Adkins/Chenoweth To Host ACA


Kristen Chenoweth


Trace Adkins


Trace Adkins and Kristin Chenoweth will co-host the 2nd Annual American Country Awards, live from Las Vegas, Dec. 5 on FOX. Adkins returns to host the youngest of the nationallly televised country award shows and the only one that allows fans to vote in traditional and new categories such as touring. Adkins, a Grand Ole Opy member, has 15 Top Ten hits, plus Gold and Platinum albums with total sales above 10 million. In addition to his music career, he has worked as a television actor, voiceover narrator, commercial spokesman and author. Actor, singer Kristin Chenoweth has performed on stage, television and film. Her upcoming country album is set for release Sept. 13.
AMERICAN COUNTRY AWARDS is executive-produced by Bob Bain (TEEN CHOICE 2011, “Kids’ Choice Awards”). Paul Flattery, Tisha Fein and Fletcher Foster serve as producers; and Greg Sills is supervising producer. Michael Dempsey will direct the special.

Dill To Head Octagon Entertainment Nashville Office

(L-R): John Ferriter, Stuart Dill


Sports and entertainment firm Octagon Entertainment has announced its expansion into Nashville with the hire of management veteran Stuart Dill as Senior Vice President. Dill will spearhead Octagon’s management presence in country music and serve as GM of the new Octagon Entertainment office in Nashville. He will work closely with Octagon Entertainment Managing Dir. John Ferriter and Octagon Music Managing Dir. Peter Rudge on artist development and numerous other projects.
Making the move to Octagon with Dill are clients Billy Ray Cyrus, Laura Bell Bundy, and Jo Dee Messina.
“Octagon is an absolute leader in celebrity management as well as global branding,” said Dill. “Our current Nashville roster and future artist signings will allow us to take full advantage of the tremendous resources Octagon has to offer. Octagon continues to be on the cutting edge of new entertainment models that successfully brand and create opportunities for their clients, and I am thrilled to be a part of their team.”
“We couldn’t be more excited to work with Stuart and his team,” said Ferriter. “Stuart has been a close friend for years and I have always enjoyed our collaborations in the past. As a longtime fan of country music, I am thrilled to expand our entertainment division into Nashville as it has long been a personal priority and focus for me.”
Additionally, Belmont University graduate Zac Koffler will join Dill in the Nashville Octagon Entertainment office.
Octagon Entertainment is located at 1105 16th Ave. S., Ste. B., Nashville, TN 37212. Reach Dill here.

The Authenticity Debate, Revisited

Kanye West, Eric Church


There’s been much discussion lately on the subject of authenticity in country music, particularly among its male stars.
To quickly recap, CMT.com’s Chet Flippo took issue with Eric Church for appreciating high thread count sheets and Justin Moore for his self-appointed “outlaw” status, then The Tennessean’s Peter Cooper followed declaring that all the redneck posturing simply wasn’t believable. The subject has prompted numerous strong reactions on both sides, so here’s mine.
This weird obsession with country music’s authenticity, both from the artistic community and from critics, borders on preposterous.
I’ve been a big hip-hop fan for some time. Lately I see country music beginning to mirror hip-hop’s growth in some interesting ways, and I’m not just talking about Jason Aldean spitting a few bars in his current single.
An artist should be free to believably inhabit the characters in his songs, and not have that persona confused with his offstage life. And it probably goes without saying, but an artist should also sing about something.
Which brings me to my first point.
There are a group of artists, mostly male, who seem to think if they can spout off more country cliches than the last dude that it somehow magically conveys an air of authenticity. There have been so many songs in the last few years referencing dirt roads, tailgates, bonfires, and every other “country” trope that I’m starting to get them all confused.
As a fellow small-town southerner (Arab, Alabama: Pop. 7,500) I agree these things are, to some degree, part of life. In younger years I spent more than one Friday night drinking in a cow pasture (sorry Mom!), and Saturdays boating on the Tennessee River. And yep, I hung out in the Food World parking lot after dark. When you grow up in a place where there everything closes at 6, you improvise.
But here’s the problem: these songs aren’t about anything. Small town life is quite complex, a rich tapestry of joy, heartache, community, sin and salvation. The offending songs actually do it a great disservice by making it appear completely one-dimensional. So songwriters, can we stop doing that? Please?
On to the second point.
People in the listening world, particularly critics, insist on projecting this myth that an “authentic” country artist needs to work on an assembly line, kill deer with his bare hands, and live out the tales in his songs. He should probably also sleep on a dirt floor in a shotgun shack with no running water, if he’s worth his redneck salt.
Which is totally absurd. I can say with a pretty high degree of certainty that Johnny Cash did not, in fact, shoot a man in Reno just to watch him die. But accusing the Man in Black of not being authentic, well that’s blasphemy and I don’t want to be near anyone who’d ever suggest such a thing (you know, in case the lightning strikes).
I’m reminded of a period in hip-hop, following the all-too-real murders of Tupac Shakur and Notorious B.I.G. New face 50 Cent was being touted as the realest rapper on the scene, presumably because he’d been shot multiple times. Jay-Z and Nas were having an epic feud through their songs about who was bigger, better, more real and true.
It was a strange time to be a fan, because there was so much to love (like Outkast putting Southern hip-hop on the map or Missy Elliott’s brilliantly weird pop hits) and so much to hate (most every P.Diddy song that sampled an FM rock standard or knifeplay at the Source Awards) at the same time. Many artists were releasing songs that varied thematically between chest-beating ‘realer-than-thou’ proclamations and misogynistic, booty-obsessed fare. (Speaking of which, is Juvenile’s “Back That Azz Up” really all that different from “Country Girl (Shake It For Me)” and the like? Just saying.)
The good news is hip-hop in 2011 has (mostly) gotten over itself. I don’t know that there was some great watershed moment for the genre, but people now seem to no longer be so obsessed with an artist’s street credentials so much as they just want a banging song.
For an example, see Kanye West. He may have drawn the ire of country fans for the Taylor Swift kerfuffle, but he’s one of the biggest artists in the game and nobody doubts his artistic credibility. What’s interesting is he didn’t grow up in an inner city slum surrounded by violence and poverty, nor does he pretend that he did. He grew up in a middle class, suburban setting outside Chicago. He wears skinny jeans and understands high fashion. No one seems the least bit bothered, long as he can crank out innovative jams like “Monster” or “Stronger.”
Hip-hop got over it, and so too will country music. Come at us with a great song, not one listing things that sound country. Create an artistic persona, and sing about the human experience with all its beauty, tragedy and utter strangeness. We’ll stop making such a fuss over your life outside music.
And for the record, I’m with Eric Church on high thread count sheets.

The Band Perry Announces New Tour

The Band Perry has announced The Purveyors of Performance Tour – a trek of approximately 75 dates that will include their own headlining shows, support dates for Keith Urban, Reba and yet-to-be-announced dates with one of Country music’s major touring forces. The tour kicks off Aug 15 and will continue into 2012 with performances at theaters, arenas, amphitheaters and stadiums.
August is a high profile month for TBP with the debut of a new video, the airing of the Teen Choice Awards (8/7) where they have two nominations, a performance on CMA Music Festival: Country’s Night To Rock on ABC (8/14), and a Jimmy Kimmel Live! concert (8/17).

“It has always been our dream to play Country music,” says the band. “We’ve been on the road as a family band for thirteen years and experienced the intimacy of theaters, the energy of county fairs and the joy of connecting with new faces as we support these amazing artists at arenas and amphitheaters. Artists like Tim McGraw, Keith Urban and Reba were the ones who originally inspired us to dream big…now they have helped our dreams come true. We couldn’t be more grateful to them or excited about the future.”

The new video for their fourth Country single, “All Your Life” is planned for a mid-August debut. The cinematic video will feature TBP as a vagabond troupe and actually inspired the “Purveyors of Performance” theme of the upcoming tour.
The band is also celebrating the extended life of “If I Die Young,” which is now climbing the pop charts.
The Band Perry’s Purveyors of Performance Tour Dates:
8/15/2011 — LEWISBURG, WV (State Fair of West Virginia)
8/17/2011 — DES MOINES, IA (Iowa State Fair)
8/18/2011 — FAIRMONT, MN (Martin County Fairgrounds)
8/19/2011 — ABERDEEN, SD (Brown County Fair)
8/20/2011 — IMPERIAL, NE (Chase County Fair & Expo)
8/21/2011 — SAINT JOSEPH, MO (Trails West Festival)
8/24/2011 — MITCHELL, SD (The Corn Palace Festival)
8/26/2011 — GRAND ISLAND, NE (Nebraska State Fair)
8/27/2011 — PUEBLO, CO  (Colorado State Fair Grandstand)
8/30/2011 — MONROE, WA (Evergreen State Fair)
8/31/2011 — WALLA WALLA, WA (Walla Walla Frontier Days)
9/02/2011 — SALEM, OR  (L.B. Day Amphitheater)
9/03/2011 — LAKEVIEW, OR (Lake County Fair)
9/04/2011 — FILER, ID (Twin Falls County Fair)
9/09/2011 — OTTAWA, ONTARIO, CA (Scotiabank Place) [with Keith Urban]
9/10/2011 — TORONTO, ONTARIO, CA (Air Canada Centre) [with Keith Urban]
9/12/2011 — LONDON, ONTARIO, CA (John Labatt Center) [with Keith Urban]
9/15/2011 — WINNIGPEG, CA (MTS Centre) [with Keith Urban]
9/16/2011 — REGINA, SASKATCHEWAN, CA (Brandt Centre) [with Keith Urban]
9/17/2011 — REGINA, SASKATCHEWAN, CA (Brandt Centre) [with Keith Urban]
9/18/2011 — SASKATOON, SK, CA (Credit Union Centre) [with Keith Urban]
9/21/2011 — EDMONTON, ALBERTA, CA (Rexall Place) [with Keith Urban]
9/23/2011 — CALGARY, AB, CA (Scotiabank Saddledome) [with Keith Urban]
9/24/2011 — PENTICTON, BC, CA (South Okanagan Events Centre) [with Keith Urban]
9/26/2011 — VANCOUVER, CA (Rogers Arena) [with Keith Urban]
9/28/2011 — FORT SMITH, AR (Arkansas Oklahoma State Fair)
9/29/2011 — MARIETTA, GA (North Georgia State Fair)
9/30/2011 — ST. LOUIS, MO (The Pageant)
10/6/2011 — MOLINE, IL (iWireless Center) [with Reba]
10/7/2011 — BLOOMINGTON, IL (US Cellular Coliseum) [with Reba]
10/8/2011 — MARYVILLE, TN (Foothills Festival)
10/11/2011 — JACKSON, MS (Mississippi State Fair)
10/13/2011 — GREEN BAY, WI (Resch Center) [with Reba]
10/14/2011 — FT. WAYNE, IN (Allen County WMC) [with Reba]
10/15/2011 — HUNTINGTON, WV (Big Sandy Arena) [with Reba]
10/19/2011 — PHOENIX, AZ (Arizona State Fairgrounds)
10/20/2011 — BOZEMAN, MT (Brick Breeden) [with Reba]
10/21/2011 — CASPER EVENTS CENTER (Casper, WY) [with Reba]
10/22/2011 — BISMARCK, ND (Bismarck Civic Ctr) [with Reba]
10/27/2011 — SIOUX CITY, IA (Tysons Events Center) [with Reba]
10/28/2011 — ST. LOUIS, MO (Chaifetz Arena) [with Reba]
10/29/2011 — KANSAS CITY, MO (Sprint Center) [with Reba]
11/3/2011 — OMAHA, NE (Quest Center) [with Reba]
11/4/2011 — TULSA, OK (BOK Center) [with Reba]
11/5/2011 — WICHITA, KS (InTrust Bank Arena) [with Reba]
11/10/2011 — GRAND RAPIDS, MI (Van Andel Arena) [with Reba]
11/12/2011 — ATLANTA, GA (Gwinnett Center) [with Reba]
11/17/2011 — LAFAYETTE, LA (Cajundome) [with Reba]
11/18/2011 — BILOXI, MS (Mississippi Coast Coliseum) [with Reba]
11/19/2011 — TUPELO, MS (Bancorp South Arena) [with Reba]
 

Miranda On Tour: Last Leg

Miranda Lambert will kick off the last leg of her headlining tour The Revolution Continues on September 8 in Terre Haute, IN. Special guests are Justin Moore and Randy Rogers Band. On select dates Little Big Town, Charlie Worsham and Pat Green will also join the tour.
“The revolution continues, but not for too much longer, this is the last leg of the tour,” shares Lambert. “We have had so much fun. So many great bands came out to join us and some great artists as well. Don’t miss your last chance to see us on the road this year.”
Details at www.MirandaLambert.com.

Photo: James Minchin


 
September 8                  Terre Haute, IN              Hulman Center at Indiana State University
September 9                  Bloomington, IL              US Cellular Coliseum
September 10                Mankato, MN                 Verizon Wireless Center
September 17                Puyallup, WA                Western Washington Fair
September 22                Tupelo, MS                    BancorpSouth Arena
September 23                Panama City Beach, FL Frank Brown Park
September 24                St. Petersburg, FL         Tropicana Field
September 29                Bossier City, LA            CenturyTel Center
September 30                Baton Rouge, LA           Baton Rouge River Center
October 1                      Cedar Park, TX              Cedar Park Center
October 6                      Topeka, KS                   Kansas Expocentre
October 7                      Sioux Falls, SD             Sioux Falls Arena
October 8                      Rapid City, SD               Rushmore Plaza Civic Center Arena
October 9                      Billings, MT                   MetraPark Arena
October 11                    Missoula, MT                 Adams Center
October 13                    Eugene, OR                  Matthew Knight Arena
October 14                    Nampa, ID                     Idaho Center Arena
October 15                    Yakima, WA                  Yakima Valley Sundome
October 20                    Cape Girardeau, MO      Show Me Center
October 22                    Jonesboro, AR               ASU Convocation Center
 

Belmont Pipeline Think Tank Helps New Artists

(L-R): Back row: Wesley Bulla (CEMB Dean), Ross Hill, Lisa Sekscinski, Jessica Pangrazio, Chase Geiser, Gia Vangieri. Front row: Molly Shehan, Kyara Rafferty, Kevin Grosch, Sarita Stewart (Pipeline faculty advisor)


Earlier this summer Belmont University’s Mike Curb College of Entertainment & Music Business (CEMB) announced the launch of Pipeline, an entertainment industry solutions think tank of Belmont’s best and brightest students.
With support from the CMA and Steve Moore, students began their Pipeline experience in June attending the Billboard Country Music Summit where they learned about important issues facing music industry professionals. Reed Arvin, one of the adjunct faculty members, led the group through a Creativity Bootcamp, challenging them to get “outside the box” and mine their creativity. The group also met with Mark Montgomery, former CEO of Echomusic, to discuss engaging the audience. Pipeline recently hosted a concert at Nashville’s Club Roar with performances by artists Mackenzie Scott, Natalie Royal, and Foxes Have Foxholes to explore the impact of audience engagement.
The three artists performed live in the studio for an exclusive audience and offered a catered meal while watching the show. The production cost of the event was under $3,000 making it affordable for up-and-coming artists. Each artist also received a six-song EP, video footage, and press pictures for use in future marketing efforts. With cost savings per artist as much as $4,000, this type of performance provides unique benefits for artists with limited fan-bases.

Sarita Stewart, Pipeline faculty advisor, says, “By combining the studio experience with live performance, the students helped the artists create a fun and interesting experience. The intimacy of the artist engagement process was reflected in the individual comments following the event.” Performer, Mackenzie Scott, said of her experience, “The stillness and attentiveness I received from the audience was a complete gift and, honestly, every musician’s dream. I hope they felt as moved by the intimacy of the music as I did.”

Weekly Chart Report (8/05/11)


Ronnie Milsap has been busy promoting the release of his album Country Again with a Satellite Media Tour, a visit with Cody Alan for CMT Radio Live, and an interview with Eddie Stubbs (who produced Country Again) on 650 AM WSM. The album’s first single is “If You Don’t Want Me To (The Freeze).” (L-R) Milsap, CMT Radio Live’s Cody Alan


SPIN ZONE
Every once in awhile, you land a big one. Trace Adkins has done just that with “Just Fishin’,” which ascends to No. 1 by jumping over Zac Brown Band’s “Knee Deep.” The big man’s latest gains 72 spins in its 21st week charting with 98 stations on board. Also advancing are Kenny Chesney’s “You and Tequila” at No. 3, Toby Keith’s “Made In America” at No. 4, and the Paisley/Underwood juggernaut “Remind Me” at No. 5.
Fishing is a pretty common theme for the summer country singles climbing the current chart. Bigger Picture’s Craig Campbell is promoting his second single, “Fish,” which moves to No. 33 with a gain of 160 spins. Newcomer Kelly Parkes is at No. 45 with “Girl With A Fishing Rod.” Right behind and red hot is Justin Moore’s “Bait A Hook,” which reels in 322 new spins and moves to No. 48.
Speaking of red hot, there are big debuts from The Band Perry and Miranda Lambert. TBP’s “All Your Life” is the fourth single from the group’s self-titled Republic Nashville album, and clocked in at No. 62 for the week’s highest debut. “Baggage Claim” is the first single from Lambert’s anticipated Four The Record album due November 1, and programmers spun it enough out of the box to earn the No. 69 spot with no prior reports.
LIFENOTE
Our thoughts and best wishes are with KBOE/Oskaloosa, IA PD Steve Shettler, whose mother recently suffered a stroke. According to Shettler, she’s showing hopeful signs of progress in the last few days. Reach out to him here.
Frozen Playlists: KBOE, KYES, KYKX, KYYZ, WAKG, WATZ, WKWS, WTCM, WTCR



Upcoming Singles
August 8
Danny Gokey/Second Hand Heart/RCA
The Band Perry/All Your Life/Republic Nashville
August 15
Crystal Shawanda/Love Enough/Sun/Nine North
Brett Eldredge/It Ain’t Gotta Be Love/Atlantic/WMN
Tyrone Vaughan/Downtime/CO5
Casey James/Let’s Don’t Call It A Night/BNA
• • • • •
New On The Chart—Debuting This Week
Artist/song/label — chart pos.
The Band Perry/All Your Life/Republic Nashville — 62
Miranda Lambert/Baggage Claim/Columbia — 69
The McClymonts/Wrapped Up Good/BSM — 75
Brad Wolfe/Love Ought To Be Perfect/Evergreen — 78
Ashton Shepherd/Where Country Grows/MCA — 80
Greatest Spin Increase
Artist/song/label — spin+
Miranda Lambert/Baggage Claim/Columbia — 348
Blake Shelton/God Gave Me You/Warner Bros./WMN — 337
Justin Moore/Bait a Hook/Valory — 332
Taylor Swift/Sparks Fly/Big Machine — 297
The Band Perry/All Your Life/Republic Nashville — 293
Most Added
Artist/song/label — New Adds
Miranda Lambert/Baggage Claim/Columbia — 31
The Band Perry/All Your Life/Republic Nashville — 26
Justin Moore/Bait a Hook/Valory — 26
Montgomery Gentry/Where I Come From/Average Joe’s — 14
Bradley Gaskin/Mr. Bartender/Columbia — 11
Mark Wills/Crazy Bein’ Home/Tenacity — 11
Tracy Lawrence/The Singer/Lawrence Music Group — 11
Martina McBride/I’m Gonna Love You Through It/Republic Nashville — 10
On Deck—Soon To Be Charting
Artist/song/label — spins
Eric Paslay/Never Really Wanted/EMI Nashville – 200
Cash Creek/Unlikely Angel/Ohana Music Group – 200
Kevin Fowler/Hell Yeah, I Like Beer/Average Joe’s Ent. – 191
Keith Bryant/Can’t Tell Somebody (Who To Love)/Jordash Records – 178
Big & Rich/Fake ID/Warner – 162

WMN’s Frankie Ballard recently visited with KEGA/Salt Lake City. Ballard’s single “A Buncha Girls” is currently at No. 49 on MusicRow’s CountryBreakout Chart. (L-R): KEGA MD Jon Watkins, Ballard, KEGA PD Alan Hague, W.A.R. West Coast Regional Rhonda Christensen

Charlie Cook On Air

PPM Pitfalls

If you’re reading this, my second note for MusicRow, then last week’s article didn’t end my writing career right out of the chute. That is great for me as there is so much to say about the relationship between radio and records.
Last week I touched, briefly, on research and how it is used and misused by stations and researchers themselves. Comprehensive research is a valuable tool for everyone looking for the truth and a navigable direction for your label, artists, individual songs and radio stations.
There is no more comprehensive research for radio than Arbitron. I remember sitting in the audience at an Arbitron seminar where they detailed the People Meter process. I said to myself, “wow, what a great system. Truthfully track the listeners and report their listening.” The presenters then went on to explain the system and detail what it takes to familiarize them with the participants. Then I thought, “Who the heck would take this project on?” It is not easy and the results make half of the station’s personnel angry on some level.
The People Meter has caused concern in both radio stations and then at record companies, as so much of what we do impacts the other industry. Radio programmers in the top 48 markets in America are living with PPM measurement and many Country Stations are thriving. Wow, Americans like Country Music. Wow, Americans like music that they can understand with lyrics about life experiences that are similar to theirs. Wow, Americans want to be able to share their radio with their families on the way to school, shopping and church.
We should all be very pleased with the current success of Country radio stations in PPM markets but I am afraid that long term PPM could be bad for building artist careers. The way stations are reading PPM many of them are removing the passion for the artists. We have passion for individual songs without building a foundation for the artists.
Many stations have eliminated on-air interviews or moved them to the station’s website. Many stations have eliminated disc jockey interaction with the artist.
Radio people will remember that famous PPM experiment in Houston years ago around a Kenny Chesney interview on the two Country stations. One of the stations was clearly more successful with the interview, ratings wise. PPM allows us to look, minute by minute, to rating’s results.
Apparently unfocused and uninteresting interviews are bad. Uninteresting chatter is also bad at cocktail parties, during dinner, on the phone and in the workplace. If you want to hold someone’s attention say something interesting, concise and with a punch line.
Suggestion number one for artists for PPM markets: come with something interesting. Come with something that can be transmitted to the listener in short order. If I am going to play “A Buncha Girls” give me five bits of information about Frankie Ballard that I can communicate in 5-7 seconds. WYCD would want to tell listeners that Frankie grew up across the state in Battle Creek. What about that Frankie toured with fellow Michigander Uncle Kracker. That he has opened for (another Michigander) Bob Seger. In fact, Frankie performed in front of two sold out audiences in Nashville. Opening for Seger one night and singing the National Anthem at a Predators Playoff game a few nights later. He also opened for Taylor Swift.
Nothing earth-shattering but it is a beginning of building a picture of Frankie and he is coming to life.
Second PPM tip for record companies. And this one is off the wall. PPM has seen a resurgence of Classic Rock radio. I contend that there are two reasons. Familiarity and…long songs. PPM measures listenership differently. If you can score 5 minutes of listening in a quarter hour you get credit for the entire quarter hour. Not any 15 minute segment, but: 00 to: 15 or: 15 to: 30 and so on.
So many of the Classic Rock songs are near the 5 minutes that makes collecting that quarter hour’s listening pretty simple. Play the right songs and you have minimized opportunities for tune outs. If you can collect listening with one hit song instead of having to pair two hit songs, you’re more than half way there.
Country record producers can identify some music that should be re-edited to approach that 5 minute length. How many Country stations would object to “Need You Now”-Lady Antebellum being 5 minutes long? That would pretty much guarantee that quarter hour’s listening. “Remind Me”-Brad and Carrie is 4:31. Give me a 5 minute version. Everyone knew that was going to be a huge record.
In single Country Music station markets you can play as much music as possible and depend on the popularity of the music. In markets with more than one Country Music station it is the subtle things that gain the advantage over your competitors.

UK Realigns IP Laws

Summary: UK approves expanded fair use definitions which might include digital lockers plus bans all attempts to block copyright infringing (filesharing) websites…

Rt Hon Dr Vince Cable MP Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills


The UK has announced sweeping changes to its intellectual property laws in response to a comprehensive analysis delivered last May titled, “Digital Opportunity: an Independent Review of IP and Growth.” An official UK government communication characterizes the report, authored by Professor Ian Hargreaves, saying it “sets out a powerful vision for the UK’s future success through better uses of IP. The Government is grateful to him and his team for their hard work and particularly commends their resolution to ground their report in reliable evidence. This response to that report … also indicates the way we will be tackling online copyright infringement, both through the Digital Economy Act and through voluntary action by responsible businesses. This is not the limit of the Government’s ambitions for IP. We are publishing alongside this document the UK’s IP Crime Strategy and International strategy for IP, which expand on our plans to defend brands and creative content from illegal copying and to encourage other countries to share our vision for a future where more value is created from IP not just in the UK but across the world.” Business Secretary Vince Cable said the move will bring copyright law into line with the “real world” and with “consumers reasonable expectations.” (Download the complete government response here.)
Below are some key points of the new strategy as outlined on the UK Business Innovations & Skills website (BIS). Most notable are a softening of the “fair use” concepts with respect to individuals copying legally purchased digital files which may change the UK rules for digital cloud based lockers. A parody can be created without permission from the copyright holder and the report calls for the creation of a digital license clearinghouse. A key component of bringing the copyright laws into the “modern era” is that plans to block copyright infringing websites are to be dropped.

  1. That the UK should have a Digital Copyright Exchange; a digital market place where licenses in copyright content can be readily bought and sold. This could add up as much as £2 billion a year to the UK economy by 2020. The Government will announce arrangements for how this work will be driven forward later in the year.
  2. Copyright exceptions covering limited private copying should be introduced to realize growth opportunities. Thousands of people copy legitimately purchased content, such as a CD to a computer or portable device such as an IPod, assuming it is legal. This move will bring copyright law into line with the real world, and with consumers’ reasonable expectations.
  3. Copyright exceptions to allow parody should also be introduced to benefit UK production companies and make it legal for performing artists, such as comedians, to parody someone else’s work without seeking permission from the copyright holder. It would enable UK production companies to create programmes that could play to their creative strengths, and create a range of content for broadcasters.
  4. The introduction of an exception to copyright for search and analysis techniques known as ‘text and data mining’, allowing research scientists such as medical researchers greater access to data.
  5. Establishing licensing and clearance procedures for orphan works (material with unknown copyright owners). This would open up a range of works that are currently locked away in libraries and museums and unavailable for consumer or research purposes.
  6. That evidence should drive future policy – The Government has strengthened the Intellectual Property Office’s economics team and has begun a program of research to highlight growth opportunities.

 

In the above video Vince Cable says, “We’ve updated the law and made it much more friendly for individual consumers and business while protecting the very real rights of creative artists, filmmakers and protecting them from criminal piracy, getting the balance between those things correct.

Photo Friday

NuCorp Entertainment flagship artist Darren Warren visited MusicRow to perform for the staff this week. He has been on the road promoting debut single “Cowboy Up and Party Down.”

(L-R): MR's David Ross, Jon Freeman and Sarah Skates, Darren Warren, and NuCorp Entertainment's Chuck Rhodes


• • • •


At Turner Field, Darling caught up with American Idol champ Scotty McCreery. Photo: Sara Kauss


 
Sarah Darling performed the national anthem July 25 when the Atlanta Braves took on the Pittsburgh Pirates. Darling closed out her “Something to Do With Your Fans” promotion at the game with Atlanta’s WUBL, The Bull and performed a private acoustic set to listners in the luxury suite. Her most recent single, “Something to Do With Your Hands,” celebrated a No. 2 rank on the GAC Top 20 Countdown.
• • • •

Director Peter Zavadil, and RCA artist Sara Evans


Taillight TV’s Peter Zavadil directed the new video from Sara Evans. “My Heart Can’t Tell Me No” was shot on location in Nashville.
• • • •
Big Machine Records presented the Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Sunday afternoon (7/31). Among the label group’s artists who performed for the 115,000 NASCAR fans were Rascal Flatts, Reba, The Band Perry, Justin Moore, Brantley Gilbert and Thomas Rhett. Driver Paul Menard and his Richard Childress Racing Team won the race.
 

2011 Brickyard 400 winner Paul Menard (C) poses with (L-R) team owner Richard Childress, Big Machine Records' Scott Borchetta, winning team chief, Reba McEntire, Justin Moore, Indianapolis Motor Speedway Pres. Jeff Belskus, and Sandi Borchetta in Victory Lane. Photo: Rick Diamond/WireImage.com