Hirings At My Good Girl And Davis Music Group

Stephanie Greene

Record producer and publishing executive Mark Bright has appointed Stephanie Greene Director of Publishing for his company My Good Girl Music, a joint venture with Sony/ATV Music Nashville.

A publishing veteran, Greene makes the move from Combustion Music where she has worked since 2005, ending as Vice President. While with the company she participated in all aspects of the creative process including signing writers, pitching songs, shopping artists for record deals, and establishing co-writes. Previously she ran her own company as an independent publisher and spent four years as Creative Director for Chrysalis Music Group. Greene’s career began in 1990 when she pitched songs independently while attending Belmont University.

“I have enjoyed a longstanding friendship with Stephanie and I’m honored to welcome her to the My Good Girl Music/Sony ATV publishing family,” commented Bright. He added, “She is a remarkable publisher as well as a respected song person.”

My Good Girl Music and Sony/ATV Music formed its joint venture in 2006 and has published such No. 1 radio hits as “American Ride” recorded by Toby Keith, and “Do You Believe Me Now” recorded by Jimmy Wayne.

Greene can be reached at [email protected] or (615) 259-5440.

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Glenn Noblit

Davis Music Group General Manager Gator Michaels announced today the addition of Glenn Noblit as National Director of Radio Marketing. Noblit will report directly to Michaels, effective immediately. Previously, Noblit worked at Warner Bros. Nashville, Vector Management and Lost Highway.

“Glenn’s extensive knowledge and expertise is key in the growth of our artists and their careers at Davis Music Group,” says Michaels. “His passion for the industry is unmatchable and his level of commitment is top-notch. I am honored to add him to the growing family at Davis Music Group.”

“I am thrilled for the opportunity to work alongside my longtime friend and respected colleague, Gator Michaels,” says Noblit. “I strongly believe the business model Davis Music Group is working from is the future of our ever-changing industry. I am eager to get started!”

Noblit will work from Davis Music Group’s Marshall, TX offices and can be reached at 903-934-8889 (o,) 214-282-6092 (c) or [email protected].

Warner Chappell Celebrates “…Like Crazy,” Signs Waterman

Warner Chappell Music recently signed a world-wide songwriter/co-publishing agreement with Doug Waterman. The publisher also celebrated a 56-week, record breaking run for the Lee Brice recording of “Love Like Crazy,” co-written by Tim James.

(L-R) Steve Markland (VP of A&R), Alicia Pruitt (Sr. Director A&R), Doug Waterman, BJ Hill (Sr. Director A&R) and Phil May (VP & General Manager)

(L-R) Alicia Pruitt, Tara James, Neena Wright, Tim James, Patricia Mainello, BJ Hill, Matt Michiels, Maureen McMullan, Phil May, Steve Markland and Adrian Crosby

Gator Michaels Named GM For Davis Music Group

Gator Michaels

Longtime label executive Gator Michaels is setting up shop as General Manager of the newly established Davis Music Group. Started by Texas based entrepreneur Jim L. Davis, the company will offer artist development, management, publishing and production services.

The first artists signed to Davis Music Group are singer-songwriter Jacob Lyda and Texas artist Kelly Kenning. Joining Michaels in the Nashville offices are Management/Marketing Directors Ashley Jennings and Mallory Opheim, handling day-to-day for Kenning and Lyda, respectively.

“Davis Music Group is a full-service artist development and publishing company,” explains Michaels. “Our goal is to develop our roster of acts to their highest potential, assisting in all areas of their career. We will find them the right producer, the right songs, the right images and ultimately, find the right home for their music.”

“I am extremely excited to open our doors in Nashville, Tennessee,” says Davis. “We have a talented and passionate team of industry professionals and we are eager to get started in the development of such amazing talent.”

Additional staff and roster announcements will be made at a later date.

Contact information:
Davis Music Group
1222 16th Ave. S., Suite 24
Nashville, TN 37212

Office Phone: 615-873-1224
Fax line: 615-873-1230

Gator Michaels, [email protected]
Ashley Jennings, [email protected]
Mallory Opheim, [email protected]

NARM/CMA Produce Entertainment Law Event

Final programming for the Entertainment Law Conference series has been set for Nov. 9 at Nashville’s Hutton Hotel. The half-day continuing legal education course will be part of scheduled events leading up to “The 44th Annual CMA Awards,” which will be held Wed., Nov. 10 (8:00-11:00 PM/ET) at the Bridgestone Arena and broadcast live on the ABC Television Network. the conference is hosted by the CMA and NARM (National Association of Recording Merchandisers).

The program will feature a keynote interview with the Honorable Marybeth Peters. In one of the final public events of her 16-year tenure as United States Register of Copyrights, Peters will discuss some of the remarkable policy changes that she has witnesses and influenced during her 45-year career in the Copyright Office, and her ideas about the future of copyright law.

Also scheduled are three high-level panels that will address the impact of the 2010 elections on music, media and copyright legislation; the challenges and opportunities associated with creators’ right to terminate assignments of copyright; and controversial recent court decisions that affect creators, including the YouTube and Veoh cases.

A cocktail reception to honor Peters will follow the program. The reception will allow registrants to meet one-on-one with not only Peters, but all of the speakers featured throughout the program.

“The Entertainment Law Conference is an exciting opportunity for CMA and NARM to work together to foster education and understanding of copyright law at a critical time for our industry,” said CMA Chief Executive Officer Steve Moore. “CMA is committed to being a resource for our industry by providing opportunities to explore and discuss important issues.”

Registration for the event through October 12 is $149 for NARM and CMA members,  $199 for non-members, and $69 for student. After October 12 registration rates will increase by $50 for members and non-members and $30 for students. You may register at http://musiclaw1109.eventbrite.com/.

Application for accreditation of this course or program in Tennessee is currently pending. Once approved, the course will yield 4 credits.

Publishing News: Hunt Departs AWMG; Artist Co-Writers

Ann Wilson Music Group Creative Director Margie Hunt has departed her position with the company after 15 months. Hunt previously spent 30 years with Sony Music, where she had instrumental roles in A&R, Marketing, Product Management, Film/TV, and in the production of compilations, re-packages and box sets. She can be reached at [email protected] or at 615-351-1156.

•  •  •  •  •

Songwriters Ken Johnson and Andi Zack recently spent some time at the Brown Owl Studio recording songs they wrote with Columbia Nashville’s Josh Thompson and Reprise/WMN’s Frankie Ballard.

(L-R): Ballard, Johnson, Zack, Thompson

Bug Acquires Saban

Bug Music CEO John Rudolph announces that the large independent publisher has acquired the worldwide rights to Saban Music Group’s extensive music publishing catalog. Saban’s extensive catalog includes material from leading children’s franchises such as the Mighty Morphin Power Rangers™, Digimon™, The Addams Family™ Reunion, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Next Generation, Princess Sissi and Walter Melon properties, and encompasses a slate of theme songs, cues and scores from more than 90 television series, 3,700 television episodes and 100 made-for-television films and specials.

Following Saban Capital Group, Inc.’s (SMG’s parent company) recent acquisition of the Mighty Morphin Power Rangers™ property, Bug Music sees significant growth opportunities in the newly acquired catalog.

“Bug is focused on opportunities that provide growth for the company, as well as best practices for our film and TV clients across the world,” said Rudolph, Bug Music CEO. “This deal falls in line with our goals and will benefit our clients in real returns. The excellent work of the Saban team in managing the catalog and completing the deal has made the transition seamless.”

Bug represents significant songwriters of today (Kara Dioguardi, Kings of Leon, Bruno Mars, Three Six Mafia, Gordie Sampson, Lucas Secon, Ryan Adams, Wilco, Grizzly Bear, Pete Townshend, Paul Westerberg among others), the past (Johnny Cash, Willie Dixon, Muddy Waters, Woody Guthrie, Townes Van Zandt and Stevie Ray Vaughan) and classics such as “What a Wonderful World,” “Fever” and “Happy Together.” The company maintains eight offices in the US and Europe.

Bug’s Nashville office is headed by Sr. VP Roger Murrah and VP John Allen.

Pay On The Way In: A Digital Manifesto For Troubled Times

During the last 12 years of the digital revolution, the music industry has mostly mimicked an ostrich. Record labels have tried to pretend that the digital realm is nothing more than a virtual Wal-Mart superstore. And how’s that been working? Not too well according to the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) which estimates that 19 out of 20 downloads worldwide are unpaid. Ouch! Experts have pronounced the album format to be in serious jeopardy. Single song download growth has flattened. Publishing revenue, especially mechanicals, has shrunk. Companies are reacting by cutting costs and headcount. Are we ready to try something new?

If so, the solution may be asking consumers to pay on the way into the digital store, not on the way out. Unlike a brick and mortar Wal-Mart, experience has proven it is impossible to lockup online merchandise at night. Sound like a good plan? It is, but to get it done the industry will have to band together. Here’s some of the basic steps…

To enter the “store” everyone will pay a mandatory copyright access fee to their Internet Service Provider (ISP), the company that connects them online. The ISP is the logical toll booth for this fee (someday it might also compensate film and book rights holders). ISPs will be glad to collect these fees since they will receive a small percentage to compensate them for time and trouble. In return, consumers get an all-you-can-eat musical buffet. Enjoying the online music will feel like free, but it is not, because everyone paid on the way into the store. And with a compulsory license, piracy disappears, because you can’t steal what you have already paid for.

Publishers, artists, labels and other copyright stakeholders will have to sit around a table to decide upon an agreeable percentage split of this newly formed digital access royalty pool. Yes, that will be a bloodbath, but in the end everyone wins with huge added revenues.

For those of you that want to delve deeper, read on.

THE PLANOperating Manual
1. All Internet traffic must pass through an ISP (Internet
Service Provider; i.e. Comcast, Verizon, AOL) creating
a natural toll booth or royalty collection point to gather
copyright payments.
2. Under the plan Internet subscribers are required to
pay a monthly “copyright fee” collected by the ISP,
perhaps $6.50/mo. or $78 per year. It would appear
as a line item on the bill. In return users enjoy an
“all-you-can-eat” compulsory license for DRM-free
digital downloads and streaming music.
3. There are approximately 150 million U.S. Internet
subscribers, whose fee payments would create an
annual copyright fund of $11.7 billion. (For perspective,
the entire annual U.S. music industry is less than a
$10 billion industry, retail.) Result—the mandatory
Internet royalty could double industry revenues in its
first year. [Not a bad beginning!]
4. Web sites would be allowed to offer music under the
compulsory license, since the use of that music would
already be paid by Internet users. Music sites would
be required to pay a minimal percentage of gross
revenue to the copyright fund.
5. Blank recordable media would also be subject to a
minimal copyright fee that would contribute to the
copyright fund.

DISTRIBUTING THE CASH
1. Under the plan there is only one digital royalty. The
distinction between performance and/or mechanical
royalties becomes irrelevant in the digital domain.
2. Files will be monitored, surveyed and eventually tagged
with IDs to accurately account for usage, not unlike
the way ASCAP, BMI and SESAC currently determine
payments.
3. Labels, artists, publishers and songwriters will have
to decide, with the help of a mediator, how they will
divide the fund.

THE VISION
1. A compulsory license brings labels and consumers
together to share and introduce new music.
Cumbersome online licensing and clearance
roadblocks are eliminated.
2. Piracy disappears since all Internet users have already
paid—on the way into the store. That is important
considering that estimates of illegal to paid downloads
are currently running about 20 to 1! It also respects
the nature of the Internet, which was designed to
distribute information.
3. Technology to enhance the discovery, appreciation and
sharing of new music is embraced and legal under the
new system. Consumers are encouraged to enjoy music
when they want it and how they want it.
4. Intellectual property owners are fully compensated
for all copyright uses, from the mandatory Internet
royalty fund collected from each user by the ISP.

TROUBLESHOOTING
1. How to get this plan adopted—It will likely need
legislative help to be implemented and consensus
from all copyright stakeholders.
2. What about movies, books and other intellectual
property? Yes, these copyrights will also be ultimately
paid from the fund.
3. Will the fund always be the same price? Probably not.
An increase would make sense as movies and books
are added.
4. I don’t download music why should I pay? Because it
is for the greater good and the benefit of creators
which are a necessary part of our society.
5. What about a bandwidth meter? It’s possible that some
kind of metering approach would more equitably
equate consumer use and cost in the same way that
utilities like water and electricity measure and bill
according to use.

Alexander Joins Black River; Hori Pro Signs Barton

John Alexander

John Alexander joins Black River Music Group as VP Strategic Marketing. Alexander will seek to create strategic partnerships with national brands and their various agencies for the label and its roster plus develop television programming. “We are very excited to have John join our team,” stated Jimmy Nichols, president BRMG. “John’s passion for helping new artists get noticed make him an invaluable asset for Black River.” Alexander joins BRMG after a 10-year-stint with Scripps Networks Interactive Great American Country (GAC) brand.

(L-R) BMI’s Clay Bradley, Hori Pro’s Amy Hendon, Barton, BMI’s Leslie Roberts, and Hori Pro’s Butch Baker. (Photo by Drew Maynard)

BMI songwriter Phil Barton recently inked a deal with Hori Pro Entertainment Group. The Australian native writes pop, country and children’s music.

Gershon Exits WC; Portnow Wants $2M

Tracy Gershon

[updated 4:36] MusicRow’s Crystal Ball previewed the story (9/29) and now comes official statements from Sr. VP Warner Chappell Music, Tracy Gershon and Scott Francis, President, Warner/Chappell Music and Chairman & CEO, Warner/Chappell Music U.S.

“I am thankful to Scott Francis for the opportunity to help rebuild and reenergize the  Warner Chappell Nashville office.” says Gershon. “Now with Scott’s blessing and support, I am able to pursue other opportunities that have come my way. It has been an honor to have worked with the incredible writers and staff at Warner Chappell Music. I will miss working with this team of people who bring so much passion and integrity to everything they do..they truly are an inspiration.”

“After five years with Warner Music Group, our friend and colleague, Tracy Gershon, has decided to leave her position as Senior Vice President and Head of A&R at Warner/Chappell, Nashville,” says Francis. “Since joining Warner/Chappell, Tracy has played an integral role in bringing our Country music roster to new heights and bolstering Warner/Chappell’s presence in Nashville. She has signed, worked with and helped develop many of our successful artists and songwriters. While it is sad to see her leave, we are sure that her diverse knowledge on both the recorded music and music publishing sides of the business as well as her television experience will lead to new exciting and successful projects. Please join me in wishing Tracy well in her future endeavors.  She will always be part of the Warner/Chappell family.”

• • •

Neil Portnow

The New York Post reports that Recording Academy President Neil Portnow, is in the midst of renegotiating his employment salary at double his previous rate. According to sources, reports the NYP, Portnow is now seeking “to boost his annual salary to $2 million.” His current contract reportedly ends next year. Portnow responsibilities include the Grammy Awards TV show which saw ratings increase last year. All genre album sales are currently down 13.3% YTD according to Neilsen Soundscan.

Photos: DiPiero and Shaw Sign Flynn; Lambert Kicks Off Tour

Amanda Flynn has signed a publishing deal with Leslie T. DiPiero of Tom-Leis Music & co-publisher Victoria Shaw.

Flynn standing in her Jeep named "Waylon" celebrating her new publishing deal. Pictured: (from L-R) DiPiero, Shaw, Amanda Flynn, Penny Lou Everhard, and Kimberly June.

•••

Columbia Nashville’s Miranda Lambert kicked off her CMT on Tour: Miranda Lambert Revolution fall tour September 29 in New York, the first of more than two dozen dates through early December. Here, Lambert is joined by Sony Music execs to help celebrate her tour launch.

Pictured (L-R): Columbia Nashville Promotion VP Jimmy Rector; Sony Music Entertainment Executive VP Sales & Distribution Darren Stupak; Sony Music Nashville Promotion VP Skip Bishop; Lambert; Sony Music Nashville Chairman & CEO Gary Overton; and Sony Music Entertainment Executive VP Operations/GM of Global Digital & U.S. Sales Dennis Kooker.