
Peter Strickland
Music Row is fond of parties. We celebrate No. 1 songs at radio and throw Gold and Platinum sales parties. Performing Rights organizations give special honors for large airplay accumulations. And let’s not forget SoundScan, BDS, MediaBase, Country Breakout, Big Champagne, Pollstar and all the other yardsticks that attempt each week to answer the question, “Which artists are the most important and successful?”
There are so many career areas to consider: radio airplay; Internet activity via friends, followers, likes and circles; touring and tickets; merchandise sales; product endorsements; publishing; video views; album and track downloads; media exposure via print, TV, etc. And adding to the complexity, every successful career balances these factors using a different formula. Until recently our industry has relied upon SoundScan and the mainstream radio charts to rank weekly artist activity. But is that still enough or do we need a more comprehensive set of activity gauges?

Tom Baldrica
“Soundscan album sales and radio charts are still an important yardstick,” says Average Joe’s Entertainment President
Tom Baldrica. “Any time you can measure what people are spending their hard-earned dollars on, that is an ultimate piece of research. But the digital download chart is also important and we should be considering hard ticket sales. Merchandise numbers are important plus ringtones and ring backs, or joining a fan club. Anything that generates dollars becomes a measuring stick because that is how you know if you are cutting through.”
“Two years ago every Wednesday morning I woke up at 5 a.m. to check the SoundScan charts and write reports about what was going on,” says
Peter Strickland, Sr. VP Brand Management & Sales, Warner Music Nashville. “Now I choose to run 5 miles, hit Starbucks and wait till I get in the office before looking at the chart. What excites me today is our daily social media numbers that help me see how our various artist revenue streams are moving. We get reports from the road on a daily basis on tours where we are servicing merchandise. Of course SS is still important, but those kinds of areas capture my attention now. Radio remains a big tool as well. I don’t know if streaming services will take a bite out of that, but for now radio is important.”
Social networks have developed into an efficient means of delivering on the Internet’s marketing promise of allowing one-to-one communication. But how should that data be treated when compared with actual purchases, for example?
“The social networks are the ultimate street team and evangelist for your cause whether it is selling music or trying to overthrow a government,” says Baldrica. “It’s an important piece in the process of building that one-on-one relationship. The big question is, does it help move fans from an interested person to an interested consumer, that’s the leap you want people to take. Social Networks give you a chance to quickly tell your story. It is grass roots cubed in the sense of how fast it can move.”
Strickland ranks the social networks importance by looking between the lines, in a sense, but notes that it requires artist input to be successful. “It’s your continued day-to-day, week-to-week growth that tells the story,” he says. “What plays a major role in that growth is the artist participation and engagement with the fan. It doesn’t happen on its own. The music alone does not drive it. And that skill is a learning curve for every artist that comes to the marketplace now. There are varying levels of fan participation which you can see that tell the story of what’s working and what’s not. Eventually radio will pay more attention to all these numbers we throw their way. When all the yardsticks collide, then you know you’ve succeeded.”
Average Joe’s Colt Ford is an example of an artist which doesn’t have all the traditional yardsticks, yet has a growing career. “If you’re talking about downloads, physical discs, tickets, merchandise sold plus sponsorship deals he checks all those boxes,” offers Baldrica. “It’s a real successful career, but missing the one ingredient that used to be the end-all, be-all for success—mainstream radio. But there’s more to the story, Paul Harvey. We need to dig deeper, to find all the facts. And that’s not just in the music business, people in all industries are finding new ways to put the biscuit in the basket.”
CMA Songwriters Series To Stream Boston Show
/by adminJoining Chesney will be:
Matraca Berg (“You and Tequila” recorded by Chesney, “Strawberry Wine” recorded by Deana Carter, “If I Fall You’re Going Down With Me” recorded by The Dixie Chicks, and “XXXs and OOOs [An American Girl]” recorded by Trisha Yearwood);
Brett James (“Jesus Take the Wheel” recorded by Carrie Underwood, “The Truth” recorded by Jason Aldean, and “When the Sun Goes Down” and “Out Last Night,” both recorded by Chesney);
Wendell Mobley (“I Melt” and “Fast Cars and Freedom,” both recorded by Rascal Flatts, “Strange” recorded by Reba, and “There Goes My Life” recorded by Chesney);
Craig Wiseman (“Live Like You Were Dying” and “Where the Green Grass Grows,” both recorded by Tim McGraw, and “The Good Stuff” and “Summertime,” both recorded by Chesney);
Bob DiPiero (“Southern Voice” recorded by Tim McGraw, “Blue Clear Sky” recorded by George Strait, and “You Can’t Take the Honky Tonk Out of the Girl” recorded by Brooks & Dunn).
The CMA Songwriters Series began in New York City in 2005. Since then, it has continued to play in front of sold out crowds at New York’s Joe’s Pub. In 2009, CMA took this popular series to other markets including Chicago and Los Angeles. The Aug. 25 show will be the series’ Boston debut. No Shoes Radio, Chesney’s online radio station, is programmed by Kenny himself, and features music from Chesney’s audio catalog, including never-before-heard recordings, live concert broadcast, and random drop-ins from fans, plus many of his favorite songs. Included is everything from Bruce Springsteen and Dave Matthews to the Caribbean grooves of Bob Marley & The Wailers.
Official sponsor for the CMA Songwriters Series at the Royale Nightclub is Great American Country (GAC). Tickets for the sold-out Boston show were $75 for VIP seating and $45 for floor seats.
Colt Ford Takes Nashville To Georgia For Big Benefit
/by Sarah SkatesBack Row (L-R): Jason Aldean, Corey Smith, Rachel Farley, Brantley Gilbert, Rhett Akins, James Otto; L to R, Middle Row: Dallas Davidson, Colt Ford, Mike Dekle. Front Row (L-R): Average Joe's President Tom Baldrica, Clarence Spalding, Average Joe's CEO Shannon Houchins, Average Joe's Management's Ken Madson. Photo: Dan Harr
Athens, Georgia native Colt Ford recruited some of his Nashville buddies for a benefit show in his hometown on Tuesday (8/16) to raise money for the families of one injured and one fallen police officer.
Joining Ford in raising $85,000 were Rhett Akins, Jason Aldean, Dallas Davidson, Mike Dekle, Edwin McCain, James Otto, and surprise guests Brantley Gilbert, Rachel Farley, and Corey Smith, many of whom are natives of the Peach State.
The sold-out show at the Georgia Theatre drew a crowd of 1,100 for the three-hour in-the-round performance, which featured Ford’s band backing the sets.
Over 200 people enjoyed a pre-show private reception and celeb memorabilia silent auction at the Hotel Indigo’s Rialto Room.
Donations for the officers’ families are being accepted at www.nobleheroes.org.
(L-R): Mike Dekle, Dallas Davidson, James Otto, Jason Aldean, Colt Ford, Rhett Akins. Courtesy: Dan Harr
Indiana Fair Tragedy Draws Attention To Growing Problem
/by Sarah SkatesStaging collapses in Belgium today.
Outdoor concerts are being scrutinized in the wake of Saturday’s (8/13) tragedy at the Indiana State Fair, where strong winds caused the staging to collapse, killing five people and injuring more than 40 others.
Today (8/19) comes the unsettling news of a disaster at a music event in Belgium, where at least two are confirmed dead after a storm hit the Pukkelpop festival.
According to music site Spinner.com, this is the fourth stage collapse of the summer. It joins the dangerous list that already includes the Indiana fair, an incident during Cheap Trick at the Ottawa Bluesfest, and the Flaming Lips’ outdoor show in Oklahoma.
An Associated Press article gives some insight into the dangers of outdoor events. It includes a discussion with promoter and ACM head Bob Romeo, and notes that part of the problem is a lack of uniform safety regulations.
Sold-Out Alabama Concert Helps Homestate Rebuild
/by Sarah SkatesAlabama onstage at Bama Rising benefit in June.
Members of Alabama are continuing to help rebuild their home state with another sold-out concert. Proceeds from the Sept. 2 show at the Tuscaloosa Amphitheater will benefit the Tuscaloosa Storm Recovery Fund for those affected by the April 27 tornadoes that ravaged the state. The perfectly timed concert is the night before the Alabama Crimson Tide football season opener against Kent State. Joining Alabama will be the Tuscaloosa Symphony Orchestra and EMI recording artist Jon Pardi.
Teddy Gentry reminds that the recovery process is slow. “These families need help for years not weeks…for me, our Tuscaloosa show is just a continuation of helping.”
This is the second fundraiser Alabama has spearheaded for the cause. On June 14 the band headlined a superstar sold-out concert in Birmingham that raised over $2.1 million.
“When we played the Bama Rising concert we had the most incredible cooperation with the Tuscaloosa Symphony Orchestra, their Executive Director and their conductor. I feel very humbled to be part of another concert to hopefully bring about happiness to an area that has lost so much,” says Randy Owen. “My prayers are that the show will be uplifting and help us all love and care more for one another.”
Jackie Campbell Joins Big Machine Label Group
/by FreemanCampbell brings with her 10 years of experience as Manager of Integrated Programs and Event Marketing for Chicago’s CBS Radio/US99.5. In this role, she helped develop and execute over 40 integrated marketing opportunities that generated over $3 million in annual non-traditional revenue for WUSN, WCFS and WSCR. She also helped create key partnerships with Live Nation and Nashville record labels, securing sponsorship rights for Kenny Chesney at Soldier Field and Rascal Flatts at Wrigley Field.
“Leaving my CBS Radio/US99.5 family after nearly 10 years was certainly not an easy decision, but this unique opportunity to work alongside Scott Borchetta, John Zarling, and the rest of the inspiring group at Big Machine Label Group was one I could not pass up,” says Campbell. “I look forward to joining the team and applying my NTR and sponsorship experience to BMLG and their incredible roster of artists and country radio.”
“I am really excited to welcome Jackie! Her passion, excitement and proven results make her the perfect addition to our team,” says John Zarling, VP/Promotion & Media Strategy. “As the climate within radio and the industry at-large continues to morph, Jackie will be a great asset for our label group and our artists pursuing partnerships with brands both on the local and national levels.”
Congratulate Campbell here.
WANTED: A New GPS For Country Marketing
/by adminPeter Strickland
Music Row is fond of parties. We celebrate No. 1 songs at radio and throw Gold and Platinum sales parties. Performing Rights organizations give special honors for large airplay accumulations. And let’s not forget SoundScan, BDS, MediaBase, Country Breakout, Big Champagne, Pollstar and all the other yardsticks that attempt each week to answer the question, “Which artists are the most important and successful?”
There are so many career areas to consider: radio airplay; Internet activity via friends, followers, likes and circles; touring and tickets; merchandise sales; product endorsements; publishing; video views; album and track downloads; media exposure via print, TV, etc. And adding to the complexity, every successful career balances these factors using a different formula. Until recently our industry has relied upon SoundScan and the mainstream radio charts to rank weekly artist activity. But is that still enough or do we need a more comprehensive set of activity gauges?
Tom Baldrica
“Soundscan album sales and radio charts are still an important yardstick,” says Average Joe’s Entertainment President Tom Baldrica. “Any time you can measure what people are spending their hard-earned dollars on, that is an ultimate piece of research. But the digital download chart is also important and we should be considering hard ticket sales. Merchandise numbers are important plus ringtones and ring backs, or joining a fan club. Anything that generates dollars becomes a measuring stick because that is how you know if you are cutting through.”
“Two years ago every Wednesday morning I woke up at 5 a.m. to check the SoundScan charts and write reports about what was going on,” says Peter Strickland, Sr. VP Brand Management & Sales, Warner Music Nashville. “Now I choose to run 5 miles, hit Starbucks and wait till I get in the office before looking at the chart. What excites me today is our daily social media numbers that help me see how our various artist revenue streams are moving. We get reports from the road on a daily basis on tours where we are servicing merchandise. Of course SS is still important, but those kinds of areas capture my attention now. Radio remains a big tool as well. I don’t know if streaming services will take a bite out of that, but for now radio is important.”
Social networks have developed into an efficient means of delivering on the Internet’s marketing promise of allowing one-to-one communication. But how should that data be treated when compared with actual purchases, for example?
“The social networks are the ultimate street team and evangelist for your cause whether it is selling music or trying to overthrow a government,” says Baldrica. “It’s an important piece in the process of building that one-on-one relationship. The big question is, does it help move fans from an interested person to an interested consumer, that’s the leap you want people to take. Social Networks give you a chance to quickly tell your story. It is grass roots cubed in the sense of how fast it can move.”
Strickland ranks the social networks importance by looking between the lines, in a sense, but notes that it requires artist input to be successful. “It’s your continued day-to-day, week-to-week growth that tells the story,” he says. “What plays a major role in that growth is the artist participation and engagement with the fan. It doesn’t happen on its own. The music alone does not drive it. And that skill is a learning curve for every artist that comes to the marketplace now. There are varying levels of fan participation which you can see that tell the story of what’s working and what’s not. Eventually radio will pay more attention to all these numbers we throw their way. When all the yardsticks collide, then you know you’ve succeeded.”
Average Joe’s Colt Ford is an example of an artist which doesn’t have all the traditional yardsticks, yet has a growing career. “If you’re talking about downloads, physical discs, tickets, merchandise sold plus sponsorship deals he checks all those boxes,” offers Baldrica. “It’s a real successful career, but missing the one ingredient that used to be the end-all, be-all for success—mainstream radio. But there’s more to the story, Paul Harvey. We need to dig deeper, to find all the facts. And that’s not just in the music business, people in all industries are finding new ways to put the biscuit in the basket.”
Music Is YouTube’s Most Popular Content
/by Sarah SkatesWith content from Universal, Sony and EMI artists, the Vevo channel is the most popular on the Google-owned site, attracting 38 percent of all YouTube users. The second post popular channel in July was Warner Music, which accounted for 20 percent of all viewers.
Music videos on these channels are accompanied by advertising, which in turn pays licensing fees to rights holders. But elsewhere on YouTube, much content is not licensed. This often includes user-generated videos, ranging from cover songs to slideshows set to music. An agreement announced yesterday (8/17) should pave the way for copyright owners to share in YouTube’s advertising revenue for previously unlicensed content.
YouTube and the National Music Publishers Association entered into the agreement, ending litigation that had been going on since 2007. Under the terms, the Harry Fox Administration will handle licensing agreements for publishers whose music is being used on YouTube.
Music Is YouTube's Most Popular Content
/by Sarah SkatesWith content from Universal, Sony and EMI artists, the Vevo channel is the most popular on the Google-owned site, attracting 38 percent of all YouTube users. The second post popular channel in July was Warner Music, which accounted for 20 percent of all viewers.
Music videos on these channels are accompanied by advertising, which in turn pays licensing fees to rights holders. But elsewhere on YouTube, much content is not licensed. This often includes user-generated videos, ranging from cover songs to slideshows set to music. An agreement announced yesterday (8/17) should pave the way for copyright owners to share in YouTube’s advertising revenue for previously unlicensed content.
YouTube and the National Music Publishers Association entered into the agreement, ending litigation that had been going on since 2007. Under the terms, the Harry Fox Administration will handle licensing agreements for publishers whose music is being used on YouTube.
The Band Perry to Headline The Ryman
/by Eric T. Parker“We are so excited to headline the Ryman, which holds a very special place in the heart of everyone in Country music,” said Kimberly, Reid and Neil Perry.
While The Band Perry has seen the view from the Ryman stage before while performing on Grand Ole Opry and other multi-artist events, this will be the first opportunity to showcase their music in a full-length show.
“It truly is an amazing experience to step on that stage – we can’t wait to spend a whole evening there, sharing our stories and becoming a part of its history,” said the Perry’s.
Tickets will go on sale Friday, August 26 in a three-tiered range $25, $30, and $35.
Belmont, Avenue Bank Team For Music Biz Finance Course
/by Sarah SkatesAvenue Bank developed the curriculum which includes industry-specific case studies, loan examples, finance for entrepreneurs, and personal finance.
It will also delve into what makes music industry banking so unique, such as loans where collateral is based on intellectual property instead of more traditional assets. The curriculum covers cash flow for performing artists and musicians, which can vary greatly and doesn’t fit a traditional monthly income model.
Avenue’s Ron Cox will lead the class, and bring in colleagues as guest instructors.
More exciting news from Belmont:
• The university’s bachelor’s degree program in Audio Engineering Technology is the first program of its kind to receive full accreditation under ABET standards.
• The university’s Belmont Heights Baptist Church is undergoing a $7 million renovation to become a large concert venue suitable for acoustic performances. With an expected completion date of May 2012, the new Concert Hall will host performances of the university’s classical choral and instrumental ensembles, as well as the Nashville Children’s Choir and other community groups.