'Billboard' Selects Top Women In Music For 2013

billboardBillboard has selected its “Women In Music” list for 2013, and Kelly Rich, Mary Ann McCready, and Marcie Allen are among the females with Nashville ties making this year’s list. For the fourth year in a row, Julie Greenwald, Chairman and COO of Atlantic Records Group, topped the prestigious ranking. The list recognizes female execs for their exemplary vision, dedication and hard work. The magazine invited readers worldwide to submit nominations on Billboard.biz, and execs in every industry sector were eligible. A team of Billboard editors then reviewed the submissions, and the top 40 nominees were chosen and ranked based on their achievements during the past 12 months.
The issue highlighting Women In Music will also include SESAC’s Ellen Truley in a feature spotlighting women in performance rights organizations. Truley is based in Nashville.
The 2013 Billboard Women in Music List:
1. Julie Greenwald
Chairman/COO, Atlantic Records Group
2. Kathy Willard
Executive VP/CFO, Live Nation Entertainment
3. Jody Gerson
Co-President, Sony/ATV Music Publishing
4. Julie Swidler
Executive VP of Business Affairs/General Counsel, Sony Music Entertainment
5. Debra Rathwell
SVP, AEG Live
6. Brenda Romano
President, Promotions, Interscope Geffen A&M
7. Sharon Dastur
Programming Director, Z-100 New York, Nick Radio, Clear Channel Media & Entertainment
8. Lia Vollack
President, Worldwide Music; Executive VP, Theatrical, Sony Pictures Entertainment
9. Amanda Marks
Global Head of Digital Accounts, Universal Music Group
10. Michelle Jubelirer
Executive Vice President, Capitol Music Group
11. Debra Lee
Chairman/CEO, BET Networks
12. Melissa Lonner
Senior Entertainment Producer, NBC News
13. Jennifer Breithaupt
SVP, Entertainment Marketing, Citi
14. Marsha Vlasic
SVP, Concerts, ICM Partners
15. (TIE) Sarah Moll
Director, Entertainment and Television Programming, National Football League
15. (TIE) Tracy Perlman
VP, Entertainment Marketing & Promotions, National Football League
16. (TIE) Emma Banks
Agent, Creative Artists Agency
16. (TIE) Marlene Tsuchii
Agent, Creative Artists Agency
17. Anne Stanchfield
Divisional Merchandise Manager of Entertainment, Target
18. (TIE) Bozoma Saint John
Director, Cultural Branding, Music &  Entertainment Marketing, PepsiCo
18. (TIE) Ellen Healy
Senior Marketing Director, Global Consumer Engagement, PepsiCo
19. Tifanie Van Laar-Frever
Senior Music Buyer, Walmart
20. Melissa Ormond
President, MSG Entertainment
21. Kelly Rich
SVP of Marketing, Sales and Interactive, Big Machine Label Group
22. (TIE) Sara Newkirk Simon
Partner, William Morris Endeavor
22. (TIE) Samantha Kirby Yoh
Partner, William Morris Endeavor
23. Linda Newmark
Executive VP/Head of Acquisitions and Strategic Products, Universal Music Publishing Group
24. Alexandra Patsavas
Owner, Chop Shop Music Group
25. Marcie Allen
President, MAC Presents
26. Zahavah Levine
Director of Global Music Partnerships, Google Play/Android
27. Ethiopia Habtemariam
Executive VP/Head of Urban Music, Universal Music Publishing; Senior VP, Motown Records
28. Diana Mogollón
Executive VP/GM, mun2
29. Anya Grundman
Director and Executive Producer, NPR Music
30. Lisa Worden
Assistant PD/Music Director, KROQ Los Angeles, CBS Radio
31. Mary Ann McCready
President, Flood, Bumstead, McCready & McCarthy
32. Jackie Wilgar
Executive VP of Marketing, North America, Live Nation Entertainment
33. Amy Doyle
Executive VP, Music and Talent Strategy, MTV Brands
34. Kathy Spanberger
President/COO, peermusic
35. Deborah Curtis
VP, Sports and Entertainment, American Express
36. Molly Peck
Director, Advertising and Sales Promotions, Chevrolet
37. Orly Adelson
President, ITV Studios America
38. Allison Kaye
General Manager, Scooter Braun Projects
39. Kate Des Enfants McMahon
VP/Senior Director of Marketing, The Messina Group/AEG Live
40. Mika El-Baz
Executive Vice President, Publicity, RCA Records

“Rumble On The Row” Fighters Announced

ringside The 10th Annual Ringside: A Fight for Kids gala will see Country radio promotion executives Van Haze (VP National Promotion, MCA Nashville) and Shane Allen (VP Promotion, UMG Nashville) jump in the ring for charity, during the gala’s main event, “Rumble on the Row.”
Proceeds from the event will benefit Nashville’s The Charley Foundation, which helps charitable organizations benefit children throughout Middle Tennessee.
“We are thrilled to have these two music industry ‘heavyweights’ on board,” said The Charley Foundation’s founder and chairman Carolyn Miller. “Their intense physical training is already under way and their tremendous dedication will directly help make an impact on the lives of so many local children.”
The Ringside event will also feature four professional boxing matches, sanctioned by the Tennessee Athletic Commission, and will include gourmet dining, live music, celebrity guests and a live auction.
The event will take place at Liberty Hall in the Factory at Franklin on March 7, 2014. For more information, visit charleyfoundation.org.

Yahoo! Acquires Live Concert Platform Evntlive

evntlive11Yahoo! has acquired Evntlive, an online platform for live concerts, according to Evntlive’s official website. Evntlive allows fans to stream concerts on their computer, tablet or phone. The platform allows users to switch camera angles, to view artist interviews, and to chat with other concert-goers in the app feature.
Evntlive was founded in late 2011 and launched in beta in April 2012. The company has streamed live performances of artists ranging from Bon Jovi to The Lumineers. Similar to other companies Yahoo! has acquired, Evntlive will shut down and the team will work on Yahoo! projects.
“Since launching our beta service in April 2013, we have live streamed hundreds of performances from amazing artists and festivals to fans all over the world,” the company wrote on its website. “Although our service will no longer be available, we are excited to be joining Yahoo’s video team.”

Garth Brooks Announces World Tour Slated for 2014

garth-wynnRumors of a Garth Brooks tour have been swirling for months, especially given that the singer recently released a box set of new music. The singer-songwriter confirmed to anchor Robin Roberts of Good Morning America that the long-awaited tour will indeed happen in 2014.
“You know what, since it’s you and since we’ve had a history forever, let’s announce it. We’re going on a world tour in 2014,” Brooks told Roberts. “I can’t believe I just did that but you are a doll.” Brooks, 52, made the Good Morning America appearance to promote his six-disc collection Blame It All on My Roots: Five Decades of Influences.
“It sure feels good to get to throw your hat back in the ring,” Brooks said of returning to touring. “All my babies are fine with it. Ms. Yearwood is fine with it. So now I get to do what I love to do, which is play music. I get to be with the person I want to be with, which is Ms. Yearwood. Our baby is a senior in high school,” he said. “My children are off on their own so the guilt of not being there…I’m a phone call dad now. ‘Hey Dad, I love you, can I borrow some money?’”
Brooks will first return to the Wynn in Las Vegas for two days of full-band shows in January 2014. “Wynn has allowed me to keep that room as a laboratory type of thing so I’m going to bring the band out there and let the band experience this room,” Brooks said.
 

Swift, Musgraves Among Leading Country Grammy Nominees

Kacey Musgraves and Taylor Swift tie with six nominations each for the 2013 CMA Awards.

Kacey Musgraves and Taylor Swift.


Taylor Swift was a front runner in the 56th Annual Grammy nominations concert held earlier Friday evening (Dec. 6). As a performer during the event, Swift offered a live version of “I Knew You Were Trouble” from Sydney, Australia. Swift earned nominations in categories for Album of the Year (Red), Best Country Album (Red), Best Country Song (“Begin Again”), and Best Country Duo/Group Performance (“Highway Don’t Care”).
Keith Urban was also a performer during the evening with R&B artist Miguel. The pair performed “Ain’t No Sunshine,” which won Bill Withers a Grammy in 1971 for Best R&B Song.
Swift’s Red was nominated for Album of the Year, alongside Sara BareillesThe Blessed Unrest, Daft Punk’s Random Access Memories, Kendrick Lamar’s Good Kid, m A. A. d City, and The Heist by Macklemore and Ryan Lewis.
Newcomer Kacey Musgraves earned nominations in the Best Country Album and Best New Artist categories. She also earned two nominations in the Best Country Song category as a songwriter, for her own hit “Merry Go Round,” as well as for “Mama’s Broken Heart,” recorded by Miranda Lambert.
Blake Shelton was nominated in three categories, including Best Country Album (Based On A True Story), Best Country Solo Performance, and Best Country Song (“Mine Would Be You”).
Best Country Album nominees highlighted during the concert include Night Train (Jason Aldean), Two Lanes of Freedom (Tim McGraw), Same Trailer, Different Park (Musgraves), Based On A True Story (Shelton) and Red (Swift).
Best New Artist nominations include Musgraves,  James Blake, Kendrick Lamar, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, and Ed Sheeran.
Additional nominations include:
Best Country Solo Performance
“I Drive Your Truck,” Lee Brice
“I Want Crazy,” Hunter Hayes
“Mama’s Broken Heart,”  Miranda Lambert
“Wagon Wheel,” Darius Rucker
“Mine Would Be You,” Blake Shelton
Best Country Duo/Group Performance
“From This Valley,”  The Civil Wars
“Don’t Rush,” Kelly Clarkson ft. Vince Gill
“Your Side of the Bed,” Little Big Town
“Highway Don’t Care,” Tim McGraw, Taylor Swift and Keith Urban
“You Can’t Make Old Friends,” Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton
Best Country Song
“Begin Again” (Taylor Swift); Songwriter: Taylor Swift
“I Drive Your Truck” (Lee Brice): Songwriters: Connie Harrington, Jessi Alexander and Jimmy Yeary
“Mama’s Broken Heart” (Miranda Lambert); Songwriters: Brandy Clark, Shane McAnally and Kacey Musgraves
“Merry Go Round” (Kacey Musgraves); Songwriters: Shane McAnally, Kacey Musgraves and Josh Osborne
“Mine Would Be You” (Blake Shelton); Songwriters: Connie Harrington, Jessi Alexander and Deric Ruttan
Best Gospel/Contemporary Christian Music Performance
“Break Every Chain [Live]” by Tasha Cobb
“Hurricane” by Natalie Grant
“Lord. I Need You” by Matt Maher
“Overcomer” by Mandisa
“If He Did It Before…Same God” by Tye Tribbett
Best Contemporary Christian Music Song
“Hurricane” (Natalie Grant); Songwriters: Matt Bronleewe, Natalie Grant and Cindy Morgan
“Love Take Me Over” (Steven Curtis Chapman); Songwriters: Steven Curtis Chapman
“Overcomer” (Mandisa); Songwriters: David Garcia, Ben Glover and Christopher Stevens
“Speak Life” (TobyMac); Toby McKeehan, Jamie Moore and Ryan Stevenson
“Whom Shall I Fear (God of Angel Armies)” (Chris Tomlin); Songwriters: Ed Cash, Scott Cash and Chris Tomlin
Best Contemporary Christian Music Album
We Won’t Be Shaken, Building 429
All The People Said Amen, Matt Maher
Overcomer, Mandisa
Your Grace Finds Me, Matt Redman
Burning Lights, Chris Tomlin
The 56th Annual Grammy Awards will be held Sunday, Jan. 26 at Los Angeles’ Staples Center. For a full list of Grammy nominees, visit grammy.com.

Hall of Fame Honors Kay Clary

Pictured (L-R): Museum Writer/Editor Michael McCall, Randy Scruggs, Gibson Foundation Executive Director Terry Stewart, Kay Clary, Senior Vice President of Public Relations Liz Thiels and Gary Scruggs. Photo by Donn Jones

Pictured (L-R): Museum Writer/Editor Michael McCall, Randy Scruggs, Gibson Foundation Executive Director Terry Stewart, Kay Clary, Senior Vice President of Public Relations Liz Thiels and Gary Scruggs. Photo by Donn Jones.


“Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking”: it’s a metaphor for the career of Kay Clary, who was saluted Wednesday night (Dec. 4) at the Country Music Hall of Fame. Clary’s impact on the Nashville music business began with partners Jack Emerson and Andy McLenon at Praxis International, where the team adopted this line from a Walt Whitman poem as their motto.
Clary was the focus of the Hall’s seventh annual Louise Scruggs Memorial Forum, where she sat down with Michael McCall for a discussion of her career accented by videos, photographs, press clippings, and, of course, music.
Opening the event was Hall executive Liz Thiels, who recapped the career of Louise Scruggs, wife of Earl Scruggs and a pioneer for women in the music business. She was his savvy strategist, serving as booking agent, publicist, manager and negotiator to keep his career in forward motion.
Terry Stewart, the former president and CEO of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, was on hand to present Clary a guitar on behalf of event sponsor Gibson. Stewart recently took up digs in Nashville.
While introducing Clary, McCall explained that she was “a major force in establishing Nashville’s rock and Americana scene,” and noted her “well earned reputation as a musical tastemaker.” Next he read a letter from Jason Ringenberg, the voice behind Praxis’ first signing, Jason and the Scorchers. Ringenberg, who was on the road and unable to attend, recalled Clary’s “vision and attention to detail it takes to pull off that vision.” Appropriately, Clary walked onstage to the Scorchers’ song “Greetings From Nashville.”
She recounted her lifelong love of music and formative years in New Jersey, where she picked up radio stations from Philadelphia and New York. Her family moved around the country often while she was growing up. Time in Wisconsin resulted in her first music job, where she worked at a record store and poured through Billboard on her lunch breaks. She eventually landed at Belmont to study music business.
In Nashville, she met Praxis’ McLenon and Emerson. The three bonded over a love of classic country and punk rock. The label/management company’s first office was in a basement apartment where a board propped up by guitar amps served as the desk. Clary recalled the excitement and energy of the Praxis days for the crowd in the Hall’s Ford Theater. In the 1980s, Praxis significantly boosted Nashville’s rock and left-of-center scene through its work with artists including Jason and the Scorchers, Georgia Satellites, Billy Joe Shaver and Webb Wilder. Praxis’ clout continued to grow when the Scorchers signed with EMI and Georgia Satellites scored with the major hit “Keep Your Hands To Yourself.”
The onstage projector showed a Nashville Scene cover featuring a photo of Clary shot at Praxis, after it had moved to real office space. Other images included rave reviews about the Scorchers in Rolling Stone and the New York Times, and an early-career postcard from R.E.M. to Clary. The music video for the Scorchers’ “Absolutely Sweet Marie” played, offering a look back at a grittier Nashville.
She and McLenon married and had two daughters before divorcing. Emerson passed away in 2003, and is survived by wife Danna Strong, a longtime staffer at the Americana Music Association.
During her time at Praxis, Clary operated mostly outside of Nashville’s country mainstream, but she developed a handful of professional relationships that would carry her career forward in the post-Scorchers days. BMI was a major supporter of Praxis. Additionally, Kerry O’Neil handled the company’s accounting, and Praxis worked with AristoMedia on music videos. Aristo later hired Clary, who then went on to work at Kathy Best’s FrontPage Publicity before opening her own Commotion PR. Along the way, her passion for music guided her to work with artists she truly admired. She most recently spent seven years at BMI, where she was promoted through the ranks to Executive Director, Media Relations. When the nighttime custodians and security guards knew her by name and even brought her candy, she wondered if it was time for a change. The untimely passing of friend and publicist Jayne Rogovin, and mandolinist Butch Baldassari also contributed to her decision to take a year off. Now, that year is up, and all she said about her next move is that it is “a cornucopia of possibilities.”

ACM Lifting Lives Highlights Music Camp In December Web Feature

ACM-Lifting-LivesACM’s Lifting Lives program has chosen to spotlight producer/songwriter Ross Copperman and the charity organization, ACM Lifting Lives Music Camp, in its “My Cause” December web feature.Copperman’s passion for the program began after participating in the 2013 ACM Lifting Lives Music Camp recording session at Ocean Way Studios in Nashville. Serving as guest producer, he helped the developmentally disabled campers record a song that they penned earlier in the week with Jerrod Niemann and Lance Miller.
“My Cause: ACM Lifting Lives Music Camp” highlights a week-long residential program powered by ACM Lifting Lives and the Vanderbilt Kennedy Center for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities. The Nashville-based camp has a dual purpose of studying those with Williams syndrome, while providing music enrichment through performance and education. Throughout the week, campers gain invaluable experience through visits from top-tier country music veterans.
Those interested in finding out more about the camp or donating can visit acmliftinglives.org.

Craig Morgan Celebrates Five Years as Grand Ole Opry Member

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Pictured (L-R): Craig Morgan and Grand Ole Opry VP and General Manager Pete Fisher.


Grand Ole Opry member and Country music singer Craig Morgan recently returned to the Opry stage to perform and to celebrate five years as an Opry member.
Opry Vice President and General Manager Pete Fisher presented Morgan with a print commemorating the five-year mark. “Opry members are the heart and soul of the Grand Ole Opry,” said Fisher. “They are the reason we have been around for 88 years and are the world’s longest running live radio show. During this Thanksgiving week, we thought it be appropriate to thank Craig Morgan for five incredible years as a member and you are going to be around for several decades more I think. We’ll be doing this a lot more so let’s thank Craig Morgan for five years.”
Morgan shared, “I wore them out when I first started as a singer. For me there’s no greater honor that can be bestowed on a country singer aside from being a member of this great foundation. I’m so proud and honored to be here tonight.”
Craig was inducted as an Opry member in October 2008 by Opry member, John Conlee.

Underwood's 'The Sound of Music Live!' Brings In 19.3 Million Viewers

carrieunderwood sound of music111

Carrie Underwood and Stephen Moyer in ‘The Sound of Music Live!’


The three-hour NBC broadcast of The Sound of Music Live!, starring Carrie Underwood, Stephen Moyer, Audra McDonald, Laura Benanti aired on Thursday night (Dec. 5) earned NBC its biggest audience on the night since 2004, according to Zap2It.com.
The Sound of Music Live! won for the night in both viewers and in the adults 18-49 demographic. The musical opened in the 8 p.m. ET hour with 17.6 million viewers and peaked in the 9 p.m. ET hour with 19.3 million viewers.
NBC got a 4.6 rating in the 18-49 demographic, beating out CBS (2.5), ABC (2.2), FOX (1.2) and The CW (.8).
The Sound of Music Live! is based on the Broadway play from 1959, which starred Mary Martin as Maria and Theodore Bikel as Captain Von Trapp.

[Updated]: 'Rolling Stone' To Open Nashville Office

rolling stone country111Rolling Stone is set to launch a standalone website covering the Country music scene in the second quarter of 2014, according to adage.com. The magazine also plans to open an office in Nashville with 10-15 editorial staffers, and has goals for its first Country-themed print issue, Rolling Stone Country.
Nashville editor and journalist Beville Darden Dunkerley, who also founded TheBoot.com, will lead the new Nashville office, beginning in March 2014.
“There’s a really big void in the digital coverage of country music as far as giving it the serious attention it deserves,” Gus Wenner, director of RollingStone.com, said, comparing the genre’s popularity to Nascar. “I saw some similarities and thought it could be an opportunity for Rolling Stone.”
“There’s a huge opportunity for us to expand the Rolling Stone consumer base by extending into country music,” added Chris McLoughlin, Rolling Stone‘s publisher, who said the brand will spend more than $1 million on the new site in 2014.
The new site aims to hit one million monthly unique visitors within its first 12 months, Wenner said, with about 8 to 12 items published daily on the site. Monthly unique visitors to the main RollingStone.com totaled nearly 4.3 million in October, up 34 percent from October 2012, according to ComScore.
There are no plans for a regular print version of Rolling Stone Country. A special interest publication with a price tag around $12 or $13 is planned for newsstands in the second half of 2014.