The studio and record label are significant milestones for the Music Makes Us program. Launched in late 2011, Music Makes Us is a joint effort of Metro Nashville Public Schools, Mayor Karl Dean, music industry and community leaders, that will lead the nation in music education.
• • • • •

Due to unprecedented alignment among
The Recording Academy, the Mayor’s Office, Warner Music Nashville and the school system,
Pearl-Cohn High is the first school in America with a state-of-the-art recording studio and a student-run record label.
At an official ribbon-cutting, red-carpet ceremony Wednesday evening (May 8), members of the Warner acts
The Farm and
Gloriana “passed the torch” by presenting a guitar to the Pearl-Cohn students.
“We all wish we’d had this,” said The Farm’s
Nick Hoffman. “This guitar represents….a model for every other high school in this country.”
“This studio and this label will change lives,” said Recording Academy national vice president
Nancy Shapiro. Shapiro is a member of the Mayor’s Music Council.
“It made sense to me that Music City should have the best music education in the world,” said Mayor
Karl Dean. “So I called up Nancy…I owe you, and the city owes you, for all that you do.”

Pictured (L to R): Pearl Cohn students Deanna Kee, Vincent Zirker and Vincent Pitts join artists Damien Horne, Nick Hoffman, Krista Marie, and Tom Gossin
“One of the things I’m really good at is asking other people to do all the work,” Shapiro joked. She called upon the Nashville NARAS chapter’s Producers & Engineers Wing and they, “installed this studio, worked on Saturdays and nights, literally on their hands and knees.”
Nationally known studio designer
Steven Durr is a Nashvillian, as are P&E Wing members
Jeff Balding, Chuck Ainlay, Ben Fowler, Julian King, Nick Palladino and Pearl-Cohn teacher and successful songwriter
Sam Lorber. Shapiro recognized them from the podium, as well as representatives of the companies who donated gear, Nashville chapter president
Jon Randall Stewart, NARAS Nashville executive director
Susan Stewart and the chapter’s staff.
“It takes a village to have a state-of-the-art studio,” she explained.
“So many people have donated countless hours to making this thing a reality,” said Dean. “I do want to make a special thank-you to
John Esposito and Warner Music Nashville. They have given these students a window to see what a real record label looks like.”
The student label, not yet named, will be mentored by WMN. The imprint’s executives will all be students. The roster will be multi-genre, via auditioning students from throughout the 81,000 enrolled in the Nashville system.
“There are students from 146 countries in our schools,” said
Jesse Register, the system’s director. “We embrace the rich cultural diversity in our school system. This is the best access to the music industry of anyplace in the country.” He added that music has been proved to improve academic performance in other disciplines as well as graduation rates.

Pictured (L to R): Damien Horne, Krista Marie, Nick Hoffman, Mayor Karl Dean, Scott Hendricks (SVP A&R, WMN), Nancy Shapiro (SVP, Member Services, The Recording Academy®), Tom Gossin.
“Warner Music Nashville is thrilled to partner with Pearl-Cohn High School to create the first student-run label in the world,” said label vice president
Scott Hendricks. He was standing in for Esposito, who was called away due to the death of his mother. “There’s a very good chance that these students will become leaders in music in the future.”
“We are so excited to have you here tonight….to the Pearl-Cohn Entertainment Magnet High School, the only one in the country,” said school principal and event host
Sonia Stewart.
Her school’s choir, directed by student
Vincent Pitts and produced by rapper
Vincent Zirker, performed an arrangement of “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” which was composed as “the Negro national anthem” in 1905. Afterward, media and dignitaries gathered in the new studio, which is more up-to-date than any commercial comparable one in town. People posed for photos with the Mayor at the multi-track control board.
“This place has a great vibe,” said Balding. “When you’re in here, you definitely don’t feel like you’re in a high school.”
RIAA Adds Digital Streams To Gold and Platinum Awards
/by Jessica NicholsonFifty-six titles are included in the inaugural certifications for the newly expanded Digital Single Award. Specifically, the RIAA is awarding 11 Gold, 18 Platinum and 27 multi-Platinum new “combined” Digital Single Awards counting both downloads and streams. This includes streams from on-demand services like MOG, Muve Music, Rdio, Rhapsody, Slacker, Spotify, Xbox Music and others, plus video streaming services like MTV.com, VEVO, Yahoo! Music, YouTube and more. The new certification approach, including the formula of 100 streams being equivalent to one download, is an approximate barometer of comparative consumer activity; the financial value of streams and downloads were not factored into the equation.
“Including music streaming in Gold & Platinum awards marks the continued evolution of the industry’s premier program for recognizing artistic achievement, and it reflects the wide spectrum of ways consumers enjoy music from their favorite bands,” said Cary Sherman, Chairman & CEO, RIAA. “The music business, along with its incredible array of digital service partners, is offering fans more access to music than ever before. We’re thrilled that our awards will now more fully recognize artists’ commercial success today.”
Among the singles being awarded with new certificates are:
“Before He Cheats,” Carrie Underwood
“Alone With You” and “Barefoot Blue Jean Night,” Jake Owen
“Why Don’t We Just Dance,” Josh Turner
“The Boys of Fall,” Kenny Chesney
The RIAA developed its Gold & Platinum Awards Program in 1958 to honor artists and create a standard by which to measure the commercial success of a sound recording. The program trademarked the Gold record and formalized the industry practice of presenting awards to artists for music sales achievements. The Gold & Platinum Awards program was first awarded to LP recordings but expanded to a number of formats over time to include cassette tapes, CDs, digital tracks, digital albums, ringtones, and now streams. More than 14,000 titles have been certified by the RIAA during the last 55 years.
All certifications are calculated by the firm Gelfand, Rennert & Feldman, which has audited title sales for the RIAA for more than 30 years. Complete lists of all album, single, mastertone and video awards can also be accessed at riaa.com.
Chesney Brings Blue Chair Bay Rum to 'No Shoes Nation' Tour
/by Caitlin Rantala“So much of the inspiration for my music comes from the places I’ve been, and people I’ve met in the Caribbean,” says Chesney. “I started thinking, ‘What if I could share that sense of escape, and freedom…and fun with friends with everyone! That’s the reason for creating Blue Chair Bay Rum, so I wanted a way to share it beyond the shelf. That’s what we’re – hopefully – bringing people with this rum and these parties.”
The laid-back parties invite like-minded imbibers across the nation to raise a glass of Blue Chair Bay Rum’s White, Coconut and Coconut Spiced flavors in celebration of the anytime, anywhere spirit that defines island life. Locals are invited to sip on signature Blue Chair Bay Rum cocktails, take part in island-themed giveaways and indulge in the singer/songwriter’s “check your troubles at the shore” way of life.
Markets include Dallas (May 11); Milwaukee (May 18); Landover, MD. (May 24); Seattle (June 1); Virginia Beach, Va. (June 6); Philadelphia (June 8); Indianapolis (June 13); Kansas City, Mo. (June 15); Pittsburgh (June 22); Columbus (June 29); Minneapolis (July 12); Denver (July 20); Mountain View, Calif. (July 25); Anaheim, Calif. (July 27); Charlotte, N.C. (Aug. 1); Atlanta (Aug. 3); East Rutherford, N.J. (Aug. 10); Detroit (Aug. 17) and Foxboro, Mass. (Aug. 23).
All will be open to No Shoes Nation tour ticketholders 21 years of age and older. To learn more about Blue Chair Bay Rum’s launch parties and No Shoes Nation Happy Hours, visit www.bluechairbayrum.com.
Artist Updates: FGL "Cruise" Ft. Nelly Video Preview
/by Jessica Nicholson• • •
The full video releases Friday (May 10). Watch the preview below:
• • •
• • •
• • •
Pictured (L-R): Scott Davis (drummer), Micol Davis, Artie Lange, Ricky Davis, Jesse Murphy (bass player). Photo: Leslie T. DiPiero
Tom-Leis Music’s Ricky and Micol Davis of Blue Mother Tupelo were invited to perform on the Artie Lange Show, which reaches 23 million homes on DirecTV’s Audience Network and an additional 20 million subscribers on Sirius XM Satellite radio.
Nashville Schools Make History
/by Robert K OermannThe studio and record label are significant milestones for the Music Makes Us program. Launched in late 2011, Music Makes Us is a joint effort of Metro Nashville Public Schools, Mayor Karl Dean, music industry and community leaders, that will lead the nation in music education.
• • • • •
At an official ribbon-cutting, red-carpet ceremony Wednesday evening (May 8), members of the Warner acts The Farm and Gloriana “passed the torch” by presenting a guitar to the Pearl-Cohn students.
“We all wish we’d had this,” said The Farm’s Nick Hoffman. “This guitar represents….a model for every other high school in this country.”
“This studio and this label will change lives,” said Recording Academy national vice president Nancy Shapiro. Shapiro is a member of the Mayor’s Music Council.
“It made sense to me that Music City should have the best music education in the world,” said Mayor Karl Dean. “So I called up Nancy…I owe you, and the city owes you, for all that you do.”
Pictured (L to R): Pearl Cohn students Deanna Kee, Vincent Zirker and Vincent Pitts join artists Damien Horne, Nick Hoffman, Krista Marie, and Tom Gossin
“One of the things I’m really good at is asking other people to do all the work,” Shapiro joked. She called upon the Nashville NARAS chapter’s Producers & Engineers Wing and they, “installed this studio, worked on Saturdays and nights, literally on their hands and knees.”
Nationally known studio designer Steven Durr is a Nashvillian, as are P&E Wing members Jeff Balding, Chuck Ainlay, Ben Fowler, Julian King, Nick Palladino and Pearl-Cohn teacher and successful songwriter Sam Lorber. Shapiro recognized them from the podium, as well as representatives of the companies who donated gear, Nashville chapter president Jon Randall Stewart, NARAS Nashville executive director Susan Stewart and the chapter’s staff.
“It takes a village to have a state-of-the-art studio,” she explained.
“So many people have donated countless hours to making this thing a reality,” said Dean. “I do want to make a special thank-you to John Esposito and Warner Music Nashville. They have given these students a window to see what a real record label looks like.”
The student label, not yet named, will be mentored by WMN. The imprint’s executives will all be students. The roster will be multi-genre, via auditioning students from throughout the 81,000 enrolled in the Nashville system.
“There are students from 146 countries in our schools,” said Jesse Register, the system’s director. “We embrace the rich cultural diversity in our school system. This is the best access to the music industry of anyplace in the country.” He added that music has been proved to improve academic performance in other disciplines as well as graduation rates.
Pictured (L to R): Damien Horne, Krista Marie, Nick Hoffman, Mayor Karl Dean, Scott Hendricks (SVP A&R, WMN), Nancy Shapiro (SVP, Member Services, The Recording Academy®), Tom Gossin.
“Warner Music Nashville is thrilled to partner with Pearl-Cohn High School to create the first student-run label in the world,” said label vice president Scott Hendricks. He was standing in for Esposito, who was called away due to the death of his mother. “There’s a very good chance that these students will become leaders in music in the future.”
“We are so excited to have you here tonight….to the Pearl-Cohn Entertainment Magnet High School, the only one in the country,” said school principal and event host Sonia Stewart.
Her school’s choir, directed by student Vincent Pitts and produced by rapper Vincent Zirker, performed an arrangement of “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” which was composed as “the Negro national anthem” in 1905. Afterward, media and dignitaries gathered in the new studio, which is more up-to-date than any commercial comparable one in town. People posed for photos with the Mayor at the multi-track control board.
“This place has a great vibe,” said Balding. “When you’re in here, you definitely don’t feel like you’re in a high school.”
Kobalt Debuts Royalty Tracking Portal
/by Sarah SkatesVia the portal, clients can also follow the synch process in real time, including tracking the income generated, and the videos of their music when licensed for advertising, TV, film trailers, games and other media. Among other new features are a real-time, customizable global activity feed and action center that notifies clients of key events and items to address in their catalogue.
Income and product data are prominently featured, and clients can query their catalogue in detail by work, rights type, territory, product and licensee. Detailed royalty analysis tools are supported by graphics.
Clients can enter new works and product data, allowing for two-way communication. The new portal is also customizable; each client can set their own reporting preferences and choose which activity alerts and notifications they receive.
Willard Ahdritz, Founder and CEO of Kobalt Music Group, said, “We expect digital revenues for Kobalt’s rights owners to increase significantly as a direct result of our new technology integration. Building on our existing platform and proven technology, this is one of our most significant technology achievements to date, offering the first completely visual and fully interactive client communication platform.”
Keith Urban Teases New Single Release
/by Jessica NicholsonUrban teased fans (and the industry) with a snippet of a new single which, according to the video preview, will release to radio on Monday, May 13 at 2 p.m. CT. The song is from Urban’s upcoming album. No official release date has been set for the project.
Hear the preview of the song below:
Marty Stuart's Late Night Jam Lineup Announced
/by Jessica NicholsonMarty Stuart
Marty Stuart’s annual Late Night Jam will take place Wednesday, June 5 at the Ryman Auditorium, beginning at 10 p.m.
This year’s event features Marty Stuart and His Fabulous Superlatives, Connie Smith & The Sundowners, The Oak Ridge Boys, Bobby Bare with Brandy Clark, Charlie Worsham, Sleepy Man Banjo Boy and of course, surprise guests. The Late Night Jam will benefit MusiCares and CMA’s Keep The Music Playing.
Tickets are available $29.50 and $39.50 at ryman.com.
Johnny Cash Boyhood Home On Track For 2014 Opening
/by Sarah SkatesCash’s family moved to Dyess and took ownership of 40 acres of land as part of President Roosevelt’s New Deal. The home is being renovated to look as it did when the Cash family moved there in 1935. The project by Arkansas State University also includes restoration of a nearby theater and the Dyess Colony administration building.
Helping fund the restoration is the annual Johnny Cash Music Festival at Arkansas State University in Jonesboro. This year’s concert, set for August 17, stars Vince Gill, Larry Gatlin and the Gatlin Brothers, Jimmy Fortune of the Statler Brothers and Joanne Cash Yates, along with show host Tommy Cash. Proceeds from the event also support a scholarship fund established in the superstar’s name.
Details and tickets at www.johnnycashmusicfest.com.
As previously reported, a Johnny Cash Museum recently opened in Nashville.
MusicRowPics: Jared Ashley Artist Visit
/by Caitlin RantalaYesterday (May 7), Jared Ashley stopped by MusicRow headquarters. The Georgia native wrote the majority of his upcoming album, some of which he shared with MusicRow staffers.
Ashley played “Cold Beer Drinker,” “Stained,” and “Just Like This,” which he calls a song about sweet-psychosis. “It’s all fun and games, until one person decides to leave and the other person goes a little bit crazy,” he explained.
He also played his current single, “Last Train to Memphis,” which is climbing the MusicRow chart.
For more information on Ashley, visit jaredashley.com.
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Opry Plans CMA Fest Plaza Party and Shows
/by Eric T. ParkerEarlier in the afternoon on June 4, the Opry Plaza Party will feature a performance by Lee Brice and Tyler Farr.
Other Opry performances during the week include Friday, June 7, when Carrie Underwood takes the stage to celebrate her 5th anniversary as an Opry member.
Tickets and information are available at 800-SEE-OPRY and opry.com.