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Weekly Register: Carrie Underwood Debuts at No. 1

Carrie Underwood Storyteller

Carrie Underwood’s album launch for Storyteller has a happy ending, as the superstar’s new collection debuts at No. 1 on the country chart this week. Accounting for streaming and digital singles, she achieved sales of 177K units (164K album only) and enters the overall album chart at No. 2.

Meanwhile, Blake Shelton secured 40K units (33K album only) of Reloaded: 20 #1 Hits, hitting the No. 2 spot on the country album chart and No. 5 on the overall chart.

Luke Bryan’s Kill the Lights (14K), Thomas Rhett’s Tangled Up (12K) and Don Henley’s Cass County (10.5K) round out the Top 5 country albums sales.

Sam Hunt’s Montevallo lands at No. 6 (10.5K), just ahead of a reissue of his acoustic mixtape, Between the Pines, at No. 7 (10K). Hunt recorded that set prior to signing to a major label.

Jimmy Fortune, a member of the Statler Brothers, enjoys a No. 10 debut on the country album chart with Hits & Hymns (4K). Other new releases on the country album chart include Colt Ford’s Answer to No One: The Colt Ford Classics (No. 14),  The Cox Family’s Gone Like the Cotton (No. 55) and Kyle Park’s Blue Roof Sessions (No. 57).

Meanwhile on the digital country tracks chart, Rhett continues to reign with “Die a Happy Man” at No. 1 (62K), trailed by Kane Brown’s “Used to Love You Sober” (46K), Hunt’s “Break Up in a Small Town” (33K), Cam’s “Burning House” (32K) and Bryan’s “Strip It Down” (32K).

Keith Urban takes a bow with “Break on Me,” entering at No. 7 (22K).

On the overall album chart, 5 Seconds of Summer’s Sounds Good Feels Good debuts at No. 1 with 192K units (179K album only). Adele’s astonishing “Hello” arrives on the digital tracks chart with 1.1 million units in its first week.

Info according to Nielsen Soundscan

 

Weekly Chart Report (10/30/15)

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Click here or above to access MusicRow‘s weekly CountryBreakout Report.

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MusicRow Launches First Podcast Episode With Merle Haggard

PodcastMerle

Photo: Myriam Santos

MusicRow is launching a new podcast series with the first episode featuring an interview with Merle Haggard.

Sponsored by SunTrust Bank’s Sports & Entertainment Group, the MusicRow Podcast is hosted by Sherod Robertson, the publication’s owner and publisher. In the first installment, the iconic Country Music Hall of Fame member talks about his true feelings toward hippies, recalls his friendship with Johnny Cash, and reveals the first song he’d want a new fan to hear.

Asked where he gets his drive, Haggard replies, “I’ve got a young wife who actually loves me, who is in love with me. She is a full-time nurse and should have a degree in homeopathic methods of healing. She has kept me young at heart and, you know, if I just try a little bit, I feel really good and I give her all the credit. She has changed my life and she’s sobered me up and made me a worthwhile citizen.”

Also in the the podcast, longtime industry figure Hazel Smith explains Haggard’s towering presence in country music history.

Or click here to listen in iTunes.

About the MusicRow podcast:
From Nashville’s leading music industry trade publication, The MusicRow Podcast features in-depth conversations with artists and the key industry members behind their music. Hosted by MusicRow Magazine Publisher Sherod Robertson, the series offers unique perspectives from iconic legends and rising talent to key decision makers and gatekeepers in the Nashville music industry.

 

Weekly Register: Luke Bryan Reclaims Country Albums Chart

luke bryan album 2015
In its 11th week, Luke Bryan’s Kill the Lights returns to No. 1 on the country album chart, with weekly sales of 15K copies. That’s just ahead of Thomas Rhett’s Tangled Up (13K), George Strait’s Cold Beer Conversation (12K) and Don Henley’s Cass County (12K).

Sam Hunt’s Montevallo lands at No. 5 with 10K sold. With these figures, the debut project sails past the 800,000 sales mark.

sam hunt montevallo

Chart debuts this week include LeAnn RimesToday Is Christmas, Stoney LaRue’s Us Time, a self-titled EP from The Voice contestant Jake Worthington, and SupersuckersHoldin’ the Bag.

This week’s top country track is Rhett’s “Die a Happy Man,” with 61K digital singles sold. In second place, Kane Brown (a 2013 contestant on The X Factor) debuts with 37.5K tracks of “Used to Love You Sober.” Bryan’s “Strip It Down” (36K), Cam’s “Burning House” (32K) and Hunt’s “Break Up in a Small Town” (31K) round out the Top 5.

Pentatonix album cover

Meanwhile, Pentatonix’s self-titled release on RCA enters at No. 1 on the overall chart with 98K units (88K album only).

Info according to Nielsen Soundscan

Weekly Chart Report (10/23/15)

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Click here or above to access MusicRow‘s weekly CountryBreakout Report.

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DISClaimer: Brett Eldredge, Backroad Anthem Offer Captivating New Music

brett-eldredge-drunk-on-your-love-single-cover-300x300Veterans and newcomers are in the mix this week, in equal portions.

Representing the first category are Jack Scott, T.G. Sheppard, George Jones and the enduringly awesome Don Henley.

New to the column are Mike & The Moonpies, AJ Kross, Alexandra Demetree and Backroad Anthem, all of whom show much promise. Backroad Anthem, a country band from Fayetteville, Arkansas, wins the DisCovery Award.

The Disc of the Day belongs to the red-hot Brett Eldredge.

BRETT ELDREDGE/Drunk on Your Love
Writers: Brett Eldredge/Ross Copperman; Producers: Copperman/Eldredge; Publishers: Sony-ATV Countryside/Paris Not France/EMI Blackwood/Ross Copperman, BMI; Atlantic
-I like the stacked vocal harmonies on the choruses very much. This instantly catchy thing is headed straight to the top. Take it to the bank.

ALEXANDRA DEMETREE/Outta My Head
Writers: Mark Oakley/Cherie Oakley; Producer: Bobby Huff; Publisher: MCRadio, ASCAP; SSM
-Nice work all around. The production is punchy and propulsive. The song is extremely well written. She sings like a bird in the sunshine. The key change in the bridge is super ear catching.

T.G. SHEPPARD & GEORGE JONES/It’s A Man Thing
Writers: Frank Solesby/Kelly Lang; Producer: Denny Diante; Publisher: Kelly Lang, BMI; Goldenlane (track)
-T.G.’s new CD is titled Legendary Friends & Country Duets. On it, the veteran hit maker teams up with Jerry Lee, the Oaks, Merle, Willie, Delbert, Crystal Gayle, Ricky Skaggs, Lorrie Morgan, B.J. Thomas, Mickey Gilley and even the late Conway Twitty and, here, George Jones. The departed Possum sounds surprisingly good with T.G. on this light hearted, charming ditty. Twangy, uptempo fun.

Backroad Anthem

Backroad Anthem

BACKROAD ANTHEM/Torn
Writers: Thomas Archer/Jay Brunswick/Josh Bryant/Tommy Cecil/Toby Freeman/Jody Stevens/Craig Strickland; Producers: Jody Stevens/Tommy Cecil; Publishers: HoriPro, BMG, Swat, Sony/ATV; BA (track)
-Very modern and electronic sounding. The track throbs with energy, and youthful voices ring on the ultra tuneful song. Imaginative, listenable, professional and extremely commercial. Somebody sign these guys.

MIKE & THE MOONPIES/Smoke ‘Em If You Got ‘Em
Writers: Mike Harmeler; Producers: Michael Kingcaid/Mike Harmeler; Publishers: none listed; BMI; MM (track)
-Breezy-easy, smooth country rock from the Lone Star State. Open-highway music, if a bit on the bland side.

DON HENLEY/Words Can Break Your Heart
Writers: Don Henley/Stan Lynch/Steuert Smith; Producers: Don Henley/Stan Lynch; Publishers: Wisteria/Warner-Tamerlane/Matanzas/Ratshoes/Granite, GMR/ASCAP; Capitol (track)
-The production is superbly pristine, with a heartbeat rhythm, sighing steel, chiming guitar work and echoey open spaces. The song sounds like a country classic. Henley’s vocal is, as always, a thing of perfect wonder. Goddess Trisha Yearwood shadows him in angelic harmony. You will not find a better recording on the market today than this legend’s Cass County. Buy it.

AJ KROSS/People Gonna Talk
Writers: none listed; Producers: Steffon Hmulack & Eric Torrez; Publishers: none listed; AJK
-He has a warm, inviting singing voice. The song is a solid, sturdy construction. The production builds beautifully around his performance. I like this a lot. Who is this guy?

JACK SCOTT/Tennessee Saturday Night
Writer: Billy Hughes; Producer: Olli Haavisto; Publisher: Unichappell, BMI; Blulight (track)
-You music nerds out there are going to be thrilled when I tell you that the great Jack Scott is back with his first new album in 50 years. Canada’s finest classic rock-and-roll stylist immortalized “My True Love,” “Burning Bridges,” “Leroy,” “The Way I Walk,” “Goodbye Baby,” “What In the World’s Come Over You” and more in 1958-61. Still touring on the rockabilly circuit, he went to Finland to record his Way to Survive comeback CD, which mainly consists of country chestnuts. He kicks it off with a snappy, rockabilly reworking of this 1948 Red Foley oldie. For a 79 year-old guy, he sounds pretty good.

BREELAN ANGEL/Nothing Cuts Like A Diamond
Writers: Julia Carlson/Courtney Dashe/Sarah Allison Turner; Producer: Trent Wilmon; Publishers: Red Vinyl/No Bull About It/Dixie Stars/True Bearing, BMI/ASCAP; MisBehavin’ (track)
-She tries to give the ballad a plaintive, heartbroken delivery. I was unmoved. There was something rather mannered and mechanical about it.

THE MAVERICKS/Pardon Me
Writers: Raul Malo/Alan Miller; Producers: Raul Malo/Niko Bolas; Publishers: Big Machine/Raul Malo/Miller’s Tale, BMI/ASCAP; Valory (track)
-This time out, the Mavs executive an echoey ballad of romantic anguish. Deep twang guitar and searing tenor vocals give it a glowing, simmering heat.

The Writer’s Room: Charlie Worsham

CharlieWorsham-WebGraphicMississippi native and Berklee College of Music graduate Charlie Worsham has been in the studio, prepping for his sophomore album for Warner Bros. Records.

MusicRow caught up with the triple-threat singer, songwriter and guitarist to discuss digital music, international touring, and other topics.

To read more, pick up your Publisher Issue print magazine available for purchase online for $30, and included with yearly subscriptions.

On songwriting with Ryan Tyndell:
I feel as if he and I are just now hitting our stride. If it’s your best friend, you don’t necessarily have that pressure to finish a song that day, because its not going to be six months before you can get back in a room together.

I think it is a really tough time to be a staff writer in Nashville. Obviously there’s not a lot of money, unless you get the single. Therefore, there is a lot of pressure on every staff writer’s back to deliver a single and that’s not an easy set of marching orders.

On Writing For His Debut Album, 2013’s Rubberband:
I’m so proud of that first record and the songs on it. That record was written and recorded over time, which was a completely different experience than the one I’m in the middle of now, partly because we made about half of the [first] record before I had record deal with Warner Bros.

There were two separate sessions at Omni and we cut four or five songs in each of those sessions. Then we plugged acoustics into amps and we put strange mic ideas around the sound, and we tinkered with it a lot. I got a record deal and the budget became easier to work with. We had three days at RCA Studio A and we were a little bit drunk with opportunity, I guess.

All of this happened over the course of a few years, so my life was a bit of a roller coaster then, just in terms of learning about record label marketing and promotion. It was a lot to take in at once.

On Spotify:
I know Spotify is a hot topic, but I am a fan of Spotify. I pay for premium and would gladly pay more. I think that’s where it’s going and where I hope it goes. I had Napster for a couple of years. People love music and they are going to go where they can find music. It is not about whether they are having to pay for it or not, so much as what makes the most sense for a music fan. If I remember correctly with Napster you could make your own playlist and burn CDs. Then iTunes came along and it was the perfect platform in that time and place and I miss the old iTunes. Sorry, Apple, I do.

I think at the end of the day, we want our music. I’ve read as much as I can on it. I do think Spotify is trying. I don’t think they completely grasp the difficult situation songwriters and publishers are in and they need to. I look to NSAI and other organizations who do great work for us and our future. It’s this great experiment we’re all in right now and for me, I have three playlists I’m updating all the time.

When they listen to my playlists of those 20 songs, it’s a chance for me to be one cog in the tastemaker gatekeeper wheel. And that’s where I think we are going. And I challenge my fellow artists, and anyone who has an audience, to look at Spotify and their presence on it as a chance to be a gatekeeper and tastemaker of tomorrow. You can totally fight for music you love by giving it a push. And that’s an Instagram thing, a Spotify thing, it’s calling your buddy … it’s my soapbox right now. If we lead with the music, the rest will fall into place. Leave it to the lawyers and politicians. We are never going to compete with the lobbyists on the other side who have armies of lawyers and money, but we have the music and they don’t.

On His Upcoming Acoustic Tour of the UK in November:
I’ve been working on running my acoustic through a small amplifier with a loop pedal, and last night I tried the same approach with an electric — I’ve opened Pandora’s box. It’s a great way to break down songs I’m in the middle of writing or change up the dynamic of older songs. I’m very excited to try that on a stage on the other side of the ocean.

My mom was a teacher, and she felt that travel equals education. I’ve been to England half a dozen times and spent a summer at Cambridge University. It’s an inspiring place. It’s also where I had Indian food for the first time, and I ordered it 5 hot. I learned that lesson the hard way.

Charlie Worsham

Charlie Worsham

Weekly Register: Toby Keith, Jana Kramer Enter Country Albums Chart

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Toby Keith

Toby Keith and Jana Kramer are back-to-back on this week’s album charts, and because of streaming figures, they’re pretty much neck-and-neck when it comes to bragging rights for having the week’s highest debut. Keith’s 35 mph Town enters the country album chart at No. 2 with nearly 19K sold, while Kramer’s Thirty-One lands at No. 3 with nearly 18K sold.

However, on the overall chart, which factors in streaming and song downloads, Kramer’s set parks at No. 10 with nearly 22K units, outpacing Keith’s No. 14 position with just under 20K units.

Photo Credit: Courtesy Warner Music Nashville

Jana Kramer: Courtesy Warner Music Nashville

Other debuts on the country album chart are Jason Boland and the StragglersSquelch, (No. 11, 4K), Josh Thompson’s Change: The Lost Record, Vol. 1 (No. 20, 2K) and Canadian country singer Corb Lund’s Things That Can’t Be Undone (No. 37, 1K).

Meanwhile, Luke Bryan returns to the top spot on the country album chart with Kill the Lights, selling 23K (648K to date). Don Henley’s Cass County (17K) and George Strait’s Cold Beer Conversation (16K) round out the Top 5.

luke bryan album 2015

The top country tracks this week are Thomas Rhett’s “Die a Happy Man” (49K), Bryan’s “Strip It Down” (38.5K), Cam’s “Burning House” (33K), and Sam Hunt’s “Break Up in a Small Town” (26K). Carrie Underwood’s brand new single, “Heartbeat,” debuts at No. 5 (23K).

On the overall chart, Selena Gomez debuts at No. 1 with Revival, moving 117K units (85K album only), just ahead of Game’s Documentary 2, with 95.5K units (83K album only). Country albums in the overall Top 10 are Bryan’s Kill the Lights (No. 6), Rhett’s Tangled Up (No. 7) and Kramer’s Thirty-One (No. 10)

Info according to Nielsen Soundscan

Round Hill Music, Big Yellow Dog Music Enter Deal For Josh Kear Back Catalog

Pictured (L-R, Front Row): Josh Gruss - RHM CEO, Josh Kear, Carla Wallace - Co-owner, Big Yellow Dog. Pictured (L-R, Back Row): Neil Gillis - RHM President, Kerry O’Neil - Co-owner, Big Yellow Dog, Mark Brown - RHM VP/ GM Nashville, Josh Saxe - RHM Associate Director, Creative.

Pictured (L-R, Front Row): Josh Gruss – RHM CEO; Josh Kear; Carla Wallace – Co-owner, Big Yellow Dog. Pictured (L-R, Back Row): Neil Gillis – RHM President; Kerry O’Neil – Co-owner, Big Yellow Dog; Mark Brown – RHM VP/ GM Nashville; Josh Saxe – RHM Associate Director, Creative.

Round Hill Music has inked a deal covering Josh Kear and Big Yellow Dog Music’s interests in all Kear-penned songs through 2014, including the hits “Need You Now,” “Before He Cheats,” “Highway Don’t Care,” and “Drunk On A Plane.”

Big Yellow Dog and Round Hill Music will jointly exploit Kear’s catalog. Kear is signed to Big Yellow Dog Music for future writing services.

​”It is a rare opportunity to acquire such a high quality body of work as the Josh Kear catalog,” says Mark Brown, VP and GM of Round Hill Music, Nashville. “There are so many huge hits and many other great songs waiting to be exploited. We are extremely excited to have this catalog under our Round Hill umbrella.”

“We have known the Nashville and New York executives of RH for a very long time. They exemplify quality and professionalism. We are pleased to be able to work with them on this wonderful catalog of songs that they are now the passionate stewards of,” Big Yellow Dog Music co-owners Carla Wallace and Kerry O’Neil said.

Kear has been with independent publisher Big Yellow Dog Music for nearly 13 years. Other hit songs Kear has co-written include “Neon Light” (Blake Shelton), “Blown Away” and “Two Black Cadillacs” (Carrie Underwood), “Helluva Life,” (Frankie Ballard), and “Drunk On You” (Luke Bryan). “Need You Now” earned Grammy honors for both Country Song of the Year and the overall Song of the Year in 2011. “Before He Cheats” and “Blown Away” each earned Grammy Awards for Country Song of the Year.

Since 2007 Kear has received 13 ASCAP country airplay awards, two ASCAP pop airplay awards, and three ASCAP Country Song of the Year awards for “Before He Cheats,” “Need You Now” and “Drunk On You.” In 2013 he also took home the coveted award for Country Songwriter of the Year.

Jon Nite Discusses Risks in the Writing Room

JonNite-WebGraphicJon Nite recently visited MusicRow to discuss his songwriting process for our 2015 Publisher Issue print magazine.

Nite is the recipient of three MusicRow No. 1 Challenge Coins for writing “Strip It Down” (Luke Bryan), “Smoke” (A Thousand Horses), and “Beachin'” (Jake Owen). His significant success continued over the years with “Glass” (Thompson Square), “Tip It On Back” (Dierks Bentley), and “Whatever She’s Got” (David Nail).

The Sony/ATV songwriter gave insight into the Nashville songwriter community, citing Cam’s Sony Nashville breakthrough–“Burning House” (Jeff Bhasker/Tyler Johnson/Cam)–as unique because usually fewer risks are taken when writing music for radio. That song, he says, gives writers hope.

“’Burning House’ is a breath of fresh air,” noted Nite. “To see something on the radio that’s not worried about what anyone thinks is really motivating.”

As the conversation turned to digital music, Nite said, “Songwriters know streaming music is either going to save us or doom us. Most songwriters are optimistic, I am too. Someone will figure out how to compensate people for music.

“I’m thankful that [Nashville songwriters] Lee Thomas Miller and Nicolle Galyon are talking face-to-face to congressmen to plead our case because I’m not a talker. But it can’t hurt for those songwriters who go to Washington to show the power a hit song can have to change someone’s life, or to lay out the family budget compared to streaming compensation. I’m optimistic, but there needs to be about 1,000 percent difference to compensate for the loss of income from downloads.

“It’s funny when you talk to the songwriters who have been around for multiple decades, because they always refer to the ‘90s income boom. They say that 80 percent of the songwriters that would have been in a job are not in a job now. I’m the lucky one to get up and do it but it does feel like there is only a small community who are doing super well—I imagine probably 15 top songwriters and 200 professional writers.

“With such few songwriters, there is a decrease in songs like ‘Burning House.’ You can get in this self-perpetuating cycle where the sound of a hit is everywhere if songwriters think they can’t pay their bills or may get dropped unless they produce something that sounds like a radio hit. ‘Burning House’ is a backlash from the economics where you need to have a radio-sounding song.

“But even if we’re writing them, they still may not be pitched as a single. Even still, the songs that provide for your family are the ones that make it to terrestrial radio—radio listeners decide. All I know is there are lesser risks in the writing room, even less that are cut, not to mention singled.”

To read more, pick up your Publisher Issue print magazine available or purchase online for $30, and are included with yearly subscriptions at no additional cost.