
Pictured (L-R): William Michael Morgan, Drake White, Granger Smith, Jon Pardi, Maren Morris. Photo: CRS Official/Twitter
BOBBY KARL WORKS THE ROOM
Chapter 556
The 2017 edition of the New Faces Show was the event’s most “country” collection of talent in years.
This annual capstone of the Country Radio Seminar convention has been showcasing up-and-comers, hopefuls and future superstars since 1970. This year, it was a celebration of neo-traditionalism as William Michael Morgan, Jon Pardi, Drake White and Granger Smith offered their various styles of twang and drawl. Even show closer Maren Morris eschewed the drum loops, electronic effects and auto-tune of her album’s sound to deliver a rootsy performance.
This year’s New Faces Show took place Friday evening, Feb. 24, at the Omni Hotel’s spacious Broadway Ballroom. The banquet meal was a pecan-encrusted chicken quarter on a bed of parsley-pureed mashed potatoes with zucchini, carrot and tomato sides and berried chocolate tarts for dessert.
My dining companions included such media mavens as Deborah Evans Price, Troy Stephenson, Chuck Dauphin, Lorie Hollabaugh, Eric T. Parker, Bob Paxman and Ed Morris. After the yummy chow, we turned our attentions to the main event, the artists doing their utmost to impress the radio tastemakers.

Drake White performs. Photo: CRS Official/Twitter
The evening belonged to Drake White, who led off. This Alabama-bred fellow never delivers less than 100%, and his crackling performance on Friday was no exception. He was saucy, sassy and drawling on the rollicking “It Feels Good” as he opened his set.
“We are ‘living the dream’ today, because of y’all; thank-you so much,” Drake said as he tore into “Livin’ the Dream.” He invested it with immense energy and passion. Then came the even more intense, relentlessly driving “Heartbeat.” He closed with his torrid love ballad “Makin’ Me Look Good Again,” and was rewarded with a standing ovation.
“You won’t see a better act tonight,” I advised Miss Mary. At first, I was perplexed that this powerhouse performer was the opener. But you know what? At New Faces, this is actually the slot you want. While Drake sang, the place was packed to capacity with 1,300 still reasonably sober and super influential radio people. By the time Maren closed the show a couple of hours later, the ballroom was almost half empty.
Second up was William Michael Morgan. This tall, handsome youngster is an “old-school” vocalist. His stone-country delivery of the mellow, mid-tempo “Vinyl” suited the lyric’s old-fashioned values perfectly. The down-home, sincere, working-class salute “Beer Drinker” was even better.
“I Know Who He Is” was a heart-tugging, inspirational ballad. He introduced his lilting new single, “Missing,” a two-step, then closed with his No. 1 hit, the swirling, atmospheric and ultra romantic “I Met a Girl.” “Thank you: God bless country music!” stated William in closing.
The 23 year-old Mississippi native had a somewhat awkward, gangly stage presence, like a country boy plucked from a farm field and put into the spotlight. It made him seem warmly charming and endearing.
By contrast, Granger Smith is the ultimate showboating extrovert. The Texan opened with the romping “If the Boot Fits.” Then, his cover of Tom Petty’s “Free Falling” segued into the churning, extended jam of “Backroad Song,” which was packed with personality.

Granger Smith’s Earl Dibbles, Jr. Photo: CRS Official/Twitter
Granger next changed into the costume of his redneck alter ego “Earl Dibble Jr.” and reemerged waving an oversized “Yee Yee” flag. Flaunting his full-bore, white-trash persona in overalls, he held up a guitar reading “Dip” on its back, offered a two-handed, beer-spray celebratory drink and stripped to his waist while performing “Country Boy Love.” The crowd gave him a standing ovation.
Also sublimely country was Jon Pardi. He was boyishly bopping on “Cowboy Hat” and appropriately drawling on “She Ain’t In It.” By this time, a large mosh pit had gathered for him in front of the stage. Like several of those who preceded him, he shook hands with those closest to him.
The California native had a sunny, optimistic quality throughout his set. He closed with back-to-back “boot” songs. His rolling, swaying big hit “Head Over Boots” was followed by the choppy, rhythmic “Dirt on My Boots.”
Petite, vivacious Maren Morris closed the show. She opened with her rumbling stomper “80s Mercedes,” punctuated by her handclaps and ad-libbed shouts. One of the big highlights of her set was her new single, a yearning, elegant, tuneful and super compelling ballad titled “I Could Use a Love Song.”
“Thank you for your support of new music and new artists,” said the singer-songwriter. “We couldn’t do it without you.”
The Texas native offered her hugely popular, Grammy-winning rouser “My Church” to great applause. Her closing “party song” was the wry, tongue-in-cheek and high-spirited “Rich.” The crowd gave the reigning CMA New Artist of the Year winner the evening’s final standing ovation.
Abetting the performances, the ACM’s Lisa Lee and Ben Vaughn presented that organization’s radio award winners, and Charlie Morgan, Lon Helton and Chuck Aly announced their Country Aircheck radio winners. There was also a salute to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, a number of amusing video interludes and an “In Memoriam” segment honoring those in the country industry who passed away during the past year.

William Michael Morgan. Photo: CRS Official/Twitter
John Esposito, John Briggs, Mike Dungan, Mike Sistad, Rob Simbeck, Bobby Young, Tom Lord, Todd Cassetty, Preshus Tomes Harris, Autumn House Tallant, Travis Rice, Royce Risser, Rick Murray, R.J. Curtis, Paul Barnabee, Scott Hendricks, Daniel Hill, Maurice Miner, Phyllis Stark, Jim Catino, Ken Robold, Capucine Monk, Kos Weaver and Duane Clark were among those working the radio room.
In the past, the New Faces Show has helped to launch such stars as Alabama, Reba McEntire, George Strait, Vince Gill, Randy Travis, Faith Hill, Taylor Swift, Tim McGraw, Patty Loveless and Blake Shelton. More than 300 New Faces artists have been showcased to date. We added five more worthy names to that long list on Friday night.
Garth Reaches Touring Milestone: Five Million Tickets In 60 Cities
/by Lorie HollabaughGarth Brooks continues to top himself, breaking another touring record last Friday night (Feb. 24) with a record five millionth ticket sold in just 60 cities played on his Garth Brooks World Tour. Brooks was recognized for the feat during his show Friday night at Rogers Place in Edmonton, AB, where wife Trisha Yearwood interrupted her own set to surprise him with the big news.
Yearwood invited Jared Smith, President of Ticketmaster and Michael Evans, President of Arenas for Live Nation to the stage to present Brooks with a commemorative plaque honoring the five million tickets sold in 100 cities during the 1996-1998 world tour along with a second plaque honoring the five millionth ticket sold in just 60 cities during this current tour. Garth Brooks and Ticketmaster have been working together for more than 20 years.
Following that presentation, Bob Nicholson, Oilers Entertainment Group CEO & Vice Chair and Susan Darrington, General Manager of Rogers Place joined the two on stage to unveil a new banner hanging from the rafters celebrating the five millionth ticket sold and Brooks’ nine sold-out concerts at the new Rogers Place in Edmonton. The banner will hang alongside the championship banners of the Edmonton Oilers and Edmonton Oil Kings. As Garth then tried to leave the stage, Trisha stopped him for another surprise – a special video message from Wayne Gretzky that played on the big screen.
In just over two years the tour has sold over five million tickets, making it the biggest tour in the world and breaking records held by acts like the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. The tour is presented by Amazon Music Unlimited.
Industry Ink: Leadership Music, CMA, YEP
/by Jessica NicholsonLeadership Music Deadline Approaching
CMA Reveals Research Data, Welcomes Attendees For CRS
Pictured (L-R): CMA Senior Manager of Market Research Courtney Ledford, CMA Senior Director of Market Research Karen Stump, and CMA Senior Director of Awards and Industry Relations Brandi Simms after CMA’s breakout session “Trending and Spending: The Country Radio Consumer” Thursday during the 2017 Country Radio Seminar in Nashville.
Photo: Devin Garrett / CMA
As thousands of Country radio broadcasters traveled to Nashville for Country Radio Seminar (CRS), CMA hosted events to welcome attendees, share valuable insights revealing the power of the Country Music radio consumer, and offer best practices regarding entries for the CMA Broadcast Awards.
“In the 60 years since CMA was founded, Country Music has grown in a way the Association’s visionary founders could have only imagined,” said CMA Chief Marketing Officer Damon Whiteside. “Today the Country Music genre is stronger than ever and has become the single largest radio format, a direct result of the tireless efforts of the men and women working in Country radio.”
On Thursday, CMA’s research team showcased data revealing the spending power of Country radio listeners compared to listeners of other popular radio formats. The presentation provided the radio industry with key insights regarding how advertisers can connect with the Country Music radio audience across six key categories—retail, communications, financial services, automotive, restaurants, and travel—accounting for more than $1.4 billion in annual radio ad spending. To view “Trending and Spending: The Country Music Radio Consumer” research deck, visit CMA’s research page by clicking here. CMA members can visit my.cmaworld.com for exclusive studies.
Rounding out CMA’s formal events at CRS was Friday’s breakout session, “And the CMA Broadcast Award Goes to…,” with CMA Senior Director of Awards and Industry Relations Brandi Simms. CMA National Broadcast Personality of the Year and Board member Lon Helton also spoke on the panel. Hundreds of Country radio stations and personalities vie for the prestigious CMA Broadcast Awards each year, so attendees learned eligibility requirements and best practices for Broadcast Awards consideration.
RaeLynn Joins YEP At The Opry
Pictured (L-R): Caroline Melby, YEP Board Member; Amelia Varni, YEP Executive Director; RaeLynn, artist; Katie Roth, YEP Board Member; Emma Joseph, Grand Ole Opry Manager of Digital Content Development & Promotion.
YEP members Caroline Melby, Amelia Varni, and Katie Roth met with Warner Music Nashville artist RaeLynn backstage at the Grand Ole Opry recently.
Blues Hall of Fame Names 38th Class of Inductees
/by Lorie HollabaughThe six artists chosen for induction into the Performers category are Mavis Staples; Latimore; guitarists Magic Slim and Johnny Copeland; and Howlin’ Wolf sidemen guitarist Willie Johnson and piano-man Henry Gray. The year’s non-performer category inductee is Living Blues Magazine co-founder/radio show host Amy van Singel, who passed away in Sept. 2016. The Classic of Blues Literature pick is Father of the Blues, W.C. Handy’s 1941 autobiography. John Lee Hooker’s 1966 Chess album Real Folk Blues is the Classic of Blues Recording Album category induction pick.
The Classic of Blues Recording songs going into the Hall of Fame include Bo Diddley’s signature tune “Bo Diddley,” Tommy Tucker’s classic “Hi Heel Sneakers,” the Albert King hit “I’ll Play the Blues For You,” Son House’s “Preachin’ the Blues” and “I Ain’t Superstitious,” which features 2017 inductee Henry Gray playing on Howlin’ Wolf’s well-known 1961 recording.
Tickets for the ceremony, which is open to the public, are $100 per seat and can be purchased online here.
In Pictures: MusicRow’s 2017 CountryBreakout Awards
/by Jessica NicholsonMusicRow celebrated its annual CountryBreakout Awards and Meet & Greet on Wednesday (Feb. 22) at Nashville’s The Listening Room Cafe. For a full recap of the awards, read Bobby Karl’s review.
Pictured (L-R): MusicRow’s Sherod Robertson, Christy Garbinski, Cliff Blake, RG Jones. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography
Alex Smith performs. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography
Pictured: MusicRow’s Sherod Robertson and Troy Stephenson honor Aaron Watson and his team for Independent Artist of the Year. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography
MusicRow’s Sherod Robertson, winner Greg Almond, and MusicRow’s Troy Stephenson. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography
Rachael Turner performs. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography
MusicRow Awards 2.22.17 © Moments By Moser Photography
MusicRow’s Sherod Robertson honors Ross Copperman and his publishing team as Songwriter of the Year. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography
MusicRow Awards 2.22.17 © Moments By Moser Photography
MusicRow’s Sherod Robertson with EMI’s Jimmy Rector. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography
MusicRow’s Sherod Robertson with BMLG VP Matthew Hargis. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography
MusicRow’s Sherod Robertson with Arista Nashville’s Josh Easler. Photo: Moments By Moser Photography
MusicRow Awards 2.22.17 © Moments By Moser Photography
In Pictures: Sony Music Nashville, Warner Music Nashville, Little Big Town, Black River Entertainment
/by Lorie HollabaughSony Hosts CRS Open House
Pictured (L-R): Cliff Blake, Bo Martinovich, Lyndsay Church, Kenny Chesney, Lauren Thomas. Back row (L-R): Sam Borenstein, Tyler Farr, Mark Janese, Shane Allen, Christy Garbinski
Sony Nashville held an open house during CRS week for radio attendees with roster artists Kenny Chesney, Brad Paisley, Tyler Farr and more on hand to welcome guests.
Warner Says Hats On To William Michael Morgan
Pictured (L-R): Mike Taliaferro (Management), Lisa Ray (VP, Brand Management), Scott Hendricks (EVP, A&R), William Michael Morgan, John Esposito (Chairman & CEO, WMN), Kristen Williams (SVP, Radio & Streaming), Matt Signore (COO, WMN), Joe Carter (Management)
Warner Music Nashville’s William Michael Morgan posed for a photo with the Warner team shortly before his 2017 CRS New Faces performance.
Little Big Town Kick Off Ryman Residency In A Big Way
Pictured (L-R): Jimi Westbrook, Karen Fairchild, Andra Day, Kimberly Schlapman and Phillip Sweet. Photo: Becky Fluke
Little Big Town launched their year-long artist residency, “Little Big Town at the Mother Church,” from the Ryman Auditorium last weekend with back-to-back, sold-out shows on Friday (Feb. 24) and Saturday (Feb. 25). Sam Hunt and Chris Stapleton joined the group for the Friday show while Andra Day joined Little Big Town on stage for Saturday night’s performance.
At the close of each show, the band earned complete reverence in the form of uninterrupted silence as they launched into an acoustic encore without mics aimed at paying homage to early Ryman Auditorium performances.
Black River Showcases Abby Anderson, Jacob Davis at CRS Event
Black River Entertainment Staff and Artists Jacob Davis and Abby Anderson
Photo: Moments By Moser
Black River Entertainment hosted a showcase for CRS attendees last Thursday night (Feb. 23) at downtown Nashville’s The Bell Tower. Kelsea Ballerini shared new music via video while new artists Abby Anderson and Jacob Davis performed for the crowd.
Diane Warren to Receive Founders Award at ASCAP Pop Awards
/by Lorie HollabaughPhoto: Emily Shur
ASCAP will honor songwriter Diane Warren with its prestigious Founders Award at its 34th annual Pop Music Awards on May 18 at an exclusive, invitation-only gala in Los Angeles. Warren’s work has been featured in more than 100 films, resulting in eight Academy Award nominations, and she has six ASCAP Songwriter of the Year Awards, three consecutive Billboard Music Awards for Songwriter of the Year, and was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2001.
Throughout her impressive 30-plus year career, Warren has penned hits for dozens of major artists including Beyoncé, Adele, Whitney Houston, Cher, Aerosmith, Elton John, Faith Hill, Aretha Franklin, Willie Nelson, Mary J. Blige, Eric Clapton, Celine Dion, Barbra Streisand, Andra Day and more.
Most recently Warren composed the original song “Prayers for this World,” performed by Cher for the documentary Cries From Syria. She also penned a new theme song for ABC’s The View called “World’s Gone Crazy,” and her evocative song “Til It Happens To You” was featured in the 2015 documentary on campus sexual assault, The Hunting Ground. Performed by Lady Gaga, it was the first song in history to be nominated for an Academy Award, Grammy and Emmy, winning the Emmy for Outstanding Original Music and Lyrics in 2016. It was also nominated for a Critics’ Choice Award for Best Song and won the Hollywood Music in Media Award for Best Song – Documentary.
“Diane Warren is one of the most continuously prolific and successful contemporary songwriters of our time,” said ASCAP President Paul Williams. “Her music evokes universal emotions that connect us in a way few songwriters can. Diane’s ability to channel our common experience through her songs has captured audiences all over the world.”
“I am honored to be receiving the Founders Award and to be among the names of songwriters whom I admire and respect so much,” said Warren. “I am grateful for the success I have had with my songs but to be honest, I feel like my career is just beginning.”
Bobby Karl Works The 2017 New Faces Of Country Music Show
/by Bobby KarlPictured (L-R): William Michael Morgan, Drake White, Granger Smith, Jon Pardi, Maren Morris. Photo: CRS Official/Twitter
BOBBY KARL WORKS THE ROOM
Chapter 556
The 2017 edition of the New Faces Show was the event’s most “country” collection of talent in years.
This annual capstone of the Country Radio Seminar convention has been showcasing up-and-comers, hopefuls and future superstars since 1970. This year, it was a celebration of neo-traditionalism as William Michael Morgan, Jon Pardi, Drake White and Granger Smith offered their various styles of twang and drawl. Even show closer Maren Morris eschewed the drum loops, electronic effects and auto-tune of her album’s sound to deliver a rootsy performance.
This year’s New Faces Show took place Friday evening, Feb. 24, at the Omni Hotel’s spacious Broadway Ballroom. The banquet meal was a pecan-encrusted chicken quarter on a bed of parsley-pureed mashed potatoes with zucchini, carrot and tomato sides and berried chocolate tarts for dessert.
My dining companions included such media mavens as Deborah Evans Price, Troy Stephenson, Chuck Dauphin, Lorie Hollabaugh, Eric T. Parker, Bob Paxman and Ed Morris. After the yummy chow, we turned our attentions to the main event, the artists doing their utmost to impress the radio tastemakers.
Drake White performs. Photo: CRS Official/Twitter
The evening belonged to Drake White, who led off. This Alabama-bred fellow never delivers less than 100%, and his crackling performance on Friday was no exception. He was saucy, sassy and drawling on the rollicking “It Feels Good” as he opened his set.
“We are ‘living the dream’ today, because of y’all; thank-you so much,” Drake said as he tore into “Livin’ the Dream.” He invested it with immense energy and passion. Then came the even more intense, relentlessly driving “Heartbeat.” He closed with his torrid love ballad “Makin’ Me Look Good Again,” and was rewarded with a standing ovation.
“You won’t see a better act tonight,” I advised Miss Mary. At first, I was perplexed that this powerhouse performer was the opener. But you know what? At New Faces, this is actually the slot you want. While Drake sang, the place was packed to capacity with 1,300 still reasonably sober and super influential radio people. By the time Maren closed the show a couple of hours later, the ballroom was almost half empty.
Second up was William Michael Morgan. This tall, handsome youngster is an “old-school” vocalist. His stone-country delivery of the mellow, mid-tempo “Vinyl” suited the lyric’s old-fashioned values perfectly. The down-home, sincere, working-class salute “Beer Drinker” was even better.
“I Know Who He Is” was a heart-tugging, inspirational ballad. He introduced his lilting new single, “Missing,” a two-step, then closed with his No. 1 hit, the swirling, atmospheric and ultra romantic “I Met a Girl.” “Thank you: God bless country music!” stated William in closing.
The 23 year-old Mississippi native had a somewhat awkward, gangly stage presence, like a country boy plucked from a farm field and put into the spotlight. It made him seem warmly charming and endearing.
By contrast, Granger Smith is the ultimate showboating extrovert. The Texan opened with the romping “If the Boot Fits.” Then, his cover of Tom Petty’s “Free Falling” segued into the churning, extended jam of “Backroad Song,” which was packed with personality.
Granger Smith’s Earl Dibbles, Jr. Photo: CRS Official/Twitter
Granger next changed into the costume of his redneck alter ego “Earl Dibble Jr.” and reemerged waving an oversized “Yee Yee” flag. Flaunting his full-bore, white-trash persona in overalls, he held up a guitar reading “Dip” on its back, offered a two-handed, beer-spray celebratory drink and stripped to his waist while performing “Country Boy Love.” The crowd gave him a standing ovation.
Also sublimely country was Jon Pardi. He was boyishly bopping on “Cowboy Hat” and appropriately drawling on “She Ain’t In It.” By this time, a large mosh pit had gathered for him in front of the stage. Like several of those who preceded him, he shook hands with those closest to him.
The California native had a sunny, optimistic quality throughout his set. He closed with back-to-back “boot” songs. His rolling, swaying big hit “Head Over Boots” was followed by the choppy, rhythmic “Dirt on My Boots.”
Petite, vivacious Maren Morris closed the show. She opened with her rumbling stomper “80s Mercedes,” punctuated by her handclaps and ad-libbed shouts. One of the big highlights of her set was her new single, a yearning, elegant, tuneful and super compelling ballad titled “I Could Use a Love Song.”
“Thank you for your support of new music and new artists,” said the singer-songwriter. “We couldn’t do it without you.”
The Texas native offered her hugely popular, Grammy-winning rouser “My Church” to great applause. Her closing “party song” was the wry, tongue-in-cheek and high-spirited “Rich.” The crowd gave the reigning CMA New Artist of the Year winner the evening’s final standing ovation.
Abetting the performances, the ACM’s Lisa Lee and Ben Vaughn presented that organization’s radio award winners, and Charlie Morgan, Lon Helton and Chuck Aly announced their Country Aircheck radio winners. There was also a salute to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, a number of amusing video interludes and an “In Memoriam” segment honoring those in the country industry who passed away during the past year.
William Michael Morgan. Photo: CRS Official/Twitter
John Esposito, John Briggs, Mike Dungan, Mike Sistad, Rob Simbeck, Bobby Young, Tom Lord, Todd Cassetty, Preshus Tomes Harris, Autumn House Tallant, Travis Rice, Royce Risser, Rick Murray, R.J. Curtis, Paul Barnabee, Scott Hendricks, Daniel Hill, Maurice Miner, Phyllis Stark, Jim Catino, Ken Robold, Capucine Monk, Kos Weaver and Duane Clark were among those working the radio room.
In the past, the New Faces Show has helped to launch such stars as Alabama, Reba McEntire, George Strait, Vince Gill, Randy Travis, Faith Hill, Taylor Swift, Tim McGraw, Patty Loveless and Blake Shelton. More than 300 New Faces artists have been showcased to date. We added five more worthy names to that long list on Friday night.
CRS 2017: Toby Keith Does Things His Way
/by Jessica NicholsonToby Keith with Beverlee Brannigan and RJ Curtis during CRS 2017. Photo: CRS Official/Twitter
Show Dog Nashville artist Toby Keith helped close out the 2017 Country Radio Seminar on Friday (Feb. 24) with the panel “Toby Keith—My Way,” moderated by All Access Nashville’s RJ Curtis and Scripps/Wichita VP/GM Beverlee Brannigan.
BMI’s Leslie Roberts introduced Keith, whose songs have garnered 31 BMI Country Awards and 29 million performances. Keith was named BMI’s Country Songwriter of the Year in 2001, 2004 and 2006.
The panel was slated for the day of the annual New Faces of Country Music Show, and Keith recalled his own appearance as a new artist on the show back in 1994, a show that also included then-newcomers Tim McGraw and Faith Hill. From there, Keith discussed the importance of making his own career decision, trusting his own intuition, and the hit-making results that mindset has had on his career.
Brannigan asked about Keith’s decision to perform during President Donald Trump’s inauguration, despite opposition on social media.
“Every single time the White House– no matter who the President was — called, I’ve always said yes and went,” Keith said. “In the end, it just makes you stronger. If you don’t succumb to the pressure, it will make you stronger.”
Keith also discussed his strong support for the military and the USO, as well as the influence of his father, who died just months before Sept. 11, 2001.
Keith recalled how early in his career, he took direction from music executives, before he began calling the shots.
“If you look at those first photo shoots, they had me in suits,” Keith said. “Probably from 1993-1997, I put up with it.”
According to Keith, his label at the time wasn’t confident in his How Do You Like Me Now?! album, so he purchased the rights to the album from the label and took it to DreamWorks, which released the project in 1999. Keith advocated for the album’s title track as the first single, a bold choice for radio at the time.
“They were afraid of it, too,” Keith said, explaining that at the time radio favored female artists and more female-centric themes. “Male artists were getting pushed aside.”
When execs at DreamWorks decided to release “When Love Fades” as the lead single, Keith was less than enthusiastic. After “When Love Fades” stalled at No. 33 on the radio charts for three straight weeks, Keith took action.
“I just called up 30 radio guys and told them to go with, ‘How Do You Like Me Now?!,’” said Keith.
Keith summed his bold, independent approach to his career, saying, “I can live with it if I go down with my own ship. But if y’all are the captain, and my ship goes down, I can’t live with that.”
Keith would go on to launch the Show Dog Nashville label in 2005.
Bobby Karl Works BMLG’s CRS Luncheon
/by Bobby KarlPictured: Big Machine Label Group President & CEO Scott Borchetta, CRB Executive Director Bill Mayne with BMLG artists Maddie & Tae, A Thousand Horses, Trent Harmon, Midland, Carly Pearce, and Delta Rae. Photo: Rick Diamond [CLICK PHOTO TO ENLARGE]
That massive sound you heard around 2 p.m. on Friday afternoon coming from the Omni Hotel was the explosion of talent by the group Delta Rae.
The Durham, NC band rocked the Big Machine Label Group luncheon with a performance that was practically volcanic in intensity. The melodies were thrilling, the showmanship was charismatic and the singing was sensational.
The group dazzled the crowd with “I’ll Walk With You,” “No Peace and Quiet,” “I Move South” and more. Led by Elizabeth Hopkins and siblings Brittany, Eric and Ian Holljes, Delta Rae completely stole the show.
The luncheon began its lineup with A Thousand Horses. This six-piece ensemble, augmented with three dancing female backup vocalists, created a big, blazing, country-rock sound. Its set included the group’s debut hit “Smoke” and featured its new single “Preachin’ to the Choir.”
Newcomer Carly Pearce sang splendidly at her debut CRS performance. She introduced the mournful heartache ballad “Every Little Thing” as her debut single.
Maddie & Tae were pert, bright and sparkly on four new tunes that will be on their sophomore CD. “Doin’ Just Fine,” “Welcome to the Club,” “Blame it on the Tree” and “Somebody Will” were all winners.
The new trio Midland faced the crowd with three voices and three guitars. Among its tunes was its tuneful new single “Drinkin’ Problem.”
“Imagine them in your conference room very soon,” promised host Scott Borchetta to the radio folks in attendance. “We’re going to break this act together. So thank-you in advance for that.”
Scott was a regular on American Idol this past season, so he naturally brought out the show’s winner, Trent Harmon. The singer-songwriter was winning on “There Is a Girl” and drew a standing ovation for his bluesy and slow “Her.”
Then Delta Rae raised the rafters of the Omni ballroom.
Taking it all in were Craig Campbell, Sarah Skates, April Johnson, Rick Murray, R.J. Curtis, Brenden Oliver, Chuck Aly and Jeff Davis.
CRS: ‘MusicRow’ Panel Station KZPK Discusses Small Market Promotions
/by Troy_StephensonCRS hosted a session called Objects Are Larger Than They Appear: Small Markets That Do Big Things on Friday (Feb.24). The panel included Sony Music Nashville’s RG Jones along with Jesse Garcia and Erica Ogle from WBYT FM – Federated Media, South Bend, Indiana, and JJ Holiday and Stephanie Theisen from MusicRow CountryBreakout panel station KZPK – Leighton Broadcasting in St. Cloud, Minnesota. It was moderated by Tom Baldrica.
Garcia and Ogle from WBYT talked about their annual B100 Birthday bash and how they grew the event from a small crowd of around 5,000 to an annual event that welcomes close to 40,000 people each year.
KZPK hosts an annual CMA Awards party at a local venue that has become a big part of their yearly non-traditional revenue events. Listeners win tickets to watch the CMA awards live with food, drinks, and sponsor prizes available.
The common theme from this panel was that even small market radio stations with small budgets can put on big events that benefit the station, the listeners, and the client.
“It has taken many years of building this event to make it where it is today,” said Garcia about their B100 concert. “But we continue to learn and continue to make it bigger every year.”
KZPK’s Holiday recalled having to work hard to “sell” the event to sponsors when they first launched the event. “Now we have businesses calling us wanting to be a ticket stop and sponsor.”