InstiGator Adds Director of Promotion

Glenn Noblit

InstiGator Entertainment has tapped Glenn Noblit to serve as Director of Promotion for the new company. From his base in Longview, Texas, Noblit will report to Pres. Gator Michaels.

Noblit brings 12 years of radio promotion experience to his new post, including most recently working with Michaels at Davis Music Group where he was National Director of Radio Promotion and Marketing. Noblit has also served as Director of Southwest Regional Promotion at Warner Bros. Nashville, and National Director of Promotion at Lost Highway Records. His resume includes time as a promotion executive at Young-Olsen & Associates and AristoMedia’s Marco Promotion. He is a graduate of Belmont University’s music business program.

“Glenn is one of the best in the business,” said Michaels. “I have been fortunate to work with him for more than a decade and I’m proud to welcome him to the InstiGator team!”

“Gator’s vision, expertise and leadership are unmatched in this ever-changing industry,” added Noblit. “I plan on bringing an immense amount of passion, energy and commitment to our clients and country radio friends, teaming with them for much success. I’m fired up and ready to get started.”

Noblit can be reached at (903) 663-2799 and glenn@musicinstigator.com.

Don Williams To Receive ASCAP Golden Note Award

Don Williams

ASCAP will honor country music star Don Williams with the prestigious ASCAP Golden Note Award during its 49th Annual Country Music Awards, taking place on Sun., Nov. 6, 2011 at Nashville’s Gaylord Opryland. The invitation-only event will also honor the songwriters and publishers of ASCAP’s most performed country songs from April 1, 2010 through March 31, 2011, and present awards for Songwriter of the Year, Songwriter/Artist of the Year, Song of the Year and Publisher of the Year.

ASCAP’s Golden Note Award is bestowed upon songwriters, composers and artists who have achieved extraordinary career milestones.  Past recipients include Garth Brooks, Lindsey Buckingham, Sean “Diddy” Combs, Alan Jackson, Quincy Jones, Reba McEntire, JD Souther, Stevie Wonder, André Previn and Tom Petty.

Commenting on the award to Williams, ASCAP President and Chairman Paul Williams said, “Don is one of country music’s most successful performers of the past four decades. His knack for finding songs that speak directly to people’s hearts has earned him millions of fans worldwide. He is a true international country music star, and we are very proud to honor him with ASCAP’s Golden Note Award in recognition of his extraordinary career.”

Texas-born recording artist and songwriter Don Williams has enjoyed 45 Top Ten hits and 17 No. 1 singles. Williams’ career stared as a member of the mid-1960’s folk-pop trio, the Pozo-Seco Singers. His self-penned hits include “The Shelter of Your Eyes,” “Lay Down Beside Me,” “Love Me Over Again,” and his collaboration with Wayland Holyfield, “Till the Rivers All Run Dry.” Williams is closely associated with songwriters Bob McDill (“Amanda,” “It Must Be Love”), Holyfield (“You’re My Best Friend,” “Some Broken Hearts Never Mend”) and Danny Flowers (“Tulsa Time”), recording hit versions of their songs. Despite a well-known aversion to the spotlight, Williams has risen to international fame. His enduring place in music was recognized in 2010 with his election to the Country Music Hall of Fame.

BMG To Acquire Bug Music

BMG Rights Management has entered into an agreement to acquire Bug Music.

Last week, reports pegged the sale to be valued at about $300 million. Financial terms of the transaction were not disclosed. The deal is expected to close by October.

Bug’s Nashville office is headed by VP John Allen, and Roger Murrah exited his post as Sr. VP earlier this summer.

Darrell Franklin serves as Executive VP of BMG Chrysalis’s Nashville operations.

BMG has been gobbling up other publishers in recent years, including Cherry Lane, Crosstown, S1 Songs, Stage Three, and EverGreen Copyrights, as well as a merger with Chrysalis Music.

Bug Music is a leading independent music publisher. Founded in 1975 and headquartered in Los Angeles, Bug Music currently owns and/or manages copyrights, including evergreen classics and contemporary hits such as “Fever,” “What a Wonderful World,” “I Walk the Line,” “Summer in the City,” “The Real Slim Shady,” “Who Are You?,” “Under the Boardwalk,” and “The Passenger.”

Bug Music’s clients include the estates of musical legends Johnny Cash, Willie Dixon, Muddy Waters, Woody Guthrie, Del Shannon and Stevie Ray Vaughan, as well as contemporary icons such as Iggy Pop, Kings of Leon, Ryan Adams, Wilco and The National. Bug Music also supports songwriters and artists through its Arthouse Entertainment joint venture with Kara DioGuardi, 2007 BMI Pop Songwriter of the Year and former American Idol judge.

“With the acquisition of Bug Music and its vast collection of evergreen and contemporary compositions, BMG further establishes itself as a leading music rights management company,” said Hartwig Masuch, CEO of BMG Rights Management. “We look forward to working with Bug Music’s exceptional roster of artists and songwriters.”

George Jones To Celebrate 80th Birthday At The Opry

By Caitlin Rantala

George Jones celebrates his 80th birthday Monday, Sept. 12, and The Grand Ole Opry will host a special celebration for him during the Tuesday night Opry Sept. 13.

Artists set to perform include Alan Jackson, Montgomery Gentry, Joe Diffie, Pam Tillis, Oak Ridge Boys, Jamey Johnson, Blackberry Smoke and Eric Lee Beddingfield. Tickets to the event can be purchased at www.opry.com.

Radio listeners can also win tickets to Jones’ Grand Ole Opry birthday celebration by tuning into Nashville’s 650 AM WSM on Sept. 12. The broadcast can be heard worldwide from www.wsmonline.com and will feature a Jones classic every hour from midnight to 7 p.m.

Along with the concert, The Opry invites fans to submit their recipes for the Opry’s Birthday Bash Dessert Contest through the Opry’s Facebook page. The three recipes with the most votes will be prepared by a professional chef and judged by Jones on Sept. 13. The winner will receive a grand prize trip to the Opry’s Birthday Bash in October. The new Opry Backstage Grill may also choose to feature the dessert on their menu.

Industry Ink Friday (9/9/11)

• MusicRow sends get-well wishes to CMA Sr. VP Bobette Dudley, who has been in a local hospital for three weeks. She has undergone two surgeries and experienced numerous complications, but is now heading in the right direction and is being released today. She can be reached at bdudley@cmaworld.com, at home 385-0040, or on her cell 714-1299.

Glen Campbell’s The Goodbye Tour will stop at the Ryman Auditorium on Nov. 30 at the 650AM WSM Listener Appreciation concert. Tickets go on sale today (9/9). He is suffering from Alzheimers and recently released a new album, Ghost On The Canvas.

Minnie Murphy

Minnie Murphy has signed a deal with 99 Matrix Records, a newly-formed independent label and will release a three-song pop/jazz compilation late summer which will be distributed by Renfield Digital a division of Stadium Entertainment Holdings, Inc. The first single from the set, “The Forbidden Hope Diamond,” is available on digital retail sites. Murphy is also slated to appear in the new film Redemption Road, slated for theaters this month.

• Music industry businesswomen Preshias Harris, Suzzane Skinner and Kat Atwood are working together under the name HSA and have been tapped by educational toy and game manufacturer McNeill Designs for Brighter Minds to produce and promote a new line of board games, card games and electronic games geared specifically toward country music enthusiasts.

• Janet Bozeman’s Bozeman Media has updated contact info. Reach her at 3122 Winberry Dr., Franklin, TN 37064 and office (615) 472-8417 or cell (615) 429-0227.

Lee Richey

Lee Richey has exited his PD/MD/Afternoon shift position with WCJW-AM/Warsaw, NY after 10 years. Reach him at 585-519-7970 or leejr@rochester.rr.com. The station has not announced plans for hiring a replacement.

The Opry Goes Pink With Martina McBride

By Caitlin Rantala

On Oct. 22, during the Third Annual Opry Goes Pink show, Opry member Martina McBride will flip the switch on The Grand Ole Opry’s barn backdrop, turning it pink for the night and joining Women Rock For The Cure in the fight against breast cancer. McBride’s current single “I’m Gonna Love You Through It” offers a message of hope to those affected by cancer, and is currently climbing MusicRow’s CountryBreakout Chart at No. 24. Her upcoming album, Eleven, is slated for release Oct. 11.

Opry Goes Pink will also feature performances by Lauren Alania, Edens Edge, Kellie Pickler and Ronnie Milsap.

Tickets to the event can be purchased through www.opry.com or by calling (615) 871-OPRY. Five dollars from each ticket will be donated to Women Rock For The Cure. Beginning Oct. 18, The Opry will also host an online pink auction, including autographed items by participating artists in the Opry Goes Pink. All auction proceeds benefit Women Rock For The Cure.

CCMA Adds Awards Presenters, Honors Johnny Reid

The Canadian Country Music Association’s Country Music Week begins today (Sept. 9) in Hamilton, Ontario, and culminates with the Sept. 12 broadcast of the Canadian Country Music Awards.

The organization just announced the addition of Backstreet Boy Howie Dorough; Toronto Blue Jays JP Arencibia and Brett Lawrie; and Canadian singer/songwriter Chantal Kreviazuk. Additionally, the presenter lineup now includes Canadian country stars Victoria Banks, Hey Romeo, Jason McCoy, Jimmy Rankin and High Valley. They join previously announced presenters Kortney and Dave Wilson, Beverly Mahood, Carolyn Dawn Johnson, Charlie Major, Michelle Wright and Nicole Appleton.

Performers on the show include Canadian artists Gord Bamford, Paul Brandt, Dean Brody, George Canyon, Terri Clark, Doc Walker,Emerson Drive, Johnny Reid and Deric Ruttan. Also taking the stage for a one-of-a-kind performance will be 2009 Rising Star winner Tara Oram and 2010 Rising Star winner One More Girl, as well as The Jim Cuddy Band with special guests The Heartbroken, who will share the stage with Luke Bryan and Ronnie Dunn. The red carpet for the event, which takes place at Copps Coliseum in Hamilton, begins at 5:15. The Awards will be broadcast live on CBC Television at 8 pm.

CCMA has also chosen to honor multiple award nominee Johnny Reid with a $5000 donation to the McMaster Children’s Hospital in Hamilton. The donation is part of an annual program where the CCMA acknowledges the humanitarian contributions of a Canadian country artist, and among Reid’s charitable causes are the World Vision Foundation, Children’s Aid Foundation and the Make A Wish Foundation. “I hope this small gesture to the McMaster Children’s Hospital will go a long way in helping the little ones who need it the most,” said Johnny Reid, 2011 Slaight Music Humanitarian Award recipient.

Additionally, Gord Bamford started off the weekend by donating $10,000 from his Gord Bamford Charitable Foundation to McMaster. “I regularly visit children’s hospitals, and I love giving back to those who need it most,” said Bamford after performing for the children. “I enjoy connecting with those kids who are so positive, even when faced with such adversity. I am just a guy with a guitar. But I have seen first-hand, the power of music when it comes to healing. I can only hope my donation will make a difference to those children currently at the McMaster Children’s Hospital.”

Lady A Promotes Release Online

Lady Antebellum has big promotions for the Sept. 13 release of their third studio album, Own the Night, including exclusive online events and other special online content.

The group is offering a live stream of their stripped-down Chicago show tomorrow (September 10) through their Facebook page and Spotify. Other online content includes an iTunes pre-release of two tracks from Own The Night on iTunes, “Dancin’ Away With My Heart” and “Wanted You More.” Music discovery site Pandora will offer a four-part video series and new station programmed by Lady A.

In addition to streaming the Chicago concert, Spotify will feature a track-by-track interview with the band about the new album, exclusive streaming of tracks and a playlist of Lady A’s favorite songs.

The trio has also teamed up with CMT and Shazam for the release of their new video “We Owned the Night,” offering a fly-away to see Lady Antebellum at a fan club exclusive event in Nashville on Nov. 14.

Over the past three weeks, more than 50,000 fan entries have been received for Lady Antebellum’s “Own The Board” game. Winners have collected prizes ranging from autographed guitars to iPads and one grand-prize winner will win a trip to meet Lady Antebellum in Nashville.

Lady A also has a heavy media appearance schedule over the weekend and through next week to support the album launch.

For more details visit www.ladyantebellum.com.

 

Toby Keith Offers Deluxe Edition Of Clancy’s Tavern

Toby Keith is slated to release the regular and Deluxe editions of his new studio album Clancy’s Tavern on Oct. 25. The Deluxe Editon will include four additional classic covers recorded live from his Incognito Bandito show: Waylon Jennings’ “High Time (You Quit Your Low Down Ways),” Buck Owens’ “Truck Drivin’ Man,” Three Dog Night’s “Shambala” and Chuck Berry’s “Memphis.” Keith also included live recordings in the Deluxe Edition of Bullets In The Gun album last October.

Recorded at The Fillmore in New York City, the bonus tracks were produced by Toby Keith, Mills Logan and Kenny Greenberg. Keith’s backing band for the show included Greenberg, Chad Cromwell, Kevin “Swine” Grantt, Rob McNelley, Jim Hoke and Mica Roberts. Keith also produced the album’s 11 new studio tracks.

Clancy’s Tavern is being released globally, and Keith is supporting the international release with a 13 city European tour opening in Edinburgh five days after the album hits stores. The collection’s first single is “Made In America,” which spent two weeks at No. 1 on MusicRow’s CountryBreakout Chart.

Clancy’s Tavern Track List:
1.”Made in America”
2. “I Need to Hear a Country Song”
3. “Clancy’s Tavern”
4. “Tryin’ to Fall in Love”
5. “Just Another Sundown”
6. “Beers Ago”
7. “South of You”
8. “Club Zydeco Moon”
9. “I Won’t Let You Down”
10. “Red Solo Cup”
11. “Chill-axin'”

Deluxe Edition only:
12. “High Time (You Quit Your Low Down Ways)”
13. “Truck Drivin’ Man”
14. “Shambala”
15. “Memphis”

Toby Keith’s Locked & Loaded Tour Presented by Ford F-Series
09.08.2011   Saratoga Springs, NY   Saratoga Performing Arts
09.09.2011   Philadelphia, PA   Susquehanna Bank Center
09.10.2011   Washington, DC   Jiffy Lube Live
09.14.2011   York, PA   York Fair
09.15.2011   Scranton, PA   Toyota Pavilion at Montage Mountai
09.16.2011   Hartford, CT   Comcast Theatre
09.17.2011   Boston, MA   Comcast Center
09.23.2011   St. Louis, MO   Verizon Wireless Amphitheater
09.24.2011   Chicago, IL   First Midwest Bank Amphitheater
09.29.2011   Cincinnati, OH   Riverbend Music Center
09.30.2011   Detroit, MI   DTE Energy Music Theater
10.01.2011   Indianapolis, IN   Verizon Wireless Amphitheater
10.02.2011   Little Rock, AR  War Memorial Golf Course
10.07.2011   Charlotte, NC   Verizon Wireless Amphitheater
10.08.2011   Atlanta, GA   Aaron’s Amphitheatre at Lakewood
10.09.2011   Mobile, AL   BayFest 2011
10.14.2011   Tampa, FL   1-800-ASK GARY Amphitheater
10.15.2011   West Palm Beach, FL   Cruzan Amphitheatre
10.30.2011   Edinburgh   Usher Hall
10.31.2011   Manchester   O2 Apollo
11.01.2011   London   Wembley Arena
11.03.2011   Amsterdam   Paradiso
11.05.2011   Munich   Kesselhaus
11.07.2011   Cologne   E Werk
11.08.2011   Hamburg   Gr Freiheit
11.11.2011   Helsinki   Finlandia Hall
11.12.2011   Basel   AVO Sessions
11.13.2011   Stockholm   Cirkus
11.15.2011   Oslo   Spektrum
11.17.2011   Copenhagen   Vega
11.19.2011   Berlin   Huxley’s Neue Welt

CountryBreakout Panelists Remember Sept. 11

Ten years ago on September 11 I was an aimless college student at Auburn University, the thought of trying to make it in the music industry still at least 18 months from entering my brain. I remember one of my college roommates, whose bedroom was upstairs, called me from his private phone line right after the second plane hit. I recall thinking this was odd because a) he was normally asleep at that time of morning, and b) he only had to walk down a flight of stairs to tell me.

The whole day after that was kind of a blur. I don’t think our school canceled class, but it’s hard to imagine we got anything done under those circumstances. The sight of those buildings falling, the knowledge that thousands had perished between the planes and buildings, haunted my dreams for weeks. It was a strange time to be trying to join the professional world, as it was suddenly impossible to imagine a future that couldn’t quickly be brought to its knees by a group of horribly misguided individuals. Like most, I turned to TV and radio in those early days to try to make some tiny amount of sense out of the senseless. In this special feature, some of our CountryBreakout panelists recall their experiences on Sept. 11.

• • •

“I was programming WDXB in Birmingham. I lived in Athens, Alabama at the time and made a 90 minute one way trip to work each day. I was en route to work that morning when I heard the news break in. We went wall to wall news and shortly afterwards began a campaign to help raise funds for those affected.  For a profession I got into mainly because of the fun involved, it turns out that the most memorable events have been working through disasters like this and area tornado strikes.”
—Tex Carter, WHMA, Anniston, AL

• • •

“In 2001, I only remember our station reporting news updates and taking calls. I had just dropped my daughters at school and returned home to watch the second plane fly into the second tower. I was in disbelief. It didn’t even register to me that it was a terrorist attack until I continued to watch the coverage. I still can’t believe that something of that magnitude was and could still be possible.”
—Billy Brown, WZZS, Zolfo Springs, FL

• • •

“I was traveling back to the listening area from a four day vacation. Was listening AM news talk out of Houston the night before because they carry Monday Night Football. That Tuesday I had a doctor’s appointment and turned the radio on in the truck. I didn’t hear much at all except it sounded like the trailer for a new movie. It was when I walked into the doctor’s office and everyone was watching TV and crying that I knew something was wrong
—CW Simon, KMKS, Bay City, TX

• • •

I had been hearing the news all that morning before I got into work at KBCR so I was upset and concerned about my son. I really wanted to ditch work and just go get my kid and be with him that day. I remember just thinking of my son, how lucky I was to have him and just wanting to hold him and be with him. I picked him up after school and tried to speak with him a bit about the day’s events though it was no easy task to explain such violence and terror to a 7 year old
—Debbie Duncan, KBCR, Steamboat Springs, CO

• • •

We got a call saying ‘Did you hear someone shot a missile into the World Trade Center?’ We had a TV in the studio but they had not gone to full coverage yet so we changed to FOX and we were all just confused and watched live as the second plane hit. We were all speechless. We went on the air with the info as we got it and just did our best to inform and keep people calm. We were getting calls from government buildings saying they were locking down and/or closing for the day. We still played some music but became very aware of the titles we aired. We took calls and let people cry and express themselves. Off the air we were all calling our families to make sure they were aware of what was going on
—Dave Tyler, WTRS, Ocala, FL

• • •

“I was asleep when I got a call from my mother. When I answered the phone, all I heard was, ‘We’re under attack!’ I asked, ‘Who?’ She said, ‘The whole country!’ So I got dressed and got ready to do whatever it was that I was going to need to do. I remember I was on vacation that week, so I just soaked in the coverage; couldn’t take my eyes off of it”
Dave Spencer, WBKR, Owensboro, KY

• • •

“I was on the air and editing my newscast to run at 9, the tail end of the broadcast mentioned a plane had hit the World Trade Center. I edited the cast and went in to our newsroom to turn on the TV and was watching live when the second plane hit. I will never forget the feeling that washed over me as I realized that this tragic accident was actually an attack on our country. I took the station to live coverage immediately at that point and we remained on the air live until after the President spoke to the nation that night. I think the thing that I continue to recall other than the surprise was the feeling of shock and then unity that spread over our community as the events unfolded. Everyone banded together and immediately we hit the air with fund raising events and patriotic support.

Not knowing what else could be planned, several of us went home and returned to the station with our guns handy just in case! My news guy and myself remained at the station through the next day.

I have been on the air when the Challenger blew up, when Reagan was shot, while Charles and Diana were married and then when she died. I was on the air when war began in Iraq under both Bush Presidents, as well as when the Murrah building in Oklahoma City was attacked along with numerous tragic tornado and other weather events. I have been witness to or had the task of sharing major events with my audience as they unfolded throughout my career yet I will never forget 9/11 and the feeling of vulnerability of that day. I would think only Pearl Harbor would have been more difficult to bear.

Let us not forget the events of that day and be reminded as broadcasters of the awesome responsibility we bear in informing, encouraging and supporting our listeners through these times. We have a gift, we also have owe it to everyone who trusts and listens to be prepared and know what to do should something similar ever befall us again.”
—JR Runyon, KCNY, Conway, AR