Country Stars To Sing National Anthem During World Series

Trisha Yearwood, Little Big Town.

Trisha Yearwood, Little Big Town.


Trisha Yearwood and Little Big Town have been confirmed to sing the national anthem at the MLB World Series games one and three, respectively.
To air on Fox, Yearwood will perform tonight (October 21) in Kansas City, Mo. Between the Royals and the San Francisco Giants. Tune in prior to the game at 8:00p.m. ET to watch her performance.
As part of the upcoming TV schedule, in promotion of the new album Painkiller, the newest members of the Grand Ole Opry, Little Big Town, will perform in California prior to game three, at 4:57 p.m. PT on FOX.
Additionally, Phillip Phillips will perform prior to game two and Carlos Santana and his son Salvador will perform prior to game four.

New Books By Paul Williams, Glyn Johns and Shelia Shipley Biddy

paul williams book gratitudeBooks written by music industry figures Paul Williams, Glyn Johns and Shelia Shipley Biddy are being released this fall.

Award-winning songwriter and ASCAP President and Chairman Paul Williams teamed with TV and film writer Tracey Jackson to write Gratitude and Trust, which applies the principles of the recovery movement to people who are not addicts but need help with difficulties. 

glyn johns sound man bookProducer Glyn Johns penned Sound Man: A Life Recording Hits With The Rolling Stones, The Who, Led Zeppelin, The Eagles, Eric Clapton, The Faces… Included in Johns’ discography are classic albums Abbey Road and Led Zeppelin, and tracks “My Generation” and “Sympathy for the Devil.” In Sound Man, Johns opens up about his life and career in the studio.

shelia shipley biddy bookAs previously reported, Nashville industry veteran Shelia Shipley Biddy has released her self-published autobiography The Music In My Rearview Mirror: My 30 Years In Music & More. Biddy highlights her career experiences, and the hurdles she overcame as one of the first females to helm a major label.

 

Keith Urban Named Featured Speaker For CRS 2015

keith urban111

Keith Urban


Keith Urban has been announced as a featured speaker for the 2015 Country Radio Seminar. Keith Urban: Being Present, is slated for Friday, Feb. 27, 2015 at 3 p.m. during the annual convention.
“This will be a definitive ‘memorable moment’ for all of us this year: having this incredible talent address this most critical skill in today’s hectic professional business environment, with far reaching effect on one’s ability to communicate,” says CRS Executive Director, Bill Mayne. “Urban is one of the first artists to have literally broken down the separation that can exist even on the concert stage.  Not only has he been leaving the stage, to join his audiences for years, he was the first artist that I’ve ever seen, whose stage literally bled into the crowd, with no barrier of any kind – no doubt entirely by design.”
Mayne continues, “Keith is one of the most impressive and successful artists of our time. There’s no doubt that both the musician and the man have set the standard for the way any artist’s relationship should be with his or her fans. His ability to connect on a human level whether in person or through his music is unprecedented.  Radio air talent and programmers are unanimous when referring to Urban’s uncanny ability to connect with people.  It is genuine, heartfelt and authentic. Through the years we have all seen how Keith conducts himself during backstage visits both with fans and industry personnel.”

CMT Reveals Artists To Be Honored at Fifth Annual Awards

CMT-Artists-of-the-YearCMT will honor five artists during its 2014 CMT Artists Of The Year ceremony, airing live from Nashville, Tuesday December 2, on the cable network.
First time honoree Keith Urban joins previously feted artists for the fifth annual ceremony including Luke Bryan, Florida Georgia Line, Miranda Lambert and Jason Aldean, who has been awarded each year since 2010.
“Country music has never been bigger, and these five are its biggest stars of 2014,’’ said John Hamlin, SVP Music Events and Talent, CMT. “We do everything we can do to make sure this is the party of the year for them. And rightfully so. They’ve earned it.”
A release by the network notes: “Over the past 12 months, all five honorees have illustrated their impact in country music through radio airplay, album sales and millions of downloads. Additionally, these acts have sold out concert tours and, collectively, their videos have received hundreds of millions of streams, earning them the honor.”
The all-new, 90-minute broadcast will premiere with performances and remarks from all five honorees and their peers at 9:00 p.m. CT.
CMT Artists Of The Year is executive produced by Michael Dempsey. Hamlin and Margaret Comeaux serve as executive producers for CMT.

CRS 2015 New Faces of Country Music Dinner Sold Out

CRS-2015-LogoCRS Executive Director Bill Mayne has announced that dinner tickets for the New Faces of Country Music Show held during Country Radio Seminar 2015 are sold out.
According to Mayne, “All registrations sold prior to Oct. 20 will include full access to the New Faces Show and Dinner. Going forward, we will be allocating seat only entry on a first-come, first-served basis until that area is sold-out.”
The CRS 2015 Early Bird registration rate of $399 expires Oct. 31. Full registrations include access to all panels, educational events, networking opportunities, label luncheons, featured speakers, research presentations and much more. After the deadline, registration will increase to the regular rate of $499 per person.
Talent for the New Faces of Country Music Show will be announced in early December.
To register for the three-day event, please visit www.countryradioseminar.com.

Industry Pics: BMI, CMHoF, Big Machine Label Group, Capitol CMG

Broadcast Music, Inc. recently presented performances during the first weekend of the Austin City Limits (ACL) Music Festival. The festivities kicked off on Friday, Oct. 3. Among the performers featured on the BMI stage at Austin City Limits was Capitol Nashville artist Jon Pardi.

 BMI’s Mark Mason (far left), Penny Everhard (2nd from left) and Sama ntha Cox pause for a photo with Capitol recording artist Jon Pardi who performed on the BMI-sponsored stage at Austin City Limits Music Festival on October 3 in Austin, TX. Photo credit: Erika Goldring

Pictured (L-R): Mark Mason (BMI), Penny Everhard (BMI), Jon Pardi, and Samantha Cox (BMI). Photo: Erika Goldring

• • •

The Country Music Hall of Fame featured hit songwriter Billy Edd Wheeler as part of its quarterly songwriters series, Poets and Prophets, at the Country Music Hall of Fame on Saturday, Oct. 18. Hosted by Museum editor Michael Gray, the 90-minute program and interview was held at the CMH0F’s Ford Theater.

Pictured (l-r) are: Buzz Cason; Suzi Cochran, widow of 2014 Hall of Fame inductee Hank Cochran; Dana McVicker; Billy Edd Wheeler; James Talley; Steve Young; John D. Loudermilk; and the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s Michael Gray.   Photo by Rick Diamond

Pictured (L-R): Buzz Cason; Suzi Cochran, widow of 2014 Hall of Fame inductee Hank Cochran; Dana McVicker; Billy Edd Wheeler; James Talley; Steve Young; John D. Loudermilk; and the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s Michael Gray. Photo: Rick Diamond

 • • •

The Band Perry and BMLG’s Scott Borchetta were on hand recently for the Nashville screening of the Glen Campbell documentary Glen Campbell…I’ll Be Me. The Band Perry contributed a cover of Campbell’s signature “Gentle On My Mind” to the film’s soundtrack EP, released by Big Machine Records. After the screening, the trio performed four songs, including “Gentle On My Mind,” “Better Dig Two,” “If I Die Young,” and “DONE.”

The documentary opens in New York and Nashville on Friday, Oct. 24, and was awarded “Best International Documentary” at the Vancouver Film Festival.

Pictured (L-R): Neil Perry, James Keach, Kimberly Perry, Scott Borchetta, Trevor Albert, Reid Perry.

Pictured (L-R): Neil Perry, James Keach, Kimberly Perry, Scott Borchetta, Trevor Albert, Reid Perry.

• • •

Capitol CMG writers Ben Glover and David Garcia were feted for their four recent No. 1 singles, including “Overcomer” (Mandisa), “Every Good Thing” (The Afters), “His Kind of Love” (Group 1 Crew), and “Write Your Story” (Francesca Battistelli).

Pictured (L-R): Capitol CMG Publishing's Matt Ewald, John Andrade, Glover, Garcia, John Thompson & Stacey Willbur

Pictured (L-R): Capitol CMG Publishing’s Matt Ewald, John Andrade, Glover, Garcia, John Thompson & Stacey Willbur

RIAA Presents Gold and Platinum Honors

RIAANumerous Nashvillians earned honors from the RIAA in September, including:
Multi Platinum Single
“Get Your Shine On,” Florida Georgia Line
“This Is How We Roll,” Florida Georgia Line ft. Luke Bryan
“Better Dig Two,” The Band Perry
“The Climb,” Miley Cyrus
“I Can Only Imagine,” MercyMe
“All About That Bass,” Meghan Trainor
Platinum Single
“Burnin’ It Down,” Jason Aldean
“Drunk On A Plane,” Dierks Bentley
“I Don’t Dance,” Lee Brice
“American Kids,” Kenny CHesney
“Don’t Ya,” Brett Eldredge
“Bartender,” Lady Antebellum
“One Of Those Nights,” Tim McGraw
“Truck Yeah,” Tim McGraw
“Come Wake Me Up,” Rascal Flatts
“Fishin’ In The Dark,” Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
“Get Me Some of That,” Thomas Rhett
“Hillbilly Bone,” Blake Shelton
Gold Single
“Leave The Night On,” Sam Hunt
“Bartender,” Lady Antebellum
“Meanwhile Back At Mama’s,” Tim McGraw
“Backwoods,” Justin Moore
“Point At You,” Justin Moore
“Changed,” Rascal Flatts
“My Eyes,” Blake Shelton
“Doin’ What She Likes,” Blake Shelton
“Postcard From Paris,” The Band Perry
Gold Album (RIAA Standard)
God’s Not Dead, Newsboys

Reba Signs With NASH Icon Music

reba60911Reba McEntire has become the first artist signed to Nash Icon Music, a joint venture between Big Machine Label Group and Cumulus Media. The multi-talented entertainer made the announcement Tuesday morning (Oct. 21) on Blair Garner’s America’s Morning Show.
McEntire is in the studio working on a new project with producers Tony Brown and James Stroud, and has 11 songs cut for the new album. “I’ve got three more to record that I have found,” she told Garner. “I’m always trying to beat out what I have already, so we just keep looking.”
McEntire released her first music in 1976, and has gone on to record numerous chart-topping songs, including signature songs such as “Is There Life Out There,” “The Heart Won’t Lie,” “Does He Love You” and numerous others. Her most recent chart-topper was 2010’s “Turn On The Radio.”
McEntire signed to BMLG’s The Valory Music Co. in 2008.
Earlier this year, Cumulus and Big Machine Label Group entered a strategic partnership to create NASH Icon, which includes the launch of the label and a live events business. The venture showcases Nashville’s talent from the past 25 years, and will release future recordings by those artists. The label complements the NASH Icons branding on some of Cumulus’ owned-and-operated radio stations.

 Pictured (L-R): Jim Weatherson (Nash Icon Music GM), Chuck Wicks (America’s Morning Show host), Terri Clark (America’s Morning Show host), Reba, Scott Borchetta (BMLG President & CEO), John Dickey (Executive Vice President of Content and Programming for Cumulus) and Blair Garner (America’s Morning Show Host). Photo: Eric Heany, Cumulus

Pictured (L-R): Jim Weatherson (Nash Icon Music GM), Chuck Wicks (America’s Morning Show host), Terri Clark (America’s Morning Show host), Reba, Scott Borchetta (BMLG President & CEO), John Dickey (Executive Vice President of Content and Programming for Cumulus) and
Blair Garner (America’s Morning Show Host). Photo: Eric Heany, Cumulus

[Updated]: LifeNotes: Songwriting Great Paul Craft Passes

Paul Craft

Paul Craft


[Updated, Oct. 21, 2014]: A memorial service for Paul Craft will be held in Nashville on Tuesday, Oct. 21, at West End United Methodist Church (2200 West End Ave.) with visitation from 11:00 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. and the funeral at 1:00 p.m.
 
• • •
[Original content, Oct. 20, 2014]:
Newly honored Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame member Paul Craft has died at age 76.
Famed for such country hits as “Dropkick Me Jesus,” “Hank Williams You Wrote My Life” and “Brother Jukebox,” Craft was inducted into the Hall of Fame on Oct. 5. He came to the banquet at the Music City Center, greeted well-wishers and was photographed with his statuette. But prior to his official induction, he experienced breathing problems. An ambulance transported him to St. Thomas Midtown Hospital, where he passed away on Saturday, Oct. 18. He had been plagued by deteriorating health for several years.
Paul Craft was born in Memphis in 1938 and spent part of his early life on his parents’ 2,000-acre cotton, bean and rice farm in nearby Proctor, Arkansas. Fascinated by country radio, he got a harmonica at age 10, an accordion at age 11 and a ukulele shortly thereafter, which led to playing guitar and banjo.
He developed a lifelong love for bluegrass music and eventually performed for a time with Jimmy Martin & The Sunny Mountain Boys. He also later became the writer of a number of bluegrass evergreens.
Craft served a stint in the Coast Guard, graduated as an English major from the University of Virginia and attended one year of law school in Memphis. He belonged to the Mensa Society, whose members have IQ’s in the top two per cent of the population.
After working for his stepfather’s Memphis printing company, operating a music store and performing in the Memphis group The Settlers, he began to focus on his songwriting. His first successes came in 1968, when Skeeter Davis and Sam the Sham recorded his songs “Somewhere with Me Sometime” and “Let it Eat,” respectively.
Paul Craft at the Songwriters Hall of Fame inductions. Photo: Moments by Moser

Paul Craft at the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame inductions. Photo: Moments by Moser


He moved to Nashville in 1975 and had 35 of his songs recorded during his first year in town. His “Dropkick Me, Jesus,” recorded by Bobby Bare, and “Hank Williams, You Wrote My Life,” recorded by Moe Bandy, brought him the unusual distinction of having both nominated for country-song Grammy Awards in the same year, 1976.
Paul Craft created wickedly humorous fare such as “It’s Me Again, Margaret” (Ray Stevens, 1985) as well as mainstream country hits such as “Blue Heartache” (Gail Davies, 1980), “Brother Jukebox” (Mark Chesnutt, 1991) and “Come As You Were” (T. Graham Brown, 1989).
Among his other well-known songs are “When the New Wears Off of Our Love” (Jody Miller, The Whites), “Honky Tonk Waltz” (Ray Stevens), “His and Hers” (John Anderson), “Too Bad You’re No Good” (Trisha Yearwood) and “Backslidin’” (Joe Stampley).
Craft’s catalog also contains several much-recorded “standards,” including “Midnight Flyer” (The Eagles, The Osborne Brothers, etc.), “Keep Me From Blowing Away” (Linda Ronstadt, The Grascals, Willie Nelson, etc.) and “Teardrops Will Kiss The Morning Dew” (Alison Krauss, The Osborne Brothers, etc.).
Others who recorded Paul Craft songs include Jerry Lee Lewis, Loretta Lynn & Conway Twitty, Del Reeves & Billie Jo Spears, Charlie McCoy, Don Everly, Keith Whitley, Randy Travis, Kenny Rogers, David Ball, Jack Greene, Cledus T. Judd and J.J. Cale.
He was one of Music Row’s most prolific providers of songs to the bluegrass world. Among his 200 songs recorded by bluegrass artists are ones by Earl Scruggs, Ralph Stanley, The Lewis Family, Claire Lynch, Larry Sparks, Charlie Sizemore, Carl Jackson and The Nashville Bluegrass Band. The Osborne Brothers have recorded 10 Craft tunes; The Seldom Scene has recorded nine.
Most of Craft’s songs were solo written, rather than collaborations with others. He was distinctive among Nashville songwriters in that he was always self-published rather then being on the songwriting staff of a major company.
He also published “The Gambler” and several other hit songs he did not write. Writers whose works he published and promoted include Mark Germino, Bruce Burch, Jon Ims, Tim O’Brien, John Starling and Don Schlitz.
Paul Craft was also a recording artist. He appeared on the country charts several times during the 1970s. Signed by Chet Atkins to RCA, he charted for the label in 1977-78 with “We Know Better,” “Lean on Jesus” and “Teardrops in My Tequila.” He actually had a bigger hit with “It’s Me Again, Margaret” than Ray Stevens, although it became one of the latter’s “signature” songs.
His albums include Warnings (1986), Brother Jukebox (1998), Raised by the Railroad Line (2006) and Too Bad You’re No Good (2007).
Funeral arrangements had not been announced at press time.
Paul Craft is inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. Photo: Bev Moser/Moments By Moser

Paul Craft is inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. Photo: Bev Moser/Moments By Moser

The Producer's Chair: Victoria Shaw

Victoria Shaw

Victoria Shaw


By James Rea
Don’t miss Victoria Shaw on The Producer’s Chair on Thursday, Oct. 30 at Douglas Corner at 6 p.m. (Doors open at 5:30 p.m.)

•••

Now that Victoria Shaw has done it all, she’s just getting started. With sixty-five million records to her name, Shaw’s highly developed, instinctive approach to music—and her warm sense of humor—make it all look easy.
She’s written and produced numerous hits, recorded her own albums, and runs her own publishing company in the heart of Music Row. Shaw won the ACM Award for Song of the Year award for co-writing John Michael Montgomery’s “I Love The Way You Love Me,” and the CMA Award for producing Single of the Year Lady Antebellum’s “I Run To You.”
Shaw’s first three No. 1s as a songwriter came in 1992, with the hit by Montgomery, as well as Doug Stone’s Too Busy Being In Love,” and Garth BrooksThe River.” In 1994, Shaw signed an artist deal with Warner/Reprise Records, releasing her debut album In Full View which yielded three singles. She was nominated for ACM Top New Female Vocalist in 1995. She also scored another No. 1 by Brooks, “She’s Every Woman.”
In 1998, Trisha Yearwood recorded Shaw’s Where Your Road Leads” as a duet with Brooks. It was the title track to Yearwood’s album and was released as a single.
Shaw’s diverse body of work has won more than 20 ASCAP and SESAC Awards, (including Publisher of the Year), two Emmy Awards, and resulted in cuts by artists as diverse as Ricky Martin & Christina Aguilera, Keb Mo, Olivia Newton-John, Faith Hill, LeAnn Rimes, Reba, Billy Ray Cyrus, Michael McDonald and Eric Church.
In 2007-08 Shaw co-produced Lady Antebellum’s self-titled platinum debut album which earned them CMA Awards for Vocal Group of the Year and Single of The Year, “I Run To You.”
As an artist she has recorded five albums, five videos, and toured extensively in Europe, but it is likely that her most memorable gig is performing in Central Park with Brooks in front of 750,000 people.
Shaw was born in Manhattan, New York, but her family moved to Los Angeles when she was five. Before Victoria was born, her mother recorded for Capitol Records and Verve Records under the name Carole Bennett. Shaw’s father, Ray Shaw, was also a singer and performer working on Broadway and in touring companies.
Growing up in Southern California, Victoria was inspired by Country rock and pop songwriters such as The Eagles, Joni Mitchell, Paul Simon and James Taylor. She began writing songs at an early age and by the time she was 13, Shaw had started a band called SOLICE and was performing at L.A. weddings and high school dances. At 18, she moved back to New York by herself, playing in piano bars at night and managing the High Rise Sound studio during the day.
The Producer’s Chair: Did you learn to engineer while you were in New York?
Victoria Shaw: No but I learned how to splice tape and I was good at making tape copies from reel-to-reel to cassette. It was a better education than I thought. If they needed some background vocals, I’d run in and do that too and then go back to answering the phones. These days I run Pro Tools.
How did you start playing in piano bars?
The owner of the studio was the host of an open mic night in Times Square and when the piano player quit he said, “why don’t you come and do this?” I was so scared because I didn’t want to screw up anyone. But it turned out that I could do it because I’m a good reader. It turned into a regular gig and that set me off playing all over New York for years. I loved it.
How did you wind up in Nashville?
I was living in Long Island with an aunt and commuting back and forth between there and the studio in New York on the Long Island Railroad (LIRR) and I wrote this song one night on a little 12-inch Casio about playing in a piano bar and coming home late on the LIRR. It was called “Is That Any Way To Treat A Star.” On one of my trips to California my Dad and I decided to record it. He found out who the Country music people were in L.A. and he stumbled onto Jerry Fuller to produce it. I had no idea who Jerry was at the time nor did I know who John Hobbs was, who played piano on that session! So we cut a couple of sides and I had this 45 and I went back to New York and somebody told me to take it to this big station in New York to the program director. I was naïve and I called up Dene Hallam and said, “Hi, I have a record and I heard you were a nice man and you would listen to it.” I’m pretty sure the only reason he agreed to see me is because I told him that I heard he was nice. So he listened to it and… a couple of days later he called up and said, “We just tested your song on the air.” Eventually it became a huge hit in New York City. It was really odd and a bunch of label people in Nashville were like, “Who the hell is Victoria Shaw and why is she getting played on this big station?”
Those people wanted to meet me down here so I came down with a manager that my father found for me and she took me around meeting publishers and A&R people like Martha Sharp and Charlie Monk. The few times I went down to Nashville no one was interested in me as an artist. I also realized that even though my father loved me dearly, it was not a good thing to have your dad trying to get you a record deal. This is a tale that’s as old as time. But I was at least smart enough to realize that whenever I said, “My Dad,”… that the industry was pretty turned off by that. Soon after that I asked my dad to just be my dad and I pursued things by myself from there on out. My father ended up being extremely proud of the fact that I did it on my own.
So I started driving down to Nashville from New York every few months. The first person I called was Charlie Monk and he was incredibly kind, letting me use his office, and setting me up with songwriters like Marcus Hummon and Steven Curtis Chapman, who did my demos for $100 a song. I also became good friends with the guy in the tape copy room by the name of Gary Overton. One of the first times I was down here someone suggested I go to the Bluebird to a writer’s night, which obviously I had never heard of. I went there by myself and it was a round consisting of Paul Davis, Fred Knobloch, Thom Schuyler and Paul Overstreet and it was like a religious epiphany. It truly changed my life, the most inspiring thing I’d ever seen, and I remember thinking, “that’s how I’m going to get my record deal. I’m going to become a hit songwriter for other people and get noticed that way,” which was totally naïve because I didn’t know if I had the talent to do that. So I really concentrated on being a songwriter, but for eight years I couldn’t get arrested in this town. I eventually became friends with Steve Small who was managing Gary Morris at the time. One day I mentioned to Gary that I was looking for a publishing deal and he had me come in and play for him. What was great about Gary is that he was an artist and he “got me.” He gave me my first break and offered me a pub deal. Gary didn’t care that I wasn’t this hardcore country writer. He encouraged me to keep writing like “me,” but he made up my game. I don’t think I got paid much for that publishing deal but I didn’t care, I wanted in. About a year later I had three number ones thanks to Randy Hart who was running Gary Morris Music.
How many publishing deals have you had?
Gary Morris was my first publishing deal. Then Maverick Music, which was owned by Madonna and Warner Bros., made me a great offer, which had a lot of potential but they didn’t have a physical office here and it was kind of frustrating, so I left Maverick and published myself for a couple of years. In that time I won two Emmy awards and got cuts by Ty Herndon, Olivia Newton John and a few others. That was when I was busy raising babies so I was content.
Then Desmond Child, who’s a friend of mine, had a writer’s camp in Miami and we, along with Gary Burr, wrote a big hit for Christina Aguilera and Ricky Martin called “Nobody Wants To Be Lonely.” Soon after that Desmond offered me a pub deal with his Destin Songs. I thought it could give me an “in” into the pop world. Again they were a new company and they came here but they only lasted about a year and a half because even though Desmond had a great vision for the company, his partners didn’t want to make the full commitment to Nashville. Then I wound up with Warner/Chappell for about a year, and then BMG New York, (which eventually turned into UMPG) who signed me because of my ability to write both pop and Country. I left them in 2007 and until now I’ve been self-published. Funny enough, to quote The Godfather III, “Every time I think I’m out they pull me back in.” I’m actually considering an interesting offer right now for a publishing deal.
In ‘94 you got your first record deal. How did that unfold?
I was at a party at Daniel Hill’s house and there was a guitar pull going on in the backyard. I sang a song and Leanne Baron freaked out and took me to meet her boss, who was Jim Ed Norman, the president of Warner Bros. He was lovely and he offered me a development deal. He was extremely supportive and I enjoyed that time. I think I was there for four years, two albums, four videos, great reviews from the critics but for many reasons didn’t sync up with the stars. Because of my time as a recording artist, I’m probably a much more well-known songwriter than a lot of my songwriter friends who are more successful. And I learned a whole lot that benefitted me as a producer.
During that period, Shaw had another No. 1 with Brooks’ “She’s Every Woman,” she was nominated for CMA Female Vocalist of the Year, and the year before she won ACM Song of the Year for “I Love The Way You Love Me.”
You’ve spent quite a bit of time touring Europe. How did that come about?
I had this kooky great career in Europe more than America because I really pursued it. I was one of those artists that actually thought that Europe was important and I still have a pretty cool little following there.
Have you ever had an independent plugger?
I’ve always been my best plugger, other than Randy Hart. That’s the thing… if I go into business with somebody, they have to do something I can’t do, or do it as well. Good pluggers are really rare in this town. There are some, but it’s a really hard thing. Holds don’t mean what they used to and it’s a whole different game.
That’s what happened with my last deal. I wasn’t getting as many cuts as I used to have and I knew the quality of my writing wasn’t going down. Then I started looking at the credits on the albums and saw that the producers had their writers on these projects. I thought, “I’m just going to have to find my own artist and develop them.” I don’t think a lot of the time now, the best song necessarily wins. And that makes me sad because even on projects that I’ve produced, I’ve said, “No, my songs don’t work on this.” So I thought I’d find a male artist to develop because I’ve had all these hits with men. I wasn’t looking for a girl, and then I found Hillary [Scott].
How did you meet Hillary?
I knew her mom Linda Davis and I would see Hillary as a kid mostly at the hair salon where Linda and I got our hair done. Then Linda invited my family to her Christmas at Opryland show and all of a sudden Hillary came out to sing and I was like the RCA dog, where my head went to one side like “huh?” There was just something about her. She was so raw and kinda pitchy but she had “that thing” and she had this texture that you could hear through all of it. And something just hit my heart. It’s intangible, you really can’t explain the “it” factor. And I walked up to her afterwards and said, “I want to work with you.” She was really sweet and she said, “that would be a dream come true. I was planning on going to beautician school and I’ve always secretly dreamed about doing music.” Her parents were really protective, but I think they trusted me and they let her come and start working with me.
She was about 15 or 16 when she came to my office and I had her sing a capella and I said, “I really would like to develop you as an artist and teach you about songwriting and get you a record deal.” I had it in my head that this would take five years, and it was almost five years to the month when Lady A took off. I wanted her to have childhood experiences, to have after school activities. We took it nice and slow. By the time she was 17, I started to bring her into writing sessions. So in the beginning, I would ask my hit songwriter friends if they would write with us. A lot of those writers tell me now that they saw it in my eyes and believed in me believing in her.
She was a great, eager student and she listened. I wish someone had taught me some of the shortcuts that I showed her, or the songwriting etiquette and the reasons why. When something didn’t work, I’d tell her why and I think that is invaluable. Some people take it as the precious information that it is and some writers get indignant. The ones that thought they knew better than me… I’m not sure where they are these days. I take a lot of pride in Hillary being a hit songwriter.
When I interviewed Paul Worley he said, “Victoria worked with them on their live show, their songs and coached them. When I saw them, it was already figured out. They really kind of crystallized in me the prototype of artist development of today.” What was his reaction the day you brought Lady A to him?
Tracy Gershon was a big champion early on, so I took them to Warner Bros. because Tracy had arranged for Paul to hear them. We sat in the conference room and they sang and he looked at me and said, “You did A&R’s job” and nobody had ever put it that way. I was just doing naturally what my gut said and that was a real compliment. They were completely prepared and we knew exactly who they were.
When you first met Hillary, she was a solo artist. How did Lady A happen?
In the beginning before the boys came on board, I got Hillary a development deal with RCA. Leslie Roberts was our champion over there. And I said to Hillary, “I don’t know if by the end of this year we’re going to be ready for this deal, but by the end of this year, you will be known as an artist and I will be known as a producer because every week, they’re going to see our names on that pitch sheet.”
I sent Hillary to an event at 12th & Porter where she bumped into Charles Kelley and she recognized Charles from MySpace. She was a fan of his brother Josh Kelley and because of Josh found Charles. She approached him and said something about being a songwriter working with me and they got together to write. And she was telling me about these boys from Georgia and they were having fun and were probably going to do this kooky side band called Lady Antebellum. And they went and took some crazy pictures in period costumes and they came up with this funny name because they were standing in front of an antebellum house. Then she called and told me they were going to play at Exit In. I said to my husband before I walked out the door, “Why do I think I’m going to go to this and it’s going to make a lot of sense?” And I saw them and Hillary looked like she felt really safe between Charles and Dave. That’s the word I kept thinking. So my arms and my heart became bigger and I welcomed them into the fold. They came to town talented, no doubt. They were good songwriters, but I don’t think either of them will disagree that I helped turn them into great songwriters. They paid attention to how I wrote and would comment when I took the song somewhere they never thought of.
Did you develop your producing chops doing demos?
Absolutely, I was producing for years. I used to think the difference between a demo and a master was the lunch budget. The first thing I officially produced was Jim Brickman’s song of mine called “Never Alone” which he loved and cut with Sara Evans. RCA wouldn’t give him permission to have her on the single because she had a song coming out, so he gave Lady Antebellum a shot and let them sing on it. He cut the track and I produced their vocal and it became a Top 5, AC hit for Jim and was their first success.
Being a singer, were you tough on them in the studio?
I remember they were doing the demo of “Love Don’t Live Here Anymore” and Charles was singing and I kept telling him, “I just don’t feel it.” He’d do take after take. At one point I said, “I don’t believe that you’re angry.” And he’s like “Oh trust me, I’m angry.” And I laughed and said, “Now use that anger that you’re felling toward me and go back in and sing it properly.” And he sang it and came back out and listened to it and said, “You drive me nuts and then I listen to it and it’s the best vocal and you’re right!”
The thing about Charles is that he’s so good that his worst day is somebody else’s best day. I knew what he was capable of so I would push him and push him. It was a pleasure because all three of them are so talented. We had a lot of laughs.
Did you also do performance coaching with them?
When they started playing out, Charles would always call me and go over the set list because I was really good at pacing a show. They really paid their dues and did it weekly and gathered their audience the old fashioned way by word of mouth and I’d go there and I was videotaping their performances and they’d watch it back like a football play. I did that a lot with Hillary in the beginning too. We’d go down to the bars on Broadway and I’d have $5 in my hand and ask the band if my friends could sing a song. The nice thing about playing back a video of somebody’s performance is that they critiqued a lot of it themselves.
Who are you working with now?
I believe that every artist is different and I’m really good at finding out who they are and bringing it out of them. It’s about strengths and weaknesses and reading them and developing them the way they need to be developed.
The artist I’m developing now is Lacy Cavalier. She’s got that “thing” that you just know! Different from the way I developed Hillary and the boys. Ihave had this feeling from the beginning that Lacy is probably going to break in a different way than the norm….like YouTube. Right now she’s in L.A. shooting a TV show.
Does being a singer give you an advantage in the studio?
Yes, as a singer I won’t only say what you’re doing wrong but I will show you tricks for days on how to achieve those notes, how to achieve that sensibility and those little few nuances in a song that need to be interpreted. Can you laugh here? Can you give me something a little more wistful here? I’m interpreting the song as the songwriter and as the singer and I think that gives me an advantage.
Who’s your engineer of choice?
I work most often with Chad Carlson because not only is he a bad ass engineer, he’s also a great singer/musician and songwriter and I know it plays into the way he records. However, when it comes to recording vocals I like to run the board myself. It’s just me and the artist—very intimate, very relaxed. I’ve actually been hired lately just as a vocal producer on some things. They’ve been doing that in the pop world for years.
How did you wind up doing Central Park with Garth?
He called me up and said, “hey, I’m going to be playing Central Park, do you want to open for me?” I don’t know if he even got the sentence out before I said “Yeah.” It was amazing and it was a really lovely invitation that Garth extended to me. My apartment in New York is not that far from where we played. I think I walked home or something. It’s a little bit of a blur. It was just me at the keyboard and my friends Steven McClintock and Stuart Ziff and their two guitars backing me up.
I was supposed to play for 25 minutes but I did 20 because I was so freaked out that I didn’t even look at my watch. I had played my five songs and never thought to play more. I always joke that after the first 50,000 people you really can’t see anymore. It was a great experience and it was an amazing day and it’s fun to be a part of history.
What are the most important things that indie artists must do to get your attention?
I am 100 percent not interested in working with an artist who is not social media savvy or at least understands the importance of it and just needs my help to steer the the right direction. I am going to work my ass off on the music end, and if they are not holding up their part of the partnership, then why should I bust my gut? I should not have more Twitter followers than my artists. Lacy Cavalier has a million YouTube views. If an artist doesn’t want to engage their fans, why should I engage with them?