CMT Artists App Launched

cmt logo111Viacom Music and Logo Group debuted CMT Artists App for iPhone, which delivers Country fans exclusive content including performances, music videos, interviews, news and more directly from their favorite stars. Additionally, the app will serve as a starting point for fans to discover new music and artists including sound ID and lyrics search. CMT Artist is the expanded mobile companion to Artists.CMT.com that powers CMT/MTV/VH1’s 100 million homes on-air.

“Despite the huge popularity and growth of country music, there’s an over apparent lack of recognition that these fans are active smartphone users,” said Shannon Connolly, Senior Vice President of Music Strategy for Viacom Music & Logo Group. “With the launch of the CMT Artist App, we’ve created a genre specific experience that benefits both the artist and the fan to deliver the type of exclusive content and direct fan-to-artist relationship that only CMT can provide.”
CMT is partnering with season four winner of The Voice Danielle Bradbery to feature an exclusive five-song performance including her single, “The Heart of Dixie,” as well as “Talk About Love,” “Never Like This,” “My Day,” and “Wild Boy” from her recently released self-titled debut album as part of CMT’s music discovery multiplatform “Listen Up” initiative.
With the app, fans can expect exclusive artist content, retro archive footage, artist at-a-glance information, and more.

Bonnaroo's 2014 Lineup Revealed

BonnarooElton John, Kanye West, Lionel Richie, and Jack White are slated to headline the upcoming Bonnaroo 2014, slated for June 12-15 in Manchester, Tenn. The full lineup for the popular music festival was unveiled earlier Wednesday evening (Feb. 19) via YouTube. John, who recently released the album The Diving Board last September, will be headlining his first Bonnaroo. Meanwhile, White will return to Bonnaroo as one of the festival’s leading artists after performing as part of The White Stripes in 2007.
West will return after he received an unwelcome reception from concertgoers at the festival in 2008, when the entertainer took the stage hours behind schedule. Richie made a surprise appearance with Kenny Rogers in 2012.
More than 125 artists will perform, including The Avett Brothers, Sarah Jarosz, Blackberry Smoke, Shovels and Rope, Carolina Chocolate Drops and numerous others.
Tickets go on sale Saturday, Feb. 22 at noon through the festival’s official website.
Bonnaroo 2014 Artist Lineup
Elton John
Kanye West
Jack White
Lionel Richie
Vampire Weekend
The Avett Brothers
Phoenix
Skrillex
Arctic Monkeys
Frank Ocean
The Flaming Lips
Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
Kaskade
Damon Albarn
Neutral Milk Hotel
Wiz Khalifa
SuperJam with Skrillex & Friends
SuperJam “?”
The Bluegrass Situation Superjam hosted by Ed Helms
Disclosure
Cut Copy
The Head and the Heart
Zedd
Ms. Lauryn Hill
Funkiest Dancer
Chromeo
Broken Bells
Tedeschi Trucks Band
James Blake
Bobby Womack
Umphrey’s McGee
Ice Cube
Ben Howard
Slightly Stoopid
Fitz and The Tantrums
Cake
Janelle Monáe
Grouplove
Amos Lee
CHVRCHES
Cage The Elephant
Die Antwoord
Andrew Bird & the Hands of Glory
Mastodon
Capital Cities
Jake Bugg
Chance The Rapper
Dr. Dog
Yonder Mountain String Band
John Butler Trio
Little Dragon
City and Colour
The Glitch Mob
The Naked and Famous
Taran Killam
Phosphorescent
Drive-By Truckers
Washed Out
Danny Brown
Warpaint
Sam Smith
A$AP Ferg
Darkside
Seasick Steve
Shovels & Rope
Lucero
Carolina Chocolate Drops
The Wood Brothers
The Master Musicians of Jajouka led by Bachir Attar, with special guests Billy Martin, Marc Ribot, DJ Logic and Shazad Ismaily
Pusha T
Meshuggah
Poliça
DakhaBrakha
Goat
ZZ Ward
Seun Kuti
Blackberry Smoke
MS MR
Hannibal Buress
First Aid Kit
Rudimental
A Tribe Called Red
Omar Souleyman
The Bouncing Souls
Greensky Bluegrass
Ty Segall
Sarah Jarosz
Vintage Trouble
Okkervil River
White Denim
Jonathan Wilson
Robert DeLong
Cloud Nothings
Typhoon
Thao & The Get Down Stay Down
Valerie June
King Khan & The Shrines
Cherub
BANKS
Break Science
The Black Lillies
Real Estate
The Lone Bellow
Caveman
Big Sam’s Funky Nation
Jon Batiste
La Santa Cecilia
Classixx
Allah-Las
Cass McCombs
Vance Joy
Haerts
J. Roddy Walston & The Business
Those Darlins
Deafheaven
Lake Street Dive
St. Paul & The Broken Bones
The Wild Feathers
The Preatures
Blank Range

APA Nashville Celebrates 20 Years

APA Nashville's Bonnie Sugarman

APA Nashville’s Bonnie Sugarman


For 20 years, APA’s Nashville office has kept several of the music industry’s most recognizable names on the road and in front of their fans. The company celebrated its long and continuing run with a bash at Hard Rock Cafe last night (Feb. 18), attended by a slew of artists and industry. Presiding over the event were Sr. VPs Bonnie Sugarman and Steve Lassiter, who recently spoke exclusively with MusicRow about APA’s history in Music City.
After joining APA in 1983 as Head of Fairs & Festivals, Bonnie Sugarman worked with Country artists including Dottie West, Tennessee Ernie Ford, The Gatlin Brothers, and Johnny & June Carter Cash. Sugarman transferred to Music City in the early 1990s to help oversee APA’s then-new Nashville office. “I knew we had to be [in Nashville], and we should have been here long before we were, because we represented Johnny and June Cash and the Gatlins at one time. Other agencies were coming to Nashville, so I volunteered to move here and loved it immediately. I used to come for the CMA Awards and the SRO awards, so I knew a lot of people even before I moved to Nashville. I knew APA needed a presence in Nashville, but I’m not sure I knew we would still be here 20 years later.” Sugarman is now APA Nashville’s Sr. VP/Head of Fairs and Festivals.
Together, Sugarman and Steve Lassiter, Partner/SVP/Head of Concerts Department, lead an agency that represents more than 50 artists and employs more than one dozen agents. Among the artists that APA Nashville represents are Dolly Parton, Charlie Daniels Band, Travis Tritt, and Maggie Rose.
“I think we’re able to successfully represent income-producing artists because we are equipped to focus on those artists,” Lassiter says. “We are able to focus on the developing artists, too. Our agent-to-artist ratio is very low, and that enables us to give more time, energy and focus to building careers and maintaining careers.” APA Nashville currently has approximately three artists per agent. “It gives each agent time to work more to tighten up each deal.”
Lassiter joined APA Nashville in 1998. Prior to that he spent 12 years at William Morris Agency, where he booked concerts in the Southeast territory, rose to a VP role, and navigated tours for Trisha Yearwood, Charlie Daniels, The Oak Ridge Boys, and others.
Both Lassiter and Sugarman have earned numerous accolades along the way. In 2005, the Nashville Association of Talent Directors (NATD) named Lassiter Talent Director of the Year. He has served as both President and Board member for the NATD; he has also served on boards for the ACM and the International Entertainment Buyers Association. In 1995, Sugarman made NATD history when she was the first woman awarded the organization’s Agent of the Year award. The following year, she made history again as the first agent to win the award for two consecutive years. Sugarman, a member of the 2010 class of Leadership Music, was honored with the Hubert Long Award in 2005, and currently serves as the first VP of NATD.
Steve Lassiter222

APA Nashville’s Steve Lassiter


APA Nashville has enjoyed several recent signings, including Tate Stevens, Maggie Rose, Mallory Hope, Jacob Powell, and band Strung Like A Horse. On the road, developing artists can tighten their performing skills, build an audience early in their careers, and help determine what songs and sound elicits a response from concertgoers.
“We are the artist development department,” Lassiter says. “Most of our young developing acts don’t have record deals. We are able to get them work before all of that and a lot of that is because of our relationships with club owners.” A solid touring schedule is also a boon for artists seeking deals. “I can remember through the years, companies would sign artists who had never performed live, ever,” adds Sugarman. “They are not doing that anymore. If you can go to a label with a track record of touring and a proven fan base, that is what they are looking for.”
Developing rising artists and songwriters through touring isn’t without risk and commitment, given the amount of time agents must invest to secure dates for (sometimes) little-known artists. Lassiter notes the time aspect can be taken for granted. “The labels sometimes frown at us, because they see that labels put a lot money in and the publishing companies put a lot of money in [developing an artist],” says Lassiter. “They sometimes look at [agencies] like, ‘Well, you are not putting any skin in the game.’ We are. It’s called manpower. If you take the hours and effort we are putting into a developing act and multiply that to a monetary value, it’s a lot of money. So yes, we do have skin in the game.”
On the opposite side of the spectrum, established artists including Travis Tritt and Charlie Daniels Band are able to tour year-round thanks to a tight-knit team of agents. Tritt is currently in the midst of a 30-city acoustic jaunt. “He loves it because he feels like he’s sitting in his living room. It’s Travis and his guitar for two hours,” says Lassiter. “He can tell stories and recall the time he spent with Waylon [Jennings] and Johnny Cash and Marty Stuart. People walk away thinking they have just spent the evening in his living room, as opposed to the large stage and huge productions.” Of course, this kind of tour also offers an economic advantage. “The scaled back acoustic tour does net more money in the long run. What the other artists are doing [on larger tours] is packaging,” says Sugarman. “It takes three or four artists to sell out an arena now. There are very few solo artists that can do that these days.”
According to Sugarman, having a physical address in Nashville for two decades has been a critical component of the company’s success. “We’ve been here and we know the people in this industry. Plus, the Nashville industry is generally so supportive of each other. Although we are fiercely competitive, we are good friends with our competitors. We’ve developed a longstanding reputation as an agency that artists and others in the music industry know and trust.”

MusicRowPics: Meet & Greet and CountryBreakout Awards

12th Annual MusicRow Meet & Greet and CountryBreakout Awards

12th Annual MusicRow Meet & Greet and CountryBreakout Awards


MusicRow presented its 12th annual MusicRow Meet & Greet and CountryBreakout Awards Tuesday (Feb. 18) at Nashville’s Margaritaville.
A throng of industry members gathered to celebrate winners including The Band Perry, Blake Shelton, Miranda Lambert, Kacey Musgraves, Tracy Lawrence, Rodney Clawson, and MusicRow Reporter of the Year, WEIO Huntingdon, Tenn.’s Kelly Green.
The afternoon event also featured performers Natalie Stovall and The Drive, and Native Run.
See below for an array of photos from the awards celebration. A full recap was published earlier today.
Select photos courtesy of Bev Moser.
[slide]

Google Fiber Could Be Coming to Nashville

google fiberGoogle could include Nashville in the company’s expansion of its Google Fiber network, which offers an Internet connection 100 times faster than traditional broadband service. Google is exploring options in nine U.S. metropolitan cities, including Nashville, Raleigh-Durham, Charlotte, Atlanta, San Antonio, Phoenix, Salt Lake City, Portland and the San Jose and South Bay areas. Google Fiber is currently offered in Provo, Utah, and Kansas City. Construction has begun in Austin.

The service would mean that Nashville residents would have service including data transfer speed of 1 gigabit per second, as well as access to Google Fiber’s television service. With the high-speed connection, there is the possibility that more software developers and entrepreneurs could look to Nashville as a place to run a company.
The new offering is one that think-tank Flo {Thinkery} has been working on with Google for the past few years.

“We are pleased that Nashville is on a short list of cities that Google will be evaluating for its ultra-high speed Google Fiber broadband network,” says Nashville mayor Karl Dean. “Nashville is a fast-growing, vibrant city, and this announcement speaks to our momentum as a city of the future. Google is still in the early stages of looking at our city’s infrastructure, and we look forward to working with the company as they explore the possibility of bringing Google Fiber to Nashville.”

BMLG and CMT Radio Host Star-Studded CRS After-Hours Show

The Cadillac Threee is joined by Thomas Rhett, Eli Young Band's Mike Eli, and Florida Georgia Line's Brian Kelley.

The Cadillac Three is joined by Thomas Rhett, Eli Young Band’s Mike Eli, and Florida Georgia Line’s Brian Kelley.


Ready or not, CRS is off to another bold start this year. Last night (Feb. 18) Big Machine Label Group and CMT Radio proved after parties are no exception. The two powerhouse brands joined forces for night one, of two, at Nashville’s Marathon Music Works. A full open bar and spread of finger food and dessert was adorned by steel link chain decorations, while plexiglass illuminated artist-themed tables dotted the schmoozing floor.
Pictured (L-R): Republic Nashville President/BMLG EVP Jimmy Harnen, Brian Kelley, BMLG President/CEO Scott Borchetta.

Pictured (L-R): Republic Nashville President/BMLG EVP Jimmy Harnen, Brian Kelley, BMLG President/CEO Scott Borchetta.


Founder/Pres./CEO of BMLG, Scott Borchetta welcomed the crowd with CMT After Midnite With Cody Alan’s, Cody Alan. During the event, Alan took the stage with CMT SVP of Music Strategy, Leslie Fram, to whet the radio crowd’s appetite for a weekend show planned by the radio giant.
The BMLG lineup included Rascal Flatts, Eli Young BandCadillac Three, and Tim McGraw. The absence of Florida Georgia Line’s Tyler Hubbard, due to a motocross injury, kept the duo from performing its previously scheduled slot. FGL’s Brian Kelley joined his labelmates onstage though.
The VIP crowd was treated to new music from nearly every act. Rascal Flatts tempted attendees with music, due May 13, including “Payback,” “Memphis,” “Night of our Lives” and current single “Rewind.” The Cadillac Three welcomed Kelley, Mike Eli and Thomas Rhett to the stage for the MusicRow CountryBreakout Chart’s No. 61-and-rising title, “The South.” Eli Young Band took to the room’s other stage, offering staples from its catalog as well as latest single “Dust” from album 10,000 Towns, due on March 4.
CMT

Pictured (L-R): CMT After Midnite’s Cody Alan, CMT’s Leslie Fram, Tim McGraw, and CMT’s John Hamlin and Anne Oakley.


BMLG’s Jimmy Harnen, Borchetta and Kelley led the audience in a Fireball whiskey round, delivering Hubbard’s “doctor’s note” and priming the audience for tonight’s festivities which will feature Justin Moore, The Band Perry, Brantley Gilbert, Danielle Bradbery and Vince Neil of Motley Crue. Borchetta plugged the heavy metal band’s final tour reiterating the finality of the forthcoming run, “Motley Crue legally signed a document stating they can never play again together.”
McGraw wrapped the evening, taking the stage with a music stand to hold new song lyrics. Around May 2014, a new album is expected to contain songs he previewed: “Overrated,” “Singin’ to the Radio (Shotgun Rider),” and “Keep on Truckin’.” Standout titles also included “City Lights,” about gazing at the diamond dusted lights of town in summertime with a slowly burning cigarette; and “Words of Medicine,” with lyrics speaking of the healing power of compassion and empathy.
Upon exit, attendees were gifted a memory foam and hydraluxe cooling bed pillow from Comfort Revolution with a note reading, “Rest Up & Stay Tuned for details…”
Photos: Rick Diamond
 

Urban To Join First US iTunes Festival

Keith Urban

Keith Urban


Apple has announced the first iTunes® Festival to be held in the US, which will run March 11-15. Taking place at ACL Live at the Moody Theater, home of Austin City Limits, the iTunes Festival at SXSW will feature Keith Urban, along with Coldplay, Imagine Dragons, Pitbull, ZEDD and more to come. All five nights of the iTunes Festival will be available to enjoy for free as a live and on-demand stream via the iTunes Store® on iPhone®, iPad®, iPod touch®, Mac® or PC. Performances can also be seen in the iTunes Festival app on iOS devices or with Apple TV.
“The iTunes Festival in London has become an incredible way for Apple to share its love of music with our customers,” said Eddy Cue, Apple’s senior vice president of Internet Software and Services. “We’re excited about the incredible lineup of artists performing and SXSW is the perfect place to debut the first iTunes Festival in the US.”
At the iTunes Festival in London over 400 artists have performed in front of more than 430,000 fans and tens of millions more online. Performances are available for purchase and download on the iTunes Store. For additional details on the lineup for the iTunes Festival check out itunes.com/festival.

Luke Bryan To Release Sixth 'Spring Break' Project in March

luke bryan spring break111ACM Awards Show co-host and reigning Entertainer of the Year Luke Bryan will release his next Spring Break-themed digital EP on Tuesday, March 11, 2014, Spring Break 6…Like We Ain’t Ever. The album contains six original songs, all co-written by Bryan.
Bryan will play two free concerts at Spinnaker’s Beach Club in Panama City, Fla. on March 11 and 12 for the sixth consecutive year. Last year’s shows saw a two-day crowd total of 120,000 fans.
SPRING BREAK 6…LIKE WE AIN’T EVER

1. She Get Me High
2. Like We Ain’t Ever
3. Night One
4. Are You Leaving With Him
5. Good Lookin Girl
6. The Sand I Brought To The Beach
Bryan’s previous five Spring Break releases have sold over 750k copies. Last year’s album debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard Country sales chart and earned him his first No. 1 album on Billboard’s Top 200 chart, selling 149,515 units its first week.

Warner/Chappell Music Nashville Signs Starzynski

Natalia Starzynski

Natalia Starzynski


Warner/Chappell Music Nashville today announced that it has signed a worldwide publishing agreement with Australian singer/songwriter Natalia Starzynski.
Starzynski was a member of ASCAP’s GPS Class of 2013, a program intended to develop Nashville’s most promising unsigned writers alongside members of the publishing community.

Bobby Karl Works 37th DJ Hall of Fame Induction

BOBBY KARL WORKS THE ROOM
Chapter 448

crs hall of fame dj

Pictured (L-R): Ed Hardy, Jim Denny, Paul Schadt, Mike Brophy, Larry Wilson, Vince Gill, Bill Mayne


The current radio industry paused to honor its past as the Country Radio Seminar convention cranked up Tuesday evening (Feb. 18).
Staged at the old Nashville Convention Center, this was the 37th induction of Country DJ’s into their Hall of Fame. Note that I didn’t say “annual.” The event has a checkered past. Actually, it took many years for Country Radio Seminar to embrace it. There were no DJ inductions in 1986, 1987 and 1997. Organizers began adding radio executives to the Hall of Fame in 2001, but no one was inducted in 2004. This latter category will doubtless assume greater prominence in years to come since disc jockeys no longer have the personalities or the influence that they used to.
“This year marks a milestone,” said R.J. Curtis. It’s the Hall’s 40th anniversary.” Correct. The first inductions were in 1974.
One of the Hall’s founding fathers, Chuck Chellman, was there to see what his baby had grown up to become. That is, more than 500 people at a sit-down Convention Center banquet with a show that is professionally staged and managed.
Here’s a revelation: Chuck’s sister is Carol Mascolo, who is married to country-industry legend Ed Mascolo. I have known these people for years, yet never knew this.
At any rate, Ed is now with the management company Turner & Nichols & Associates, so he introduced me to the company’s new Republic signee Jackie Lee. Jackie is tall, friendly and handsome and is being produced by Carson Chamberlain, so those are good signs. I believe there is also a female “Jackie Lee” who competes on The Voice, which is not a good sign. Stay tuned.
Other artists working the room at this prestigious gig included J.T. Hodges, Mike Eli & James Young, Kellie Pickler, Jamie O’Neal  and Jack Ingram.
Among the industry mavens schmoozing were Karen Clark, Karen Tallier, Charlie Chase, Charlie Cook, Dan Rogers, Dan Halyburton, Dan Hollander, Bobby Young, Bobby Craig, Robby Lynn, Bob Kingsley (who had a big doo-dah at the Opry House on Monday for his 40th anniversary of counting down the hits), Debbie Linn, Deborah Evans Price, Mike Wilson, Mike Hammond, Mike Kraski, Jimmy Murphy, Bill Mayne, Andrew Kintz, Chuck & Kelly Shultz (of Maverick magazine), Pete Fisher, Lon Helton, Kim Leslie, Phyllis Stark, Todd Cassetty, Lorianne Crook, Lisa Harless (whose Regions Bank sponsored the Green Room and is giving away an eco-friendly green bike during CRS, too), Cathy Martindale, Ed Morris, Tim McFadden, George Briner, Phil Sweetland, Rick Murray, Paul Allen and Sarah Trahern. Did you know that MR’s own Jessica Nicholson was once the intern of attendee Schatzi Hageman? Now you do.
Larry Wilson, Alpha and L&L Broadcasting, and Mike Brophey, WKLB in Boston, Mass. The inductees in the On-Air category are Paul Schadt, WKKT in Charlotte, N.C., and Jim Denny, WFMS in Indianappolis, Ind.

CRS DJ Hall of Fame


The award ceremony was presented with surprising alacrity, and was mercifully free of long-winded speeches.
This year’s radio-exec inductees were Mike Brophey and Larry Wilson. Brophey is a veteran of 30 years in Boston and Philadelphia and is also a consultant. “Our format has become almost mind boggling in its strength,” he said. “This organization…really is a fraternity. It’s a real camaraderie that you don’t find anywhere else. The induction is beyond belief.”
Wilson has been a mogul at Citadel Communications and Alpha Broadcasting. “This [CRS] is what makes country music so great,” he observed. “I don’t think there’s ever been a better time than right now. I’m truly blessed to have done what I’ve done in my career.”
The on-air personalities inducted this year were Paul Schadt and Jim Denny. Schadt is the longest consecutive on-air personality in Charlotte, NC radio history. “Tonight is definitely the highlight of my professional career,” he said. He’s very much at his peak: He not only was inducted into the Hall of Fame, he is also the ACM major-market air personality of the year.

Denny had the most colorful induction. He’s the 25-year host of the morning show at WFMS in Indianapolis. He was introduced by his wife, Mimi Pearce, who is the traffic reporter on the show. How cool is that? Even cooler was the person doing the actual inducting. Denny is a bluegrass picker, and a 12-year-old fiddler named Alison Krauss was once a member of his band. She did the honors. “What a night, what a night,” he exclaimed. “I have been so lucky. I have worked with some of the best people in the world.” Also cool is the fact that he is an Indianapolis native, still working in his hometown.

The President’s Award went to Ed Hardy. You know him in Nashville as the former head of GAC and as the acting chairman of the CMA board. But Ed also has a solid radio background as an exec at stations in Cleveland, Portland, Louisville and Denver. He is the current chairman of the board of the Nashville Convention & Visitors Bureau and the past president of the board of the W.O. Smith Community Music School. Here’s something I didn’t know: good-guy Ed is a 20-year vet of the Army Reserves who has attained the rank of Major. Salute!
This year’s Career Achievement Award honoree was Vince Gill. “We’re here to honor this young man who has come of age before our very eyes,” said Rodney Crowell. “Hasn’t he done well?” added Emmylou Harris. “We’re proud to know you, Vince.” They sang “Go Rest High on That Mountain” in Vince’s honor.
“Life is good when your biggest heroes become your best friends,” said Vince. “What I want to share with all of you is sheer gratefulness for what you did for a kid. I made my first record 40 years ago. Radio stations where I grew up were kind enough to play that record. It gave me such hope that I could do this. I never forgot that feeling of when I first heard myself on the radio. I can still drive you to that spot. And I still feel that way….And I promise you I’m going to keep coming, beating on your door” with more music.
We dined on tender, medium-rare filet mignon, with broccoli and roasted squash and tomato slices, plus cheesy rice with cheesecake desserts. The wine was from The Dreaming Tree, the vineyard of pop star Dave Matthews. I had the white, and it was quite crisp and good.
The after party starred Rachele Lynae and Outshyne, plus Jamie O’Neal.