
Dark songs require dark shades—Eric Church wants his hometown back.

Selfie time! Co-hosts Luke Bryan and Blake Shelton search for the biggest stars in the room; determine that they are the biggest stars.
“I always said I have the best fans,” noted
George Strait as he accepted Entertainer of the Year honors at last night’s (April 6)
ACM Awards, “and I heard this is a fan-voted award, so I rest my case.” Making it two-for-two, Strait also took home the top trophy at the November CMA Awards.
The ACM show brought a galaxy’s worth of Country star power to the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. The string of excellent performances—ten, in fact, before the first award was handed out— surely left fans satisfied. Still, there were a few black holes in the line up. Nominees
Taylor Swift and
Carrie Underwood presented but didn’t perform. Nor did Album of the Year winner
Kacey Musgraves. Meanwhile artists
Strait,
Florida Georgia Line, Miranda Lambert, Lady Antebellum and co-hosts
Blake Shelton and
Luke Bryan took the stage twice each, either to sing their own songs, or to assist another artist.

Hunter Hayes gives a powerful performance of “Invisible.”
Hunter Hayes had the best stage set of the evening. He donned an all-black wardrobe and played “Invisible” in front of an orchestra dressed in white with white instruments, while contrasting black and white images danced on the video screen. The production for
Eric Church’s “Give Me Back My Hometown” included the film-like music video in the background and a graveyard setting in the foreground. As always, he delivered with passion. Lady A’s pairing with iconic songstress
Stevie Nicks was a stripped down vocal dream of “Golden” and “Rhiannon.”
Tim McGraw offered an old-Hollywood take on his new song “Meanwhile Back at Mama’s” and was joined by
Faith Hill where they seemed to share an endearing moment. It was also good to see a performance by mega-star
Toby Keith, who is sometimes absent from Country’s trophyfests.

Lady Antebellum and Stevie Nicks were enthralling.
Show opener
The Band Perry scored with plenty of family-sized energy.
Brad Paisley’s poolside performance of “River Bank” was sunny fun.
Keith Urban brought three drummers to the party for “Even The Stars Fall 4 U.” Lambert, Strait,
Jason Aldean, Rascal Flatts, and
Darius Rucker gave solid performances.
Sheryl Crow and
Dierks Bentley teamed for his hit “I Hold On,” from his highly listenable set
Riser, (one of this year’s best releases).
At the ACM Fan Jam at the Mandalay Bay Events Center, FGL and Bryan sang “This Is How We Roll” with an exciting mash-up of sky-high flames and summersaulting bike tricks.
Justin Moore, who
barely squeezed in a nomination for New Artist, took home that fan-voted prize.
Brett Eldredge, Kip Moore and
Lee Brice had abbreviated performance slots. Brice’s “I Drive Your Truck” earned Song of the Year for writers
Jessi Alexander, Jimmy Yeary, and
Connie Harrington. Often an astute predictor of awards to follow,
MusicRow subscriber members voted it
MusicRow Song of the Year in 2013.

Jessi Alexander, Connie Harrington and Jimmy Yeary accept Song of the Year honors.
Back at the MGM, charmer Shelton reiterated that he’s equally adept at delivering a ballad as a bro-country smash, performing the sexy tune “My Eyes” with
Gwen Sebastian on a romantic, candlelit stage.
Bryan and Shelton shared plenty of camaraderie as co-hosts, and while the jokes were mostly funny, they borrowed a little too much from this year’s other awards shows, including a selfie photo, Travolta-ized name mispronunciation, and Daft Punk space helmets.

Underwood won in the style department.
Shelton also teamed with
Shakira for “Medicine.” His fellow coach on
The Voice makes the morning-after worst-dressed list with her red lingerie slip. Making the best-dressed list are the silver glam gowns worn by Faith Hill and
Carrie Underwood; as well as Luke Bryan, who donned a sharp springtime suit for hosting duties and switched to black leather jacket for his performance of “Play It Again.”
With so ACM many highlights, fans are likely ready to play it again. And their year-long wait will be well worth it, because the
2015 move to the home of the Dallas Cowboys is sure to bring Texas-sized entertainment.
•
View evening ratings.
•
View full winner list.
•
View after-party photos.

McGraw and Hill still have spades of onstage chemistry.
Photos courtesy of ACM.
NMPA Adds Renzer To Board
/by Jessica Nicholson“David has been in the publishing business for over a quarter of a century, and was at the forefront of shepherding our industry through the transition to the digital age,” said Irwin Z. Robinson, chairman of the NMPA Board.
Prior to joining Spirit, Renzer served as chairman and CEO of Universal Music Publishing Group (UMPG). Major signings include the catalogs of Elton John and Bernie Taupin, Justin Timberlake, Paul Simon, Elvis Costello, U2, and Mary J. Blige. He began his career at Zomba Music Publishing.
“The strength of our organization comes from the commitment of Board members to the songwriting and publishing community,” said NMPA president and CEO David Israelite. “David’s leadership and experience is a tremendous asset to our organization.”
Artist Updates (4/8/14)
/by Jessica NicholsonDunn took part in writing six of the 14 songs on Peace Love and Country Music, including three he wrote by himself, “Let’s Get The Beer Joint Rockin’,” “Romeo and Juliet,” and “Country in Texas.”
The physical edition of Peace Love and Country Music is available exclusively at Country Outfitter, at countryoutfitter.com. Digital editions are available at all digital retailers.
• • •
The series will run from April 30 through May 2. Performances begin at 7 p.m. at Starbucks-Colonnade at 9811 Interstate 10 W., San Antonio, Texas.
• • •
• • •
Emmylou Harris, singer-songwriter and animal activist, was recently awarded by national animal welfare organization Best Friends Animal Society, in recognition of her work to protect animals.
Following her concert at Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles, Marc Peralta, executive director of Best Friends-Los Angeles, presented Harris with an award. “Emmylou Harris is a longtime friend to animals in need, exemplifying the Best Friends spirit that every pet deserves a second chance. Emmylou has given many dogs and cats that second chance at a great new life and is a powerful ally in the fight to save them all,” Peralta said.
Pictured (L-R): Greg Siegel, Sr. VP, Live Nation; Rick Merrill, general manager, Wiltern Theatre; Emmylou Harris; Marc Peralta, executive director, Best Friends – Los Angeles; and Amy Wolf, celebrity and entertainment relations manager, Best Friends Animal Society.
Music City Roots Moving To Factory at Franklin
/by Jessica NicholsonThe Factory, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, also houses the Americana Music Association, Sugar Hill Records, Dark Horse studios, and several other organizations in the music community.
“Music City Roots is the perfect flagship for our vision to highlight Americana music and regional art and food culture here at The Factory at Franklin,” said its events manager Tami Pryce.
Most Wednesdays, Roots will be staged in The Factory’s 10,000 square foot Jamison Hall, though when a larger capacity is needed, MCR will move to the larger Liberty Hall. The show will continue to be broadcast live over local radio partner Hippie Radio 94.5 FM and webcast via its own website at musiccityroots.com.
MCR’s streaming service, RootsRadio.com, will create a broadcast booth in The Factory’s main hall, allowing opportunities for live programming and interviews alongside its regular 24-hour stream of Music City Roots performances.
“We have loved our home out ‘on the edge of Music City’ at the Loveless Cafe and deeply appreciate the magical musical moments we created together at the Loveless Barn…and we look forward to continuing the tradition at the historic Factory.” says Music City Roots co-executive producer and creator Todd Mayo.
“Loveless Cafe is pleased to have been the original setting for Music City Roots,” says Jessica Charlton, Loveless Cafe Brand Manager. “We celebrate the show’s growth and look forward to continued partnership opportunities.”
The final MCR “Spring Season” at the Loveless Barn will run April 9 through June 18.
Gervino Appointed Editor-In-Chief for 'Billboard'
/by Jessica NicholsonTony Gervino
Guggenheim Media Entertainment Group has appointed Tony Gervino as the new editor-in-chief of the music trade publication Billboard, effective April 28.
Gervino was previously executive editor at Hearst Magazines International, where he oversaw editorial direction of magazines within the company’s home design, men’s enthusiast, teen and women’s network groups. These publications included Esquire, Car & Driver, Popular Mechanics, Seventeen, Robb Report and House Veranda. Gervino has contributed to the New York Times, and served as contributing editor to the New York Times Magazine from 2010-2011.
He will report to Janice Min, co-president and chief creative officer of Guggenheim Media Entertainment Group.
Current Billboard editor Joe Levy will assume the role of editor-at-large; Levy was previously chief content officer of Maxim, and, prior to that, editor-in-chief of Blender.
Billboard recently announced the hire of Mike Bruno as VP of digital content from Entertainment Weekly.
John Hiatt, Patty Griffin To Headline Cross-County Lines Festival
/by Jessica NicholsonAlso performing during the two-stage, seven-hour event are Ashley Monroe, “Stripes” singer-songwriter Brandy Clark, Parker Milsap, Joe Pug and Luther Dickinson.
The Park at Harlinsdale Farm is located across the street from the Americana Music Association headquarters at the Factory at Franklin.
Last year’s inaugural event featured Jerry Douglas, Alison Krauss, Amos Lee and Shawn Colvin, among others.
AEG-TMG will co-produce the event, which begins at 4:30 p.m., with doors opening at 3:30 p.m. Tickets for the event are $35 per person, and will be available to the public beginning Friday, April 11 at 10 a.m. CT at Ticketmaster and The Franklin Theatre box office.
Songwriter Signings (4/7/14)
/by Jessica Nicholson“We are so pleased to get to work with Mary. She is very well known around Nashville, and such a superb lyricist. We look forward to working with her to promote her music and helping her reach her full potential,” stated Mike Mouret, president of Studio Gold Music.
Studio Gold Music, Inc., is an independent publishing company headquartered in Brentwood, Tenn., that offers traditional publishing, single-song publishing and related promotional activities.
• • •
Chris Roberts
Catch This Music LLC (CTM) has signed Chris Roberts to CTM Writers INK – a publishing division of Catch This Music.
“Chris has become a great friend not only to me but many in the music community,” says CTM president Eddie Robba. “His songs have character, spunk and that little something extra that attracts the listener. We are honored to have Chris join our team of creators here at CTM. When you know it’s the right move you just make it, and that’s what I did signing Chris Roberts.”
In Photos: ACM Party For A Cause
/by Jessica NicholsonThe 2nd Annual ACM Party for a Cause Festival, hosted by Outnumber Hunger, launched Friday (April 4) at the LINQ with headlining trio Rascal Flatts. The “Outnumber Hunger Live!” concert featured Florida Georgia Line, Justin Moore, Thomas Rhett, Cassadee Pope, Danielle Bradbery, The Cadillac Three, Will Hoge, Chase Rice and Charlie Worsham.
On Saturday (April 5), headliner Keith Urban anchored the second evening of the Party For A Cause Festival. Lee Brice, Brett Eldredge, Tyler Farr, Kip Moore, Joe Nichols, Jerrod Niemann, Chris Young, Love and Theft, Parmalee, Joel Crouse, Jon Pardi, Leah Turner, Austin Webb and Dan + Shay performed.
Photos: Getty Images for ACM
Pictured (L-R): Cassadee Pope, Thomas Rhett
Charlie Worsham
Pictured (L-R): Danielle Bradbery and RaeLynn
Rascal Flatts perform.
Pictured (L-R): Kip Moore, Brett Eldredge
Keith Urban
Pictured: The Swon Brothers with Jerrod Niemann.
Artist Updates (4/7/14)
/by Jessica NicholsonHunter Hayes
The Academy of Country Music and CBS have revealed the launch of a new performance in the “ACM Sessions” online concert series. “ACM Sessions” with singer-songwriter Hunter Hayes is available at cbs.com. Artists who have previously appeared on “ACM Sessions” include Luke Bryan, Brett Eldredge, Justin Moore and Jerrod Niemann.
Hayes’ ACM Sessions includes a performance of his hit song “Wanted,” a behind-the-scenes look at rehearsals for his We’re Not Invisible Tour and more.
• • •
Mark Collie
101 Ranch Films, a division of 101 Ranch Records LLC, has announced the completion of The Mountain, a documentary film from accomplished singer and songwriter Mark Collie. The Mountain, directed by Ken Mandel, will screen at select film festivals in late 2014.
The film’s trailer is currently available on YouTube.
• • •
Bigger Picture Group’s Chelsea Bain recently opened for Rock and Roll Hall of Fame member Sammy Hagar.
Chelsea Bain (l) and Sammy Hagar.
ACMs Earn Highest Evening Ratings
/by Eric T. ParkerKacey Musgraves, Taylor Swift.
And the winner is…the 49th Annual Academy of Country Music Awards, bringing in a peak audience tally of 14.14 million live+SD viewers for the April 6 broadcast, according to Zap2It.
Immediate ratings were down slightly from last year’s highest measure since 1998, 15.38 million viewers, up from the prior year’s 12.2 million viewers. Official numbers are forthcoming, taking into account delayed viewing, which has become increasingly important to boost total audience metrics.
Initial ratings for the three-hour CBS awards show came in at 3.3 for adults 18-49 from 8-11:00 p.m., down from last year’s 4.3 with the same demographic. CBS, which also carried 60 Minutes for the lead in, ranked No. 1 throughout the evening in viewers and adults 18-49.
Trailing networks included ABC with America’s Funniest Home Videos, Once Upon A Time, Revenge and the second-highest viewed program of the evening, Resurrection. The Simpsons, Family Guy and Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey helped push Fox in third place ahead of NBC.
View full winners list.
View MusicRow’s review.
View after-party photos.
ACM Awards Win Vegas Jackpot
/by Sarah SkatesDark songs require dark shades—Eric Church wants his hometown back.
Selfie time! Co-hosts Luke Bryan and Blake Shelton search for the biggest stars in the room; determine that they are the biggest stars.
“I always said I have the best fans,” noted George Strait as he accepted Entertainer of the Year honors at last night’s (April 6) ACM Awards, “and I heard this is a fan-voted award, so I rest my case.” Making it two-for-two, Strait also took home the top trophy at the November CMA Awards.
The ACM show brought a galaxy’s worth of Country star power to the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. The string of excellent performances—ten, in fact, before the first award was handed out— surely left fans satisfied. Still, there were a few black holes in the line up. Nominees Taylor Swift and Carrie Underwood presented but didn’t perform. Nor did Album of the Year winner Kacey Musgraves. Meanwhile artists Strait, Florida Georgia Line, Miranda Lambert, Lady Antebellum and co-hosts Blake Shelton and Luke Bryan took the stage twice each, either to sing their own songs, or to assist another artist.
Hunter Hayes gives a powerful performance of “Invisible.”
Hunter Hayes had the best stage set of the evening. He donned an all-black wardrobe and played “Invisible” in front of an orchestra dressed in white with white instruments, while contrasting black and white images danced on the video screen. The production for Eric Church’s “Give Me Back My Hometown” included the film-like music video in the background and a graveyard setting in the foreground. As always, he delivered with passion. Lady A’s pairing with iconic songstress Stevie Nicks was a stripped down vocal dream of “Golden” and “Rhiannon.” Tim McGraw offered an old-Hollywood take on his new song “Meanwhile Back at Mama’s” and was joined by Faith Hill where they seemed to share an endearing moment. It was also good to see a performance by mega-star Toby Keith, who is sometimes absent from Country’s trophyfests.
Lady Antebellum and Stevie Nicks were enthralling.
Show opener The Band Perry scored with plenty of family-sized energy. Brad Paisley’s poolside performance of “River Bank” was sunny fun. Keith Urban brought three drummers to the party for “Even The Stars Fall 4 U.” Lambert, Strait, Jason Aldean, Rascal Flatts, and Darius Rucker gave solid performances. Sheryl Crow and Dierks Bentley teamed for his hit “I Hold On,” from his highly listenable set Riser, (one of this year’s best releases).
At the ACM Fan Jam at the Mandalay Bay Events Center, FGL and Bryan sang “This Is How We Roll” with an exciting mash-up of sky-high flames and summersaulting bike tricks.
Justin Moore, who barely squeezed in a nomination for New Artist, took home that fan-voted prize. Brett Eldredge, Kip Moore and Lee Brice had abbreviated performance slots. Brice’s “I Drive Your Truck” earned Song of the Year for writers Jessi Alexander, Jimmy Yeary, and Connie Harrington. Often an astute predictor of awards to follow, MusicRow subscriber members voted it MusicRow Song of the Year in 2013.
Jessi Alexander, Connie Harrington and Jimmy Yeary accept Song of the Year honors.
Back at the MGM, charmer Shelton reiterated that he’s equally adept at delivering a ballad as a bro-country smash, performing the sexy tune “My Eyes” with Gwen Sebastian on a romantic, candlelit stage.
Bryan and Shelton shared plenty of camaraderie as co-hosts, and while the jokes were mostly funny, they borrowed a little too much from this year’s other awards shows, including a selfie photo, Travolta-ized name mispronunciation, and Daft Punk space helmets.
Underwood won in the style department.
Shelton also teamed with Shakira for “Medicine.” His fellow coach on The Voice makes the morning-after worst-dressed list with her red lingerie slip. Making the best-dressed list are the silver glam gowns worn by Faith Hill and Carrie Underwood; as well as Luke Bryan, who donned a sharp springtime suit for hosting duties and switched to black leather jacket for his performance of “Play It Again.”
With so ACM many highlights, fans are likely ready to play it again. And their year-long wait will be well worth it, because the 2015 move to the home of the Dallas Cowboys is sure to bring Texas-sized entertainment.
•View evening ratings.
•View full winner list.
•View after-party photos.
McGraw and Hill still have spades of onstage chemistry.
Photos courtesy of ACM.