Weekly Register: Swift’s “Red” Becomes State-Of-The-Art Marketing Textbook

It’s not easy to grab top headlines during a week loaded with Awards, label restructuring and a massive hurricane, but Taylor Swift is used to making the difficult look easy. This week the Big Machine international superstar became the first female artist of the SoundScan era to have two million-selling album weeks. Red scanned 1.208 million units this week. About 38% of that total was in digital format. (Swift’s Speak Now logged 1.047 million 10/31/10).

The blockbuster marketing ballet which helped accomplish this exceptional feat will no doubt be discussed and dissected in label boardrooms across the country in the coming weeks. It included high-profile partnerships with Walgreens and Papa John’s Pizza plus dozens of other brands and a Nashville radio remote. Swift worked the tube tirelessly—Letterman, Good Morning America, The View, Ellen DeGeneres, Katie Couric and there were layers of social and traditional media. Dropping the album on Monday allowed an extra sales day.

Orchestrated like a major movie release, the impressive Red marketing campaign has written itself into the music industry record books as a state-of-the-art album sales textbook.

Swift also dominated across other charts. In the tracks department she scored 13 entries on Nielsen SoundScan’s Top 200 Digital Tracks chart and was all over the Digital Genre Country tracks chart (the country chart only lists some of her tracks due to Billboard’s recent decision to dictate what is and isn’t country music). The singer/songwriter also owned the Top 3 positions on the Top Catalog Country Albums chart.

In the end, Swift’s dramatic showing plus week two for Jason Aldean (Country No. 2; 116k) and a holiday debut from Lady Antebellum (No 3; 25k) upped YTD country sales from last week’s -2.4% tally to a +1.4% adding a welcome dose of good news to an already event-filled week.

Robert Deaton: Getting Awards Show Ratings

(L–R): Robert Deaton and ABC’s Mark Bracco

A candid and in-depth look into Robert Deaton’s journey from playing on a local country music television show in North Carolina at age six to becoming the Executive Producer of the CMA Awards television special. Originally published in the 2012 MusicRow Awards print issue.

Robert Deaton is a lucky man. His two career dreams have come true—to work in film/TV and contribute to country music. He’s insanely busy and has won hundreds of awards, but his relaxed manner instantly puts others at ease. When Deaton starts talking about work, his enthusiasm and excitement makes it clear he loves what he does.

Currently Deaton is Executive Producer for the CMA’s Awards, Music Festival and Country Christmas shows on ABC, plus the new TV singing competition Duets. He and business partner George Flanigen have also created numerous music videos for an impressive list of artists through their company Deaton Flanigen Productions.

In spite of Deaton’s numerous accomplishments he started this interview by recalling how his company got its first major country music video assignment. “George and I incorporated in 1985,” he says. “MusicRow magazine reviewed a video we did with Eddie DeGarmo and said, ‘Deaton Flanigen, Nashville’s best kept secret.’ After reading the review and seeing the video, James Carlson from Columbia called AristoMedia’s Jeff Walker and asked ‘Who are these guys?’ That perfect storm resulted in us doing a major country music video and got things rolling.”

The CMA Awards remain, however, Deaton’s most influential annual time block with respect to country music. The impact of those three hours on the radio and SoundScan charts, the TV networks, with media gatekeepers and inside Music Row boardrooms is intense. What follows is the story of how Deaton rose to this position of trust in 2007 and the numerous decisions which it requires him to make when considering artists, presenters, hosts and ratings…

MR: How did your journey to becoming Executive Producer of the CMA Awards start?

Robert: It began with being asked to chair the CMA TV committee. Lon Helton was President of the organization that year and felt I would get along well with Walter Miller (CMA Awards Producer) and be able to interact with him from a creative standpoint in a way no other chair had been able to do. The previous year I co-chaired the TV committee with Paul Corbin. You have to understand that just being around all these brilliant people on the CMA Board was amazing and to chair anything was a great opportunity, especially the TV committee. I was still pretty much a stranger to corporate structure (i.e. how to run a committee) and had a big learning curve. So I became the TV Chairman and Walter Miller taught me a great deal about TV. I tried to soak up everything.

MR: But being Chairman of the TV committee is a long way from producing the CMA awards, right?

Robert: I looked at CMA leaders like Joe Galante, Tim DuBois, Lon Helton, Mike Dungan, Luke Lewis, you [David Ross] and Jeff  Walker. Everyone had their area of expertise and I kept thinking, “But what can I contribute? How can I make my mark within the organization?” I wanted to create a TV broadcast for the CMA Music Festival. It had been tried in the past, but not strategically. With the blessing of the TV committee, and my own money, I shot B-roll at the CMA music festival. It had already moved to the new stadium. I put together a six-minute pitch piece to show CBS with graphics, sound design and interviews. Attorney Joel Katz got me a meeting with Les Moonves in Los Angeles. I told him, “I could tell you what it is, but let me show you what it really is.” So I played the piece for him and held my breath. After it was over Les looked at me and said, “I totally get this. Let’s do it.” And that’s how we sold the first year.

(L–R): Robert Deaton, Walter Miller and Vince Gill

MR: That had to be like winning an award! But now you had to follow through and create a show.

Robert: Yes, it was “mission accomplished,” but it was also just beginning. The TV committee sent me back to LA to find a producer and director for the new show. On that trip I met Gary Halvorson who became our Director and still directs the music festival to this day. Gary is brilliant, with tons of experience and a deep love of music. I returned to Nashville and reported to CMA Executive Director Ed Benson and TV Co-chair Larry Fitzgerald, “I’ve found a director, but not a producer yet.” Larry changed my life because he said, “I have a problem.” “What do you mean?” I asked. “This isn’t fair,” said Larry. “You came up with the idea, shot the video, went to LA and then sold it. You should produce it.” That was the very first time I thought about producing it. A week later Larry repeated his comment to the committee. I said, “I’ve never done this before, but for this one moment I want to take off my CMA cap and put on my personal hat. I’ve never asked anything personally, but if you deem it’s appropriate and feel I can do the job, I’d like to be considered.” So I left the room and they voted. When I returned I had been named Producer. I called Gary Halvorson and off we went.

MR: That must have been a heart pounding afternoon.

Robert: Yes, but then the hard work began. The first few years for the festival show were rough because it was this huge TV elephant. I was determined to make great TV and therefore part of the festival culture had to be changed. It rocked the boat, but slowly and surely we got there.

MR: Flash forward a couple of years. CMA decided they needed someone in place to take over from Walter someday and that person was you.

Robert: Walter and I had become very close, so I had his blessing. The first year I was Consulting Producer. The second year they upped me to Producer, which was the best of all worlds. I was still working under Walter and doing what I love most, the creative. Walter and I approach things differently. I came from film so I’m really about the presentation, whereas he produces more from a director’s point of view because he began as a broadcast director. For example, Walter was more into the artist staging, where they’re going to perform, walk to and how the movement works within the song. I was more about lighting and set design. So we were great together. The next year the CMA asked me to take over even more of the producing responsibility, still with Walter’s approval.

MR: Sharing Walter’s experience and knowledge must have been like a graduate course in TV?

Robert: It was great. I had all the fun and Walter had all the pressure because he was the one having to decide who was going to be on the show. All the really hard decisions, which I do now, he was doing at that time. And by the way, he was simply amazing. When I finally transitioned to Executive Producer, about five years ago, Walter became Consulting Producer and is to this day. That’s when I got the pressure and the phone calls that come with the job.

(L–R): CMA CEO Steve Moore, Producer Byron Gallimore and Robert Deaton

MR: What about the nuts and bolts decisions like choosing hosts?

Robert: Brooks and Dunn hosted the year before I became Executive Producer but decided they didn’t want to do it again. ABC suggested a no-host approach kind of like the Grammy model which we did that first year. For the second year I wanted a host. “Who are you thinking about?” ABC asked. I absolutely wanted Brad and Carrie. Everyone said, “Well, Brad will be great,” and I replied, “Carrie Underwood is the last person you need to worry about.” Carrie had hosted some CMA Music Festival segments I had produced and she was great, it was like a light turned on. I didn’t push it, but I knew I was going to bring it back up. Later, I went to the TV committee and said, “This is who I’m thinking of and why.” Brad’s a great player, singer and represents the traditional side, but he’s also a comedian and the way he thinks is left of center. Carrie, with her pop culture/American Idol following represents the contemporary side. She’s beautiful, well spoken and also an amazing talent. I knew these two would have chemistry together as our hosts. But honestly, they are unbelievable together and have completely exceeded everyone’s expectations. And here’s another thing we were missing out on. Without a host, there’s no focus point to do the heavy media lifting. We didn’t have someone that could talk to People magazine and Entertainment Weekly and all the newspapers and radio stations and do the promos. We missed out on that for a year. So I went back to ABC expecting a fight, but after I laid it all out, they said, “No, we get it now. You should do that.” And that’s how we ended up with Brad and Carrie.

MR: What’s great about an inspired choice is after the fact everyone says, “Yeah—no brainer.” What about some of the other pressures that come with wearing the Executive Producer hat?

Robert: There’s booking, site surveys, design, lots of things, but hands down the most fun part is creating ideas for the artists, the song presentations and interacting with Brad and Carrie. That’s a blast. The hardest part is booking the show and having to tell someone they are not getting a slot. We always book the Entertainer Of The Year nominees, but then the question is, what will make the best TV show? Every year there are more than 20 artists that have a valid story and good reasons to be on the show. I agonize over the process because the artists are depending on me. There’s only two weeks out of the year I can’t sleep and it’s during the CMA awards. I called Luke Lewis, Joe Galante and Mike Dungan for advice because they are in similar pressurized positions. They all said the same thing—    “It will never get any easier, you have to live with it.” Dungan also said, “Frankly, I hope booking the show never gets any easier for you, because if it does it means you don’t care anymore.” So I’ve always remembered their advice, this is supposed to be difficult. But once we know who is on the show we start listening to the music and it all turns to fun.

MR: What about those special, never-before-seen TV moments?

Robert: Those pairings are usually very organic. Over time you learn that certain things work. For example, a hit song with a superstar artist will always make a big rating. An unknown song with a superstar artist can produce a good rating, but nothing like combining Taylor Swift with a hit song, or the year we had Kid Rock singing “All Summer Long.” And then there are certain songs that transcend, like “Believe” with Brooks and Dunn. We’re always looking to somehow create new pairings plus give a nod toward where we came from, like the Glen Campbell tribute this past year. I was proud of that on a lot of different levels. At first I was going to have Keith Urban on guitar, very intimate at the front of the stage. I was home one night listening to Glen’s records and asking myself, “Have I chosen the right songs?” when I realized these are some of the best records of all time, they sound so good. So I called my Music Director Steve Gibson and said, “I want to do them exactly like the record, full strings, everything. It needs to be done that way.” Then I found a past clip of Glen performing “Gentle On My Mind” on the CMA Awards. So I thought we’ll start the segment cold with Glen and then move to our guys. I still needed someone to host the segment, to come out and talk about Glen. Ultimately, instead of one host, we decided to have each artist—Vince, Keith and Brad—say a little something about Glen. I started getting chill bumps and knew we had it right. It was a long, eight minute segment which is an eternity in TV, but our ABC partners believed the tribute was the right thing to do and never asked me to cut out even a second. That was really cool.

Robert Deaton

MR: Brad and Carrie’s opening is one of everyone’s favorite segments. How does it come together?

Robert: This past year we got together at Brad’s house in Pacific Palisades earlier than usual, about 3 months out front of the show and started with general pop culture ideas. We’ve discovered that nothing is too old for us to use, even if it happened in the beginning of the year. Why? Because the Awards are like country’s annual corporate meeting and this “speech” is about everything that happened throughout the year. For example, six months before the awards I read that Tim and Faith were coming out with dolls and knew we’d want to use them somehow. One thing we don’t want to do is hurt anybody’s feelings. We want to be funny, playful, but not be hurtful. Over time we’ve defined and refined Carrie and Brad’s roles. It’s ok for Brad to do something stupid, but it’s not ok for Carrie to act like Brad is stupid. Like when Brad got the songs mixed up between Lady Gaga and Lady Antebellum, “Oh I love them,” and starts singing a Gaga song. Carrie is the one who, like the mom says, “Brad you sweet thing, that’s not Lady Antebellum that’s Lady Gaga.” Brad comes with a million ideas and Carrie will maybe not say anything for a half hour in a writer’s meeting and then will say the absolute thing that we should do, plus Carrie’s comedic timing is perfect. She knows to wait in the beat after Brad does something crazy. We’re so fortunate with both of them. So we start generalizing and eventually narrow it down to about six minutes. Creatively, it is the hardest thing we do and it changes right up until we air.

MR: Picking presenters?

Robert: One viewpoint is we should only book presenters from within the country genre. Some people don’t want presenters coming in from LA—TV or movies. My opinion is we need to be as broad as possible. If we can get Hugh Jackman or Reese Witherspoon we absolutely should. People sometimes only think about those three show hours, but I also have to think about getting us press. If I release that Gwyneth Paltrow—one of the biggest rated portions of our show over the last several years—is going to perform or be on the show we land in People magazine, Entertainment Weekly and every newspaper across the country. We cannot buy that kind of publicity and we need it to create awareness. Booking Paltrow to sing “Country Strong” met so many things in my criteria, it was the perfect storm. I had 25 phone calls from LA congratulating me on that booking because they understood how big it was. It also gave me something to promote for the last half hour of the show to help keep the ratings up. Maintaining ratings during the last half hour, and especially the final 15 minutes is almost impossible even though that is when the Entertainer is revealed. So in the last couple of years we’ve tried to develop strategies to keep viewers from leaving.

MR: Do you know the winners in advance?

Robert: I never know who the winners are, even during the show and don’t want to know. I’ll take a polygraph test on it. I would never criticize Walter, but sometimes he was too good at guessing who was going to win. He’d have someone perform and they’d win an award right afterwards and it looked like he knew. It happened to me once with Lady Antebellum. But usually there are lots of big surprises which work great for television. The first year Blake Shelton won Male Vocalist he was surprised and I was too. It was well deserved, but when he stomped up those steps it was like he was saying, “I’m living every moment of this, going up these steps one at a time and grabbing my place.” There is no better TV than those unscripted kinds of moments. I just have to make sure I capture them when they happen. I have to be able to say, I’ve arranged everything the best I possibly can, now let’s see what else happens.

MR: You’re like a party planner. You provide the guest list, create some party games and then hope the guests have a good time.

Robert: Exactly. I’ll run the show schedule with my directors, and we’ll discuss things like where the standing ovations might happen. For example, I carefully selected a list of audience people to shoot during the Glen Campbell segment so we could see their reactions while watching the tribute to this legendary performer. But every year something surprises us. I’m only as good as the artists we have on the show and the songs they are performing. With each performance I let the songs tell us what to do and try to see that the artist wins. Sometimes I’ll spend a lot of money on a set like I did last year with Blake and the dancers, other times I can showcase Reba with a spotlight and have her just sing a great song.

MR: This event’s importance cannot be overestimated. It’s the format’s most visible moment. Do you appreciate the magic you are helping to create?

Robert: You have to understand something about my background. When I was six years old I was on a local country music television show in North Carolina as a bit player. I grew up around Jack Greene and Jeannie Seely. I remember being in an empty classroom with Ray Pillow, a member of the Grand Ole Opry thinking the coolest thing I’d ever seen was the gold velvet in his guitar case! I met Jerry Lee Lewis backstage in one of those gymnasiums where they used to play and shook his hand when I was only seven. He was sitting in a chair with a big ole cigar and no shirt on. I remember hanging back stage with Buck Owens and know what it feels like, what it smells like to be in that room with Buck Owens. When I get stressed I pull out my favorite record and sit and listen to it—Buck Owens Live From Carnegie Hall. It got to the point where I was at the Grand Ole Opry so much I could call Mr. Bell, the security guard at the time, and just say “Hi, I’m coming down.” And he’d let me backstage. I’d sneak in the back corner of Roy Acuff’s dressing room and see all of them in a circle talking and playing.

Knowing that as my background, you can understand why it was such an unbelievable feeling for me when I got through my first show as the TV Chairman. That show was the first time that I felt I’d contributed to something that really made a difference in our genre. Look around my room at the albums I listen to—music from Jim Reeves, Ronnie Milsap and Jerry Reed. I’m not in this business by accident. I love this music, the genre and being part of this community and it runs deep from when I was a kid.

Blue Sky Riders Announce Album, Benefit Show

Blue Sky Riders

Blue Sky Riders, the vocal trio of Kenny Loggins, Georgia Middleman and Gary Burr, will be releasing its first album, titled Finally Home, on January 29.

Together, the seasoned songwriters will perform material from the forthcoming release at The Franklin Theatre November 16 and 17 to benefit NSAI. The showcases follow a recently completed 14 city tour (including a 5 night residency at New York’s Feinstein’s At Loews Regency).

Select singles from the forthcoming album and an EP, Live At The Rutledge, are currently available for purchase on iTunes.

Darius Rucker to Release New Album

Newly inducted Grand Ole Opry member Darius Rucker will release his third country album, True Believers, on January 22, 2013. Rucker served as co-writer on 10 of the album’s 12 tracks, including the title track and first single, and Frank Rogers returned as the project’s producer. Full track listing is included below.

“For this album, we really paid attention to what our friends and fans were telling us on the road,” shares Rucker. “The result is an album that I’m so proud of because my fans really have been the true believers since I released my first single to country radio. I can’t wait for everyone to hear it on January 22.”

Pictured at the Hall of Fame event are (L-R): UMG Nashville Chairman & CEO Mike Dungan; Darius Rucker; Frank Rogers. Photo: Chris Hollo

Rucker played the album in its entirety at a special event yesterday (10/30) at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s Ford Theater. The stripped-down, intimate showcase (and one of the first official combined UMG-Capitol events) featured Rucker performing each of the album’s songs with his numerous co-writers. Highlights included the soulful, homesick plea “Take Me Home” (co-written with Frank Rogers and Monty Criswell), the heartbroken “Love Without You” (by Brandy Clark and Shane McAnally), and “Miss You” (co-written with Rogers).

True Believers Track Listing:
1. True Believers (Darius Rucker, Josh Kear)
2. Miss You (Darius Rucker, Frank Rogers)
3. Wagon Wheel (Bob Dylan, Jay Secor)
4. Love Without You (Brandy Clark, Shane McAnally)
5. Radio (Darius Rucker, Luke Laird, Ashley Gorley)
6. Lost In You (Darius Rucker, Mark Nesler, Phillip White)
7. I Will Love You Still (Darius Rucker, Josh Kear)
8. Take Me Home (Darius Rucker, Frank Rogers, Monty Criswell)
9. Shine (Darius Rucker, Frank Rogers)
10. Heartbreak Road (Darius Rucker, Dallas Davidson, Rhett Akins)
11. Leavin’ The Light On (Darius Rucker, David Lee Murphy, Phil O’Donnell)
12. Lie To Me (Darius Rucker, Rodney Clawson, Bob DiPiero)

Pictured at the Hall of Fame event are (L-R) Back Row: Bob Diperio, Ashley Gorley, Mark Nesler, Monty Criswell, David Lee Murphy, Rhett Akins, Rodney Clawson, Dallas Davidson. Front Row: Luke Laird, Phillip White, Frank Rogers, Phil O’Donnell, Darius Rucker, Brandy Clark, Josh Kear. Photo: Chris Hollo

BMI Country Award Winners

BMI honors Songwriters of the Year Luke Laird and Dallas Davidson. (L-R): BMI's Jody Williams, Luke Laird, BMI's Del Bryant, Dallas Davidson and BMI's Clay Bradley.

Tuesday night’s (10/30) BMI Country Awards honored the Country Songwriter, Song and Publisher of the Year, as well as legendary songwriter Tom T. Hall and the writers and publishers of the past year’s 50 most-performed songs on radio and TV from BMI’s country repertoire. The exclusive event was held at the organization’s Music Row offices.

Songwriter of the Year: Dallas Davidson, “Country Girl (Shake It for Me)” and “I Don’t Want This Night to End” recorded by Luke Bryan; “If Heaven Wasn’t So Far Away” by Justin Moore; and “Just a Kiss” and “We Owned the Night” recorded by Lady Antebellum.

Songwriter of the Year: Luke Laird, “A Little Bit Stronger” by Sara Evans; “Baggage Claim” by Miranda Lambert; “Drink in My Hand” by Eric Church; “You” by Chris Young; and “Take a Back Road,” recorded by Rodney Atkins.

Song of the Year: “Take a Back Road,” Luke Laird and Rhett Akins. Published by EMI-Blackwood Music, Inc. and Universal Music Careers, the song earned more than one million performances in 2011, making it one of the most-performed songs of the year in any genre of music.

Publisher of the Year: Sony/ATV Music Publishing Nashville, with 24 songs on the year’s most-performed list, including “Take a Back Road”; Taylor Swift’s “Mean”; Kenny Chesney’s “Live a Little”; Eli Young Band’s “Crazy Girl”; Keith Urban’s “You Gonna Fly”; The Band Perry’s “All Your Life”; and Blake Shelton’s “Honey Bee.”

Proof of Country’s Power: 10 of the top 20 most-performed works in the U.S. in 2011 from BMI’s repertoire were country songs

Tom T. Hall was named BMI Icon and saluted with a musical tribute by The Avett Brothers (“That’s How I Got To Memphis”); Dailey & Vincent (“Can You Hear Me Now”); Justin Townes Earle (“Homecoming”); and Toby Keith with Scotty Emerick (“Faster Horses (The Cowboy And The Poet)”).

As a recording artist in the early to mid 1970s, Hall had seven self-penned No. 1 singles: “A Week in a Country Jail,” “The Year That Clayton Delaney Died,” “(Old Dogs, Children and) Watermelon Wine,” “I Love,” “Country Is,” “I Care,” and “Faster Horses (the Cowboy and the Poet).” The Grammy winner and Country Music Hall of Fame inductee also wrote mega hits for others, including Jeannie C. Riley’s “Harper Valley P.T.A.,” Dave Dudley’s “The Pool Shark,” Alan Jackson’s “Little Bitty,” and Bobby Bare’s “(Margie’s at) the Lincoln Park Inn” and “That’s How I Got to Memphis.”

More coverage of the BMI Country Awards will be posted later today in MusicRow’s exclusive column “Bobby Karl Works The Room.”

(L-R): Clay Bradley, Dallas Davidson, Del Bryant, Tom T. Hall, Luke Laird, Rhett Akins and Jody Williams

Country Performers Added to American Music Awards

Carrie Underwood and Taylor Swift are among the latest artists added to the musical lineup of The 40th Anniversary American Music Awards, which will be broadcast live from the Nokia Theatre L.A. Live Sunday, November 18 (7-10 pm/CT) on ABC. Additional artists scheduled to perform during the broadcast include P!nk, Pitbull, Nicki Minaj, Linkin Park and Christina Aguilera. Additional acts and presenters will be revealed in the coming weeks.

Winners for the awards will be determined by online voting, which is open at amavote.com. For a list of nominations, as well as performer announcements, visit ama.abc.com. Both Swift and Underwood are nominated for Favorite Female Artist – Country, and Underwood’s Blown Away is up for Favorite Album – Country.

The 40th Anniversary American Music Awards is produced by dick clark productions, inc. Orly Adelson and Allen Shapiro serve as executive producers, and Larry Klein is the producer.

“No Shave November” Gets Hairy For St. Jude

Gentlemen, it’s almost time to liberate yourselves from at least one form of tyranny grooming for a full month. The Second Annual “No Shave November” competition for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital gets under way and squeaky clean on Thursday, Nov. 1.

All participants in this fuzzy fundraiser must begin November with a clean shave and post a photo of themselves with that day’s newspaper. On Nov. 30, participants will repeat the process with their final facial hair. On that day, Nashville-area participants will also gather for the annual “Beard Bash” where prizes will be awarded and a “No Shave November Champion” will be crowned. Cost to enter is $30 and registration is open at www.stjude.org/noshavenovember through tomorrow. Check out the event’s Facebook page here. Warner Music artist Charlie Worsham has written a catchy theme song for the event, and WMN also has t-shirts for sale.

The competition originally began as a friendly wager among co-workers at Warner Music Nashville and has now turned into a major fundraiser for the nonprofit hospital. The fundraising goal for 2012 has been set at $100,000 and Country Radio employees nationwide are encouraged to participate.

All clean-shaven participants in Nashville are encouraged to gather for a kickoff photo at Warner Music Nashville on Thursday, Nov. 1 at 10 am/CT.

Second Annual “No Shave November” Beard of Directors:
President – April Johnson (Warner Music Nashville)
Lou Ramirez (Warner Music Nashville)
George Meeker (State Farm Insurance)
Chuck Aly (Country Aircheck)
Josh Easler (Sony & Country Cares Board of Directors)
Keith Kaufman (Center Stage Tour Promotions & Country Cares Board of Directors)

Bobby Karl Works The ASCAP Country Awards

Brad Paisley wins ASCAP Country Songwriter/Artist of the Year.

Chapter 412

Georgia was on our mind at this year’s ASCAP Country Music Awards banquet.

Songwriter of the Year Ben Hayslip, a native of the Peach State, returned to the stage again and again, either to accept an award or to sing. He performed “I Don’t Want This Night to End” with fellow Georgians The Peach Pickers, then returned to sing “Honey Bee” with Peach Picker Rhett Akins. The former song was a big hit for another Georgian, Luke Bryan.

This was Hayslip’s second time to win ASCAP’s country songwriter prize. In addition, the Hayslip/Akins “Honey Bee” tied with “Barefoot Blue Jean Night” for ASCAP Country Song of the Year. “Barefoot” was penned by the organization’s Eric Paslay and Terry Sawchuk.

Another repeating winner was Brad Paisley. Thursday’s CMA Awards co-host was named ASCAP’s Country Songwriter/Artist of the year for the third time.

Sirius/XM Radio was ASCAP’s Partners in Music honoree. John Marks accepted and was joined onstage by Charlie Monk.

Now that Sony/ATV and EMI are joined, is it any wonder that it was named Country Publisher of the Year? Does anyone else even stand a chance?

In addition to the Haslip performances, the banquet was highlighted by the singing of ASCAP’s other top songs of the year. Paslay and Sawchuk drew a standing ovation when they were joined by a drum corps drawn from Vanderbilt’s marching band. Dave Barnes and Ed Cash performed their big hit “God Gave Me You.” Jason Sellers sang “Don’t You Wanna Stay” with his cowriters Andy Gibson and Paul Jenkins.

ASCAP Senior Creative Director Michael Martin with Songwriter of the Year Ben Hayslip.

The most rocking performance of the night was the banquet’s opening number, Kip Moore’s explosive “Crazy One More Time.” Josh Kelley, Ronnie Dunn, Chris Stapleton and 18 South performed a multi-song tribute to Bob McDill, who won the ASCAP Golden Note Award. With 31 No. 1 hits to his credit, we could have heard a multi, multi, multi song salute to McDill.

My favorite performance of the night was the Jon Randall and Sam Bush harmonizing duet on Lyle Lovett’s “If I Had a Boat.” That was part of a salute to Lovett as he was presented with ASCAP’s Creative Voice Award. Others who performed admirably during the tribute were Guy Clark and Robert Earl Keen.

“I wouldn’t be here tonight if it weren’t for Guy Clark,” Lovett said, noting that Clark championed his songwriting to producer Tony Brown. “It is an honor to be in the room with all you folks. ASCAP was home to me from the very first time I came to Nashville.”

Lyle Lovett accepts ASCAP’s Creative Voice Award.

Working with Lovett, “made me realize that if the people you hang out with are better than you are, you’ll get better,” said Brown. “He’s one of the greatest people I’ve ever met in my life.”

The gala was staged at its traditional home, the Presidential Ballroom of the Gaylord Opryland Hotel on Monday evening (10/29). Attendees interpreted the “black tie/formal” invitation in a wide variety of ways. The ladies got out their velvets and sequins. The gentlemen’s outfits ranged from business suits to classy cowboy couture, from tuxedos to disrespectful work jackets and hoodies.

Gathering together were Tim Nichols, Tim Mensy, Tim Wipperman, Mark D. Sanders, Mark Ford, Marc Beeson, Marc Driskill (who has departed from ASCAP for Sea Gayle), Mike Milom, Mike Reid, Mike Hollandsworth, David & Susana Ross, Dave Berg, David Lee Murphy, Brett James, Brett Jones, Rusty Jones, Jim Foglesong, Jimmy Harnen, Doug & Linda Edell Howard, Travis Howard, Bob Regan and Robert Ellis Orrall.

Twinkling stars on hand in addition to Paisley and Lovett, included Deana Carter, Dierks Bentley, George Strait, new Opry member Darius Rucker, Martina McBride, RaeLynn from TV’s The Voice, Lady Antebellum’s Dave Hayward & Charles Kelley, Pistol Annie Angaleena Presley, and J.D. Souther, who has added acting to his resume via his appearances on TV’s Nashville.

Guests dined on salad greens with cherry tomatoes, cucumber slices and slivered red onions topped with bacon and blue cheese crumbles and drizzled French dressing. The main course was glazed pork, shrimp, mashed potatoes and broccolini. Dessert was a trio of crème caramel in a shot glass, a fruit torte and a cream-cheese cookie. Table centerpieces were white and peach colored tea roses arranged with hydrangeas, roses and organza ribbons.

The talent fest in attendance featured Pat Alger, Wayland Holyfield, Allen Reynolds, Rory Bourke, Fred Knobloch, Carl Jackson, Gary Nicholson, Rick & Janis Carnes, Vince Melamed, Liz Hengber, Chris DuBois, Josh Kear and Kelley Lovelace. 

Working the room were John McBride, Gilles Godard, Randy Wachtler, Carla Wallace, Norbert Nix, Kyle Lehning, Garth Fundis, Kevin Lamb, Ken Levitan, Shelby Kennedy, newly installed Warner-Chappell chief Ben Vaughn, Tom Long, Horton Frank, Dan Keen, Walter Campbell, Frank Liddell, Belmont University’s Bo Thomas, Dale Bobo, Ralph Murphy, Clay Myers, Brent Maher, Stuart Dill, Kay West, Tony Conway, Dwight Wiles & Diana Johnson, Judy Turner, Sherod Robertson and Scott & Sandi Borchetta. Scott was running on fumes, having spent the past week on international promotion for the new Taylor Swift disc and getting four hours of sleep a night. Sandi is creating Big Machine’s new office building on Music Row.

This was the 50th anniversary of the ASCAP Country Awards, “a half century of honoring the best in country music,” noted ASCAP president Paul Williams. “For every song we honor tonight, I know you have 100 in a drawer somewhere. I know who you are.” Williams is a major songwriter, himself, with Grammy, Tony and Emmy awards to show for his efforts.

(L-R): Garth Fundis, Don Schlitz, Allen Reynolds, ASCAP President and Chairman Paul Williams, ASCAP Publisher Board Member Dean Kay, ASCAP Golden Note Award honoree Bob McDill, Jon Randall, Ronnie Dunn, Josh Kelley, Jessi Alexander and Morgane Stapleton

Sony Music Nashville Signing

Pictured (L-R): Gary Overton, Angie Johnson, Lisa Ramsey Perkins (Sr. Director A&R, Sony Music Nashville)

Chairman and CEO of Sony Music Nashville, Gary Overton, has signed Missouri Air National Guard Tech Sergeant Angie Johnson to a recording contract with the label.

Johnson, a previous contestant on NBC’s The Voice for team Cee Lo Green, will be produced by fellow St. Louis native Josh Leo (Alabama, Love and Theft).

Johnson spent six years in the Air Force as an intelligence analyst and featured performer in the Air Force Tops In Blue Band after being honorably discharged. Her band, Sidewinder, gained attention after a video performing Adele’s “Rolling In The Deep” was submitted on YouTube.

Toby Keith Revs Up ‘Hope On The Rocks’ Today

Toby Keith’s Hope on the Rocks was released today by Show Dog–Universal. The project is streaming at Spotify, and Amazon is selling the album’s standard edition for $5.00.

Keith partnered with Clear Channel Radio for a text-to-win promotion airing on country stations nationwide. Winners of daily cash prizes will be entered to win a new Ford F-150, then flown to a secret location to pick up the keys from Keith.

Lead single “I Like Girls That Drink Beer” is a hit heading into album launch week, with the title track set to be the follow up single.

Keith’s promotional appearances include The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, the Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson and The Talk. He recently wrapped his 2012 Live In Overdrive Tour.

Also, a “Red Solo Cup (Live)” video was released today.