SoundExchange Board Extends President/CEO Michael Huppe’s Contract

Michael Huppe

The SoundExchange Board of Directors has extended the contract of President and CEO Michael Huppe, who will continue to lead the company through 2021.

Huppe took the helm at SoundExchange in 2011 and since that time, annual collections have increased by more than 150 percent and the company has successfully diversified its offerings to include administration of direct licenses and distribution of settlement monies for third parties. SoundExchange moved into music publisher administration with its acquisition of Canadian mechanical rights society CMRRA in May 2017 and has distributed nearly $5 billion in digital performance royalties to artists and rights owners since it was formed.

“Mike’s vision and energy have driven SoundExchange through a remarkable period of growth and diversification, resulting in one of the most effective, efficient and transparent organizations in the industry today,” said Cary Sherman, chairman and CEO, Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), and a member of the SoundExchange Board of Directors. “Mike has identified and executed on opportunities to redefine service and efficiency. Moreover, he has guided the expansion of our business beyond its initial core to include administration of direct licenses for sound recordings and brought the company into the music publisher services sector through the acquisition of CMRRA. He is a tireless advocate for musicians and the industry, and I’m thrilled he will be at SoundExchange’s helm for another term.”

Dedicated to advocating for all creators of music, Huppe has testified multiple times before Congress and led the organization’s successful efforts before the Copyright Royalty Board, resulting in substantial increases in royalties paid by webcasters and satellite radio. At the same time, the company delivered new services including direct license administration and the distribution of settlement monies to artists including the recording industry’s settlement of litigation around pre-72 sound recordings. The company also developed and rolled out SoundExchange Direct, providing a new level of access and transparency in royalty reporting as well as the industry’s first publicly accessible International Standard Recording Code (ISRC) database.

Huppe also serves on the Executive Committee of industry lobbying organization musicFIRST and the Community Advisory Board for the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. He is an Adjunct Professor at Georgetown University School of Law and a graduate of the University of Virginia and Harvard Law School.

 

Rascal Flatts Slates Back To Us Tour For Summer

Rascal Flatts revealed today that they will hit the road this summer for their headlining Back To Us Tour. The 25-date tour kicking off in Hartford, Connecticut, follows the band’s successful sold-out residency in Las Vegas last year and will visit cities including Charlotte, Tampa, Philadelphia, Chicago, San Diego, and Dallas.

The trio has invited chart-toppers Dan + Shay and Carly Pearce to join them on the trek this summer. Fans can purchase tickets beginning Jan. 26 for select cities as part of Live Nation’s Country Megaticket at Megaticket.com.

“I can’t describe how much we are looking forward to the tour this summer!” said Rascal Flatts’ Gary LeVox. “We’ve been lucky enough to be in a position to tour consistently throughout our career, and last year felt like the perfect time to reset as we focused on the release of our 10th album. Coming back this year and with our friends Dan + Shay, who are some of the best guys around, as well as Carly who had an amazing year last year, makes it all the more exciting! It’s going to be an awesome time for us and the fans!”

RASCAL FLATTS BACK TO US TOUR CITIES:
Hartford, CT
Mansfield, MA
Alpharetta, GA
Charlotte, NC
Raleigh, NC
Virginia Beach, VA
Holmdel, NJ
Bristow, VA
Wantagh, NY
Tampa, FL
West Palm Beach, FL
Philadelphia, PA
Pittsburgh, PA
St. Louis, MO
Cincinnati, OH
Indianapolis, IN
Chicago, IL
Toronto, ON
Cleveland, OH
Clarkston, MI
Dallas, TX
Phoenix, AZ
San Diego, CA
Irvine, CA
Sacramento, CA

Dierks Bentley Ups Ante On Creativity On New Telluride-Inspired Project

Dierks Bentley traveled to the mountains for the Telluride Bluegrass Festival last summer to perform, and came out with the inspiration for his ninth and latest album, The Mountain, due out in early 2018 on Capitol Nashville. 

Returning to Telluride not long after for a writers retreat with fellow writers Natalie Hemby, Luke Dick, Ross Copperman, Jon Randall, Jon Nite and Ashley Gorley, Bentley knocked out the bulk of the material that would make up the new album that week. He calls it the most inspiring creative experience he’s ever had.

“Telluride just makes you want to reach for your guitar,” described Bentley. “We all went out there and got completely off the grid…out of our normal element and the grind that happens on Music Row and it was, from the very get-go, magic. We’d wake up every morning, grab a coffee, take the gondola up, watch the sun come up over the mountains, and by 8:30 we were writing. We just wrote non-stop. Obviously, the songs were written and recorded in the mountains. But it’s the mountain that we’re all faced with every day, and the struggle to put one foot in front of the other even when things are hard, that we all have in common. Looking back now, I think we were all searching for hope and optimism when we were writing this music.”

Two months later, Bentley traveled back to Telluride with producers Ross Copperman, Jon Randall, and executive producer Arturo Buenahora Jr., along with an array of musicians to record the songs in a small studio atop a mesa outside of town.

Today, he’ll go live across all social media platforms at 12:00 p.m. CT to give fans more insight behind the new project. Questions can be submitted until 11:00 a.m. CT using the hashtag #themountain on Twitter. Fans who pre-order the album now on Dierks.com will receive a Key to The Mountain that will unlock extra tracks, bonus videos, special merchandise and VIP experiences with Bentley on his 2018 tour.

Americana Music Association Teams With CDX Nashville For Albums, Singles Charts

The Americana Music Association, in conjunction with CDX Nashville, will launch a monitored Americana Radio Airplay Albums Chart and debut a Singles Chart on Jan. 16. The data for both charts will be based on monitored Americana radio airplay, and will be published on americanaradio.org.

This new partnership will enable CDX Nashville to implement their monitored airplay system to the Americana format. Utilizing their own patent-pending song recognition technology, the service will monitor terrestrial broadcast station signals that are being streamed over the internet as well as take into account internet-based radio streams. Song detections will be tracked in real-time and then reported to paid subscribers through the CDX TRACtion web-based interface.

The charts will monitor Americana songs and albums that are encoded into the CDX TRACtion database by radio chart editor Michele Rhoades, who also oversees radio development.

“We are thrilled to partner with CDX Nashville and their incredibly supportive team,” said Jed Hilly, Executive Director of the Americana Music Association℠. “With their innovative platform and the debut of our new Singles Chart, we hope to bring our Americana radio charts to another level where we can continue to justly serve our artists in the community and their music being played across the country.”

“It is our belief that monitored airplay tracking will allow promoters, labels and artists to more accurately measure success and optimize their marketing and promotion efforts,” said CDX Nashville VP Joe Kelly.

For more information and to inquire about advertising opportunities for the new Americana Radio Airplay Charts, contact Michele Rhoades.

Jordan Davis, Jillian Jacqueline Plot White Wine And Whiskey Tour

MCA Nashville’s Jordan Davis is riding high on the success of his debut single, “Singles You Up.” He released the official video clip for the track, which Davis penned with Justin Ebach and Steven Dale Jones, with production from Paul DiGiovanni (of Boys Like Girls fame).

In February, he will bring his music on the road with the White Wine and Whiskey Tour, which features Big Loud Records’ Jillian Jacqueline opening dates. The tour launches Feb. 2 in West Peoria, Illinois, and will include stops in Nashville, Atlanta, Detroit, and Dallas.

Tickets for the tour go on sale Friday (Jan. 12).

Davis was signed to MCA in 2016, after moving to Nashville following his graduation from Louisiana State University in 2012 (he studied Resource Conservation).

Jacqueline recently released her EP Side A, with production from Tofer Brown. The set features her single “Reasons.”

WHITE WINE AND WHISKEY TOUR Dates:
Feb. 2, West Peoria, IL
Feb. 3, Sioux City, IA
Feb. 16, Mount Laurel, NJ
Feb. 17, Asbury Park, NJ
Feb. 18, Uncasville, CT
Feb. 23, Dallas, TX
Mar. 1, Cleveland, OH
Mar. 2, Grand Rapids, MI
Mar. 3, Detroit, MI
Mar. 20, Decatur, GA
Mar. 21, Nashville, TN*
Mar. 22, St. Louis, MO

Kim Richey Set To Release First New Album In Five Years

Kim Richey will release her first album in five years, Edgeland, on Yep Roc Records March 30. In support of the album, Richey has announced the first leg of a U.S. tour, which will include stops in Nashville, Vienna, Cambridge, Pittsburgh, and Ann Arbor, among others.

Recorded in Nashville and produced by Brad Jones, Edgeland is Richey’s eighth studio album. Nashville players including Dan Dugmore, Jerry Roe, Pat Sansone, Doug Lancio, Dan Cohen, Chris Carmichael, and Robyn Hitchcock joined her in the studio. The follow up to 2013’s Thorn In My Heart, the album offers 12 original songs and features writing collaborations with Maendo Sanz, Mike Henderson, Bill Deasy, Al Anderson, Jenny Queen, Harry Hoke, Chuck Prophet and Pat McLaughlin.

KIM RICHEY TOUR DATES:
April 6 – City Winery – Nashville, TN
April 7 – The Red Clay Theater – Duluth, GA
April 12 – Jammin Java – Vienna, VA
April 13 – Kennett Flash – Kennett Square, PA
April 15 – The Loft at the Music Hall – Portsmouth, NH
April 18 – Club Passim – Cambridge, MA
April 19 – The Linda – WAMC’s Performing Arts Studio – Albany, NY
April 20 – Club Café – Pittsburgh, PA
April 21 – The G.A.R. Hall – Peninsula, OH
April 25 – The Ark – Ann Arbor, MI
April 26 – Natalie’s – Worthington, OH
April 27 – Pin Drop Concert Series @ Seven Steps Up – Spring Lake, MI
April 28 – SPACE – Evanston, IL

Jason Isbell To Kick Off Spring Tour In April

Jason Isbell and The 400 Unit have announced Spring 2018 tour dates in support of their acclaimed album The Nashville Sound (Southeastern Records). Richard Thompson has been slated to open most of the new dates. 

The Nashville Sound has been nominated for two 2018 Grammy Awards for Best Americana Album and Best American Roots Song (“If We Were Vampires”). The independently-released album has sold over 120,000 copies. Tour and ticket information can be found at jasonisbell.com.

Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit ~ 2018 Spring Dates:

April 14 – Savannah, GA – Savannah Music festival
April 15 – Panama City, FL – Marina Civic Center
April 17 – Clearwater, FL – Ruth Eckerd Hall
April 18 – Orlando, FL – Walt Disney Theater
April 20 – Greenville, SC – Peace Center
April 21 – Charleston, SC- Highwater Festival
April 22 – Chattanooga, TN – Tivoli Theatre
April 24 – Amarillo, TX – Amarillo Civic Center Auditorium
April 25th – Albuquerque, NM – Popejoy Hall
April 26 – El Paso, TX – The Plaza Theatre
April 28 – Indio, CA – Stagecoach
April 30 – Midland, TX – Wagner Noël Performing Arts Center
May 1 – San Antonio, TX – Tobin Center for the Performing Arts
May 2 – Sugar Land, TX – Smart Financial Centre
May 5 – El Dorado, AR – Griffin Music Hall
May 6 – Montgomery, AL – Montgomery Performing Arts Centre
May 8 – Knoxville, TN – Tennessee Theatre
May 9 – Knoxville, TN –Tennessee Theatre
May 10 – Huntsville, AL – Huntsville Hospital Foundation Benefit Concert at Von Braun Center

Thomas Rhett, Jon Pardi, Sam Hunt, Luke Combs Among 2018 iHeartRadio Music Awards Nominees

iHeartMedia and Turner Broadcasting have announced the nominees for the upcoming 2018 iHeartRadio Music Awards set for Sunday, March 11 at the Forum in L.A. Thomas Rhett, Jon Pardi, Sam Hunt, and Luke Combs all received multiple nominations for the awards, which are now in their fifth year and celebrate the biggest songs and artists heard throughout 2017 across iHeartMedia radio stations nationwide and on the iHeartRadio app.

For the first time ever, this year iHeartRadio will present seven awards in the seven nights leading up to the Sunday, March 11 telecast. Each night at 8 p.m. ET, an artist will be presented their award and give an acceptance speech. The awards show will be simulcast live on TBS, TNT and truTV at 8 p.m. ET, on iHeartMedia radio stations nationwide, and on the iHeartRadio app. TV subscribers can also watch the awards on the truTV, TNT & TBS Apps. The 2018 telecast will feature live performances from today’s superstars, once-in-a-lifetime collaborations, as well as celebrity guest appearances. This is Turner Broadcasting’s third year broadcasting the event.

“We have a guiding principle at iHeartRadio that fans rule,” said John Sykes, President of iHeartMedia Entertainment Enterprises. “In our fifth year we are still holding true to our original vision of staging an awards show that truly reflects the music fans loved listening to on iHeartRadio all year long.”

Artists receiving multiple nominations in other genres include Rihanna, Taylor Swift, Ed Sheeran, Bruno Mars, Luis Fonsi, Daddy Yankee, Justin Bieber, DJ Khaled and The Chainsmokers.

iHeart Radio Music Country Nominees:
Country Song of the Year:
–       “Body Like A Back Road” – Sam Hunt
–       “Dirt On My Boots” – Jon Pardi
–       “Hurricane” – Luke Combs
–       “Small Town Boy” – Dustin Lynch
–       “Unforgettable” – Thomas Rhett

Country Artist of the Year:
–       Blake Shelton
–       Jason Aldean
–       Luke Bryan
–       Sam Hunt
–       Thomas Rhett

Best New Country Artist:
–       Brett Young
–       Jon Pardi
–       Kane Brown
–       Lauren Alaina
–       Luke Combs

Steve Dorff Looks At A Life In Songwriting With New Memoir

One of songwriter Steve Dorff’s earliest memories involves creating a musical score in his head—while getting pelted by ice during a snowball fight.

For most children, the innate response might be to run or perhaps retaliate with a few well-timed throws of their own. However, Dorff recalls standing still in the center of the group, listening intently as his mind created rhythms and music to accent each swirl of a snowball flying through the air, and the soft punches of snow as they hit against his jacket.

“Everyone else would be cheering it, while I would be musicalizing it. I would underscore in my head everything that was going on around me,” Dorff recalls during a visit to the MusicRow offices. “I assumed everybody did that.”

Dorff was born with synesthesia, a cross-sensory phenomenon that allows some people to hear colors, see sounds, or perhaps see numbers or letters as inherently colored.

“I do remember banging my head against the crib when I was a baby. My mother thought I was having epileptic seizures, but I was trying to create the rhythms I was hearing. I heard orchestras in my mind long before I knew what they actually were. I guess I always knew that music was something I was destined to do,” he says.

Now having been in the music industry for more than four decades, Dorff has more than fulfilled that destiny. Along the way, he has earned 40 BMI Awards and 11 Billboard awards, and has crafted more than 20 Top 10 hits, for an array of pop and country artists including titles for Whitney Houston, Celine Dion, Barbra Streisand, Garth Brooks and George Strait, among others.

On Nov. 1, 2017, Dorff released his memoir, titled I Wrote That One, Too…A Life In Songwriting From Willie To Whitney (with Colette Freedman, on Backbeat Books), a trove filled with at times humorous, and always honest, stories from a diverse career that has included scoring music for television shows including Reba, Growing Pains, and Murder She Wrote, and movies including Every Which Way But Loose and Pure Country. Most recently, he returned to what he calls his first love: musical theater, scoring for the musical Josephine.

The same month, it was announced that Dorff was named among the elite group of songwriters nominated for induction to the Songwriters Hall of Fame in New York.

How did the idea to write a book come about, and how long did it take you to complete the book?

I was asked to write a book. After I had done one of my [solo performances] Evenings With Steve Dorff. This woman came up and said, ‘I love your stories you should write a book.’ She was a literary agent and she said, ‘I’m going to get you a book deal.’ She gave me her card and a few months later she called me and said, ‘I think I got you a deal, you better start writing.’ That was March 2016. I wrote it very quickly. I had to turn the first draft in on November 15 of 2016.

Were some events and sessions hard to remember?

It was fun because sometimes I’d be thinking about who played on which records. After my first pass, my editor would ask for more details. ‘I want to know what Barbra [Streisand] was wearing. How long did it take? Who played on it?’ So I had to recall those sessions I did 15 or 20 years ago. I remembered pretty much everything, but sometimes I would listen to the record and it reminded me who played on what, because music always does that.

Your son, late songwriter Andrew Dorff, wrote the foreword of the book just before he died in December 2016.

Andrew had called me around the beginning of November, and he said, ‘Who’s going to write that foreword?’ I said, ‘They will probably want Kenny Rogers or someone who has worked with me to do that.’ He said he wanted to write it, and wrote this really cool thing. Our publisher said we didn’t have to worry about the foreword until later on, but when all this happened, I called the publisher and said, ‘This is the forward, this is non-negotiable.’ They were happy to do that and it was beautiful what he wrote.

In the book, you talk about having been able to hear entire scores in your head since you were a young child. Is that still the case?

Yes, that’s why it is so easy for me. When I went into film, writing for movies comes as natural as breathing. I can look at a scene and I can hear it. I don’t have to play or write it. I look at the film without any sound, and I try to create what I’m hearing.

I’m totally piano, though. I can’t play guitar. I sit at my big old Yamaha in my living room. I have a grand piano and there is nothing like the sound of that. The truth is, with most of my ideas, I have 75-85 percent of the song done before I ever sit down at the piano.

Your creative talent has allowed you to compose for musical theatre, score movies and television shows, and write hit songs for radio. What are the differences in scoring and composing for movies, television and musical theatre?

I grew up on theater music more than on rock ‘n’ roll. You are writing as an extension of the dialogue so whatever the characters are, you have to write both musically and lyrically along to how he or she would say it, and just musicalize that, as if you were musicalizing a page or two of dialogue. Musically you are free to do anything—time signatures, changing keys—you have much more creative freedom than writing for radio.

There are tricks and things I’ve learned along the way. For movies and television, if it is a tense scene, there are certain intervals and chords that my ear goes to right away that complement what is happening on the screen. If you dial it down and have it very subliminally, it underscores the action.

What do you recall about writing for Whitney Houston?

I remember getting a phone call from Jermaine Jackson. I had worked with him on a previous album years before, and hadn’t seen him since because the song never came out. He said, ‘I’m looking for a duet song for my album, and I thought of you and wondered if you had something like that.’ Of course I said yes, even though I didn’t. You always say yes. I just stuffed a couple of songs in my pocket and went over to his studio. He jumped into my car and popped the cassette in to play “Take Good Care of My Heart.” By the second chorus he said, ‘That’s it.’ I thought it would be for Dionne [Warwick] or Aretha [Franklin] because they were the best ones on Arista at the time and he said, ‘No, it’s with this new girl.’ I was disappointed, but some of my buddies were playing on the record. They recorded it that night, and I thought it was great. I thought she could really sing. After Jermaine’s album came out, Clive Davis called and told me Jermaine didn’t want it to be a single from his album. Clive was doing a solo album on Whitney and wanted it for her album. I thought, ‘Great, I might sell another 5,000 copies.’ It sold 23 million. That was a big one.

You first came to Nashville in 1971. What are your memories of Nashville at that time?

Being from New York, I wanted to see what Nashville was about. We came up here and stayed in this dumpy hotel down where downtown Nashville is now. Downtown Nashville in the ‘70s didn’t have buildings with more than four floors. I went to BMI and saw producer Bob Montgomery and Billy Sherrill, which was like seeing God. And he actually cut one of my songs with Barbara Fairchild. Back then, the thing that I took away was it’s a little music community that has it’s power brokers and has its setup and you gotta get through certain barriers to get to the guys who make the decisions, much like it is today. I didn’t understand how the business worked back then as well as I do now. Coming from New York, where there were hundreds of “camps,” I understood if I wanted Andy Williams, I went to Columbia and tried to find out the powers that be there. In Nashville it’s so close-knit, it’s like one camp. And it’s still that way, just the names have changed.

You scored the soundtrack to George Strait’s 1992 movie Pure Country. What was different in how you approached that movie?

I met with Chris Cain who [directed] Young Guns and Where the River Runs Black. He knew how he wanted to shoot this movie. They sent me the script and I knew we would have to find songs and pre-record a lot. I had never really done that. I had done a few with the [Clint Eastwood] movies but not on the scale of this, where [lead character Dusty Chandler] is playing in front of 25,000 people.

Tony Brown was very involved in the song selection. I came in with two songs, “Heartland” and “I Cross My Heart.” “I Cross My Heart” was a song that Bette Midler had recorded eight years before, which kept us from getting an Academy Award nomination for it. She had tried singing it several times, but in the end, she didn’t feel like it was the right fit for her at the time.

When I played that song for Tony and George, he basically said, ‘I’m not doing a Lee Greenwood album,’ and George really didn’t like “Heartland,” but it was right for the film. A great deal of my success has been the bridge that film and TV and yet knowing how to write songs that work in this format. The power of movies and television really elevated it.

Several of your hits were in your catalog for years before they were released. You wrote “Baby Let’s Lay Down and Dance” in 2001, and it became the first single off Garth Brooks’ 2016 album, Gunslinger.

I keep digging back and pitching songs, and trying to give facelifts to demos of songs I really believe in. I do that with Andrew’s catalog too. Andrew and I used to argue about how he would write 250 songs a year and if I write 15 songs a year, that’s a big year for me. I’ll go months sometimes without writing a song, so to think some of these great writers are writing five songs per week is mind-boggling.

So we playfully argued, ‘How do you have that many ideas?’ But he did. He was brilliant as an idea guy, but he tends to always go with what he wrote yesterday and he would forget some of the great songs he wrote two or three years ago. Now I’m given that charge since he is not here to go back and mine that catalog and try to find homes for some of those songs.

Big Deal Music Signs Forest Glen Whitehead

Pictured (back row): Dale Bobo, Greg Gallo, Whitney Whitehead, Nate Drake, Pete Robinson, Robert Filhart. Front row (L-R): Austin Adams, Forest Glen Whitehead, Kelly Bolton

Big Deal Music Group has signed songwriter and producer Forest Glen Whitehead to the roster. Whitehead, a Louisiana native, produced and co-wrote several songs on Kelsea Ballerini’s now Platinum, Grammy-nominated, debut album, The First Time, as well as her most recent sophomore album, Unapologetically.

To date, he has achieved No. 1 songs with Ballerini including “​Love Me Like You Mean It,” and “Peter Pan.” Whitehead is also a writer on her current and climbing Top 10 single, “Legends” co-written with Ballerini and Hillary Lindsey. Whitehead has also had songs recorded by Brantley Gilbert, Dylan Scott, and Jacob Davis, among others.