
Ron Haffkine
By James Rea
(The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of MusicRow
.)
Best known for his work with
Dr. Hook, record producer, manager, A&R/songman
Ron Haffkine is in a class all his own. He shies away from talking about his Grammy and his record deal with PolyGram in 1971. His 67 gold and platinum albums (worldwide) are in closets and boxes in his home. And if you ask Ron about the 10 Top 10s he produced on Dr. Hook, he gives you the unedited hilarious stories of how much fun it was.
Dr. Hook’s 12 albums (10 studio and two live) produced by Ron featured numerous hits: “On The Cover of The Rolling Stone,” “Sylvia’s Mother,” “Sharing The Night Together,” “When You’re In Love With A Beautiful Woman,” “Baby Makes Her Blue Jeans Talk,” “Sexy Eyes” (written by
Keith Stegall) and Dr. Hook’s smash, “A Little Bit More,” which Ron found at a flea market for 35 cents.
At 21, Ron was a self-professed “average” musician, and his love of music drew him to Greenwich Village, in his home town of New York. There, he became life-long buddies with famed author/playwright/songwriter
Shel Silverstein, who wrote many of Dr. Hook’s songs, including “The Cover of The Rolling Stone,” “Freakin’ at the Freakers’ Ball” and “Sylvia’s Mother.” The late writer also penned songs including
Johnny Cash’s “A Boy Named Sue,” which won a Grammy in 1970, “The Unicorn” for
The Irish Rovers, and
Loretta Lynn’s “One’s On The Way.” Today Ron calls Shel,
Clive Davis and
Kyle Lehning the three most important people in his career.
Ron’s career began to take shape in the early ‘70s when he formed and managed a band called
The Gurus. He boldly walked into Regent Sound Studios and convinced then unknown engineer
Bill Szymczyk (who later produced
The Eagles) to co-produce his band. It was Ron’s first project.
Ron played the album for Shel, who was so impressed he recruited Ron to produce the music for some films he was working on:
Who is Harry Kellerman (
Dustin Hoffman) and
Ned Kelly (
Mick Jagger). The soundtrack of the 1970 Jagger film features Silverstein songs produced by Ron, and performed by
Waylon Jennings and
Kris Kristofferson. Although he was broke, Ron recognized the opportunity and took the gig for free.
One scene in the Hoffman film required a band on stage, so he recommended
Dr. Hook, who he’d heard in The Sands bar in Union City, New Jersey. He convinced the producers, Shel and Hoffman, to use them by hosting a showcase.
Ron knew he had to get a record deal for the band before the movie came out, so he used Hoffman’s name to get a meeting with
Clive Davis at CBS. Ron says that in preparation for the meeting he told the drummer to turn over Clive’s wastebasket and use it as a drum. He told the keyboard player to jump up on Clive’s desk, and he told Ray to sing about two feet from Clive’s face. He prepped the band with liquor. Clive called his business affairs man,
Elliot Goldman, and signed them on the spot. It was 1969.
Ron recalls, “Clive Davis had signed Dr. Hook and flown us to the CBS convention in LA. He had just finished telling everyone in his company that he was going to introduce his next huge act. Then the group gets on stage and completely blows it. It was terrible and I’m hiding in the bathroom.
Fred Foster comes in and sees me ready to pass out. He says, ‘Don’t worry. I heard that kid’s voice. Stay with it. Fred was a very important factor in my life and I don’t know if he knows it.”
Silverstein was then living in Sausalito and when Ron went to visit him, he fell in love with San Francisco and moved there.
They recorded Dr. Hook’s first album on the west coast at
Roy Halee’s studio. Ron and the band were broke and living in a flop house but they managed to record 20 sides. One day Shel and Ron were driving across the Golden Gate Bridge and Shel pulled out his guitar and played “Sylvia’s Mother.” Clive liked the song, but his head of national promotions,
Steve Popovich, loved it.
From hanging out with Shel Silverstein, Ron had learned the difference between good songs and great songs and was quickly becoming Dr. Hook’s go-to A&R man, as well as their producer and manager. Later, after “Sylvia’s Mother,” Ron locked horns with Clive Davis over Silverstein’s “Cover of the Rolling Stone” because of the lyrics “We take all kinds of pills to give us all kinds of thrills” and “I got a freaky old lady named Cocaine Katy.”
Ron recalled, “I went up to see
Jann Wenner at
Rolling Stone magazine and told him, ‘I’ve just given you guys the best commercial for that rag you’ll ever get.’ And the rest became music history. They sent
Cameron Crowe, their 16-year-old wiz-kid reporter to do the interview.” And in March 1973, issue 131, Dr. Hook and the Medicine Show appeared on the cover of
Rolling Stone.

Dr. Hook on the cover of Rolling Stone in 1973.
The Producer’s Chair: In 1971 you got signed as an artist on PolyGram. How did that come about?
Ron Haffkine: Shel had written a song called “Do You Wanna Boogie or Do You Don’t, Cause If You Do, I Will with You and If You Don’t I Won’t.” So Dennis and the guys said they wanted to produce me. And in the middle of Dr. Hook being hot I got a deal on PolyGram. The record came out and did absolutely nothing, but it took off in San Jose, Calif. and went Top 10. The PolyGram president wanted to do another record but I can’t sing a f…ing note and I was having too much fun with Dr. Hook so I refused.
Why did you leave the west coast and come to Nashville?
RF: Shel says to me, “There’s a young fellow in Nashville,
Kyle Lehning, who engineers for Waylon Jennings. He wants to meet
Roy Halee. If I send Kyle out to San Francisco, will you introduce him to Roy?” So Kyle comes out, I introduce him to Roy and they hit it off. During his time out there Kyle says to me, “Why don’t you come to Nashville and cut a record?” I had never worked with studio players before, but we came to Nashville and Kyle set up a session and he’s got
Kenny Malone,
Steve Gibson and
Shane Keister and we recorded “A Little Bit More.” Dr. Hook wasn’t happy because they always recorded everything themselves but I stood there with my jaw open and my eyes spinning. I could not believe what happened.
The session goes great and Kyle laughed and says to me, “Hey Ronnie, how’s that ever going to be a hit?” The line in the song “When your body’s had enough of me” …is a pretty strong sexual connotation. I said, “If I can get this thing on the radio, there’s no way it’s not a hit.”
Ron moved to Nashville in 1975 and later when the band signed with Capitol, the first single “Only 16” got some attention, but when they released “A Little Bit More” things exploded for Dr. Hook…and Ron.
What surprises you about the industry today?
RF: There were certain songs throughout my life that could not miss. I say that because once an artist gets their first hit, they can be sure that the public is going to hear their second record. So if you miss and you’re already on a greased track, you can’t blame it on promotion or marketing or the record company. That’s what surprises me today. I don’t understand someone having an enormous hit and not being able to follow it up.
I’d listen to 1,000 songs and I’d hear a song with a magnificent first verse and chorus and I’d think to myself, “Thank God I found one.” And then the second and third verses were weak. And I’d get frustrated with the songwriter and I’d say, “You expect me to spend thousands of dollars, energy, time, fight with the record company and fight with radio? You have a genius first verse and chorus and you did not spend the time and effort to finish the song as brilliantly. You got lazy.” That’s the only thing that ever upset me with a songwriter.
How did you wind up producing Lou Rawls?
RF: A girl who worked for me was friends with Lou’s girlfriend, and then I became friends with Lou. He asked me if I wanted to make a record with him. As it turned out, I did not make a really good record with him. I wasn’t doing the kind of stuff that
Gamble and Huff were doing, which had more of a Motown feel. I figured, “they know how to do that stuff, what do they need me for?” So I took the record in a different direction. There were some great songs on that album, one of them being “Wind Beneath My Wings.” I was the first one to cut it and in 1985 an astronaut took the song to space and played it back to earth. That was a first.
You’re the first producer I’ve interviewed who also managed their act. Why?
RF: Jerry Weintraub wanted to take over managing Dr. Hook from me, but the band was funny and wild and I was having the time of my life. So I told him no. He came back, during the success of “Sylvia’s Mother,” and said he would get me the biggest acts in the world to produce, if he could be management. I said, “Jerry, you’re from the Bronx and I’m from Brooklyn. There is not enough money in the world to make me want to talk to you three times a week.”
Jerry would have made me a lot richer but I didn’t care at the time. I was offered lots of jobs as head of A&R but I was having such a great time and I didn’t want a job that put me in the position of telling people “no” on a daily basis. We’re in a business that is so tough and artists and songwriters are sensitive by nature. There are all these sensitive people who put their hearts out there for someone else to stomp on every friggin’ day. I didn’t want to be that stomper.
You had an opportunity to sign Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham. Why didn’t you?
RF: Dr. Hook was out in San Francisco recording their first album. Our road manager had some friends and he asked if I would meet with them. A couple of days later, they’re over at my house Lindsey starts to play his guitar and I hear Stevie Nicks’ voice and I almost passed out. They’d play a song and then argue, they’d play another song and they’d argue again. This went on for a while. I thought they wouldn’t last together because they’d argue after every song. If I had signed them, no doubt I would have ruined their career and they never would have become Fleetwood Mac as the world knows them.
What do you love the most about the music industry?
RF: As a producer, you fall in love with the artists that you produce and you fall in love with the songs. It’s the joy of doing it. This business is not a business that you go into saying, “I’m going to make a million dollars.” I have to walk in with something that someone either hates or loves. I can’t walk in with something ordinary or I’m dead.
When did the industry really change?
RF: We were born at a wonderful point in time but once everybody started sampling everything and there were all kinds of loops and beats, some became so overused that they became dull and boring. The way great music was made, and will be made again, is when you make your own sounds.
Tell me about the Grammy you received in 1984.
RF: Shel wrote a children’s book called
Where The Sidewalk Ends which was on the best sellers list longer than any other book in history at the time. The president of CBS,
Al Teller (later president of MCA), asked me to do some albums on Shel’s children’s books. At first Shel said no, but I convinced him. He refused to go on a book tour or do any TV appearances to promote it, but we won the Grammy anyway.
Who are your current projects and what are your biggest challenges today?
RF: I’m currently working with
Bryan James and
Tawny River. Many of the Country records that are being made today are basically similar to the kind of records that were being made back in the ‘70s and ‘80s. The challenge is what the challenge has always been: the songs.
For more, visit theproducerschair.com.
Industry Ink (6-21-13)
/by Jessica NicholsonGreg Bates was invited to become an honorary “Friends and Family” member of the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum.
Pictured (Back Row, L- R): Marc Dennis (CAA), Jeff Krones (CAA), Nikki Burns (Big Machine Label Group), Martha Earls (Sandbox Entertainment), Rachel Weingartner (Membership Manager, Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum), Pamela Johnson (Vice President of Development, Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum), Jay Orr (Vice President of Museum Programs, Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum) and Greg Bates. Photo Courtesy of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
• • •
During the recent CRS Board and Agenda Committee meetings, members got a bit of musical entertainment from Hit Shop artist Weston Burt and Warner Nashville’s Charlie Worsham.
Pictured (L-R): Mike Culotta (CRB/CRS President), Becky Brenner (Albright, O’Malley & Brenner), Weston Burt, Skip Bishop (HitShop Records), Bill Mayne (CRB/CRS Executive Director). Photo Credit: Kristen England.
Pictured (L-R): Bill Mayne (CRS/CRB Executive Director), Charlie Morgan (WLHK), Tim Roberts (WYCD), Shelly Easton (WXTU), Kurt Johnson (Townsquare Media), Charlie Worsham, Chris Stacey (Warner Nashville), John Esposito (Warner Nashville), John Shomby (Max Media of Hampton Roads). Photo Credit: Kristen England
• • •
Jo Dee Messina
Jo Dee Messina‘s fans have reached and exceeded her Kickstarter goal, raising $100,000 in 30 days to help fund the recording of Messina’s next album. “The people are the ones that make music possible,” says Messina. “They are the ones that come to the shows, request the songs, and get the records. When I first started the campaign, many folks didn’t get it. The ones that took the time to learn about it got that this project is something we are all doing together. Once again the fans have shown their love and loyalty. I am truly grateful.”
Messina’s Kickstarter campaign officially ends Sunday (June 23) at 9 p.m. ET. According to Kickstarter.com, 831 backers have raised over $111,000, as of this writing.
• • •
Little River Band
Kirt Webster‘s Webster PR has signed Little River Band for publicity representation. Originally formed in Melbourne, Australia in 1975, Little River Band has sold more than 30 million albums worldwide. In 2004, Little River Band was inducted into the Australian Recording Industry (ARIA) Hall of Fame.
Wayne Nelson, lead singer and 30+ year member of the band resides in Nashville.
• • •
The Producer’s Chair: Ron Haffkine
/by contributorRon Haffkine
By James Rea
(The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of MusicRow.)
Best known for his work with Dr. Hook, record producer, manager, A&R/songman Ron Haffkine is in a class all his own. He shies away from talking about his Grammy and his record deal with PolyGram in 1971. His 67 gold and platinum albums (worldwide) are in closets and boxes in his home. And if you ask Ron about the 10 Top 10s he produced on Dr. Hook, he gives you the unedited hilarious stories of how much fun it was.
Dr. Hook’s 12 albums (10 studio and two live) produced by Ron featured numerous hits: “On The Cover of The Rolling Stone,” “Sylvia’s Mother,” “Sharing The Night Together,” “When You’re In Love With A Beautiful Woman,” “Baby Makes Her Blue Jeans Talk,” “Sexy Eyes” (written by Keith Stegall) and Dr. Hook’s smash, “A Little Bit More,” which Ron found at a flea market for 35 cents.
At 21, Ron was a self-professed “average” musician, and his love of music drew him to Greenwich Village, in his home town of New York. There, he became life-long buddies with famed author/playwright/songwriter Shel Silverstein, who wrote many of Dr. Hook’s songs, including “The Cover of The Rolling Stone,” “Freakin’ at the Freakers’ Ball” and “Sylvia’s Mother.” The late writer also penned songs including Johnny Cash’s “A Boy Named Sue,” which won a Grammy in 1970, “The Unicorn” for The Irish Rovers, and Loretta Lynn’s “One’s On The Way.” Today Ron calls Shel, Clive Davis and Kyle Lehning the three most important people in his career.
Ron’s career began to take shape in the early ‘70s when he formed and managed a band called The Gurus. He boldly walked into Regent Sound Studios and convinced then unknown engineer Bill Szymczyk (who later produced The Eagles) to co-produce his band. It was Ron’s first project.
Ron played the album for Shel, who was so impressed he recruited Ron to produce the music for some films he was working on: Who is Harry Kellerman (Dustin Hoffman) and Ned Kelly (Mick Jagger). The soundtrack of the 1970 Jagger film features Silverstein songs produced by Ron, and performed by Waylon Jennings and Kris Kristofferson. Although he was broke, Ron recognized the opportunity and took the gig for free.
One scene in the Hoffman film required a band on stage, so he recommended Dr. Hook, who he’d heard in The Sands bar in Union City, New Jersey. He convinced the producers, Shel and Hoffman, to use them by hosting a showcase.
Ron knew he had to get a record deal for the band before the movie came out, so he used Hoffman’s name to get a meeting with Clive Davis at CBS. Ron says that in preparation for the meeting he told the drummer to turn over Clive’s wastebasket and use it as a drum. He told the keyboard player to jump up on Clive’s desk, and he told Ray to sing about two feet from Clive’s face. He prepped the band with liquor. Clive called his business affairs man, Elliot Goldman, and signed them on the spot. It was 1969.
Ron recalls, “Clive Davis had signed Dr. Hook and flown us to the CBS convention in LA. He had just finished telling everyone in his company that he was going to introduce his next huge act. Then the group gets on stage and completely blows it. It was terrible and I’m hiding in the bathroom. Fred Foster comes in and sees me ready to pass out. He says, ‘Don’t worry. I heard that kid’s voice. Stay with it. Fred was a very important factor in my life and I don’t know if he knows it.”
Silverstein was then living in Sausalito and when Ron went to visit him, he fell in love with San Francisco and moved there.
They recorded Dr. Hook’s first album on the west coast at Roy Halee’s studio. Ron and the band were broke and living in a flop house but they managed to record 20 sides. One day Shel and Ron were driving across the Golden Gate Bridge and Shel pulled out his guitar and played “Sylvia’s Mother.” Clive liked the song, but his head of national promotions, Steve Popovich, loved it.
From hanging out with Shel Silverstein, Ron had learned the difference between good songs and great songs and was quickly becoming Dr. Hook’s go-to A&R man, as well as their producer and manager. Later, after “Sylvia’s Mother,” Ron locked horns with Clive Davis over Silverstein’s “Cover of the Rolling Stone” because of the lyrics “We take all kinds of pills to give us all kinds of thrills” and “I got a freaky old lady named Cocaine Katy.”
Ron recalled, “I went up to see Jann Wenner at Rolling Stone magazine and told him, ‘I’ve just given you guys the best commercial for that rag you’ll ever get.’ And the rest became music history. They sent Cameron Crowe, their 16-year-old wiz-kid reporter to do the interview.” And in March 1973, issue 131, Dr. Hook and the Medicine Show appeared on the cover of Rolling Stone.
Dr. Hook on the cover of Rolling Stone in 1973.
The Producer’s Chair: In 1971 you got signed as an artist on PolyGram. How did that come about?
Ron Haffkine: Shel had written a song called “Do You Wanna Boogie or Do You Don’t, Cause If You Do, I Will with You and If You Don’t I Won’t.” So Dennis and the guys said they wanted to produce me. And in the middle of Dr. Hook being hot I got a deal on PolyGram. The record came out and did absolutely nothing, but it took off in San Jose, Calif. and went Top 10. The PolyGram president wanted to do another record but I can’t sing a f…ing note and I was having too much fun with Dr. Hook so I refused.
Why did you leave the west coast and come to Nashville?
RF: Shel says to me, “There’s a young fellow in Nashville, Kyle Lehning, who engineers for Waylon Jennings. He wants to meet Roy Halee. If I send Kyle out to San Francisco, will you introduce him to Roy?” So Kyle comes out, I introduce him to Roy and they hit it off. During his time out there Kyle says to me, “Why don’t you come to Nashville and cut a record?” I had never worked with studio players before, but we came to Nashville and Kyle set up a session and he’s got Kenny Malone, Steve Gibson and Shane Keister and we recorded “A Little Bit More.” Dr. Hook wasn’t happy because they always recorded everything themselves but I stood there with my jaw open and my eyes spinning. I could not believe what happened.
The session goes great and Kyle laughed and says to me, “Hey Ronnie, how’s that ever going to be a hit?” The line in the song “When your body’s had enough of me” …is a pretty strong sexual connotation. I said, “If I can get this thing on the radio, there’s no way it’s not a hit.”
Ron moved to Nashville in 1975 and later when the band signed with Capitol, the first single “Only 16” got some attention, but when they released “A Little Bit More” things exploded for Dr. Hook…and Ron.
What surprises you about the industry today?
RF: There were certain songs throughout my life that could not miss. I say that because once an artist gets their first hit, they can be sure that the public is going to hear their second record. So if you miss and you’re already on a greased track, you can’t blame it on promotion or marketing or the record company. That’s what surprises me today. I don’t understand someone having an enormous hit and not being able to follow it up.
I’d listen to 1,000 songs and I’d hear a song with a magnificent first verse and chorus and I’d think to myself, “Thank God I found one.” And then the second and third verses were weak. And I’d get frustrated with the songwriter and I’d say, “You expect me to spend thousands of dollars, energy, time, fight with the record company and fight with radio? You have a genius first verse and chorus and you did not spend the time and effort to finish the song as brilliantly. You got lazy.” That’s the only thing that ever upset me with a songwriter.
How did you wind up producing Lou Rawls?
RF: A girl who worked for me was friends with Lou’s girlfriend, and then I became friends with Lou. He asked me if I wanted to make a record with him. As it turned out, I did not make a really good record with him. I wasn’t doing the kind of stuff that Gamble and Huff were doing, which had more of a Motown feel. I figured, “they know how to do that stuff, what do they need me for?” So I took the record in a different direction. There were some great songs on that album, one of them being “Wind Beneath My Wings.” I was the first one to cut it and in 1985 an astronaut took the song to space and played it back to earth. That was a first.
You’re the first producer I’ve interviewed who also managed their act. Why?
RF: Jerry Weintraub wanted to take over managing Dr. Hook from me, but the band was funny and wild and I was having the time of my life. So I told him no. He came back, during the success of “Sylvia’s Mother,” and said he would get me the biggest acts in the world to produce, if he could be management. I said, “Jerry, you’re from the Bronx and I’m from Brooklyn. There is not enough money in the world to make me want to talk to you three times a week.”
Jerry would have made me a lot richer but I didn’t care at the time. I was offered lots of jobs as head of A&R but I was having such a great time and I didn’t want a job that put me in the position of telling people “no” on a daily basis. We’re in a business that is so tough and artists and songwriters are sensitive by nature. There are all these sensitive people who put their hearts out there for someone else to stomp on every friggin’ day. I didn’t want to be that stomper.
You had an opportunity to sign Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham. Why didn’t you?
RF: Dr. Hook was out in San Francisco recording their first album. Our road manager had some friends and he asked if I would meet with them. A couple of days later, they’re over at my house Lindsey starts to play his guitar and I hear Stevie Nicks’ voice and I almost passed out. They’d play a song and then argue, they’d play another song and they’d argue again. This went on for a while. I thought they wouldn’t last together because they’d argue after every song. If I had signed them, no doubt I would have ruined their career and they never would have become Fleetwood Mac as the world knows them.
What do you love the most about the music industry?
RF: As a producer, you fall in love with the artists that you produce and you fall in love with the songs. It’s the joy of doing it. This business is not a business that you go into saying, “I’m going to make a million dollars.” I have to walk in with something that someone either hates or loves. I can’t walk in with something ordinary or I’m dead.
When did the industry really change?
RF: We were born at a wonderful point in time but once everybody started sampling everything and there were all kinds of loops and beats, some became so overused that they became dull and boring. The way great music was made, and will be made again, is when you make your own sounds.
Tell me about the Grammy you received in 1984.
RF: Shel wrote a children’s book called Where The Sidewalk Ends which was on the best sellers list longer than any other book in history at the time. The president of CBS, Al Teller (later president of MCA), asked me to do some albums on Shel’s children’s books. At first Shel said no, but I convinced him. He refused to go on a book tour or do any TV appearances to promote it, but we won the Grammy anyway.
Who are your current projects and what are your biggest challenges today?
RF: I’m currently working with Bryan James and Tawny River. Many of the Country records that are being made today are basically similar to the kind of records that were being made back in the ‘70s and ‘80s. The challenge is what the challenge has always been: the songs.
For more, visit theproducerschair.com.
'MusicRow' No. 1 Song
/by Eric T. ParkerCarrie Underwood not only stands at No. 1 on this week’s CountryBreakout Chart with her latest single, “See You Again,” but she does so with 345 spins to spare.
As one of three songs penned by Hillary Lindsey, Dave Hodges and Underwood in preparation for the Chronicles of Narnia soundtrack, the song was excluded from the Disney series in favor of “There’s A Place For Us.”
Thankfully, Underwood exposed the track as the fourth single on Blown Away, and has since performed “See You Again” across various media channels, including a recent tribute performance to tornado-stricken Oklahoma during the 2013 CMT Music Awards.
Take a peek at the track’s music video below, directed by Eric Welch.
4th Annual ACM Lifting Lives Music Camp Coming To Nashville
/by Eric T. ParkerThe 4th annual camp will include celebrity involvement, beginning when campers participate in a songwriting workshop with Dallas Davidson and Jerrod Niemann, to craft a song from concept to final wording. At Ocean Way Studios, campers will have the opportunity to record the song during a recording session with Jake Owen and producer Ross Copperman.
Additionally, campers can sing karaoke onstage at Winner’s Bar with Love and Theft and perform live with Jerrod Niemann at the Grand Ole Opry on Friday, June 28. At the Wildhorse Saloon, campers will gather to share stories about their camp experience with Lauren Alaina.
ACM Lifting Lives funds the costs of the Camp, enabling the Vanderbilt Kennedy Center for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities to advance its mission of improving the lives of individuals with Williams syndrome and their families through research, training and service.
Williams syndrome is a genetic condition that is present at birth, characterized by medical problems including cardiovascular disease, developmental delays and learning disabilities. These occur side by side with striking verbal abilities, highly social personalities and an affinity for music.
For more information, visit acmliftinglives.org.
'Nashville' Stays in Nashville
/by Jessica Nicholson“I am very excited and looking forward to getting back to Nashville in just a few weeks,” Hinkle said.
During the show’s first season, it had incentives accounting for 32 percent of its Tennessee-based costs, but legislation changed the incentive structure to provide up to 25 percent. Nashville producers have since sought to make up the difference from state and city officials.
Weekly Chart Report (6/21/13)
/by Michael_SmithSPIN ZONE
KVOM/Morrillton, Ark.’s Ashton Taylor recently visited with Montgomery Gentry while at Thunder On the Mountain.
Carrie Underwood blows away the competition with “See You Again,” which earns this week’s No. 1 spot with 3,387 spins. We’re pretty sure that song title is prophetic, and that this powerful singer will indeed see the top slot on our MusicRow charts again soon. Zac Brown Band’s “Jump Right In” continues to jump up the chart, landing at No. 2. Justin Moore’s “Point At You” settles in at No. 3, while Kip Moore’s “Hey Pretty Girl” at No. 4. Keith Urban’s “Little Bit Of Everything” climbs three spots to break into the Top 5. Rounding out the Top Ten this week are Randy Houser’s “Runnin’ Outta Moonlight” and Hunter Hayes’s “I Want Crazy,” which continue to hold the No. 6 and No. 7 slots. Lady Antebellum’s “Goodbye Town” sits at No. 8, with Tyler Farr’s “Redneck Crazy” at No. 9 and Luke Bryan’s “Crash My Party” at No. 10.
Toby Keith’s “After Work” is this week’s greatest gainer, landing at No. 33 with an additional 585 spins. Kenny Chesney’s “When I See This Bar” earns the No. 24 spot with an added 511 spins. Jason Aldean’s “Night Train” gained another 407 spins, reaching the No. 40 spot. Dierks Bentley’s “Bourbon in Kentucky” (which features Kacey Musgraves on harmony vocals) breaks the Top 30, landing at No. 29 with an added 386 spins. Finally, Miranda Lambert’s “All Kinds of Kinds” sits at No. 43 with an additional 365 spins.
Women rule this week’s debuts, with Ashley Monroe’s “You Got Me” debuting at No. 75, Taylor Swift’s “Red” at No. 77, Erica Nicole’s “Better Beer” at No. 79 and Jordan Anderson’s “You Ain’t Ready For Me” at No. 80.
Frozen Playlists: KVVP, WDHR, WDGG, KCJC, KVOM, KYEZ, KYYK
Upcoming Singles
June 24
Jason Aldean/Night Train/BBR
Aaron Lewis/Grandaddy’s Gun/Blaster
Andy Gibson/Best Thing/Curb
Gwen Sebastian/Suitcase/Flying Island
Dylan Scott/Makin’ This Boy Go Crazy/Sidewalk
Rachele Lynae/Fishing For Somethin’/Momentum/New Revolution
Jason Aldean/Night Train/Broken Bow
Sarah Darling/Little Umbrella/764/Aristo
Miranda Lambert/All Kinds Of Kinds/RCA Nashville
Toby Keith/Drinks After Work/Show Dog-Universal
Ry Bradley/New Kind Of Lonely/Crimson Q Records
Trae Edwards/Killing Myself To Stay Alive/BREEZEWOOD Productions
Taylor Swift/Red/Big Machine
Logan Tudeen/Circles/Go Time
June 27
Lathan Moore/Burn These Memories/Render
July 1
Chris Stapleton/What Are You Listening To/Mercury
Eli Young Band/Drunk Last Night/Republic Nashville
July 2
Colby Dee/He Don’t Know/Donard Music Group
Joe Allen/Looks LIke It’s Raining/Stubborn Horse Records
July 8
Downday/Back In The Day/Render
Denae Gardner/Sound Of A Woman Sayin Goodbye/4D
Kelly Clarkson/Tie It Up/RCA/Columbia Nashville
Craig Morgan/Wake Up Lovin’ You/Black River
July 15
Old Crow Medicine Show/Carry Me Back To Virginia/ATO Recrods
July 22
North 4o/Hey Girl Hey/RHYMETOWN ENTERTAINMENT
Jay Jolley/God Save Us All From Religion/Double J Records
July 29
Jared Blake/Countryfied/Skiddco Records
Blue Sky Riders/Brave/3 Dream Records
August 6
Brett Eldredge/Bring You Back/Atlantic
• • •
New On The Chart—Debuting This Week
Artist/song/label — chart pos.
Ashley Monroe/You Got Me/Warner Bros. Records – 75
Taylor Swift/Red/Big Machine – 77
Erica Nicole/Better Beer/Heaven-Nine North-Turnpike – 79
Jordan Anderson/You Ain’t Ready For Me/GTR – 80
Greatest Spin Increase
Artist/song/label — spin+
Toby Keith/Drinks After Work/Show Dog-Universal – 585
Kenny Chesney/When I See This Bar/Blue Chair-Columbia Nashville – 511
Jason Aldean/Night Train/Broken Bow – 407
Dierks Bentley/Bourbon In Kentucky/Capitol Nashville – 386
Miranda Lambert/All Kinds Of Kinds/RCA – 365
Most Added
Toby Keith/Drinks After Work/Show Dog-Universal – 39
Miranda Lambert/All Kinds Of Kinds/RCA – 29
Jason Aldean/Night Train/Broken Bow – 27
Blake Shelton/Mine Would Be You/Warner Bros. – 21
Tracy Lawrence/Footprints On The Moon – 17
Kenny Chesney/When I See This Bar/Blue Chair-Columbia Nashville 16
Dierks Bentley/Bourbon In Kentucky/Capitol Nashville 15
Cassadee Pope/Wasting All These Tears/Republic Nashville- 15
Eli Young Band/Drunk Last Night/Republic – 12
Taylor Swift/Red/Big Machine – 11
On Deck—Soon To Be Charting
Herrick/Do You Love Me/BreakAway Entertainment – 232
Eli Young Band/Drunk Last Night/Republic – 229
The Lockets/Stepping Stone/Nu Toy – 224
Tracy Lawrence/Footprints On The Moon / – 201
Sherry Lynn f. Crystal Gayle/Beautiful Life/Steal Heart – 198
Joy Williams of The Civil Wars caught up with SirusXM’s John Marks at Sony Music Nashville’s Music Row offices in anticipation of the group’s sophomore self-titled album Aug. 6 on Sensibility Music/Columbia Records. Pictured (L-R): Nate Yetton (Sensibility Music), Gary Overton (SMN Chairman & CEO), Joy Williams, John Marks (SirusXM Senior Director, Country Music Programming), Norbert Nix (Columbia Nashville VP Promotion).
Leah Turner performed for a gathering of industry executives and Country Radio Broadcasters board members at The Chapel on Wednesday (June 19) in conjunction with the June 19-21 CRB board and CRS agenda committee meetings. Pictured (L-R): Gary Overton (Sony Music Nashville), Mike Culotta (CRS President), Leah Turner,Charlie Morgan (WLHK), Bill Mayne (CRS Executive Director), Norbert Nix (Columbia Nashville). Photo Credit: Kristen England
MusicRowPics: Chelsea Bain Artist Visit
/by Caitlin RantalaShe has made appearances on FOX Sports, Root Sports Network, The NFL Network, and FSN in association with NASCAR, the NHL and Major League Baseball.
Find out more about Bain at chelseabainmusic.com.
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[Updated] Attorney Keith Adkinson Passes
/by Jessica NicholsonAdkinson was actively engaged in the practice of law for over 40 years. Adkinson received his undergraduate degree at the University of Virginia in 1966 and his Juris Doctor degree from the University in 1969. He started practicing law in Beverly Hills, Calif. with the firm of Wyman, Bautzer, Rothman & Kuchel. His clients ranged from Kirk Kerkorian to MGM to Frank Sinatra, along with a host of major corporations and entertainment personalities.
In 1984, while Adkinson was litigating a major real estate matter in lower Alabama, he was invited by his client to meet with a young lady then known as Cathy Deupree Mayer. He undertook the case, proved that she was the daughter of late entertainer Hank Williams, sued in Alabama to re-open the estate [making her an heir, 40 years after Williams’ death], and sued in New York for her proportionate share of the copyright renewals of her father’s songs. They won and changed multiple laws in the process. He married his client in September 1986.
Adkinson has spearheaded numerous related intellectual property cases growing out of and related to his representation of his father-in-law’s estate and his representation of Jett Williams. His current practice was restricted to his and Jett’s Grand Ole Opry performing buddies (Jeanne Pruett, Leroy Van Dyke, Moe Bandy, David Frizzell, Jim Ed Brown, among others) and cases of significant legal merit, from his point of view, and those that caught his interest.
Update: Adkinson’s funeral will be held Monday (June 24) at Alexander Funeral Home in Lafayette, Tenn., beginning at 1 p.m. CT. Afterward, a Celebration of Life reception will be held at 3 p.m. at the home of Jett Williams. Visitation will be held Sunday (June 23) from 4p.m. until 7 p.m., and on Monday (June 24) from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m. at Alexander Funeral Home.
Nashville Symphony Agrees To Media Blackout
/by Jessica NicholsonThe association’s collective bargaining agreement with the symphony expires July 31. The symphony is also currently in negotiations with bank lenders regarding the more than $80 million owed on the Schermerhorn Symphony Center; a foreclosure sale of the Schermerhorn is slated for June 28.
In the midst of these financial challenges, the Nashville Symphony continues to garner accolades. The symphony is one of 19 American orchestras that was recently honored with a 2012-2013 ASCAP Award for Adventurous Programming at the League of American Orchestras 68th National Conference in St. Louis, Mo. The Nashville Symphony was selected for third place for Programming of Contemporary Music, because it featured the works of such contemporary composers as Richard Danielpour, Roberto Sierra, Stephen Paulus, John Adams and Edgar Meyer in its 2012-2013 season. The League and ASCAP present the awards each year to orchestras of all sizes for programs that challenge the audience, build the repertoire, and increase interest in music of our time. Approximately $725,000 has been bestowed on orchestras since the awards were established in 1947.
Charlie Cook On Air: Country P1s Still Lagging
/by contributorCharlie Cook
Arbitron and Edison Research have been measuring radio users since 1998, attempting to gauge the impact of digital platforms on consumer behavior. Today I will update you on the Country format P1s. These notes are based on 223 Country format P1s. The term P1 refers to first preference listeners. These 223 indicated their first preference radio station was a Country station.
Sixty-seven percent of all radio listeners have access to a Wi-Fi Network setup, but the Country P1s lag that number a bit. Only 63 percent CP1 (Country P1s) have this access. This impacts usage of services like Pandora and Spotify. This also impacts the amount of online listening done by CP1. Still, 26 percent reported listening online (to both their AM/FM station and online only services) in the last week. The overall radio listener reported 33 percent.
Pandora recently changed their model in the last two months. This study was fielded in January and February, so there could be a slight adjustment in their usage, but overall 20 percent of the study respondents have listened to the service in the last week. Only 16 percent of the CP1 has done so. I would like to believe this reflects a satisfaction with their local Country radio station but overall online access most likely has a bigger role in this than anything.
It is not as though the CP1 are not aware of Pandora and other online services. Over 60 percent are aware of Pandora, 47 percent are aware of iHeartRadio (higher than the overall radio user, which tells me the Clear Channel Country stations are doing a good job of selling the service to their listeners), and almost 20 percent know about Spotify.
YouTube is becoming one of the most popular on-demand services online. Thirty-seven percent of the overall radio listeners have watched YouTube in the last week.
By just looking around you’ll notice people never get too far from their cell phones. If you see someone panicking they are probably more than 10 feet from their phone. This is consistent with CP1. More than half of those listeners are tethered to their phone and 30 percent sleep with their phones. Seriously, because 30 percent wake up to their phone as an alarm.
The Country core is way behind the general radio user in owning a Smartphone, 53 percent to 42 percent. This may be the reason CP1 are behind in online services. I use my Smartphone for almost everything in audio and video. About a quarter of the CP1 own a tablet but as more and more people move from laptops to tablets we will certainly see this number increase and at the same time should see increased audio and video services.
Country fans have not shied away from social media services. Sixty percent have a profile on some social media platform and 23 percent report using the services/websites several times per day. CP1 Facebook users have an average of 261 friends. I wouldn’t think all of these friends are country music fans, but as a station that plays country music, if you can begin conversations about your station and the music everyday your material can spread quickly. When you think of a listener using Facebook, think of that person standing in front of 261 people.
And I stress Facebook because it is Facebook and all the rest. In fact Facebook leads by such a number that there is no real second place. When it comes to Country radio, we love to talk AM/FM. 91 percent of CP1 use AM/FM in their car and this is the highest number of any format. The general music population reports 84 percent of listeners who use AM/FM in their car, so you can see Country is much stronger than the other formats. AM/FM radio has held on to their leadership position as the number one source for new music, and 41 percent CP1 say staying up-to-date with new music is very or somewhat important. Country music programmers should be confident their listeners appreciate the job being done by AM/FM on a weekly basis.
Many stations like to stay in touch with their listeners through Email, but only 8 percent of the audience has signed up for this communication model. Stations have an opportunity here to open this to their audience.
And finally, because we’re all here to make a decent living, 61 percent of the CP1 reported they have listened to AM/FM radio before arriving at or during their last shopping visit. We know the immediacy of radio impressions pays off for the advertising clients who use enough frequency to make an impact on radio listeners.
(The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of MusicRow.)