is the “IT FACTOR”?
AS: I first met Taylor Swift when she was about 17. She didn’t have any hits out there yet but she was on the orange carpet at the ACM Awards. She was a virtual nobody, but there was something about her that was ‘It.’ She radiated charisma. She was a star before anyone even heard her. When she got in front of the cameras it was like fireworks. That kind of ‘It Factor’ is something you’re born with.
PC: Has country radio become a little too generic?
AS: When I was growing up, the one thing that you could say about country music was that there was no mistaking the voices. You could not mistake Dolly for Loretta or Loretta for Tammy Wynette or Waylon for Willie. People who are true originals and creative at that level have issues, addictive personalities, some are bi-polar, very eccentric, and not politically correct and they’re not easy to manage. I think that this is a politically correct environment and I hate that. Conway Twitty was saying very sexually suggestive stuff, Ray Stevens did ‘The Streak’ and today you could never do that. We do have some amazing artists out there and I’d like to see country push the envelope and unleash them.
Smith is currently producing Sweetwater Rain, Lucy Angel, Shea Fisher and 13.
 
For more, visit www.theproducerschair.com

Artist Update (4-25-13)

Rodeowave Entertainment’s Phil Vassar dropped by the MRN (Motor Racing Network) offices this week to chat up his “Love Is Alive” single.

Pictured (L-R): Marty Hough, Producer of "NASCAR USA"; Vassar; Valerie Gladden, Manager, Radio Partnerships and Promotions; and Rodeowave's Jennifer Shaffer.

Pictured (L-R): Marty Hough, Producer of “NASCAR USA”; Vassar; Valerie Gladden, Manager, Radio Partnerships and Promotions; and Rodeowave’s Jennifer Shaffer.

• • •

Toby KeithToby Keith will visit and perform for troops and their families stationed in the Philippines, Guam and Hawaii as part of his 11th USO/Armed Forces Entertainment tour April 27 – May 7. As part of his three-country USO trip, Keith will perform hits from his upcoming “Toby Keith Hammer Down Tour Presented by Ford F-Series” – which kicks off June 8 in Ozark, Ark. Additionally, he’ll perform several USO shows for sailors, airmen, soldiers and Marines. The shows are private and open only to military ID holders.

• • •

VinceGill2_LgVince Gill Will Join William Shatner for the 23rd Annual “Priceline.com Hollywood Charity Horse Show, Sponsored by Wells Fargo, slated For April 27, at the Los Angeles Equestrian Center. Guests will be treated to the arena show with world-class reigning competition, followed by a dinner catered by Stonefire Grill. The evening will conclude with a performance by Vince Gill.
Proceeds will benefit special needs children’s charities across the city of Los Angeles, including AHEAD with Horses, Camp Max Straus, Childrens Hospital Los Angeles, Hollenbeck Police Activities League, St. Jude Childrens Research Hosptial, The Painted Turtle and other charities. Information about the 23(rd) Annual “Priceline.com Hollywood Charity Horse Show, Sponsored by Wells Fargo” at www.horseshow.org, or 818.509.2290.

Streamsound's Dakota Bradley Releases First Single April 29

Dakota Bradley11Streamsound Records’ newest addition to its artist roster, Dakota Bradley, will release his first single to country radio on April 29. “Somethin’ Like Somethin'” was co-produced by Tim McGraw and Byron Gallimore, and written by Mark Irwin, Josh Kear and Shane McAnally. Bradley, an 18-year-old St. Louis native, currently resides in Nashville and has been visiting radio stations for the past three months on a national radio tour.

Dakota is the real deal,” says McGraw. “He is a great young artist who defies the trends and lives for his music. His voice is unique and instantly recognizable, and his ability to convey pure emotion in his music draws the listener in from the very first word of every song. Working with him on this project has been a lot of fun. The single is a great summer song and I really think Country radio is going to dig it.” 

 

dakota bradley ballcap11“I am truly blessed to have had Byron Gallimore and Tim McGraw co-produce the single and my album,” said Bradley. “I pinch myself everyday to make sure this isn’t a dream. I am really thankful for them both and for Streamsound Records for taking a chance on me.”

To listen to Bradley’s single “Somethin’ Like Somethin’,” click here.