Bryan Performs for 1.3 Million in 2013

Luke Bryan. Photo: Joseph Llanes

Luke Bryan. Photo: Joseph Llanes


ACM Entertainer of the Year Luke Bryan wrapped touring for 2013 after closing his headline tour over the weekend. The “Dirt Road Diaries Tour,” which sold-out all dates in advance, along with the fifth annual eight-city “Farm Tour 2013” shows, saw Luke perform for a total of 1.3 million fans this year.
The “Dirt Road Diaries Tour” was nationally promoted by Live Nation. Cabela’s was a tour sponsor while Citi was the official credit card of tour.
Luke will launch a new tour in January, “That’s My Kind of Night Tour,” with the first leg kicking off on Jan. 16 in Columbus, Ohio at the Schottenstein Center; Bryan will perform 18 shows through March 8. The tour will feature Lee Brice and Cole Swindell.

Aldean's Tour Bus Involved In Fatal Crash

jason aldean111A tour bus carrying Country singer Jason Aldean was involved in a fatal accident overnight in Knox County, Ind. The accident occurred at approximately 1:30 a.m. Monday (Oct. 28) on Old U.S. 41. According to deputies, Albert Kennedy, of Vincennes, Ind., walked in front of Aldean’s bus, and was fatally struck. Neither Aldean nor the bus driver were injured, and the accident remains under investigation.
Aldean released a statement regarding the accident. The statement reads:
“With a heavy heart, I’m sad to say that a man passed away last night after stepping out in front of my bus in Indiana. In all the years I’ve been touring and all the miles we’ve driven, nothing prepares you for something like this to happen. I’m praying for Albert Kennedy’s family and friends today and ask that you do the same.”

Mary Chapin Carpenter Plans Orchestral CD, New Tour

Mary Chapin Carpenter

Mary Chapin Carpenter. Photo: Russ Harrington


Mary Chapin Carpenter’s debut orchestral record, Songs From The Movie, will be released Jan. 14 on Zoë/Rounder Records. Recorded at Air Studios in London, the album was arranged and conducted by six-time Grammy Award winner Vince Mendoza (Sting, Diana Krall, Chris Botti, Elvis Costello, Björk, Joni Mitchell) and was produced by Carpenter and Mendoza along with Matt Rollings (Keith Urban, Lyle Lovett). Featured on the album are new interpretations of ten beloved songs by Carpenter, including “Between Here and Gone” and “Come On Come On.” See below for complete track-listing.
In celebration of the album, Carpenter is set to embark on her first tour with a live orchestral backing. The tour will run throughout 2014 and includes a special debut performance at the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall with the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra on Jan. 24 as well as a date at L.A.’s Disney Concert Hall with L.A. Philharmonic on Feb. 8. See below for complete details.
Songs From The Movie pairs Carpenter’s songbook with an ensemble of London’s finest orchestral musicians and features Peter Erskine (Weather Report, John Abercrombie, Rod Stewart, Michael Bublé, Joni Mitchell, Diana Krall) on drums. Of the recording process, Carpenter comments, “Working with Vince Mendoza was incredibly inspiring. His arrangements gave these existing songs new meanings, new colors, new feelings, new destinations. To hear them played by the world class orchestra assembled at Air Studios was beyond any artistic experience that I could have imagined.”
Songs From The Movie track-listing
1. On and On It Goes
2. I Am A Town
3. Between Here and Gone
4. Ideas Are Like Stars
5. The Dreaming Road
6. Only A Dream
7. Come On Come On
8. Mrs. Hemingway
9. Where Time Stands Still
10. Goodnight America
MARY CHAPIN CARPENTER TOUR DATES
November 1 // Wichita, KS // The Orpheum Theatre*
November 2 // Springfield, MO // Gillioz Theatre*
November 3 // Columbia, MO // Missouri Theater*
November 4 // Dallas, TX // Majestic Theatre*
November 6 // Austin, TX // The Paramount Theatre*
November 7 // The Woodlands, TX // The Big Barn*
November 8 // Baton Rouge, LA // Manship Theatre*
November 9 // Pensacola, FL // Saenger Theatre*
November 10 // Oxford, MS // Gertrude C. Ford Center*
January 24 // Glasgow, Scotland // Glasgow Royal Concert Hall†
February 8 // Los Angeles, CA // Walt Disney Concert Hall‡
April 4 // Scottsdale, AZ // Scottsdale Center for the Arts**
*with Shawn Colvin
†with BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra and Vince Mendoza
‡with the L.A. Philharmonic and Vince Mendoza
**with the Phoenix Symphony

IEBA Panels Highlight the State of Touring

IEBABy Michael Smith and Eric Parker
The International Entertainment Buyers Association (IEBA) held its 43rd annual conference at Nashville’s Omni Hotel from Oct. 19-22. The conference, which featured several panels during the day and music showcases in the evening, was capped with the IEBA Honors and the SRO Awards. MusicRow attended two panels for the conference on Tuesday, Oct. 22: Are Agents the New A&R Directors? and A Financial Breakdown of Touring Revenues & Expenses.
Examining business dealings on the road, Flood, Bumstead, McCready & McCarthy’s Jamie Cheek, who received the CMA’s 2013 SRO Business Manager of the Year award, discussed touring costs and revenues for artists at various stages in their careers. Cheek noted that most newly signed Country acts may at best reap minuscule profits after touring for a year. For example, a newly signed act may generate $362,000 of income and $359,000 of expenses, resulting in profits of only a few thousand dollars. An artist at this level, however, can make a living by selling merchandise.
Mid- and veteran-level acts incur higher touring costs, but receive higher profits. Cheek estimated a veteran act may earn $740,000 from merchandise sales alone. Wildly successful acts that sell out arenas (e.g. Kenny Chesney, Taylor Swift, Tim McGraw, etc.) receive the most jaw dropping profits. An act of this ilk may earn $19 million and incur $11 million in expenses after a year of touring, resulting in a net income of $8 million. Merchandise can earn the artist another $2 million. With money to spare, it’s no surprise that artists at this level begin chartering private planes at an estimated cost of $20,000 per show.
Cheek caught the audience’s attention when he broke down an $80 concert ticket and explained who profits from each dollar.

Touring

• • •

Pictured (L-R): Mike Dungan (UMG), Rob Beckham (WME), Marc Dennis (CAA), Steve Lassiter (APA), Jonathan Levine (Paradigm), Paul Lohr (New Frontier Touring), and Kevin Neal (BLA)

Pictured (L-R): Mike Dungan (UMG), Rob Beckham (WME), Marc Dennis (CAA), Steve Lassiter (APA), Jonathan Levine (Paradigm), Paul Lohr (New Frontier Touring), and Kevin Neal (BLA)


For the Mike Dungan-led panel discussing whether agents are the new A&R directors, insights were offered from agents including Rob Beckham (WME), Marc Dennis (CAA), Steve Lassiter (APA), Jonathan Levine (Paradigm), Paul Lohr (New Frontier Touring), and Kevin Neal (BLA).
Dennis used CAA act Kip Moore as an example of the reversed process in which the UMG newcomer was signed to the agency prior to the label. “It takes a long time to break an artist on the road and Kip already would have equity in markets when promotion called,” explained Dennis. “We can assist a label with having an artist prepared when a spotlight is shined on them.” Lassiter countered the notion that agents have “no skin in the game,” referring to the fact that agents don’t pay advances or have sunk development costs. “What agents hand over is manpower,” said Lassiter. “It costs a lot of money to have our staff working them.”
Levine says of the lessons he’s learned in 30 years in the business: “The locomotive of touring pulls the whole rest of the train—airplay and sales are driven by live performances. It’s our job as agents to see the spark where an artist is connecting to fans and bring them to a larger and larger audience, to hopefully international.” It is important to emphasize the power of live concerts, because as Lohr contributed regarding promotion: “radio popularity doesn’t necessarily translate to ticket sales.”
One recent spark in the spotlight is Neal’s Florida Georgia Line, managed by Seth England at Big Loud Mountain. “When Jason Aldean picked “Black Tears” (written by FGL’s Tyler Hubbard), I was able to put FGL out with Colt Ford’s show,” said Neal. “I was sold with the way they acted and treated the audience. England wasn’t in a rush to get a label deal, so I setup secondary radio with Marco Promotions. FGL has gone faster than anything I’ve seen before.”
The panel of agents then revealed some thoughts on social media. “The advent of Soundscan or BDS was very helpful, “ said Lassiter. “Whether it’s views/followers/likes, you’re able to geo-target much more efficiently—it’s a hell of a lot better than hoping your banner ad worked.” Beckham noted social tallies may be misleading in a world of manipulation: “It sounds cool to calculate socials, but how many did the artist purchase? Blake Shelton is a rare example of an artist that can sell a ticket from a tweet.” Dennis chimed in about the sentiment behind social media’s helpful hand. “Fan bases like to feel like they’ve discovered the music, and they will be extremely loyal if they do,” said Dennis.
Regarding a prompt from Dungan about female acts on the road, Beckham noted: “Danielle Bradbery has a launching pad from The Voice, but it depends on how hard you want to work on the road,” echoing the notion that it’s “sometimes harder for a female to have the desire to hop in a van and trailer early on.”
Dungan summed up the panel with a statement about the current state of the industry, “It’s a different world that it was 10 years ago. Everyone is involved from the ground up.”

Dolly To Return To Europe On Upcoming "Blue Smoke" Tour

Dolly

Dolly Parton


Dolly Parton’s Blue Smoke will soon be wafting through Europe as well as she has just announced plans to return to Europe for a set of tour dates through June and July, hitting seven countries in 17 days. The European run will bring her back to the O2 Arena in London, where she recorded and filmed her DVD/CD set An Evening With…Dolly that sold over half a million copies.
“Every time I come to Europe I’m just as excited as I was my very first time, which was many, many years ago.  I love that part of the world and I especially love the fans,” adds Parton.  “We always have such a good time and I’ve put together a lot of things for this show that I think the fans will love.  We had not planned to come back so soon, but we got so much fan mail and such a great reaction that I thought ‘Well, why not.  If they’re having a good time and we always do, let’s just do it’.”
She will also release a CD of all-new material, Blue Smoke, to accompany the tour in the coming months, with a release date to be announced soon.
Blue Smoke UK & EUROPE Dates:
June 8      England, Liverpool, Echo Arena
June 10    Northern Ireland, Belfast, Odyssey Arena
June 11    Ireland, Dublin, O2 Arena
June 12    Ireland, Cork, Live At The Marquee
June 14    England, Newcastle, Metro Radio Arena
June 15    Scotland, Aberdeen, GE Arena
June 17    Scotland, Glasgow, Hydro Arena
June 20    England, Leeds, First Direct Arena
June 21    England, Manchester, Phones 4U Arena
June 22   England, Birmingham, LG Arena
June 24    Wales, Cardiff, Motorpoint Arena
June 27    England, London, O2 Arena
July 2       England, Nottingham, Arena
July 5        Germany, Cologne, Lanxess Arena
July 6        Germany, Berlin, O2 World
July 8        Denmark, Copenhagen, Forum
July 9        Norway, Oslo, Spektrum

Luke Bryan Brings Musical Swagger To Nashville

Luke Bryan

Luke Bryan


Is Luke Bryan country’s next stadium star? If the revved up crowd at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena on Saturday night (Oct. 19) is any indication, the answer is a roaring “yes.” The reigning ACM Entertainer of the Year had the room sizzling with energy during the second of two sold-out hometown shows.
Bryan’s Dirt Road Diaries Tour is a cowboy disco complete with neon lights and spinning mirror ball. He doesn’t need wall-to-wall production to be engaging—his Saturday show was fueled by the infallible mix of hit songs and dynamic performance. The only downside was that his dance moves swagger the line between sexy and silly (with a few too many tongue-rolling purrs thrown in).
He ushered the crowd through his catalog of hits crisscrossing from farm boy fare (“Country Man,” “Rain Is A Good Thing”) to dance-party primed (“That’s My Kind of Night,” “Country Girl (Shake It For Me)”). Along the way he performed “Crash My Party,” “Someone Else Calling You Baby,” “Drunk On You,” and “I Don’t Want This Night To End.” Midway through the show he and the band slowed the tempo and gathered around a piano. They picked up the pace again by bringing back opening acts Dierks Bentley and Cole Swindell for “The Only Way I Know.” Bryan even threw in a cover of the Metallica classic “Enter Sandman,” though the 1991 hit probably pre-dates his younger listeners.
Bryan’s connection to his fans is as tangible as the one staked by longtime stadium sell-out king Kenny Chesney. If the younger star can grow his repertoire by sprinkling in songs with a bit more substance, his career will continue to ripen.
At the industry-packed after party, UMG Nashville boss Mike Dungan presented a platinum plaque to Bryan for latest album Crash My Party, which moved a million units in just six weeks. The singer took the small stage in the arena’s Patron Lounge and recalled his early years driving on I-440 in Nashville and dreaming of sold out shows in Music City. This week that dream came true—twice.
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Hunter Hayes Headlines Ryman Auditorium, Twice

HHAtlantic Records’ Hunter Hayes was one of two Nashville headliners spanning two nights in downtown venues this weekend (Oct. 18 and 19). The other was Luke Bryan at the Bridgestone, while Hayes appropriately packed the Ryman Auditorium during the Friday Hunter’s Moon for his Let’s Get Crazy Tour. MusicRow offered an early look at Hayes’ tour this month.
During intermission, post-Ashley Monroe (more on her phenom below), the backdrop partition was removed to reveal Hayes’ ramps and riser skirts covered with handwritten lyrics. The writing didn’t stop there, the piano, guitar pick guards, and (spoiler alert) oversized balloons in the finale were also covered. Those song lyrics were well received among the post-millennial female crowd, many of whom are discovering their individuality and searching for love. Here’s, a boy spilling his heart out on every co-written song to provide companionship to the developing generation. “A song will never let you down—you’re never alone,” Hayes charismatically preached from the stage.
Front-row fans stood in front of metal folding chairs, pulsing their heads to the beat of the music. The auditorium pews also carried a light load for standing patrons on the main floor, perhaps a taste of what the 1950’s music fans were like – new music giving voice to a burgeoning generation. Hayes displayed not only a buoyant stage swagger, but a certain command as he hopped on monitor stands. “This tour is my first time properly headlining,” said Hayes with a coffee cup in hand. “We’re gonna play every song from Encore – for the love of music, let’s be crazy, Nashville!”
A five-member band backed Hayes, who prepared fans for his one “costume change” where he removed his jean jacket to sport a black tee, slicked comb over, jeans and Converse kicks. For the 22-year-old talent who played every instrument on his debut record, new guitars were at his fingertips for each song; at times the savant even switched instruments in the middle of songs. For the acoustic strip-down, Hayes looped guitar rhythms and layered vocal harmony for a slow-build, solo-performance of “I’ll Find It In A Song.”
Ronnie Milsap, a confessed longtime influence for Hayes, gave a surprise performance with his 1983 hit “Stranger In My House.” “When you hear his music, mine will all of a sudden make sense,” explained Hayes who watched intently as the Country legend sat behind the keys.
Hayes kicked his production into overdrive with a succession of catchy titles for the finale, including an Imagine Dragons cover “On Top Of The World,” alongside his own “Wanted,” “You Light Me Up,” and “I Want Crazy.”

Ashley Monroe backstage for Let's Be Crazy Tour. Photo: Instagram

Ashley Monroe backstage for Let’s Be Crazy Tour. Photo: Instagram


Prior to Hayes, Monroe donned a gorgeous long sleeve, open back sparkly lace romper from Jovani. With her tan ankle boots, Hippie Annie didn’t noticeably frighten the mostly middle school attendees with her traditional sound, featuring her band’s upright bass. Her set included the Miranda Lambert cut, “Heart Like Mine,” as well as Monroe’s own “Satisfied,” and “Can’t Let Go.” Mother chaperones, too, seemed unfazed with the misdeeds in Monroe’s current single, “Weed Instead of Roses.”
Monroe additionally graced the stage with her Warner Nashville labelmate during a masterful collaboration on “What You Gonna Do,” which is featured on Hayes’ latest release Encore. The song perhaps may be the one commonality between Monroe’s twang and Hayes’ generational pop-appeal, aside from each’s giant talent.
The CMT-sponsored tour runs through December. Find your tickets at cmt.com.

Luke Bryan 'That's My Kind of Night Tour' Launches in January

Luke Bryan. Photo: Joseph Llanes

Luke Bryan. Photo: Joseph Llanes


Luke Bryan will light up evenings in 2014 with his headlining That’s My Kind of Night Tour. The tour will kick-off its first leg on Jan. 16 in Columbus, Ohio at the Schottenstein Center and will perform 18 shows through March 8. The tour will feature Lee Brice and Cole Swindell.
Live Nation is the national tour promoter for the That’s My Kind of Night Tour; Cabela’s has signed on as a tour sponsor.
2014 That’s My Kind of Night Tour
Jan. 16 Columbus, Ohio Schottenstein Center
Jan. 17 Lexington, Ky. Rupp Arena
Jan. 18 Knoxville, Tenn. Thompson-Boling Arena
Jan. 23 Uncasville, Conn. Mohegan Sun Arena
Jan. 25 New York City Madison Square Garden
Jan. 30 Lubbock, Texas United Spirit Arena
Jan. 31 Oklahoma CityChesapeake Energy Arena
Feb. 6 Moline, Ill. iWireless Center
Feb. 7 Cedar Falls, Iowa UNI-Dome
Feb. 8 Omaha, Neb. CenturyLink Center
Feb. 13 Greensboro, N.C. Greensboro Coliseum Complex
Feb. 14 Wilkes Barre, Pa. Mohegan Sun Arena
Feb. 15 Atlantic City, N.J. Atlantic City Boardwalk Hall
Feb. 28 Fargo, N.D. Fargodome
March 1 Bismarck, N.D. Bismarck Civic Center Arena
March 2 St. Paul, Minn. Xcel Energy Solutions Arena
March 7 Memphis, Tenn. FedEx Forum
March 8 Bossier City, La. CenturyLink Center

Kip Moore Plans To Burn The World Down This Winter

kip moore1

Kip Moore


Kip Moore is getting ready to Burn The Whole World Down this winter, as he sets off on his first headlining tour Nov. 15 in Jacksonville, Fla. The CMA New Artist of the Year nominee will hit eight states through Dec. 14 with Drake White and Joey Hyde opening select dates on the tour.
“‘Burn The Whole World Down’ is actually one of the new songs I’ve been working on for the next album.  It just seemed to fit and was something fun we could call this last run of dates…we’re going to go down in flames here at the end of the year,” joked Moore. “The best way to test out new songs is always to play them live for the fans, so I’m excited to get some feedback direct from them.”
No word on whether heavy pyrotechnics are in the works for the shows, but tickets for the dates go on sale beginning Oct. 18. More information can be found at kipmoore.net.
BURN THE WHOLE WORLD DOWN Tour
Nov. 15    Jacksonville, Fla.   Mavericks Rock N’ Honky Tonk
Nov. 16    Tampa, Fla.             The Dallas Bull
Nov. 21    New Orleans, La.    Civic Theater
Nov. 22    Baton Rouge, La.   Texas Club
Nov. 23    Mobile, Ala.              Soul Kitchen Music Hall
Dec. 4      Oxford, Ohio               Brick Street Bar
Dec. 6     Sioux Falls, S.D.        The District
Dec. 7     Madison, Wis.             Orpheum Theatre
Dec. 12    Indianapolis, Ind.      Egyptian Room
Dec. 13    Detroit, Mich.              The Fillmore
Dec. 14    Cleveland, Ohio      House of Blues

Colleges Receive 'Luke Bryan Farm Tour' Scholarships

2013 Farm Tour Michael Monaco GC6A0742111

Luke Bryan performs during his fifth Farm Tour.


2013 CMA Entertainer of the Year nominee Luke Bryan wrapped his fifth Farm Tour over the weekend, performing for 115,000 fans during the course of the eight-city run. Eight local colleges–one in each city that the Farm Tour visited–will receive a Luke Bryan Farm Tour Scholarship, which will be given to a student from a farming family within each community.
Those colleges include:
Statesboro, Ga. – Georgia Southern University
Athens, Ga.- University of Georgia
Columbia, S.C. – University of South Carolina
Macon, Ga.- Mercer University
Villa Rica, Ga.- University of West Georgia
Auburn, Ala.- Auburn University
Tallahassee, Fla.- Florida State University
Valdosta, Ga. – Valdosta State University
The idea for the Farm Tour concerts was conceived as a way to give back to local farming communities, by celebrating American farmers and offering a fun escape with the outdoor shows. Farm Tour 2013 was sponsored by BMI, Cabela’s, Harveys Supermarket, Miller Lite and Texaco.