July 4th With Billy Currington, Striking Matches, Ashley Monroe

Billy-Currington

Billy Currington


Middle Tennessee will host plenty of Independence Day Celebrations this weekend. Here’s a brief run-down:
Nashville will welcome locals and visitors to what MSN Living has named “one of the best Fireworks Shows” in the nation. Let Freedom Sing: July 4th in Music City will feature live music from Striking Matches, Ashley Monroe and Billy Currington. The entire event is free. There will also be an attempt at a Guinness World Records title. Since July is National Ice Cream Month, Dippin’ Dots and Warner Music Nashville artist Monroe will attempt to set a world record for the number of ice cream cups prepared in three minutes. The event will take place at approximately 1:45 p.m. just outside Bridgestone Arena in the free McDonald’s Family Fun Zone on the corner of Broadway and 5th Avenue in Nashville.
More Info HERE
• • • •
Murfreesboro’s Celebration Under the Stars will take place at McKnight Park. The event is free and open to the public. More Info HERE.
Franklin will host “Franklin on the Fourth” with activities in the downtown area from 10 a.m. – 8 p.m. and fireworks at Harlinsdale Farm at 9:00 p.m.
More info HERE.
Lebanon hosts an annual 4th celebration with fireworks at the James E. Ward Ag. Center. More Info HERE.
Hendersonville Independence Day Celebration features local entertainment, a kids zone, vendor and food booths, followed by fireworks at Drakes Creek Park. More Info HERE.
Mt. Juliet will host the annual 4th celebration with fireworks and other festivities at the Providence Marketplace and begins at 4:30 with the fireworks display kicking off around 9:00 p.m.
More Info HERE.
Gallatin July 4th celebration, with food, music and fireworks, at the Gallatin Civic Center is free to the public. More Info HERE.
White House Independence Day Celebration offers food, music, crafts, games, fireworks at White House City Park. More Info HERE.
Silver Point will host an Independence Day campsite decoration contest at Edgar Evins State Park. More Info HERE.
Goodlettsville invites people to join them in Moss-Wright Park on the 4th of July. Festivities will begin at 4:00 p.m. Activities will include fireman’s foam, food, games, and fireworks at 9:00 p.m. More Info HERE.

Thirty Tigers Adds Staffers

thirty tigers logo11Thirty Tigers, which has worked with artists including Jason Isbell, Chase Rice, and St. Paul and the Broken Bones, has added Lynn Oliver, Whitney Richards and Tessa Schonder to its staffers.
Oliver, most recently of Southern Ground Artists as the VP of Publishing/A&R, will initially focus on project management for Thirty Tigers. She has previously worked at Atlantic, Virgin and BMI, and will assist Thirty Tigers’ growing client list. Thirty Tigers founder David Macias said, “Thirty Tigers is very lucky that she’s joining the team. We’re going to do good work together.”
Richards joins Thirty Tigers from CAA’s Nashville office, and is currently day-to-day manager for Trampled by Turtles. Schonder, most recently a personal assistant for pop artist Kesha, and will now serve as day-to-day manager for Jason Isbell, St. Paul and the Broken Bones, and Diamond Rugs.

IEBA Announces Hall of Fame Inductees for 2014

TheDoobieBrothers1

The Doobie Brothers


IEBA’s Hall of Fame Class of 2014 will include The Doobie Brothers and their longtime manager Bruce Cohn, veteran manager and agent Jim Halsey, and event producers Bob and Peggy Kaltenbach of Klein’s Entertainment.
IEBA will also present its Industry Achievement award to Romeo Entertainment Group.
The Class of 2014 will be inducted at the close of the 44th Annual Conference, to be held Sept. 30 at the CMA Theater at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. The private event is only for conference attendees.
The 44th annual conference will be held Sept. 27-30, 2014, at Omni Nashville. Registration is now open.
bruce cohn1

Bruce Cohn


IEBA’s Hall of Fame honors elite live entertainment industry professionals.
Over the course of four decades, The Doobie Brothers have sold more than 48 million albums, won four GRAMMY Awards and built an extremely loyal fanbase. Their relationship with Nashville continues this fall when some of country music’s top stars join them on their forthcoming Sony Music Nashville collaboration album. The record, full of their hits, also reunites them with longtime Doobie Brother Michael McDonald.

“The IEBA Hall of Fame induction is an honor in itself,” Cohn said. “I can’t tell you how much more it means to be inducted simultaneously with the band. We have accomplished so much together and will continue to achieve even more in the future. We have a brotherhood that I am proud of, and—even after 44 years together—I think some of the most exciting times are just around the corner.”

Jim Halsey

Jim Halsey


Jim Halsey founded The Jim Halsey Company talent agency in 1951. His clients included Tammy Wynette, Merle Haggard, Waylon Jennings, The Oak Ridge Boys, Roy Clark, and many others. The Jim Halsey Company was acquired by the William Morris Agency in 1990, but Halsey remains active in the industry. As an author and educator, he launched The Jim Halsey Institute of Music and Entertainment Business, an undergraduate music business program at Independence Community College in Independence, Kan.
Carl and Margaret Klein created Klein’s Attractions in 1930. For more than 80 years and three generations, Klein’s has provided entertainment for state and county fairs, expositions, festivals, colleges, casinos, community and corporate events throughout the United States. Just as Carl and Margaret passed their love of the business onto their daughter Peggy and her husband Bob Kaltenbach, Peggy and Bob passed it to their son R.J. and his wife Patty. After Bob’s death in 1993, R.J. took the reigns as the company’s president and Peggy, though semi-retired, continues to play an active role in day-to-day operations.
Don Romeo started Romeo Entertainment Group, which is celebrating its 60th anniversary, in 1954. He later joined with Hap Peebles in forming IEBA. The Don Romeo Agency steadily grew as it was passed down to Bob, Don’s son. Today, as Romeo Entertainment Group, its client list boasts over 100 names including Country Jam, North Dakota State Fair, Bands in the Backyard, Evergreen State Fair, Grand Falls Casino Resort, and Riverside Casino and Golf Resort. The company remains in the family: Don’s daughter Fran Romeo is President, and grandchildren Michelle and R.J. Romeo are Agent and General Counsel, respectively. Michelle also serves on IEBA’s Board of Directors.

Dale Morris, Marc Oswald Delve Further Into Hospitality Industry

dale morris marc oswald fontanel

Pictured (L-R): Don Schappacher, President & COO of MORE American Hospitality; Marc Oswald, CEO of MORE American Hospitality; Dale Morris, Chairman of the Board, MORE American Hospitality; Bob Ekman, Vice President-Franchise Development-North America-IHG.

Entertainment industry powerhouses Dale Morris and Marc Oswald are expanding their resort/hospitality initiatives. Their company MORE Enterprises is teaming with Michigan based American Hospitality Management, Inc. to form MORE American Hospitality LLC.

Morris will serve as Chairman of the Board of MORE American Hospitality and Oswald will serve as Chief Executive Officer.
Morris and Oswald entered the hospitality business by developing the Fontanel mansion and its surrounding 186 acres near Nashville. They added The Woods Amphitheater, a restaurant, boutique hotel and more. Later this year, work will begin on a 150 room and suite Holiday Inn Resort at Fontanel. MORE American will work closely with Fontanel Properties CFO Sandy Medd and GM JP Dansereau to support current operations.
Morris and Oswald also have controlling interest in Deadwood Mountain Grand, a Holiday Inn Resort in Deadwood, SD which includes a casino and event center.
American Hospitality Management, which manages 26 hotels and resorts in 12 states, is headed by Don Schappacher, Fred Kindell and Chris Godfrey. AHM will also continue to own and/or operate hotels on its own. Schappacher will serve as President and COO of the newly formed MORE American Hospitality, LLC. Kindell will serve as Secretary of MORE American Hospitality.

fontanel holiday inn

Rendering of the Fontanel Holiday Inn Resort.

Limardi To Leave WSM-AM

Joe Limardi

Joe Limardi


By: Laura Hostelley
Joe Limardi of WSM-AM/Nashville is set to leave the station where he has served as Program Director/mid-days for seven years. He will begin a new gig in New York state as Operations Manager for the Hudson Valley Townsquare Media cluster, as well as Program Director for its WPDH rock station on July 21.
“WSM has been a lesson in radio, Country music and the workings of Nashville that I will always hold with great respect and gratitude,” said Limardi. “It was time for me to start thinking about rejoining my family in New England and when this incredible opportunity came up to work with a passionate and talented group of people again the thinking about it became do something about it.”
Limardi’s prior stops have included PD of WCZX, which is also a part of Townsquare.

Google Acquires Songza

imgresGoogle has announced that it reached a deal to acquire Songza, an internet radio streaming service. Songza recommends various playlists based on time of day and mood or activities like waking up, driving or working out.
Songza will give Google a music streaming service, which can compete with Apple’s Beats Music.
The most recognized music streaming brands are internet radio services such as Pandora. Songza is recognized by only 5 percent of consumers. However, this number is likely to improve under Google’s ownership.
With the purchase of Songza, Google aims to attract young consumers. As internet radio becomes available in more automobiles, there will be an increasing opportunity to reach older consumers as well.
It is expected that Google will explore ways to incorporate Songza into Google Play Music, YouTube and other Google Products.

Weekly Register: Mid-Year Check-Up

WeeklyRegJuly2This week wraps the end of the second quarter of 2014, so let’s check the barely-there sales pulse.
YEAR TO DATE
Albums:
Country album sales are down -18.4% YTD, having sold 15.302 million this year, compared to 18.763 million at the same time last year.
Country digital albums, which are included in the above total tallies, are 5.214 million YTD versus 5.808 million last year, a fall of -10.2%.
Country album sales including track equivalent albums (TEA) are down -19.2%.
The Country album market share is at 12.7%, fairly steady compared to last year.
Total album sales, encompassing all genres, fell -14.8%, selling 120.895 million YTD. This is a little less than Country’s -18.4% slide.
Tracks:
Country tracks are down -20.8% YTD, selling 73.307 million this year, versus 92.530 million last year.
Total tracks YTD fell -13%, 593.6 million this year compared to 682.2 million last year.
THIS WEEK
Circling back to this week, Tay-Tay’s pal Ed Sheeran debuted at the top of the charts with his latest, X, selling 209K.
Top 5 Country Albums 
Miranda Lambert 29K this week
Brantley Gilbert 21K
Luke Bryan 13K
Willie Nelson 11K
Now Country 7 10K
Top 5 Country Tracks
Kenny Chesney “American Kids” 74K this week
Dierks Bentley “Drunk On A Plane” 69K
Lady Antebellum “Bartender” 61K
Miranda Lambert and Carrie Underwood “Somethin’ Bad” 60K
Jake Owen “Beachin’” 54K
Hot Track: Luke Bryan’s “Roller Coaster” increased 207%, selling 17,540 TW and 73,501 RTD.
Next month starts a string of major label releases to boost YTD sales including Chase Rice (8/19), Brad Paisley (8/26), Lee Brice (9/9), Tim McGraw (9/16) and Kenny Chesney (9/23).
Sales tallies according to Nielsen SoundScan.

DISCLAIMER: Twin Towers of Talent

brett-eldredge-400x379This listening session starred two twin towers of talent.
The two best records of the week belong to Craig Morgan and Brett Eldredge. Both of them are superb country singers. They have the two best-written songs of the day. And Craig’s “We’ll Come Back Around” and Brett’s “Mean to Me” are both produced perfectly.
I love these two singles so much that they are going to have to share this week’s Disc of the Day award.
We have two feisty female acts this week — Erica Nicole and The Pfeiffer Twins. But the DisCovery Award goes to a tender-hearted male outing by the Johnny Orr Band.
THE PFEIFFER TWINS/Nobody’s Puppet
Writers: C. & L. Pfeiffer/A. Krizan; Producer: Anthony Krizan; Publishers: Pfeiffer Twins/Krizan, ASCAP; Pfeiffer Twins
-Bluesy, with a Southern-rock edge and definite lady-sass attitude. Caution: strong language occurs.
BRETT ELDREDGE/Mean To Me
Writers: Brett Eldredge/Scooter Carusoe; Producer: Luke Laird; Publishers: Sony-ATV/Countryside/Paris Not France/Scrambler/Abbotts Creek/Carnival, BMI/ASCAP; Atlantic
-Completely enchanting. If the essence of songwriting is coming up with new ways to say, “I love you,” then this is at the beating heart of our art. A lovely song deserves a soul-saturated vocal performance and a beautiful confection of a production, and this one has them both. An out-of-the-park home run.
JOHNNY ORR BAND/We’ll Get By
Writers: J. Orr; Producer: Johnny Orr; Publisher: none listed, BMI; JOB
-Subtitled “The Autism Song,” this moving ballad is sung from the point of view of a child affected by that condition. If it doesn’t bring a tear to your eye and a lump in your throat, you’re made of stone.

Craig Morgan

Craig Morgan


SAMMY KERSHAW/Do You Know Me
Writers: Johnny Holland/Billy Lawson; Publisher: Sammy Kershaw; Producer: House of Fame/Cal IV, ASCAP; Bit Hit
-Throughout his career, Sammy has made no secret of his emulation for George Jones, and he can sound eerily exactly like his idol. This is the title ballad to Sammy’s tribute album to George. It offers effective, vivid vignettes from the life and career of the late Hall of Fame member. Elsewhere on this collection of 12 revivals of the legend’s greatest hits, check out Sammy’s version of “Near You” with Georgette Jones singing the part of her late mother, Tammy Wynette.
ERICA NICOLE/I Listen To My Bad Girl
Writers: Debbie Pascarella/Dani Jamerson; Producer: Kent Wells; Publisher: Wrapped in Songs, ASCAP; EN/PCL
-Despite her better judgment, she gets tangled up with the nothing-but-trouble guy. Drums slam and guitars scream.
JERROD NIEMANN/Buzz Back Girl
Writers: Lee Brice/Kyle Jacobs/Phillip Lammonds; Producers: Jimmie Lee Sloas & Jerrod Niemann; Publishers: Mike Curb/Curb Songs/Jacobsong/BrainTwang, BMI/ASCAP; Arista (track)
-As usual, the backing track is ultra cool, with ear-catching percussive effects, electro voices and quirky guitars. His bopping vocal carries a song about a fellow falling hard. Groovy.
DEBBIE COCHRAN/Everything Changes
Writers: Debbie Cochran; Producer: Kent Wells; Publisher: DMC Anniston, BMI; GTR
-Her singing voice has resonance, but the song’s lyrics are riddled with cliches.
COLT FORD/Workin’ On
Writers: none listed; Producer: none listed; Publisher: none listed; Average Joes
-It begins as a fairly routine hick-hop outing, name checking various blue-collar thangs. But the choruses find Ford actually kinda singing. In his own way, mind you. Hooky and listenable.
johnny orr band11

Johnny Orr


CHANDLER MARIE/Breaking Down
Writers: Chandler Marie Picerne/Kris Bergsnes/Angie Broberg/Grant Austin Taylor; Producer: Sorted Noise; Publishers: CMP/SB21/Bluewater/Splendiferous/DHM /Grant Austin Taylor, BMI/ASCAP; CMP 
-You’d think one of those four writers could have come up with a melody.
CRAIG MORGAN/We’ll Come Back Around
Writers: Trevor Rosen/Brandy Clark/Jessi Jo Dillon; Producer: Craig Morgan & Phil O’Donnell; Publishers: ReHits/Smacktown/Smack Blue/Wrensong/Nettwerk One B/Revelry/Jay Gatsby/Limited Songs of Parallel/Amplified/Vista Loma, ASCAP/BMI; Black River
-They scrap and fight, but in the end they really love one another and will wind up back together again. This fiery vocalist is the just the guy to sell this well-written throbber. I got so into it, I played it twice in a row. You will too.

Estates of Bradley and Atkins Release Response Regarding RCA Studio A

Harold Bradley

Harold Bradley


[Updated, July 2]: Musician and RCA Studio A tenant Ben Folds has responded to Harold Bradley’s letter regarding the sale of RCA Studio A. (Scroll to bottom.)
Folds also stated via a Facebook post on Wednesday morning that he is attempting to put together a plan to purchase the studio for the owners’ reportedly $4.4 million asking price.
“I’m a touring recording artist and not a developer or real estate mogul. Four million plus clams is well out of my range,” says Folds. “As a tenant I’ve been trying to put together a scenario that brings the owners’ asking price, establishes the historical status of the property for preservation, and provides a cash flow for interested developers…Now, with all the players we have on the sidelines, we have more time and I’m positive we can help pull this ambitious plan off.”
• • •
[Original post]: While RCA Studio A tenant Ben Folds and Bravo Development’s Tim Reynolds have both spoken publicly regarding the sale of the studio, and a gathering has been held in support of saving the property, one party has kept silent until now: the sellers, the estates of Owen Bradley and Chet Atkins. A letter addressing the sale was sent to members of the Metro Council this afternoon (July 1) and obtained by the Nashville Scene. Titled ‘Fact v. Fiction,’ legendary musician Harold Bradley (brother of the late Owen Bradley) and other members of the estates report that the property has been available of purchase for the last 24 years—thus, Folds has had ample opportunity to buy it.
The letter also takes issue with the attempts to obtain a historic overlay for the Music Row area, stating that it would restrict the future creative community in Nashville. Harold Bradley also refutes the long-standing claim that legendary entertainer Elvis Presley recorded in RCA Studio A, and goes on to say that the property was originally purchased as a long-term investment.
The letter reads:

Re: 30 Music Square West
Fact v. Fiction
Dear Nashville,
We write to you today with an eye toward history—in fact, several generations of music history—beginning with our forebears (and architects of the “Nashville sound”) Chet Atkins and Owen and Harold Bradley.
These families have a longstanding commitment to Music City. Owen and Harold Bradley built their first studio in 1952, one at the corner of 2nd and Lindsley and the other in Hillsboro Village. But the Quonset Hut is where it all started. With no money in their pockets, Owen borrowed $15,000 against his insurance, and Harold agreed to work for free for ten years…and with that bold move, the Bradley brothers helped establish Nashville as Music City, U.S.A., and kept the music from moving to Jim Beck’s studio in Dallas.
The brothers erected the foundation for that storied Nashville sound in a squat little house on 16th Avenue. They stuck on a surplus Army quonset hut, assembled an “A-Team” of session players (the Nashville Cats), and reimagined country music as something bigger…and more marketable. By the time Brenda Lee recorded “I’m Sorry” and Patsy Cline channeled “Crazy” at the Quonset Hut, a new industry had emerged.
In the 1950s and 60s, anybody who wanted to be a part of that big new sound came to Nashville, because the Quonset Hut and RCA Studio B were producing it. These studios are where the Nashville sound was created and where the classic hits were recorded— which is why they are worthy of being called historic. Thanks to generous donations and investments by the Maddox family, Mike Curb, and the Bradleys (who bought and preserved Studio B equipment and sold it at cost to the Country Music Hall of Fame), those early, important studios still exist for students and visitors to enjoy.
What makes a place historic? The architecture of the Nashville sound was never of brick and mortar. Certainly, there are old studio spaces that, in our imaginations, ring with sonic magic; but in truth, it’s not the room; it’s the music. Billy Swan recorded his hit song “I Can Help” in Chip Young’s house. Should we force the owner of that house to register it as a historic landmark? Joan Baez, Dan Fogelberg, and Neil Young recorded hits in Quadrafonic Studios. Jimmy Buffett recorded Margaritaville there, yet Quadrafonic was sold without protest.
Of the three men who built 30 Music Square West, one of them is still living. Harold Bradley worked in that room as much or more than anyone. He knows the history of the building. He knows who recorded there. Elvis was not on this list. Elvis In Nashville, Don Cusic’s definitive book on Elvis’ time in Music City, confirms Mr. Bradley’s memory. Elvis Presley never recorded in that building.
Mr. Atkins and the Bradleys built 30 Music Square West in 1965 for RCA Studio A as an inducement to keep the music group in Nashville. The Bradley-Atkins play worked: RCA rented the 30 Music Square West offices and studio for 25 years. Nostalgia wasn’t a factor. This was business. When Chet Atkins and Owen and Harold Bradley built 30 Music Square West, Owen said, “One day we might not have anything, but if we buy this property and build this office building, we can at least have something to sell.” It was an investment in their futures.
Mr. Atkins and the Bradley family listed 30 Music Square West for sale 24 years ago, just after RCA moved out. They’ve been trying to sell it ever since. Mr. Folds leased space in the building about 12 years ago on a ninety-day lease. That ninety-day lease has been extended nearly 50 times, with the anticipation that someone might want to buy the building.
The building is now, finally, under contract for sale to Bravo Development. Mr. Folds, who has no ownership interest in the building, has made an impassioned plea to “Save Studio A” as a historic landmark. (He’s now asking, hyperbolically, to “Save Music Row.”)
Historically, Metro Council has been hesitant to grant restrictive overlays without the consent of the land owner. When a tenant, with no ownership in the property, requests restrictions to a property without the owners’ consent, he effectively hijacks the owners’ original risk and the possibility of a good return on their investment. The Atkins and Bradley families have skin in the game as property owners, and Mr. Folds would ask them to just walk away.
An overlay for the entire area would be a downzoning of the worst order, diminishing value almost immediately, and potentially stymieing future creative endeavors. Such restrictions would likely prevent two brothers from slapping a Quonset hut on an old house and trying something new.
Music City isn’t about making a perfect room, or hanging just the right baffling. Turns out, the architecture of Nashville’s evolving sound is a synergy of creative energy. That’s still here, and it has nothing to do with this building.
Sincerely,
Harold Bradley,
The Owen Bradley Family
The Chet Atkins Family Trust

Folds’ response reads:

I would agree that ‘Nashville’s evolving sound is a synergy of creative energy.’ As I said before, I believe that our music heritage should be protected and preserved. It’s up to our city and business leaders – working alongside the people who make and support our local music scene – to find the right balance between progress and preservation.
But as those folks weigh in on what’s best to do, I hope they recognize from a musician’s perspective that great spaces like historic Studio A – the only such space left in the world with its unique sonic and acoustic design – are integral ingredients in the recipe that fuels our ‘synergy of creative energy.’ It’s frankly a testament to the genius of both Owen Bradley and Chet Atkins that both historic Studio A and B are still state-of-the-art. These two spaces and their approaches to acoustics have stood the test of time. We are grateful that the current building owners have allowed musicians like me to work with and collaborate with some of the greatest artists of our generation to keep these spaces alive and busy. If we didn’t have these and other uniquely Nashville music assets, in time I believe we would cease to be relevant to current and future generations of music makers.

Folds is currently on tour in Europe.

Aristo Releases International Report for July 2014

 july international report

Click above for a full report.

The Aristo International Report has been released for July 2014. The AristoMedia Group has been issuing a quarterly review of global activities since 2008.
Highlights in this issue include:
• An overview and photo gallery of the CMA World GlobaLive! Show.
• An update on the coverage of Internet radio station, CMR Nashville.
• Details of the annual International Country Music Conference at Belmont.
• General news from all around the globe, including news about Dolly, the CCMA and Aussie Morgan Evans’ Opry debut.