Premiere To Launch Nationally Syndicated Country Programs

Bobby Bones

Bobby Bones


Premiere Networks announced today (Jan. 4) it will syndicate The Bobby Bones Show on country radio stations nationwide Monday-Friday, in the 5 to 10 a.m. time slot. Set to air from Nashville, Tenn. studios, the morning program will first debut on Nashville’s The BIG 98/WSIX and the station’s SiriusXM channel 57 on Feb. 18.
The program will then be brought nationwide on Feb. 25 with syndication on iHeartRadio’s webcast and mobile app and broadcast stations, which currently include KSD-FM/St. Louis; KTGX-FM/Tulsa, Okla.; KASE-FM/Austin, Texas; WCKT-FM/Ft. Myers, Fla.; KYKR-FM/Beaumont, Texas; WTXT-FM/Tuscaloosa, Ala.; and WOBB-FM/Albany, Ga.
In addition, Country Top 30 with Bobby Bones, a new four-hour weekend country music program, will launch nationwide the weekend of March 2 and 3. Each week, Bones, Lunchbox and Amy will showcase the top country songs, in addition to artist interviews. The show will be available for air Saturday or Sunday between 6 a.m. and midnight local time.
“When we created The Bobby Bones Show back in 2002, we wanted to give listeners a fun, real and entertaining morning show,” said Bones. “More than 10 years later, that’s what continues to drive us every day. Nashville, here we come!”
“Bobby has always had a strong interest in Country and with the success of his show in the CHR format, we have no doubt the program will resonate with this new audience and see much continued growth and success,” said Jennifer Leimgruber, Premiere Networks EVP of Entertainment Programming. “Bobby is a tremendous talent. His fun, natural and engaging approach to morning radio and passion for Country music will be great for the format and for listeners nationwide.”
For affiliations, call Premiere Networks at 818-377-5300.

2013 SPBGMA Award Winners

spgbma logo1The winners of the 2013 SPBGMA Fan’s Choice Awards have been announced.The 39th annual SPBGMA awards and National Convention took place on Jan. 31-Feb. 3 in Nashville.
Performers for the evening’s awards presentation included Dailey & Vincent, Rhonda Vincent & The Rage, The Gibson Brothers, Nothin’ Fancy, Darin & Brooke Aldridge, Rarely Herd, Randy Waller & the Country Gentlemen and Lou Reid & Carolina.
The 2013 winners are:
Promoter of the Year – DA Calloway from Silver Dollar City
Radio Station of the Year – Sirius-XM Bluegrass Junction
DJ of the Year – Kyle Cantrell, Sirius-XM
Songwriter of the Year – Tom T. and Dixie Hall
Album of the YearThe Heart Of A Song, Junior Sisk & Rambler’s Choice
Bass Player of the Year – Mickey Harris
Dobro Player of the Year – Tim Graves
Guitar Player of the Year – Josh Williams
Mandolin Player of the Year – Doyle Lawson
Banjo Player of the Year – J.D. Crowe
Fiddle Player of the Year – Hunter Berry
Female Vocalist of the Year (Contemporary) – Rhonda Vincent
Female Vocalist of the Year (Traditional) – Jeanette Williams
Male Vocalist of the Year (Contemporary) – Junior Sisk
Male Vocalist of the Year (Traditional) – James King
Gospel Group of the Year (Contemporary) – Dailey & Vincent
Gospel Group of the Year (Traditional) – Paul Williams & Victory Trio
Bluegrass Band of the Year (Overall) -Dailey & Vincent
Vocal Group of the Year -Dailey & Vincent
Instrumental Group of the Year – The Grascals
Entertaining Group of the Year – Nothin Fancy
Entertainer of the Year – Rhonda Vincent
Song of the Year – “A Far Cry From Lester And Earl,” Junior Sisk & Rambler’s Choice

George Jones' Final Nashville Show Gets All-Star Lineup

GeorgeJonesfinalGeorge Jones‘ final Nashville concert of his career will take place at the Bridgestone Arena on Nov. 22, as part of his 2013 farewell tour titled The Grand Tour. Though the performance is still several months away, it is already slated to have an all-star lineup of supporters and performers. Charlie Daniels, Lorrie Morgan, Randy Travis, Jamey Johnson and Gene Watson will join previously announced guest Tanya Tucker to help honor the legendary performer.
More artists have yet to be announced. Jones is expected to make approximately 60 stops as part of The Grand Tour.
Tickets for the Nashville finale are currently on sale at all Ticketmaster locations.
Fans of ‘The Possum’ can see him at his upcoming concerts listed below or at www.georgejones.com.
 

Dwight Yoakam Sets Ryman Date; Gary Allan Sells Out Shows

dwightDwight Yoakam will headline Nashville’s historic Ryman Auditorium for the first time since 2005. Touring in support of his critically-acclaimed album 3 Pears, Yoakam will play the venue Friday, April 12.
The Lone Bellow will open the evening. Tickets go on sale Friday, Feb. 8 at 10:00 AM via the Ryman box office, ryman.com, or by calling 800-745-3000.
GaryAllan_Lg
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Gary Allan sold out two concerts at the Ryman over the weekend. Tickets for his April 17 show went on sale Friday (Feb. 1) and sold out in 10 minutes, so the singer added a second show on April 19, which also sold out.
Allan’s new album Set You Free on MCA Nashville debuted at No. 1 recently with over 106,000 copies sold.

Global Repertoire Database At Midem; 'This Year It Is Real'

midemLast year at MIDEM, the Global Repertoire Database (GRD) initiative was announced; this year that initiative is underway. Simply put, the GRD is a central source for copyright metadata related to music. This metadata will include the creators of these works and their ownership, control and/or administration. It is intended to solve a major problem between the music industry—particularly publishers—and digital companies because it will create one source for companies to go to in order to find out who controls a copyright and, therefore, who to seek in order to receive permission to use that work.
The GRD panel at MIDEM was hosted by Stephen Navin, Chief Executive of the Music Publishers Association (UK). Members of the panel were Jackie Alway, Director of Legal & Business Affairs International, Universal Music Publishing (UK); Michael Battiston, Vice President, International Business Development, ASCAP (US);  Alfons Karabuda, Executive Chairman, ECSA (Belgium); Thimo Prziklang, Director of Corporate Development, GEMA (Germany); Pekka Sipila, Executive Director, Finnish Music Publishers Association (Finland) and Sami Valkonen, Head of International Music Licensing, Google Play, Google (US).
Navin began the session by announcing, “this is one of the most dynamic projects in our industry. It was discussed last year and then undertaken. Over 100 people from 30 different countries are hard at work on this and you can feel the pride in this project. This is a structure that is going to deliver our business to the digital age. It involves taking a multiplicity of data from around the world and creating a Palace of Data, the Jerusalem of Data, which will benefit all of us greatly.”
Prziklang of GEMA noted, “the world repertoire of music will be there in its final state. It will be one place to go to find out about mechanicals and sync rights.”
Battiston of ASCAP added, “it’s much more than just a database. It is a single point of contact for publishers who will only pay a single acknowledgement fee once registration is in. There will be a single operating area to reconcile the data. A single place helps resolve conflicts because the GRD will direct queries to the suppliers of information—such as ASCAP or BMI.  Once in GRD, there will be a major service to get that data to collection societies and publishers. It will give easy access to music users.” Finish Music Publishers’ Sipila stated, “Creators, collection societies, licensees, publishers, record companies, and advertising agencies will all have different limits to access, dependent on how the information is used.
The Global Repertoire Database will be financed by 13 collection agencies through a “loan” process.
“The real value of the GRD is shared copyright operations,” said Battiston. “Everything will be done in a single place with the data fed to all societies. The result will be a large savings because it will clear and reconcile a set of data everyone can agree on. It will make all of our lives easier. When a publisher or collection society receives an invoice, they can see if it lines up with conflicting data. Someone who wants to use this data will know where to go to find the rights.”

Google’s Valkonen noted the progress from last year at MIDEM, stating, “Last year this was a Power Point; this year it is real. However, the next stage will require a lot of extremely complex work.”

Karabuda of ECSA in Belgium noted that there will be unknown advantages in the future because “we are creating something for inventions that are not yet invented, for compositions not yet composed.”
“Digital space is global,” stated Jackie Alway with Universal Music Publishing (UK). “This is the first time access to a database is global. This is the opportunity to do it once and do it right. We will provide one place to register instead of having to register in multiple societies.”
“There is no data base today for people to refer to for digital services,” added Prziklang.
Walkonen stated, “in our current practice of licensing, we don’t have any idea of conflicts which lead to a great deal of time and attention wasted to sort those out. With GRD we will be able to make the money flow a lot faster to our partners. The ultimate benefactors will be the composers, authors and publishers because we can turn money around a lot faster.”
“The GRD isn’t gong to solve copyright disputes itself,” said Alway. “These will be referred back to the rights owners.”
The Global Repertoire Database is expected to be operational in 2014, although panelists repeatedly stated that data injection is a complex process and their aim is to do it right regardless of how long it takes—although time is of the essence.

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Industry Ink (2/1/13)

nmpaThe NMPA has named Christopher Cylke as Sr. VP for Government Affairs at the association. Cylke will serve as the chief liaison to Capitol Hill and federal agencies, overseeing all legislative and regulatory policy development and outreach on behalf of the music publishing and songwriting industry.

Cylke comes to the NMPA from the Motion Picture Association of America where he served as Director of Government Affairs advocating on issues of domestic and international copyright protection, content distribution, trade, tax, and privacy. Prior to the MPAA, Cylke was Director of Congressional and Public Affairs at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. He will begin his post on Feb. 11.

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John Thomas

John Thomas


John ‘JT’ Thomas has been announced VP, Marketing and Entertainment by Boomtown CEO/ Pres. Frank Capri, to oversee marketing for Toby Keith’s I Love This Bar and Grill restaurant chain. The newly created position comes after Thomas’ most recent post as PD for KYGO in Denver, CO.
“In this role JT will have oversight in booking artists for our ever expanding group, act as the liaison to the Nashville community in order to develop strategic partnerships that are mutually beneficial, and directly oversee our various partnerships with radio, television, print, and social media,” said Capri.

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HSThe 5th Annual Groundhog Day Night of Music is set to take place at 6 p.m. at The Listening Room Café’s new location on Saturday (Feb. 2) with featured artists Jimmy Hall, Chris Cline, Sharif Iman, Dan Adams and Matt Feole.
A suggested $10 per person donation will be collected at the door to benefit Middle Tennessee nonprofit Alive Hospice on behalf of Joe Shrum, whose birthday was Feb. 2.
“We are just so thankful to be able to give back to Alive Hospice for all the wonderful service we received, and that so many others receive on a daily basis,” said Shrum’s daughter Ginger Shrum McClendon. “What better way is there to celebrate Daddy’s memory than by giving back to Alive Hospice?”
The Listening Room Café moved to its new location at 217 Second Ave. S. in January. For more information, visit listeningroomcafe.com.

Kautz Promoted to Chief Operating Officer at BMLG

andrew kautzBig Machine Label Group’s Andrew Kautz has been promoted to Chief Operating Officer. In this newly-created position, Kautz will continue to oversee all operations of the label, including leading the company’s financial, legal, administrative and business development processes.
“It is an amazing adventure every day with our team that never sleeps,” says Kautz. “Scott, seeing everyone pull together to build this rocket ship and having your trust from the start to help set its course has been a dream come true. The day you told me your vision I knew this was something I had to be a part of; getting to see it become a reality has been awe inspiring. Thank you for the opportunity and especially this recognition; it’s truly an honor.”
“Andrew has literally been with me before we even settled on the name Big Machine. He bought into the vision from our very first sit-down meeting at the Sunset Grill and has never veered from that vision, he has only added to it. He has been my ‘get-it-done guy’ from the first moment. This promotion is richly deserved,” said CEO/President Scott Borchetta.
Prior to joining Big Machine at its inception in 2005, Kautz was COO of The Emerald Entertainment Group the Southeast’s largest recording facility (Emerald Sound Studios, Masterfonics, Emerald Broadcast Division, Digital Audio Post) where he started as a college intern and escalated through the ranks from 1989 to 2005.
Kautz earned a Music Business degree from Belmont University. He is also an advisory member of the American Association of Independent Music (A2IM).
Kautz will continue reporting directly to Borchetta and can be reached via andrew.kautz@bmlg.net.

CMA Songwriters Series Enters Ninth Year

cmasongwriters1The CMA Songwriters Series returns for its ninth consecutive year in 2013 with a string of events planned across the country.
On March 19, Craig Morgan will launch the 2013 series where the program began, with two shows in New York City’s Joe’s Pub, along with Shane Minor (Kenny Chesney’s “Live A Little”), Phil O’Donnell (Montgomery Gentry’s “Back When I Knew It All”) and the evening’s host Bob DiPiero (“Southern Voice” by Tim McGraw). The shows will begin at 6:30 p.m. and 9 p.m. ET. Tickets for the march 19 CMA Songwriters Series at Joe’s Pub are $40 and $35 and are on sale now at joespub.com.
On March 20, DiPiero will welcome Ronnie Milsap and Lorrie Morgan to the Library of Congress’ Coolidge Auditorium in Washington, D.C. The CMA Songwriters Series at the Library of Congress is free, but a ticket is required. Tickets will be available beginning Wednesday (Feb. 6), and can be attained at ticketmaster.com (service fees do apply). There is a limit of two tickets per patron. Patrons who are unable to obtain tickets are encouraged to try for standby tickets on the evening of the concert, starting at 6:00 p.m. Tickets are often available even for sold-out events. For more details please visit loc.gov/concerts.
“Nashville’s songwriters are the best in the world and CMA is excited to showcase them, not only in the States, but overseas as well,” said Steve Moore, CMA Chief Executive Officer. “It’s great to see how this series has grown since it began in 2005. What started at Joe’s Pub in New York has expanded to other cities over the years. We have even taken the series overseas with shows in the U.K. and Ireland and we will be hitting Paris next month.”
Additional shows will also take place in Boston, Chicago, Austin and Nashville.
 
 

Jaida Dreyer – "Half Broke Horses"

jdBorn in Thunder Bay, Ontario, and raised in Latimer, Iowa, Jaida Dreyer was a “horse-crazy” little girl who grew up showing competitively and won her first of many world championships at 5, getting an early education in the sort of work ethic required to reach success. Before she turned 18, Dreyer had lived in seven states, including Iowa, Florida, Wisconsin, and Tennessee, with the bulk of her time spent between Texas and Georgia. During those gypsy years, Dreyer says, music and songwriting remained a constant, and when forced to retire from riding at 17, she took the biggest risk of her life: “The only other thing I knew how to do was write songs,” Dreyer says. “Growing up on the road, I learned that life isn’t a fairy tale,” Dreyer says. “It gave me a lot to write about, and a story that most 17 year old girls don’t have. I look at it as a blessing. My crooked road has given me a career.”
Dreyer didn’t grow up intending to become a country music artist, but to hear the story of her crooked road to Nashville, it’s clear she was meant to be here all along. Her unmistakable voice, bubbly personality, and eclectic, insightful songwriting scored her a publishing deal with Grammy Award-winning producer Byron Gallimore (Faith Hill, Tim McGraw, Sugarland) at the precocious age of 19; this February, Gallimore announced the creation of his own label, Streamsound Records, and threw his full support behind Dreyer’s career. “I’m proud for her to be our flagship artist,” says Gallimore. “She’s the real deal. I couldn’t feel stronger about anybody.”
As the flagship artist on Streamsound Records, she released two singles to country radio in 2012, “Guys Girl” and “Confessions.” The year proved to be a busy one for her as she has been traveling the country on a coast-to-coast radio promotion tour, where she has made stops at over 80 radio stations.
She has made quite an impression at radio with early support shown by major stations including KILT in Houston, KASE in Austin, KNTY in Sacramento, and KUPL in Portland among others. She and Gallimore have been working meticulously on her debut album, set for release in the coming months. A talented songwriter in her own right, Jaida will have a hand in writing or co-writing all of the songs on her debut release.
For more information on Jaida and to check out live performances from her radio tour you can go to www.jaidadreyer.com.

The Oak Ridge Boys Perform 'MCA Music At The Mill' Benefit

Oak Ridge BoysThe Oak Ridge Boys will join fellow artists Michael W. Smith, Ricky Skaggs, Ray Stevens, Sal Gonzalez, Deborah Allen and Rachel Bradshaw (daughter of NFL legend Terry Bradshaw) in a benefit concert for Lebanon, Tenn.’s McClain Christian Academy.
McClain Christian Academy’s “Fourth Annual MCA Music at the Mill,” located at 300 North Maple Street in Lebanon, is slated for 7 p.m. on Saturday (Feb. 2).
“The Oak Ridge Boys are honored to join the amazing acts for this year’s MCA Music at the Mill,” says member Duane Allen. “We are supporters of our number one natural resource, our children. The Oaks give back from the success we have had to help children have a place to get a great education…McClain Christian Academy.”
The venue offers four seating options: Section C General Admission seating (chairs only), $50, Section B Reserved Table Seating, $75; Section A VIP Reserved Table Seating with Dinner, $125; and Section A Platinum VIP Reserved Front Venue Table Seating, Meet & Greet with Artists & Dinner, $150.
For ticket information, please call: (615) 375-MCA7 or visit: www.mcclainchristian.org.