Exclusive: Craig Wiseman Shares His Big Loud Vision

Craig Wiseman. Photo: Amy Allmand

Craig Wiseman. Photo: Amy Allmand

The full vision for Craig Wiseman’s enterprise is coming to fruition at 1111 16th Avenue South in Nashville.

That’s where the 2015 Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame inductee oversees his Big Loud headquarters, offering a true 360-degree artist experience with in-house publishing, management, label, and music production.

“People might demonize 360 deals,” says Wiseman on a late November morning inside the plaque-saturated walls of his three-story office building. “Although this was our first venture together [with Joey Moi, “Chief” Zaruk and Seth England], every entity came in pretty seasoned. Nobody is riding anyone’s coattail in this instance.”

Now with a staff of over 20 in the 16th Avenue complex, the Big Loud Shirt publishing group encompasses the third floor with a songwriter roster that includes Moi, Rodney Clawson, Chris Tompkins, Matt Dragstrem, Sarah Buxton and the Warren Brothers. Chris Lane and Florida Georgia Line’s Brian Kelley and Tyler Hubbard are signed for publishing with Big Loud Mountain.

Wiseman thanks longtime friend and writer Buxton for helping him realize the current business structure.

“Sarah was the only artist I ever produced,” recalls Wiseman of a 2007 six-track EP. “We had 11 songs that we threw over the fence for the label to release in 2005. Everything I feared, overthinking and all that, happened. I stepped back from that saying, ‘Never again!’ If I ever contribute that much heart and soul again, it will be a situation I have far more control of. But when you say that, you’ve gotta get your checkbook out.

“The wheels were falling off the industry that whole time. For us, it came down to: if you want to fish, you better be running a hatchery. When Seth England came along to start this new publishing model—getting good bands in clubs—the old model started working like crazy with Rodney Clawson and Chris Tompkins kicking ass with Blake, Luke, Jason, and Carrie cuts. Though, we still had more great songs than we knew what to do with.”

Soon, the largest-selling digital country song of all time came knocking to not only change the trajectory for Big Loud, but the modern Nashville industry altogether.

“My mother could’ve told you ‘Cruise’ was a hit,” Wiseman says. “But we were lucky that FGL was our first attempt at the new model. Here were two kids starving to death, killing themselves wearing out a Chevy Tahoe. We figured if we put out one independent single, their club date booking price would double and we would recover our investment. We were just trying to keep things simple.

MusicRow: How did FGL’s success light the fuse for Big Loud Records?

Wiseman: The whole goal was to put good music together, pay for it ourselves and do our own thing because when you take outside money, you take an outside timetable, expectations, fears and overthinking. What eventually happened with FGL was supernatural. It’s a perfect storm of so many elements coming together that is unrepeatable. You just thank God that you’re lucky to be anywhere in the vicinity when lightning strikes.

Partnering with Republic Nashville allowed us to scale up. When we partnered with Big Machine, we sold 20,000 single downloads that week. We always wanted to do a label here, but FGL exploded so quickly, you really get acquainted with the phrase “easier said than done.” We could have got greedy, but it would have been a disservice to the guys.

After we got FGL on their way [with Republic], it was Seth’s genius to go after Clay Hunnicutt to run Big Loud Records with [flagship artist] Chris Lane. People aren’t pushing back as hard as I thought they would. We’ll probably get a few more acts out there. But this [enterprise] is more than enough for me right now. We’re at a point where I don’t have to ask anyone’s permission for anything. I’ll live and die by it, that’­s fine—it’s my money. I hope to piss people off and make people smile a little.

Has your success sunk in?

Behind all this, I feel like I’m in the middle of the largest practical joke ever. I literally can’t believe it all. The weird thing was when I asked Tim McGraw and Ronnie Dunn to come sing at the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame induction, they both said, “You’re not already in there?”

That honor was amazing, as was the 2014 Heritage Award for the most-performed country music songwriter of ASCAP’s first 100 years. It’s like, “Are you fucking kidding me?” There are some real songwriters out there, and I’m just me.

What keeps you motivated?

I have been incredibly blessed. I spent my first week in town sleeping in a van. In 2000, Almo/Irving [where Wiseman signed his first publishing deal a decade prior] sold. Before I went to BMG, I sold my catalog for million[s], yet it was the most uncomfortable time of my life. I thought, “Is that it? I’m just going to make that pile bigger?”

I was in my mid 30s—didn’t have to worry about where my next house, meal or car would come from—but on an intuitive level I felt like such an ass, using these blessings to make myself comfortable. The story in the Bible about the three individuals entrusted with wealth and one buries it while the others invest it [helped decide the next step].

All I knew was I loved songs and songwriters. So I put $1 million in a business checking account and bought a piece of property on 17th Avenue South with the intention of throwing parties. I was watching all the old publishing companies fall away and I would love to go to these parties they would throw because they brought together a community.

I love watching new artists getting their dreams and prayers answered. And whether or not I help them, just to be around them—who doesn’t need to be reminded that prayers get answered and that angels fly low? I naively didn’t realize the staff answering phones would advance and realize their own dreams, too. Our employees are given the opportunities and in return are given the rewards. There are so many dreams coming true and people working hard. To see the look in their eyes when they catch fire is great to be around.

In 2014, you partnered with Round Hill. Why was that the right decision?

We sold a portion of copyrights but our business is still here. I still own every song. We more or less did a co-venture going forward and kind of a co-venture going back.

The brilliance of Round Hill is they partner. They have a very effective admin and sync organization of about 20 people. I pay very close attention to admin—I owned my own for years. They just run everything through their pipes. Ultimately, I just wanted to be left alone and to be an extremely low-maintenance partner to make us both money. We’re looking at future areas to partner with them. Since, Round Hill has made some very aggressive moves in Nashville.

Are you part of the trend of publishers being the artist developers?

When millions turn into billions, lawyers and investors come in and screw things up and then it’s left to the creative people who love the music to build it back and fix it. Shane McAnally is having major success at development, as is Luke Laird. It’s great to see.

I’m of the old school Nashville publishers who think if you care about an act, you will do anything for them to get them somewhere. That’s where artist development comes in at the publisher level.

Mountain High Music Festival Slated For January 2016

mountain high music fest

Broadcast Music, Inc., (BMI), and BMI Country Awards Icon, ACM Poet Award Honoree and world-renowned singer/songwriter Dean Dillon have partnered with LMG, SunTrust Bank, Texas Roadhouse, HD Radio, Bedell Guitars and more to present The Mountain High Music Festival, to be held Jan. 13-17, 2016, in Crested Butte, Colorado.

The festival will feature a lineup of recording artists and songwriters, with performances to be presented in various locations around Crested Butte, Colorado.

Hosted by GAC and SiriusXM’s on-air personality Storme Warren, artists and songwriters will swap stories and mingle in a series of full-band performances. The line-up includes performances from recording artists and singer/songwriters such as Marshall Tucker BandWendell MobleyKendell MarvelLee Thomas Miller, as well as up-and-coming country/hip-hop artist Julia Cole, Colorado-based singer Evelyn Roper and Dean Dillon and the Texas Jamm Band.

Part of the event proceeds will be donated to the Adaptive Sports Center and to Tough Enough to Wear Pink.

More information can be found at www.mountainhighmusicfest.com.

Dean Dillon

Dean Dillon

Music City Music Council Names First Full-Time Executive Director

Justine Avila

Justine Alexa Avila

Justine Alexa Avila has been chosen by the Music City Music Council as the organization’s first full-time executive director. Avila was selected following an intensive search process led by current co-chair Ed Hardy and incoming co-chair Joe Galante, with support of Mayor Megan Barry, who is also co-chair of the Council.

Avila began her career in New York City, serving as venue concierge and concert manager for City Winery music venue, as well as co-founding the music booking agency MJ Booking. Avila earned a Masters of Arts degree in Music Business from New York University and a B.S. from Cornell University. Avila will begin her new position with the Council on Jan. 4, 2016.

The Music City Music Council aids music-related businesses in expanding or relocating to Nashville; bringing televised music shows and music-related award shows across all genres to the city; and recruiting more music-related events and conventions. Priorities also include supporting and expanding live music in Nashville and music education in public schools.

“Justine is an incredibly impressive woman who will strengthen our city’s partnerships with music businesses in Nashville that will grow our economy and enhance our quality of life,” said Mayor Barry. “I’m looking forward to working with Justine, Joe and the Music City Music Council as we continue to build up and support the music industry that has been so critical to Nashville’s success over the years.”

“This is an amazing opportunity for me to use my experience to help promote and enhance Nashville’s brand as Music City USA,” said Avila. “I’m grateful to Joe, Ed and Mayor Barry for this opportunity to serve the city and to find new ways to support the music industry in a way that expands our already strong portfolio of artists, entertainers, and music businesses.”

“Joe Galante and I have worked with a small group of Music Council members to undertake an exhaustive search for the right person to serve as our executive director, and we believe we have found that person in Justine Avila,” said Ed Hardy, co-chair of the Music City Music Council. “This is an exciting time for the Music Council. With the strong support and leadership of Mayor Barry and Joe Galante, and Justine’s impressive educational background and industry contacts, I’m excited to see the Music Council taken to the next level in the coming years.”

“Justine has great passion and enthusiasm for Nashville and the council,” said incoming co-chair Galante. “We are both looking forward to getting started and continuing to accomplish the economic goals of the Music City Music Council.”

In addition to Mayor Barry, co-chair Galante, and Hardy (immediate past co-chair), members of the Music City Music Council include:

Scott Clayton, a music agent at entertainment and sports agency Creative Artists Agency (CAA) and co-head of CAA Music’s Nashville operations (vice chair, beginning Jan. 1)
Randy Goodman, chairman and CEO of Sony Music Nashville (past co-chair)
Mary Ann McCready, co-founder and president at Flood, Bumstead, McCready & McCarthy (past co-chair)
David Bohan, President/CEO, BOHAN
Ken Levitan, Founder and Co-President, Vector Management
Hank Adam Locklin, entertainment attorney
Ken Paulson, Dean, College of Media and Entertainment, Middle Tennessee State University
Colin Reed, Chairman and CEO, Ryman Hospitality Properties
Ralph Schulz, President and CEO, Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce
Nancy Shapiro, Senior Vice President, The Recording Academy
Clarence Spalding, Partner, Maverick Management
Butch Spyridon, President and CEO, Nashville Convention & Visitors Corp
Troy Tomlinson, CEO, SONY/ATV Publishing
Jason Moon Wilkins, Co-Founder, Do615 LLC
Sally Williams, Vice President of Business and Partnership Development, Opry Entertainment Group, and General Manager, Ryman Auditorium

Industry Pics: ole, Brett Eldredge, Cam, Maren Morris, Makenna & Brock

ole Takes Part in ‘Boots n’ Business’ Event

ole General Manager of Nashville Creative John Ozier and ole songwriter Phil O’Donnell participated in the Tennessee Chamber of Commerce & Industry’s “Boots n’ Business’ event, held Dec. 7 at the Bridge Building in Nashville.

Pictured (L-R): Phil O'Donnell, ole songwriter; Greg Martz, Chairman, Tennessee Chamber of Commerce & Industry; Catherine Glover, President, Tennessee Chamber of Commerce & Industry; Shane Minor, songwriter; John Ozier, ole GM, Nashville Creative.

Pictured (L-R): Phil O’Donnell, ole songwriter; Greg Martz, Chairman, Tennessee Chamber of Commerce & Industry; Catherine Glover, President, Tennessee Chamber of Commerce & Industry; Shane Minor, songwriter; John Ozier, ole GM, Nashville Creative.

 

Brett Eldredge Celebrates Gold Status

Brett Eldredge recently notched his fourth consecutive #1 single with “Lose My Mind,” the first release from his chart-topping new album, IllinoisOn Friday night, Eldredge continued the party when he was presented with a plaque for the song which has now been Certified gold by the RIAA. 

Pictured (L-R): Lou Ramirez, Regional Promotion Manager, WMN; Liz Kennedy, Director, Communications and Gold & Platinum Program, RIAA; Brett Eldredge; Meg Stevens, Senior Vice President, Programming, iHeartMedia DC/Baltimore; Michele Ballantyne, Executive Vice President, Public Policy and Industry Relations, RIAA.

Pictured (L-R): Lou Ramirez, Regional Promotion Manager, WMN; Liz Kennedy, Director, Communications and Gold & Platinum Program, RIAA; Brett Eldredge; Meg Stevens, Senior Vice President, Programming, iHeartMedia DC/Baltimore; Michele Ballantyne, Executive Vice President, Public Policy and Industry Relations, RIAA.

 

Cam Rings In The Holiday With WIVK

GRAMMY nominee and 2016 MusicRow ‘Next Big Thing’ artist Cam helped ring in the holiday season in Knoxville on Friday as the Grand Marshal of the 43rd annual WIVK Christmas Parade.

Pictured (L-R): WIVK the Frog; Bob Raleigh, PD, WIVK; Cam; PM drive host Gunner, PM Drive Host, WIVK; Alison, morning show co-host, WIVK.

Pictured (L-R): WIVK the Frog; Bob Raleigh, PD, WIVK; Cam; Gunner, PM Drive Host, WIVK; Alison, morning show co-host, WIVK.

 

Maren Morris Visits SiriusXM Studios in NYC

While in New York City, Columbia Nashville newcomer Maren Morris paid a call on the SiriusXM studios, where she caught up with Senior VP and General Manager, Music Programming, Steve Blatter.

Pictured (L-R): Steve Blatter, Maren Morris.

Pictured (L-R): Steve Blatter, Maren Morris.

 

Makenna & Brock Visit KFAV

Country duo Makenna & Brock spent time recently with Mike Thomas at KFAV 99.9 FM/Warrenton, Missouri, while on their current radio tour to promote the debut single, “Burnin’ The Night Down.”
Pictured (L-R):  Brock Wade, PD/MD Mike Thomas and Makenna Sullinger.

Pictured (L-R): Brock Wade; Mike Thomas, PD/MD, KFAV; Makenna Sullinger.

 

CMA Presents SRO Awards For Touring Industry

Pictured: (Back row, L-R): Brian O'Connell, Kerri Edwards, Ebie McFarland, David Farmer, Jay Cooper, Darin Murphy, Sarah Trahern, and James McDermott. (Front row, L-R): Ed Wannebo, Mary Ann McCready, Sally Williams, Lisaann Dupont, Jay DeMarcus, and Kris O'Connor. Photo: Donn Jones/CMA

Pictured: (Back row, L-R): Brian O’Connell, Kerri Edwards, Ebie McFarland, David Farmer, Jay Cooper, Darin Murphy, Sarah Trahern, and James McDermott. (Front row, L-R): Ed Wannebo, Mary Ann McCready, Sally Williams, Lisaann Dupont, Jay DeMarcus, and Kris O’Connor. Photo: Donn Jones/CMA

More than a dozen members of the country music touring industry were formally recognized at the SRO Awards, presented by the CMA, on Monday night (Dec. 7).

The trophies were presented at an industry event at Marathon Music Works in Nashville hosted by Jay DeMarcus of Rascal Flatts.

“Our touring industry members are on the frontline, every day taking our music directly to the fans in small clubs, stadiums, and everything in between,” said Sarah Trahern, CMA Chief Executive Officer. “Their hard work and many contributions to the success of the format deserve attention and a standing ovation.”

Pictured (L-R): Jay DeMarcus, Ebie McFarland, Hunter Hayes. Photo: Donn Jones

Pictured (L-R): Jay DeMarcus, Ebie McFarland, Hunter Hayes. Photo: Donn Jones

DeMarcus, Dierks Bentley, Hunter Hayes, and Cole Swindell presented trophies to members of their road families, while Jason Aldean, Kenny Chesney, Little Big Town, Old Dominion, Chase Rice, Blake Shelton, Ricky Skaggs, George Strait, and Steve Wariner recorded personal congratulatory messages to celebrate the winners.

Swindell summed it up when he presented the SRO Award for Manager of the Year to Kerri Edwards: “We all know how hard she works on the team, but it is nice seeing her recognized by the industry.”

Pictured (L-R): Jay DeMarcus, Kerri Edwards, Cole Swindell. Photo: Donn Jones

Pictured (L-R): Jay DeMarcus, Kerri Edwards, Cole Swindell. Photo: Donn Jones

Brian O’Connell, who won the SRO Award for Talent Buyer/Promoter of the Year, spoke with passion about how this is the touring industry’s CMA Award: “This is OUR CMA Award for the guys and girls on the road who put it up and take it down.”

The winners in 15 categories were determined by CMA members in the following categories: Advertising/Public Relations/Media; Affiliated; Artist; Entertainment Services; Marketing/Digital; Musician; Personal Manager; Record Label; Talent Agent; Talent Buyer/Promoter; Touring; and Venue. Ballots were tabulated by the professional services firm Deloitte & Touche LLP.

Pictured (L-R): Jay DeMarcus, James McDermott, Dierks Bentley. Photo: Donn Jones

Pictured (L-R): Jay DeMarcus, James McDermott, Dierks Bentley. Photo: Donn Jones

CMA’s SRO Awards 2015 Winners are as follows:

CATEGORY 1 – BUSINESS MANAGER OF THE YEAR
Mary Ann McCready – Flood, Bumstead, McCready & McCarthy, Inc.

CATEGORY 2 – COACH/TRUCK DRIVER OF THE YEAR
Kelley Beck – Blake Shelton

CATEGORY 3 – FOH (FRONT OF HOUSE) ENGINEER OF THE YEAR
James McDermott – Dierks Bentley

CATEGORY 4 – LIGHTING DIRECTOR OF THE YEAR
Philip Ealy – Kenny Chesney

CATEGORY 5 – MANAGER OF THE YEAR
Kerri Edwards – KP Entertainment

CATEGORY 6 – TOUR MANAGER OF THE YEAR
David Farmer – Kenny Chesney

CATEGORY 7 – MONITOR ENGINEER OF THE YEAR
Brad Baisley – Blake Shelton

CATEGORY 8 – PRODUCTION MANAGER OF THE YEAR
Ed Wannebo – Kenny Chesney

CATEGORY 9 – PUBLICIST OF THE YEAR
Ebie McFarland – Essential Broadcast Media, LLC

CATEGORY 10 – TALENT AGENT OF THE YEAR
Darin Murphy – Creative Artists Agency

CATEGORY 11 – TALENT BUYER/PROMOTER OF THE YEAR
Brian O’Connell – Live Nation

CATEGORY 12 – TOUR CATERER OF THE YEAR
Dega Catering

CATEGORY 13 – TOURING MUSICIAN OF THE YEAR
Jenee Fleenor – Blake Shelton

CATEGORY 14 – VENUE OF THE YEAR
Ryman Auditorium – Nashville, Tenn.

CATEGORY 15 – TOUR VIDEO DIRECTOR OF THE YEAR
Jay Cooper – Kenny Chesney

Industry Ink: Sony Music Nashville, Project Music 2016 Accelerator, ‘Nash Country Weekly’, CRS

Kinney Moves From UMG to Sony Music Nashville

Mary Catherine Kinney

Mary Catherine Kinney

Mary Catherine Kinney has joined Sony Music Nashville as Manager, Media.  Reporting to Vice President, Media, Fount Lynch, Kinney will work closely with Lynch in support of his roster of artists, which includes Kenny Chesney, Tyler Farr, Miranda Lambert, Maren Morris, Old Dominion, Jake Owen, Chase Rice, and Chris Young.

Most recently Coordinator of Media Marketing for Universal Music Group Nashville, Kinney is on the job now and can be reached at [email protected].

 

Music Tech Startups Named For Nashville Entrepreneur Center, CMA’s Project Music 2016 Accelerator

ProjectMusic16Seven music tech startups will join the sophomore cohort of the Nashville Entrepreneur Center (EC) and CMA’s Project Music 2016 Accelerator. These music­-centric startups will be onsite at the EC for a 16­-week business building program that meets the unique needs of music-­minded entrepreneurs by surrounding them with the curriculum, community, connections, and capital necessary to turn their ideas into reality. Project Music saw a 55 percent increase in applications over the prior year, leading to tough competition for the coveted slots in this unique industry­-focused program.

The following entrepreneurial ventures were chosen for the 2016 program: (in alphabetical order):
Concert.Expert: Aladdin Schastlivy (Kiev, Ukraine)
Moodsnap: David Blutenthal (Nashville)
My Fans Demand: Shaun Cavanaugh (Nashville)
nicechart: Steve Morell (San Diego, California)
notetracks: Kam Lal (Montreal, Canada)
RecordGram: Erik Mendelson (Miami Beach, Florida)
Up Next: Ayinde Arnett (Chicago, Illinois)

Project Music co-­founder, Joe Galante, said, “The dramatic increase in both applicants and their geographic reach signifies a significant milestone for Project Music. It is the culmination of a great deal of effort at the EC lead by Stuart (McWhorter), Heather (McBee) and our initial investors.” Galante continues, “We look forward to helping this next cohort provide some solutions and opportunities for the entertainment business.”

Promotion, Hiring at Nash Country Weekly

Pictured (L-R): Chris Parton, Jim Casey

Pictured (L-R): Chris Parton, Jim Casey

Nash Country Weekly Editor in Chief Lisa Konicki has announced the promotion of Jim Casey to managing editor and the hiring of Chris Parton as deputy editor, effective immediately. The moves follow the exit of Nash Country Weekly Managing Editor Jon Freeman, who has begun working with Rolling Stone Country.

Casey joined the magazine as deputy editor in 2014 after serving as director of editorial at FIGHT! Magazine for five years. The Memphis native is a graduate of UT Chattanooga and the University of Memphis.

A Warsaw, New York, native, Parton was most recently a staff writer and producer for CMT.com. As a freelance journalist he’s contributed to Rolling Stone Country and Nashville Scene. He is a graduate of SUNY Oneonta.

“Jim’s work ethic and vision are vital in the often crazy-paced world of publishing a weekly magazine,” said Konicki. “And Chris’ reputation within the country music industry makes him the perfect addition to the Nash Country Weekly staff.”

 

Country Radio Seminar Offering Discount on CRS 2016 Registrations

CRS 2016 LogoCountry Radio Seminar is offering a $100 discount on CRS registrations, available now through Jan. 7, 2016. Following the deadline, the $529 per person rate will increase to $629. To register for the three-day event, visit countryradioseminar.com.

CRS will be held Monday, Feb. 8 through Wednesday, Feb. 10 at Nashville’s Omni Hotel.

[Exclusive] Inside The Grammys: The Recording Academy’s SVP of Awards, Bill Freimuth

Bill Freimuth

Bill Freimuth, the Recording Academy’s SVP of Awards

Bill Freimuth, SVP for the Recording Academy’s Awards Department, oversees the Awards department, leading a full-time staff of 16 (plus five temporary staffers in the fall) to manage the Grammy Awards’ submission process, and oversees production of Premiere, the Grammy Awards’ pre-telecast show, where the majority of the awards are announced.

Freimuth spoke to MusicRow about the voting process for the Recording Academy’s 13,000 voting members, the Grammys’ move to Monday night in 2016, Grammy voting misconceptions, and the next steps in the Grammy awards process now that the final nominees have been revealed.

Final-round Grammy ballots will be mailed Dec. 16 and awards will be presented Monday, Feb. 15, live from STAPLES Center in Los Angeles and broadcast on CBS. Click here for more on this year’s Grammy nominees.

On the requirements to become a voting member of the Recording Academy:
Freimuth: You have to be a music maker, and involved creatively in the production of recorded music, so that’s singers, songwriters, instrumentalists, producers, engineers, album notes writers, art directors, video directors, people like that. They are all creative folks. Our voting members are not artist managers, publicists, label executives.

To be a member, it’s really easy to join if you have those credits, and we are always encouraging those who are eligible to join the Academy. Right now, you need credits in one of those creative areas on at least six tracks that are released physically via a CD or at least 12 tracks released digital only.

On this year’s leading nominees, including Kendrick Lamar and Taylor Swift:
Each of them has released an album this year that, at the risk of sounding cliché, was a game-changer. They pulled out all the stops and made albums that were not just people-pleasers, but have deep, artistic integrity. They did terrific work, and I like to think that these nominations are a reflection of that fantastic work.

On the Grammy Awards’ move to Monday night in 2016:
The major reason is if we were on our normal Sunday, it would fall on Valentine’s Day. I think that is second only to Mother’s Day as far as the busiest night for restaurants so we didn’t want people to have to choose. And it’s also a holiday weekend otherwise, because it’s President’s Day on Monday, so…for those various reasons it made sense to be on a Monday this year.

On deciding which categories will be telecast each year:
It’s decided in collaboration between the production team and our TV committee, primarily elected leaders from the Academy, our trustees, along with a few senior staff members. It’s usually not decided until relatively late in the process, as far as what categories will be on air. We want to make sure we have a good mix, that the categories are relevant to the viewing audience, and of course, we want to make sure that all the nominees are actually attending.

On Recording Academy voting rules:
There is a cap on how many of the 83 categories members can vote in. Everybody can vote in the four categories in the general field and we certainly encourage every voter to make their marks in those categories. Out of the remaining 79 categories, people can vote on up to 20 of those categories. We strongly encourage people to vote only in areas in which they have expertise. No doubt there are a lot of people, for example in Nashville, that know not only country music but also rock, pop, and very likely American roots music, so there are plenty of people who really are qualified to vote in 10, 15, up to 20 additional categories.

On Grammy misconceptions:
I travel to our different Recording Academy chapters to meet with new members, or with potential members, and I will sometimes do these kind of ‘Grammy 101’ talks. I ask how many of them think that the Grammy nominations and winners decisions are made in some smoke-filled room by a bunch of top label execs and managers. I always get several people raising their hands. So we’ve done a lot of work to dispel some of the myths.

We’ve developed our awards process over the last 58 years and we tweak it every year to keep currency and relevance. We have the whole process to screen each recording into its proper genre. Some categories—country included—go through review committees to further ensure the integrity of the category. We work against marketing budgets and popularity to some extent to make sure we are actually honoring simply great recordings.

It’s funny because I meet people and they find out what I do, and they say, “OK, what do you do the rest of the year?” I’m doing this the whole year. We got over 21,000 submissions this year. Our staff needs to look at each one of those submissions at least a couple of times during the process. From July through Thanksgiving, we are just going through every single one of these, to make sure they are actually eligible and in the right category and going through the process in the correct way.

On the next steps for the Recording Academy leading up to the Grammy Awards:
The first couple of things are that we are uploading all the recordings on a site I call our “Listening Room,” a password-protected site where all of our voters can go and listen to all the nominated recordings, and we find that’s actually had a great influence on the way people vote. They may see the list and think they will vote for one track, but then they listen to another song they had not even heard, and it blows them away and it gets their vote. It helps to ensure that the best music is being honored. Of course, we have to make sure we get clearances for all that music so that’s a lot of work as well.

For me, personally, I am a sort of co-producer on the Premiere ceremony, so I’m booking presenters and performers for that event. We are getting more and more big-name artists at that event. Taylor [Swift] is always there and has been since she was a kid, which is amazing.

On nominee seating arrangements during the Grammy Awards ceremony:
It’s more contingent on whether you are a member of the Academy. If you are a member of the Academy who is nominated [for a Grammy Award], you get two gratis seats and the ability to purchase more, though the ones you purchase probably won’t be seated with you, but further back in the house. If you are not a member of the Academy, you get one ticket and the ability to purchase a ticket to sit next to you, and the ability to purchase more tickets further back. In terms of seating, if your category will be televised on air, you will be seated near the front. Also because we certainly want to please our fans and general music consumers, we tend to put some of the more recognizable faces on the front rows, as you can imagine.

‘MusicRow’ Reveals 2016 Next Big Thing Artists

NBT-2016_reveal_570px (1)

MusicRow is proud to announce today the 2016 Next Big Thing print issue. This year’s 11 Next Big Thing artists range from established hitmakers prepping their next moves, to newcomers ready to claim their turns in the spotlight.

Be sure to pick up your copy of the print magazine here, or receive your copy with the purchase of a yearly subscription.

“As we open the doors to 2016, we are excited to cast a spotlight on a deserving new class that we have deemed The Next Big Thing,” says MusicRow Publisher/Owner Sherod Robertson. “Whether basking in the national spotlight for the first time or escalating to a much bigger stage in 2016, these 11 artists have the talent and skill to reach higher ground.”

In addition to spotlighting artists as MusicRow‘s Next Big Thing, this issue offers exclusive editorial content including a Pentatonix/Cracker Barrel partnership, a spotlight on the burgeoning Nashville neighborhood of Berry Hill, and the video gaming industry’s foray into Music City. CMA-winning, Grammy-nominated producer Dave Cobb also sits down to discuss his successes with Chris Stapleton, Jason Isbell, A Thousand Horses and Sturgill Simpson.

MusicRow‘s 2016 Next Big Thing Artists

· A Thousand Horses (Republic Nashville)
· Kelsea Ballerini (Black River Entertainment)
· Brothers Osborne (EMI Records Nashville)
· Cam (Arista Nashville/RCA Records)
· Dan + Shay (Warner. Bros Records/Warner Music Nashville)
· Mickey Guyton (Capitol Nashville)
· Chris Janson (Warner Bros. Records/Warner Music Nashville)
· Old Dominion (RCA Nashville)
· Mo Pitney (Curb Records)
· Granger Smith (Wheelhouse Records)
· Chris Stapleton (Mercury Records)

Exclusive: Skyville Live Brings Star Power to Streaming Video

Pictured (L-R): Wally Wilson and Nic Duggar

Pictured (L-R): Wally Wilson and Nic Dugger

Although it’s technically housed in a warehouse in Berry Hill, Skyville Live is pretty much on cloud nine these days. In November, the live-streaming concert series picked up three Midsouth Regional Emmy nominations and confirmed Grammy-nominated artists Chris Stapleton and Little Big Town, Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Gregg Allman and blues great Taj Mahal for their next installment, set for Friday (Dec. 11).

Wally Wilson created Skyville Live after setting up some shows at the Basement with new acts he was developing. When those gigs outgrew the small space, he relocated the series to the Skyville property and streamed a 2014 concert by The Mavericks. With a much stronger viewer turnout than he anticipated, he decided to expand on the idea. As the series continued, stars like Gladys Knight and Kris Kristofferson signed on, as did Jason Isbell, Lady Antebellum, Martina McBride and more. Past performances are archived on SkyvilleLive.com. The upcoming concert will be streamed there, as well as Skyville.USAToday.com.

While the music is obviously a key part of the series, so is the storytelling between songs. Taking a cue from their high-profile talent, Wilson and Nic Dugger (who handles the technical components of the show) share their own Skyville Live story with MusicRow.

MusicRow: One of your Emmy nominations for Skyville Live is in the audio category. Do you approach audio on this show differently than you might on a TV show?

Wilson: This is a television show for all intents and purposes. As a matter of fact, as we move through this process, we will be utilizing television as well as the internet space. It’s recorded exactly like every other television show. And I will humbly, or not so humbly, say that we believe our sound is far superior to most things we see on television. We’re head and hands above.

We approach this the way you would making a record. On the day before our show, we record rehearsals in ProTools and we get back out there and suss out what it sounds like, and take great pains with it. Mills Logan [who shares the audio Emmy nomination with Duggar and Wilson] and the crew work their butts off on this, way into the night and the day before, to get this great sound.

It surprises me that most big awards shows don’t do that, or don’t have that kind of sound, because we’re doing exactly what they’re doing. Now, I will say that they have a lot of music and set changes that we don’t necessarily have. We have a stationary band, but in general, our sound is tremendous. I guess I’m the most proud of that, because I’m a music guy.

The HD video makes the show seem very intimate and immediate. What does that bring out in the show?

Dugger: High-definition television production is not anything new. But delivering it at a quality level, via a web stream, is fairly new. There’s been hi-def streaming for years, but varying levels of quality. Something that we want to make sure of is that when people watch this, it’s as if they’re sitting in this space. We want to bring them into our studio, bring them into our basement for this fun session.

So, what that means is, not only do the cameras have to be of excellent quality, but the lighting has to be of excellent quality. The set pieces that Wally has had built have to look authentic. The staging placement and the arrangement of the musicians has to be pleasing to the eye. That way when you’re watching on your portable device, or your laptop, or hopefully your big-screen TV, you feel like you’re in that space. If the video quality doesn’t match the audio quality, we’re missing half of the story. Audio without video is just radio. But video without audio is just surveillance! (laughs) And we don’t want that either.

You’ve had incredible guests on the show. How do you present this concept to artists and managers?

Wilson: The formula that dawned on me after doing that first show is that if we book tremendous iconic talent, other artists will be drawn to that. For example, if we book Gladys Knight, then Martina McBride and Estelle want to play with Gladys and interact with her in a way that’s out of their comfort zone and in a new comfort zone. The same with Kris Kristofferson. Jason Isbell is a tremendous fan of his, and that was such a moving moment on that show – the passing of the torch from Kris to Jason. And Lady Antebellum was in the middle of that show, and then Brandy Clark. I say it’s like the Bill Gaither Homecoming meets Jools Holland. (laughs)

Dugger: The quality is an important part of this as well. Even though I’m thrilled to be on Wally’s team for this, we [Duggar’s company TNDV] do work outside of Skyville and we average 360-some-odd shows a year. Of all the meetings I sit through, I hear, “Cut the budget. How do we do it cheaper? How many corners can we cut?” That is just the trend: “How do we get content for cheap?”

What Wally has brought to the table is budget-conscious. We’re not throwing money around, but at the same time, we want to do it right. When we send a clip to an artist’s manager and say, “This is the level of quality we can present and that you should expect,” that has a much different reaction than “cheap, cheap, cheap, cut, cut, cut.” And the fact that we have a few of these under our belt, it’s very easy to say, “Look what we’ve done in the past. We want you to be a part of this.” When they see it, they know immediately that we’re not joking around.

You have a live audience, rather than a closed set. How does that affect the show?

Wilson: The artists know that at 7 Central, 8 Eastern, this is going out around the world. We literally have people in Japan, the Soviet Union, Lithuania, and Africa watching this show. That adds a piece of drama for the artist. The intangibles of that are very, very valuable.

Dugger: It’s unique. These are touring artists. Some of these artists have been on tour for years and years. They’re performed at awards shows, they’ve performed on television specials, but nothing intimate like this. They’re literally performing in someone’s lap at home who is tuning in because they love that artist and love that music. We can’t say it’s unscripted—we rehearse and we know what we’re going to do. But it’s a very natural and free-flowing event that is not stale or static. It has its own vibe to it, and it’s important that we step back and let it happen. So, if they deviate from the rundown a little bit, that’s OK. If they’re feeling the groove and want to do an extra chorus, go for it. We enjoy that part.

Watch Skyville Live’s YouTube channel here.

LifeNotes: Keith Urban’s Father Passes

Photo: Instagram/Keith Urban

Photo: Instagram/Keith Urban

MusicRow sends its condolences to Keith Urban and his family in the passing of Urban’s father, Robert, on Saturday, Dec. 5, after an extended battle with cancer.

“I’ve been deeply touched by the outpouring of love and support that Nic and I, and our family,  have received since my Dad’s passing on Saturday night,” Urban said in a statement. “His long battle with cancer is now over and he is finally at peace. My Dad’s love of country music and America set me on my life’s journey, and shaped so much of who I am today.  Thank you to everyone who has kept us all in your thoughts and prayers.”