Industry Ink: Parton's 'Blue Smoke,' YEP Springboard, Teen Choice Awards

Pictured (L-R): Dolly Parton and Kent Wells

Pictured (L-R): Dolly Parton and Kent Wells


Producer and musician Kent Wells is celebrating another hit record as Dolly Parton‘s Blue Smoke was recently certified Gold by the BPI (British Phonographic Institute).  Albums selling at least 100,000 units qualify for Gold certification under BPI.
The project peaked at No. 2 on the Official UK chart, and at No. 2 on Billboard‘s Top Country albums chart.

• • •

yepMusic industry organization Young Entertainment Professionals (YEP) has launched YEP Springboard, a mentorship program designed to connect new members of the music industry with experienced professionals. YEP board members will select 24 applicants to participate in the program for one-on-one time with a mentor. A YEP board member will help develop the vision of each participant and prepare them for mentorship meetings. The program will run September through December, and the fee upon acceptance into the program is $100.
Applications for the YEP Springboard are being accepted through Aug. 22. For more information and to register, visit yepnashville.com.

• • •

teen choice 20141The recent flooding near UCLA caused damage to several buildings on the college campus, including the Pauley Pavilion, which was slated to house the Teen Choice Awards on Aug. 10. The awards show will relocate to the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles. Ticketmaster will contact those who have purchased tickets with alternate seating and refund information.

NRA Country Names Chase Rice As Featured Artist Of The Month

unnamed

Chase Rice


Columbia Nashville/Dack Janiels Records artist Chase Rice has been named the NRA Country Featured Artist for the month of August. An exclusive behind-the-scenes video clip is available at NRACountry.com. Fans can also register on the website for a chance to win a prize package that includes an autographed copy of Rice’s upcoming debut album Ignite the Night, t-shirt, beach towel, sunglasses, hat, water bottle, and koozies.
As an NRA Country Featured Artist, Chase joins some of country music’s biggest artists including Florida Georgia Line, Lee Brice, Love and Theft, Easton Corbin, Eric Paslay, Craig Morgan and many more, in teaming up to celebrate his support of our brave men and women in uniform, appreciation for the great outdoors, and love of family. 
Ignite The Night is set to release on Aug. 19 and features the hit song “Ready Set Roll,” which is now in the top 10 on MusicRow’s CountryBreakout Chart.
He can also be seen making his national television debut this Wednesday, Aug. 6 when he appears on Late Night with Seth Meyers.

Ballard Set To Headline 19-Show Run

Frankie Ballard. Photo: Sam Erickson

Frankie Ballard. Photo: Sam Erickson


Warner Bros. Records’ Frankie Ballard is preparing to headline his first run, the Light ‘Em Up Tour.
Kicking off Oct. 19 in Minneapolis as part of the Live Nation Ones To Watch with Skype tour for emerging artists, 19 cities (full dates below) will experience the show by Ballard, Republic Nashville’s newly signed A Thousand Horses, and co-headliner on select dates David Nail.
Ballard has previously opened select dates for the likes of Jake Owen, Rascal Flatts, Kenny Chesney, Taylor Swift and longtime idol Bob Seger.
Since releasing his first No. 1, “Helluva Life,” the Battle Creek, Mich., native has gone on to release “Sunshine & Whiskey,” which has risen to No. 28 on the MusicRow Chart. Both songs are featured on his latest Marshall Altman-produced album, Sunshine & Whiskey.
For on-sale information, visit FrankieBallard.com.
FRANKIE BALLARD ONE’S TO WATCH TOUR 
10/16              Varsity Theater – Minneapolis, MN
10/17              The Pageant – St. Louis, MO
10/23              Bogart’s – Cincinnati, OH
10/24              Mercury Ballroom – Louisville, KY
10/25              Egyptian Room* – Indianapolis, IN
10/30              House of Blues – Cleveland, OH
11/1                Fillmore – Detroit, MI
11/8                House of Blues* – Boston, MA
11/13              Theater of Living Arts – Philadelphia, PA
11/14              Fillmore – Charlotte, NC
11/15              Fillmore – Washington, DC
11/19              House of Blues – Houston, TX
11/20              House of Blues – New Orleans, LA
11/22              House of Blues – Dallas, TX
11/28              House of Blues – Orlando, FL
12/6                Neptune – Seattle, WA
12/11              House of Blues – San Diego, CA
12/12              House of Blues – Anaheim, CA
12/13              House of Blues – Los Angeles, CA
(* co-headline with Nail)

LifeNotes: Velma Smith

Steve Wariner and Velma Smith at the 2014 Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum Induction Ceremony  in January 2014. Photo courtesy of the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum.

Steve Wariner and Velma Smith at the 2014 Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum Induction. Ceremony in January 2014. Photo courtesy of the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum.


Velma Smith, one of Nashville’s first female session musicians, died Thursday (July 31) in Madison, Tenn. She was 87.
She was inducted into the Musicians Hall of Fame by Steve Wariner in January 2014, alongside Peter Frampton, Buddy Guy, Barbara Mandrell, Stevie Ray Vaughn, and a host of others.
According to the Musicians Hall of Fame, Smith was the first rhythm guitar player to record on albums in Nashville. In 1942, she joined Roy Acuff’s Smokey Mountain Boys as a bass player. She later played in bands for Carl Smith and Ernest Tubb.
She performed on records including Hank Locklin’s “Please Help Me, I’m Falling,” Connie Smith’s Connie In The Country, and recordings by Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, Ray Price, and Porter Wagoner, among others.
In 1948, she married fiddle player Hal Smith, a fellow member of Acuff’s band and a music industry entrepreneur, who co-founded Pamper Music with Ray Price, among other ventures. Hal Smith died in 2008.
Funeral services for Velma Smith were held Saturday, Aug. 2 at Forest Lawn Memorial Gardens in Goodlettsville, Tenn.

Birth of Country Museum Opens

Photo includes: Lt. Gov Ron Ramsey Jim Lauderdale Mayors of both Bristols Head of Museum Smithsonian Representation Museum Director Ronnie Stoneman Georgia Warren. Photo: Mary Bufwack

Photo includes: Lt. Gov Ron Ramsey, Jim Lauderdale, Roni Stoneman, Georgia Warren. Photo: Mary Bufwack


In the summer of 1927, Victor Records talent scout Ralph Peer discovered two of country music’s most enduring superstars, and that historic event is commemorated in a new museum.
Bristol, the small Appalachian city that straddles the state line between Tennessee and Virginia, staged a weekend celebration for the opening of its Birthplace of Country Music Museum. Affiliated with the Smithsonian Institution, the $12 million museum honors Jimmie Rodgers, The Carter Family and the other 17 artists recorded by Victor during those 1927 recording sessions. The Bristol Sessions have been called “The Big Bang of Country Music.”
“Pretty soon, people around the world will know that Bristol is the birthplace of country music,” said Leah Ross, the new facility’s executive director.
“What happened in 1927 impacted all kinds of genres of American popular music,” added museum director/curator Jessica Turner. By opening the state-of-the-art museum and re-branding Bristol as The Birthplace of Country Music, the city hopes to benefit from music tourism, just as Nashville and Memphis do.
“The economic impact of this museum is $50 million over the next five years,” declared Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe. “Tourism is the No. 2 industry in Tennessee,” agreed Tennessee Commissioner of Tourism Development Susan Whitaker. “It has had a $16.2 billion impact over the past seven years.”
Artwork greets visitors in the lobby of the new museum. Photo: Mary Bufwack

Artwork greets visitors in the lobby of the new museum. Photo: Mary Bufwack


“I’ve been thinking about this all week long,” said country star Carlene Carter, who is the granddaughter of Maybelle Carter of The Carter Family. “What a wonderful, wonderful gift to the city of Bristol.”
“This is a fantastic moment,” said Tennessee Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey. “I’m just proud to be a small part of this.”
Ramsey, a native of Bristol, secured Tennessee money for the project despite the fact that the museum is technically in Virginia. State Street runs through the center of the town. Tennessee is on one side of the street, and Virginia is on the other. The 1927 Bristol Sessions were held in a hat factory on the Tennessee side. The museum is 50 yards away on the Virginia side.
For many years, those historic sessions were not acknowledged by the community, although then as now, the area is home to a large pool of country talent. “I always thought Bristol should be as big as Nashville, musically,” said Grand Ole Opry star Jesse McReynolds. His grandfather was the fiddler in the Bull Mountain Moonshiners band recorded during the 1927 Bristol Sessions.
Bristol, Va. mayor Catherine Brillhart, Ralph Stanley, and Bristol, Tenn. mayor MIchelle Dolan. Photo: Mary Bufwack

Bristol, Va. mayor Catherine Brillhart, Ralph Stanley, and Bristol, Tenn. mayor Michelle Dolan. Photo: Mary Bufwack


The opening-weekend activities began with a media day on Friday. Visitors viewed the 12,000-square-foot museum’s films and tried its interactive displays.
John Carter Cash narrates the introductory film, Bound for Bristol. In the next gallery, touch screens and listening stations deal with Appalachian geography and the Bristol Sessions participants. Acoustic instruments and their histories are the subjects of both display cases and a film. Gospel music is also dealt with in both modes.
Another interactive station demonstrates the many versions of Bristol Sessions songs, including ones by modern artists such as Natalie Merchant and Nirvana. At a karaoke station, visitors record their own versions of the songs, which sometimes result in attempts to yodel like Jimmie Rodgers. Gov. McAuliffe recorded the Carters’ “Single Girl, Married Girl.”
A radio room contains antique memorabilia, but will also serve as the studio for WBCM, the museum’s radio station. A nearby screen shows TV footage of folk stars performing old-time music alongside framed posters of films such as Bonnie & Clyde, Deliverance and O Brother Where Art Thou. One station teaches the art of audio mixing. The finale theater is “an immersion experience” called The Unbroken Circle with a curved screen showing multiple images of contemporary performers saluting their roots.
Outside the museum, a fine-art print and a new “Take the Stage” bronze statue both saluted the museum’s grand opening.
In the facility’s theater, a revived Farm and Fun Time radio show was taped for WBCM’s inaugural broadcast in October. The original Farm and Fun Time aired over Bristol’s WCYB from 1946 until the early 1960s.
A circular display in the exhibit hall. Photo: Mary Bufwack.

A circular display in the exhibit hall. Photo: Mary Bufwack.


The revival show co-starred Opry artists Jesse McReynolds and Ralph Stanley, both of whom were regulars on the original Farm and Fun Time (as members of Jim & Jesse and The Stanley Brothers, respectively). The Blue Ridge Entertainers, an old-timey duo consisting of Kris Truelsen and Coleman Aiken, were also featured. McReynolds played “Johnny Goodwin,” the tune his grandfather played during The Bristol Sessions, on the same antique fiddle that was used on the recording.
Saturday’s official ribbon-cutting ceremony was attended by Georgia Warren, the last living participant in The Bristol Sessions. Now 98 years old, she was an 11-year-old who sang in the 1927 choir that Peer dubbed The Tennessee Mountaineers. In the museum, she readily sang along with the recording of “Standing on the Promises” that she made four score and seven years ago.
“I’ll be 99 in November,” Warren said. “I’ve lost my memories of a lot of things, but sometimes that day comes back.
“There were six girls in our family, but I was the only one who would sing with my daddy.” She recalled being frightened to be recording in the dark factory building and holding her father’s hand throughout the songs. After the ribbon cutting, Warren sang “Amazing Grace” with the media. “I’ve sung in choirs all my life,” she said.
“This is special to me. I appreciate y’all doing all of this. I never thought it would be as big as this. It means a lot to me.”
Georgia Warren, the last living member of the 1927 Bristol sessions, with Robert K. Oermann. Photo: Mary Bufwack

Georgia Warren, the last living member of the 1927 Bristol sessions, with Robert K. Oermann. Photo: Mary Bufwack


Also attending the ribbon cutting was Hee Haw’s Roni Stoneman. Her parents were recorded during the Bristol Sessions. Because the Stonemans already had recording success by 1927, Peer used Pop Stoneman to recruit others to the sessions.
Roni Stoneman, Carlene Carter and Jim Lauderdale were among the entertainers that evening during the grand-opening weekend. Carter performed such Carter family favorites such as “The Storms Are on the Ocean,” “I’ll Be All Smiles Tonight” and “My Dixie Darling” from her new Carter Girl CD. She accompanied herself on guitar, playing in her grandmother’s style.
“I’ve been dong this since I was 16,” she said. “If you were a Carter girl, they threw you on the stage, and if you could sing at all, you stayed.”
“We’re going to try and continue the ‘Circle’ that was started here,” promised Lauderdale.
The first Carter Family recording session was on Aug. 1, 1927. In the remote Maces Spring mountain community 20 miles east of Bristol, the old Carter homestead celebrated that anniversary with a two-day festival. Maybelle’s granddaughter, Lorrie Carter Bennett, headlined. The festival was organized by Rita Forrester and Dale Jett, the grandchildren of The Carter Family’s Sara and A.P. Carter. This was the 40th anniversary of this annual gathering.
Abingdon, VA, 13 miles north of Bristol, was also staging a weekend arts event, The Virginia Highlands Festival.
A crowd gathers to celebrate the opening of the museum. Photo: Mary Bufwack

A crowd gathers to celebrate the opening of the museum. Photo: Mary Bufwack


Bristol continued its celebration on Sunday with a taping of radio’s Mountain Stage in its historic, restored Paramount Theater. It booked Jett, Bennett and Carlene Carter, plus Martina McBride, Larry Groce and Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver.
The city next takes the spotlight during the third weekend in September with the BCM’s 14th annual Rhythm & Roots Reunion fest. It is expected to draw 50,000 people this year and will showcase Emmylou Harris, Dale Watson, David Grisman, The Seldom Scene, 18 South, Billy Joe Shaver, Ray Wylie Hubbard, Marty Raybon, Chuck Mead, Sturgill Simpson and more.

Industry Ink: CMA Songwriters Series, CMT's Leslie Fram, MusicMaster

The CMA Songwriters Series visited Chicago this week for a night of stories and songs at Joe’s Bar. Songwriter and CMA board member Bob DiPiero hosted and performed alongside Monty Powell, Striking Matches, and Charlie Worsham.

Pictured (L-R): CMA Board member Bob DiPiero, Charlie Worsham, Sarah Zimmermann and Justin Davis of Striking Matches, and Monty Powell backstage at the CMA Songwriters Series Wednesday, July 30 at Joe's Bar in Chicago. Photo: Matt Marton / CMA

Pictured (L-R): CMA Board member Bob DiPiero, Charlie Worsham, Sarah Zimmermann and Justin Davis of Striking Matches, and Monty Powell backstage at the CMA Songwriters Series Wednesday, July 30 at Joe’s Bar in Chicago. Photo: Matt Marton / CMA

 • • •

Leslie Fram

Leslie Fram


CMT Sr. VP of Music Strategy Leslie Fram will be the keynote speaker for Nashville Lifestyles‘ Women In Business event, to be held Thursday, Aug. 26, beginning at 11:30 a.m. at Nashville’s Schermerhorn Symphony Center. Tickets are $50, and full table ticketing options are available (10 for $500) by contacting lkeally@nashvillelifestyles.com.
Individual tickets are available at ticketsnashville.com.

• • •

musicmaster1Former MusicRow radio chart reporting panelist JVC PD Dave Tyler has joined MusicMaster as a Music Scheduling Consultant. Tyler has worked with the MusicRow CountryBreakout chart since inception stating, “I have been with WTRS alone for 16 years and there are few gigs that could entice me away from my JVC Broadcasting family, but this is one that checked every box on my wish list, the most important of which is the chance to work with Joe Knapp, whom I’ve known and admired for a long time.”
Additional new hires include Jeff Schroeder as Senior Technical Consultant for onsite installation, technical documentation, and automation interface expertise and Lorie Robers as Senior Accountant.

RIAA: July 2014 Gold, Platinum, and Multi-Platinum Certs

RIAALuke Bryan, Dierks Bentley, Brett Eldredge, Tyler Farr, Miranda Lambert & Carrie Underwood, Joe Nichols, Chris Young, Florida Georgia Line, Kacey Musgraves, Jerrod Niemann, Jake Owen, The Fray, Paramore, and Phillips, Craig & Dean are among those earning RIAA certifications this month. The awards are from 7/1/2014 to 7/31/2014.
Multi-platinum Single Certifications:
Luke Bryan, “Country Girl (Shake It For Me)”– 3x platinum
Platinum Single Certifications:
Kacey Musgraves, “Merry Go Round”
Jerrod Niemann, “Drink To That All Night”
Jake Owen, “Beachin'”
Paramore, “Ain’t It Fun”
Gold Single Certifications:
Dierks Bentley, “Drunk On A Plane”
Brett Eldredge, “Beat of the Music”
Tyler Farr, “Whiskey In My Water”
The Fray, “Love Don’t Die”
Miranda Lambert & Carrie Underwood, “Somethin’ Bad”
Kacey Musgraves, “Follow Your Arrow”
Joe Nichols, “Yeah”
Chris Young, “Who I Am With You”
Phillips, Craig & Dean, “Revelation Song”
Multi-Platinum Album Certifications:
Florida Georgia Line, Here’s To The Good Times–2x platinum
Gold Album Certifications:
Eric Church, The Outsiders
Miranda Lambert, Platinum
Kacey Musgraves, Same Trailer, Different Park
Paramore, All We Know Is Falling
George Strait, Love Is Everything

The Band Perry Promotes Safe Driving With School Concert

132433

The Band Perry


The Band Perry is teaming up with State Farm to offer teens a chance to win a private concert for their high school as part of the “Celebrate My Drive” campaign. The program is designed to encourage safe driving in high schools across the United States and Canada.
Through Oct. 7, administrators at U.S. and Canadian high schools can register to participate in the program. Teens and community members can commit to safe driving once a day every day from Oct. 15-24 in support of their favorite high school. Two grand prize winning schools will receive a private concert from The Band Perry. The 100 high schools with the most online safe driving commitments will win a grant award of $25,000 or $100,000.
“Getting a driver’s license is a major milestone in a young adult’s life, and The Band Perry is the perfect partner to help celebrate it,” said Leif Roll, Marketing Vice President for State Farm. “Teens, in particular, connect with music in a major way, so it only makes sense to partner with one of the biggest acts in music to celebrate this new generation of teen drivers. As a leader in auto safety, we feel Celebrate My Drive has proved to be a positive way to help educate teens and their parents about teen driver safety.”
For more information and to register, visit www.celebratemydrive.com.

Blake Shelton Preps Eleventh Studio Album

Bringing-Back-The-SunshineBlake Shelton has revealed cover art, release date and title for his eleventh studio album. Expected to hit shelves Sept. 30, Shelton’s Warner Bros. Records album will be titled Bringing Back the Sunshine.
Produced by Shelton’s longtime collaborator and award-winning producer Scott Hendricks, the CMA’s four-time reigning Male Vocalist of the Year will release the lead single from the album in the coming weeks.
Recently breaking his own record for most consecutive No. 1’s at Country radio (12 in a row, 17 overall), Shelton is currently on his Ten Times Crazier Tour 2014, which culminates on the west coast this fall.
Bringing Back the Sunshine is exclusively available for pre-order now at Walmart.com.

Ben Folds To Leave RCA Studio A

ben folds111

Ben Folds


Nashville-based musician Ben Folds told fans via social media today (Aug. 1) that he will be leaving 30 Music Square West, home RCA Studio A, once his lease ends in November. Folds has been a tenant in the building for 12 years.
The building that houses RCA Studio A was purchased recently by Bravo Development, and has been the center of heated controversy between Folds, purchaser Tim Reynolds of Bravo Development, and the Atkins and Bradley estates (previous owners of the property). In June industry and community members gathered at 30 Music Square West to discuss the importance of preserving the Music Row area’s older buildings where much of Nashville’s music industry was created.
Folds’ letter reads:

Dear All,
After closing on the purchase of 30 Music Square West, home of historic RCA Studio A (of which I’ve been tenant for 12 years) Tim Reynolds of Bravo Development in Brentwood TN has just informed us that our rent will be raised 124%. Haha, okay Tim, we got it, and we’re moving out as soon as our current lease runs out. That means we will be there until end of November. He is on public record saying he will not demolish the building, though I’m not sure how any studio owner could make bottom line with rent that high.
We have and will continue to send investors and planners his way who have ideas on how to both preserve the space, keep the studio working and make everyone the money they want. I will continue to raise public awareness of the grand history of Music Row that is threatened by hasty development. Today we did Morning Joe and an NPR segment on 360 will also air soon – many more outlets to come. My hope is that all our efforts have given us a moment to pause and consider how Nashville might continue to grow, while also retaining the identity and culture that has made it Music City.
Since the rally was held at the studio on June 30, a group called Music Industry Coalition has formed, elected a Board, begun filing its official papers with the state, fashioned a mission statement and collected over 1500 members. Their mission is to give the working folks in the music industry a voice and to work with city officials on a plan for Music Row that allows our music culture to co-exist with new growth. I will continue to help them in any way I can.
Yeah, I’m sad personally, but I had a good decade plus run and will be recording as much of my new album as I can there before November, including with the absolutely incredible sextet yMusic from New York. The Nashville Symphony and I recorded my Concerto For Piano and Orchestra there recently. What other studio can handle 80-piece orchestras in one take?
This whole #SaveStudioA and #SaveMusicRow thing was never about me (or the former owners or Tim Reynolds) and that’s why the issue has resonated with people here and around the world who are concerned about retaining Nashville’s identity, culture and music economy. Thanks for reading, and for the concern and effort! It’s working. That’s all I got to say.
Ben