Tim McGraw Earns 44th Radio No. 1 Hit With “I Called Mama”

Tim McGraw

Tim McGraw has earned his 44th career No. 1 radio hit with “I Called Mama,” a poignant reminder to stay close to those you love. The song has earned more than 72.7 million streams, and marks McGraw’s fourth decade of earning chart-topping singles, which matches his four-decade streak of No. 1 albums, which he marked with his 16th studio project Here On Earth, released earlier this year.

“I Called Mama,” which was written by Lance Miller, Marv Green and Jimmy Yeary, has become McGraw’s highest career chart debut and reached No. 1 on Billboard‘s Hot Country Digital sales chart.

McGraw’s own mother is featured on cover art for “I Called Mama.” In a recent media virtual Zoom call, McGraw recalled his mother’s devotion to their family.

“She found out she was pregnant with me during her senior year of high school,” he recalled. “She had me young and she didn’t get to graduate because I came along, and then she went through some terrible things early in my life. I know how tough she is, how resilient she is, how strong of a woman she is and how well she raised…me and my two sisters that all grew up together. One thing I really remember, and for her it was probably one of a hundred times that I didn’t see, but I can remember us being on our own, her and me and my two sisters…and her working three jobs just to try to keep the basics in line.”

The song marks McGraw’s first single release since he announced his return to Big Machine Label Group earlier this year. McGraw previously released three albums for Big Machine, including Two Lanes of Freedom (2013), Sundown Heaven Town (2014), and Damn Country Music (2015).

Dr. Lana Israel Talks Working With Music Industry Vet Bob Doyle On Muzology

Garth Brooks brought together Dr. Lana Israel, a globally recognized learning expert, with Bob Doyle, music industry veteran and Brooks’ longtime manager. Their partnership lead to a project that brings Israel’s expertise in learning and their shared love of music to life with a project that is changing education in the United States.

Started in 2015 and headquartered in Nashville, Muzology develops music-based learning solutions that enable all students to achieve and succeed. Its combination of high-quality, trendy-sounding music and challenging school subjects has helped students in subjects that are proven pain points in our education system.

Muzology recently released Love @ First Sound (When Math Met Music), an album featuring their most popular math songs, including songs about fractions, graphing lines and equations.

The free album reached No. 2 on Amazon’s Children’s Music Chart, and features Grammy-winning producer Andy Zulla, Grammy-nominated artist and producer Ryan Toby (Mary J. Blige, Usher, Justin Bieber), hit songwriter Maria Christensen (“Waiting for Tonight,” Jennifer Lopez), and Chris Blue, winner of NBC’s The Voice, among others.

Love @ First Sound (When Math Met Music) is currently in consideration for Best Children’s Album at the upcoming Grammy Awards.

MusicRow spoke to Dr. Lana Israel recently about the birth and mission of Muzology.

Dr. Lana Israel

Tell me a little bit about your background.

I started working in the learning space at about 12 or 13 years old. I wound up, based on my eighth grade science project, writing a book on innovative approaches to learning. I got invited to present my eighth grade research at a global education conference in Sydney, Australia and wound up getting a publishing deal for the book. Within a year I was lecturing globally to teachers, parents, students, and corporate audiences about how to optimize learning, memory, and creativity. So I kind of had my first career as a teenager! I wound up writing two books on learning, and creating multimedia content on learning with Island World Communications out of England, which is essentially Island Records. I really had this fascination at a young age with innovative ways of optimizing learning and potential.

I studied cognitive psych as an undergrad and then I was very honored to receive a Rhodes Scholarship. I did my graduate work at Oxford and did my doctoral work in experimental psychology with a focus on cognitive psychology and memory. When I had received my doctorate and I was actually doing post-doctoral work at Oxford—I joke that I had an early life crisis—I decided to leave academia to pursue another childhood passion of mine: music. I moved to Manhattan and went into the music business. I worked first as the assistant to a songwriter/music producer in New York, Billy Mann (P!nk, John Legend, Celine Dion), an incredibly talented producer whose career just skyrocketed in such a quick amount of time.

What did you learn while working with Billy Mann?

I found myself in the middle of all of this activity in the music business that he had generated, and I suddenly got this hands-on crash course in the music business at the highest of levels. That’s when it occurred to me, as a former memory researcher, that there was something almost magical about music when it came to learning. Because in the learning space, we get excited if we find something—an intervention, a method that leads to a modest improvement in outcomes—as long as it’s replicable and we think we understand, systematically, why we’re getting the effect.

Billy would have writers and producers come into the studio to work with him, and at the end of the day, a song existed that didn’t exist hours before. If an artist recorded that song, and it got played at radio on heavy rotation, millions of people would know every word to that song. I took a step back as a memory researcher, and I said, ‘That’s amazing. This is replicable. This happens for millions of people and that song maybe didn’t even exist a month prior to this occurrence.’ I got pretty intrigued with starting to understand why this effect occurred. I came across a fair amount of neuro-scientific literature, indicating that music directly activates brain regions that are critical for successful learning—namely memory, attention, motivation, and emotion. So then I’m like, ‘Ding, ding!’ It meets those two criteria that we look for in academia: it’s replicable, and we understand systematically why we’re getting the effect.

My third question is, ‘What was the size of the effect?’ I can tell you in the education space, when we find interventions that meet those two criteria, usually the effect that you see is a modest improvement in outcomes—and we get excited when we find those because we don’t find them a lot. But what occurred to me is, if someone hears a song that they haven’t heard for decades, like the song ‘My Girl’ [by The Temptations] for example. You may not have heard that for many years, but all the words still come back to you. That’s not a modest improvement in outcomes. That’s a massive learning effect that we don’t really see with any other medium at scale, but we see it with music.

That’s incredible. How did you parlay your education and experience into Muzology?

I wound up moving to Nashville and to run creative for an entertainment branding company here almost 10 years ago and transitioned into doing some data analytics work, which was a lot of what I did as an undergrad and grad student. I wound up doing consulting work for Bob [Doyle] and Garth Brooks when Garth was getting ready to come back into marketplace after his hiatus, and had the distinct pleasure of working with both of them to see how data and models could help answer questions that were important to them from attraction in the marketplace, sales projections, real-time ticket sales projections, and things of that nature.

That’s when I started talking to Bob a lot about this idea and kept saying to him, ‘Bob, how’d, you learn your ABCs?’ And he’s like, ‘I sang them. What’s your point?’ I said, ‘Well, my point is it’s kind of spectacular that if you unpack the ABCs, it’s an instance of memorizing 26 nonsense syllables in perfect order.’ That’s really a challenging cognitive task that adults can’t do, but babies can do it if you put it to music. As adults, we can do it when we put the information to music. If I asked you, ‘What comes first, P or Q?’ you’re probably going like this right now; ‘L, M, N, O, P…

We take for granted that as babies, we can perform this really challenging cognitive task through the use of music, but we shouldn’t take it for granted. We should start to see how can we apply music to the education space in a more systematic, credible way, and that’s how Muzology was born.

How did you get started?

I said to Bob, ‘What if we work with our network of hit songwriters and music producers who are creating the music that kids listen to electively? What if we create a comprehensive and iterative series of high production value, great sounding songs and music videos that teach an entire subject? And what if we pick a subject that’s a really acute pain point for learners and that’s technical enough so that if we demonstrate that we can use music to teach this subject effectively, by extension, we could probably use it to teach anything.’ When we looked at the K-12 landscape, what just leaps off the page as one of the most acute pain points was middle school math or pre-algebra. That is where proficiency in math really drops. It’s the first time girls start underperforming boys. It’s when many parents can’t help their kids with their math homework anymore. In some cases, it’s where some teachers even struggle to communicate the material effectively to kids. So that’s where we began.

Over the last several years, we’ve conducted multiple studies and study after study we continue to see that Muzology’s approach to learning not only improves student performance on quizzes and third party tested diagnostics to statistically significant levels, but equally important, we see massive shifts in students’ self-confidence, self-efficacy and belief in themselves, which has been transformative for many, many learners using Muzology.

 

How do educators use Muzology?

Some teachers will play the videos in class to introduce math topics. They’ll play the videos while in the course of teaching a math topic, they’ll play the videos as a refresher or for remediation. Teachers can also create custom playlists and assign them to students. So students can work through those playlists in class or at home. Right now you’re seeing a lot of hybrid learning where some kids are still learning remotely, some kids are showing up in class. Whether they’re sitting at the kitchen table or sitting in a classroom, kids can log in individually and work through the videos. We’ve got challenges—silver, gold, and platinum—associated with each music video where kids level up from one challenge level to the next, so they’re able to apply and extend the knowledge that they learned in the music videos. Teachers will use the challenges as a proxy for proficiency on these math topics, they’ll often give quiz grades connected to how students do on our challenge system.

How has the COVID-19 pandemic affected the use of Muzology?

Now more so than ever, there’s a massive need for this approach to learning. That’s part of the reason why we released the album [Love @ First Sound (When Math Met Music)]. We had teachers coming off of school closures last spring, so we made Muzology free for teachers, parents, and students throughout the country for the rest of that last school year and through the summer to do our part in helping support people during a really challenging, unprecedented situation. And we had a lot of teachers reach out and say, ‘Is there a way you could just access the song on a streaming platform? Could you release an album? I want to play it in the car with my kids.’ They wanted much broader access to the material. And what has also become sadly very apparent during COVID-related school closures and remote learning is lack of equitable access to technology and high quality content for low resource students.

In many cases, these students are not learning at home. Learning has just stopped for them, which has tragic and very severe implications. So we released the album of our most popular math songs, and also the songs that cover the most critical foundational math subjects so that all students anywhere could start to access the content.

What feedback have you received so far from educators and students using Muzology?

[The feedback has been] so unbelievable that it even shocked me. I had a teacher call me two times in a row on Friday. She said, ‘I wanted to give you some good news on a Friday. We take state tests that establish the proficiency level of our students. At the beginning of last year, my ninth graders tested at a fifth and sixth grade proficiency level. As did the ninth graders in other ninth grade math classes taught by other teachers. We all teach math exactly the same way.’ She’s the department head, and she said that she and the other teachers give out the exact same assignments. They have a consistent, similar way of teaching math to their students. She said they intentionally ensure that no matter who their teacher is in ninth grade, the student is getting pretty much the same instruction.

She said, ‘The only difference between what I did last year and what the other teachers did, is I used Muzology consistently with my kids all year. We just got back the state test results…all the other teachers’ kids when they tested, they had gone from a fifth and sixth grade proficiency level to a sixth and seventh grade proficiency level.’ But, she said that her kids went from a fifth and sixth grade proficiency level to an eighth and ninth grade proficiency level. All she did was use Muzology.

Sam Grow To Drop New EP ‘Me & Mine’ Oct. 30

Sam Grow is set to release his new five-song EP, Me & Mine, produced by Colt Ford and Noah Gordon, via Average Joes Entertainment on Oct. 30.

The recently released title track, “Me And Mine,” follows Grow’s fan-favorite, “Song About You,” which has 20 million streams across all streaming platforms and a corresponding video in rotation on CMT Music. Grow wrote four out of the five tracks on the new EP.

“I’ve been so excited about this EP and its release. Colt Ford, Noah Gordon and mix engineer, Billy Decker, found a way to capture a sound I’ve been chasing my whole career,” said Grow. “Combine that with being able to write with some of my favorite writers and buddies in town, and you can hear the amount of fun we had making this music. All these parts together have really given me an opportunity to take things to a whole new level. I am so humbled and blessed with the love that ‘Song About You’ and now ‘Me And Mine’ have gotten. And to think, I really feel the best is yet to come!”

Grow has also teamed with Solo Stove for a “Bonfire” giveaway in tandem with his “Backyards & Bonfires” socially distanced fall tour. Fans can enter to win a “Bonfire” Solo Stove, and pre-order/pre-save the new EP, “Me And Mine” beginning today.

Track List:
1. “Me and Mine” (Sam Grow, Danny Orton, Cody Cooper, George Birge)
2. “Song About You” (Taylor Phillips, Joey Hyde, Kenton Bryant)
3. “Boy Like Me” (Sam Grow)
4. “Bar Last Night” (Sam Grow, Danny Orton)
5. “Kiss My Ass” (Sam Grow and Hank Miller)

NSAI Celebrates Nashville Songwriter Awards Winners For 2020

This year’s Nashville Songwriter Awards were held virtually, as the Nashville Songwriters Association International (NSAI) partnered with City National Bank and Billboard to announce the winners for 2020 via social media platforms throughout the past week.

This year’s Nashville Songwriter Awards winners are below:

Song of the Year: “More Hearts Than Mine,” recorded by Ingrid Andress. Writers: Ingrid Andress, Sam Ellis, Derrick Southerland
Songwriter-Artist of the Year: Luke Combs
Songwriter of the Year: Ashley Gorley

“10 Songs I Wish I’d Written” Winners:
“Beer Never Broke My Heart” – Luke Combs, Randy Montana, Jonathan Singleton
“Heartache Medication” – Barry Dean, Natalie Hemby, Jon Pardi
“Homemade” – Ben Goldsmith, Jared Mullins, Drew Parker, Bobby Pinson
“Lover” – Taylor Swift
“Old Town Road” – Billy Ray Cyrus, Jocelyn Donald, Montero Hill, Trent Reznor, Atticus Ross, Kiowa Roukema
“On My Way To You” – Brett James, Tony Lane
“One Man Band” – Josh Osborne, Matthew Ramsey, Trevor Rosen, Brad Tursi
“Prayed For You” – Ash Bowers, Allison Veltz Cruz, Matt Stell
“Speechless” – Shay Mooney, Jordan Reynolds, Dan Smyers, Laura Veltz
“The Bones” – Maren Morris, Jimmy Robbins, Laura Veltz
“What If I Never Get Over You” – Sam Ellis, John Green, Ryan Hurd, Laura Veltz

“City National Bank has a long history of supporting songwriters and the creative community,” said Diane Pearson and Lori Badgett, heads of Entertainment Banking for City National in Nashville, in a joint statement. “This community is resilient, and we can’t wait for the time when live music, crowds and celebrations can resume in person. In the meantime, we are grateful for the opportunity to celebrate such amazing songwriters virtually. Congratulations to all of this year’s Nashville Songwriter Award winners, and thank you for making our lives better by creating these wonderful songs.”

UMG Announces First UMUSIC Hotels Locations

UMUSIC Broadwater Hotel. Photo: UMG

UMG has announced the first three locations for its UMUSIC Hotels, a global collection of music-based experiential hotel properties, in partnership with Dakia U-Ventures. The first three locations include Atlanta, Georgia; Biloxi, Mississippi; and Orlando, Florida, with additional locations to come both throughout the United States and abroad. Pyramid Hotel Group has joined the venture for United States operations of the hotels.

The UMUSIC hotels aim to be immersive experiences for fans, guests and artists, with each property designed to complement the city landscape and incorporate elements of the local music scene. The UMUSIC Broadwater Hotel in Biloxi will include a performance venue and a luxury hotel with an immersive architecture style. In Atlanta, the UMUSIC Hotel will include a holistic entertainment venue. UMUSIC Orlando’s design will similarly reflect a music-first experience for guests.

Robert Lavia, Chairman at Dakia U-Ventures LLC., said, “Every destination holds a great story just waiting to be told through its cultural heritage and its music. Through this new concept, we will both help people discover new ways to channel their love for music and the arts and help empower the transformation of communities worldwide through cultural, inspirational, creative and conscious collaboration. And we’re thrilled to work together with Universal Music Group who shares our vision and passion about the powerful role of culture and music for each community we touch.”

Bruce Resnikoff, President and CEO of Universal Music Enterprises, said, “Through music’s unique power to inspire and unite – especially given UMG’s unparalleled roster of artists and labels – UMUSIC Hotels will both highlight these cities’ rich music heritages and provide new opportunities for artists to reach fans in immersive, innovative and authentic ways.”

LuckySky Music Launches Label, Publishing Company

Pictured (L to R): Bill Warner, Tori Martin, Kirsti Manna, (standing) Doug Maddox, Jamie Knight, Jason Engelman, Wynne Adams, Shane Barrett.

LuckySky Music has opened a new record label and publishing company. Jason Engelman, CEO, has tapped WarnerWorks music industry vet Bill Warner to serve as President of the label group. Engelman is the CEO of Freaky Fast Home Buyers and Investments LLC., a rapidly growing company with properties in Georgia, Ohio, and other markets. He is also the founder of Revolution 13, a ministry outreach to public schools, focusing on helping students recover from bullying, depression, and suicide.

The first two signings are Tori Martin, the flagship artist for the label, and songwriter Bill DiLuigi as the first signing to the publishing division.

Martin has already achieved success on the Texas Country Music Charts. She was a contestant on Season 14 of American Idol and in March released her current single, “What Would Dolly Do?” which has garnered over 50,000 streams, currently resides at No. 18 on the Texas Regional Radio Chart, and is being released to country radio. It is the first single from her new LuckySky Music album Lucky and has already exceeded 90,000 streams.

Right Image (L to R): Shane Barrett, Bill DiLuigi, Kirsti Manna, Bill Warner, (standing) Jason Engelman. Photo: Alan Kirkland

DiLuigi is a singer/songwriter who emerged from the Philadelphia music scene. DiLuigi has over 300 cuts to his credit and his songs have received placements in major films and TV including Good Morning America, CBS Daytime, Hart of Dixie, The Tonight Show, and Access Hollywood. He’s also had cuts with Blessid Union of Souls, The Lost Trailers, Richie McDonald (Lonestar), and most recently, a No. 1 Gospel song “Grateful,” by Chris Golden (The Goldens/Oak Ridge Boys). DiLuigi has two cuts coming out on LuckySky Music, “Show Me Your Smile” (Blessid Union of Souls), and “Father’s Daughter” (Johnny Lee/Sony).

The LuckySky Music offices are located in the Rutledge Hill area of downtown Nashville. Newly appointed staff includes Kirsti Manna/VP & Creative Director of Publishing, John Cirillo/Business Manager, Wynne Adams/Director of Promotion & Marketing, Shane Barrett/Songplugger, Jamie Knight/Director of Social Media, and Doug Maddox/Director of Film & Video Production.

Industry Ink: Jackie Evancho, Ryman Community Day, Phil Vassar

Jackie Evancho Signs With Melody Place

Pictured (L-R): Melody Place’s Sanborn McGraw, Jackie Evancho, and Melody Place President Fred Mollin. Photo Credit: Erika Rock

Jackie Evancho has signed a label deal with Melody Place Records. She is currently in the studio with Melody Place President Fred Mollin recording her debut, including her fresh take on Joni Mitchell’s “River,” which will be released by Melody Place on Oct. 23 and distributed by BMG. Evancho has released a string of Platinum and Gold albums, with sales of more than 3 million in the U.S., alone. She has also made history as the youngest, solo Platinum artist in the U.S., the youngest Top 5 debut artist ever in the U.K., and the youngest person to give a solo concert at Lincoln Center.

“I’m thrilled to be back in the studio and even more thrilled to be doing it in Nashville,” said Evancho. “I’m very excited for the journey I am about to embark on and to be recording for Melody Place.”

 

Ryman Auditorium Free Community Day Set For Oct. 25

The Ryman Auditorium is offering its daytime tour experience free of charge on Sunday, Oct. 25 as part of Ryman Community Day presented by PNC Bank and supporting partners Hiller and Farm Bureau Health Plans. Complimentary self-guided tours will be available from 9 a.m.-4 p.m. with presentation of a valid Tennessee state ID at the Ryman box office, and COVID safety precautions will be in place.

 

Phil Vassar Wins Best Actor At Long Island International Film Expo

Phil Vassar and Lori Fischer

Phil Vassar won Best Actor at the Long Island International Film Expo for his work in the short film i only miss you when i’m breathing, directed by Ashley Wren Collins and co-starring Lori Fischer. Shot in Nashville with a local cast and crew, the film follows the story of Nora (Lori Fischer) and Warren (Phil Vassar) as they deal with the devastation of their only son’s death after a school shooting. The film is based on the real life story of country performer Freddy Weller and his wife, Pippy. The film features original music from both Weller and Vassar.

Jenny Methling Joins 615 Leverage + Strategy As Director, Strategic Partnerships

Jenny Methling

Marketing company 615 Leverage+Strategy has named Jenny Methling as Director, Strategic Partnerships, to oversee campaign strategy for key accounts in the company’s portfolio.

“I believe in the vision that John and Jackie have for this company, and in their approach to strategic partnerships in this business,” says Methling. “They collectively have an impressive track record and impeccable relationships within the Nashville music community, so it is an honor to be working with them. I’m absolutely thrilled to be a part of their talented team, and to contribute to the company’s growth and success.”

Methling spent seven years at AOL (Verizon Media) and later worked at iHeartMedia in their Strategic Partnerships Group. There, she worked in audio advertising and radio promotions, artist relations, business affairs, and content/event production. She later moved to the client services team, overseeing program activation for clients including Google, Netflix and more. She also oversaw strategy for AT&T’s title sponsorships, artist sponsorships, and livestreams for the iHeartCountry Festival and iHeartRadio Wango Tango, as well as for the Honda Stage.

“Having someone with Jenny’s expertise join our company will allow us to more aggressively embrace the virtual realities of the entertainment world on behalf of our clients, “ said 615 Leverage + Strategy co-founders John Zarling and Jackie Campbell Seaton, in a joint statement. “The minute we met Jenny, it was clear that her passion and artist/brand experience would enhance our companies’ value proposition to clients. As we close in on one year together in business, we look forward to having Jenny in this leadership role; we know she will be an invaluable addition.”

Methling joins Project Director Cheyana Weekley and Project Manager Jordan Lipsey on the 615 Leverage + Strategy team.

Jordan Rager Releases Four-Track EP ‘Habits & Hearts’

Jordan Rager Photo Jason Myers

Jordan Rager has released his latest project, the four-track EP Habits & Hearts, which includes his previously-released songs “Want Me To Want You” and “Somebody’s Summer,” as well as the title track and “Call You Home.” In 2015, Rager earned a Top 40 hit with “Southern Boy,” featuring Jason Aldean.

Georgia native Rager began his career under the mentorship of Aldean’s father Barry Williams. Rager signed to Riser House in 2018 and continued honing his songwriting and performances. He’s since opened shows for Kane Brown, Justin Moore, Old Dominion and more, and earned more than 52 million streams to date.

“All four of these songs help tell an important part of my story,” Rager said. “From musical influences to personal experiences, you’re gonna learn a lot about me from listening to this EP.”

Weekly Radio Report (10/9/20)

Click here or above to access MusicRow’s weekly CountryBreakout Radio Report.