
Brad Paisley with Jimmy Kimmel. Photo: ABC/Randy Holmes
Brad Paisley revealed the title of his new album,
Wheelhouse, during an appearance on Wednesday (Jan. 9) on
Jimmy Kimmel Live!
The new album, which for the first time features Paisley as the sole producer, is set to for release April 9. Fans can preorder
Wheelhouse and
Wheelhouse (Deluxe Version)
here.
“It’s all about leaving your comfort zone,” Paisley explained about the album’s title during his appearance on the show. “You know, the baseball expression, sort of what is in your strike zone, your wheelhouse, where you’re comfortable.”
Watch Paisley’s full interview and
performance of the album’s first single, “Southern Comfort Zone,” with the St. James Gospel choir,
here.
Paisley jokingly introduced his new TV theme song during the interview, titled “The Ballad of Honey Boo Boo.” Watch it
here.
Brad Paisley Reveals Title of Upcoming Album
/by Eric T. ParkerBrad Paisley with Jimmy Kimmel. Photo: ABC/Randy Holmes
Brad Paisley revealed the title of his new album, Wheelhouse, during an appearance on Wednesday (Jan. 9) on Jimmy Kimmel Live!
The new album, which for the first time features Paisley as the sole producer, is set to for release April 9. Fans can preorder Wheelhouse and Wheelhouse (Deluxe Version) here.
“It’s all about leaving your comfort zone,” Paisley explained about the album’s title during his appearance on the show. “You know, the baseball expression, sort of what is in your strike zone, your wheelhouse, where you’re comfortable.”
Watch Paisley’s full interview and performance of the album’s first single, “Southern Comfort Zone,” with the St. James Gospel choir, here.
Paisley jokingly introduced his new TV theme song during the interview, titled “The Ballad of Honey Boo Boo.” Watch it here.
Charlie Cook On Air: Bon Appetit
/by contributorThe CMA took that restaurant theme to their latest CMA Insiders research project. If you’re a radio station programmer/manager and are already a CMA member, you can visit cmaworld.com to review this material. Knowing what your listeners are up to will make appealing to them that much easier. The CMA talked to 1,222 country music fans about their likes and dislikes concerning restaurants. The restaurant experience is one of the most familiar we all have each week. We share it with friends and family. Just like we share radio.
The study found that 75 percent of the respondents dine out once a week or more across all kinds of restaurants, from fast food to fancy dancy. (This is where I tell you about a woman I spent years with who would eat only at dining establishments that had tablecloths. I used to carry a tablecloth with me when I wanted a Big Mac.) Anyway back to radio, 83 percent of the diners stated they had tried a new restaurant in the past six months because of recommendations. Radio works this way, too. Encouraging your listeners to positively speak of your radio station to their friends can move people to sample you.
Sandwiching listeners between music, talking about your station and providing them a menu of what the station offers is sure to gobble up all the listening they do each day. Okay…I promise, you can continue to read this. I will NOT do any more puns. I was kind of surprised that nearly half of the diners reported spending more than $50 per week. A family of four will spend $50 at places like Outback, but McDonald’s should come in about $30.
What does this tell those of us in radio? Prizes should be in the $50 range. Listeners winning smallish prizes don’t think much of what you have to offer. Oh yeah, there are contest pigs out there who want to win a package of chewing gum but the discriminating listener will not play for just anything. Why do people dine out? Overwhelmingly, these folks choose to have a meal out of the house with their family. Secondly, time with friends is important. Think about these reasons when designing your giveaways. Use their language. Put your radio station between your listeners and their daily activities.
Just for fun I will report The Country Music Consumers choices for favorite restaurants:
American 84%. (Would you think anything different with Country Music Fans? USA! USA! USA! )
Mexican 62%. (This is all about Lon Helton)
Italian 53%. (Not like my mama’s food. Fortunately. She was a great Italian mother but a terrible cook.)
Steakhouse 48%. (This is all about expense accounts.)
Chinese 44%. (Grits and Gravy with MSG.)
If you do want to get with a restaurant partner for a give away, here are the top choices;
Fast Food and Casual
McDonald’s
Subway
Casual and Fine Dining
Applebee’s
Cracker Barrel
That gives new meaning to “fine dining.”
Dining out is an experience shared with family and friends and we know that this is where our listeners get information about restaurants, movies, TV shows and (maybe) radio stations. We need to get in there. We need to become part of the conversation during this experience.
This was a little light-hearted, but I want you to know that the CMA does great work with their research projects and that this information is valuable to radio stations, listeners and even artists, who may be looking for tour sponsors. Radio stations’ sales departments should be using this information in their sales pitches and programmers should be aware of their listeners’ preferences.
And who doesn’t like thinking about food?
(The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of MusicRow.)
ASCAP Offers License For Small Business Websites
/by Sarah SkatesThe Play Music license is for web or mobile apps with fewer than 30,000 user visits per month, and less than $2,000 per month in revenue. The license costs $240 per year.
“At ASCAP, we want to make it as simple and cost-effective as possible to encourage the use of our members’ music,” commented Vice President of New Media Licensing Matt DeFilippis. “Music adds tremendous value to websites and mobile apps. We’re excited to offer a convenient way for individuals and small businesses to benefit from the use of ASCAP music while fairly compensating our songwriter, composer, lyricist and music publisher members.”
ASCAP licenses a catalog of over 8.5 million music works. Details about the new agreement are available at www.ascap.com/licensing/digital.
New Release Date For The Mavericks
/by Sarah SkatesThe Mavericks will kick off a tour in March, with dates to be announced next week. In the meantime, fans can catch them Jan. 19 at the Grand Ole Opry, Jan. 22 in Glasgow, Scotland and in a pre-release concert Feb. 25 at New York’s famed Bowery Ballroom. They are currently sailing the high seas and performing on the Sandy Beaches Cruise.
Original members reuniting for the project include lead singer Raul Malo, drummer Paul Deakin, and multi-instrumentalist Robert Reynolds; as well as longtime keyboardist Jerry Dale McFadden and seasoned guitarist Eddie Perez.
Among the tracks on the new album is the Buck Owens-inspired “Dance In The Moonlight,” the Orbison-esque “Born To Be Blue,” the horn punctuated retro noir “Back In Your Arms Again” and Tejano-influenced “All Over Again.” The band’s “Come Unto Me” was featured on ABC’s Nashville Wednesday night.
GAC to Tell Lambert's "Backstory"
/by Caitlin RantalaFour albums into her career, Lambert has netted three ACM and one CMA Album of the Year awards and is the reigning and three-time CMA and ACM Female Vocalist of the Year. While 2011 was a highlight year in her life with her marriage to Shelton and the release of the first Pistol Annies LP, it was also filled with personal challenges.
“It was like everything you could throw at us like cannonballs,” Lambert says of the death of Shelton’s father as well as the passing of one of her closest friends. “You picture newlywed bliss and really it was him living in LA, me on the road and us in the hospital a lot of the time. It was just a lot to deal with. It seemed that when that one-year anniversary hit, we could almost go ‘Phew, okay, now we’re ready.’”
Lambert, who’s currently on tour, concludes, “I always go with my gut. It’s never steered me wrong.”
The Band Perry Sets April Release Date
/by Jessica NicholsonThe Band Perry is set to release their as-of-yet untitled sophomore album on April 2, 2013. The lead single from the highly anticipated second release is “Better Dig Two.”
The trio’s debut self-titled album earned platinum status, and their chart-topping single “If I Die Young” went 4x platinum. The single also netted CMA Awards in 2011 for Single and Song of the Year.
The Band Perry earned trophies for Top New Artist and Top New Vocal Duo or Group from the Academy of Country Music in 2011.
50th Anniversary Memorial for Cline, Copas, Hawkins and Hughes
/by Jessica NicholsonCline, Copas, Hawkins and Hughes died on March 5, 1963 when a plane carrying the four entertainers crashed in Camden, Tenn.
Cline’s legacy includes an unforgettable vocal style and a string of iconic songs, such as “Sweet Dreams (Of You),” “Crazy,” “Walkin’ After Midnight,” “I Fall To Pieces,” “She’s Got You” and others. Hughes was a session guitarist and promotion man who became Cline’s manager. Copas was part of the Pee Wee King band and often performed on the Grand Ole Opry. His 1952 single, “‘Tis Sweet to be Remembered,” cracked the Top 10 on the Billboard Country charts. Singer Hawkins was a member of the Grand Ole Opry and was married to fellow singer Jean Shepard. His 1963 single, “Lonesome 7-7203” topped the Billboard Country charts.
Craig Morgan To Make Second Appearance on 'Hotel Impossible'
/by Jessica NicholsonPhoto (L-R): Craig Morgan, Anthony Melchiorri
Craig Morgan is set to make his second appearance on the Travel Channel’s Hotel Impossible. The episode, which features Alaska’s Glacier Bear Lodge, will air on Monday (Jan. 14) at 10 p.m. ET.
Morgan joins “hotel fixer” Anthony Melchiorri as they head north to fix the hotel dominated by commercial and sport fishermen.
The singer-songwriter previously joined Melchiorri on Hotel Impossible last summer in an episode that featured Nashville.
Primetime 'Nashville': Stones You Throw
/by Sarah Skates“Be Careful of Stones That You Throw”


Season 1 | Episode 109 | Aired 01/09/2013
Nashville shines when Juliette and Rayna share the screen. Their witty, often nipping, banter offers some of the show’s best lines, for instance, last night when Rayna assured Juliette she doesn’t hate her—”The only things I hate are sunburns and hangovers, this is just business.” Hopefully, these divas will have many more scenes together in upcoming episodes when they are on their co-headlining tour.
The five-month run will give Rayna and Teddy a break from their rocky marriage. On the downside, it will hold up recording her new album with producer Liam.
Among the episode’s highlights was seeing Teddy grow a backbone and stand up to his conniving father-in-law Lamar, who is threatening to expose the fact that Teddy is not the biological father of he and Rayna’s oldest daughter, Maddie.
The tour is also a great escape for Juliette, who eloped with football player Sean but then ditched him at the alter before the big, church wedding his mother planned. Instead, she hopped a jet during a montage backed by the episode’s only new song, “Change Your Mind.”
Hillary Lindsey, Gordie Sampson and Troy Verges wrote the song, but on the show it was penned by Scarlett and Gunnar. Elsewhere in Scarlett-land, she hopped back in the sack with Avery long enough to realize why they broke up in the first place, particularly after he ‘fessed up that he fired his longtime band because Atlanta-based producer Dominic Wells (Wyclef Jean) wanted to sign him as a solo act. Scarlett filled in as singer with his former band, which led to one of the episode’s best moments: the look of disbelief on Avery’s face when he saw a video of the performance.
Elsewhere, Deacon was on a major tour with legendary rock band The Revel Kings, but when old flame/journalist Carmen joined them on the road, she could tell he was struggling with the new situation.
People's Choice Awards Chooses Swift
/by Caitlin RantalaAt the beginning of her speech, Munn pretended to interrupt Swift, who seemed to know it was all in good fun. “This always happens,” she sighed before going on to thank her fans.
Swift later returned to the stage to present the award for Favorite Movie, which went to The Hunger Games.
Swift wasn’t the only country artist on stage last night though. Jason Aldean, a fellow People’s Choice nominee, was among the show’s performers. Aldean sang his hit “My Kinda Party.”
A full list of the 2013 People’s Choice Awards nominees and winners can be found here.