By James Rea

Mark Bright
Shortly after
Mark Bright left his position as Pres./CEO of Word in 2010, I quoted Mark in my 2011 P.C. interview as saying: âThe more time I spent in the studio, the more I felt like I might be jeopardizing the jobs of all the people I was responsible for. My resignation was like a new lease on life.â
Clearly it has been. In two short years, Bright’s body of work with engineer
Derek Bason has been remarkable. In 2011
Carrie Underwood was nominated for ACM Top Female Vocalist and
Sara Evansâ âA Little Bit Strongerâ was nominated for CMA Single of the Year. 2012 brought a CMA Album of the Year nomination, Carrie was nominated for ACM Vocalist of the Year, and Carrie &
Brad Paisley were nominated for ACM Vocal Event of the Year for âRemind Me.â Carrie also received a Grammy nomination for Best Country Solo Performance in 2012 and
Scotty McCreery won ACM Best New Artist. This year, Mark received nominations for CMA & ACM Album of the Year, Carrie earned another ACM nomination for Female Vocalist of the Year and Bright’s production on âBlown Awayâ did just that when it won a Grammy for Best Country Song of the Year for writers
Josh Kear and
Chris Tompkins.
And the hits just keep on coming.
Mark and co-writer
Tim James received an ASCAP âMost Playedâ Award for co-penning
George Straitâs 60th No. 1, “Give It All We Got Tonight.” Brightâs new publishing deal is with Delbertâs Boy Music. Bright and
Kirsten Wines at Chatterbox Music have already had cuts with
Tim McGraw,
Little Big Town and others since the name change. Staff Writers include
Jason Saenz,
Mallary Hope,
April Geesbreght,
Clark Kelly and others.
Â
Thereâs more…Along with Carrieâs new album, Mark produced a record on the Texas-based group
The Wagoneers this year and signed New York-based
Allison Veltz to a publishing deal, a development deal and a record deal on Blaster Records out of Cleveland â distributed by Warner Bros. He also signed pop artist
Clark Kelly and is currently producing Spanish/English, singer-songwriter/dancer/producer/choreographer/model/
The Voice coach:Â
Shakira. I must remember to ask Mark how he finds time to go fishing with
Luke Bryan.
How did you wind up producing Shakira?
Bright: Since she was a judge on
The Voice, Shakira has been around
Blake &
Miranda and really seeing where the genesis of a Country song starts and becoming inspired by that on her end. So she started checking out country records and she like the ones I was producing. So her A&R guy from New York called me when I was in England and said,
Shakira wants to write and record with you.
Is the creative process different from artist to artist?
Yes, and what makes it different is the relationship that the producer has with the artist. Carrie has such an incredible handle on who she is as an artist. Sheâs very savvy in the studio but she had to learn how to get there. On her first album she had a lot of people around her and she did a lot of listening so she could get her feet under her. She goes out and she sells a gazillion records but more importantly, she learned a lot in the process. The second record comes out, all of a sudden she knew what snare drums make what kinds of sounds, she knew what kind of guitars made those particular sounds and she had an utter command of the types of songs that she wanted to record. Sheâs always said publicly: âMark doesnât tell me how to sing and I donât tell Mark how to produce.â And itâs been a magnificent relationship.
An artist who has had hit-or-miss with their career will clearly have a little bit of insecurity about how there are perceived in the studio, so you have to just read it in the moment. And where an artist wants to assert himself or herself, you make sure that the players â the engineer and the producer â  are listening because itâs their record.
When pitching a new artist for a deal, do you have a better shot with a label who already has someone you produce, on the label or, one who doesnât?
I donât think I could perceive it as having a better shot. I just have special relationships with certain labels that are going to think
Mark Bright is doing this; we should give this a special listen. That doesnât mean however that,
Mark Bright is doing this, so letâs sign it. Thatâs a big distinction.
Do you ever go out on the road with your artists?
With Carrie, itâs such a big tour with so many moving parts that I only take care of the music aspect. I rehearse the show with the band here in Nashville including sound designs for some of the segways between songs, for instance with the show opener, I produced that and itâs my arrangement. Then Iâll go out and weâll rent out an arena for two weeks and put the show together. When this tour with Carrie started, I was out for two months. But in my world, Iâm just taking care of the music part and
Raj Kapoor takes care of how the sets come together and how they work, etc. But itâs a lot of fun and then Iâll go back out and make sure that, as we make subtle changes with the tour, maybe a song here and a song there, and check to see if weâre getting the right kind of response.
Â
Does an artistâs road band ever have difficulty with the song arrangements that were established in the studio?
I think it happens, but itâs rare. Whatâs more common is that we encourage and particularly in the Carrie camp, youâre going to be playing these songs every night and hopefully the way they play it, by the middle of the tour, is going to be better than the record. I want people to say,
That show is better than the record. I love that comment.
If a great song comes in at the last minute, does the lack of time with that song require a different approach in the studio?
Thatâs a complex question. It happens fairly frequently but in every case that it has happened with me, we have all of those resources in place to be able to handle that. In that event, we already have 4 or 5 drum kits and twenty guitars on hand, so weâre prepared for it. Generally when a new song is that important, weâre excited that we had one come in here thatâs going to be a game changer.
In our last interview, you said: Producers are working 5-6 times harder to make the same money. Has your method of doing business changed?
Dramatically, everything in our lives can be scaled and this is no different. We have to scale it to meet the market’s expectation. On a new artist, you can no longer spend anywhere close to the money you used to spend making a record. Youâve got to make it as good but youâve got to do it with half the money and sometimes less than half the money. And that means, where we used to spread the mix out on the console, a lot of times weâre mixing the whole thing inside the box meaning, in Pro Tools because itâs just so expensive to spread it out. Maybe weâre using more players on the session, so we get a more complete picture of a song. After the date, instead of having to think, letâs get a bunch of these overdubs and sort of build an actual tracking date. In my world, thereâs a lot less of that going on.
We try to get the artist to sing one or two or three songs in one session during the day, instead of one song per day. But the idea is, you canât let the quality compromise. Weâre under the same constraints that labels are and how much they can spend going to radio. I love the good old days, but this is what weâre in now and to me itâs all about making great music.
It is what it is and weâre going to be happy with it and maybe do a lot more pre-production before we ever go into the studio.
Why is it that many producers and engineers in LA, NY and England have representatives and in Nashville they donât?
Culturally, we just donât do that here. We speak for ourselves if we need to talk. And Iâm telling ya, thatâs one of the biggest attributes of our culture in this town. Producers and engineers donât have reps, because we donât need them here.
Are the big studios still dwindling?
It hasnât changed as much here for Starstruck. Over the past twelve years, Iâve been the primary user of the rooms. I keep one room booked out probably 85% of the time. Other large studios have shut down. Itâs tougher for the multi-room studio owner to make a living at this point.
You are on the NARAS and Leadership Music Boards. What have they been up to in the past couple of years?
The Recording Academy has a tremendous amount of programs for high school and college students. We have a thing called GRAMMY U. in colleges. People like me talk to college students in an up-front and honest way to look at what their odds are of getting a music-related job. Weâre being honest with them. We also have GRAMMY CAMP, which has high school students going in and getting really concentrated instruction at a very high level from the greatest musicians, engineers and producers in the world. The fruit of that was on the last American Country Awards, when
Keith Urban came out and performed with these kids. It was unbelievable how talented these kids were.
The other significant thing that weâre doing at the Academy is building a fully functioning studio at
Pearl Cohn High School here in Nashville. They also have a fully-functioning record label that is mentored by
John Esposito and Warner Bros. That warms my heart. Now they have a program that is second to none as far as getting a recording education at the high school level.
Leadership Music quietly goes about teaching young and sometimes not-so-young people what the lay of the land looks like, in minutia. Leadership Music does the best job Iâve ever seen in equipping a music professional to understand how to navigate these rather muddy waters that is the music business today, and it does it brilliantly.
Does the direction of a new album generally revolve around what is going on, in the artistâs personal life?
Yes, a lot of times either directly or psychologically. With Carrie, sheâs in a very happy place because got married a couple of years ago, so her life looks different. So she typically wants to do songs about happiness and family instead of old boyfriends.
Carrie has had a lot of award nominations. How important is it to her, to win?
Greatly. Sheâs one of the most competitive people Iâve ever known. You canât be a successful artist and not have that competitive spirit.
For more, visit theproducerschair.com
Clear Channel Hints At IHeartRadio Country Festival, TV Awards
/by Lorie HollabaughRecently, Clear Channel inked a multi-year deal with The CW network earlier this year making way for the IHeartRadio Festival to air on the network Sept. 30 and Oct. 1, and revealed then that they would be announcing two other new franchises with a to-be-determined broadcast partner. The company has plans to air its annual Jingle Ball concert as well.
âIâve been doing Jingle Ball since 1996 in New York,â said Poleman, âand one of the things John and I have been able to do together now that weâre on the same team is like, âhey you have this great timing, why donât you put it on TV and blow it up?â Weâre doing the IHeartRadio Jingle Ball tour now, not only in New York but in 12 other markets and weâre gonna televise that as well.â
Tim McGraw was on the Saturday night IHeartRadio lineup that also included heavy hitters like Paul McCartney, Justin Timberlake, Maroon 5, Bruno Mars, and Ke$ha.
Lifenotes: Musician and Audio Innovator Bill West Passes
/by Robert K OermannBill West
Steel guitarist, songwriter and audio innovator Bill West died on Thursday, Sept. 19, at age 80.
Born William Morris West Jr., he was raised in Nashville. After graduating from Hume-Fogg High School, he enrolled at Tennessee Tech in Cookeville to pursue an electrical engineering degree. By then, he was already proficient on pedal steel guitar.
While in Cookeville, he met aspiring country singer-songwriter Dorothy Marie Marsh. They married in 1952, and he worked in her band throughout the 1950s and 1960s.
As Dottie West (1932-1991), she became a big hit singer and a Grand Ole Opry star. She and Bill co-wrote her Grammy Award winning âHere Comes My Babyâ (1964). The Wests also co-wrote her hits âWould You Hold It Against Meâ (1966), âMommy, Can I Still Call Him Daddyâ (1966) and âWhatâs Come Over My Babyâ (1967), as well as the 1963 Jim Reeves hit âIs This Me.â
Always an experimenter who could reportedly build and fix just about anything, Bill West developed a âtalkboxâ device. It sent processed vocal sounds through an electric-guitar amplifier. The effect was first heard on fellow steel guitarist Pete Drakeâs 1964 hit âForever.â
Rock artist Joe Walsh was a friend of the Wests. Bill West gave Walsh a prototype of the talkbox and Walsh used it on such hits as 1976âs âRocky Mountain High.â He later also used it on some songs when he was a member of The Eagles, notably on âThose Shoesâ on the million-selling 1979 LP The Long One.
A similar effect can be heard on several hits by Peter Frampton, including 1976âs âShow Me the Way.â
Several of the Westsâ children entered the music business. Daughter Shelly West became a country hit maker of the 1980s and a CMA Award winner as the duet partner of David Frizzell.
Son Kerry West is an audio engineer, both in Music Row studios and at concerts. He tours with stars such as Ronnie Milsap, and has also produced a number of song demos that resulted in big hits.
Son Mo West (1953-2010) was a guitarist and songwriter in the American rock band Thunder. Produced by Kyle Lehning, the group recorded albums for Atlantic Records in the early 1980s.
Bill and Dottie West divorced in 1974. In the 1980s, he continued to perfect his steel guitar sounds. He also performed in the Opryland USA theme parkâs long-running stage show âCountry Music USA.â He has been retired for several years.
Bill West is survived by his wife Brenda McClure West, by sons Kerry, Dale and Walter, by daughter Shelly West Hood, by six grandchildren and by three great-grandchildren.
A celebration of his life will be at noon today (Monday, Sept. 23) at the chapel of Spring Hill Funeral Home. Internment will follow in Forest Lawn Memorial Gardens. The family will receive friends from 10 a.m. until the time of the service. Memorial contributions may be made to Alive Hospice.
'MusicRow' No. 1 Song
/by Eric T. ParkerToby Keith joins staff members of KBEQ during a stop on his Hammer Down Tour in Kansas City, Mo. Pictured (L-R): Greg Sax (SDU); Mike Kennedy (KBEQ/PD); Keith; TJ McEntire (KBEQ MD); Joshua James (KBEQ On Air)
Barry Dean, Natalie Hemby and Luke Laird, the same writers who brought you Little Big Townâs âPontoonâ last summer, teamed up to bring you this weekâs No. 1 song, âDrinks After Workâ by Show Dog-Universalâs Toby Keith.
Weâve all had one of those days: âlong day, no break.â But Keithâs working man single has been asking for 15 weeks on our chart to let some hair down during an after-office happy hour with a particular someone.
Hopefully they said yes, because Keith knows how to have a good time. He’s been around the country this summer for the Hammer Down Tour with dates scheduled through October 2013, so it’s not too late to join the singer while he works on stage!
In the meantime, we can all raise our glass to toast the single with a drink this evening…can’t you get 2-for-1s on Friday? On second thought, we might have to go another week with this song!
No. 1 Celebration: Carrie Underwood's "See You Again"
/by Jessica NicholsonPictured (back row L-R): EMIâs Josh Van Valkenburg, producer Mark Bright, Sony Music Nashvilleâs Gary Overton and Lesly Tyson and BMG Chrysalisâ Kos Weaver. (front row L-R): BMIâs Jody Williams, David Hodges, Underwood, Hillary Lindsey and ASCAPâs LeAnn Phelan. Photo: Rick Diamond
Carrie Underwood, Hillary Lindsey and David Hodges were honored for their chart-topping single, “See You Again,” yesterday (Sept. 19) at the Country Music Association offices in Nashville. The song marks Underwood’s ninth No. 1 as a songwriter and ASCAP writer Hillary Lindsey’s 12th time at the top of the charts. Hodges, a former member of the rock band Evanescence, was gifted with a guitar from BMI to commemorate his first Country chart-topping song. It was the 29th chart-t0pper for Underwood’s producer Mark Bright.
Country Radio Broadcasters’ Bradford Hollingsworth, the Country Music Association’s Brandy Simms, Josh Van Valkenburg of Sony/ATV, and representatives from ASCAP’s LeAnn Phelan and BMI’s Jody Williams were among the many to offer congratulations to the songwriters, radio promotion staff and publishers. Sony/ATV made a donation to the Humane Society on behalf of the writers, while Avenue Bank offered a donation to Underwood’s C.A.T.S. Foundation.
“I’ve been nervous the whole week because I’ve never been to a No. 1 party here,” said Hodges. He expressed thankfulness that he was able to not only co-write the song, but sing on it. “I got a call from Mark [Bright] saying Carrie really wanted Hillary and myself to sing background on the song because we wrote it with her,” says Hodges. “I loved that because it is so different from what most artists do and Carrie is so involved in the song.”
The song was one of three originally penned by the trio for possible inclusion on the Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader soundtrack. “I thank the Chronicles of Narnia people for asking Carrie to write for the movie and Carrie for asking us to write songs with her for it,” said Lindsey. “Almost three years later [after “There’s A Place For Us” was chosen for the movie], I thought ‘See You Again’ was done because we didn’t use it in the movie, then we found out she’s putting it on her album.”
For Underwood, it was a song she felt still had a future and deserved to be heard. “I had so much fun writing with these two. It’s so fun writing with people you like to be around because you know that whatever happens, you had a great time. I knew this song had a place–some place–and that I would find it,” said Underwood, who also spoke about hearing numerous stories of how the song has brought comfort and hope to the lives of those who listened to it. “No. 1 parties are awesome, but the biggest reward is hearing how the song affects people.”
Producer's Chair: Mark Bright
/by contributorBy James Rea
Mark Bright
Shortly after Mark Bright left his position as Pres./CEO of Word in 2010, I quoted Mark in my 2011 P.C. interview as saying: âThe more time I spent in the studio, the more I felt like I might be jeopardizing the jobs of all the people I was responsible for. My resignation was like a new lease on life.â
Clearly it has been. In two short years, Bright’s body of work with engineer Derek Bason has been remarkable. In 2011 Carrie Underwood was nominated for ACM Top Female Vocalist and Sara Evansâ âA Little Bit Strongerâ was nominated for CMA Single of the Year. 2012 brought a CMA Album of the Year nomination, Carrie was nominated for ACM Vocalist of the Year, and Carrie & Brad Paisley were nominated for ACM Vocal Event of the Year for âRemind Me.â Carrie also received a Grammy nomination for Best Country Solo Performance in 2012 and Scotty McCreery won ACM Best New Artist. This year, Mark received nominations for CMA & ACM Album of the Year, Carrie earned another ACM nomination for Female Vocalist of the Year and Bright’s production on âBlown Awayâ did just that when it won a Grammy for Best Country Song of the Year for writers Josh Kear and Chris Tompkins.
And the hits just keep on coming.
Mark and co-writer Tim James received an ASCAP âMost Playedâ Award for co-penning George Straitâs 60th No. 1, “Give It All We Got Tonight.” Brightâs new publishing deal is with Delbertâs Boy Music. Bright and Kirsten Wines at Chatterbox Music have already had cuts with Tim McGraw, Little Big Town and others since the name change. Staff Writers include Jason Saenz, Mallary Hope, April Geesbreght, Clark Kelly and others.Â
Thereâs more…Along with Carrieâs new album, Mark produced a record on the Texas-based group The Wagoneers this year and signed New York-based Allison Veltz to a publishing deal, a development deal and a record deal on Blaster Records out of Cleveland â distributed by Warner Bros. He also signed pop artist Clark Kelly and is currently producing Spanish/English, singer-songwriter/dancer/producer/choreographer/model/The Voice coach: Shakira. I must remember to ask Mark how he finds time to go fishing with Luke Bryan.
How did you wind up producing Shakira?
Bright: Since she was a judge on The Voice, Shakira has been around Blake & Miranda and really seeing where the genesis of a Country song starts and becoming inspired by that on her end. So she started checking out country records and she like the ones I was producing. So her A&R guy from New York called me when I was in England and said, Shakira wants to write and record with you.
Is the creative process different from artist to artist?
Yes, and what makes it different is the relationship that the producer has with the artist. Carrie has such an incredible handle on who she is as an artist. Sheâs very savvy in the studio but she had to learn how to get there. On her first album she had a lot of people around her and she did a lot of listening so she could get her feet under her. She goes out and she sells a gazillion records but more importantly, she learned a lot in the process. The second record comes out, all of a sudden she knew what snare drums make what kinds of sounds, she knew what kind of guitars made those particular sounds and she had an utter command of the types of songs that she wanted to record. Sheâs always said publicly: âMark doesnât tell me how to sing and I donât tell Mark how to produce.â And itâs been a magnificent relationship.
An artist who has had hit-or-miss with their career will clearly have a little bit of insecurity about how there are perceived in the studio, so you have to just read it in the moment. And where an artist wants to assert himself or herself, you make sure that the players â the engineer and the producer â  are listening because itâs their record.
When pitching a new artist for a deal, do you have a better shot with a label who already has someone you produce, on the label or, one who doesnât?
I donât think I could perceive it as having a better shot. I just have special relationships with certain labels that are going to think Mark Bright is doing this; we should give this a special listen. That doesnât mean however that, Mark Bright is doing this, so letâs sign it. Thatâs a big distinction.
Do you ever go out on the road with your artists?
With Carrie, itâs such a big tour with so many moving parts that I only take care of the music aspect. I rehearse the show with the band here in Nashville including sound designs for some of the segways between songs, for instance with the show opener, I produced that and itâs my arrangement. Then Iâll go out and weâll rent out an arena for two weeks and put the show together. When this tour with Carrie started, I was out for two months. But in my world, Iâm just taking care of the music part and Raj Kapoor takes care of how the sets come together and how they work, etc. But itâs a lot of fun and then Iâll go back out and make sure that, as we make subtle changes with the tour, maybe a song here and a song there, and check to see if weâre getting the right kind of response.Â
Does an artistâs road band ever have difficulty with the song arrangements that were established in the studio?
I think it happens, but itâs rare. Whatâs more common is that we encourage and particularly in the Carrie camp, youâre going to be playing these songs every night and hopefully the way they play it, by the middle of the tour, is going to be better than the record. I want people to say, That show is better than the record. I love that comment.
If a great song comes in at the last minute, does the lack of time with that song require a different approach in the studio?
Thatâs a complex question. It happens fairly frequently but in every case that it has happened with me, we have all of those resources in place to be able to handle that. In that event, we already have 4 or 5 drum kits and twenty guitars on hand, so weâre prepared for it. Generally when a new song is that important, weâre excited that we had one come in here thatâs going to be a game changer.
In our last interview, you said: Producers are working 5-6 times harder to make the same money. Has your method of doing business changed?
Dramatically, everything in our lives can be scaled and this is no different. We have to scale it to meet the market’s expectation. On a new artist, you can no longer spend anywhere close to the money you used to spend making a record. Youâve got to make it as good but youâve got to do it with half the money and sometimes less than half the money. And that means, where we used to spread the mix out on the console, a lot of times weâre mixing the whole thing inside the box meaning, in Pro Tools because itâs just so expensive to spread it out. Maybe weâre using more players on the session, so we get a more complete picture of a song. After the date, instead of having to think, letâs get a bunch of these overdubs and sort of build an actual tracking date. In my world, thereâs a lot less of that going on.
We try to get the artist to sing one or two or three songs in one session during the day, instead of one song per day. But the idea is, you canât let the quality compromise. Weâre under the same constraints that labels are and how much they can spend going to radio. I love the good old days, but this is what weâre in now and to me itâs all about making great music. It is what it is and weâre going to be happy with it and maybe do a lot more pre-production before we ever go into the studio.
Why is it that many producers and engineers in LA, NY and England have representatives and in Nashville they donât?
Culturally, we just donât do that here. We speak for ourselves if we need to talk. And Iâm telling ya, thatâs one of the biggest attributes of our culture in this town. Producers and engineers donât have reps, because we donât need them here.
Are the big studios still dwindling?
It hasnât changed as much here for Starstruck. Over the past twelve years, Iâve been the primary user of the rooms. I keep one room booked out probably 85% of the time. Other large studios have shut down. Itâs tougher for the multi-room studio owner to make a living at this point.
You are on the NARAS and Leadership Music Boards. What have they been up to in the past couple of years?
The Recording Academy has a tremendous amount of programs for high school and college students. We have a thing called GRAMMY U. in colleges. People like me talk to college students in an up-front and honest way to look at what their odds are of getting a music-related job. Weâre being honest with them. We also have GRAMMY CAMP, which has high school students going in and getting really concentrated instruction at a very high level from the greatest musicians, engineers and producers in the world. The fruit of that was on the last American Country Awards, when Keith Urban came out and performed with these kids. It was unbelievable how talented these kids were.
The other significant thing that weâre doing at the Academy is building a fully functioning studio at Pearl Cohn High School here in Nashville. They also have a fully-functioning record label that is mentored by John Esposito and Warner Bros. That warms my heart. Now they have a program that is second to none as far as getting a recording education at the high school level.
Leadership Music quietly goes about teaching young and sometimes not-so-young people what the lay of the land looks like, in minutia. Leadership Music does the best job Iâve ever seen in equipping a music professional to understand how to navigate these rather muddy waters that is the music business today, and it does it brilliantly.
Does the direction of a new album generally revolve around what is going on, in the artistâs personal life?
Yes, a lot of times either directly or psychologically. With Carrie, sheâs in a very happy place because got married a couple of years ago, so her life looks different. So she typically wants to do songs about happiness and family instead of old boyfriends.
Carrie has had a lot of award nominations. How important is it to her, to win?
Greatly. Sheâs one of the most competitive people Iâve ever known. You canât be a successful artist and not have that competitive spirit.
For more, visit theproducerschair.com
LifeNotes: R&B Musician DeFord Bailey Jr. Passes
/by Robert K OermannDeFord Bailey Jr.
DeFord Bailey Jr. died last Sunday, Sept. 15, in his hometown of Nashville. He was 81 years old.
Bailey was a Nashville r&b music mainstay for decades. He was a regular on the nationally syndicated soul TV show Night Train in 1963-68. His backing band on the show included the guitarist who later became known as Jimi Hendrix. The latterâs guitar style was reportedly influenced by Baileyâs.
DeFord Bailey Jr.âs band also became popular in local nightspots such as The Jolly Roger in Printerâs Alley. He continued to perform regionally throughout the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s. He was a musician at the Opryland USA theme park for a time. DeFord Bailey Jr. was the son of early Grand Ole Opry star and Country Music Hall of Fame member DeFord Bailey (1899-1982). His father was known as âThe Harmonica Wizard.â âJuniorâ was frequently called upon by the media to speak about his legendary father. Juniorâs son Carlos Bailey is also a professional musician in Nashville.
DeFord Bailey Jr. is survived by sisters Dezoral and Christine, 10 children, 26 grandchildren and 29 great grandchildren.
Visitation with the family is this afternoon (Sept. 20) until 6 p.m. and on Saturday from 11 a.m. to noon at Terrell Broady Funeral Home, 3855 Clarksville Pike. The funeral will follow tomorrowâs visitation. It will be held at Greater Bethel A.M.E. Church, 1300 South Street. Interment will be in Greenwood Cemetery, which is also where his father is buried.
Nielsen To Add Smartphone, Tablet Viewership To Ratings Tabulation
/by Lorie HollabaughWith more people watching TV in less conventional ways now, the networks have reportedly been pressuring Nielsen to include that viewership in its reports that measure advertising rates and often influence perceptions of program success or failure.
Since Nielsen ratings are mainly used for buying and selling TV advertising air time, the expansion plan will not include services like Netflix, which airs previous seasons of shows, or Hulu, which is jointly owned by the parent companies of ABC, Fox, and NBC, because ads streamed on that service are different from the ones on network TV. The company will however measure online streams of programs that have the same ads in the same order as regular broadcasts.
The company plans to formally announce the move next week at New Yorkâs Advertising Week conference.
Sounds Australia Hosts 17 Artists At Bluebird Showcase
/by Lorie HollabaughPictured (L-R): Jeff Walker (AristoMedia President/CEO), Glenn Dickie (Sounds Australia), Sam Hawksley, Katie Brianna, Emma Swift, Gena Rose Bruce, Andrew Wriggleswoth and Laura Coates (The Weeping Willows), Jen Mize, Dobe Newton, Mike David (Breaking Hart Benton), Donna Dean, Bill Page (Mushroom Music), Lee Fielding (Breaking Hart Benton), and Erika Wollam Nichols (Bluebird, COO/President).
Aussies got the week rolling in a big way for the Americana Festival this week with a huge Tamworth Presents âAustraliana At Americanaâ showcase at the Bluebird CafĂ© presented by Sounds Australia. Seventeen artists from Down Under showcased during the event, which kicked off the festival week in Music City. Performers at two different shows included Breaking Hart Benton, Katie Brianna, Tracey Bunn, Donna Dean, Melody Feder & Michael Muchow, Sam Hawksley, Paul Kelly, Anne McCue, Cameron Milford, Jen Mize, Kelly Menhennett, Gena Rose Bruce, Tamara Stewart, Emma Swift, and The Weeping Willows.
“Regulars at the Bluebird are privileged to see a seemingly never-ending stream of incredibly gifted songwriters – most of whom they know,â said Dobe Newton of Sounds Australia. Â âSo it’s always exciting to present a bunch of new Australian talent and watch the response. We’ve been sold-out for the last two years, and it’s become a favorite, for our artists as well as the locals. Â A great night for artists and fans alike.â
Sounds Australia is a marketing initiative designed by the country to provide a cohesive platform to aid the Australian music industry in accessing domestic and international career opportunities.
Pictured (L-R): Dobe Newton (Sounds Australia), Anne McCue, Cameron Milford, Gena Rose Bruce, Paul Kelly, Tamara Stewart, Michael Muchow, Melody Feder, Tracey Bunn, Glenn Dickie and Kelly Menhennett.
Lifenotes: Teresa L. "Tuttie" Jackson
/by Jessica NicholsonJackson is survived by sister, Sherry (Bobby) Oakley; brother, Jack (Renee) Jackson; nieces, Amanda Oakley Badacour and Jamie Jackson; nephew, Cody Jackson; great nephews, Logan Badacour and Blaine Jackson, according to Jackson’s obituary.
Funeral services will be conducted Friday (Sept. 20) at 4 p.m., at Woodbine Funeral Home, Hickory Chapel, 5852 Nolensville Road. Visitation will be held Friday (Sept. 20) from 2-4 p.m. at Woodbine Funeral Home, Hickory Chapel.
Swift's Spectacular RED Tour
/by Sarah SkatesTaylor Swift RED Tour
âItâs going to blow your mind. I dare you not to like this show,â proclaimed Scott Borchetta during last nightâs (Sept. 19) VIP reception before Taylor Swift took the stage in Nashville for her RED Tour. Media and industry elite gathered backstage at Bridgestone Arena to toast Swiftâs recent successes with six plaque presentations. âShe is fearless. She is about striving for greatness,â continued Borchetta.
Joining him to do the honors was David Joseph, Chairman & CEO of Universal Music Group UK. Swift was saluted with awards for four million sales each of the No. 1s âWe Are Never Ever Getting Back Togetherâ and âI Knew You Were Trouble,â one million downloads of âBegin Again,â and the chart topping status of âThe Highway Donât Care,â her duet with labelmate Tim McGraw. Joseph celebrated Swiftâs four million UK sales of her latest album Red, and another plaque honored her six million U.S. sales. Recalling early meetings with the superstar and her team, Joseph said there was never a doubt about her success, âthe only question was how big. The story has just begun.â
Mingling at the party were BMLG execs Jimmy Harnen and John Zarling, as well as many others, including Troy Tomlinson, Jody Williams, Pete Fisher, Kyle Young, Sherod Robertson, Bob Doerschuk and representatives from every media outlet in town.
(L-R): Universal Music Group UK/Ireland CEO & Chairman David Joseph, Taylor Swift, Big Machine Label Group President/CEO Scott Borchetta. Photo: by Larry Busacca/TAS/Getty Images for TAS
Nashville is the final stop on the Red North American tour. Swift choose to wrap the run in her hometown because she says it brings out some of her wildest followers. On the first of a three-night stand, she even saluted Nashville by sporting a blinged-out Opry T-shirt. The fan connection is one of the most amazing aspects of her spectacular show. In a huge arena she expertly cultivates an intimate connection with the crowd through open, honest dialog. Her relationship and respect for her fans remains one of Swiftâs strongest ties to her country music roots. And just like she grew up listening to Shania Twain and other â90s stalwarts, there could be a young girl in the audience who will become the next Taylor Swift.
âI didnât always have 13,000 people wanting to hang out with me on a Thursday night, thatâs, like, a recent development,â the performer admitted as she discussed the importance of treating people kindly and feeling good about yourself before launching into âMean.â
âI want to thank you for making my music the soundtrack to your crazy emotions,â she shared while explaining that the color red is an analogy for many of her feelings.
The audience was a vibrant sea of red clothing and pulsating lightsâcreating the biggest party to hit Nashville this year. The theatrical production was mind boggling, venturing from an old Hollywood set for âThe Lucky One,â to wind-up toy ballet dancers for âLove Story.â Elaborate sets and wardrobes are Swiftâs hallmarks; choreography and her acting prowess add up to unstoppable perfection.
When performing songs from her previous albums, the scene was reminiscent of a fairy tale. For the trip down memory lane she re-imagined some of her biggest hits, including a doo-wop version of âYou Belong With Meâ backed by Supremes-style girl group. She went old school with just an acoustic guitar to perform âOur Songâ on the secondary stage and recalled penning it for her 9th grade talent show at Hendersonville High School. Today songwriting is still the bedrock of her career. She performed the expertly crafted âAll Too Wellâ on a piano which was, of course, painted red.
During âSparks Fly,â a platform carried her through the air above the audience. Known for welcoming surprise guests, Luke Bryan appeared for a fun duet of his mega-hit âI Donât Want This Night to End.â
The finale was a trippy Alice In Wonderland scene commanded by a high-flying Swift in a red ringmaster costume. It was a stellar combination of the eveningâs best elements: sparkle, glitter and dazzling excitement in a swarm of confetti.
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