Industry Ink (4-16-13)

recording academy nashville chapter111The Recording Academy‘s Nashville chapter, in partnership with the Producers and Engineers Wing, will feature a presentation by engineer Andrew Scheps, along with a panel discussion with producer Chuck Ainlay, singer-songwriter-studio owner Ben Folds, producer and publisher Frank Liddell and mastering engineer Bob Ludwig on April 25. The panel will discuss current listening formats, sound quality, and how to capture authentic performances from artists. The event, which has limited seating and is open only to Recording Academy members, will be held at The Listening Room (217 2nd Ave. S.) beginning at 5:30 p.m. CT. Doors will open at 5 p.m. To attend RSVP here by Monday, April 22.

• • •

Australian singer-songwriter Kane Harrison has joined SESAC‘s roster of writers. Harrison has released two singles, “Crazy” and “Slow Burn.” Harrison recently stopped by SESAC’s Nashville headquarters to celebrate the new partnership.

Pictured (L-R): SESAC’s Shannan Hatch and Harrison. Photo: Peyton Hoge

Pictured (L-R): SESAC’s Shannan Hatch and Harrison. Photo: Peyton Hoge

• • •

Joanna Smith performed an acoustic set for the WDKN Open House last week.

Pictured (L-R): RG Jones, Sony Music Secondary Promotion Manager Robert Freeman, WDKN MusicDirector Kenneth Forte, President/WDKN Joanna Smith, RCA artist Dale Turner,WDKN Mornings Rusty Sherrill, Sony Music Secondary Promotion

Pictured (L-R): RG Jones, Sony Music Secondary Promotion Manager Robert Freeman, WDKN Music
Director Kenneth Forte, President/WDKN Joanna Smith, RCA artist Dale Turner,
WDKN Mornings Rusty Sherrill, Sony Music Secondary Promotion


 
 
 

CD Baby Partners with Songtrust To Offer CD Baby Pro

CDBaby200CD Baby has partnered with digital publishing service Songtrust to offer the new service CD Baby Pro, a comprehensive royalty collection service.
The new service interfaces with performance rights organizations to collect royalties on behalf of US-based artists. The offering is made of four primary services including music distribution, songwriter affiliation and/or registration with performing rights organizations ASCAP or BMI, song registration with ASCAP or BMI and international collection agencies, and global royalty collections.
The service will be an add-on opportunity for existing CD Baby Artists, at a cost of $59 per album or $39 per single.

Artist Updates (4-15-13)

faith hill11Faith Hill will no longer be performing the opening theme for Sunday Night Football. The singer revealed the news to fans via her Facebook page today:
“Amazing 2 [sic] have been part of SNF- an honor. I’ve just let everyone there know it’s time 2 [sic] let someone else rock the open. Difficult decision. Kinda Emotional. Love all you guys at SNF – I’ll b [sic] watching!!”
Hill began performing the opening theme in 2007.

• • •

Photo: Dana Tynan

Sugarland’s Kristian Bush has launched a new web series, Music Monday. Each Monday, the singer-songwriter will stream a different song and discuss the story behind it. The song could be a new demo or an old favorite. His first installment begins today (April 15), with “Call It Even,” from Billy Pilgrim’s 2001 project In The Time Machine. For more information, visit kristianbush.com.

• • •
misswilliebrown390x260Amanda Watkins and Kasey Buckley of Miss Willie Brown have parted ways. Watkins will continue to pursue a solo career. “I support Kasey as she decides to take a break from the world of music. I’m sure as you have seen over the past few years, there is nothing that will ever come between us,” Watkins said via her Facebook page. “The songs that you have been loving and playing will be ever present on my solo journey. It’s going to be a great year with lots to come! And I promise to keep you updated every step of the way through touring, videos, posts and most of all music.”
Miss Willie Brown debuted in 2011 and toured with Dierks Bentley and Josh Thompson.

 • • •

Bigger Picture Group’s Chris Janson recently participated in the ACM & Cabela’s Great Outdoors Archery Event on April 6. Also competing was Willie Robertson, star of the A&E hit show Duck Dynasty.

Pictured (L-R): Chris Janson, Willie and Korie Robertson

Pictured (L-R): Chris Janson, Willie and Korie Robertson

Film-Com This Week In Nashville

film comThe annual Film-Com event started in Nashville on Saturday (April 13) and will run through Friday, April 19 at venues centered around the Hilton Nashville Downtown. The conference is a marketplace connecting filmmakers with packaging, financing and distribution opportunities. Expected to be represented are domestic and foreign distribution companies, equity financiers, lender capital, P&A funding, gap financing, co-production partners, packaging agents and product integration specialists.
Prior to the event, Film-Com processes all entries to identify the most marketable properties. Filmmakers with the most marketable works-in-progress present their projects at Film-Com, and 50-100 additional projects of marketable merit are included in a printed catalog.
The conference kicked-off Saturday (April 13) with Score-Com at Ocean Way Studios and Script-Com.
A few of the week’s highlights include:
• Faith In Film Conference at the Frist Center for Visual Arts
• New Project Expo at Titans Stadium
• Film and Television Business Seminars at the Country Music Hall of Fame’s Ford Theatre
• Syncs & Drinks at The Hard Rock Café, featuring performances by Lions For Real and Shannon LaBrie.
Details at filmnashville.org.

RCA Nashville Promotes Two

Matt Galvin

Matt Galvin

RCA Nashville has promoted Matt Galvin and Elizabeth Sledge to Directors, Regional Promotion, effective immediately. Both Galvin and Sledge will continue to be responsible for the development, implementation and supervision of radio promotional plans for the RCA Nashville roster in their respective regions, including the radio airplay of Bush Hawg, Sara Evans, Miranda Lambert, Love and Theft, Jake Owen, Pistol Annies, Joanna Smith, Tate Stevens and Chris Young. They continue to report to Keith Gale, Sr. VP, National Promotion, RCA Nashville in their new roles.

“Matt and Liz have both been important members of our team for a long time, and their contributions to our successes are too numerous to count,” said Gale. “They’ve seamlessly executed and excelled at every new challenge and additional responsibility presented to them, and this well-deserved recognition formalizes their incredible momentum as members of the RCA Promotion leadership team. I’m lucky and proud to have them in the RCA family.”

Elizabeth Sledge

Elizabeth Sledge

Galvin, a native of Nashville, has a long tenure with the company, most recently serving as Manager, Regional Promotion, RCA Nashville. He first joined then Arista Records in 1995 in the mailroom before being promoted to A&R Coordinator in 1996 and Tickets and Itineraries Coordinator for RCA Label Group in 1999. In 2001, Galvin was promoted to Promotions Coordinator, Arista Nashville and later relocated to Pheonix with the company in 2004 as National Promotions Director for RCA Nashville, where he worked with radio stations on the West Coast to promote and market artists on the RCA roster before relocating back to Nashville as Regional Promotion Manager in 2008. Galvin is a native of Nashville, TN and graduated from Belmont University in 1995.

A 14-year veteran in the industry, Sledge has served as Manager, Regional Promotion in the Southeast region for the RCA Promotion team since 2009. Sledge rejoined the company after working as part of the founding team of Montage Music Group, where she held several positions of increasing responsibility culminating in her role as Midwest/Northeast regional in 2009. Prior to Montage, she worked on the Columbia /Epic Promotions team from 2002-2006, where she worked with the label’s artists including Gretchen Wilson and Montgomery Gentry. Sledge first joined the Columbia Nashville team as a Coordinator in 2002 before being promoted to Northeast Regional Promotion Manager for Epic in 2005. Liz graduated from the University of North Alabama in 1998. She currently resides in Nashville.

Madson, Harden Launch F3 Entertainment

F3 Entertainment111Ken Madson and J.T. Harden have launched F3 Entertainment, a multifaceted artist management and television development/production company. Madson will oversee the artist management division as president, while Harden will oversee the television production and development division as president.
Madson recently exited his post as president of Average Joes Management. Madson started his career as a manager at Parallel Entertainment in 2004, and joined Average Joes in 2009 as a partner helping to building the careers of Colt Ford, Brantley Gilbert and Dee Jay Silver.
“The last four years have been extremely exciting and memorable and I enjoyed being part of the Average Joes team,” says Madson. “F3 Entertainment was the next obvious step for my career and I am thrilled to reignite ideas and build this company with J.T. We have exciting opportunities on the horizon that span a variety of entertainment platforms.”
Harden, producer and star of Pursuit Channel’s Hard Core Hunting T.V., has helped bring country music and hunting together and stated, “The outdoor industry has experienced a recent boom in popular culture. I’m excited to further integrate country musicians in to the outdoor world as well as expand production to projects for the mainstream.”
F3 Entertainment’s management roster includes artists Dee Jay Silver, JJ Lawhorn, Moonshine Bandits, Ty Stone, Ira Dean, football legend Jim McMahon and former MLB player Ryan Klesko. The F3 television division will produce “Hard Core Hunting TV” for Pursuit Channel, consult MMA promotion “Showdown Fights” on a new television deal and shepherd a slate of shows in development.
F3 Entertainment’s offices will be based out of Nashville. Madson can be reached at ken@f3entertainment.com. Harden can be reached at jt@f3entertainment.com.

Aldean Lights Up UGA Stadium With Historic Show

Jason Aldean and Ludacris at UGA’s Sanford Stadium, Saturday, April 13. Photo: Chris & Todd Owyoung

Jason Aldean and Ludacris at UGA’s Sanford Stadium, Saturday, April 13. Photo: Chris & Todd Owyoung


Jason Aldean almost, quite literally brought the house down with a one-time-only concert Saturday (April 13) at the University of Georgia’s Sanford Stadium thanks to numerous high-power flamethrowers shooting skyward during opening and closing numbers, “Crazy Town” and “Hicktown,” respectively.
As part of the Georgia native’s Night Train tour, in support of his latest album by the same title, Aldean stepped up his arena tour with a few stadium dates. This weekend’s show will go down in history as the only music concert to play on the lawn of the Georgia Bulldog’s home turf in its 84-year history.
What an event it was! Tickets were capped at 66,000 and sold out in a reported 45 minutes. By comparison, LP Field holds a little over 69,000 at its maximum.
“Thanks to Dr. Adams and coach Mark Richt for letting us tear up your field for a night—It’ll grow back,” joked Aldean during his headlining set.
Fans accustomed to tailgating before football games at the Athens stadium partied throughout the day in anticipation of the ACM Male Vocalist of the Year’s alcohol-free evening, due to campus/SEC standards. Also on the bill were special guests Thomas Rhett, Jake Owen and Luke Bryan.
Deviating from his trademark plaid shirt, Aldean sported a red Georgia Bulldogs t-shirt on the stage, which featured six, impressive, moving LED displays overhead (10 screens in all), LED illuminated risers, and hundreds of intelligent lighting elements.
Backing up the star were five of his New Voice band members. Before Aldean performed his current single “1994” each musician was highlighted with throwback photographs from that year. Additional highlights included a hologram appearance by Kelly Clarkson during “Don’t You Wanna Stay,” and guest appearances by Bryan on “Only Way I Know” and Atlanta-resident Ludacris on “Dirt Road Anthem.”
“Minor-league baseball stadiums, CMA Fest at LP Field and festivals like Bayou Fest all have prepared me for this show,” said Aldean before the concert. “The first time I stepped foot in this stadium I was just glad to just see a game, let alone think I would play it. When it’s all said and done, this will be one of the defining shows of my career.”
His agrarian based mega-hits couldn’t have sounded better echoing the walls of the Georgia field. Aldean proved well-equipped as a stadium torch bearer. Fans certainly haven’t objected. Thus far, Aldean has sold out every show this year, including two upcoming stadium concerts at Boston’s Fenway Park (July 12-13) and Chicago’s Wrigley Field (July 20).
Catch him play Nashville on Tuesday, April 16 when the star appears as part of  the Country Music Hall of Fame benefit, We’re All For The Hall, at the Bridgestone Arena.
UGA Night Train Set List
Crazy Town
Take A Little Ride
Tattoos On This Town
When She Says Baby
The Truth
Fly Over States
Nothin Town
Johnny Cash
Amarillo Sky
Night Train
1994
Don’t You Wanna Stay
Big Green Tractor
Only Way I Know
Dirt Road Anthem
She’s Country
My Kinda Party
Hicktown
Photo: Chris & Todd Owyoung

Photo: Chris & Todd Owyoung


Photo: Chris & Todd Owyoung

Photo: Chris & Todd Owyoung

Industry Ink (4-15-13)

GRAMMY LOGOThe Nashville Chapter of The Recording Academy’s annual Grammy Block Party will take place May 14 from 4:30 p.m. until 10 p.m. at Owen Bradley Park near the roundabout on Music Row. The party will feature DJ DU, Will Hoge, Kristen Kelly, The Lone Bellow, The Megaphones, Kip Moore and The Rhett Walker Band. The event is not open to the public. It is open only to members of The Recording Academy and their guests.

                                                               • • •

gacAfter many years with GAC-TV, Talent Manager Shanna Strassberg has left the company. She can now be reached at shannastrassberg@gmail.com or 615-714-1837 for freelance TV and music projects.

            • • •

CountryThunder_newlogo

In a first for Arizona Country Thunder history, festival organizers of the four-day country music lifestyle event has sold out, reaching a capacity of 25,000 patrons and filling more than 5,000 campsites.

Performers during the event include Toby Keith, Lee Brice, Diamond Rio, Parmalee, Morgan Frazier, Lady Antebellum, Justin Moore, Jerrod Niemann, Aaron Lewis and others.

                                                               • • •

“This New Business Of Singing” Panelists spoke at Renee Grant-Williams “Fearless Solutions for Singers” Master Class held Saturday at Soundcheck Nashville.

Topics covered in the session included the relationship between artists and labels, the importance of songwriting, alternative distribution of music and social media.

Pictured (L-R): Paul Worley, Anthony Smith, Renee Grant-Williams, Anthony Smith, Sherod Robertson

Picture from left: Paul Worley, Anthony Smith, Renee Grant-Williams, Anthony Smith, Sherod Robertson

                                                            • • •
Warner/Chappell is supporting the 60 for 60 movement for George Strait.
Pictured (L-R):Steve Markland, Matt Michels, Nina Wright, Patricia Mainello, Alicia Pruitt, Phil May, BJ Hill, Tim James, Karen Harrison-Hite, LuAnn Inman, Blain Rhodes, Ben Vaughn

Pictured (L-R):Steve Markland, Matt Michels, Nina Wright, Patricia Mainello, Alicia Pruitt, Phil May, BJ Hill, Tim James, Karen Harrison-Hite, LuAnn Inman, Blain Rhodes, Ben Vaughn

 

Artists Sign On For 'Alabama & Friends' Tribute Album

alabamaofficial111Luke Bryan, Toby Keith, Jason Aldean, Kenny Chesney, Tim McGraw, Rascal Flatts, Eli Young Band and Trisha Yearwood are among the artists who will pay tribute to country band Alabama on an upcoming tribute album, Alabama & Friends.
According to Billboard, the project will include two new Alabama songs and should be released in late 2013. The project will feature members of Alabama performing with the artists on some of the tracks.
Alabama is currently on its first full tour since 2004, their 40th Anniversary Back to the Bowery tour. The trek launched on April 4 at the Bowery in Myrtle Beach, S.C.
 

Launching An Idea And Making It Populr

Nicholas Holland

Nicholas Holland


The dazzling world of startup investors and the entrepreneurs that entice bets on success has been exploding in Music City.
Nicholas Holland, who describes himself as, “an avid supporter of the Nashville entrepreneur ecosystem,” created his first company at 23, then sold it at 26. Next he started the highly successful CentreSource, an Interactive Agency which he recently stepped down from to helm his latest venture full time—Populr.
Populr is all about creating published one-pagers online or Pops. CEO Holland and his group of investors, which includes music industry notables such as Joe Galante, Mark Montgomery and Paul Schatzkin, are convinced Pops will take root and eventually occupy an essential place in every marketer’s toolbox.
Also featured in the following interview is Populr’s Senior Communications Strategist, Heather McBee, who previously served as VP, Marketing and Web Initiatives for Sony Music in Nashville. McBee’s unique perspective creates a strong understanding of how the new product can interface with the entertainment community.
In the following discussion we asked Holland and McBee about Nashville’s entrepreneur community, how they characterize the new company and the colorful journey which has brought Populr into existence.
BossRoss: Nashville, with its traditional roots and Bible belt values seems an unlikely place to birth a technology/entrepreneurial hotbed. How did this happen?
Nicholas Holland: Back-to-back recessions across America created an environment where people’s primary source of wealth collapsed—their homes. At the same time we all have email addresses, interface with a variety of social and virtual connections and have become comfortable interfacing through computers and mobile to a larger world. Finally, Nashville is experiencing a much stronger economic vibrance than many other cities across the country. The result is that individuals have lost trust in corporate America and their personal finance vehicles and have found themselves wanting to build wealth outside that system.
BossRoss: And these changes created a group of wanna-be investors and entrepreneurs?
Holland: Yes. Overall, the changes have created situations where access to capitol is no longer restricted to brick and mortar ideas. You can actually start a business with just a computer and smart phone. As we’ve moved from a blue collar to a services society the exchange of goods has become more fluid because it’s really just information. So you have a reason to become an entrepreneur, access to become an entrepreneur and finally a city which very much supports it. The overall impact of entrepreneurship is sometimes small, but the irony is that it makes a huge splash in terms of its allure and appeal. Ninety-five percent of startups fail but they still gather fans who want to cheer for the underdog. I hear people saying all the time, “If I didn’t have two mortgages and four private school kids I’d love to do what you are doing.” And that creates the investor ecosystem which makes it all possible. Over the last 7 years in Nashville we saw the Entrepreneur Center and various funding groups emerge. Media publications then began attributing more of their pages to these efforts. The culture of entrepreneurship is on fire across the country. But Nashville is three degrees hotter than everywhere else, which makes it such a great place to be.
Populr Logo - MedBossRoss: When was Populr born?
Holland: It started officially in Nov. 2011, but really began a few years earlier. My agency, CentreSource, required a lot of high touch communications. I wanted to step up our sales efforts with something more than email and attachments, something on the web. Our clients were immediately drawn to the idea of being able to easily create pages online. The web is active, visual and live vs. email which goes out of date as soon as it’s done. People wanted to use it for sales, internal communication, training and customer on-boarding. Unfortunately, our first and second prototypes simply didn’t work and we put our plans on the back burner. When we came into 2011 my team wanted to try again. I told them, “Anything above expenses and taxes up to $10k per month I will give back to the team. So if you build a recurring business model and it brings in $10k a month you guys can buy iPads, Kindles, beer whatever you want.” We named the project “10k.” Two weeks later they returned wanting to build Upopper! By the end of February the name evolved to Populr. We got the .me domain, built the logo, established some branding and the team promised a June delivery.
BossRoss: This sounds easy. Everything went according to schedule, right?
Holland: No. First we missed June, then July and it still wasn’t ready. I thought, “this is going to kill me.” But I remembered something my family said, “If your business doesn’t run without you it isn’t really a business.” I began to toy with the idea of stepping down from CentreSource to build Populr as a separate company, full time. Bullpen, a Nashville microfund accepted me, so I stepped down from CentreSource, recruited two team members and we began building Populr full time in Nov. 2011. We moved into the Entrepreneur Center a month later and by April our first version was ready. My mentors insisted we formalize the business model immediately so we added a slew of features such as collaboration, team sharing and security. It took us another four months to get that done, but amazingly by late August 2012, but we had arrived squarely in the Alpha stage.
BossRoss: What about the financing?
Holland: It wasn’t a cinderella story. I put in about $125k of my own money and then raised another $450k in a convertible note. At our current burn rate that should take us through the end of this year. We’re being capitol efficient and making money, but it is still a big chunk of cash. We have nine employees.
Heather McBee

Heather McBee


BossRoss: Heather, how do one-page web sites fit into the big picture of social media and branding?
Heather McBee: Your website remains the core, the home where you return. Populr becomes an extension of that home base. It offers the flexibility to quickly create and launch a page without having to call a developer and go through a multi-day or week process. Then you spread it via social media, email, all the venues. The sites are mobile optimized so they work beautifully in that space as well.
BossRoss: How do people use these one-page sites?
McBee: They are highly interactive which creates lots of possibilities. The Lost Trailers, for example, are using Populr in a variety of new ways. After a show in Detroit they’ll record a special message, add some fan photos and create a Pop. Next they publish it via social media and geo-targeted posts on Facebook. It gives them a way to go back into the market quickly and easily with custom branding and reinforce that fact they were just there. Big Machine Label Group is using Populr in another way—to contact radio and deliver assets. Instead of sending emails to station PDs with an attached MP3 file, bio and three paragraphs of information; they send a link to a highly dynamic environment. And they can track who opened it, what each programmer clicked on and how much time they spent. Leadership Music and the Americana Music are using custom themes and finding unique ways to reach their membership.
BossRoss: How do you see adoption spreading in the entertainment industries?
McBee: Right now we’re building some innovative case studies. Nashville is our core, but as it grows we’ll start reaching out to labels in New York and L.A., management companies in Austin and everyone else around the country. We know this platform is also perfect for film, TV and books. There are so many applications for these one-page sites that it just continues to grow.
BossRoss: I noticed the CMA used a password protected Pop to provide documents and information at its recent Board of Directors meeting which I attended. It was convenient having all the files (downloadable) in one place.
Heather: We’ve also suggested additional uses to them like preparing sponsor pitches for the CMA Music Fest or CMA Awards and to provide digital tools and assets for street teams.
BossRoss: What is the biggest difference between the entrepreneur space and the music industry?
McBee: It’s fast and flexible because decision making doesn’t take large committees or repeated meetings. In the music business there are expectations about royalties, systems, accounting and people you are accountable to plus multiple gate keepers that touch every artist. On the entrepreneur side you walk in every day with the feeling you can change the world, because you’re creating something no one else has done.
BossRoss: Nick, what’s next on Populr’s entrepreneurial roadmap?
Holland: We’ve already checked off the typical seed investment boxes. We’ve built and launched a product plus validated that people will naturally gravitate to the product and upgrade and pay without our involvement. Our biggest chore now is the conversation which goes, “That’s impressive. How do I use it?” People want it to replace something. They ask, “Does this get rid of email marketing? Or my website?” We’ve learned Pops are like the tablet in that it’s about expanding how you consume media not replacing a previous device.
BossRoss: Do you have other competitors in the space?
Nicholas: We haven’t seen any direct competitors. But there are some consumer-based one-page builders like www.about.me which creates online business card/bio pages. People are experimenting with the micropublishing concept, but we haven’t seen anybody on the B2B side which we believe is a much broader application.
BossRoss: How do you describe Populr?
Holland: There’s three things we say to position it. Populr is very effective at creating engaging online content quickly and easily. Then through sharing across social media, email and other channels it helps you gain attention and be heard. Finally, it helps you improve your message with its Micro-Analytic tracking tools that deliver critical insight into who is reading, opening, sharing and responding to your communications. Ultimately the question becomes, “If you can easily create and share a single page what would you do with it?”