Anacrusis Inks Admin Deal With Kobalt

Nashville-based publisher Anacrusis has signed an exclusive, global administration deal with Kobalt Music Group. Anacrusis was started by Liz Rogers, who now serves as Creative Director. The Anacrusis-Kobalt partnership will be managed by Kobalt’s Nashville office, under GM Jesse Willoughby.  Kobalt will be handling admin for Anacrusis’ catalog, which includes pop artist Drew Southwell, who recently collaborated with Steve Aoki, and has garnered attention from Timbaland.

“We could not be more excited to partner with Kobalt,” said Rogers. “They are a true leader in merging technology and music, while maintaining valuable relationships and service, focusing on the songwriter. “We have exciting opportunities on the horizon and Kobalt is the perfect partner to help take Anacrusis to the next level.”   

Anacrusis will be hosting a writing camp and official showcase at the Sundance Film Festival featuring both Anacrusis and Kobalt writers, as well as presenting The Nashville House at SXSW again in March. 

Sugarland Plots 2018 Still The Same Tour

Following the announcement of Sugarland’s return with an upcoming album to be released jointly via UMG Nashville and Big Machine Label Group, the duo has announced it will hit the road this year with 48 tour stops, including a stop in Nashville. Other cities on the tour include Atlanta, Anaheim, Dallas, Seattle, and more. Specific dates for each city have not yet been announced.

Sugarland’s Jennifer Nettles and Kristian Bush recently returned to country radio with the new single, “Still The Same,” marking their first radio offering since 2011’s “Tonight.”

The duo has sold nearly 10 million albums domestically, and earned Platinum-certified singles including “All I Want to Do,” “Stay” and the 2x Platinum “Stuck Like Glue.” During their career, the duo has also earned several accolades including CMA Vocal Duo of the Year (2007-2011), five ACM Awards (including Song of the Year and Single of the Year) and Grammy honors for Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals, and Best Country Song, for “Stay.”

The duo’s reunion comes after both Nettles and Bush released solo projects in recent years. Nettles released the solo album, That Girl, in 2014 via Mercury Nashville. Her second solo album, Playing With Fire, released via Big Machine in 2016. Meanwhile, Bush released the solo album Southern Gravity as a solo artist in 2015 with the now defunct Streamsound Records before signing with BBR Music Group’s Wheelhouse Records. There, he also produced Lindsay Ell’s The Project, released in August on the label group’s Stoney Creek Records.

Sugarland 2018 Still The Same Tour Stops

Allentown, Pa.
Anaheim, Calif.
Atlanta
Augusta, Ga.
Bakersfield, Calif.
Bismarck, N.D.
Chicago
Columbia, Md.
Columbus, Ohio
Dallas
Daytona beach, Fla.
Denver
Des Moines, Iowa
Durant, Okla.
Gilford, N.H.
Grand Island, Neb.
Grand Rapids, Mich.
Green Bay, Wis.
Greenville, S.C.
Huntsville, Ala.
Las Vegas
Los Angeles
Louisville, Ky.
Moline, Ill.
Nashville, Tenn.
Newark, N.J.
Niagara falls, Ontario
Omaha, Neb.
Pensacola, Fla.
Phoenix, Ariz.
Portland, Oregon
Raleigh, N.C.
Rapid city, S.D.
San Diego, Calif.
Santa Barbara, Calif.
Seattle
Sioux falls, S.D.
Spokane, Wash.
St. Louis
St. Paul, Minn.
Sugar Land, Texas
Toledo, Ohio
Tulsa, Okla.
Uncasville, Conn.
Verona, N.Y.
Wichita, Kan.
Worcester, Mass.
Youngstown, Ohio

Smithfield To Join Granger Smith On 2018 Tour

Smithfield will join Wheelhouse Records artist Granger Smith for 12 dates on his upcoming 2018 Winter tour. The Texas acts will kick off the tour on Jan. 18 at Irving Plaza in New York, New York.

Duo Smithfield, which includes Jennifer Fiedler and Trey Smith, released the single, “When You’re Gone,” which has earned more than 2.1 million streams on Spotify, 480K views on YouTube and is consistently topping the CMT 12-Pack Countdown. Both songwriters, Fiedler is aligned with ASCAP, while Smith is signed with SESAC. Last year, the duo took part in SiriusXM and Live Nation’s Highway Finds Tour, alongside Steve Moakler and Drew Baldridge.

Smithfield Tour Dates:
Jan. 18: Irving Plaza | New York, NY
Jan. 19: Paradise Island Rock | Boston, MA
Jan. 20: Starland Ballroom | Sayreville, NJ
Jan. 25:  Kegs Canal Side | Jordan, NY
Jan. 26: Upstate Concert Hall | Clifton Park, NY
Jan. 27: Trocadero Theatre | Philadelphia, PA
Jan. 28: Anthology | Rochester, NY
Feb. 1: Castle Theatre | Bloomington, IL
Feb. 3: Prarie’s Edge Casino Resort | Granite Falls, MN
Feb. 8: Ram’s Head Live | Baltimore, MD
Feb. 9: Dusty Armadillo | Rootstown, OH
Feb. 15: The Griffin Restaurant | El Dorado, AR

Exile Celebrates 55th Anniversary With No Limit Tour

Music group Exile will celebrate its 55th anniversary with the upcoming No Limit Tour, which launches this month with shows in the Nashville area. The band will appear on the Huckabee Show (TBN) on Jan. 13, followed by a Grand Ole Opry appearance the same day. The band will play Franklin, Tennessee’s Franklin Theatre on Feb. 10, followed by shows in Kentucky, Florida, Oklahoma, Iowa, and more.

Since forming in Richmond, Kentucky, in 1963, Exile has sold more than 8 million records and earned three Gold records. 2018 also marks the 40th anniversary of the group’s hit “Kiss You All Over,” which spent four weeks atop the Billboard pop chart in 1978. The band’s other hits include “Give Me One More Chance,” and “I Don’t Want to Be a Memory,” among others.

“We’re excited and proud to commemorate this landmark achievement in Exile’s history of 55 years as a band as well as celebrating the 40th Anniversary of ‘Kiss You All Over’ this year!” said members of Exile, adding, ”there are some very special plans for 2018, and we cannot wait to share them with all our fans.”

Exile “No Limit Tour” 2018
Jan. 13 – National TV – Huckabee Show – TBN
Jan. 13 – Nashville, TN – Grand Ole Opry
Feb. 10 – Franklin, TN – Franklin Theatre
Feb. 15 – Lancaster, KY – Grand Theater
Feb. 16 – McMinnville, TN – Park Theater
Feb. 24 – Weirsdale, FL – Orange Blossom Opry
Mar. 3 – Norman, OK – Thunderbird Casino
Apr. 14 – Niagara Falls, Ontario – Niagara Falls View Casino Resort
Apr. 16 – Pigeon Forge, TN – Dollywood, Show Street Theater
Jun. 3 – Branson, MO – Silver Dollar City
Jun. 8 – Richmond, KY – Chenault Vineyards
Jun. 29 – Prestonsburg, KY – Mountain Arts Center – Hillbilly Christmas in July
Jul. 22 – Iowa City, IA – Johnson County Fair
Aug. 11 – Bevier, MO – Bevier Homecoming
Oct. 2 – Eminence, MO – Cross Country Trail Ride
Oct. 16 – Hiawassee, GA – Georgia Mountain Fair / Anderson Music Hall
Nov. 17 – Federalsburg, MD – Curtis Andrew Auctions Events w/Rhonda Vincent
Nov. 30 – Scottsburg, IN – Ross Country Jamboree
Dec. 1 – Scottsburg, IN – Ross Country Jamboree
Dec. 15 – Bremen, GA – Mill Town Music Hall

mTheory Adds Marketing Manager

Erica Buchi

mtheory Nashville, the Music City division of the artist management services company, has hired Erica Buchi as Marketing Manager.

Buchi comes to mtheory from Ticketmaster/Live Nation Entertainment, where she was Marketing Services Specialist- National Tours. For over five years, she supported artists like Keith Urban, Jason Aldean, Florida Georgia Line and Carrie Underwood.

mtheory, which was founded in 2010, also has offices in New York and Los Angeles.

Buchi can be reached at [email protected]

Funeral Services Set For Opry’s Hairl Hensley

Photo credit: WSM

The life of Country DJ Hall of Fame member Hairl Hensley will be celebrated on Friday – he died on New Year’s Eve, his birthday, at age 81.

Best known as a host of The Grand Ole Opry for 35 years, Hensley also hosted satellite-radio programs, presented bluegrass showcases, worked as a TV announcer and was a regular on Knoxville’s Tennessee Barn Dance.

A native of Madisonville in East Tennessee, Hairl Hensley initially aspired to be a musical performer. Born Dec. 31, 1936, he learned to play guitar as a teenager. He joined a country band that was regularly featured on WDEH in Sweetwater, TN. When the station’s morning DJ was promoted, Hensley took that job.

He worked his way up through the country ranks to become an announcer on WNOX in Knoxville. His duties included co-hosting the station’s Tennessee Barn Dance show. Its cast included such future Nashville stars as Jim & Jesse, Don Gibson and Archie Campbell.

Hensley’s first big job in Nashville was as the voice-over announcer on Porter Wagoner’s widely syndicated TV series. During the late 1950s, he also became the overnight DJ on WKDA in Nashville. He served a stint at WMAK in Music City before being named the program director at WLAC.

In 1972, he joined the staff of WSM, the host station of The Grand Ole Opry. He worked at the station and/or the Opry for the next 35 years. Hensley became known as “the dean of Grand Ole Opry announcers” and was one of the most familiar voices in the annals of country radio.

He was named Country Disc Jockey of the Year by the CMA in 1975. In the early 1980s, he became WSM’s program director.

Hairl Hensley was inducted into the Country Disc Jockey Hall of Fame in 1995. The following year, Hensley was named Bluegrass DJ of the Year by the Society for the Preservation of Bluegrass Music. His daily WSM radio series included “The Early Bird Gets the Bluegrass” and “Orange Possum Special.”

He won the Radio Personality Award at the 2000 Golden Voice Awards. Hensley left WSM in 2004, but continued to announce Opry broadcasts. In later years, he also hosted a daily show on the Sirius “Roadhouse” satellite radio channel.

Ill health forced his retirement in 2007.

Hairl Hensley was inducted into the Tennessee Radio Hall of Fame in 2014.

He suffered a heart attack and underwent triple-bypass surgery on September 17, 2017. He died on December 31 in Mt. Juliet, TN.

Visitation with the family is scheduled for Friday, January 5 from noon to 2:00 p.m. at the Spring Hill Funeral Home in Nashville. A Celebration of Life service will follow at 2:00 p.m.

Muscle Shoals Music Producer Rick Hall Dies

Rick Hall

 

With the death of Rick Hall, the music world has lost one of its most successful entrepreneurs, colorful personalities and dynamic creators.

The man who put Muscle Shoals, Alabama on the map as a music mecca passed away at age 85 on Jan. 2. He had been battling cancer.

As a record producer, studio owner, engineer, music publisher, songwriter and deal maker, Rick Hall touched the lives and careers of such greats as Aretha Franklin, Mac Davis, Wilson Pickett, Ronnie Milsap, Shenandoah, Duane Allman, The Osmonds, Tom Jones, Paul Anka, Alabama, Liza Minnelli and Etta James.

He rose from desperate poverty to become a figure of international renown. A native of North Alabama, Hall was raised in log cabins with no amenities. His mother deserted the family when he was four. His father was a moonshiner, sharecropper, carpenter and saw mill worker who raised his barefoot children on a diet of wild game.

The future mogul began his musical career as a square dance fiddler. In the 1950s, he started making trips to Nashville to peddle his songs.

Back home in Alabama, he formed a partnership with Tom Stafford and Billy Sherrill. They built a studio above Stafford’s father’s drug store in Florence, AL. Sherrill coined its name, FAME (Florence Alabama Music Enterprises). After two years of moderate success, the partnership dissolved. Sherrill moved to Nashville and became one of the most successful record producers and songwriters in the city’s history.

Hall kept the FAME name and opened his own studio on Wilson Dam Avenue in 1959. There, he produced “You Better Move On” written and sung by hotel bellhop Arthur Alexander. In 1962, it became the first international hit recorded in the Muscle Shoals area.

Using the profits from that hit, plus investment from his father-in-law, Hall built a new studio on Avalon Avenue in Muscle Shoals. This is where he produced 1964’s “Steal Away” by Jimmy Hughes.

Working as his studio’s engineer, Hall helped to craft Tommy Roe’s “Everybody” (1963), The Tams’ “What Kind of Fool (Do You Think I Am)” (1964) and other key pop hits of the early 1960s.

Soul stars began beating a path to FAME’s door. Hall produced or co-produced Aretha Franklin’s “I Never Loved a Man” (1967) and “Do Right Woman” (1967), James & Bobby Purify’s “I’m Your Puppet” (1966), Joe Tex’s “Hold What You’ve Got” (1965), Clarence Carter’s “Slip Away” (1968) and “Patches” (1970), Etta James’ “Tell Mama” (1967) and the Wilson Pickett smashes “Mustang Sally” (1966), “Funky Broadway” (1967) and “Land of 1,000 Dances” (1966).

He molded local musicians into becoming studio professionals. Among the notable graduates of his Muscle Shoals sessions are Jerry Carrigan, David Hawkins, Barry Beckett, Dan Penn, David Briggs, Norbert Putnam, David Hood, Spooner Oldham, Terry Thompson, Jimmy Johnson and Chips Moman.

In 1970, MGM chief Mike Curb approached Rick Hall about producing The Osmonds in Muscle Shoals. The results were such hits as “One Bad Apple” (1971), “Yo-Yo” (1971), “Down By the Lazy River” (1972) and “Sweet and Innocent” (Donnny Osmond, 1972, co-written by Hall) and sales of 11 million.

Hall was named Producer of the Year by Billboard in 1971. Bobbie Gentry (“Fancy,” 1970), Paul Anka (“You’re Having My Baby,” 1974) and Candi Staton (“Stand By Your Man,” 1970) followed The Osmonds to FAME. So did Andy Williams, Liza Minnelli, Lou Rawls, Tom Jones and dozens of others.

Mac Davis came to FAME for “Baby Don’t Get Hooked on Me” (1972), “Stop and Smell the Roses” (1974), “Texas In My Rear View Mirror” (1980) and “Hooked on Music” (1981) and more. This led Rick Hall back to his first love, country music.

During the 1980s, T.G. Sheppard, Larry Gatlin, Jerry Reed, Gus Hardin, Terri Gibbs, Vern Gosdin, Billy Joe Royal, Tom Wopat and other country stars made the pilgrimage to FAME.

Rick Hall became an inaugural inductee into the Alabama Music Hall of Fame in 1985.

Next, Hall discovered the local Muscle Shoals band Shenandoah and brought it to country fame with such hits as “Church On the Cumberland Road” (1990), “Mama Knows” (1990) and “Ghost in This House” (1991).

By the close of the 1990s, Rick Hall had produced 24 top-10 country hits, 26 top-10 pop hits and 33 top-10 r&b hits. His songs had been recorded by George Jones, Brenda Lee, Roy Orbison, The Amazing Rhythm Aces, Otis Redding, Booker T & The MGs, Huey Lewis, Little Richard, Sam & Dave and T. Graham Brown.

In addition, songs from Hall’s publishing company were making regular appearances on the country charts in the 1990s. His staff writers included Walt Aldridge, Tommy Brasfield, Mark Hall, Robert Byrne, Gary Baker and Frank Myers.

“There’s No Getting Over Me,” “I Swear,” “I Like It, I Love It,” “Holding Her and Loving You,” “”She’s Got a Single Thing In Mind,” “I Sure Can Smell the Rain,” “Leave Him Out of This” and “Crime of Passion” are among Hall’s publishing award winners.

Among the albums recently recorded and/or mixed at FAME are Gregg Allman’s Southern Blood, Third Day’s Revival and John Paul White’s Beula.

In 2013, Rick Hall was prominently featured in the acclaimed documentary Muscle Shoals. He was presented with a Trustees Award by The Recording Academy in 2014. He published his autobiography in 2015, The Man From Muscle Shoals: My Journey From Shame to Fame.

Funeral arrangements have not been announced.

Weekly Register: Taylor Swift, Garth Brooks, FGL Top Charts

Taylor Swift‘s latest Big Machine Records album Reputation returned to No. 1 on Nielsen Soundscan’s overall albums chart, with 107K for the final chart week of 2017.

On the country albums rankings, Garth BrooksAnthology Part 1 tops the chart this week, with 36K in total consumption. At No. 2 is Chris Stapleton‘s From A Room Vol. 2 with 33K, followed by Luke Bryan‘s What Makes You Country at No. 3 with 33K. Thomas Rhett‘s Life Changes is at No. 4 with 22K, followed by Kane Brown‘s self-titled album at No. 5, with 19K.

On the country digital songs chart, Bebe Rexha and Florida Georgia Line‘s “Meant To Be” is at No. 1, with 52K. Thomas Rhett’s “Marry Me” is at No. 2, with 31K, and LANCO‘s “Greatest Love Story” is at No. 3 with 21K. Kane Brown ft. Lauren Alaina‘s “What Ifs” is at No. 4 with 21K. Sam Hunt‘s “Body Like A Back Road” is at No. 5 with 17K.

Information courtesy of Nielsen Soundscan.

Mark Your Calendar—January 2018

Single Add Dates

January 1
Greg Hudik/Back In Love With You Again/Platinum Records Nashville

January 4
Tim Elliott/I Got You/Boggs River Entertainment
Candy Fernaux/Gone Fishin’/Sunny Day Records

January 5
Brothers Osborne/Shoot Me Straight/EMI Records Nashville

January 8
Luke Combs/One Number Away/River House/Columbia
Sugarland/Still The Same/Big Machine

January 15
Ry Bradley/Hard Not To Feel/SMG Records Nashville
Cort Carpenter/Again

January 16
Walker McGuire/Lost/Wheelhouse Records
Josh Gracin/Nothin’ Like Us/Revel Records/1608

January 22
Alan Jackson/The Older I Get/EMI Nashville
Jillian Jacqueline/Reasons/Big Loud
Kid Rock/American Rock ‘N Roll/Red Bow

January 29
Cash Creek/Make Your Momma Proud/Heartland Records Nashville
Raleigh Keegan/Lookin’ Like That/Nine North Label Group
LOCASH/Don’t Get Better Than That/Reviver Records

Album Release Dates

January 12
Anderson East/Encore/Low Country Sound-Elektra Records
Walker McGuire/Walker McGuire/Wheelhouse Records

January 19
LANCO/Hallelujah Nights/Arista Nashville
Devin Dawson/Dark Horse/Atlantic-WMN
Moon Taxi/Let The Record Play/RCA Records
John Conlee/Classics 3/Rose Colored Records

Industry Events

January 11
Nashville Grammy Nominations Party

January 12-15
30a Songwriting Festival

January 15
Submissions for ACM Radio Award categories and Video of the Year close

January 17-20
Luke Bryan’s Crash My Playa in Riviera Maya, Mexico

January 28
60th annual Grammy Awards at New York City’s Madison Square Garden

January 29
Hats Off for High Hopes, feat. Jonathan Cain of Journey & Friends at 7pm, Ryman Auditorium

January 31
ACM Awards first round voting closes

CMA Streaming Study Panel Added To CRS 2018 Agenda

Just added to the Country Radio Seminar 2018 agenda is an exclusive release of CMA’s 2017 Country Music Streaming Study: The Way Forward To Drive Consumption. The session will take an in-depth look at the role radio has and will play in this fast-growing platform. Research was conducted to examine how streaming is changing consumers’ relationship with music, including country and other top genres, over a nine-month period.
More than 2,500 country music listeners were part of research that included tracking music streaming behaviors on mobile devices, PCs, and laptops, in addition to quantitative survey research describing their attitudes and perceptions about streaming experiences and providers.
“CMA is excited to present this unique research that captures current streaming behaviors and experiences,” said Karen Stump, CMA Senior Director of Consumer Research. “By leveraging the learnings provided, all segments of the industry can have an expanded understanding of how we all work together to bring country music to our fans every day through streaming.” 
The research will be presented on Wednesday, Feb. 7 between 10-10:50 a.m., by Stump and Andrew Hare, Vice President of Research with Magid and Associates. Country Radio Seminar will be held Feb. 5-7 at the Omni Nashville. Registration is now available at the Final Rate of $699 at countryradioseminar.com or by calling the CRS offices at 615-327-4487.