Country Idols Earn Winning Sales

Lauren Alaina visits WYCD (L-R): MD Jack Shell, Lauren’s Mom Kristy, PM Drive Linda Lee, Lauren, PM Drive Chuck Edwards

The country American Idols are repeating history. After finishing No. 1 and 2 on the popular TV show, Scotty McCreery and Lauren Alaina are back in that same configuration after this week’s sales.

According to Nielsen SoundScan, McCreery’s Clear As Day moved 88,000 units in its second week to head the country albums chart, following first week sales of 197,000. Idol runner-up Lauren Alaina’s debut Wildflower generated an impressive 69,000 in its first week out, 29% of which was digital product.

About 15,000 people attended McCreery’s album release party and birthday celebration in hometown Raleigh, N.C. He was presented with a gold record by Mercury Nashville and Interscope staffers during the event for the digital gold certification of “I Love You This Big.”

Martina McBride’s new release Eleven made a fine first week showing following her cross-country Amtrak tour, ringing in 40,000 units and landing her at No. 4 on the country albums chart.

Also performing well this week was Atlantic artist Hunter Hayes, whose self-titled debut landed at No. 7 on the country albums chart with 18,000 units sold. 65 percent of Hayes’ album sales were digital.

Following the successful theatrical premiere of the Footloose remake last week, the new soundtrack (classified as country) moved to No. 6 on the country albums chart and No. 16 in the Top 200 by selling 18,000 units.

Hank Williams Jr. seems to have parlayed his disagreement with ESPN into something positive, as his track “Keep The Change” rang in 19,000 purchases to land at No. 14 among country digital tracks. Adele’s “Someone Like You” still leads the overall digital tracks chart.

Country album sales are still on the up, showing a YTD increase of 9.8%. Contrast that with overall album sales, which are rising more slowly at 3.5%.

Hard rockers Evanescence had the No. 1 album in all genres, selling 127,000 units, as well as the No. 1 digital album.

By The Numbers: Martina’s Train Trek

Team Martina at the Empire State Building on Friday night. (L- R) Back row: John McBride, Mark Hively, Jake Basden, Stacy Blythe, Megan Knutson, Matthew Hargis, Brandon Gill, Mike Betterton. Middle row: Mandy McCormak, Jackie Campbell, Brittney McKenna, Randi Lesnick, John Zarling. Front row: Sandi Spika Borchetta, Scott Borchetta, Martina McBride, Jimmy Harnen, Clint Higham. Photo: Becky Fluke.

Martina McBride’s “ELEVEN Across America powered by Amtrak” came to a close Friday night (10/14) in Manhattan when she became the first artist to perform a concert from the Empire State Building’s 80th floor. Hundreds of VIP guests, music industry executives, media and fans were in attendance at the private concert presented by Stanford Women’s Cancer Center. McBride flipped a switch to turn the world-famous building “pink” for the weekend in association with National Breast Cancer Awareness Month and her latest single, “I’m Gonna Love You Through It.” The train trek launched her new album, Eleven, which debuted today with sales of 40,000 units.

By the numbers
• 80 million+ impressions
• $11,000 donated by McBride and PinkTogether.com to the Susan G. Komen Foundation
• 2,446 miles traveled
• 750 fans at her 2:00 AM performance at Albuquerque’s Union Station
• 80th floor of Empire State building
• 70 interviews
• 30+ radio contest winners onboard the train
• 11 cities
• 11 breast cancer survivors honored in each city

Wednesday Photos

Songwriters At Destin Seafood Festival

BMI partnered with the Florida Restaurant and Lodging Association (FRLA) on the weekend of Sept. 30 to present a songwriters festival held in conjunction with the 33rd Annual Destin Seafood Festival. Thirty shows featuring sixteen BMI songwriters took place over three days in venues throughout Destin, FL. (L-R) standing: FRLA’s Carol Dover; BMI’s Dan Spears; songwriters Ryan Tyndell, Brandon Kinney, Alissa Moreno, Danny Myrick and Kendell Marvel; BMI’s Tom Annastas; FRLA’s Dan Murphy; and FRLA Regional Dir. Ray Green. Seated: songwriters Aaron Barker and Bridgette Tatum; BMI’s Mason Hunter; and songwriter Charlie Worsham.

Patrick Davis Visits MusicRow

Rising artist Patrick Davis visited MusicRow for an acoustic performance yesterday. His debut single “Lucky” is climbing MusicRow’s CountryBreakout chart. Among the artists who have cut Davis’ songs are Darius Rucker, Jason Michael Carroll, Lady Antebellum, and Jewel. (L-R): MR’s Christie King; Marco Promotion’s Rick Kelly; Grassroots Promotion’s John Griffin; Davis; and MR’s Sherod Robertson, Sarah Skates and Jon Freeman.

Photo: Virgina Davis

ACM Welcomes Darren Warren

The Academy of Country Music welcomed NuCorp Entertainment recording artist Darren Warren to the office while he was in Los Angeles last week. Warren performed songs off of his EP, Cowboy Up and Party Down and signed up for professional ACM membership.

Photo: Michel Bourquard

Catch This Music Revives Studio Space

Catch This Music, the newest recording studio on Music Row, is set to open its doors tomorrow (10/20). The former Bayou Recording studio on 17th Ave. S. was purchased by Eddie Robba and Lee Adams in May. Since then the studio has been undergoing major transformations and renovations.

“We are excited to have a home on Music Row,” says Robba. “The history and legacy of ‘The Row’ is rich and we are blessed to be part of it. Now we get to be part of The Row’s future.”

Catch This Music’s recording studio will also have its first session since the renovations tomorrow (10/20). A very special guest from Make A Wish Foundation will be joining for them for the day. “As we considered starting this business Lee and I both wanted to incorporate the idea of giving back from the very start. During the renovation process we began exploring a relationship with Make A Wish,” he explains. Since then, a seventeen-year-old young man from Make A Wish asked to experience a live recording session and the date he selected was, coincidentally, Oct. 20.

Help Catch This Music celebrate its new home at the parking lot party and open house on Friday, Oct. 21. The gathering, which will run from 3pm to 8pm, will include food, drinks and live music.

The Opry Goes Pink This Weekend

The Grand Ole Opry will join Women Rock For The Cure in the fight against breast cancer Saturday, Oct. 22 with its third annual Opry Goes Pink show. The evening will be split into two shows. ABC’s Good Morning America co-anchor, Robin Roberts, who survived breast cancer herself, will be a special guest announcer for a portion of the night’s first show. She will introduce acts as well as the Women Rock For The Cure Honorary Survivor of the Year, Yolanda Smith.

Opry member Martina McBride will take the stage to flip the switch during the first show, turning the Opry’s signature barn backdrop pink in support of the cause. McBride’s current single, “I’m Gonna Love You Through It,” offers hope to those affected by cancer.

For every ticket sold for the night’s second show, $5 will also be donated to Women Rock For The Cure. That show is scheduled to include performances from Lauren Alaina, Edens Edge, Kellie Pickler, Ronnie Milsap, and more. In addition to her performance, Pickler will flip the switch on the Opry’s barn backdrop, turning it pink for the second show of the night. Tickets are available at (615) 871-OPRY and www.Opry.com.

Over the weekend (10/16), PinkFest 2011, part of Hard Rock International’s 12th annual Pinktober, was held at Hard Rock Cafe Nashville to benefit Women Rock For The Cure. Among the performers donning fashion provided by the Betsey Johnson store were Sarah Darling, Marlee Scott, Kendra Chantelle, Cissy Crutcher, The Lowry Sisters, Alexa Carter, Ya Za, and bands Kink Ador, Baby Daggers and The Vicious Guns.

Colt Ford’s Goodtime Liquor Line

Average Joe’s Entertainment’s Colt Ford is launching his own signature liquor line, Goodtime. Ford aligned himself with the Georgia Distilling Company and United Distributors to produce Goodtime Moonshine (90 proof) and Goodtime Vodka (80 proof), which hit stores today (10/19). Goodtime will initially be available throughout retail stores in Georgia and Tennessee.

“The Georgia Distilling Company has been honored to have the opportunity to partner with Colt Ford and United Distributing to bring the Goodtime brands into the market,” said Bill Mauldin, CEO and co-founder of the Company. “As Colt is recognized by his peers and fans as being an authentic country musician and Georgia boy, we wanted to make a product for him that was just as authentic as he is.”

The partnership was announced yesterday (10/18) at a press conference at the United Distributors offices near Atlanta.

Lambert Announces New Tour

With her new album Four The Record slated to release Nov. 1, Miranda Lambert is preparing for her upcoming headlining tour On Fire. The outing kicks off Jan. 12 in Rockford, IL with labelmate guests Chris Young and Jerrod Niemann.

Lambert, the reigning CMA Female Vocalist of the Year is nominated for two CMA Awards this year including Female Vocalist.

Young brings a string of four No. 1 singles to the tour including “Tomorrow,” the first single from his album Neon. Young was recently nominated by the CMA as New Artist of the Year and has three American Country Award nominations including Breakthrough Artist of the Year.

Niemann launched his major label debut Judge Jerrod & The Hung Jury, which includes his single, “Lover, Lover.” Niemann has five nominations for the upcoming American Country Awards.

Tour stops will include:

Rockford, IL
Lacrosse, WI
Fargo, ND
Charlotte, NC
Lexington, KY
Greensboro, NC
Baltimore, MD
Charlottesville, VA
East Rutherford, NJ
Huntsville, AL
Tallahassee, FL
Orlando, FL
Amherst, MA
Hershey, PA
Youngstown, OH
Macon, GA
North Charleston, SC
Fayetteville, NC
Sale Lake City, UT
Broomfield, CO
Kearney, NE
Toledo, OH
Saginaw, MI
Louisville, KY
Charleston, WV
Tulsa, OK
Little Rock, AR
Wichita, KS
Columbia, MO
Milwaukee, WI
Minneapolis, MN
Green Bay, WI
Fresno, CA
Mountain View, CA

Strait’s 58th No. 1 Is Also A First

George Strait’s “Here For A Good Time” has become his 58th career No. 1 hit, following its ascent to the top of the CountryBreakout (on Sept. 16 and Sept. 23) and Mediabase charts. The song was co-written by George with his son Bubba and Dean Dillon and, surprisingly, marks his first No. 1 as a songwriter.

Strait has been a model of consistency over his legendary career, and holds the record for notching the most No. 1 singles of any artist in history, more than even Elvis and the Beatles. Eighty-four of his 89 radio singles have reached the top 10, and 73 of those were Top 5 or better. His career sales total almost 69 million records, and he was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2006.

“Here For A Good Time” is the title track from Strait’s latest album, which debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Top Country Albums chart and at No. 3 on The Billboard 200, behind Lil Wayne and Adele. Strait also has several headlining dates scheduled on his 2012 U.S. tour, featuring guest Martina McBride.

Montgomery Gentry Releases Seventh Studio Album

Montgomery Gentry’s seventh studio album, Rebels on the Run, was released yesterday (10/18) on new label home Average Joes. The album includes the single “Where I Come From.” The corresponding music video has stirred emotions with its realistic battle scenes and hard-hitting emotions that many veterans face in the heat of war.

Rodney Clawson and Dallas Davidson co-wrote “Where I Come From,” while Montgomery Gentry collaborated with Jim Collins, Ira Dean, Wendell Mobley, David Lee Murphy, Rivers Rutherford and Neil Thrasher on three of the other album cuts. The rest of the album was written by Kelly Archer, Greg Bates, Kevin Grantt, Justin Weaver and others.

Rebels on the Run was produced by Michael Knox, whose credits include Jason Aldean, Trace Adkins, Hank Williams, Jr., Kelly Clarkson and more.

While the album is available online and in stores, one physical copy of the CD is an exclusively designed “golden ticket” copy. The person who purchases this copy will win a one-of-a-kind Demented Cycles custom chopper, designed with input from the country duo.

Later this month, Montgomery Gentry will join Tonight Show host Jay Leno and thousands of bikers for the 28th annual Love Ride in Los Angeles on Sunday, Oct 23. Love Ride is a mega-event that draws thousands of generous motorcycle enthusiasts, concert-goers and celebrities to help others while enjoying music.

Kevin Griffin Blurs Musical Boundaries From New Base In Nashville

Photo Credit: Piper Ferguson

A few years ago songwriter Kevin Griffin was at his base in the Hollywood Hills setting up writing appointments with fellow pop/rock hitmakers when he kept running into a problem—they were all out of town, writing in Nashville.

Griffin, who got his start in music as frontman for Better Than Ezra, parlayed the success as principal songwriter and producer for his own band into a strong career doing the same for others. He co-wrote Howie Day’s monster hit “Collide,” and racked up cuts and/or production credits with Train, James Blunt, David Cook, Augustana and more.

Living in Los Angeles while many of his co-writers were based elsewhere made the collaborative process difficult. From L.A., Griffin and Shy Carter worked via Skype with Jennifer Nettles and Kristian Bush on one writing session. That afternoon resulted in the Sugarland hit “Stuck Like Glue,” nonetheless, songwriting via video chat didn’t cut it.

Originally from New Orleans, Griffin had moved to California post-Hurricane Katrina. But after realizing he could write with the same people in L.A. or Nashville, Griffin and his wife, both native Southerners, decided to move with their three sons to Franklin, Tenn. at the beginning of 2011.

He recalls his thought process: “So I can live in Nashville, be near SEC football, have a better standard of living, save money, and work with the same artists. It was a no-brainer. I continue to do the work I did in L.A.

Click to visit KevinGriffinMusic.com

“The past couple of years I’ve really seen a shift where pop and rock songwriters and managers have moved to Nashville,” he continues. “Not necessarily to carpetbag on the country world, but because it is a great place to live and do what they do. There’s a great support system with the labels, studios, press and media. Plus, everywhere you go there’s a stage for music. It’s really refreshing.”

Upon arrival, Kevin Spellman, a friend working at Vector Management, helped Griffin find a studio to base his operations. He took over the Franklin recording space from TobyMac, and eventually plans to build a home studio on his property in historic downtown.

Blair Daly, Craig Wiseman, Andrew Dorff, and Jeffrey Steele are just a few of the local tunesmiths Griffin has been writing with. “It’s surprising how many of the traditionally country writers want to do pop,” he notes. “And not only want to do it, but are really great at it. Some of them are almost closet hip-hop artists like Luke Laird. They also like to stretch the traditional boundaries and do something that is a little more lyrically poetic.”

Griffin appreciates Nashville’s reverence for songwriters and has taken some of Music Row’s traditions out west. “I love that the height of the songwriting craft is in Nashville. My friend Monty Powell says, ‘songwriters are at the top of the food chain’ here.

“There is a real discipline and craft to writing that bulletproof Nashville lyric—you know exactly what it’s about and all the loose ends are tied up. In rock it’s the opposite, you get away with a lot more non sequiturs and open ended themes—lines that don’t mean anything but sound good. Now when I go back to L.A., I’m the song police, saying ‘I’m not quite sure about that line, or let’s go back to the first verse.’ Everyone else has moved on, but I’m worried about the lyric that isn’t clear.

“I always said that where I live wouldn’t affect my songwriting, nonetheless, it always has,” he muses. Increasingly he says those Music City influences include world-class musicians like pedal steel and mandolin master Russ Pahl, recurring song themes, and collaborating with other writers for the first time on the upcoming Better Than Ezra album.

In the midst of shifting influences, Griffin remains focused on the song. “Ultimately I think that if the melody and the feel of the song don’t pull you in, then the lyric is irrelevant. My success has been with the simple songs, and the hardest thing to do as a writer is to remember that when you keep it simple, it’s a song everybody loves—whether it is ‘Collide,’ which is four chords, or [BTE breakout hit] ‘Good’ which is the same four chords.”

Griffin and Collective Soul’s Ed Roland are showcasing their songwriting chops and love of the South this fall on the aptly named Southern Gentleman tour, though Griffin laughs, “the irony of the name wasn’t lost on either one of us.” The run launches Sunday (10/23) in New York, and hits the Franklin Theatre Nov. 5.