Kobalt Appoints Smith as VP, Sales and Marketing

kobaltKobalt Label Services has appointed Tom Smith as VP, Sales and Marketing. Smith was previously a marketing, sales and business development consultant for Kobalt, aiding the company in establishing a footprint on the west coast.
In his new role he will work alongside Kobalt’s Sr. VP of Sales, North America Shari Segalini and will continue to report to Diarmuid Quinn, president of KLS North America. Smith will conduct day-to-day business on behalf of KLS clients with national, physical, and digital retailers, as well as non-traditional and independent retailers. Smith will also pursue strategic brand partnerships for KLS artists that connect with retail.
“Tom is a dynamic executive who has delivered incredible results and support for Kobalt artists since the launch of KLS,” Quinn said. “His relationships with our retail partners and our artists runs deep, and we’re excited he has agreed to come on full time as part of the rapidly growing KLS team.”
“I am excited to be a part of the new model that Kobalt Label Services has created for artists to release their music,” added Smith. “To be able to execute on marketing launch plans based on the artists’ vision with the artist having total control is an amazing environment to work in. I am grateful to Willard Ahdritz, Richard Sanders, Paul Hitchman, Diarmuid Quinn and Shari Segalini for this opportunity.”
Smith’s career began at Capitol Records. He then worked as Sr. Director Sales for at RCA Nashville for 12 years, where he managed national campaigns for Carrie Underwood, Kelly Clarkson, Christina Aguilera, Dave Matthews Band, Maroon 5, and other artists.

Weekly Register: Independents Day

colt fordTwo indies scored this week’s top-selling new Country albums. Average Joes’ Colt Ford sold 23K copies of Thanks For Listening, according to Nielsen Soundscan, to land at No. 2 Country. ATO’s Old Crow Medicine Show flew in with sales of 17K, nesting at No. 4 Country.
On the tracks chart, the top Country debut is RaeLynn’s “God Made Girls” scoring 20K clicks and coming in at No. 22. “American Kids” by Kenny Chesney is the No. 1 Country track, selling 80K.
The 4th of July helped Lee Greenwood wave his flag to the tune of 24K downloads of “God Bless the USA,” which has sold 934K digital copies RTD.
Top 5 Country Albums this week
Miranda Lambert 25K
Colt Ford 23K
old crowBrantley Gilbert 21K
Old Crow Medicine Show 17K
Luke Bryan 13K
Top 5 Country Tracks this week
Kenny Chesney “American Girls” 80K
Dierks Bentley “Drunk on a Plane” 69K
Lady Antebellum “Bartender” 63K
Miranda Lambert and Carrie Underwood “Somethin’ Bad” 60K
Jake Owen “Beachin’” 55K
This week the indies weren’t competing with new releases by major stars, but August and September brings projects by Brad Paisley (Aug. 26), Lee Brice (Sept. 9), Tim McGraw (Sept. 16) and Kenny Chesney (Sept. 23).

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DISClaimer: Championing The Underdogs

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Old Crow Medicine Show


Yes, Luke Bryan has a new single, and, yes, it sounds good, and, yes, it is a hit. Nevertheless, my Disc of the Day award is going to the underdog Grand Ole Opry stars Old Crow Medicine Show. The real story du jour is the battle for the DisCovery Award. Dean Alexander, Kristian Bush, Chris Lane and Ben Rau are all worthy contenders. In a close call, I’m giving it to Chris Lane.
BEN RUE/I Can’t Wait (Be My Wife)
Writers:Ryan Ogren/James Bailey/Jon Berry/Peter Munters/James Ulrich; Producer: Kyle Lehning; Publisher: none listed; ASCAP/BMI; Arista (CDX)
-This pretty ballad has lyrics that are woven with vivid details. His singing voice is sincere, if a little generic sounding. I think I hear a hit.
DYLAN SCOTT/Mmm, Mmm, Mmm
Writers: Dylan Scott/Forest Glen Whitehead; Producer: Jim Ed Norman; Publishers: Curb/Want a Fresh One/Black River, ASCAP; Sidewalk (CDX)
-A little swampy. A little funky. A little saucy. A whole lot Southern.
LUKE BRYAN/Roller Coaster
Writers: Cole Swindell/Michael Carter; Producer: Jeff Stevens; Publishers: Sony-ATV Tree/Sony-ATV Cross Keys/243 Music, BMI/ASCAP; Capitol
-This rolls with verve and spirit. I like it that the vocal is mixed up bright and high, while the percussion is kept simple and steady. Very, very summer-y.
KRISTIAN BUSH/Trailer Hitch
Writers: Kristian Bush/Brandon Bush/Tim Owens; Producers: Kristian Bush/Tom Tapley; Publishers: Songs of the Architect/Another Song of the Architect/Archuleta, ASCAP; Streamsound
-I have always maintained it’s a shame that this fine singer was so consistently overshadowed in Sugarland. This bopping, percolating disc reveals a performer with jaunty personality to spare. The bonus is that there’s a nifty message beneath the happy rhythm: You can’t take it with you when you go.
AMERICAN YOUNG/Wasn’t Gonna Drink Tonight
Writers: Lee Brice/Billy Montana/Jon Stone; Producers: Jon Stone/Justin Niebank/Lee Brice; Publishers: Mike Curb/Dandon Ranch/Hears That Skyline/Adios Pantalones/BMG, BMI/SESAC; Curb (CDX)
-The jittery rhythm track is nervous sounding. It doesn’t go with the smooth singing. And that gliding vocal performance doesn’t match the downbeat lyric.
SARA EVANS & ISSAC SLADE/Can’t Stop Loving You
Writers: Victoria Banks/Phil Barton/Emily Shackleton; Producer: Mark Bright & Sara Evans; Publishers: Chrysalis/45th Parallel/Sixteen Stars/Horipro/Liz Rose/Songs of Kobalt, ASCAP/BMI; RCA
-Duet partner Slade is the lead singer of the pop/rock band The Fray. Evans dominates the track, which is loudly busy and bombastic. They try to redeem it by repeating the title over and over and over again as the noise crashes around them. Pass.
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Chris Lane


CHRIS LANE/Broken Windshield View
Writers: Rodney Clawson/David Lee Murphy/Shane Minor; Producer: Joey Moi; Publishers: Big Red Toe/Big Loud Bucks/Old Desperados/N2D/Sony-ATV Tree/Code Six Charles, BMI/ASCAP; Big Loud Mountain
-This backwoods rocker packs a punch. Lane’s passionate vocal rides atop a churning track and delivers a dirt-road anthem with panache. Ear catching.
JUSTIN MOORE & VINCE NEIL/Home Sweet Home
Writers: Nikki Sixx/Tommy Lee/Vince Neil; Producer: Jeremy Stover; Publishers: Sixx Gunner/Downtown/Tommyland/Safe N Sound/WB/Mars Mountain/Cherry Lane, ASCAP; Valory
-The song wasn’t even a hit when Motley Crue sang it. Pointless.
DEAN ALEXANDER/Live a Little
Writers: Dean Alexander/Laura Veltz; Producers: Justin Weaver/Dean Alexander; Publishers: Warner-Tamerlane/Get Along/Hits of Parallel, BMI; Elektra
-Hooky. The title is interjected with stacked harmonies throughout the performance. The choppy rhythms, sunny guitar solo, urgently boyish vocal and overall groove all scream summer. Irresistible.
OLD CROW MEDICINE SHOW/Sweet Amarillo
Writers: Dylan/Secor/Fuqua; Producer: Ted Hutt; Publishers: Special Rider/Blood Donor, SESAC/BMI; ATO (track)
-Old Crow Medicine Show had a Gold Record with “Wagon Wheel” long before Darius Rucker covered the tune. Can lightning strike twice in the same place? I think so, especially when there’s a performance this charming, propulsive, thumpy, rootsy and earnestly relentless. The Dylan/Secor combination repeats its winning ways.

Recent RIAA Awards

FGL

FGL’s “Cruise” has been purchased more than 7 million times.


The RIAA awarded several Nashville stars during the month of June.
Florida Georgia Line’s “Cruise” went seven-times Platinum.
Scoring Gold certifications were Jake Owen’s “Beachin,’” Miranda Lambert’s “Automatic,” Rascal Flatts’ “Rewind,” Keith Urban’s “Cop Car,” Zac Brown Band’s “Sweet Annie” and TobyMac’s “Me Without You.”
Garth Brooks’ The Ultimate Hits received its seventh Platinum certification, and the discs in his box set Blame It All On My Roots went Platinum.
Brantley Gilbert’s Just As I Am and Toby Keith’s American Ride received Gold album honors.

Bobby Karl Works The Nashville Songwriters HOF Induction Announcement

Pictured, (back row, L-R): Nashville Songwriiters Hall of Fame Board Chair and Hall of Fame member Pat Alger; inductees John Anderson and Gretchen Peters and Hall of Fame executive director Mark Ford. Front row, (L-R): Inductees Paul Craft and Tom Douglas.

Pictured, (back row, L-R): Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame Board Chair and Hall of Fame member Pat Alger; inductees John Anderson and Gretchen Peters and Hall of Fame executive director Mark Ford. Front row, (L-R): Inductees Paul Craft and Tom Douglas.


BOBBY KARL WORKS THE ROOM
Chapter 462
One of the things I find most impressive about the voters for the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame is that they so often choose quality over quantity and/or commerciality.
This year’s slate of inductees is a perfect example of that. There are songwriters who have larger catalogs and bigger hits than Gretchen Peters, Tom Douglas, Paul Craft and John Anderson. But you won’t find four writers with classier or better-written songs.
“The voters choose real songs,” observed Peter Cooper, who also heartily approved of this year’s inductees.
How true. The Peters catalog includes such superb creations as “Independence Day” (Martina McBride), “The Chill of an Early Fall” (George Strait), “The Secret of Life” (Faith Hill), “You Don’t Even Know Who I Am” (Patty Loveless), “Let That Pony Run” (Pam Tillis), “My Baby Loves Me” (Martina McBride), “If Heaven” (Andy Griggs) and “On a Bus to St. Cloud” (Trisha Yearwood).
As for Douglas, his list includes “The House That Built Me” (Miranda Lambert), “I Run to You” (Lady Antebellum), “Little Rock” (Collin Raye), “Love’s the Only House” (Martina McBride), “Hello World” (Lady Antebellum) and the Tim McGraw hits “Grown Men Don’t Cry,” “My Little Girl,” “Let it Go” and “Southern Voice.”
Paul Craft, this year’s “veteran” inductee, has penned songs for practically every bluegrass band there is. Not to mention such gems as “Brother Jukebox” (Mark Chesnutt), “Come As You Were” (T. Graham Brown), “Dropkick Me Jesus” (Bobby Bare), “Hank Williams, You Wrote My Life” (Moe Bandy), “Keep Me From Blowing Away” (Linda Ronstadt), “It’s Me Again, Margaret” (Ray Stevens), “Midnight Flyer” (The Eagles) and “Blue Heartache” (Gail Davies).
The 2014 writer/artist inductee is John Anderson, whose catalog includes such choice items as “Swingin,’” “Chicken Truck,” “I Wish I Could Have Been There,” “Goin’ Down Hill,” “Seminole Wind,” ‘Bend it Until it Breaks,” “I Wish I Could Write You a Song,” “If it Ain’t Broke Don’t Fix It” and “Country ‘Til I Die.”
All four inductees appeared at the announcement ceremony on Tuesday morning, July 8, at the Music City Center. This is where their names will be engraved on Songwriter Square and on the MCC steps leading up from Fifth Avenue. It is also where the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame gallery is on display. And MCC will be the site of their induction banquet on Oct. 5.
Showing their support for the new “class” were such prior Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame inductees as Jerry Chesnut, Jerry Foster, Allen Shamblin, Dickey Lee, Larry Henley, Kenny O’Dell, Wayland Holyfield, Pat Alger and Tony Arata. How cool is that?
NSHoF executive director Mark Ford introduced them all at a post-announcement luncheon. This was also attended by Amy Kurland, Jennifer Bohler, Erika Wollam Nichols, Troy Tomlinson, Mike Dye, Ken Paulson, Woody Bomar, Bo Thomas, Corky O’Dell and Bobby Roberts.
As I have mentioned before, the MCC catering can’t be beat. We lunched on chilled herb-chicken salad and chess pie with whipped cream.
Also in attendance at the event were R.J. Curtis, Bart Herbison, Barb Hall, Barry Walsh, Connie Bauer, Carol Ann Ford, Bob Paxman, crews from all three TV news stations and a number of curious fans, conventioneers and onlookers.
“Here in Nashville where the music industry has always been built on a foundation of great songs written by legendary songwriters, each year only a few are elected to the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame,” said Pat Alger, who is the chair of the organization’s board. This year’s “few” are truly the best of their breed.
These four will join the 192 existing members of the NSHoF. This is the 44th anniversary/ceremony of the organization.
Tickets for the Oct. 5 banquet, show and ceremony are $250 apiece. Some seats are available to the public. Contact Mark Ford for more information ([email protected])

Beuschel Joins Warner/Chappell Music as A&R Director

Ryan Beuschel

Ryan Beuschel


Ryan Beuschel has been tapped for the role of A&R Director for Warner/Chappell Music, the global publishing arm of Warner Music Group. Beuschel comes to Warner/Chappell from ASCAP, where he spent four years as an Associate Director of Membership for their Nashville branch.
Beuschel will provide A&R resources and creative support across the publisher’s roster and catalog, and assist in the discovery of new talent and the development of songwriters. He will report to Ben Vaughn, Executive Vice President, Warner/Chappell Nashville.
Vaughn said, “I am pleased to announce that Ryan Beuschel will be joining the Warner/Chappell Nashville team. Ryan understands how to work with talent, as demonstrated through his years helping grow the careers of songwriters at ASCAP and artists at Universal, and we look forward to the excellent service he’s capable of providing to our writers.”
“I cannot wait to begin working with the world-class songwriters and A&R staff of Warner/Chappell. This is an incredible opportunity and I’m extremely grateful for it,” said Beuschel.
While at ASCAP, Beuschel co-founded the ASCAP GPS Project, which aids unsigned songwriters in navigating Nashville’s publishing community. Prior to ASCAP, he was A&R Manager at Universal Music Group, where he worked with artists signed to the MCA and Mercury labels. He began his career in 2005 as an intern for Universal Music Publishing. He was later named as Catalog Coordinator, before moving to UMG label group in 2007 as A&R coordinator. The Michigan native earned a degree in management and finance from Hope College.

Artist Pics (7/8/14)

Sony Music Nashville Chairman & CEO Gary Overton recently presented Miranda Lambert a plaque in recognition of her new album Platinum, which debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 and Top Country Albums Chart.

Pictured (L-R): Lambert, Overton and Miranda’s manger Marion Kraft of Shopkeeper Management.

Pictured (L-R): Lambert, Overton and Lambert’s manger Marion Kraft of Shopkeeper Management.

 • • •

Lucy Hale debuted her new single, “Lie A Little Better,” during a live performance last week on Good Morning America. The up-tempo track is from the singer’s first album Road Between, released by DMG Nashville and produced by Mark Bright and Mike Daly.

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Lucy Hale performs on Good Morning America.

 • • •

Country Music Hall of Fame member Bill Anderson earned a standing ovation at the Grand Ole Opry House on July 1 with his rendition of “Deck of Cards,” which he performed in honor of Independence Day.

Bill Anderson. Photo: Lee Willard.

Bill Anderson at the Grand Ole Opry House. Photo: Lee Willard.

Mel Tillis Signs With The Bobby Roberts Company

Pictured (L-R): Mel Tillis and Bobby Roberts

Pictured (L-R): Mel Tillis and Bobby Roberts


Country Music Hall of Fame member Mel Tillis has signed on for exclusive booking representation with The Bobby Roberts Company.
“We at the Bobby Roberts Company are pleased and excited to exclusively represent the great Mel Tillis,” says BRC CEO, Bobby Roberts. “Mel is a true country music legend and icon that continues to thrill his audiences throughout the United States and Canada with his incredible shows, hits and comedy. Besides all of that, he is one of the nicest entertainers that has ever set foot onstage. We are elated that Mel has chosen us to handle his touring!”
Tillis recently returned to performing following open heart surgery in early March.
“A little heart surgery isn’t slowing me down,” notes Tillis. “I’m back on the road with my band the Statesiders and I know that Bobby Roberts is our man for the job.”

Childs, Mandile Launch Veritable Music

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Pictured (L-R): Steve Mandile and Andy Childs


Nashville musicians Andy Childs and Steve Mandile have launched music publishing and production company Veritable Music, LLC. Funded by Memphis businesswoman Leigh Shockey, the company is housed in the Parlor Recording Studio building, located at 1317 16th Ave. S. Music publisher and songplugger Stephanie Greene represents Veritable’s catalog of songs through her own independent firm, while Mark Ahlberg handles administration.
Veritable’s roster of songwriters includes Willie Mack, Danielle Lauderdale, and Seth Cook. Mack’s songs have been recorded by Sara Evans, Collin Raye, the Oak Ridge Boys, and others. Lauderdale was featured on CMT’s Next Superstar series.
Childs and Mandile co-formed the band Sixwire. Together and separately, they have had songs recorded by Tim McGraw, John Michael Montgomery, Chris Cagle, Ronnie Dunn, Craig Morgan, Mark Wills, Cliff Richard, George Canyon, and Carolyn Dawn Johnson.
Childs and Mandile each rank as managing partner at Veritable, with Childs overseeing all operations as CEO, and Mandile supervising all creative activities. Shockey serves as CEO of Drexel Chemical Co. in Memphis, and is the current chairperson of the Memphis Chamber of Commerce.
For more information, visit veritablemusic.com.

Americana Music Association Names Lifetime Achievement Winners

Screen shot 2014-07-08 at 10.40.56 AMLoretta Lynn, Jackson Browne, Taj Mahal, and Flaco Jiménez have been selected as Lifetime Achievement Award winners by the Americana Music Association. The awards will be presented at the organization’s 13th annual Honors and Awards ceremony, presented by Nissan, on Wednesday, Sept. 17 at the historic Ryman Auditorium in Nashville.
The Lifetime Achievement Award for Songwriting goes to Loretta Lynn. During Lynn’s decades of hit songs, her compositions including “The Pill,” “Don’t Come Home A Drinkin’ (with Lovin’ On Your Mind)” and “Rated ‘X’,” confronted sexism and double standards. Lynn has received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement award and a Kennedy Center Honor.
Jackson Browne will receive the “Spirit of Americana Award, Free Speech in Music” co-presented with the First Amendment Center. Brown has sung on the behalf of Farm Aid, Amnesty International, MoveOn.org’s Vote For Change and was a co-founder of Musicians United for Safe Energy and nukefree.org. The Rock and Roll Songwriter’s Hall of Fame member’s songs include “Running On Empty,” “The Pretenders,” “For A Rocker,” and others.
Flaco Jiménez will be honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award as an instrumentalist. As one of the most accomplished conjunto tejano accordion players, the San Antonio, Texas-born Jiménez has collaborated with dozens of artists including Doug Sahm, Ry Cooder, Dr. John, Bob Dylan, and The Rolling Stones. He’s won several Grammy Awards, including one with super-group Los Super Seven. His accordion lines can be heard on “Streets of Bakersfield” by Dwight Yoakam and Buck Owens.
In the category of Lifetime Achievement for Performance, the honor goes to Grammy award-winning blues musician Taj Mahal. Mahal has worked with the Rolling Stones, Howlin’ Wolf, Buddy Guy, Muddy Waters, Lightnin’ Hopkins, and many others.
The awards will be included in ACL Presents: Americana Music Festival 2014, which will air on PBS later this year.