Chapter 398

Tim McGraw and CAA's Rod Essig (R) celebrate the new CAA Nashville offices at the 20th Annual CAA BBQ on June 4, 2012 in Nashville, Tennessee. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images for CAA
For a moment, I thought I’d walked onto the set of Mad Men.
But it wasn’t Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce; it was the spotless new office headquarters of CAA. Which is, in fact, even more pristinely corporate than the television stage set.
The occasion was the grand-opening gala for the CAA HQ on Monday evening (6/4). The elevator at 401 Commerce takes you up to the Penthouse (high above both UMG and SunTrust). The cream-and-white lobby/reception area looks directly into a massive, glass-walled conference room. The eight-feet-wide, white granite table seats at least 30. The exterior wall commands a vista of SoBro, including the stunning, evolving Music City Center.
A U-shaped corridor wraps around the opposite side of the Penthouse level. At each corner is an executive office with a jaw-dropping view. But even the offices along the hallways have glass walls overlooking something. Woodwork throughout is light walnut. Chairs are black moderne.
There is a break room the size of a small cafeteria. A sitting room, presumably for visiting artists, has a deep-cushioned white sectional, cream colored lounge seats and, of course, a glass wall overlooking Tune Town.
Did I mention that flutes of champagne were arrayed along the receptionist’s counter? So as not to soil the flawless décor, the actual food, drink and mob were on the ground floor on the building’s patio.
And I do mean mob. “EVERYONE is here,” Lori Badgett correctly observed. “If you can’t find someone, they’re here.” “And we’ll see them all again next year,” added Gillie Crowder, referring to the fact that the opening did double duty as CAA’s 20th annual Fan Fair industry “barbecue.”

CAA's Marc Dennis (second to left) and Edens Edge attend the 20th Annual CAA BBQ at the new CAA Nashville offices on June 4, 2012 in Nashville, Tennessee. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images for CAA
“Everyone” included Scott Siman, Susan Stewart, Royce Risser, Hunter Hayes, John Grady, John Dorris, John Esposito, John Huie (I assume; I never actually saw him), Rod Essig (ditto), Randy Scruggs, Ron Cox, Rob Dennis, Scott Clayton, Martin Clayton, Steve & Ree Guyer Buchanan, Steve Moore and Kip Moore, who is riding high at No. 1 with “Something ‘Bout a Truck.” “I wish you could see these clubs we’re filling,” said Kip with a grin. “They sing along with the words to every song on the album.” “That’s the same thing that happened with Eric Church,” I told him. “I am so, so happy for you.”
But I digress. “Everyone” also included Drew Alexander, Daniel Hill, Dwight Wiles, Alan & Beth Raebeck Hall, Melinda Scruggs Gales, Hank Adam Locklin, Chuck Mead, Elizabeth Cook, Mayor Karl Dean, Barry Coburn, Tracy Gershon, Teri Brown (who has moved here), Mike Vaden, Justin Levenson, Nancy Shapiro, Heath Owen (who is working with/for his Hall of Fame dad Randy), Larry Fitzgerald, Christina Winslow, Kathleen O’Brien, Sally Williams and — from A to Z — everyone from Alison Jones to Nicole Zeller.
Nearby, the Country Music Hall of Fame was offering a special media preview of its new exhibit, “Taylor Swift Speak Now: Treasures from the World Tour.”
The party was staged in the Hall of Fame Rotunda. Exotic, lavender-hued roses in glass bowls were centered on each maroon-clad cocktail table. Trays of h’ors d’oeuvre circulated.
Snacking and sipping were Lucas Hendrickson, Rob Simbeck, Kay West, Sherod Robertson, crutch toting Lorianne Crook nursing a knee injury, Charlie Chase, Brian Mansfield, Phyllis Stark, Jimmy Harnen, Ed Morris, Vernell Hackett and Scott Borchetta, taking a rare pause from making music-industry news every day.
“We expect this exhibit to have wide appeal to the fans in town this week,” said the Museum’s Kyle Young. He described Ms. Swift as “an old friend.” I guess so. Her recent $4 million donation, “made international headlines,” said Kyle. “It is the largest donation from an artist in our 45-year history.”
Swift’s Speak Now tour was 111 shows in 82 cities, 19 countries and four continents. It sold more than 1,579,885 tickets and was the top-grossing country tour of 2011. Some 130 people traveled in 21 trucks and 13 buses from date to date. The stage took more than five hours to construct at each venue. There were 350 lights, 116 speakers and 158 motors. A total of 62 tons of equipment hung from the rigging above the stages in the arenas.
The first tour artifact on display is the “Juliet” balcony on which Swift flew around the arena at the finale of each show. Arranged along the glass walls encasing the museum’s archival area on both the third and second museum levels are various set pieces from the show.
There’s the dress with the gold bugle beads worn during “The Story of Us,” the snug gleaming black number form “Long Live,” the red-on-red creation worn for “Better Than Revenge” and the vintage “hillbilly” frock from “Mean” and “Our Song.” Each is displayed with a faux tree, a glamorous chair, a frame, a railing or another prop that originally accompanied it. There’s a video station, too.
Also on view are the “Speak Now” wedding ensemble, the violet “Fearless” cocktail dress, that wafting pale-blue piano gown from “Back to December,” the wild crimson “gypsy” dress from “Haunted” and the climactic “Juliet” gold-and-ivory gown. Were you counting? Yes, Taylor had nine costume changes during each show. Including dancers and instrumentalists, 150 costumes were involved. Wait. Double that. Each one of them had a “spare” that could be worn while the other was being cleaned and/or repaired.
The verdict: Your daughters are going to LOVE this exhibit. Oh, and so will you.
Belmont To Offer Motion Picture Degree
/by Sarah SkatesAkers has 25 years experience as a screenwriter, and had three feature films produced from his screenplays. He has written for the network television series Strange Luck, Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman and Eerie, Indiana.
Akers’ also background includes 19 years of teaching at Vanderbilt University in film studies, theater and communication studies. He is the author of an industry-standard text, Your Screenplay Sucks!, 100 Ways To Make It Great. The Nashville native graduated from Vanderbilt and earned a master’s degree in cinema production from the University of Southern California.
“Today motion pictures can be found in all kinds of media including television, cell phones and computers; it’s not simply film-in-a-theater anymore,” Akers said. “Belmont’s new program will capitalize on the growing diversity of motion pictures, teaching students all aspects of the craft from script development, through production, to marketing and distribution.”
Belmont Provost Thomas Burns added, “This new undergraduate major is a natural extension of Belmont’s strong liberal arts curriculum and our commitment to high-quality professional programs related to the management and development of the entertainment industry.”
U.S. News & World Report ranked Belmont No. 7 in the Regional Universities South category, and listed it for the fourth consecutive year as one of the top “Up-and-Comer” universities. Belmont University consists of approximately 6,400 students.
Two-For-One Party Celebrates Shelton and Lambert No. 1s
/by Eric T. Parker(L-R) back: Sony Music Nashville’s Gary Overton, ASCAP’s LeAnn Phelan, producer Scott Hendricks, Warner Music’s John Esposito, Ashley Monroe, Wrensong Publishing’s Ree Guyer, BMI’s Jody Williams, Disney Music Publishing Nashville’s Kos Weaver, ASCAP’s Mike Sistad, Big Loud Shirt Publishing’s Craig Wiseman, Starstruck Entertainment’s Brandon Blackstock, BMI’s Clay Bradley, Avenue Bank’s Ron Cox. FRONT: Blake Shelton; Miranda Lambert, Jon Randall, Jessi Alexander, and Rodney Clawson. Photo: Rick Diamond
Blake Shelton and Miranda Lambert recently celebrated their respective No. 1 hits “Drink On It” and “Over You” at A Cowboy Town in Whites Creek, TN.
Hosted by ASCAP and BMI, the event honored “Drink On It” writers Jon Randall, Rodney Clawson and Jessi Alexander and singer Shelton for earning his sixth consecutive No. 1 and 11th career No. 1.
Shelton was also honored along with Lambert for “Over You,” which is the couple’s first No. 1 co-write. The song is Lambert’s fourth career No. 1.
Azar to Host Celebrity Golf Event This Weekend
/by FreemanJoining Azar for the event will be Academy Award-winning actor Morgan Freeman, country singer Johnny Lee, Grammy winner Dan Tyminski, and many other actors, musicians, and athletes. Azar is a talented golfer who was ranked No. 4 on Golf Digest’s “Top 100 Musician Golfers” list.
The golf tournament will take place at the Greenville Country Club, to be followed by a performance by Azar at Harlow’s Casino & Resort on June 9. Proceeds from the event will benefit Azar’s St. Cecilia Foundation, a non-profit organization that raises funds for children’s charities.
More info here.
Publishing News
/by Sarah SkatesKip Raines
Southern Crossroads Music, in association with Pat Finch Music Publishing, has signed songwriter Kip Raines to a co-publishing deal. Raines’ catalog includes Tim McGraw’s No. 1 “One of These Days (I’m Gonna Love Me),” Van Zant’s hit “Help Somebody,” and cuts by Clay Walker and Bucky Covington.
Finch serves as head of Nashville operations for Southern Crossroads, and also owns his namesake publishing company. “Kip brings a freshness and individuality to everything he does,” said Finch. “And I’m looking forward to great success and a long working relationship with him.”
Souther Crossroads CEO Steve McMellon added, “This is a major coup for us. Kip is a stellar writer and a really great addition to the Nashville roster.” Raines joins Greg Becker and Bobby Terry on the Southern Crossroads roster.
“Pat represents the best of both worlds for a songwriter; he’s a lifelong musician with a great instinct for matching songs and artists,” said Raines. “And Steve’s passion and vision for SCM is contagious.”
James House
• • • •
Evelyn Shriver and Susan Nadler have renamed their publishing venture Notorious Women Music. The company is home to songwriter James House (“Ain’t That Lonely Yet,” “Broken Wing”) who co-wrote The Mavericks’ new single “Born To Be Blue” with the band’s singer Raul Malo. Also, “Get Lucky” penned by House and John Brannen will be used on the June 27 episode of HBO’s True Blood.
• • • •
New Haven Records President Ken Harding and RSI Music Group President Bob Rodgers have announced the signing of award-winning singer and keyboardist Gordon Mote to Nashville-based New Haven Records. The label will release Mote’s next project, Songs I Grew Up Singing, on July 17. Mote is a past winner of MusicRow’sTop 10 Album All-Star Musician award. New Haven is the home of Gold City, Chicago Mass Choir and The Country Music Hall of Fame Gospel Series.
Pictured (L-R): Vince Wilcox, director of marketing for New Haven; Bob Rodgers, president of RSI Music Group; Michael Puryear, publisher, Harding Music Group/Final Four Music; and Ken Harding, president of New Haven Records and Harding Music Group. (New Haven Records photo)
Bobby Karl Works The Room
/by Bobby KarlChapter 398
Tim McGraw and CAA's Rod Essig (R) celebrate the new CAA Nashville offices at the 20th Annual CAA BBQ on June 4, 2012 in Nashville, Tennessee. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images for CAA
For a moment, I thought I’d walked onto the set of Mad Men.
But it wasn’t Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce; it was the spotless new office headquarters of CAA. Which is, in fact, even more pristinely corporate than the television stage set.
The occasion was the grand-opening gala for the CAA HQ on Monday evening (6/4). The elevator at 401 Commerce takes you up to the Penthouse (high above both UMG and SunTrust). The cream-and-white lobby/reception area looks directly into a massive, glass-walled conference room. The eight-feet-wide, white granite table seats at least 30. The exterior wall commands a vista of SoBro, including the stunning, evolving Music City Center.
A U-shaped corridor wraps around the opposite side of the Penthouse level. At each corner is an executive office with a jaw-dropping view. But even the offices along the hallways have glass walls overlooking something. Woodwork throughout is light walnut. Chairs are black moderne.
There is a break room the size of a small cafeteria. A sitting room, presumably for visiting artists, has a deep-cushioned white sectional, cream colored lounge seats and, of course, a glass wall overlooking Tune Town.
Did I mention that flutes of champagne were arrayed along the receptionist’s counter? So as not to soil the flawless décor, the actual food, drink and mob were on the ground floor on the building’s patio.
And I do mean mob. “EVERYONE is here,” Lori Badgett correctly observed. “If you can’t find someone, they’re here.” “And we’ll see them all again next year,” added Gillie Crowder, referring to the fact that the opening did double duty as CAA’s 20th annual Fan Fair industry “barbecue.”
CAA's Marc Dennis (second to left) and Edens Edge attend the 20th Annual CAA BBQ at the new CAA Nashville offices on June 4, 2012 in Nashville, Tennessee. Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images for CAA
“Everyone” included Scott Siman, Susan Stewart, Royce Risser, Hunter Hayes, John Grady, John Dorris, John Esposito, John Huie (I assume; I never actually saw him), Rod Essig (ditto), Randy Scruggs, Ron Cox, Rob Dennis, Scott Clayton, Martin Clayton, Steve & Ree Guyer Buchanan, Steve Moore and Kip Moore, who is riding high at No. 1 with “Something ‘Bout a Truck.” “I wish you could see these clubs we’re filling,” said Kip with a grin. “They sing along with the words to every song on the album.” “That’s the same thing that happened with Eric Church,” I told him. “I am so, so happy for you.”
But I digress. “Everyone” also included Drew Alexander, Daniel Hill, Dwight Wiles, Alan & Beth Raebeck Hall, Melinda Scruggs Gales, Hank Adam Locklin, Chuck Mead, Elizabeth Cook, Mayor Karl Dean, Barry Coburn, Tracy Gershon, Teri Brown (who has moved here), Mike Vaden, Justin Levenson, Nancy Shapiro, Heath Owen (who is working with/for his Hall of Fame dad Randy), Larry Fitzgerald, Christina Winslow, Kathleen O’Brien, Sally Williams and — from A to Z — everyone from Alison Jones to Nicole Zeller.
The party was staged in the Hall of Fame Rotunda. Exotic, lavender-hued roses in glass bowls were centered on each maroon-clad cocktail table. Trays of h’ors d’oeuvre circulated.
Snacking and sipping were Lucas Hendrickson, Rob Simbeck, Kay West, Sherod Robertson, crutch toting Lorianne Crook nursing a knee injury, Charlie Chase, Brian Mansfield, Phyllis Stark, Jimmy Harnen, Ed Morris, Vernell Hackett and Scott Borchetta, taking a rare pause from making music-industry news every day.
“We expect this exhibit to have wide appeal to the fans in town this week,” said the Museum’s Kyle Young. He described Ms. Swift as “an old friend.” I guess so. Her recent $4 million donation, “made international headlines,” said Kyle. “It is the largest donation from an artist in our 45-year history.”
Swift’s Speak Now tour was 111 shows in 82 cities, 19 countries and four continents. It sold more than 1,579,885 tickets and was the top-grossing country tour of 2011. Some 130 people traveled in 21 trucks and 13 buses from date to date. The stage took more than five hours to construct at each venue. There were 350 lights, 116 speakers and 158 motors. A total of 62 tons of equipment hung from the rigging above the stages in the arenas.
The first tour artifact on display is the “Juliet” balcony on which Swift flew around the arena at the finale of each show. Arranged along the glass walls encasing the museum’s archival area on both the third and second museum levels are various set pieces from the show.
There’s the dress with the gold bugle beads worn during “The Story of Us,” the snug gleaming black number form “Long Live,” the red-on-red creation worn for “Better Than Revenge” and the vintage “hillbilly” frock from “Mean” and “Our Song.” Each is displayed with a faux tree, a glamorous chair, a frame, a railing or another prop that originally accompanied it. There’s a video station, too.
Also on view are the “Speak Now” wedding ensemble, the violet “Fearless” cocktail dress, that wafting pale-blue piano gown from “Back to December,” the wild crimson “gypsy” dress from “Haunted” and the climactic “Juliet” gold-and-ivory gown. Were you counting? Yes, Taylor had nine costume changes during each show. Including dancers and instrumentalists, 150 costumes were involved. Wait. Double that. Each one of them had a “spare” that could be worn while the other was being cleaned and/or repaired.
The verdict: Your daughters are going to LOVE this exhibit. Oh, and so will you.
B-Roll: Country TV News
/by Sarah Skates• • •
Duets, ABC’s new singing competition show featuring Jennifer Nettles, Kelly Clarkson, John Legend and Robin Thicke, slipped in the ratings for its second episode. The program aired Thurs., May 31 and came in second among the major networks in the 8 and 9 PM/ET time slots, with 5.6 million and 6.2 million viewers, respectively. Ratings according to Zap2It.com.
• • •
Vevo’s new original series Sound + City explores Nashville in one episode. The 5-minute segment features Josh Turner, Katy K Designs, The Basement and Santa’s Pub (huh?). The show hosted by Desi Sanchez (E! News Now, MTV) visited six music cities. See it here.
All About Music Retreat Returns To Nashville
/by FreemanArtists participating in this year’s retreat include Show Dog-Universal’s JT Hodges, indie rock band Moon Taxi, and The So Manys (whose song “Not the End” was featured in the Glee season 3 finale). Attending music supervisors represent CBS, E! Entertainment, Sony Pictures, and Chop Shop among others.
Ocean Way Studio will host attendees for “SongCamps” where music supervisors will collaborate with artists to write and record compositions and engage in discussion about the process of placing songs. Nightly showcases will take place at The Rutledge beginning at 7 pm, and are open to the public.
More info here.
Hot Dog! SunTrust Annual Event Thursday
/by Sarah SkatesSunTrust’s Music Row branch is hosting its annual Hot Dog Day on Thurs., June 7. Members of the music business are invited to the bank parking lot from 11:30 a.m. until 2 p.m. for free grub and good music.
The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum is co-hosting the 14th annual celebration. Big Yellow Dog Music songwriters will be performing.
The fun event is typically held the week of CMA Music Festival and serves hot dogs to over 1000 members of the music industry each year.
Dates Announced For ASCAP and BMI Country Awards
/by FreemanASCAP and BMI have announced the dates for their annual Country Awards banquets, which open a busy week that will culminate in the 46th Annual Country Music Association Awards Thursday, Nov. 1.
ASCAP will host its 50th Annual Country Music Awards Monday, October 29 at the Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center. The invitation-only gala will honor the songwriters and publishers of ASCAP’s most performed country songs from April 1, 2011 through March 31, 2012 and award the Country Songwriter of the Year, Songwriter/Artist of the Year, Song of the Year and Publisher of the Year. Attendees will also be treated to live performances of the top five most performed songs of the year.
“We are very proud to honor the songwriters, publishers and artists behind Country music’s biggest hits. It truly is an honor to recognize the incredible achievements of our uniquely talented songwriting community,” said Marc Driskill, Vice President and General Manager, ASCAP Nashville.
The following day, Tuesday, October 30, BMI will host its 60th Annual BMI Country Awards at the company’s Music Row offices. In addition to saluting the 50 most-performed country songs in BMI’s repertoire, the invitation-only event will also name the Country Song, Songwriter, and Publisher of the Year.
EMI Music Publishing Hosts Open House
/by FreemanEMI Music Publishing held an open house on Wednesday, May 30 to give music industry colleagues the opportunity to see the company’s newly remodeled offices. The new digs boast a clean, modern style and a built-in table that was once a workbench owned by Guy Clark. Attendees dined on Southern cuisine and were treated to a special performance by Clark with accompaniment from Verlon Thompson and Shawn Camp.
(L-R): EMI Music Publishing CEO Roger Faxon, Guy Clark, Executive VP/GM Ben Vaughn, President Jon Platt
EMI Music Publishing staff at the company's open house