
Pictured (L-R): Miranda Lambert, Reba, and Kelly Clarkson. Photo: ACCA/Getty
Jason Aldean took home the evening’s biggest prize, Artist of the Year, last night (Dec. 15) during the inaugural American Country Countdown Awards, which aired live on FOX. The honor was sweet for the Georgia native, who told the Nashville audience that “never in a million years” did he dream he would make a living performing for fans in stadiums across the country and hearing his songs on country radio. The win was a full-circle moment for Aldean, who recalled listening to the
American Country Countdown radio show each weekend as a child.
“The American Country Countdown was the one avenue I had in Nashville to keep up with what was going on,” he said. “Thank you for allowing me to have a career doing something I truly, truly love.”

Lady Antebellum perform during the American Country Countdown Awards. Photo: ACCA/Getty
Luke Bryan and the evening’s hosts
Florida Georgia Line earned the most trophies during the awards show, with three apiece. Bryan took home Male Vocalist of the Year honors, while Florida Georgia Line was honored as Group/Duo of the Year. Bryan and FGL’s collaboration “This Is How We Roll” earned trophies for Collaboration of the Year and Digital Song of the Year.
“The crazy thing is Tyler and I started this thing in my Chevy Tahoe with a dream and prayer of playing country music and all of this is thanks to you guys,” FGL member Brian Kelley said.
After winning Album of the Year for his project
The Outsiders,
Eric Church gave one of the most endearing speeches of the evening. “The coolest thing we get to do is play our songs live for the fans,” Church said. “There’s a lot of people who think albums are a thing of the past … but albums matter more now than ever.” He also treated the crowd to current single “Talladega.”

Eric Church accepts Album of the Year honors for ‘The Outsiders.’ Photo: ACCA/Getty
American Country Countdown radio host and entertainer
Kix Brooks was on hand to toast friend and fellow performer
Reba with the American Country Countdown Awards’ Nash Icon award, honoring more than four decades of success in country music. Brooks took the time to remind the audience of Reba’s career highlights, including selling more than 56 million albums and notching 35 No. 1 songs. A multi-faceted entertainer, Reba has had success in two television sitcoms and on Broadway, where she starred in
Annie Get Your Gun.
ACCA Female Vocalist of the Year winner
Miranda Lambert and
Kelly Clarkson performed a tribute to Reba, including the McEntire hits “How Blue,” “Take It Back,” and “Fancy.” The Country Music Hall of Fame member joined Clarkson and Lambert on “Fancy,” to the delight of artists watching in the audience. The cameras caught Bryan,
Sara Evans and
Carrie Underwood singing along.
“It sure means the world to be thought of as a valued member of our country music family,” McEntire said in accepting the Nash Icon honor. “In music as it is in life, it’s all about connecting with people and I feel very blessed to have made such a deep and lasting connection with all of you.”
Kenny Chesney was also the recipient of a special honor, the Groundbreaker Award, for his success in touring and music. After performing current single, “Til It’s Gone,” Chesney humbly accepted saying, “God gave me an incredible gift and that gift was he put a song in my heart and that song has taken me to places that I never dreamed it would.”
Brett Eldredge and
Kip Moore also heard their names called as winners during the two-hour event. Eldredge’s ear-candy single “Beat of the Music” earned Song of the Year, while Moore was named Breakthrough Artist of the Year.

Brett Eldredge performs during the American Country Countdown awards. Photo: ACCA/Getty
The show launched with Underwood performing a medley of some of her biggest hits, in promotion of
Carrie Underwood: Greatest Hits: Decade #1. The performance was fitting, given that Underwood got her start on another FOX program,
American Idol.
ACCA finalists are determined by statistics and radio airplay charts from Nov. 1, 2013 through Oct. 31, 2014. Finalists for Album of the Year are based on album sales information from Soundscan, while finalists for Artist of the Year are based on a combination of Mediabase airplay, digital data from Big Champagne and tour information from
Pollstar. The other award categories are based on the largest audience reach according to Mediabase. The only fan-voted category is Breakthrough Artist of the Year.
American Country Countdown Awards Winners:
Winners
bolded and in
red.
ARTIST OF THE YEAR
- Jason Aldean
- Luke Bryan
- Florida Georgia Line
- Lady Antebellum
- Blake Shelton
MALE VOCALIST OF THE YEAR
- Jason Aldean
- Dierks Bentley
- Luke Bryan
- Randy Houser
- Blake Shelton
FEMALE VOCALIST OF THE YEAR
- Danielle Bradbery
- Miranda Lambert
- Cassadee Pope
- Taylor Swift
- Carrie Underwood
GROUP/DUO OF THE YEAR
- The Band Perry
- Eli Young Band
- Florida Georgia Line
- Lady Antebellum
- Zac Brown Band
SONG OF THE YEAR
- “When She Says Baby” – Jason Aldean
- “Beat Of The Music” – Brett Eldredge
- “Lettin’ The Night Roll” – Justin Moore
- “Drink To That All Night” – Jerrod Niemann
- “Chillin’ It” – Cole Swindell
COLLABORATION OF THE YEAR
- “This Is How We Roll” – Florida Georgia Line featuring Luke Bryan
- “Small Town Throwdown” – Brantley Gilbert featuring Justin Moore and Thomas Rhett
- “Meanwhile Back At Mama’s” – Tim McGraw featuring Faith Hill
- “My Eyes” – Blake Shelton featuring Gwen Sebastian
- “We Were Us” – Keith Urban and Miranda Lambert
ALBUM OF THE YEAR
- “Crash My Party” – Luke Bryan
- “The Outsiders” – Eric Church
- “Here’s To The Good Times” – Florida Georgia Line
- “Just As I Am” – Brantley Gilbert
- “Platinum” – Miranda Lambert
DIGITAL SONG OF THE YEAR
- “Burnin’ It Down” – Jason Aldean
- “Drink A Beer” – Luke Bryan
- “Play It Again” – Luke Bryan
- “Dirt” – Florida Georgia Line
- “This Is How We Roll” – Florida Georgia Line featuring Luke Bryan
BREAKTHROUGH ARTIST OF THE YEAR PRESENTED BY SAMSUNG GALAXY®
(Fan-voted Award via Twitter)
- Brett Eldredge
- Tyler Farr
- Kip Moore
- Thomas Rhett
- Cole Swindell
In Pictures: American Country Countdown Awards
/by Kelsey_GradyReba McEntire with her Nash Icon honor. Photo: Bev Moser/Moments By Moser
Kix Brooks. Photo: Bev Moser/Moments By Moser
Luke Bryan rejoices in his win at the ACCAs. Photo: Bev Moser/Moments By Moser
Miranda Lambert. Photo: Bev Moser/Moments By Moser
Jason Aldean. Photo: Bev Moser/Moments By Moser
Carrie Underwood. Photo: Bev Moser/Moments By Moser
Kip Moore. Photo: Bev Moser/Moments By Moser
Lady Antebellum. Photo: Bev Moser/Moments By Moser
Brett Eldredge. Photo: Bev Moser, Moments By Moser
Cole Swindell. Photo: Bev Moser, Moments By Moser
CLICK HERE to see full list of winners.
Visitation Today For Late Nashville Vocal Legend Millie Kirkham
/by Robert K OermannIn 2012 the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum honored Millie Kirkham in its quarterly series Nashville Cats: A Celebration of Music City Musicians. Pictured here, Kirkham entertained the audience with tales from her recording sessions with George Jones, Roy Orbison, Elvis Presley, Leon Russell and many others. Photo: Donn Jones
The ethereal soprano vocal backing Elvis Presley on the classic “Blue Christmas” is being heard throughout the world this season.
The woman who owned that voice died Sunday in Nashville. Millie Kirkham, the legendary Music Row backup vocalist, passed away in her hometown at age 91.
Kirkham began her career on Nashville radio in 1946 by singing on various programs on WSM. In 1954, she began to concentrate on recording-studio work. She was at times a member of the Anita Kerr Singers as well as an adjunct member of The Jordanaires. Between them, those two vocal groups backed virtually every singer who ever recorded in Nashville in the 1950s, ‘60s, ‘70s and 1980s.
Her soaring soprano voice embellished such iconic hits as George Jones’s “He Stopped Loving Her Today,” Ferlin Husky’s “Gone,” Bobby Vinton’s “Blue Velvet,” Brenda Lee’s “I’m Sorry” and Kris Kristofferson’s “Why Me,” in addition to “Blue Christmas” and many other Presley hits.
She can be heard on the recordings of at least 30 members of the Country Music Hall of Fame. Patsy Cline, Johnny Cash, Charley Pride, Bobby Bare, Mac Wiseman, Hank Snow, Chet Atkins, Porter Wagoner, Connie Smith, Jim Reeves, Reba McEntire, Roger Miller, Willie Nelson, Tom T. Hall, Eddy Arnold, Tammy Wynette, Dolly Parton and Loretta Lynn are just a few of the greats whose records feature Kirkham’s vocal support.
Pop stars including Paul Anka, Little Richard, Bob Dylan, Perry Como, Gordon Lightfoot, Rosemary Clooney, Roy Orbison, Brook Benton, Andy Griffith, Carl Perkins, Duane Eddy and Leon Russell all released records containing Millie Kirkham vocal harmonies. So did Jerry Lee Lewis, Dottie West, Bobby Darin, Burl Ives and The Browns.
The widely beloved recording-session stalwart displayed her gracious good humor during a memorable “Nashville Cats” tribute event at the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2012.
Millie Kirkham was married to a fellow musician, drummer Doug Kirkham. He died in 1986.
She is survived by her daughter, Shelley Richardson (Walter), three grandsons, four great-grandchildren, sister Marilyn Ezell and numerous nieces and nephews.
A visitation will be held 3-7 p.m. today (Tuesday, Dec. 16) at Woodlawn Roesch-Patton Funeral Home. Millie Kirkham’s Celebration of Life Service will be held there at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 17, with a visitation held one hour prior.
Online Music Series "Skyville Live" to launch in January
/by Troy_StephensonSkyville Live will feature major national and international stars and up-and-coming artists from every genre of music. It will also allow people from around the world to communicate directly with the artists being featured in each unique streaming event.
“Skyville Live is one of those ideas that kind of grows itself, like the mountain stream that eventually becomes the Mississippi,” says Wally Wilson, the show’s creator and Executive Producer.”Luck and timing are essential in show biz, and it appears that Skyville Live has both.”
American Country Countdown Awards Winners [Updated]
/by Jessica NicholsonPictured (L-R): Miranda Lambert, Reba, and Kelly Clarkson. Photo: ACCA/Getty
Jason Aldean took home the evening’s biggest prize, Artist of the Year, last night (Dec. 15) during the inaugural American Country Countdown Awards, which aired live on FOX. The honor was sweet for the Georgia native, who told the Nashville audience that “never in a million years” did he dream he would make a living performing for fans in stadiums across the country and hearing his songs on country radio. The win was a full-circle moment for Aldean, who recalled listening to the American Country Countdown radio show each weekend as a child.
“The American Country Countdown was the one avenue I had in Nashville to keep up with what was going on,” he said. “Thank you for allowing me to have a career doing something I truly, truly love.”
Lady Antebellum perform during the American Country Countdown Awards. Photo: ACCA/Getty
Luke Bryan and the evening’s hosts Florida Georgia Line earned the most trophies during the awards show, with three apiece. Bryan took home Male Vocalist of the Year honors, while Florida Georgia Line was honored as Group/Duo of the Year. Bryan and FGL’s collaboration “This Is How We Roll” earned trophies for Collaboration of the Year and Digital Song of the Year.
“The crazy thing is Tyler and I started this thing in my Chevy Tahoe with a dream and prayer of playing country music and all of this is thanks to you guys,” FGL member Brian Kelley said.
After winning Album of the Year for his project The Outsiders, Eric Church gave one of the most endearing speeches of the evening. “The coolest thing we get to do is play our songs live for the fans,” Church said. “There’s a lot of people who think albums are a thing of the past … but albums matter more now than ever.” He also treated the crowd to current single “Talladega.”
Eric Church accepts Album of the Year honors for ‘The Outsiders.’ Photo: ACCA/Getty
American Country Countdown radio host and entertainer Kix Brooks was on hand to toast friend and fellow performer Reba with the American Country Countdown Awards’ Nash Icon award, honoring more than four decades of success in country music. Brooks took the time to remind the audience of Reba’s career highlights, including selling more than 56 million albums and notching 35 No. 1 songs. A multi-faceted entertainer, Reba has had success in two television sitcoms and on Broadway, where she starred in Annie Get Your Gun.
ACCA Female Vocalist of the Year winner Miranda Lambert and Kelly Clarkson performed a tribute to Reba, including the McEntire hits “How Blue,” “Take It Back,” and “Fancy.” The Country Music Hall of Fame member joined Clarkson and Lambert on “Fancy,” to the delight of artists watching in the audience. The cameras caught Bryan, Sara Evans and Carrie Underwood singing along.
“It sure means the world to be thought of as a valued member of our country music family,” McEntire said in accepting the Nash Icon honor. “In music as it is in life, it’s all about connecting with people and I feel very blessed to have made such a deep and lasting connection with all of you.”
Kenny Chesney was also the recipient of a special honor, the Groundbreaker Award, for his success in touring and music. After performing current single, “Til It’s Gone,” Chesney humbly accepted saying, “God gave me an incredible gift and that gift was he put a song in my heart and that song has taken me to places that I never dreamed it would.”
Brett Eldredge and Kip Moore also heard their names called as winners during the two-hour event. Eldredge’s ear-candy single “Beat of the Music” earned Song of the Year, while Moore was named Breakthrough Artist of the Year.
Brett Eldredge performs during the American Country Countdown awards. Photo: ACCA/Getty
The show launched with Underwood performing a medley of some of her biggest hits, in promotion of Carrie Underwood: Greatest Hits: Decade #1. The performance was fitting, given that Underwood got her start on another FOX program, American Idol.
ACCA finalists are determined by statistics and radio airplay charts from Nov. 1, 2013 through Oct. 31, 2014. Finalists for Album of the Year are based on album sales information from Soundscan, while finalists for Artist of the Year are based on a combination of Mediabase airplay, digital data from Big Champagne and tour information from Pollstar. The other award categories are based on the largest audience reach according to Mediabase. The only fan-voted category is Breakthrough Artist of the Year.
American Country Countdown Awards Winners:
Winners bolded and in red.
(Fan-voted Award via Twitter)
Little Big Town Announces Spring Tour Dates, New Radio Single
/by Kelsey_GradyTHE PAIN KILLER TOUR – SPRING 2015:
March 5 Savannah, Ga., Johnny Mercer Theatre
March 6 Birmingham, Ala., BJCC Concert Hall
March 8 Chattanooga, Tenn., Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Auditorium
March 12 Evansville, Ind., Aiken Theatre
March 13 Louisville, Ky., Louisville Palace Theater
March 14 Muncie, Ind., Emens Auditorium
March 19 Davenport, Ia., Adler Theatre
March 20 St. Louis, Fabulous Fox Theatre
March 27 Sioux City, Ia., Orpheum Theatre
March 28 Enid, Okla., Enid Event Center
Artist Updates: Dan+Shay, Jamie Grace, Nashville Artist Benefit Concert
/by Jessica NicholsonDan + Shay played an important role during a memorable moment for two fans during the last stop of Hunter Hayes‘ Tattoo (Your Name) Tour. A couple recently got engaged during a Dan+Shay meet and greet. A Dan+Shay superfan was proposed to by her boyfriend right as she was meeting the duo.

• • •
T.C. Brandon
The Nashville Palace will host a benefit concert for artist T.C. Brandon on Tuesday, Dec. 16. Artists taking part in the evening include Jan Howard, Jeannie Seely, Bruce Channel, Bekka Bramlett, Clinton Gregory, Tommy Barnes, Thom Bresh, Irlene Mandrell, Dianne Sherrill, Earl Clark, Tony Stampley, Trick Pony’s Keith Burns, Trent Tomlinson, Brad Martin, Jaynie Trudell, Troy Martin, and Trey Young.
The evening will also feature a silent auction and raffle of country music memorabilia, sports items, and more.
Direct donations are also accepted at US Bank, rt#064000059, acct#151208933375. An event Facebook page has been set up in support of the event.
Doors will open at 6 p.m. and admission is $10.
• • •
Jamie Grace will join The Rock & Worship Roadshow 2015 with MercyMe, Crowder, Matt Maher and Tedashii.
Almon Law Names McPike To Partner
/by Jessica NicholsonThe firm’s Senior Partner and founder is noted entertainment attorney, Orville Almon, Jr., who has practiced entertainment law for more than three decades.
McPike, a graduate of the University of New Hampshire School of Law, has been with the firm since its inception in 2011. His practice encompasses all areas of the entertainment industry, new media, intellectual property, and corporate business matters. McPike has been recognized as a Super Lawyers® Rising Star (Mid-South) and serves on the Executive Council of the Tennessee Bar Entertainment and Sports Law Section.
Nashville's NorthStar Studios For Sale
/by Jessica NicholsonThe 120,000-square-foot facility includes “teleport” capabilities, a fiber optic cable system, internet streaming capabilities and satellite transmission services, with domestic and international FCC licensure. The facility includes a 17,000-square-foot warehouse, parking for 700 vehicles, six loading docks, post-production suites, and executive/ management office space.
NorthStar Studios has provided studio production support for artists and entertainers including Faith Hill, Dolly Parton, The Gaithers, Carrie Underwood, Amy Grant and Vince Gill. The studio has also hosted media tours, commercials, infomercials, television shows, streamed events and educational series. Recent NorthStar clients include ABC/Disney, CNN, Fox News, MSNBC, BBC, E! Entertainment and Discovery Channel.
“NorthStar Studios is a world-class broadcast, technology and video production facility,” said Grant Barbre, president of NorthStar Studios. “It is rare to find this combination of resources under one roof. Studios, HD broadcast control rooms, post-production and edit suites, c-band and ku-band satellite dishes, and fiber and Internet streaming capabilities, along with redundant power support systems – all of those and a lot more are part of the NorthStar Studios campus.”
“The economic impact of this listing will be felt beyond Nashville,” said Nate Greene, executive vice president and co-founder of Colliers International. “This is a turnkey facility for a top-tier company in the health care, technology or entertainment industry. At 16 acres, it will also be attractive to developers. It has the potential to bring big change to our city and our region.”
A video tour is available below.
Musgraves Extends Tour Through Spring
/by Eric T. ParkerKacey Musgraves.
Kacey Musgraves will continue her fall tour, Same Tour Different Trailer into 2015, with a spring leg, kicking off on Feb. 12 in Norfolk, Va.
The upcoming trip will make its way to nine different cities throughout the east coast and Midwest, with John & Jacob continuing to open the show. The outing will be produced by AEG LIVE/The Messina Group.
Public on-sale will be available Friday, Dec. 19 at 10 a.m. (local time). Fans can visit kaceymusgraves.com for more information.
SAME TOUR DIFFERENT TRAILER – SPRING 2015
Feb. 12 – Norfolk, VA / The NorVa
Feb. 13 – Durham, NC / Carolina Theatre
Feb. 14 – Baltimore, MD / Ram’s Head Live!
Feb. 19 – Madison, WI / Orpheum Theater
Feb. 20 – Minneapolis, MN / State Theatre
Feb. 21 – Milwaukee, WI / Pabst Theater
Feb. 26 – Louisville, KY / Brown Theatre
Feb. 27 – Knoxville, TN / Tennessee Theatre
Feb. 28 – Richmond, VA / The National
Technology Brings Fans An Interactive Concert Experience
/by Jessica NicholsonHunter Hayes’ recent Tattoo Your Name Tour featured LED wristbands, used to create an interactive concert experience for fans.
Artists, managers, and show designers are continuously on the hunt to bring something fresh and unexpected to audiences with each new tour outing.
For his recent Tattoo (Your Name) Tour, Hunter Hayes and his team utilized new technology Ghostbands—patented LED wristbands that can be programmed to emit upward of 16 million colors, essentially making the audience an intrinsic segment of the show’s set design. Thanks to the work of Nashville based companies Glow Motion Technologies and Dev Digital, the wristbands receive signals from a core control module, and can communicate with each other, allowing for an array of show production effects. The possibilities for strobing, fading, color blocking, and even corporate branding are endless.
Mitch Ballard, DevDigital Founding Partner
Dev Digital founding partner Mitch Ballard, who moved to Nashville in 1992 and spent 15 years on the road with artists including BJ Thomas, Collin Raye, SHeDAISY, Kevin Sharp and others before founding Dev Digital, immediately saw the potential in the technology. “Coming from the music business background, I get the lighting experience and the fan experience. To actually be at a concert and see them light up, it’s a unique lighting experience that I haven’t seen in the past. I thought it was brilliant because now with the Internet and technology, the accessibility that you have as a fan wasn’t available before.”
The wristbands, which are given to fans as they enter the concert venue, are synched with an app fans download once they enter the venue. Attendees at each concert enter information—for Hayes’ tour that information included email address, age, gender, favorite color, mobile phone carrier, and social media profile information.
That data is then used to elevate fans from spectators to an interactive part of the performance. “When Hunter is out on stage he can say, ‘All the girls raise your hands,’ and the bands will light up on all the girls’ arms,” DevDigital founding partner Ballard explains. “Or the lighting director can light up the bands of everyone whose favorite color is blue, or red, for example. The fans become a visual piece of the show.”
The LED wristbands can also be used to shine the spotlight on certain groups of fans or attendees. “There’s a point in the show where Hunter has a remote stage and the fans around that stage are his fan club members,” Ballard says. “So when he goes out there, their bands have a special serial number, and they actually light up around that stage, so it’s a way of pinpointing groups.”
The more than 80,000 Glow Motion Ghostbands used throughout Hayes’ Tattoo (Your Name) Tour collected data from 65 percent of his fans that activated the interactive experience.
“We have someone who goes on the road to manage the setup and management of the bands,” Ballard says. “A cloud-based database handles data. An application runs on Windows, and we can see the data in real time. It’s interesting to sit with the lighting director at front of house. You start the software prior to the show, and see people scanning the bands and the data being collected in real time.” The software allows for new shows to be added to a tour in moments.
Hayes first learned about the technology from his show designer Paul Normandale and lighting designer Taylor Price. For Glow Motion Technologies’ Justin Roddick, the pairing with Hayes was a homecoming of sorts. Roddick and his Glow Motion partner Daniel Slezinger previously produced CMT’s Listen Up, and Hayes was one of the first artists featured in that program. “Hunter is a cutting edge artist who is not afraid to push technology to its limits,” Roddick says. “We are very lucky to launch Glow Motion touring with such a fantastic artist and person.”
Hayes isn’t the only artist to take advantage of the wearable technology. Lady Antebellum used the LED wristbands (sans data collection) to light up their performance of “Hey Bartender” during this year’s CMA Awards. Jon Bon Jovi, Cassadee Pope, Twenty One Pilots, Zac Brown Band, GEM, and others have used the technology in various ways during performances. Roddick says more concerts and tours are on the horizon, and has deals in the works with “two of the biggest pop music superstars in the world.”
“It goes back to the old rock days when you go to a KISS show,” Ballard sums. “What makes it fun is getting this side of the crowd yelling, and then that side yelling. Now you can light them up if you want. The possibilities are practically endless what you can do with these. This is just the tip of the iceberg.”
Watch below for a video with more information on Ghostbands LED wristbands.