Primetime Nashville: "Don't Open That Door"

nashville-abcSeason 2, Episode 5: “Don’t Open That Door”
Rayna (Connie Britton)’s voice gets tested, and someone gets arrested on last night (Wednesday, Oct. 23)’s episode of Nashville.
A Family Up In Flames
Tandy (Judith Hoag) gave information to the police that could ruin Lamar (Powers Boothe) during the last episode, after she discovered he was involved in her mother’s death. However, to receive immunity, she is forced to not talk about the situation with anyone, including sister Rayna. That decision comes back to bite her later in the episode. She discovers that after a blowup with label chief Jeff (Oliver Hudson), Rayna had told Jeff that she was going to buy out her contract with Edgehill and fully fund her boutique label Highway 65. She would need $20 million to make it work, and persuaded Lamar to give her the funds to complete the buyout.
After the meeting with Jeff, Lamar is arrested for racketeering, extortion and conspiracy. Lamar, meanwhile, thinks Teddy is behind his arrest.
Moving On
Juliette (Hayden Panettiere), ready to move on with her career, holds a press conference about her tour; astute viewers will notice a few of Music City’s own in the audience of reporters.
None too pleased with opening act Layla, she devises a plan to shorten Layla’s performance time on the tour by inviting Will (Chris Carmack) to audition for an opening slot on the tour. He successfully completes the audition, signing on for the tour.
Of course, she needs a guitar player in order to tour. She first turns to Deacon (Charles Esten), who reveals that due to his injury, he is out of commission. Juliette also lets it slip about Rayna’s injured singing voice.
She then turns to Avery (Jonathan Jackson), offering him an apology; when he still turns down the guitarist offer, she gives him the keys to her top-shelf studio as a goodwill gesture.
Fear Factor
One of the episode’s most dramatic moments comes after Juliette lets it slip about Rayna’s voice to Deacon. Deacon, still convinced that his own music days are over, confronts Rayna about her voice. He repeatedly asks her, “Can you sing?” until she finally replies, “I don’t know! Everything is different now.”
Later in the episode she faces her fear that her musical gift is gone. Rayna surprises Juliette at a charity event by asking her to become part of the Grand Ole Opry. Superstar singer Luke Wheeler is also at the event; an impromptu onstage performance request from superstar Luke forces Rayna to test out her voice in front of an audience of fans. She performs the entirely appropriate “Best Songs Come From Broken Hearts” (penned by Bonnie Bishop and Ronnie Rogers). After a shaky start, she proves that her voice is indeed in fine shape, delivering an emotional performance and drawing a standing ovation from the crowd.
Friends of Friends
Avery, Gunnar (Sam Palladio), and Zoe collaborate on a song called “Be My Girl” in this episode; Zoe and Gunnar’s relationship later turns physical.
Meanwhile, Layla (Ashley Peeples) uses Scarlett’s trusting nature against her at a red carpet event; earlier in the episode a media trainer tries to prepare Scarlett for working a red carpet and speaking to media. Later in the dressing room while preparing for the show, Layla notices Scarlett trying to memorize her talking points; Layla rips up the notes and tells Scarlett to be herself. That advice proves disastrous after a reporter asks Scarlett about her uncle Deacon’s carwreck.
The episode ends with Scarlett O’Connor (Clare Bowen) stomping through Deacon’s front door, clearly upset about her first turn on the red carpet. She and Deacon sing “This Town”; the song was co-written by Jaida Dreyer, Cory Mayo and Andrew Rollins.

Producer's Chair: Keith Thomas

keith thomas

Keith Thomas


By James Rea
If one were to ask Keith Thomas why he has been so successful, I’m sure he would say that it’s his ability to find star quality talent. Keith’s early Grammy-winning productions with Bebe & Cece Winans, Amy Grant and Vanessa Williams, when they were just getting started, propelled his career to having one of the most diverse and immense discographies in Nashville. With over 40 No. 1 Billboard Hits as a songwriter, his production body of work includes James Ingram, Peabo Bryson, Michael Bolton, Luther Vandross, Brian McKnight, Yolanda Adams, Trisha Yearwood, Mandy Moore, Selena and Puff Johnson. Jon Secada, Deborah Cox, Regina Belle, Wendy Moten and a cast of artists on the Touched By An Angel soundtrack, which peaked at No. 1 on the Billboard Top Christian Albums chart and No. 3 on the Top Country Charts in 1998.
Although Thomas will tell you himself that he is as “Country” as anyone in Nashville, you wouldn’t know it. None of his seven Grammy awards, 10 Grammy nominations, one Academy Award for Best Song, three Dove Awards, one Dove Award nomination or his two Grammy nominations for producer of the year were Country, which leads one to believe: all evidence to the contrary, but not so…
“I grew up playing gospel music in The Thomas Family band with my sister, my brother-in-law and my Dad, who was a hillbilly musician who played with the Sons of The Pioneers, early-on before they blew up,” says Keith. “We weren’t allowed to listen to anything except Country & gospel. I had to sneak a Carpenters record into the house, that’s how bad it was. We didn’t have hot running water or an inside bathroom until I was 13-years-old. There was a slop jar on the back porch where we fed the pigs and we had cows and pigs and chickens runnin’ in the yard. Momma would say, ‘Go get a chicken’ and I’d grab one and pop its head.'”
keith thomas family photo

Keith Thomas (right) with his father.


Born and raised in the Atlanta suburb of Conyers, Ga., Keith was singing lead with his father’s gospel group at the age of nine. His self-taught style as a keyboard player led him, while still in high school, to recording sessions in Atlanta and later to the gospel act, The Sharrett Brothers, for whom he wrote several songs, while finishing his college studies. The first time his ability as a songwriter was fully recognized, however, was when Ronnie Milsap included two of his compositions on his Milsap Magic album in the late 70s. Milsap invited Keith to bring his family to Nashville and by 1979, he relocated and become a staff writer for Milsap Music.
“Ronnie would go out of town and give me his studio and his engineer and I would spend 18 hrs a day in a state-of the art studio, while he was on the road, for about a year and a half,” said Thomas. “I was playing on Ronnie’s records and producing my own demos and I eventually got a loan and bought a huge rig that I took to sessions. So I learned to engineer and produce that way. The time I spent at Ronnie’s with all that free studio time, I learned so much and will always be grateful”
A year later he took a similar post with gospel label Word Records (for whom he had recorded with the Sharrett Brothers). As well as two of his own solo albums for Word, he became producer to Carman, First Call, Paul Smith, the Gaither Vocal Band, Kenny Marks and The Imperials.
After producing BeBe and CeCe’s, 1987 Grammy Award-winning debut, Thomas established his own independent production and publishing company, Yellow Elephant Music, in Franklin, Tenn., and in 1992 he purchased the Bennett House in Franklin for his own studio.
From that point on, Thomas was linked with a series of high-profile artists, beginning with Whitney Houston (co-writing “Take A Chance”), Vanessa Williams (“Save The Best For Last,” “The Sweetest Days” and ” Colors Of The Wind,” which garnered his Academy Award for Best Song).
Once settled in The Bennett House, Keith turned his attention again to Amy Grant by writing and producing “Baby, Baby,” “I Will Remember You” and “House Of Love” for her House of Love album. The album had several hits for Keith including the songs, “Lucky One” and the title track. Keith produced records for James Ingram, Peabo Bryson, Deborah Cox, Regina Belle and Wendy Moten. In 1995, Keith wrote and produced the hit song, “I Could Fall In Love” for Selena.
In 1997, Thomas completed tracks for Amy Grant’s next album, Behind The Eyes and Vanessa Williams’ follow up album, Next. He also produced records for Michael Bolton, Luther Vandross, Brian McKnight, Tamia and Puff Johnson.
In early 1998, Keith produced several songs for Vanessa and Jon Secada for the movie, Dance With Me. He also produced the track, “I Do (Cherish You)” for 98°’s multi-platinum album on Universal Records, 98° and Rising. The song was also featured in the Julia Roberts/Hugh Grant romantic comedy, Notting Hill. In Addition, Keith was nominated for a Grammy for Producer of the Year in 1998.
In late 1998, Thomas served as the principle Producer and co-Executive Producer for the multi-artist Touched By An Angel and in early 1999, Thomas produced the track “Precious Wings” on MJJ artist Tatyana Ali for the Sesame Street movie, Elmo In Grouchland. During that year he also produced tracks for Yolanda Adams, Wild Orchid and Williams. Thomas also produced the song, “You’re Where I Belong” for Trisha Yearwood for the movie, Stuart Little.
In 2000, Keith produced At Last for Gladys Knight and he wrote and produced the hit song, “I Wanna Be With You” for Mandy Moore. The song was featured in the Columbia Pictures film, Center Stage.
Over the past 13 years, Thomas has produced 43 more albums, whose artists include Carman, Charlotte Church, Jessica Simpson, Steve Camp, Jordan Pruitt, Rissi Palmer, Heather Headley, Laura Turner and Forever Jones, just to name a few.
You can watch Thomas (the on-camera mentor/producer/personality) in a new reality show, Chasing Nashville, which airs on Lifetime Oct. 22. The show tracks seven female artists from North Carolina, West Virginia & Kentucky.
The Producer’s Chair: When did you stop the pursuit of an artist career?
Keith Thomas: I think when I got married and the responsibility of having a young son (Jeremy) at the time. I was offered the opportunity to go on the road with Amy Grant and open for her. During that time period, we were new to Nashville and I just couldn’t leave my wife by herself. So the artist thing took a back seat and so did the acting.
Acting?
I wanted to be an actor even more than I did a musician or a producer. I had a scholarship to act. The Alliance Theater in Atlanta offered to send me to New York and promised me all lead roles if I would go. So my Dad being a primitive Baptist Minister went to one of the rehearsals with me and some weird stuff happened. I was about 18 and he said, ‘You’re not going to New York.’ So that dream went away very quickly. My first trip to New York was when I went to meet Vanessa Williams to do ‘Save the Best for Last.’ I’m walking down the streets of New York and there was a theater with the door open and I walked in and the smell just took me, I had a panic attack … I was there again. So it’s been since college since I acted but it’s still in there. I’d love to do that.
Country is now more accepting of new grooves. Considering your pop and R&B background, does that attract you more?
KT: Absolutely, I love Country and I grew up on it but growing up I just felt like I wanted more in terms of chords and arrangements and orchestral stuff. I wanted to go the full gambit, but at the core it’s who I am. I love the fact that Country music is more accepting of programming.
Was it growing up in Atlanta that got you into R&B and pop?
KT: I started discovering The Stylistics and Gino Vanelli, The Commodores and The O’Jays and I just gravitated to it. So much so that, by the time I was making records, people didn’t know if I was black or white. The first time I met Vanessa Williams in New York, she walked in and said: ‘Oh, you’re white.’
When you left Milsap’s publishing company, how did you wind up at Word?
KT: Neal Joseph was head of A&R at Word. Mike Blanton, who managed Amy Grant, introduced me. I started doing sessions for Brown Bannister who would sometimes use me for background vocals and arranging. Neil had a Word Sampler project that he wanted me to do. They had 4-5 artists and whoever got the biggest response got a record deal. So Kenny Marks, the artist that I produced got the record deal. Just as I was finishing that, I got Steve Camp. I did his record, Run To The Battle and it was No. 1 for six months.
To what do you attribute its success?
KT: At the time I felt like I was producing a little ahead of where the gospel music thing was and it was kind of pushing the envelope. And then even more so when I got into BeBe and CeCe. BeBe thought he was going to get kicked out of the church because of some of the stuff we were doing. But it worked; people accepted it and they became huge icons.
When artists like Peabo Bryson and Luther Vandross are looking for songs, is their method the same as the Nashville song search, as we know it?
KT: It’s different. They have their individual songwriters and producers who they reach out to. The pop world is a little closed off and a different process.
How long have you been working with Amy Grant?
KT: I was her band leader on her very first concert at Vanderbilt. Her then husband Gary Chapman and I were writing songs together so, that was beginning of it. After I did that show, they offered me to go on the road and have 20 min in front of her. After passing on that, we stayed in touch.
How did you meet Bebe and Cece?
KT: I went to visit a friend on the PTL Club and I met Bebe there. I said, ‘I’d love to try and get you a deal.’ I’m doing a solo project for Word and I’d love for you to do a guest vocal spot on the project and we can take that and shop it for a deal. And that’s what happened. He won a Grammy with the song that we wrote, “It’s Only Natural,” and that got them their deal on Sparrow.
How did you meet Vanessa Williams?
KT: I got a call from Ed Eckstein who was running Mercury. He said; ‘I love your work, I heard the Bebe and Cece Winans stuff that you’ve done and I’d like to get you involved with Vanessa Williams, would you come to New York and meet her?’ So I took eight songs with me that I had written. They were just tracks and melodies and Ed said: ‘I love these. I want Cynthia Weil to write the lyrics.’ I didn’t know who she was but I said great. So he faxed over her discography. So I’m looking at that fax and oh my God, I felt like a fool. So I called her when I got home and we wrote those eight songs together. Six of them made the album. She’s the one who also introduced me to James Ingram. She’d say, ‘Who else do you want to work with?’ And I’d say my goal is to work with James Ingram. In a couple of days I had a message on my machine. Now James is one of my best friends. He’s my brother. In many ways, I’ve accomplished what I wanted to accomplish.
Who has been one of your most significant mentors along the way?
KT: David Sonenberg who also managed The Fugees, Black Eyed Peas, Lauryn Hill, and The Spin Doctors managed me for 18 years and he changed my life. I was the only producer that he managed at the time.
How did he change your life?
KT: He taught me how the business really worked. It’s very complicated and very political. I was pretty naive, especially coming into the pop market. Understanding how that all worked. I’ve watched him do so many deals and consequently, I’ve been able to do the same kind of deals. He and I split around 2002 and then Irving Azoff managed me for a while.
What is the most important aspect of artist development that you do?
KT: The most important aspect, I guess would be getting an artist to a place where they’re prepared. Not just in singing and artistry but, what to expect in the industry, teaching them how to connect with the fans, important steps with the media and understanding what happens with fame and money and how to handle that. Each artist has different areas that need to be worked on.
Do you prefer to work with artists who write?
KT: I do. I feel like the artist has to have something to say and it’s got to be believable. If they can’t sell it, it doesn’t work for me. It can work but it’s more about the production than it is about the artist and I’m all about the artist. I like an artist that knows who they are and willing to do whatever it takes to make it. The music industry is about taking one opportunity at a time and capitalizing on it and going to the next step. Very rarely do you just get that one shot and it takes you all the way. You gotta build it and you gotta be able to work and I don’t want to be a producer that works harder than the artist. I’ve done that and it doesn’t pay off.
Tell me about your company, Levosia Entertainment.
KT: It’s a production, publishing and management company. I signed Celica Westbrook four years ago, who was on The Voice. Forever Jones had their own reality show last year on Bounce TV. They’re a black gospel group and their 25-year-old daughter Dominique is a star.
Are you working with anyone else right now?
KT: I’ve got one girl in Atlanta who is a female Michael Bublé. I went down to Atlanta to shoot interviews of my family members for my brother’s birthday. So the younger of my two brothers said: ‘hey, why don’t we go and do an interview at the house where we grew up.’ So I’ve got my camera out front and he says: ‘I’m going to knock on the door.’ We talked the beautiful 24-year-old girl who opened the door, into letting us come through the rental. So when we were done, I said to her: ‘What do you do?’ She said, ‘I sell organic popsicles…and I like to sing.’ So I turned my camera on and asked her to sing and she killed me, a capella. She came up to Nashville and we went in the studio and it was shocking how great it was. Her popsicles are for sale at Whole Foods for $3 a piece.
Do you work with the same engineer all the time?
KT: Yes, Jonathan Crone. He’s been with me for seven yrs now.He’s from Berkley. He plays guitar, produces and he writes … the whole package.
Have the changes in the industry since the ’90s affected every genre, or did some escape?
KT: It’s everywhere. Even the urban side of things, which is where the big sales are right now and the Top 40 dance music are lucrative, but not like it was 10 years ago. I just read that this used to be a $38 billion industry a decade ago and now it’s a $16 billion industry. Buying singles instead of albums and the whole sharing thing I get, but at the same time there are so many people that never get paid. Like Lady Gaga having 1 million spins and only receiving $162, you can’t make a living doing that. The art is not as important any more. The democratization of the music itself has driven the cost down, but it’s also driven the revenue down. People don’t need it as much because they have so many other forms of entertainment. Back in the day, my per-track fee was $80,000 per track and from that I could pretty much count on what I was going to get on the back end. Now, the track fees are, well let’s just say, they’re not what they used to be and there’s very little back end. So, whatever you get up front is basically, what you’re going to get. And hopefully you have the single.
KT: I spend so much time trying to figure things out because I want to become part of that process. Until we get the whole streaming thing figured out, it’s just morphing into whatever it’s going to be. I don’t know what that is yet. I do know that there are more artists out there than there’s ever been. I’m deep into marketing. How do I get somebody’s attention for 20 seconds? I don’t know where it’s going to go but I want to be a part of that process and figure it out.
What would you like your future to hold?
KT: Ultimately for me, down the road, it’s either to have my own label or go into a situation where I can control that. I want to be in a place where I can oversee it all because of my track record with finding talent, even from back in the day, when I signed Katy Perry. One thing I didn’t tell you about, I’m working on Danny Gokey’s new project.
If you could produce anyone you wanted, who would that be today?
KT: Michael Bublé, Bruno Mars and Justin Timberlake.
For more, visit theproducerschair.com
 

MusicRowPics: Krystal Keith

Krystal Keith Artist Visit

Krystal Keith Artist Visit


Show Dog-Universal’s Krystal Keith stopped by the MusicRow office yesterday (Oct. 23) to preview songs from her upcoming debut album, Whiskey & Lace, which releases Dec. 10. Keith, who resides in Oklahoma, took three years to complete the project, co-writing with top songwriters including Craig Wiseman, Bobby Pinson, Rodney Clawson, Lynn Hutton and Chris Tompkins, and selecting songs for the project. “I realized through the process that I love co-writing even more than writing by myself,” says Keith. “I like to bounce ideas off another creative person.”
During her visit, Keith performed the album’s title track, which she co-wrote with Clawson and Hutton. She also performed “Doin’ It,” which was penned by Pinson and Keith’s father, Country superstar Toby Keith. “I’ve never actually co-written a song with him, but he is a mentor,” says Keith. “I’ll take songs to him for direction or advice. He co-wrote three or four songs for my album.”
She worked with songwriter/producer Nathan Chapman on the project. “He’s one of the most talented people I’ve been around, and I’ve been around a lot of creative people,” says Keith. She co-wrote her current single, “Get Your Redneck On” with Chapman. “One day I thought, ‘You know, there hasn’t been a song about being a redneck from a female perspective since Gretchen Wilson’s “Redneck Woman.”‘ When we met to write, he mentioned the exact same idea and I got so excited about that. Nathan’s not a redneck, so he’d ask, ‘How does a redneck do this?’ or ‘How would a redneck say that?'”
“Get Your Redneck On” is a laid-back approach to the redneck lifestyle, according to Keith. “In high school, me and my friends would park our trucks around a campfire and listen to music. We’d go muddin’ during the day. When we were writing ‘Get Your Redneck On,’ I knew it couldn’t be a hardcore redneck song; it’s got to portray the other side of it.”
Backed by a guitarist and keyboard player (who also provided some tightly woven harmonies), Keith wrapped her three-song performance with an excellent cover of the bluesy classic “Son of a Preacher Man.” It’s another testament to the variety that permeates Keith’s music. “I’m really eclectic,” she says. “I love all the phases country has gone through–the rock, the red dirt, all of them. I wanted to incorporate all my favorite phases into my music, so I took time making sure we have a variety of songs.”
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Nashville Funds ABC 'For The Love of Music' Documentary

love of musicThe hour-long film For The Love of Music: The Story of Nashville will debut on Sunday, Nov. 3 on ABC. The film was produced by Music City itself; For The Love of Music lists Butch Spyridon, of the Convention and Visitors Corporation, as an executive producer. The film was made for $300,000, which was paid for by a federal grant originally allocated for marketing the city of Nashville after the 2010 flood, according to nashvillepublicradio.com.
“It was a gamble, make no mistake,” Spyridon says. “We were spending some money that wasn’t really in the budget when we decided to go do it.”
Spyridon hired an out-of-town director to interview more than 30 artists over the course of 18 months. The film includes interviews and information on an eclectic array of artists who call Nashville their musical home, ranging from country stalwarts Marty Stuart, Eric Church, Vince Gill and Kris Kristofferson, to the Fisk Jubilee Singers, to rockers Dan Auerbach of the The Black Keys, as well as Kings of Leon and Ben Folds.
The prime target of the documentary, according to Spryridon, is to “set the story straight.” Though the city has garnered considerable press over the past year thanks in large part to the ABC drama Nashville, he says the city is far from an overnight success. “The worst thing that could happen is everybody writes about you for a year and then – next,” he says. “I worry about that.”
ABC won’t charge to air the documentary, something Spyridon says is a substantial savings, considering it cost his agency $100,000 to air a 15-second ad during the premiere of  Nashville last year.
Watch the For The Love of Music: The Story of Nashville trailer below.

YouTube Getting In Music Subscription Game

youtubeYouTube is planning a move to expand into the music subscription service to compete with companies like Spotify and Rdio, according to Variety magazine. The launch would begin possibly by year’s end, with the video giant offering both free and premium tiers and offline listening options through both computers and mobiles.
No official announcements have been made by the company as of yet, but the move is a logical one for the giant, who already possesses some of the most-viewed videos and most popular music-related channels, thanks to a partnership with Vevo that increased its music repertoire. Expansion plans will likely also integrate parent company Google’s music service Google Play Music All Access, which provides users with a huge music library and the ability to personalize their own radio stations based on their preferences.
YouTube is the internet’s largest video site, with more than one billion monthly users. The company is already planning its own YouTube Music Awards on Nov. 3 which will feature performances by artists like Eminem and Lady Gaga.

UMPG Promotes Gordon To Creative Director

Travis Gordon

Travis Gordon


Universal Music Publishing Group (UMPG) Nashville has promoted Travis Gordon to Creative Director, as announced by Kent Earls, Executive VP/General Manager, UMPG Nashville.
Gordon first joined the company as Creative Manager in June of 2012 and has garnered multiple covers for the songwriting staff at UMPG Nashville. He began his music career in 2006 with Ten Ten Music in Nashville, TN after graduating from Appalachian State University with a bachelor’s in Music Industry Studies. From there, Gordon moved to William Morris Endeavor (WME), where he worked as an assistant, agent trainee and departmental coordinator before joining UMPG Nashville.

Mary Chapin Carpenter Plans Orchestral CD, New Tour

Mary Chapin Carpenter

Mary Chapin Carpenter. Photo: Russ Harrington


Mary Chapin Carpenter’s debut orchestral record, Songs From The Movie, will be released Jan. 14 on Zoë/Rounder Records. Recorded at Air Studios in London, the album was arranged and conducted by six-time Grammy Award winner Vince Mendoza (Sting, Diana Krall, Chris Botti, Elvis Costello, Björk, Joni Mitchell) and was produced by Carpenter and Mendoza along with Matt Rollings (Keith Urban, Lyle Lovett). Featured on the album are new interpretations of ten beloved songs by Carpenter, including “Between Here and Gone” and “Come On Come On.” See below for complete track-listing.
In celebration of the album, Carpenter is set to embark on her first tour with a live orchestral backing. The tour will run throughout 2014 and includes a special debut performance at the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall with the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra on Jan. 24 as well as a date at L.A.’s Disney Concert Hall with L.A. Philharmonic on Feb. 8. See below for complete details.
Songs From The Movie pairs Carpenter’s songbook with an ensemble of London’s finest orchestral musicians and features Peter Erskine (Weather Report, John Abercrombie, Rod Stewart, Michael Bublé, Joni Mitchell, Diana Krall) on drums. Of the recording process, Carpenter comments, “Working with Vince Mendoza was incredibly inspiring. His arrangements gave these existing songs new meanings, new colors, new feelings, new destinations. To hear them played by the world class orchestra assembled at Air Studios was beyond any artistic experience that I could have imagined.”
Songs From The Movie track-listing
1. On and On It Goes
2. I Am A Town
3. Between Here and Gone
4. Ideas Are Like Stars
5. The Dreaming Road
6. Only A Dream
7. Come On Come On
8. Mrs. Hemingway
9. Where Time Stands Still
10. Goodnight America
MARY CHAPIN CARPENTER TOUR DATES
November 1 // Wichita, KS // The Orpheum Theatre*
November 2 // Springfield, MO // Gillioz Theatre*
November 3 // Columbia, MO // Missouri Theater*
November 4 // Dallas, TX // Majestic Theatre*
November 6 // Austin, TX // The Paramount Theatre*
November 7 // The Woodlands, TX // The Big Barn*
November 8 // Baton Rouge, LA // Manship Theatre*
November 9 // Pensacola, FL // Saenger Theatre*
November 10 // Oxford, MS // Gertrude C. Ford Center*
January 24 // Glasgow, Scotland // Glasgow Royal Concert Hall†
February 8 // Los Angeles, CA // Walt Disney Concert Hall‡
April 4 // Scottsdale, AZ // Scottsdale Center for the Arts**
*with Shawn Colvin
†with BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra and Vince Mendoza
‡with the L.A. Philharmonic and Vince Mendoza
**with the Phoenix Symphony

Houser Celebrates Chart-Topper "Runnin' Outta Moonlight"

Pictured (Back row, L-R): BMI’s Bradley Collins, producer Derek George, ASCAP’s LeAnn Phelan; (Middle row, L-R): Sony/ATV Music Publishing’s Tom Luteran, Broken Bow Records’ Benny Brown, Combustion Music’s Chris Farren, ASCAP’s Ryan Beuschel, Broken Bow Records Jon Loba; (Front row, L-R): co-writer Ashley Gorley, Randy Houser, and co-writers Dallas Davidson and Kelley Lovelace. Photo credit: Steve Lowry

Pictured (Back row, L-R): BMI’s Bradley Collins, producer Derek George, ASCAP’s LeAnn Phelan; (Middle row, L-R): Sony/ATV Music Publishing’s Tom Luteran, Broken Bow Records’ Benny Brown, Combustion Music’s Chris Farren, ASCAP’s Ryan Beuschel, Broken Bow Records Jon Loba; (Front row, L-R): co-writer Ashley Gorley, Randy Houser, and co-writers Dallas Davidson and Kelley Lovelace. Photo credit: Steve Lowry


Stoney Creek Records artist Randy Houser celebrated the chart-topping success of “Runnin’ Outta Moonlight” at Nashville’s Adventure Science Center on Tuesday evening (Oct. 22). The Adventure Science Center is featured in the Wes Edwards-directed music video for “Moonlight.” ASCAP and BMI were on hand to celebrate the song, which was co-written by Dallas Davidson, Kelley Lovelace and Ashley Gorley.“Runnin’ Outta Moonlight” is Davidson’s 17th No.1, Lovelace’s 16th and marks Gorley’s 10th; although Gorley has since had singles by Brett Eldredge, Billy Currington and Luke Bryan hit the top of the charts for a total of 13 to date.
Though sound problems were persistent throughout the event, a considerable industry crowd gathered to praise the writers and performer of the song. Those in attendance included Broken Bow/Stoney Creek Exec. VP Jon Loba, the song’s producer Derek George, Sony/ATV Music Publishing’s Tom Luteran, Combustion Music’s Chris Farren, Country Radio Broadcasters’ Bill Mayne, BMI’s Bradley Collins, ASCAP’s Ryan Beuschel, BBR’s Lynette Garbonola, and a throng of supporters. Ron Cox with Avenue Bank also announced two donations the bank will be making to charities on behalf of the songwriters.
Loba recalled the excellent early crowd response “Runnin’ Outta Moonlight” drew even before it had been released. He relayed the story of an early performance that featured Houser and several other artists, “Randy got the only standing ovation of the night, performing an unknown song,” said Loba. “I thought, ‘If I had the chance to work a Randy Houser record, it would be this song.'” In 2012, he got his chance when Houser began looking for a new deal. “I took him to [Broken Bow Records’] Benny [Brown] and I could see the look in Benny’s eyes when he heard him sing the song. It’s the kind of song that we want to say, ‘This is what our music group represents.'” said Loba.

IEBA Panels Highlight the State of Touring

IEBABy Michael Smith and Eric Parker
The International Entertainment Buyers Association (IEBA) held its 43rd annual conference at Nashville’s Omni Hotel from Oct. 19-22. The conference, which featured several panels during the day and music showcases in the evening, was capped with the IEBA Honors and the SRO Awards. MusicRow attended two panels for the conference on Tuesday, Oct. 22: Are Agents the New A&R Directors? and A Financial Breakdown of Touring Revenues & Expenses.
Examining business dealings on the road, Flood, Bumstead, McCready & McCarthy’s Jamie Cheek, who received the CMA’s 2013 SRO Business Manager of the Year award, discussed touring costs and revenues for artists at various stages in their careers. Cheek noted that most newly signed Country acts may at best reap minuscule profits after touring for a year. For example, a newly signed act may generate $362,000 of income and $359,000 of expenses, resulting in profits of only a few thousand dollars. An artist at this level, however, can make a living by selling merchandise.
Mid- and veteran-level acts incur higher touring costs, but receive higher profits. Cheek estimated a veteran act may earn $740,000 from merchandise sales alone. Wildly successful acts that sell out arenas (e.g. Kenny Chesney, Taylor Swift, Tim McGraw, etc.) receive the most jaw dropping profits. An act of this ilk may earn $19 million and incur $11 million in expenses after a year of touring, resulting in a net income of $8 million. Merchandise can earn the artist another $2 million. With money to spare, it’s no surprise that artists at this level begin chartering private planes at an estimated cost of $20,000 per show.
Cheek caught the audience’s attention when he broke down an $80 concert ticket and explained who profits from each dollar.

Touring

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Pictured (L-R): Mike Dungan (UMG), Rob Beckham (WME), Marc Dennis (CAA), Steve Lassiter (APA), Jonathan Levine (Paradigm), Paul Lohr (New Frontier Touring), and Kevin Neal (BLA)

Pictured (L-R): Mike Dungan (UMG), Rob Beckham (WME), Marc Dennis (CAA), Steve Lassiter (APA), Jonathan Levine (Paradigm), Paul Lohr (New Frontier Touring), and Kevin Neal (BLA)


For the Mike Dungan-led panel discussing whether agents are the new A&R directors, insights were offered from agents including Rob Beckham (WME), Marc Dennis (CAA), Steve Lassiter (APA), Jonathan Levine (Paradigm), Paul Lohr (New Frontier Touring), and Kevin Neal (BLA).
Dennis used CAA act Kip Moore as an example of the reversed process in which the UMG newcomer was signed to the agency prior to the label. “It takes a long time to break an artist on the road and Kip already would have equity in markets when promotion called,” explained Dennis. “We can assist a label with having an artist prepared when a spotlight is shined on them.” Lassiter countered the notion that agents have “no skin in the game,” referring to the fact that agents don’t pay advances or have sunk development costs. “What agents hand over is manpower,” said Lassiter. “It costs a lot of money to have our staff working them.”
Levine says of the lessons he’s learned in 30 years in the business: “The locomotive of touring pulls the whole rest of the train—airplay and sales are driven by live performances. It’s our job as agents to see the spark where an artist is connecting to fans and bring them to a larger and larger audience, to hopefully international.” It is important to emphasize the power of live concerts, because as Lohr contributed regarding promotion: “radio popularity doesn’t necessarily translate to ticket sales.”
One recent spark in the spotlight is Neal’s Florida Georgia Line, managed by Seth England at Big Loud Mountain. “When Jason Aldean picked “Black Tears” (written by FGL’s Tyler Hubbard), I was able to put FGL out with Colt Ford’s show,” said Neal. “I was sold with the way they acted and treated the audience. England wasn’t in a rush to get a label deal, so I setup secondary radio with Marco Promotions. FGL has gone faster than anything I’ve seen before.”
The panel of agents then revealed some thoughts on social media. “The advent of Soundscan or BDS was very helpful, “ said Lassiter. “Whether it’s views/followers/likes, you’re able to geo-target much more efficiently—it’s a hell of a lot better than hoping your banner ad worked.” Beckham noted social tallies may be misleading in a world of manipulation: “It sounds cool to calculate socials, but how many did the artist purchase? Blake Shelton is a rare example of an artist that can sell a ticket from a tweet.” Dennis chimed in about the sentiment behind social media’s helpful hand. “Fan bases like to feel like they’ve discovered the music, and they will be extremely loyal if they do,” said Dennis.
Regarding a prompt from Dungan about female acts on the road, Beckham noted: “Danielle Bradbery has a launching pad from The Voice, but it depends on how hard you want to work on the road,” echoing the notion that it’s “sometimes harder for a female to have the desire to hop in a van and trailer early on.”
Dungan summed up the panel with a statement about the current state of the industry, “It’s a different world that it was 10 years ago. Everyone is involved from the ground up.”

Carrie Underwood Honored At T.J. Martell Honors Gala

(EXCLUSIVE COVERAGE) attends the T.J. Martell Foundation's 38th Annual Honors Gala at Cipriani 42nd Street on October 22, 2013 in New York City.

Carrie Underwood and Sony CEO Doug Morris


The T.J. Martell Foundation raised $1.4 million at its 38th Annual Honors Gala Tuesday night (Oct. 22) in New York, and honored several CEOs along with Carrie Underwood, who received the organization’s Artist Achievement Award. Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin flew in especially for the event to honor fellow Oklahoma native Underwood, who was presented the special award by Sony CEO Doug Morris.
Big Machine President Scott Borchetta was also on hand at the event to present Anne Staunchfield from the Target Corporation with the company’s Spirit of Excellence Award. Other recipients during the gala included Jennifer Breithaupt, SVP of Marketing of Citi; Brandon Steiner, CEO of Steiner Sports; and John Sykes, President of Clear Channel Entertainment Enterprises, who received his Lifetime Music Industry Achievement Award from longtime friend former President Bill Clinton.
“When I started this Foundation with several of my peers in the music and entertainment business in honor of my son T.J., I wanted to do all that I could to make sure other families would not have to suffer the way my family did,” said Tony Martell, Founder & Chairman of the T.J. Martell Foundation. “Our annual New York Honors Gala is one of the most important fundraisers we produce and without it we could not continue to offer the patient services or cutting-edge research for Leukemia, Cancer and AIDS.”
The gala concluded with special performances from both Sting and Bryan Adams. Since its inception in 1975, The T.J. Martell Foundation has raised more than $250 million for research that supports the 12 top hospitals in the U.S.
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Pictured (L-R): Laura Heatherly, CEO of TJ Martell Foundation; Honoree Brandon Steiner, CEO of Steiner Sports; Honoree John Sykes, President of Clear Channel Entertainment Enterprises; President Bill Clinton; Honoree Anne Stanchfield of Target Corporation; Honoree Jennifer Breithaupt, SVP of Marketing Citi; Carrie Underwood; Tony Martell, Founder of the TJ Martell Foundation; and Chris Mattioli, Director of the TJ Martell Foundation.