Country Cares for St. Jude

Randy Owen visits with a St. Jude patient at Country Cares for St. Jude Kids seminar.


Many members of the country music community spent the weekend in Memphis to help kick off the Country Cares for St. Jude Kids radiothon season. The event, spearheaded 22 years ago by Randy Owen, drew more than 800 artists, label representatives, radio station personnel and executives.
Country Cares is one of the nation’s largest radio fundraising programs, having generated more than $385 million for St. Jude since it began in 1989.
More than 30 artists visited St. Jude patients, including Owen, Ronnie Dunn, Joanna Smith, Justin Moore, The Band Perry, Jake Owen, Casey James, Katie Armiger, Frankie Ballard, Craig Campbell, Ashley Gearing, the JaneDear Girls, The Grascals, Walker Hayes, Joey & Rory, Josh Kelley, Jennette McCurdy, Randy Montana, Troy Olsen, and Eli Young Band.

Frankie Ballard enjoys an activity with St. Jude patient Anna Pike.


Ronnie Dunn and St. Jude patient Ella hang out during Country Cares for St. Jude Kids seminar.


Josh Kelley meets St. Jude patient Carissa at Country Cares for St. Jude Kids seminar.



Weekly Chart Report (1/14/11)


WUCZ/Carthage, TN’s Dennis Banka with Garth Brooks prior to the first of nine Flood Relief shows in Nashville.


SPIN ZONE
Things are a little slow early in 2011, with several older singles hanging on in the Top 10 for a chance at No. 1. Keith Urban’s “Put You In A Song” remains at the top of the stack, but appears to be losing some ground to Luke Bryan’s “Someone Else Calling You Baby” and Kenny Chesney’s “Somewhere With You.” As programmers continue freshening their playlists, expect to see big movement from newer singles like Taylor Swift’s “Back To December” currently No. 8, and Brad Paisley’s “This Is Country Music” currently No. 14.

When Aussie artist Kate Russell made a station visit to KBCR/Steamboat Springs, she discovered that she and MD Debbie Duncan had more in common than a love for country music.


Surviving the holiday break can be tough for independent artists, but there’s no denying a good song. Check out Burns & Poe’s “How Long Is Long Enough,” which continues to hang in there at No. 25. See also Eric Lee Beddingfield’s “The Gospel According To Jones” which moves up to No. 39.
Ashton Shepherd is back with her trademark Southern sass and her latest, “Look It Up,” struts to the No. 71 spot for the week’s highest debut. Also showing some spark is Average Joe’s JB & The Moonshine Band, whose “Perfect Girl” jumps on at No. 73. On target for a big debut in next week’s edition is Reba’s version of the Beyonce hit “If I Were A Boy.” Programmers spun it an extra 181 times this week, nudging it to just outside our chart cutoff.



Upcoming Singles
January 18
Band Perry/You Lie/Republic Nashville
David Adam Byrnes/Sweet Distraction/Better Angels/Ride
January 24
Jeff Bates/One Day Closer/Black River
Reba/If I Were A Boy/Valory
•  •  •  •  •

Average Joe's Entertainment's Corey Smith (R) recently visited The Bull in Atlanta, Georgia and chatted with WUBL MD Lance Houston.


New On The Chart—Debuting This Week
Artist/song/label — chart pos.
Ashton Shepherd/Look It Up/MCA — 71
JB & The Moonshine Band/Perfect Girl/Average Joe’s Entertainment — 73
Steve Holy/Love Don’t Run/Curb — 77
Christine VanHoy/What I Live For/Big 7 — 78
Jimmy White/Katy Did — 80
Greatest Spin Increase
Artist/song/label — spin+
Zac Brown Band/Colder Weather/Bigger Picture — 507
Miranda Lambert/Heart Like Mine/Columbia — 497
Rascal Flatts/I Won’t Let Go/Big Machine — 391
Jason Aldean w/Kelly Clarkson/Don’t You Wanna Stay/Broken Bow — 356
The Band Perry/You Lie/Republic Nashville — 294
On Deck—Soon To Be Charting
Artist/song/label — spins
Reba/If I Were A Boy/Starstruck/Valory — 188
Sandra Piller/Days Like These — 172
Emma King & The Heartsets/I’m Not Forgotten/PLC — 158
Lathan Moore/Love In Your Life/Blue Steel Records — 84
Kate Russell/Damned If I Do/Urunga — 155
Most Added
Artist/song/label — New Adds
Miranda Lambert/Heart Like Mine/Columbia — 31
Zac Brown Band/Colder Weather/Bigger Picture — 29
Rascal Flatts/I Won’t Let Go/Big Machine — 25
The Band Perry/You Lie/Republic Nashville — 23
Ashton Shepherd/Look It Up/MCA — 17
Reba/If I Were A Boy/Starstruck/Valory — 16
JB & The Moonshine Band/Perfect Girl/Average Joe’s Entertainment — 14
Trace Adkins/Brown Chicken, Brown Cow/Show Dog – Universal — 13
Steve Holy/Love Don’t Run/Curb — 10

Sea Gayle/Arista Nashville’s Jerrod Niemann recently visited the Lia Show to promote his current single, “What Do You Want.” (L-R): Niemann, Arista Nashville’s Lori Hartigan, host Lia Knight, and Lia Show producer Hank Aaron.

Benken Joins Quarterback Records

Quarterback Records has hired Tony Benken as Vice President, Promotion. Effective immediately, Benken will oversee label contact with medium and major market radio.
“This is another strong step for the growth and capability of Quarterback,” says label co-principal John Ettinger. “Tony brings a terrific skill set in promotion, and carries a wonderful reputation.  He is smart, caring, and has the kind of radio-relation integrity we want at the label.”
“I couldn’t be more excited to get going with this Quarterback team,” adds Benken. “They do everything with energy and integrity, and I can’t wait to bring the same spirit out to my friends in country radio.”
Benken was most recently VP Promotion at Treehouse Records and his 18 years of experience have included stops at BNA, RCA, Virgin, Universal South and Broken Bow. Reach him at 615-478-9056 or [email protected]
Along with Benken’s hiring, Quarterback has promoted J.R. Hughes to National Director/Midwest Regional.

Chris Young's Radio Redux

Are you having deja vu of hearing “voices”? Chris Young’s current single “Voices” is making its way up the radio charts for a second time. The same recording of the same song is resting at No. 12 on MusicRow’s Country Breakout chart after 22 weeks on the list—this go ‘round.
The track was first released by RCA Nashville in 2008 as the lead single from The Man I Want to Be. Co-written by Young, Chris Tompkins, and Craig Wiseman, the song originally made it to No. 65 on the Country Breakout chart.
“Voices” is No. 5 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart, and if it makes it to the top, it will be the first time since Randy Travis’ 1986 chestnut “On the Other Hand,” that a re-released single hit the pinnacle.
Young has had back-to-back No. 1’s with “Gettin’ You Home” and “The Man I Want to Be.” He is nominated for his first GRAMMY Award next month for Best Male Country Vocal Performance (“Gettin’ You Home”). He joins Luke Bryan on the second leg of Rascal Flatts’ Nothing Like Tour, kicking off January 14.

Davis Music Group Partners With Nine North

Jacob Lyda


Davis Music Group has announced a partnership with Larry Pareigis and his Nine North team for national radio promotion efforts of DMG artist Jacob Lyda.
“Larry Pareigis has established a stellar promotion staff at Nine North and the Davis Music Group family is excited to add their help in our radio efforts for Jacob Lyda,” says DMG GM Gator Michaels.
“We are thrilled and look forward to working with Gator Michaels, Glenn Noblit and the entire DMG family to break this remarkable, deserving artist at country radio,” adds Pareigis.
Lyda’s debut single “I’m Doing Alright” has shipped to radio and goes for adds January 31.

FCC Chairman Keynotes At CES



FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski



Julius Genachowski, FCC Chairman will deliver the keynote address at the Consumer Electronics Show, (1/7/11) starting at 1:30 PT. in Las Vegas. The Chairman has been a proponent of net neutrality and actively working toward a more efficient use of radio wave spectrum. His remarks were released in advance. TV and terrestrial radio, which currently hold large chunks of wireless spectrum are carefully watching to see if/how the FCC’s vision may effect their industries going forward.
“The consumer electronic industry is going wireless, and the future success of this wide-ranging industry and others depends on whether our government acts quickly to unleash more spectrum—the oxygen that sustains our mobile devices,” Genachowski says.
“To seize the opportunities of our mobile future, we need to tackle the challenges of our invisible infrastructure. We need to free up more spectrum. If we do, we can drive billions of dollars in new private investment, fueling world-leading innovations, creating millions of new jobs, and enabling endless new products and services that can help improve the lives of all Americans. If we don’t tackle the spectrum challenge, network congestion will grow, and consumer frustration will grow with it. We’ll put our country’s economic competitiveness at risk, and squander the opportunity to lead the world in mobile. That’s why unleashing spectrum to support mobile innovation is at the top of the FCC’s 2011 agenda.”
The Chairman cited advances in the past year in the market for tablets, eBooks and the “app economy” as proof of how swiftly these markets can evolve.
“Thanks to Skype, Facebook, Twitter and many others, mobile has become an incredible platform for connecting friends and families, kids on one end of the country to grandparents on the other,” Genachowski’s remarks continue. “Mobile broadband can empower people not only in 21st century economies, but can promote 21st century democracy. We’ve seen this around the world. Here’s the issue: All of these wireless innovations require an invisible infrastructure that is up to the task. They require something we can’t see—spectrum, the airwaves—the signals that beam from towers and quietly carry digital information—data, voice, video—until they light up those devices we increasingly rely on.
“This invisible infrastructure is the backbone of a growing percentage of our economy and our lives. And whether or not most Americans know the physics of spectrum, they know what it feels like to have a slow connection or a call dropped. This coming spectrum crunch is not just a real issue for the future of gadgets, it’s a vital strategic issue for the future of our economy and job creation, our global competitiveness, and our quality of life. Failure to tackle the spectrum challenge could have disastrous consequences.”
Calling the current U.S. spectrum policies “outdated,” the FCC Chairman outlined some of the general changes he’d like to see take place including incentive auctions to redirect spectrum use more efficiently.
“We need to make more spectrum available for mobile broadband,” stated Genachowski. “So we are eliminating unnecessary restrictions on use of spectrum—all toward our goal for freeing up 500 megahertz of spectrum for mobile broadband, almost double what is currently available.
Since the Digital TV transition, some broadcasters are making effective use of the capabilities of their spectrum, but some are not. For those who are not, their spectrum could be put to higher use for other purposes. What we need is a mechanism to enable market forces to unleash the value of that spectrum for broadband use, and we believe that incentive auctions are that mechanism. It’s time to take the necessary steps to ensure that spectrum will be the great enabler of mobile innovation in the 21st century, not a chokepoint. I believe incentive auctions are a test of whether the U.S. can make the right strategic choices in a complex and fast-moving digital economy.”
The Chairman also noted that, “…just this week, the Consumer Electronics Association, the Information Technology Industry Council, the Semiconductor Industry Association and the Telecommunication Industry Association wrote a joint-letter to Congressional leaders calling on Congress to ‘swiftly pass legislation allowing the FCC to conduct voluntary incentive auctions.'”

Weekly Chart Report (1/07/11)


Colt Ford (R) played the Dixie Dancehall in Beaumont, TX and KYKR’s Mark Guzman (L) was in attendance. Radio stations across the country are currently offering a free download of Ford’s new single “Hip Hop In A Honky Tonk,” featuring Kevin Fowler. Find it at www.coltford.com.


Bigger Picture Group sibling trio The Harters were in their hometown of Phoenix over the holidays to play a set at Toby Keith's I Love This Bar And Grill. (L-R): Michael Harter, KNIX’s Barrel Boy, Leslie Harter and Scott Harter.


In the first CountryBreakout Chart of 2011, Keith Urban stays in control of the No. 1 position with “Put You In A Song” and Luke Bryan’s “Someone Else Calling You Baby” and Tim McGraw’s “Felt Good On My Lips” unseated at spots 2 and 3. Kenny Chesney’s “Somewhere With You” is the big mover in the Top 5, as it gains 315 spins and moves ahead of Toby Keith’s “Bullets In The Gun” to No. 4.
Positions 10-20 are a veritable battlefield, with practically every title pushing for power rotation. Brad Paisley’s “This Is Country Music” is the juggernaut among them, already at No. 15 in the short period since the CMA Awards. But also noteworthy are big moves from Chris Young’s “Voices” at No. 12, Billy Currington’s “Let Me Down Easy” at No. 13, and Darius Rucker’s “This” at No. 16.
With the new year comes new singles, and many programmers are already giddily spinning them. Miranda Lambert’s “Heart Like Mine” is a particularly hot item, making its big CountryBreakout debut at No. 58. Also making impressive first chart appearances are Rascal Flatts’ “I Won’t Let Go” at No. 64, Zac Brown Band’s “Colder Weather” at No. 72 and The Band Perry’s “You Lie” at No. 75.
Frozen Playlists: KICR, KITX, KVAY, KVVP, KYYK, KZZY, Sirius XM, WAXX, WBKR, WPPL, WXFL
RADIO NEWS
Chandra Hunter has stepped into the role of Music Director for Beacon Broadcasting’s KVAY/Lamar, CO. This move follows the exit of previous MD/On-air talent Thadeus Steele, who accepted a job outside the radio industry. Hunter will begin taking music calls 2-3 pm CT on Tuesdays after January 17 and she can be reached via email at [email protected]. Contact Steele at [email protected].
Longtime Maverick Media WAXX/Eau Claire, WI Station Manager/Morning Co-host George House retired on December 30 after a 22-year tenure with the station. Afternoon personality Alex Edwards has shifted to co-host the morning show with Becca, and Phil Tripper has come over from sister station WBCV to fill the afternoon slot.
Upcoming Singles
January 10
Miranda Lambert/Heart Like Mine/Columbia
Rascal Flatts/I Won’t Let Go/Big Machine
Trace Adkins/Brown Chicken Brown Cow/Show Dog-Universal
January 18
Band Perry/You Lie/Republic Nashville
David Adam Byrnes/Sweet Distraction/Better Angels/Ride


New On The Chart—Debuting This Week
Artist/song/label — chart pos.
Miranda Lambert/Heart Like Mine/Columbia — 58
Rascal Flatts/I Won’t Let Go/Big Machine — 64
Zac Brown Band/Colder Weather/Bigger Picture — 72
The Band Perry/You Lie/Republic Nashville — 75
Taylor Made/Quiet Kind of Crazy — 76
Chuck Wicks/Old School/RCA Nashville — 77
Greatest Spin Increase
Artist/song/label — spin+
Brad Paisley/This Is Country Music/Arista — 465
Rascal Flatts/I Won’t Let Go/Big Machine — 451
Taylor Swift/Back To December/Big Machine — 438
Jason Aldean w/Kelly Clarkson/Don’t You Wanna Stay/Broken Bow — 427
Miranda Lambert/Heart Like Mine/Columbia — 419
On Deck—Soon To Be Charting
Artist/song/label — spins
Jimmy White/Katy Did — 178
JB & The Moonshine Band/Perfect Girl/Average Joe’s — 159
Ashton Shepherd/Look It Up/MCA — 158
Lathan Moore/Love In Your Life/Blue Steel Records — 156
Emma King & The Heartsets/I’m Not Forgotten/PLC — 151
Most Added—Week 1
Artist/song/label — New Adds
Rascal Flatts/I Won’t Let Go/Big Machine — 32
Zac Brown Band/Colder Weather/Bigger Picture — 30
Miranda Lambert/Heart Like Mine/Columbia — 27
The Band Perry/You Lie/Republic Nashville — 25
Trace Adkins/Brown Chicken, Brown Cow/Show Dog-Universal — 17
Steel Magnolia/Last Night Again/Big Machine — 11
Sugarland/Little Miss/Mercury — 9
Steve Holy/Love Don’t Run/Curb — 9

A recent tour stop in Seattle gave The Adam Craig Band a chance to visit with Albright & O’Malley’s Jaye Albright about their latest single, “Nothin’ Wrong.” The local marina must have known the group was coming, which explains the sign. (L-R): Johnny Duke, Adam Craig, Albright, Ryan Jones, Jimi Hendrix and Brian Smith.

Hirings At Taillight and AirPlay Direct

Nashville production company Taillight has hired Sam Ciaramitaro as Vice President/Executive Producer for Commercials. Ciaramitaro originally hails from Chicago, and his career includes over 15 years experience in broadcast production at ad agencies Leo Burnett and DRAFTFCB.
Ciaramitaro’s work in Chicago helped create campaigns for the US Army, Allstate, United Airlines, KFC, Def Jam, EA Sports, General Motors and many more. He was the director and producer of the Army’s hyper-successful “Army of One” campaign that integrated viral and broadcast content. He can be reached at 615-385-1034 ext. 234 or [email protected].
•  •  •  •  •
Industry veteran Dan Bowen has been tapped by digital delivery service AirPlay Direct to be VP of Radio Strategies, where he will oversee all radio relations and initiatives.
Bowen has over 26 years of experience in the music industry, and was most recently VP of Strategic Marketing & Communications for the Country Music Association. Prior to that, he served as the PD of WSTR/Atlanta; Denver’s KWMX, KHHT, and KQKS; and in marketing and promotions for WNCI/Columbus. Reach him at [email protected].

Brad Howell Joins Show Dog-Universal

Brad Howell


Show Dog-Universal Music has added Brad Howell as VP of National Field Promotion. His extensive experience ranges from radio programming, to promo exec positions at Warner Bros. and Equity, as well as GM of Broken Bow Records. Howell will report to Show Dog-Universal VP of Promotion Rick Moxley.
“Brad has been both an innovative promoter and a rock-solid record executive for several years now,” commented Moxley. “His experience and leadership will greatly benefit our team as the New Year unfolds.”

Macy Morgenthaler


In addition, Moxley announced the promotion of Macy Morgenthaler to Northeast Regional Promotion & Marketing Manager. Morgenthaler, a Belmont graduate and Arkansas native, previously served as A&R Coordinator for the label as well as executive assistant to label Pres. Mark Wright for four years.
Morgenthaler’s previous position will be filled by Laurel Kittleson who has worked as Production/Creative Services Assistant at the label for the past year. Her new title is A&R/Production Coordinator. A Belmont graduate and Seattle native, Kittleson held previous positions at Elevation Music Publishing and served as personal assistant to award–winning songwriter Rivers Rutherford. She will continue performing her previous duties as well as assisting Wright.

Laurel Kittleson


Brad Howell / VP National Field Promotion/615.324.7779/ [email protected]
Macy Morgenthaler 615.324.7768/ [email protected]
Laurel Kittleson/ 615.324.7763/ [email protected]

WSIX's New Morning Team


Billy Greenwood and Karla Lawson


Billy Greenwood and Karla Lawson have taken over the morning shift at WSIX following the end of Gerry House’s long-running “House Foundation” show.
Their first day with the new gig was Jan. 3, 2011.
Lawson previously handled traffic duties for the “House Foundation.” She has 30 years of experience in the entertainment industry, and has spent 15 years in broadcast radio.
Greenwood has been in radio for 20 years, and was nominated for R&R’s Personality of the Year in 2007. He was also a judge on USA Network’s Nashville Star in 2004.
Zak is on board as the show’s producer. Check out the show’s blog.
In other Gerry House news, expect details this week about an invitation-only roast of the DJ Hall of Fame inductee, set for Feb. 3.