CountryBreakout No. 1 Song

Probably goes without saying, but country music isn’t just for rural Southerners. It’s populist art, and unless you’ve managed to completely escape heartbreak or never bothered to form basic human relationships, then you can relate to at least some of the songs.

And so we’ve hit upon the central thesis of Brantley Gilbert’s “Country Must Be Country Wide,” which is now No. 1 on MusicRow’s CountryBreakout Chart. A defiant mass of thudding drums and metallic guitars, “Country Wide” wears the rural badge with pride and menacingly dares you (while brandishing brass knuckles) to say something about it.  Turns out he’s exactly right: country music is indeed country wide, regardless of whatever our geographical differences might be. Need further confirmation? Look to decidedly not rural places like Minneapolis/St. Paul, Chicago, and Seattle, where country stations have long been thriving. They’re playing this song like crazy too.

“Country Wide” is the Gilbert’s first single since signing to Valory Music, who re-released the Athens, Georgia native’s 2010 album Halfway to Heaven (plus a Deluxe version) in September 2011. Also included on the Deluxe release are a re-imagined version of “Dirt Road Anthem,” which Jason Aldean recently turned into a huge hit. Valory also re-released Gilbert’s 2009 debut A Modern Day Prodigal Son on Tuesday, October 25.

Weekly Chart Report (10/27/11)

 

 

 

 

Skyville Records’ Trent Tomlinson (R) visits WUSH/Norfolk’s Brandon O’Brien (L) to share his new single “A Man Without A Woman,” which lands at No. 41 on MusicRow’s CountryBreakout Chart this week.

 

 

 

RADIO NEWS
KYYK/Palestine, TX Music Director Amanda Hardy has departed her position with the station, which she joined in 2007. GM Lee Parkinson will handle music duties in the meantime. Hardy is seeking her next opportunity and can be reached here or at 903-330-5880.

SPIN ZONE
It’s always exciting to see up-and-coming stars land a No. 1 song. Like Brantley Gilbert, for example, whose Valory Music debut “Country Must Be Country Wide” is the young artist’s first No. 1 song. Gilbert is 100 spins ahead of No. 2—ranking “We Owned The Night” by Lady Antebellum, which will probably soon own the top spot considering it’s only 11 weeks old. Also battling for chart supremacy is Miranda Lambert’s “Baggage Claim,” which edges up to No. 3.

A parade of largely male singles are gobbling up programmers’ spins as we head toward the CMA Awards and the ensuing holiday season. Dierks Bentley’s “Home” refuses to sit still for long, moving on to No. 18 after five weeks. Close behind are Kenny Chesney’s “Reality” at No. 20 and Brad Paisley’s “Camouflage” at No. 21. Toby Keith’s “unofficial” single “Red Solo Cup” has gotten everyone in the party spirit, and it jumps to No. 30 after two weeks. Keith Urban’s “You Gonna Fly” is also two weeks old, and swoops in at No. 34. One spot behind at No. 35 is Billy Currington’s three-week-old “Like My Dog.” New male singles charting ahead of their official add dates include Trace Adkins’ “Million Dollar View” at No. 55 and Rodney Atkins’ “He’s Mine” at No. 69.

Frozen Playlists: KMKS, KWWR, KYYK, WTCR

Upcoming Singles
October 31
Trace Adkins/Million Dollar View/Show Dog-Universal
Katie Armiger/Scream/Cold River
Uncle Kracker/My Hometown/Top Dog/Atlantic/BPG

November 7
Rodney Atkins/He’s Mine/Curb

• • • • •

New On The Chart—Debuting This Week
Artist/song/label — chart pos.
Trace Adkins/Million Dollar View/Show Dog-Universal — 55
Rodney Atkins/He’s Mine/Curb — 69
Landon Michael/Might As Well Be Me/Big Dog Records — 75
Corey Wagar/I Hate My Boyfriend/GTR — 76
Sean Patrick McGraw/What I’d Do/Little Engine Records — 79
Casey James/Let’s Don’t Call It A Night/BNA — 80

Greatest Spin Increase
Artist/song/label — spin+
Keith Urban/You Gonna Fly/Capitol — 534
Toby Keith/Red Solo Cup /Show Dog-Univeral — 489
Jake Owen/Alone With You/RCA — 333
Kenny Chesney/Reality/BNA — 327
Trace Adkins/Million Dollar View/Show Dog-Universal — 324

Most Added
Artist/song/label — New Adds
Toby Keith/Red Solo Cup/Show Dog-Univeral — 42
Keith Urban/You Gonna Fly/Capitol — 30
Billy Currington/Like My Dog/Mercury — 25
Brad Paisley/Camouflage/Arista — 21
Kenny Chesney/Reality/BNA — 19
Neal McCoy/A—Ok/Blaster Records — 13
Trace Adkins/Million Dollar View/Show Dog-Universal — 13
Rodney Atkins/He’s Mine/Curb — 12
Jake Owen/Alone With You/RCA — 11

On Deck—Soon To Be Charting
Artist/song/label — spins
Erica Nicole/Shave/Heaven Records — 151
Vince Gill/Threaten Me With Heaven/MCA — 142
David Bradley/If You Can’t Make Money/Gecko Music Productions — 136
Mark Wayne Glasmire/Going Home/Traceway — 132
Burns & Poe/I Need a Job/Blue Steel — 130

Trace Adkins made a recent tour stop and spent a little face time with KYGO’s John Thomas and KMLE’s Jeff Garrison. His new single “Million Dollar View” debut on this weeks chart at #55. (L-R) Lisa Owen (SDU), Adkins, John Thomas (KYGO PD), Jeff Garrison (KMLE PD)

Mercury’s Canaan Smith and BNA’s Casey James recently played at the WKLB/Boston New Artist Spotlight show. (L-R): WKLB’s Dawn Santolucito, Mercury’s Sally Green and Canaan Smith, Ginny Rogers (WKLB), Casey James (BNA), Lori Grande (WKLB), and Buffy Cooper (BNA).

Before headlining the 28th Annual Love Ride in Los Angeles, Average Joe’s duo Montgomery Gentry toured the motorcycle museum at Glendale Harley-Davidson with KKGO evening personality Ginny Harman. (L-R): Eddie Montgomery, Troy Gentry, Ginny Harman

The McClymonts recently visited with Captain Jack of Renegade Radio Nashville. The Aussie sister trio’s “Wrapped Up Good” is currently at No. 32 on MusicRow’s CountryBreakout Chart. (L-R): Sam McClymont, Mollie McClymont, Captain Jack, and Brooke McClymont

 

 

 

 

Charlie Cook On Air

Halloween is right around the corner. It’s not my favorite holiday. I may be the only American who does not like Halloween. It’s cold out. Even in California, I would stand by the front door handing out candy to cute little kids, but it was always cold.

There is nothing cuter than a 3-4 year-old looking through a poorly-fitted mask, in a costume five sizes too big, with a huge bag pointed towards the sky, knowing that they get smiles and candy. But it’s always cold.

I also don’t love candy. You know, “Lead us not into temptation.”

I grew up in Detroit and it is really cold there. Which is one reason people in the Detroit area start fires on what is known as “Devil’s Night,” the night before Halloween. Because it is cold. They should move Halloween to July. It stays light longer, and it’s not cold.

Now that I have established I am not a fan of Halloween, let’s talk about some things that we should be afraid of as Halloween approaches. It is the scariest holiday, after all.

It’s when companies start doing their budgets for the upcoming year. They look back on the current year, which was not good for many people in our businesses, and they start looking for shortcuts. Radio had a tough revenue year, the record industry has had another challenging year.

More than cold weather at Halloween, I hate that managers lack the creativity of finding non-traditional revenue sources and deciding that they can save their way out of problems.

I do not spend money willy nilly. I worked for Westwood One for 10 years (post Norm Pattiz). I have been a partner in a privately held consulting company for close to 30 years. Every dime spent came out of our pockets. I have never worked for a company that spent frivolously. I am careful with costs, but trying to win with three less people than you failed to win with this year is generally a formula for failure.

If you have the wrong people, replace them, don’t eliminate the position. If you’re not accomplishing your goals with the people you have in those positions, is it the people, and not necessarily the position, that is the problem?

I have always believed that you find what works and you just repeat it over and over until it doesn’t work again, all the while evolving the process so that you’re prepared for the change when it is inevitable.

In radio the template has been to put the best product on the air, generate the biggest ratings you can and then send station representatives into the market to find sponsors that can benefit from using your station to reach consumers. This takes people.

In the record business you record the best music you can. Then you send representatives out to radio stations to convince them that this record will help them generate those ratings so that their representatives can go out into the market and, you get the idea. At the same time the record people are using the station to “advertise” the record to the audience. It is a win/win. Or should be. And it takes people.

A lot of stations are doing good radio today. In our format there are a ton of stations doing good radio. Boston, Detroit, LA, Minneapolis and others are seeing real ratings successes.

The music, in our format, and in CHR, is as good as it has ever been. Miranda Lambert is amazing. So are Chris Young and Justin Moore and Lady A and many more. In CHR, I love Katy Perry and Bruno Mars. The new Maroon 5 song is stuck in my head.

How tough is it to be good in a bad time? It’s like wearing the best Halloween costume to the Christmas Party.

Some people are afraid of change. They are afraid of innovation. The Country Music business is under attack. Radio is being attacked by Pandora and Spotify. The record industry is being attacked by dot edu accounts, and single track instead of full-album sales.

The problem with having radio and records partnering to fight these challenges is that we are at cross purposes on some of this stuff. Radio has run ads saying that stealing music is like stealing food from the Piggly Wiggly. Records continue to help radio with promotional tools in order to make sure that their music is presented in an exciting fashion.

But when it comes to Pandora and Spotify I am afraid that we part company. I mentioned a couple of weeks ago that a pipe is a pipe is a pipe to an artist. Anything that gets the music out to the consumer is good.

I know some record executives who would love to diminish the influence of radio in the music/consumer equation. That is wrong-headed because it is the relationships, built over years and years, that can finally get over these problems.

I have a Pandora account. I really don’t listen much because I have to listen to radio for work. I hear 12 hours of radio a day. Not much time for Pandora. When I do listen I hear unfamiliar music but I am not sure if I hear a lot of new music. I know that I hear new music on the radio.

I have said in past columns that radio should do a better job of teaching the listener about new music and new artists and keeping the established artist’s profiles current. I mentioned months ago that providing tools for stations to use in order to introduce the artist information was imperative to continued success.

But most labels have cut the people who did this. How is that working out for building new acts? When it takes three CDs for an artist to break through, you don’t really make that up in volume.

Well sorry, I have gone long this week but I have to go to Target and buy some candy. Monday is Halloween.

Nix Named Promo VP

Norbert Nix has been appointed to the post of Vice President, Columbia/BNA Promotion, it was announced today. Nix joined the label in 2006 and was most recently Director of National Promotion for RCA. He will report directly to Sony Music Nashville Sr. VP Promotion Skip Bishop.

In his new role, Nix will be responsible for developing and implementing promotional plans for artists on the Columbia and BNA imprints, which include Bradley Gaskin, Jordyn Shellhart, Joanna Smith, Wade Bowen, Kenny Chesney, Tyler Farr, Casey James, The Lunabelles, and Kellie Pickler.

“Norbert Brings a tsunami of new vitality to this team,” says Bishop. “With his vast experience and his recent contributions, Norb is a perfect fit to lead this excellent promotion machine. Along with Keith Gale, he has been instrumental in taking RCA Nashville to the highest level of success they have seen in years. Norbert has the kind of contagious energy from which Columbia/BNA will quickly benefit.”

Nix’s 20 year career in music includes time working in artist management and booking in addition to label promotion with Mercury Nashville. In 2001, he joined Refugee Management and later led his own management and publishing company N2 Entertainment.

New Book About Townes Van Zandt

Townes Van Zandt, legendary songwriter of classics “Pancho and Lefty,” “If I Needed You” and “For the Sake of the Song,” will be remembered in a new book by Brian T. Atkinson from Texas A&M University Press titled, I’ll Be Here In The Morning: The Songwriting Legacy of Townes Van Zandt, due in stores December 1.

Atkinson’s work on the troubled troubador’s rise and fall includes reflections from more than 40 peers about lyrical significance and impact including Guy Clark, Rodney Crowell, Kris Kristofferson, Lyle Lovett and Lucinda Williams.

Artists of today such as Jim James (My Morning Jacket), Scott Avett (The Avett Brothers), Grace Potter, Josh Ritter and Kasey Chambers speak of the influence Van Zandt made on their music since his death on New Year’s Day 1997.

“I don’t envision a very long life for myself,” Van Zandt once said. “I think my life will run out before my work does. I’ve designed it that way.”

“Townes is a Christ-like figure in Texas,” says country singer Jack Ingram at the book’s close. “He is the one. He was writing on another plane.”

Cropper Visits Grammy Museum, Talks New Album

Rock & Roll Hall of Fame guitarist (and Nashville resident) Steve Cropper appeared at the Grammy Museum in Los Angeles Tuesday, October 25, to discuss his legendary career and latest album Dedicated. Additionally, Cropper sat in with the band on Conan O’Brien Monday, October 24.

Dedicated is Cropper’s tribute to guitarist Lowman “Pete” Pauling and early R&B group The Five Royales, who helped shape his own distinctive playing style. Special guests performing with Cropper on the album include Lucinda Williams, Brian May, Sharon Jones, Steve Winwood, John Popper, BB King, Bettye LaVette, Delbert McClinton, Buddy Miller, and more. The album was produced by Cropper with Jon Tiven (Wilson Pickett), featuring an all-star lineup of session players including David Hood (bass), Spooner Oldham (keys), Steve Ferrone (drums), Steve Jordan (drums, percussion), Neal Sugarman (from the Dap Kings), and Tiven on saxophones. Full track list below.

“Part of getting older and still being able to play and all of that — at a certain point it becomes about educating the next generation,” says Cropper. “I’ve already had four of five careers and I’m lucky to be alive. If I can educate these young ears as to where the music started, because they’re always asking, and if I can get them interested in the Five Royales I’ve done something.”

Cropper’s Stax Records-era guitar work with Otis Redding also got repurposed recently when Jay-Z and Kanye West used a sample of “Try A Little Tenderness” to power their collaboration “Otis.” Check out the video here.

Dedicated Track List:
1. 30 Second Lover (w/ Steve Winwood)
2. Don’t Be Ashamed (w/ Bettye LaVette & Willie Jones)
3. Baby Don’t Do It (w/ BB King & Shemekia Copeland)
4. Dedicated To The One I Love (w/ Lucinda Williams & Dan Penn)
5. My Sugar Sugar (w/ John Popper)
6. Right Around The Corner (w/ Delbert McClinton)
7. Help Me Somebody (Instrumental)
8. I Do (w/ Brian May)
9. Messin’ Up (w/Sharon Jones)
10. Say It (w/ Bettye LaVette)
11. The Slummer The Slum (w/ Buddy Miller)
12. Someone Made You For Me (w/Dan Penn)
13. Think (instrumental)
14. Come On And Save Me (Dylan Leblanc and Sharon Jones)
15. When I Get Like This (w/ Lucinda Williams)

House Introduces “The Stop Online Piracy Act”

A bill introduced yesterday (10/26) in the U.S. House of Representatives is designed to combat online piracy with new enforcement tools, which would help boost America’s music industry. The bill, H.R. 3261 The Stop Online Piracy Act, was introduced by House Judiciary Committee Chairman Lamar Smith (R-TX) and multiple cosponsors. It would “promote prosperity, creativity, entrepreneurship, and innovation by combating the theft of U.S. property.”

The initiative is praised by National Music Publishers Association President and CEO David Israelite. He explains, “Current laws tie the hands of both law enforcement and judicial personnel in many instances, to the detriment of American business and consumers. Legislation introduced today in the U.S. House would help fix that, enabling our justice system to go after criminal operatives. The music publishing and songwriting communities support these efforts and urge the entire House to move this important bill forward soon.”

Mastering For iTunes Optimization

I'm With You, the new album from the Red Hot Chili Peppers, is widely touted as the first offering optimized for iTunes.

New albums are being mastered specifically for iTunes, starting with the latest from the Red Hot Chili Peppers, which was released last month.

Producer Rick Rubin enlisted Masterdisk’s Vlado Meller and Mark Santangelo to master three versions of I’m With You—one for AAC (iTunes), one for vinyl, and one for CD.

Digital Music News spoke to Santangelo about the project. He explains, “optimized AAC files for iTunes were designed to retain the frequency response and level of the CD. With an iTunes optimized master, the listener will be able to enjoy more clarity and an overall better sound quality than is otherwise currently available.”

He believes this will eventually become a standard practice in the music industry.

Vinyl mastering he notes, “The vinyl purist appreciates the warmth and depth of the vinyl. To get the vinyl to sound its best, test cuts are made and compared to the original high resolution master. Adjustments in tone and level are made so that the vinyl plays back without distortion and without skipping. Levels and high frequencies and extremely low frequencies have to be handled carefully.”

Full story here.

How Chris Young Ended Up With Keith Whitley’s Guitar

Chris Young performs with the guitar once belonging to Keith Whitley.

How did Chris Young come to own a prized guitar of one of his heroes, the late Keith Whitley? The short answer is he bought it from Music City Pickers, the Nashville outfit formed by artist Brady Seals and former Gibson Guitars web editor Gabe Hernandez.

But here’s the rest of the story:

During the mid-to-late 1980s at the height of his popularity, Keith Whitley performed mainly with three guitars: a Martin acoustic, a Fender Telecaster, and a Sigma by Martin acoustic/electric.

The Martin acoustic and Fender Telecaster are owned by private collectors and have been displayed on occasion at museums throughout the southeast since Whitley’s death. The Sigma by Martin acoustic/electric, however, remained in the hands of a family friend and fellow musician, Earl Watkins, until now.

Watkins, who previously owned the Circle H Saloon near Lexington, Ky., met Whitley during the mid 1970s. They became close friends, and often played music together at the Circle H. During a visit to the venue in 1987, Whitley traded his Sigma by Martin SE-36 for the Fender Telecaster belonging to one of Watkins’ band mates, Jerry Fannin. Not long after that, Watkins purchased Whitley’s guitar from Fannin for $500. Watkins eventually passed it on his daughter Jeanne, who sold it to Music City Pickers during a recent event in Lexington.

In turn, Music City Pickers sold it to Young. He explains, “Keith Whitley has always been one of my musical heroes, so to get the chance to hold a piece of history in my hands and play his guitar on the Opry stage was beyond awesome.”

Young played it during a recent performance on the Grand Ole Opry, where he sang his own hit “Tomorrow,” and Whitley’s classic “Don’t Close Your Eyes.” The show is set to air Sat., Oct. 29 on GAC.

Google Music Nears Launch

Google’s music offering is nearing launch according to numerous reports including the New York Times.

The MP3 store is expected to have ties to the company’s growing social network, Google+, allowing users to share the music they buy with friends/followers. There is also supposed to be a cloud-based storage component.

Reportedly, EMI Music is close to agreeing to license its catalog, but NYT reports that the other majors are not yet on board with Google Music.

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