Florida Georgia Line To Host American Country Countdown Awards

florida georgia line 2013

Florida Georgia Line


Florida Georgia Line‘s Brian Kelley and Tyler Hubbard will serve as hosts for the inaugural American Country Countdown Awards, set to air live on Monday, Dec. 15 on FOX. It will broadcast from the Music City Center in Nashville.
The American Country Countdown Awards is based on on the radio countdown show American Country Countdown with Kix Brooks, distributed by Westwood One division of Cumulus.
“Brian and Tyler are incredible artists and friends with undeniable chemistry that will make them the perfect hosts for the first-ever American Country Countdown Awards,” said Mark Bracco, EVP, Programing and Development, dick clark productions.
The show is produced by dick clark productions. Allen Shapiro, Mike Mahan, Bracco, John Dickey, Richard Godfrey, and Tom Forrest are executive producers. Baz Halpin is co-executive producer.

Industry Ink: Curb Cheers Brice, Leadership Music Event, Aaron Tippin Inks, McBee Moves

Curb Family Pic _ Lee Brice #6Curb Records celebrated the release of Lee Brice’s new album with a lunchtime event featuring Mike Rogers on the grill, custom t-shirts, and corn hole. (Read MusicRow’s coverage of Brice’s project in this post.) “Lee Brice has turned in an amazing body of work and it is a great reason to celebrate,” says Taylor Childress, VP, The Curb Group. “Our industry is built on the backs of talented artists, without them, none of us would be here, and this celebration was an awesome reminder! We couldn’t be more proud of the efforts and hard work Lee Brice and his team have put forth in creating this album.”
• • • •
Leadership Music will present a conversation with revered A&R ladies Martha Sharp and Mary Martin in its quarterly series, Off the Record on Tuesday, Sept. 30 at 12:00 noon at Sambuca. MTSU professor and award-winning journalist Beverly Keel will moderate.
Sharp is the writer of two million-selling songs and served as Sr. VP of A&R at Warner Bros. Records. Before retiring in 1995, she had been instrumental in signing and developing the early careers of Randy Travis and Faith Hill.
Martin headed the A&R department at Mercury Records, encouraged Bob Dylan to work with The Band, and was involved with the signings of Leonard Cohen, Emmylou Harris and Vince Gill. She also worked with Van Morrison and Rodney Crowell.
The event is open to the public. $25 Leadership Music alumni/$35 non-alumni. To register click here.
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(L-R): Aaron Tippin, Don Murry Grubbs

(L-R): Aaron Tippin, Don Murry Grubbs


In preparation for his 25th anniversary in music in 2015, Aaron Tippin has signed with Absolute Publicity for exclusive representation.
“We’re overjoyed to add the ‘Hardest Workin’ Man In Country Music’ to Absolute’s client roster,” says Absolute Publicity President Don Murry Grubbs. “We’re proud to represent Aaron for this great career milestone.”
Tippin’s fame launched in 1990 with the release of “You’ve Got to Stand For Something,” which he followed with hits “Where the Stars and Stripes and the Eagle Fly,” “There Ain’t Nothing Wrong with the Radio” and “Kiss This.”
• • • •
Heather McBee is exiting her role as Operations Director for America’s Morning Show. McBee helped launch the nationally-syndicated program over a year ago and acted as the show’s liaison for record labels and affiliates. McBee has 20 years of industry experience, including a long tenure with Sony Music Nashville, which ended with her serving as VP/Marketing & Web Initiatives. She can be reached at [email protected] or (615) 584-8741.

Alan Jackson Celebrates Acme Feed and Seed Opening in Nashville

Alan Jackson was the special guest of the evening last night (Sept. 10) at newly opened Nashville bar and restaurant Acme Feed and Seed. Partner proprietors for the venue, located at 101 Broadway, include Jackson, Steve Moore, Nancy Russell, and George Boedecker. Moore is a former CEO of the Country Music Association, while Russell was Jackson’s longtime manager.

Singer/Songwriter Jason White with Guthrie Trapp and the Mule Kickers also performed during the evening.

CEO/Acme Tom Morales attends Acme Feed & Seed Grand Opening Party on September 10, 2014 in Nashville, Tennessee.  Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

CEO/Acme Tom Morales attends Acme Feed & Seed Grand Opening Party on September 10, 2014 in Nashville, Tennessee. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images


 
Atmosphere at Acme Feed & Seed. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Atmosphere at Acme Feed & Seed. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images


 
CEO/Acme Tom Morales, Denise Jackson with Singer/Songwriter Alan Jackson attend Acme Feed & Seed Grand Opening Party. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

CEO/Acme Tom Morales, Denise Jackson with Singer/Songwriter Alan Jackson attend Acme Feed & Seed Grand Opening Party. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images


 
Singer/Songwriter Alan Jackson performs at Acme Feed & Seed on September 10, 2014 in Nashville, Tennessee.  Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Singer/Songwriter Alan Jackson performs at Acme Feed & Seed on September 10, 2014 in Nashville, Tennessee. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images


 
Atmosphere at Acme Feed & Seed. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Atmosphere at Acme Feed & Seed. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images


 
Atmosphere at Acme Feed & Seed. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Atmosphere at Acme Feed & Seed. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Bobby Karl Works ACM's 50th Anniversary 'This Is Country' Release Party

this is country1111BOBBY KARL WORKS THE ROOM
Chapter 467
This is the 50th anniversary of the Academy of Country Music, and what better way to celebrate than with the publication of a commemorative book?
That was the agenda at the Country Music Hall of Fame on Wednesday (9/10). The book in question is titled This Is Country, a sumptuous coffee-table tome loaded with photos and souvenir “stick-ins” like ticket, program, newsletter and award-certificate reproductions.
For you music-industry folks out there, a “book” is a thing with paper pages that you turn after reading collections of words on them that are longer than tweets. I doubt that there are more than 100 of you who have read one in the past year. That’s why the sentence, “I have written a book” has a status on Music Row that ranks just below, “I am the hair stylist for Gloriana,” or “I have a line of dialog on this week’s episode of Nashville,” or “I had a cut on the last SheDaisy album.”
Those of us who value book authorship beg to differ. For one thing, it means you’ve brought forth something that will last forever. For another, it demands a helluva lot of creative labor.

Lisa Lee, SVP, Creative & Content Production, Academy of Country Music

Lisa Lee, SVP, Creative & Content Production, Academy of Country Music


“It’s the hardest work I’ve ever done,” said author Lisa Lee. “It’s like giving birth….This is one of my proudest moments.”
We applauded her long and loud in the museum’s ACM Gallery. “She came up with the idea for the book,” said the ACM’s Bob Romeo. Not only that, “Years ago, we didn’t have a staff. I said, ‘Lisa, you’re going to have to build one.’ She has met that challenge. In seven years, Lisa has built a great department.”
Lisa joined the ACM in 2007. She soon realized that the 50th anniversary was impending, so she sought out the ACM’s four founding figures. Two of them – Chris Christensen and hit songwriter Eddie Miller – have died. So she began in 2009 by interviewing survivors Mickey Christensen, then 91, plus Tommy Riggins. Tommy, a West Coast performer and radio promoter, came up with the idea for the ACM while on the golf course. Mickey, who has since passed away, owned the Red Barrel nightclub, which she offered as the host venue.
D.J. country awards for West Coast artists were staged in 1963 and 1964. Then the first official ACM meeting took place on Feb. 17, 1965. The first ACM awards presentation was on Feb. 28, 1966 at the Hollywood Palladium. The book notes that the CMA had been formed in Nashville in 1958, but had not yet mounted an awards show.
Founders Tommy and Mickey, “were so excited [about the book idea],” Lisa reported. “They lit the fire.” They also led Lisa to early ACM honoree and champ yodeler Janet McBride, who had saved a treasure trove of memorabilia. Lisa made that contact in 2012.
“It has just been in the past year that it has really been a crunch,” the book’s mastermind commented. “We saved the last few pages, because we knew we wanted to include the 2014 awards show.”
She is especially proud that all of the living Artist of the Decade awardees participated. Garth Brooks and Randy Owen of Alabama wrote their own essays. Lisa interviewed George Strait and Loretta Lynn for theirs. Marty Stuart wrote eloquently about Marty Robbins. Other essay contributors include stars Luke Bryan, Blake Shelton and Reba McEntire.
Essays or not, it is a coffee-table collectible. “This is for the fans,” said Lisa. “It is 50 years of country-music history and 50 years of this organization’s history, [but] it is for the consumers.”
It is certainly for the readers who attended. More literate than the rest of you were Wes Vause, Regina Stuve, Sherod Robertson, Suzanne Gordon, Jay Frank, Rod Essig, Chuck Aly, Ken Tucker, Teresa George, Paul Moore, Paul Barnabee, Mike Kraski and Ron Cox.
Attending ACM staffers Tiffany Moon and Taylor Payne presented Lisa with a framed first-proof of the book jacket, plus its Library of Congress registration certification.
The Hall of Fame’s catering, as usual, was tops. During the cocktail reception, we snacked on mushroom caps stuffed with sausage, chicken-salad wontons, hummus, tabbouleh, tzatziki, lavosh (it’s a flat bread), pita points, crostini and marinated grilled vegetables.
“I can’t thank you enough for coming,” said Bob Romeo. On behalf of book lovers everywhere, the pleasure was all mine.

The Lumineers Re-sign With Dualtone, Prep Sophomore Release

"Well folks, we are back in the studio...It's been one hell of a ride so far, and we are excited to be writing again. Thanks, and stay tuned..." -Lead singer and guitar player Wesley Schultz. Photo: Instagram

“Well folks, we are back in the studio…It’s been one hell of a ride so far, and we are excited to be writing again. Thanks, and stay tuned…” -Lead singer and guitar player Wesley Schultz. Photo: Instagram


As reported in MusicRow’s June/July print magazine, The Lumineers have re-signed with Nashville’s Dualtone Records to release its second album in the U.S.. Decca/Universal will release the forthcoming project for the rest of the world.
Lead singer and guitar player Wesley Schultz took to the band’s Instagram (pictured) to announce they were back in their Denver, Colo. home studio.
“We consider The Lumineers and their team as family and we are thrilled to be continuing our partnership forward with their sophomore album,” said GM of Dualtone Records Paul Roper. “The early songs we have heard are proof that they are writing material every bit as compelling as the tracks from their debut. This record will be well worth the wait.”
New material from the “Ho Hey” band will also be included in the upcoming TV soundtrack for The Walking Dead, and the feature film soundtrack for The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1.
A world tour will wrap the end of 2014 for the Denver band.
The Lumineers On Tour
Nov. 18 – Mexico City, Mexico @ Jose Cuervo Salon
Nov. 20 – Bogota, Colombia @ Soma Festival
Nov. 22 – Santiago, Chile @ Primavera Fauna Festival
Nov. 25 – Buenos Aires, Argentina @ Niceto Club (SOLD OUT)
Nov. 26 – Buenos Aires, Argentina @ Niceto Club (SOLD OUT)
Nov. 28 – Rio De Janiero, Brazil @ Queremos! At Vivo Rio
Nov. 29 – Sao Paulo, Brazil @ Popload Festival
Dec. 04 – Cape Town, South Africa @ Kirstenbosch Gardens (SOLD OUT)
Dec. 05 – Cape Town, South Africa @ Kirstenbosch Gardens (SOLD OUT)
Dec. 06 – Johannesburg, South Africa @ Emmarentia Dam

Pandora, BMG Strike US Licensing Deal

bmg logo22Pandora and BMG have struck a multi-year agreement for a US license for BMG’s complete catalog of BMI and ASCAP musical works.
BMG represents artist-songwriters including Bruno Mars, Duran Duran, Kings of Leon, John Legend, Frank Ocean, will.i.am, Valerie June, Wilco and others.
“BMG looks forward to a prosperous relationship with Pandora in which our songwriters can benefit from their platform,” said Laurent Hubert, President, Marketing & Creative at BMG Chrysalis North America. “We also want to take this opportunity to emphasize our strong, continuing relationship with the US performing rights organizations as they play a vital role for songwriters and music publishers alike.”

Radio Hirings: Curb Records, WEA Promotion

Mark Jenese

Mark Janese


Curb Records has added Mark Janese as Manager, Southwest Regional Promotion. His career has included time at Sony, Broken Bow, and Famous Hillbillies Entertainment.
“Mark is a promotion superstar with the relationships and experience that make him an incredible asset to our Curb team and to our artists. I couldn’t be more excited about his passion for our roster of artists and his enthusiasm for the music!” says Ryan Dokke, VP of Promotion for Curb. “Since March, Mark has served Curb Records on an independent contract basis and was a big part of our recent No. 1 on the Lee Brice hit ‘I Don’t Dance.’”
Janese will continue to be based in Dallas. He can be reached at [email protected] and (214) 673-7816.

 • • •

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Diane Monk


WEA has added Diane Monk as Midwest/Northeast Regional Promotion Manager. She spent more than 13 years working in pop promotion in Los Angeles and Dallas for MCA Records and Sony’s Columbia Records as a National Director of Adult Formats. Most recently, she worked the Country format for Arista Records and HitShop Records.

MusicRowPics: The Roosevelts

The Roosevelts visit

The Roosevelts visit


It’s hard to categorize new Texas duo The Roosevelts, who blend soulful harmonies, acoustic music and deft songwriting. “Our music is a good crossover of folk, rock, Americana, Country and soul,” says The Roosevelts member James Mason. “There are elements of all of those styles. The closest thing that might describe it is organic pop. We are still trying to figure out what you call it. No matter what kind of music audience we play for, they seem to like it. There is so much genre-blending now in music, anyway.”
The process for determining the duo’s distinguished band name was similarly organic. “The first day we went into the studio, it was President’s Day,” says Mason. “We were throwing out names to our producer, and we couldn’t believe no one had come up with that band name yet. So it stuck.”
Houston native Mason and Birmingham-bred Jason Kloess met after each moved to Austin, Texas,  in 2008 to pursue music. They met through a mutual musician friend, and found Jason’s harmonies and songwriting sensibilities complemented James’ rugged lead vocals. Countless bar performances and wedding singer gigs solidified their tight-knit harmonies and genre-bending sound–as well as their extensive repertoire of cover songs. “We did a lot of Motown and hip-hop, mixed with “Last Dance with Mary Jane” and Coolio. It’s was a bit of everything,” says Mason.
In 2013, they recorded the six-song EP, Cold Sheets, at Matchbox Studio in Austin.
The duo performed three songs during their MusicRow visit, including “Don’t Wanna Let You Go,” “Baby You Can Break My Heart,” and the current single, “Cold Sheets.”  They revealed more of their soulful influences on a cover of “Signed, Sealed, Delivered (I’m Yours).”
The video for “Cold Sheets” debuted this week on CMT. The clip was filmed near Houston, Texas, with director Brad Linton. Kloess and Mason take on leading roles, portraying army soldiers whose relationships are torn apart by war. The video marks the first time either acted in front of a camera, though Mason says he drew on his previous theater experience for the role.  “It’s just learning to forget the camera isn’t there,” he says.
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Deezer To Enter U.S. Market

Screen shot 2014-09-10 at 3.46.28 PM1French company Deezer’s Deezer Elite in beta is coming to North America on Sept. 15. The offer will give Sonos customers access to millions of tracks in 16-bit, 44.1 kHz FLAC lossless. Users can instantly stream music, create custom radio stations and discover music with personalized features, only on the Sonos Wireless HiFi System.

  • Access to millions of tracks in high definition audio (16-bit, 44.1kHz, FLAC lossless) to hear every nuance of your music, anywhere in your home, only on the Sonos Wireless HiFi System.
  • Instantly stream your favorite music, create custom radio stations based on your favorite artists, and discover more music with personalized features.

– See more at: http://blog.sonos.com/news/introducing-deezer-elite-on-sonos/#sthash.YWCzObXq.dpuf

Deezer Elite will be available to Sonos customers for a $9.99 per month price for those who sign up for a full year, beginning Sept. 15 with a one-month free trial. This is a 50 percent cut from Deezer’s standard $19.99 rate for the new U.S. service. Deezer customers who want to pay month-to-month will still pay a $5 premium at $14.
Deezer has 5 million paying subscribers (predominantly in France), and 16 million total users.

Vince Gill To Receive BMI 'Icon' Honor

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Vince Gill will be celebrated as a BMI Icon at the performing rights organization’s 62nd annual BMI Country Awards. The invitation-only event is slated for Tuesday, Nov. 4 at BMI’s Music Row offices in Nashville.
Gill will be feted by an all-star musical tribute. Gill joins past honorees including Bill Anderson (BMI’s inaugural BMI Icon honoree), Dean Dillon, Dolly Parton, Tom T. Hall, Kris Kristofferson, Willie Nelson, Loretta Lynn, Hank Williams, Jr., Merle Haggard, and others.
Among Gill’s 17 solo albums are the platinum-selling When I Call Your Name, These Days, and When Love Finds You. His hit songs, including “Go Rest High On That Mountain,” “When I Call Your Name,” “I Still Believe In You,” “Never Knew Lonely,” “The Heart Won’t Lie” (with Reba), and numerous others, have garnered him more than 40 million radio performances, in addition to more than 26 million albums sold.
His awards mantle is heavy with 20 Grammy honors, six ACM Awards, 18 CMA awards, and 32 BMI awards (including two Songwriter of the Year honors). He was named CMA’s Entertainer of the Year twice. He was inducted as a member of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2005, the prestigious Country Music Hall of Fame in 2007, and earned a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2012.
He is as well-known for his charitable involvement as he is for his singing, songwriting and guitar work. His philanthropic initiatives include work with the Make-A-Wish Foundation, the T.J. Martell Foundation, the Country Music Hall of Fame’s “All For The Hall” campaign, and helping to create the annual The Vinny Pro-Celebrity Invitational Golf Tournament.
“The craft of a songwriter isn’t easy; however, Vince makes it look easy. He binds lyrics with music into timeless songs that have influenced musicians across all genres,” said BMI President and Chief Executive Officer Mike O’Neill. “Vince Gill’s discography, in addition to his philanthropic endeavors in Nashville and beyond, represents the epitome of a BMI Icon, and we look forward to celebrating his accomplishments.”
BMI will also crown the Country Songwriter, Song and Publisher of the Year at the awards ceremony, as well as salute the writers and publishers of the past year’s 50 most-performed songs from BMI’s country catalog. BMI President and CEO O’Neill will host the event with Jody Williams, BMI Vice President, Writer/Publisher Relations, Nashville, and Clay Bradley, BMI Assistant Vice President, Writer/Publisher Relations, Nashville.