DISClaimer: Mary Chapin Carpenter Shines On Latest Release

mary_chapin_carpenter

Mary Chapin Carpenter

This week’s column abounds with newcomers.

But it’s a veteran star, Mary Chapin Carpenter, who easily walks off with the Disc of the Day award.

As I said, there is no shortage of claimants for the DisCovery Award. All making their bows in DisClaimer are Dave Insley, The Darlins and our winning Two Way Crossing. I love the way the male and female voices interact in that band.

I’d have given the honor to Thomas Michael Riley, who is also new in this column. But according to his website, he has 10 albums and has already won plenty of honors in Texas. So that would seem weird. But I do like him a whole lot.

Two Way Crossing

Two Way Crossing

KENT BLAZY/Footsteps Of Dylan
Writer: Kent Blazy, Producer: Kent Blazy, Publisher: none listed; KB (track)
– Singer-songwriter Kent Blazy has two new collections. One, titled Me & Garth, contains his versions of songs that the superstar popularized (”Somewhere Other Than the Night,” “Ain’t Going Down,” “If Tomorrow Never Comes,” etc.). The other is called New Songs From Old Guitars. It includes this ode to a man who revolutionized American songwriting. Fittingly, it begins as an acoustic-guitar tune then shifts gears into a wailing rocker. Throughout, Blazy’s voice is urgent and passionate. Recommended.

DEREK HOKE/Southern Moon
Writers: Derek Hoke/Dexter Green; Producer: Dexter Green; Publishers: Slow Hoke/Made With Black Ink, BMI/ASCAP; Little Hollywood
– He has an attractive tenor voice, and the track has a bluesy, swampy vibe shot though with organ and harmonica passages. This is the title tune of a Nashville-recorded collection that is all self-penned. Hoke’s live shows are dandy, too.

THE DARLINS/Crush
Writers: Jude Toy/Erinn Bates; Producer: Buddy Hyatt; Publishers: none listed, BMI/SESAC; The Darlins (track)
– This female duo has a sensuous sound on this slow burning track. A resonator guitar weaves through the arrangement as they languidly drawl their desire in harmony. Feverish.

The Darlins

The Darlins

MARY CHAPIN CARPENTER/Map Of My Heart
Writer: Mary Chapin Carpenter; Producer: Dave Cobb; Publishers: Why Walk, ASCAP; Lambent Light
-I love the brisk, crisp texture of this lightly rocking performance. Carpenter sounds like “the Everly Sisters” as the rhythm section throbs relentlessly and the electric guitar gooses the track with some deep twang. It goes without saying that her lyrics are totally evocative. Brilliant work. The forthcoming (May 6) album that contains this will be titled The Things That We Are Made Of. Get this now on her website for an advance taste.

TWO WAY CROSSING/Deja Vu
Writers: Jenny Marvin/Ryan Sorestad; Producers: Jay Tooke/Craig Wilson; Publishers: none listed; TWC (track)
– The title tune to this five-piece band’s six-song EP starts softly. Then everyone kicks in on harmonies and instruments, and it’s katie-bar-the-door. These kids have the goods. A celebration in sound.

ZAC BROWN/Grandma’s Garden
Writers: Skip Ewing/Donny Kees; Producer: Dave Cobb; Publishers: Sony-ATV Acuff Rose/Write On, BMI; Elektra (track)
– Producer Dave Cobb was inspired at his grandmother’s funeral in Georgia to craft a concept album called Southern Family. It boasts a bevy of talent including Jamey Johnson, Morgane & Chris Stapleton, Miranda Lambert, Brandy Clark and Jason Isbell. Along with John Paul White’s performance of “Simple Song,” Brown’s track is a centerpiece, since it directly addresses lessons passed through the generations. Lee Ann Womack supplies a lovely harmony vocal. Sweet and touching. The whole album is a gem.

Dave Insley

Dave Insley

DAVE INSLEY/Just The Way That I Am
Writers: Dave Insley; Producer: Dave Insley; Publisher: none listed; Dir (track)
– The rootsy, ragged title tune of Insley’s Austin album twangs in all the right places. He’s not the world’s strongest singer, but there’s sincerity in every note. Guests on the album include Kelly Willis, Redd Volkaert and Dale Watson. If you’re headed for the Texas capital, you’ll find Insley and his Careless Smokers holding forth at The White Horse every Saturday night.

DARWIN MACON/This Ain’t The Love
Writers: Darwin Macon/Brad Ward; Producer: none listed; Publisher: Lil Red Caboose, BMI; DM
– The tempo is so sluggish that it’s the aural equivalent of walking through molasses.

TED RUSSELL KAMP/Life On The River
Writers: Ted Russell Kamp/Kirsten Proffit; Producer: Ted Russell Kamp; Publishers: Steady Teddy, ASCAP/BMI; Pomo (track)
– Bass player Kamp has worked as a sideman for everyone from Shooter Jennings to Wilson Phillips. But his self-penned albums are gradually bringing him the solo spotlight he deserves. His baritone vocal on this lead-off track of his CD Flying Solo is wonderfully resonant. As a songwriter, he knows just where to put the hooks. You recording artists out there should start plundering his songs pronto.

THOMAS MICHAEL RILEY/Ten Toes Up
Writers: Thomas Michael Riley; Producer: none listed; Publishers: Thomas Michael, BMI; TMR
– It’s a lively country rocker with an electric guitar answering each of his wry vocal lines. I’m completely smitten with this. Send me more, more, more of his true-Texas music.

Thomas Michael Riley

Thomas Michael Riley

Peter Frampton, Neil Portnow, Mike Curb To Attend Grammy Museum Gallery Nashville Opening

Pictured (L-R): Peter Frampton, Neil Portnow, Mike Curb

Pictured (L-R): Peter Frampton, Neil Portnow, Mike Curb

Musicians Hall of Fame inductee Peter Frampton, President/CEO of The Recording Academy Neil Portnow, and Chairman and Founder of Curb Records Mike Curb will be in Nashville for the ribbon-cutting ceremony for the grand opening of the Grammy Museum Gallery™ at Musicians Hall of Fame on Tuesday, March 29, 2016 at 1 p.m.

Other guests will include Nashville Mayor Megan Barry and Bob Santelli, Executive Director of the GRAMMY Museum® at L.A. LIVE.

The GRAMMY Museum Gallery at Musicians Hall of Fame is an interactive music space that allows guests the opportunity to explore the history of the GRAMMY Awards, and offers visitors the experience of performing onstage and interacting with every aspect of the recording process.

“Our collection of iconic musical instruments that have been used in the studio and live by some of the greatest musicians in the world, coupled with the GRAMMY Museum Gallery’s state-of-the-art, interactive and educational booths, will be a great experience for all visitors to Music City,” said Joe Chambers, Founder/Executive Director of the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum.

Exclusive: Nashville’s Sierra Hull Unites Singing, Songwriting, Mandolin On New Album

Pictured (L-R): Craig Shelburne, Troy Stephenson, Justin Moses, Sierra Hull, Ethan jodziewicz, Sherod Robertson, Jessica Nicholson

Pictured (L-R): Craig Shelburne, Troy Stephenson, Justin Moses, Sierra Hull, Ethan Jodziewicz, Sherod Robertson, Jessica Nicholson

Sierra Hull grew up as a bluegrass prodigy from rural Tennessee, and now she’s a Nashville resident with a record deal, a high-profile producer, and a brand new album that’s spent multiple weeks at No. 1 on Billboard’s bluegrass albums chart.

Produced by Grammy-winning banjo player Béla Fleck, Weighted Mind is Hull’s first release in five years. Just prior to issuing the project on Nashville-based Rounder Records on January 29, she threw a local record release party at City Winery. After several weeks on tour this winter, she dropped by MusicRow on a rare day off to perform three tracks from the album.

“The whole album is centered around the idea of mandolin and voice, so that’s what Béla and I first started working on,” she said. “We took some of these songs that I had written and just started with mandolin and voice. We were trying to make it as much about the lyric and the song as possible, and from there, sprinkling in a little bit of harmony, bass, and banjo.”

Sierra Hull, Weighted MindFleck plays banjo on the record, but in performance, Hull often performs with banjo player-singer Justin Moses. Ethan Jodziewicz contributes bass on tour and on the record. Alison Krauss, Rhiannon Giddens, and Abigail Washburn all lend to their vocals to the album, which was recorded at Sanctuary Studios in Nashville.

Although she possesses a sweet soprano herself, Hull’s original material leans toward the sadder side. She learned the only cover song on the album, “Queen of Hearts,” from an old Joan Baez record, then modernized it with one of her own instrumental compositions, “Royal Tea.”

Asked if she’s always been attracted to tragic songs, Hull laughed and replied, “I have in a way. I grew up playing bluegrass music [where] all the melodies are really happy but the lyrics are tragic anyway. So, I think I just stuck with the tragic lyrics, but made my music tragic too.”

After a laugh, she added, “This whole project is filled with songs that I wrote and a lot of them are very personal. It feels like my most vulnerable album so far, from a lyrical standpoint. But I tend to write more when I’m in that place, than when I do when I’m my generally happy self.”

A native of Byrdstown, Tennessee, Hull moved to Nashville five or six years ago, after completing a two-year program at Berklee School of Music in Boston. Although she’s an accomplished mandolin player, another instrument first attracted her attention.

 Pictured (L-R) Justin Moses, Sierra Hull, Ethan Jodziewicz

Pictured (L-R): Justin Moses, Sierra Hull, Ethan Jodziewicz

“You know, I originally wanted to play fiddle,” she recalled. “When I was 8 years old, I decided I wanted to get an instrument. My dad was learning to play a mandolin a little bit at that time so I definitely was around the mandolin. I had a great uncle on my mom’s side of the family and he lived just up the road, and he played mandolin and fiddle too. But for whatever reason, I thought, ‘Maybe I’ll play the fiddle.’ I got one for Christmas and it was full-size. It was just too big for how old I was at that point. “

Since she could barely hold the instrument, let alone play it, she said her father offered to show her some tunes on the mandolin, to cheer her up. Rather than sulking, she immediately clicked with the mandolin and she’s never looked back.

“I think that was to save my disappointment but for whatever reason I just fell in love with the mandolin and kept at it,” she said. “I started going to local festivals, and from there just fell in love with it, and the community of all of the musicians I was meeting, and didn’t want to do anything else.”

Pictured (L-R): Justin Moses, Sierra Hull, Ethan Jodziewicz

Pictured (L-R): Justin Moses, Sierra Hull, Ethan Jodziewicz

Cyndi Lauper To Launch 27-City Tour At Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium

Cyndi Lauper

Cyndi Lauper

Cyndi Lauper will bring her musical Detour to Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium on May 9, when she launches her 27-city trek across the United States and Europe. Lauper’s country album Detour, which releases May 6, includes her renditions of several classic tunes from the 40s, 50s, and 60s. Detour features guest appearances from Vince Gill, Emmylou Harris, Alison Krauss, and Willie Nelson. Lauper recorded the album in Nashville with many of the city’s top session players.

“There’s something so very magical about the Ryman and all the rich history there. Just to think it’s the same stage where Wanda Jackson and Patsy Cline performed so long ago and here I am singing songs they made famous on this record – it’s such an honor,” Lauper said.

Lauper recently visited MusicRow to offer a preview of her album.

CYNDI LAUPER DETOUR TOUR:
*denotes shows with Boy George

May 9-Ryman Auditorium – Nashville, Tenn.
May 11-Palace Theatre – Louisville, Ky.
May 13-Carnegie Music Hall Homestead – Pittsburgh, Pa.
May 14-Michigan Theater – Ann Arbor, Mich.
May 16-Chicago Theatre – Chicago, Ill.
May 17-Hard Rock Live – Cleveland, Ohio
May 20-Mohegan Sun – Uncasville, Conn.*
May 21-Wang Center – Boston, Mass.*
May 25-Beacon Theatre – New York, N.Y.*
May 28-Sands Bethlehem Events Center – Bethlehem, Pa.*
May 29-Borgata – Atlantic City, N.J.*
Jun 01-Wolf Trap Filene Center – Vienna, Va.*
Jun 02-Charleston Music Hall – Charleston, S.C.
Jun 04-Duke Energy Center for the Performing Arts – Raleigh, N.C.
Jun 05-Atlanta Symphony Hall – Atlanta, Ga.
Jun 08-Ruth Eckerd Hall – Clearwater, Fla.
Jun 09-Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts – Orlando, Fla.
Jun 11-Mizner Park Amphitheatre – Boca Raton, Fla.
Jun 12-St. Augustine Amphitheater – St. Augustine, Fla.
Jun 22-Symphony Hall – Birmingham, United Kingdom
Jun 23-Royal Concert Hall – Glasgow, United Kingdom
Jun 25-Newcastle City Hall – Newcastle, United Kingdom
Jun 30-Eventim Apollo, Hammersmith – London, United Kingdom
Jul 03-Jazz Fest Wien – Vienna, Austria
Jul 06-Parco Della Musica Auditorium Cavea – Rome, Italy
Jul 07-GRU Village – Torino, Italy
Jul 11-Grand Rex – Paris, France

In Pictures: SESAC @ SXSW

SESAC’s John Sweeney (second from left) and Jamie Dominguez (second from right) hang out with members of affiliated band, The Slow Show.

SESAC’s John Sweeney (second from left) and Jamie Dominguez (second from right) hang out with members of affiliated band, The Slow Show.

SESAC showcased several performers during its SXSW 2016 Showcase held at Lamberts Downtown BBQ in Austin. The eclectic event boasted a lineup that included Axel Flóvent, John Grvy, Barns Courtney, The Slow Show, Hunny and Tesla Boy to a packed house.

SESAC also hosted the annual “Green Eggs & Band” Brunch during the SXSW festivities at Austin’s Driskill Hotel. The event drew a gathering of SESAC-affiliated artists, songwriters and publishers along with a plethora of journalists and music supervisors.

SESAC executives were also on hand to participate in six panels throughout the week including the “MRO: What Are They?” panel which offered details on how music rights organizations work and the benefits they offer songwriters, composers and publishers in today’s multi-format landscape.

SESAC’s Trevor Gale, James Leach, Ellen Truley and Liz Cost visit with funk music legend George Clinton before he hit the stage for a three hour show.

SESAC’s Trevor Gale, James Leach, Ellen Truley and Liz Cost visit with funk music legend George Clinton before he hit the stage for a three hour show.

Pictured (L-R): John Beiter, Shackelford Bowen MicKinley & Norton LLP; John Josephson, SESAC; Michael Simon, HFA; Nigel Elderton, Peer Music

Pictured (L-R): John Beiter, Shackelford Bowen MicKinley & Norton LLP; John Josephson, SESAC; Michael Simon, HFA; Nigel Elderton, Peer Music

Artist/songwriter Anthony Skinner visits with SESAC’s Tim Fink.

Artist/songwriter Anthony Skinner visits with SESAC’s Tim Fink.

Pictured (L-R): SESAC’s Erin Collins, John Sweeney and Trevor Gale, artist/songwriter Barns Courtney and SESAC’s Jamie Dominguez.

Pictured (L-R): SESAC’s Erin Collins, John Sweeney and Trevor Gale, artist/songwriter Barns Courtney and SESAC’s Jamie Dominguez.

Jon Pardi’s Sophomore Album, ‘California Sunrise’, Releases June 17

jon pardi album

Capitol Records Nashville’s Jon Pardi will release his sophomore album, California Sunrise, on June 17. The album’s lead single, “Head Over Boots,” is currently climbing country radio’s Top 20 and gaining Top 15 in country track sales. The song reached No. 3 on MusicRow’s CountryBreakout Chart last week.

“I always want to have the traditional country soul while meeting the new standards of country music,” says Pardi. “As a songwriter, we’re looking for a good story and we’re always looking to push the limits. I love having those lyrics that at first make you think it’s about one thing, but it’s really about something so much more.”

Each song on the album was recorded with a full band. “I’m a big fan of a live band recording and it was really important for me to get that sound on my record,” says Pardi. “The heart of this record comes across with a live band. We used seven guys – one band, and there’s something special about that.”

California Sunrise Track Listing
1. Out Of Style
2. Cowboy Hat
3. Head Over Boots
4. Night Shift
5. Can’t Turn You Down
6. Dirt On My Boots
7. She Ain’t In It
8. All Time High
9. Heartache On The Dance Floor
10. Paycheck
11. LuckyTonight
12. California Sunrise

CMA Music Festival Saturday Night Stadium Lineup Announced

2016-CMAMusicFestival-Logo-Badge-4CThe Country Music Association has announced the lineup for the Saturday evening show at Nashville’s Nissan Stadium during the upcoming CMA Music Festival, slated for June 9-12.

Florida Georgia Line
, Blake Shelton, Cole Swindell, and Chris Young will take the stage Saturday, June 11.

The music festival features several free stages spread throughout Lower Broadway, as well as nightly concerts at Nissan Stadium. Tickets to the nightly shows sold out before any of the performers were announced.

CMA is revealing the lineup for each night of the Nissan Stadium shows on a weekly basis. Previously announced stadium performers during CMA Music Festival include Jason Aldean, Dierks Bentley, Eric Church, Sam Hunt, Miranda Lambert, Rascal Flatts, Chris Stapleton, Carrie Underwood, and Hank Williams, Jr. who will perform during the festival’s first two nights.

RIAA Releases 2015 Year-End Report, Streaming Grows

2015 Recorded Music Revenues for US. Source: RIAA

RIAA’s 2015 year-end Music Sales & Shipments Report shows total retail income from recorded music in the U.S. increasing 0.9 percent to $7.02 billion ($4.95 billion wholesale).

Streaming—led by paid subscription models, which grew 40 percent in paid subscribers—clocked in at $2.4 billion, slightly outperforming physical and download sales to become the largest revenue-generator for the U.S. recording industry.

Streaming, permanent downloads and physical sales are “the most balanced revenue mix in recent history, with just about 1/3 of revenues coming from each of the major platform,” cites Joshua Friedlander, RIAA’s Sr. VP of Strategic Data Analysis.

Thus, permanently downloaded albums declined 7 percent from the previous year (5 percent decline in dollar value), while single-track downloads declined 15 percent (13 percent decline in dollar value).

The report continues, noting SoundExchange distributions grew 4 percent to $803 million, and on-demand ad-supported streaming grew 31 percent year-over-year to $385 million. Sync royalties grew 7 percent to $203 million.

Total value of shipments in physical formats was $2.0 billion, down 10 percent versus the prior year. Vinyl LPs were up 32 percent by value, and at $416 million were at their
highest level since 1988. Synchronization royalties were $203 million, up 7 percent versus the prior year.

US Streaming Music Revenues (2013-15). Source: RIAA

RIAA Chairman & CEO Cary Sherman offered his take:

The music industry is now a digital business, deriving more than 70% of its revenues from a wide array of digital platforms and formats. The share of revenues from those digital formats surpasses that of any other creative industry.

Another headline? In 2015, digital music subscription services reached new all-time highs, generating more than $1 billion in revenues for the first time, and averaging nearly 11 million paid subscriptions for the year. Heading into 2016, the number of subscriptions swelled even higher — more than 13 million by the end of December — holding great promise for this year.

While today’s data is encouraging, the challenges facing us are significant. The consumption of music is skyrocketing, but revenues for creators have not kept pace. In 2015, fans listened to hundreds of billions of audio and video music streams through on-demand ad-supported digital services like YouTube, but revenues from such services have been meager — far less than other kinds of music services.

Need further proof that some fundamental market distortions are at play? Last year, 17 million vinyl albums, a legacy format enjoying a bit of a resurgence, generated more revenues than billions and billions of on-demand free streams: $416 million compared to $385 million for on-demand free streams.

I’m confident that music’s future is bright. The popularity of music is greater than ever. Like never before, it drives our culture and commerce. It is the throbbing heartbeat of social media and it is a must-have ingredient of any major technology platform. But reforms are necessary to level the playing field and ensure that the entire music community derives the full and fair value of our work.

ACM Award Winners Revealed In New Artist Categories

2015_acm_award_logo_tunein_cmyk_type_041415Kelsea Ballerini, Chris Stapleton and Old Dominion have been named Academy of Country Music (ACM) New Female Artist of the Year, New Male Artist of the Year and New Duo/Group of the Year, respectively.

The newcomer categories for the 51st annual awards were previously fan voted and have now been incorporated into the professional membership voting process.

These awards mark the first-ever ACM Award wins for Ballerini, Stapleton and Old Dominion. Additionally, Ballerini is also nominated for Female Vocalist of the Year, Stapleton leads the ACM nominations with six additional nods, including Album of the Year and Male Vocalist of the Year, and Old Dominion received a nomination for Vocal Group of the Year.

Co-hosted by Luke Bryan and Dierks Bentley, the ACM Awards will broadcast live from MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Sunday, April 3 at 8:00 p.m. live ET/delayed PT on CBS.

Artist Updates: Kelsea Ballerini, LOCASH, Dolly Parton

Kelsea Ballerini Added To CMA Music Festival

Screen Shot 2016-03-22 at 5.29.35 PMKelsea Ballerini has been added to the opening night lineup at Nissan Stadium for the 2016 CMA Music Festival in Nashville, which will run June 9-12.

She joins previously announced artists for the Thursday night lineup that already includes performances from Jason Aldean, Dierks Bentley, Miranda Lambert and Rascal Flatts.

 

LOCASH’s Chris Lucas Welcomes Second Child

Photo: Chris Lucas

Photo: Chris Lucas

LOCASH’s Chris Lucas and his wife, Kaitlyn, welcomed a baby girl at the Williamson Medical Center in Franklin, Tennessee, on Monday, March 21, according to US Weekly.

Remi McKenna Lucas arrived at 9:21 p.m., weighing in at 6 lbs, 10 oz, and 19 inches long. Remi joins older brother Caden, 5.

 

Dolly Parton Reveals Songs For Upcoming Katy Perry ACM Awards Duet

Dolly Parton

Dolly Parton

Dolly Parton recently revealed to Rolling Stone that the upcoming Parton/Katy Perry duet at the 51st ACM Awards will include the Parton classics “Coat Of Many Colors” and “Jolene.”

“We were going to do ‘Coat of Many Colors’ together as a duet and then she got the big idea, why don’t we sing ‘Jolene’ together because she loves that song and since it’s going to be one of the movies,” explains Parton. “I go, yeah, why not? So I’m going to try to combine the ‘Coat of Many Colors’ and ‘Jolene’ to make it like a really even more special moment to perform with her.”

Parton is gearing up for a busy 2016, with the release of the CD Pure & Simple, and an upcoming United States tour.

The ACM Awards will air live from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas April 3 at 8 p.m. ET on CBS.