George Strait Celebrates 60th No. 1 Single

The UMG Nashville staff celebrates George Strait's 60th No. 1 hit.

The UMG Nashville staff celebrates George Strait’s 60th No. 1 hit.


Country Music Hall of Fame member and UMG Nashville artist George Strait became the first music artist in history, regardless of genre, to place 60 songs at the top of the charts when Mediabase named “Give It All We Got Tonight” as this week’s most played song on country radio. The song is the first single from Strait’s new album Love Is Everything, which released last week. “Give It All We Got Tonight” was written by Mark Bright, Tim James and Phil O’Donnell.
“I didn’t realize we were making history — I just hoped we were putting out music that my fans would enjoy,” said Strait. “As always, I’m thankful to the fans and country radio for their support on all 60 of these number one songs as well as my entire career. They are the ones who made this happen.”
Strait fans, radio stations and several country artists joined the “Sixty For Sixty” movement to help Strait earn his 60th No. 1 single, while he was 60 years old. It came down to the wire, as Strait turned 61 over the weekend (on Saturday, May 18).
“The amount of support shown by fans, industry and especially country radio to give George his 60th No. 1 single is the ultimate testament in a format that has been defined by his music,” said Royce Risser, Sr. VP, Promotion for Universal Music Group Nashville. “No one is more deserving of this accomplishment than George Strait, the undeniable King of Country Music. Happy Birthday George!”
Watch Brad Paisley, Vince Gill, Lee Ann Womack, Gary Allan, Lady Antebellum’s Charles Kelly and Hillary Scott and others congratulate Strait on his 60th No. 1 song.

YouTube video

 

MusicRow No. 1 Song

BPAlthough summer doesn’t officially start for another month, Brad Paisley already “Beat This Summer” to the punch with his most recent MusicRow No. 1 song.
Written by Luke Laird, Chris DuBois, and Brad Paisley, the song is strong with nostalgic recollections of summers past.
MusicRow’s Robert K. Oermann reviewed the single in the March 27 “DISClaimer,” noting: “Brad has a single that sings, ‘Sunshine!’ loud and clear. The cloppy rhythms, snazzy guitar lines, interjected vocal effects and dazzling acoustics in this production are all mighty impressive indications of his ongoing progress as a record maker. Call me dazzled and delighted.”

Paisley recently launched his Beat This Summer tour, a partnership with Cracker Barrel, which features Lee Brice, Chris Young and The Henningsens.
Catch the music video for the single below.

YouTube video

Weekly Chart Report (5/17/13)


SPIN ZONE

KWNR/Las Vegas' Ransom (R) and Jojo (L) recently visited with Chris Janson before he hit the stage for Country at the Park at Mountain's Edge.

KWNR/Las Vegas’ Ransom (R) and Jojo (L) recently visited with Chris Janson before he hit the stage for Country at the Park at Mountain’s Edge.


As the temps begin to rise and summer finally arrives, Brad Paisley‘s current single ushers in warmer temps as summer finally arrives. “Beat This Summer” ranks atop the MusicRow Country Breakout chart. Last week’s No. 1 song, Tim McGraw featuring Taylor Swift‘s “Highway Don’t Care,” is at No. 2 this week, followed by The Band Perry‘s “Done” at No. 3, Blake Shelton‘s “Boys Round Here” at No. 4 and Jake Owen‘s “Anywhere With You” at No. 5. Luke Bryan‘s “Crash My Party” continues its swift climb to land at No. 6 after six weeks on the chart. The Henningsens‘ “American Beautiful” holds steady at No. 7 again this week, while Zac Brown Band‘s “Jump Right In” ups a notch to No. 8. Kip Moore‘s “Hey Pretty Girl” rises from No. 10 to No. 9, while Carrie Underwood‘s “See You Again” gains two slots to round out the Top 10.
Keith Urban returns to the chart with a new single, “Little Bit of Everything,” from his upcoming album. The song gained the most spins this week (643) to land at No. 42. Lady Antebellum‘s “Goodbye Town” is storming up the chart, jumping from No. 47 to No. 28 this week, with 520 added spins. Luke Bryan‘s “Crash My Party” gained 303 spins enough to put it in the No. 6 slot on the chart. Carrie Underwood‘s “See You Again” adds 288 spins this week, breaking into the Top 10. Chris Young‘s “Aw Naw” accumulated 270 added spins, enough to rise from No. 48 to No. 37.
Keith Urban‘s “Little Bit of Everything” is also the highest debut this week, breaking onto the chart at No. 42, followed by Branch & Dean‘s “The Dash” at No. 66, Mark Chesnutt‘s “When The Lights Go Out” at No. 75, Chuck Wicks‘ “Salt Life” at No. 77 and Tyler Barham‘s “17 & Young” at No. 80.
Frozen Playlists: WPPL, KGMN, KVVP, KXBZ, WBKR

Upcoming Singles
May 20
Ashley Monroe/You Got Me/Warner Bros.-WMN
Keith Urban/Little Bit of Everything/Capitol Nashville
Jana Kramer/I Hope It Rains/Elektra Nashville-WAR
Adrianna Freeman/Just a Girl/AFM Entertainment
David Bradley/Get A Hero Home/Gecko
Mark Bray/Let Me Know That You’re Mine/HGN
May 27
Dustin Lynch/Wild In Your Smile/BBR
John Fogerty w/ Miranda Lambert feat. Tom Morello/Wrote A Song For Everyone/Vanguard
Ali Dee/It Ain’t/Diamond Dee
Alexandra Lee/Dancin’ Round the Fire/Wild Blue Records
Jordan Anderson/You Aint Ready For Me/GTD
May 28
David Nail/Whatever She’s Got/MCA Nashville
June 3
Love and Theft/If You Ever Get Lonely/RCA Nashville
Lydia Hollis/All For You/HMG
Chelsea Bane/James Dean/Jobe
Steve Richard/Keep On Rollin’/Force MP
June 16
Travis Tritt (feat. Tyler Reese)/Sometimes Love Just Ain’t Enough
July 8
Downday/Back In The Day/Render
• • •
New On The Chart—Debuting This Week
Artist/song/label — chart pos.
Keith Urban/Little Bit Of Everything/Capitol-UMG Nashville – 42
Branch & Dean/The Dash/SSM Nashville – 66
Mark Chesnutt/When The Lights Go Out/Nada Dinero – 75
Chuck Wicks/Salt Life/Chuck Wicks – 77
Tyler Barham/17 & Young/YN Records – 80
Most Added
Artist/song/label — New Adds
Keith Urban/Little Bit Of Everything/Capitol-UMG Nashville – 46
Lady Antebellum/Goodbye Town/Capitol-UMG Nashville – 33
Chris Young/Aw Naw/RCA Nashville – 19
Trace Adkins f. Colbie Caillat/Watch The World End/Show Dog-Universal – 15
Branch & Dean/The Dash/SSM Nashville – 14
Lee Brice/Parking Lot Party/Curb – 13
Thomas Rhett/It Goes Like This/Valory Music Group – 12
Love and Theft/If You Ever Get Lonely/RCA Nashville – 10
Greatest Spin Increase
Artist/song/label — spin+
Keith Urban/Little Bit Of Everything/Capitol-UMG Nashville – 643
Lady Antebellum/Goodbye Town/Capitol-UMG Nashville – 520
Luke Bryan/Crash My Party/Capitol-UMG Nashville – 303
Carrie Underwood/See You Again/Arista – 288
Chris Young/Aw Naw/RCA Nashville – 270
On Deck—Soon To Be Charting
Artist/song/label — spins
Amber Hayes/Any Day Is A Good Day/GMV Nashville-A-OK Entertainment – 211
Steve Richard/Keep On Rollin’/Force MP – 204
SaraBeth/Kickin’ And Screamin’/Circle S Records – 202
Jason Cassidy/Blame It On Waylon/Blake Records – 196
Shelley Laine/Born Again American/SLG – 192

Streamsound Records’ Dakota Bradley made a recent visit to WUSN/Chicago in support of his current single, "Somethin' Like Somethin,” available May 14th. Pictured (L-R): Jeff Kapugi (WUSN/Chicago, PD), Dakota Bradley, Marci Braun (WUSN/Chicago, MD) and Mike Culotta (Streamsound).

Streamsound Records’ Dakota Bradley made a recent visit to WUSN/Chicago in support of his current single, “Somethin’ Like Somethin,” available May 14. Pictured (L-R): Jeff Kapugi (WUSN/Chicago, PD), Dakota Bradley, Marci Braun (WUSN/Chicago, MD) and Mike Culotta (Streamsound).


The Band Perry visited with KKGO before the finale of American Idol. Pictured (L-R) Reid Perry, Kimberly Perry, Shawn Parr and Neil Perry.

The Band Perry visited with KKGO before the finale of ‘American Idol’. Pictured (L-R): Reid Perry, Kimberly Perry, Shawn Parr and Neil Perry.


 

Charlie Cook On Air: Country Radio's Competing Formats

CCook-onair-sm11If you work in the radio business, Arbitron is your greatest fear or your best friend. To be fair, Arbitron has nothing to do with whether you are successful or not. That falls on you; however, Arbitron does tell everyone. They are a great resource. If you use the research they gather beyond the audience rank, you can begin to build a story for your station against other media and making sure you’re on target. New information from Arbitron was released recently and continues to provide good news for radio in general and Country radio in particular. The Country radio station audience continued to grow and remained the most listened to format. The growth came from listeners aged 18-24 and Country is ranked the number two most listened to format with teens nationally.
I am theorizing that this comes from performers like Hunter Hayes, Brantley Gilbert, Luke Bryan and of course Taylor Swift. Add the success of The Voice with young people and the audience Blake Shelton brings to the radio. I know I am leaving out a half dozen more acts that appeal to the 12-24 year olds to benefit Country radio, but you get the point. Top 40 is actually the fastest growing music format on the radio and because the time spent with Top 40 stations is less than a format like Country, the actual number of weekly listeners in number one. While Country radio has spurted with teens recently, 30 percent of all female teens listen to Top 40 radio nationally. Because Country radio gets 50 percent of its audience from females, the other format Country stations need to be aware of is Contemporary Christian music. It has the highest proportion of female listeners in the Arbitron study. You read that right. The industry believes the format is female leaning in appeal but the truth is the gender split is close to 50/50. A year ago, the format saw the largest share of males in the last six years.
While the share of younger listeners is growing on Country radio, the sweet spot is showing some erosion. The 35-54 share of the audience is off with the 35-44 portion down more than what would be comfortable. Is that attributable to the rise in Contemporary Christian? Or is that where Country is strong versus other markets? We like to think Country is strong just in the South and Southwest but market size is the real determiner. Overall, the format has a 14.2 share, all in. In the PPM markets the share is half that at 7.8. In some markets the share doubles to 15.6 on average and zooms to over a quarter of the audience (25.2) in non-Metro markets.
That said, there is a definite delineation of success of the format. A swatch from Idaho to West Virginia, in some areas three states deep, the format performs substantially above average. Only in California, New York, Illinois, New Jersey and Rhode Island does the format perform substantially below average. Country radio performs way above index from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. with radio listeners with middays scoring the highest against average. Weekends continue to be a challenge. I wonder if all of the remote Country stations do Saturdays to help the bottom line at the expense of audience tune-ins. The format scores an 80 on the index scale. Yikes! Remotes are NOT going away so stations should step up and make them less a chore and more a fun experience for listeners.
This information is valuable for programmers to understand the changing attitudes of their audience and for sales departments to know 92 percent of the American population is using radio each week. As listeners find other ways to use radio, we can track Country radio as the number one format for number of streaming stations at 60 percent of all FM stations streaming online and over a third of all AM country stations found online. HD radio is also becoming a player for country stations. A small number but already 10 percent of Country FMs are available in HD.
This is an exciting time for broadcast radio as owners and managers are providing the programming consumers want and new ways to use radio. Country should be proud to be leading the way.
(The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of MusicRow.)

MusicRow No. 1 Song

Highway

Tim McGraw on the set of the “Highway Don’t Care” video shoot


It has certainly been an important week for Tim McGraw’s current single, “Highway Don’t Care.” The song blazed a trail to the number one spot on the MusicRow Chart this week. On Tuesday (May 7), McGraw held the first-ever music video debut via a Google+ hangout session for the single, which features Taylor Swift and Keith Urban.
Written by Mark Irwin, Josh Kear and brothers Brad and Brett Warren, the title has taken on new life with the video, a powerful public service announcement video portrayal bringing attention to distracted driving.

There’s no telling what further impact the star-studded single will make after this week’s music video launch. But we can be sure video view numbers are on the rise!
Take a peek at the Shane Drake-directed work below.
YouTube video

Weekly Chart Report (5/10/13)


SPIN ZONE

MCA’s Drake White (R) recently visited with WIL's Danny Montana (L) to promote his debut single, “The Simple Life.

MCA’s Drake White (R) recently visited with WIL’s Danny Montana (L) to promote his debut single, “The Simple Life.”


According to Tim McGraw‘s new single, which features Taylor Swift (and Keith Urban on guitar), the “Highway Don’t Care”—but radio sure does. The single has topped the MusicRow Country Breakout Charts with 3546 spins this week, after only 12 weeks on the chart. Brad Paisley‘s warm-weather anthem, “Beat This Summer,” is heating up the charts, jumping from No. 4 to No. 2 this week. Eric Church‘s former No. 1 song, “Like Jesus Does,” lands at No. 3, followed by The Band Perry‘s “Done” at No. 4 and Blake Shelton‘s “Boys Round Here,” which climbs from No. 9 to No. 5. Jake Owen holds steady at No. 6 for a second week with “Anywhere With You,” while The Henningsens continue their steady climb up the chart. The family trio’s single “American Beautiful” is at No. 7 this week. The Top 10 gets three new singles this week. Luke Bryan‘s “Crash My Party” crashed into the Top 10, leaping from No. 14 to No. 8. Zac Brown Band‘s “Jump Right In” did just that, rising from No. 13 to No. 9. Kip Moore‘s “Hey Pretty Girl” rounds out the Top 10, upping two slots from No. 12 to No. 10 this week.
Radio is apparently saying a great big ‘Hello’ to Lady Antebellum‘s “Goodbye Town,” as it is this week’s greatest gainer with 546 spins, landing at No. 47. Blake Shelton‘s “Boy’s Round Here” gained 391 spins, enough to jump into the Top 5 this week. Thomas Rhett‘s “It Goes Like This” earned 379 spins, soaring up the charts from No. 60 last week to No. 37 this week. Chris Young‘s “Aw Naw” gathered 536 additional spins this week, enough to put it in the No. 48 spot. Luke Bryan‘s “Crash My Party” lands at No. 8 with an added 335 spins.
Plenty of new singles were launched at the chart this week. Lady Antebellum‘s “Goodbye Town” notched the highest debut, at No. 47, followed by Trace Adkins (featuring Colbie Caillat)’s “Watch The World End” at No. 59, Joe Nichols‘ “Sunny and 75” at No. 73, Morgan Frazier‘s “Yellow Brick Road” at No. 77, Breelan Angel’s “It’s My Turn” at No. 78, Lennon & Maisy Stella (who portrayed sisters Maddie and Daphne on the television show Nashville)’s “Ho Hey” at No. 79 and Steve Richard‘s “Keep On Rollin'” at No. 80.
Frozen Playlists: KGMN, KYTN, WIBL, KXBZ

Upcoming Singles
May 10
Kellie Pickler/Someone Somewhere Tonight/Black River Entertainment
May 13
Joe Nichols/Sunny and 75/Red Bow
Keith Urban/TBD/UMG
Chris Young/Aw Naw/RCA
Trace Adkins (feat. Colbie Caillat)/Watch The World End/Show Dog–Universal-New Revolution
Frank Ortega/Two Places at Once/Villa One Records
Lee Brice/Parking Lot Party/Curb
Mark Chesnutt/When The Lights Go Out (Tracie’s Song)/Nada Dinero
Adam Fears/There’s A Girl Out There/LandStar-Flying Island
May 20
Ashley Monroe/You Got Me/Warner Bros.-WMN
Jana Kramer/I Hope It Rains/Elektra Nashville-WAR
Adrianna Freeman/Just a Girl/AFM Entertainment
May 27
Dustin Lynch/Wild In Your Smile/BBR
John Fogerty w/ Miranda Lambert feat. Tom Morello/Wrote A Song For Everyone/Vanguard
Ali Dee/It Ain’t/Diamond Dee
Alexandra Lee/Dancin’ Round the Fire/Wild Blue Records
June 3
Lydia Hollis/All For You/HMG
June 16
Travis Tritt (feat. Tyler Reese)/Sometimes Love Just Ain’t Enough
July 8
Downday/Back In The Day/Render
 
• • •
New On The Chart—Debuting This Week
Artist/song/label — chart pos.
Lady Antebellum/Goodbye Town/Capitol Nashville – 47
Trace Adkins f. Colbie Caillat/Watch The World End/Show Dog-Universal – 59
Joe Nichols/Sunny and 75/Red Bow – 73
Morgan Frazier/Yellow Brick Road/Sidewalk Records – 77
Breelan Angel/It’s My Turn/MisBhavin’ – 78
Lennon & Maisy Stella/Ho Hey/Big Machine Records – 79
Steve Richard/Keep On Rollin’/Force MP – 80
Most Added
Artist/song/label — New Adds
Lady Antebellum/Goodbye Town/Capitol Nashville – 39
Chris Young/Aw Naw/RCA Nashville – 28
Thomas Rhett/It Goes Like This/Valory Music Group – 27
Lee Brice/Parking Lot Party/Curb – 17
Branch & Dean/The Dash/SSM Nashville – 15
Trace Adkins f. Colbie Caillat/Watch The World End/Show Dog-Universal – 14
Joanna Smith /Girls Are Crazy/RCA Nashville – 10
Billy Currington/Hey Girl/Mercury Nashville – 9
Tyler Farr/Redneck Crazy/Columbia Nashville – 9
Greatest Spin Increase
Artist/song/label — spin+
Lady Antebellum/Goodbye Town/Capitol Nashville – 546
Blake Shelton/Boys Round Here/Warner Bros. – 391
Thomas Rhett/It Goes Like This/Valory Music Group – 379
Chris Young/Aw Naw/RCA Nashville – 536
Luke Bryan/Crash My Party/Capitol/UMG Nashville – 335
On Deck—Soon To Be Charting
Artist/song/label — spins
Branch & Dean/The Dash/SSM Nashville – 180
Tyler Barham/17 & Young/YN Records – 174
Emerson Drive/She’s My Kind Of Crazy/Open Road Recordings – 169
Shelley Laine/Born Again American/SLG – 165
Chuck Wicks/Salt Life/Chuck Wicks – 164
 
Stoney Creek Records' Parmalee recently paid a visit to its home state of North Carolina to play its single “Carolina” for WSOC/Charlotte. Pictured (L-R) Top: WSOC’s ‘Big Sexy,’ Chele Fassig, and Parmalee’s Matt Thomas. Bottom: Rob Taanner (WSOC), Scott Thomas (Parmalee); WSOC’s Brittney Carson, Rick McCracken, Barry Knox and Josh McSwain.

Stoney Creek Records’ Parmalee recently paid a visit to its home state of North Carolina to play its single “Carolina” for WSOC/Charlotte. Pictured (L-R) Top: WSOC’s ‘Big Sexy,’ Chele Fassig and Parmalee’s Matt Thomas. Bottom: Rob Taanner (WSOC), Scott Thomas (Parmalee); WSOC’s Brittney Carson, Rick McCracken, Barry Knox and Josh McSwain.


Gloriana recently visited with Bill Reed of KTST. The trio was featured in the May 7th season finale of the hit CW’s ‘Hart of Dixie’ performing the single "Can't Shake You.” Pictured (L-R): Gloriana’s Mike and Rachel, Bill Reed, and Gloriana’s Tom.

Gloriana recently visited with Bill Reed of KTST. The trio was featured in the May 7 season finale of the hit CW’s Hart of Dixie. performing the single “Can’t Shake You.” Pictured (L-R): Gloriana’s Mike and Rachel, Bill Reed and Gloriana’s Tom.


 

Keith Urban Teases New Single Release

kurbanKeith Urban has been hard at work as a judge on this season of American Idol, and the second leg of his Light The Fuse 2013 Tour (featuring Little Big Town and Dustin Lynch) starts in October.
Urban teased fans (and the industry) with a snippet of a new single which, according to the video preview, will release to radio on Monday, May 13 at 2 p.m. CT. The song is from Urban’s upcoming album. No official release date has been set for the project.
Hear the preview of the song below:

YouTube video

All Access Names New Nashville Editor

R.J. Curtis (top) and Jim Asker (bottom).

R.J. Curtis (top) and Jim Asker (bottom).


All Access/Nashville Editor Jim Asker has resigned from his post, with Country Aircheck VP/Country R.J. Curtis filling the vacated position beginning Monday, May 20. All Access’ online community covers the music and radio industry across various music genres, including country, contemporary Christian, alternative, rock, Top 40 and other genres.
Asker and Curtis will work together in a transitional role over the next four weeks.
All Access co-Founder, President & Publisher Joel Denver says, “I am truly sorry to see my dear friend and colleague Jim Asker move on after starting our Nashville office some 12 years ago. This began as a discussion several months back, and after chatting with several very qualified candidates, has culminated with choosing R.J. Curtis, who Jim and I both feel is the right person for this role as All Access/Nashville Editor as he has a terrific background in Country radio and the Country music industry.”
“12 years at All Access,” says Asker, “It’s really hard to wrap myself around that sometimes. I came to All Access after leaving radio and Joel and (co-Founder VP/CFO) Ria Denver didn’t have a Nashville office yet. Back then a good portion of the Nashville music community, did not have All Access on their ‘radar’ yet. I am proud of what we accomplished here and have really enjoyed working with Joel and Ria and the entire All Access staff. Joel and Ria have become like family to me, and we have been through a lot together. I’m going to really miss everyone.”
Curtis’ career includes time in radio at KZLA/Los Angeles,  KNIX/Phoenix and KKYX/San Antonio. He also served as the R&R Country Editor, a past CRS President, and the current CRS VP. Curtis worked as the Midwest Director of Promotion at Arista Nashville before joining radio publication Country Aircheck.
Curtis says, “I’m honored and flattered at the invitation from Joel and Ria to join the All Access family. My goal is to build on the already successful Country brand Jim Asker has created in the Nashville community, utilizing the experience and relationships established during my career in radio, records and trade publications. Radio still excites me every day and I will always draw inspiration from the music, artists and label partners in our format. I also need to express my appreciation to Lon Helton, Chuck Aly and the entire Country Aircheck team for allowing me to be part of their credible and respected industry publication for the past two-and-a-half years, which have been a period of professional discovery and growth that will forever benefit me.”
R.J. Curtis can be reached at rj.locurto@gmail.com.
 

No. 1 Party Toasts Whirlwind Hit 'Tornado'

 Pictured are, back row (l-r): Capitol Nashville’s Mike Dungan, BMI’s Jody Williams, and EMI Blackwood Music’s Josh Van Valkenberg; front row (l-r): Little Big Town’s Jimi Westbrook, Karen Fairchild, Kimberly Schlapman and Phillip Sweet; and co-writers Delta Maid and Natalie Hemby. Photo by Rick Diamond

Pictured are, back row (l-r): Capitol Nashville’s Mike Dungan, BMI’s Jody Williams, and EMI Blackwood Music’s Josh Van Valkenburg; front row (l-r): Little Big Town’s Jimi Westbrook, Karen Fairchild, Kimberly Schlapman and Phillip Sweet; and co-writers Delta Maid and Natalie Hemby. Photo by Rick Diamond


“We’d never heard a girl call herself a tornado,” said Little Big Town’s Karen Fairchild yesterday (May 6) during a No. 1 party for “Tornado” at BMI, as she recalled the decision to record the song after hearing a rough demo. Penned by Natalie Hemby and Delta Maid, “Tornado” went on to become the title track of Little Big Town’s latest studio album and the band’s second chart-topper.
The song was the result of Hemby and Delta Maid’s first meeting—a meeting that almost didn’t happen.
It was Hemby’s last writing appointment of 2011, and Delta Maid’s last writing appointment during her first-ever visit to Nashville. For various reasons, they almost cancelled on each other. “Coming to Nashville was a massive dream,” shared Delta Maid, a native of Liverpool, England who grew up on a steady diet of traditional country music from Lefty Frizzell to Hank Williams. In recent years she has opened for Ray LaMontagne and Ron Sexsmith. Her career is being shepherded locally by manager Stuart Dill, who helped arrange her initial trip to Music City. “The first time I came to Nashville, I wrote a No. 1 song, which is mad,” she exclaimed. BMI’s Jody Williams presented a guitar to commemorate the occasion.
UMG Nashville boss Mike Dungan took the stage and described an “ugly” race to the pinnacle of the radio charts, with the goal of securing back-to-back No. 1s for Little Big Town. “We went to war,” he said as he handed over pointed crystal trophies he jokingly referred to as the “impaler award.” In fact, UMG was so proud of the accomplishment that several out-of-town team members flew in for yesterday’s party.
“We live for that passion and energy,” exclaimed LBT’s Phillip Sweet as he toasted the radio promotion crew.
Hemby, who also had a writing credit on Little Big Town’s previous No. 1 “Pontoon,” was celebrating her fourth No. 1 yesterday. The hot-as-fire tunesmith has at least two other current singles: “Don’t Rush,” by Kelly Clarkson ft. Vince Gill, and “Downtown,” by Lady Antebellum.
Josh Van Valkenburg, who works with Hemby at Sony/ATV, saluted her with a series of quotes from her peers. Among the touching tributes describing her character and talents: “a unique truth,” “liked and respected,” and “literally making history with her words and music.”
Hemby thanked her loved ones, including hubby Mike Wrucke, and her music biz parents who taught her the importance of integrity.
Representatives from CRS, CMA and Avenue Bank also toasted the writers and artists. Several people thanked Little Big Town producer Jay Joyce, who was absent from the event.
“We like the way this feels,” summed Fairchild.
Here’s betting they have that feeling many more times.

Blaster Records Adds National Director of Promotion

Bob Reeves

Bob Reeves


Bob Reeves has joined Blaster Records as National Director of Promotion. Reeves’ first day with the label is Monday (May 6).
“Bob is an incredible promotion executive who brings tremendous drive to his work each and every day,” says Vice President of Promotion Gator Michaels. “His commitment to our artists and his will to win are a tremendous boost to our team.”
“I felt like it was about time to get my ‘indie cred’ back,” says Reeves. “Where better to do that than with the superb team at Blaster? The artists are real, the music is great and the team is ripe for success. I’ve had incredible timing in my career. I’ve always seemed to end up at the right place at the right time. So the stars have aligned to bring me back together with Gator and I couldn’t be happier.”
Reeves’ career in radio promotion includes stops at Warner Brothers and Sony Music. Reeves can be reached at 615-347-9499 or at bob@blasterentertainment.com.