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Bobby Karl Works The Room: Taylor Swift Takes Nashville

BOBBY KARL WORKS THE ROOM

Chapter 509

Taylor Swift and Mick Jagger. Photo: Getty Images

Taylor Swift and Mick Jagger in Nashville on Sept. 26. Photo: Getty Images

A lucky few got to attend an intimate private party to celebrate Taylor Swift on Saturday (Sept. 26) backstage at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena.

A small living-room sized area was tented in the rehearsal hall and furnished with beige couches and cocktail tables. Décor also included glass cases containing some of the pop superstar’s costumes. A photo booth was in one corner.

Taylor’s publicist is Tree Paine. She invited her fellow Recording Academy board members to the soiree. Among those accepting were Daniel Hill, Erika Wollam Nichols & Roger Nichols, Jeff Balding, and LeAnn Phelan.

Trey Fanjoy brought Anastasia Brown as her “date.” Phil Thornton brought Taj Johnson-George, who is not only a member of the Grammy-nominated SWV and a 2009 Survivor competitor, but turns out to be a major Taylor Swift fan. She told Taylor that she follows her religiously on social media.

Lisa Harless brought her niece. Julian King, Lori Badgett and Ben Fowler brought their daughters. For Ben’s 10-year-old, it was her first concert, ever.

Taylor greeted each person individually, easily making small talk, especially with the little girls. She autographed a photo for each attendee, personalizing every one. We also each got a souvenir photo with the pop princess.

She joked with Taj that she thought she could take her on. Taylor may have the height, but my money’s on Taj’s Survivor toughness.

Bart Herbison presented Taylor with five No. 1 plaques from the Nashville Songwriters Association. All of them were for songs from her triumphant, eight-million-selling pop collection 1989.

“C’mon, y’all, Yay for Taylor!” he exhorted. We cheered with pleasure.

“Where’s the camera? Let’s take a picture,” said the delighted star.

“It’s my first pop album, but I took my Nashville songwriting sensibilities into the sessions with me,” she added. “That’s what Nashville taught me.

“Thank you for coming to my show. I know how busy you are. You are people I admire and respect so much. Thank you for wanting to spend your Saturday night with me.”

She served us light refreshments and soft drinks. Then momma Andrea Swift took everyone on a backstage tour of the mammoth production. The kids were completely saucer eyed.

On our way into Taylor’s “homecoming” show, we encountered such other fabulons as Victoria Shaw, Peter Cooper, Brandon Heath and Nashville Recording Academy board president Shannon Sanders.

We walked into a concert atmosphere that was deliriously joyous. The audience at a Taylor Swift show is almost as entertaining as the show, itself, with its costumes, homemade signs, battery-powered holiday lights, tutus, headdresses, cat outfits, Taylor-inspired couture and sparkles everywhere. The crowd is simply adorable.

Here’s another cool thing. Taylor’s songs mean so much to them. They sang along to every single lyric of every single song.

Most of the shows on the 1989 Tour have featured surprise celebrity guests. Saturday night’s included two of the greatest, living legend Mick Jagger and awesome vocal phenom Leona Lewis. Taylor rocked “Satisfaction” with the former and sang a soaring rendition of 2008’s No. 1 pop smash “Bleeding Love” with the latter.

The crowd sang, too, and roared deafeningly as each was announced. Jagger wasn’t a surprise to the “lucky few,” since we’d glimpsed him briefly in a hallway backstage. (Friday’s concert featured appearances by Steven Tyler, Kelsea Ballerini and Alison Krauss). The crowd greeted opening acts Vance Joy and Haim with equal enthusiasm.

“Nashville….you have never looked as beautiful as you do, 15,000-strong, on a Saturday night,” said Taylor to the sold-out audience. “I feel like tonight is going to be the crowd of all crowds. And I really want it to be worth your while.”

The concert mainly consisted of material from 1989. She opened with “Welcome to New York,” for instance. But she also offered a few tunes from her years as a country act – “Fifteen” and “Love Story” – plus “We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together.”

The set pieces were simpler than on the Red Tour. A massive video screen backed the three-tiered stage. Twelve athletic male dancers accompanied most songs.

There were nine costume changes. This was sometimes accomplished because of female-empowerment and self-actualization video testimonials from Taylor buddies such as Lena Dunham and Selena Gomez.

A long, long runway extended almost the entire length of the Bridgestone. It rose 20-feet into the air and then rotated like a propeller blade over the audience. Taylor strutted fearlessly on it, in high heels. I wouldn’t walk that elevated thing on a dare, even in sneakers.

But the coolest effect was the light-up bracelet that was taped to every seat in the house. You put it on, and throughout the show, unseen forces made it change color – white, red, green, pink, blue, turquoise – depending on the mood of the song. This synchronized coordination resulted in the lovely vision of the crowd becoming a celestial galaxy.

“You’ve been so generous to me tonight,” said Taylor, “so welcoming, so open.

“I am having such a good time….Getting to hang out with you for two-and-a-half hours is going to be a memory for me. You make me so happy.

“Nashville, I’m going to ask you to sing one last time with me tonight,” she said before beginning the gloriously synth-throbbing “Out of the Woods.” Confetti rained down on our heads as the song reached its crescendo.

Of course it wasn’t the end. We rocked out to the “Shake It Off” finale as even more tons of confetti descended on our heads from the girders.

If you didn’t have a good time, you had to be made of lead.

Kacey Musgraves’ Rhinestone Revue Lights Up The Ryman

Kacey Musgraves performs at the Ryman (Sept. 24, 2015), "The Kacey Musgraves Country & Western Rhinestone Revue" tour

Kacey Musgraves performs at the Ryman (Sept. 24, 2015) on”The Kacey Musgraves Country & Western Rhinestone Revue” tour.

The Kacey Musgraves Country & Western Rhinestone Revue delighted fans last night (Sept. 24) during the second show of a two-night stand at Nashville’s iconic Ryman Auditorium.

Opening band Sugar & The Hi-Lows left the audience in a lively mood for Musgraves, who opened with the title track of her latest album Pageant Material, garnering thunderous applause from the sold-out crowd.

With a sparkling backdrop behind her and a large disco ball above, Musgraves quickly segued into other tunes pulling from both her latest release and her debut album Same Trailer Different Park.

She peppered the set with a few cover songs including a cool rhythmic rendition of TLC‘s “No Scrubs” and Miranda Lambert‘s “Mama’s Broken Heart,” which Musgraves co-wrote with Brandy Clark and Shane McAnally.

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After her performance of “Dime Store Cowgirl,” a huge group of excited fans swarmed to the front of the stage. It even caught the songstress by surprise and she welcomed the enthusiastic throng, before continuing with several more tunes. When her stellar band took a break, she sang a well-received acoustic version of “Merry Go ‘Round.”

After a quick costume change, Musgraves was back on stage performing “High Time” and “Blowin’ Smoke.” She received a standing ovation as soon as she started the first line of “Follow Your Arrow,” and fans thoroughly enjoyed having a sing-along.

Next up, Musgraves performed Nancy Sinatra‘s sassy “These Boots Are Made For Walkin.'” She ended the fun night with an a cappella version of “Happy Trails,” the tune made famous by being used during the end credits of the Roy Rogers and Dale Evans TV shows.

That was our cue to giddy up and go.

Kacey Musgraves performs at the Ryman (Sept. 24, 2015), "The Kacey Musgraves Country & Western Rhinestone Revue" tour

Kacey Musgraves lights up the Ryman stage.

Kacey Musgraves performs at the Ryman (Sept. 24, 2015), "The Kacey Musgraves Country & Western Rhinestone Revue" tour

Kacey Musgraves, the Dime Store Cowgirl.

Weekly Chart Report (9/25/15)

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

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DISClaimer: Praise For Craig Morgan, Mo Pitney, Home Free

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Photo: Joseph Llanes

Leaves are falling and the fall releases are beginning to drop, too. One thing we do not have this week is a first-timer to the column. So I have no DisCovery Award recipient.

That being the case, let’s spread the love around with our Disc of the Day award. Absolutely, for certain, that belongs to mighty voiced Craig Morgan.

But if we want to salute a baby act, save some applause for Mo Pitney, whose sophomore single is a thing of perfect wonder. And for a left-field pleasure, give a listen to the imaginative vocal arranging skills of Home Free.

RACHELE LYNAE/Quicksand
Writers: Rachele Lynae/Danick Dupelle/Patricia Conroy; Producers: Jamie O’Neal/Rachele Lynae; Publishers: Rachele Lynae/Bend That Note/Emerson Drive/Patricia Conroy, ASCAP/SOCAN; Momentum
-She’s warning her girlfriend about a guy who is big trouble while the band rumbles around her in a ruckus. After such a rocking ride, the abrupt ending might give you whiplash.

Home Free

Home Free

HOME FREE & THE OAK RIDGE BOYS/Elvira
Writers: Dallas Frazier; Producers: Darren Rust/Home Free; Publishers: Sony-ATV Acuff Rose, BMI; Columbia (track)
-Home Free is the a cappella quintet that won on TV’s The Sing Off. They warble like perfectly harmonizing birds and have enormous talent for creatively re-arranging country classics like this one. If you think you’ve heard this song enough times already, trust me, you haven’t. This gives it a completely fresh sound. Elsewhere on the new Country Evolution CD are equally inventive re-workings of “9 to 5,” “The Devil Went Down to Georgia,” “Friends in Low Places,” “Fishin’ in the Dark” and more.

REBA McENTIRE/Until They Don’t Love You
Writers: Shane McAnally/Lori McKenna/Josh Osborne; Producers: Tony Brown/Reba; Publishers: Universal/Smack Ink/Hoodie Songs/One Little Indian Creek/Songs of Black River, ASCAP/BMI; Starstruck/Nash Icon (track)
-Lots of rhythm. Not much melody.

CRAIG MORGAN/When I’m Gone
Writers: Justin Ebach/Steven Dale Jones; Publishers: Byron Gallimore/Craig Morgan; Publishers:Whispering/Word/Son of Austin, SESAC/ASCAP; Black River
– He remains one of the greatest vocalists in this city, and this powerhouse performance of a pile-driving song proves it. It’s a ferociously soaring rocker about living life to the fullest. Sing it, brother.

ABBI WALKER/Well Behaved Too Long
Writers: Abbi Walker/P. Ryan Petkoff/Rich Alvarez; Producer: none listed; Publisher: Abbi Walker, BMI; Indie
-She gives this sassy number her best, but the production is rinky-dink cheesy.

GLEN CAMPBELL/Streets of London
Writer: McTell; Producer: none listed; Publisher: Westminster, no performance rights listed; Rainman (track)
-The “new” CD by this legend is a live album recorded in England in 1990. It includes full-band rendition of his big hits, plus Paul McCartney’s “Mull of Kintyre” (featuring his stunning bagpipe playing) and this lovely, heartfelt performance of Ralph McTell’s folk song accompanying himself on simple acoustic guitar. Pure talent.

STEPHANIE URBINA JONES/Bring It Back to the Heartland
Writers: Stephanie Urbina Jones/Mark Marchetti; Producer: none listed; Publishers: Casa Del Rio/Mark Marchetti, SESAC/BMI; Casa Del Rio
-I have long been a fan of this lady’s work. Her voice is as throaty and emotive as ever on this topical single. The lyric yearns to bring the nation back to its better years when we had mom-and-pop stores, products made in the U.S.A., family farms, good jobs and the American Dream.

JOHN ANDERSON/Don’t Forget To Thank The Lord
Writers: John D. Anderson/John Rich; Producers: John Anderson/Joe Spivey; Publisher: none listed; Bayou Boys (track)
-John says not to take things for granted. Remember to thank teachers, preachers, policemen, firemen, mothers, soldiers and at the end of the day, the man upstairs. The loping rhythm, fiddle work, steel backing and guitar chops are all first rate. As is his singing, of course.

JON PARDI/Head Over Boots
Writers: Jon Pardi/Luke Laird; Producers: Bart Butler/Jon Pardi; Publishers: Golden Vault/Bill Butler/Song Factory/Songs of Universal/Creative Nation, BMI; Capitol (CDX)
-This goes down smooth and easy with its lulling, gentle rhythm and simple, smiling lyric of romance. Sweet and youthful.

Mo Pitney photo Joseph LLanes

Mo Pitney. Photo: Joseph Llanes

MO PITNEY/Boy and a Girl Thing
Writers: Mo Pitney/Don Sampson; Producer: Tony Brown; Publishers: Mike Curb/She’s My Darlin/House of Sea Gayle, BMI/ASCAP; Curb (CDX)
-This is ultra cool, a soft, dreamy groove that’s as comfy as a hammock on a summer afternoon. You’ll think it is understated at first, but this will definitely get under your skin and into your memory bank. The kid just might be our next big star. I wanna hear Mo.

Bobby Karl Works “Blake Shelton Week”

Blake Shelton brought music back to the Row for the final installment of Warner Music Nashville’s Pickin’ on the Patio 2015. Thousands of people filled the streets to celebrate with the reigning five-time CMA Vocalist of the Year. Shelton performed an hour long set that included many of his 20 No. 1 singles, all featured on his forthcoming album Reloaded: 20 #1 Hits due October 23. Photo: Alan Poizner

Blake Shelton brought music back to the Row for the final installment of Warner Music Nashville’s Pickin’ on the Patio 2015. Thousands of people filled the streets to celebrate with the reigning five-time CMA Vocalist of the Year. Shelton performed an hour-long set that included many of his 20 No. 1 singles, all featured on his forthcoming album Reloaded: 20 #1 Hits due October 23. Photo: Alan Poizner

BOBBY KARL WORKS THE ROOM

Chapter 507

It’s Blake Shelton Week here in Music City.

Thousands thronged the streets of Music Row last night (Sept. 23) for his free concert. Even more heard his fifth anniversary celebration as a Grand Ole Opry cast member on Tuesday (Sept. 22). Today (Sept. 24), BMI and ASCAP are throwing a bash for five of his most recent No. 1 hits at Losers. More on this to follow.

Trace Adkins and Blake Shelton. Photo: Chris Hollo

Trace Adkins and Blake Shelton. Photo: Chris Hollo

The fun began with Blake’s appearance on the Opry. The show’s chief Pete Fisher presented him with a fifth of whiskey to commemorate the fifth anniversary. Not just any fifth, mind you. This one looked just like a fifth of Jack Daniels, except instead of “Jack Daniels,” the distinctive white-on-black label script read, “Blake Shelton.” It also read, of course, “Old No. 5,” and on the back Pete had inscribed the megastar’s “distilling” process.

Trace Adkins was the one who invited Blake to become an Opry cast member and the one who inducted him. He was on hand to sing “Hillbilly Bone” with Blake. “He’s still as cranky as ever, and that’s why I love him,” said Blake of Trace.

A heavenly host of fabulons gathered at Warner Bros. Records on Wednesday for a party celebrating Blake’s 20 No. 1 hits. By the way, there have been 15 of them in a row. Soon to be 16. Warner Bros. honcho John Esposito told us so, adding that Blake has won nine CMA awards, is a five-time CMA male vocalist, co-hosts the ACMs and is a four-time winning coach on TV’s The Voice. “Blake could sing the phone book,” Espo averred. He said that the A&R department is the heart and soul of his label while introducing producer Scott Hendricks. “I hope we’ve made you proud with the records we’ve made,” said Scott.

Then it was Blake’s turn to take the mic. “This is unbelievable,” he began. “This whole day, I’ve been running into people I haven’t seen in a long time. I ran into Jim Ed Norman. He looks the same as he did 100 years ago! It makes me realize how important the Nashville community has been to my success. More than ever, I realize how important great songs are. Thanks to the songwriters.”

Scott and his staff have sifted through 20,000 songs for Blake’s records. Frankly, I don’t think I would have the patience.

“It’s just been a magical day….I feel like it’s not about me,” Blake added later. “There are the songwriters, the record label, my agents….and that’s why I wanted to do something free for the community, for the fans.” The fans were there. Typical of the devoted, dedicated country lovers, many had found out about this Music Row event and travelled to Nashville, just to attend. Chris Cannon and his Channel 5 crew aired awesome helicopter video views of the assembled multitude.

(L-R): Kevin Herring (SVP, Promotion), Peter Strickland (EVP & GM, WMN), John Esposito (President & CEO, WMN), Scott Hendricks (EVP, A&R), Narvel Blackstock (Starstruck Management), Brandon Blackstock (Starstruck Management). Photo: Alan Poizner

(L-R): Kevin Herring (SVP, Promotion), Peter Strickland (EVP & GM, WMN), John Esposito (President & CEO, WMN), Blake Shelton, Scott Hendricks (EVP, A&R), Narvel Blackstock (Starstruck Management), Brandon Blackstock (Starstruck Management). Photo: Alan Poizner

Among the lucky ones in the party space and patio above the crowd were Charlie Cook, Charlie Chase, Lorianne Crook, Rob Simbeck, Rob Beckham, Kyle Young, Mary Ann McCready, Julie Boos, Gold and Platinum RIAA plaque maker Deborah Lotz (who is moving here from L.A., another coup for us), Leslie Fram, R.J. Curtis, John Marks, Stuart Dill, rising star Brett Eldredge, Hunter Hayes, Narvel Blackstock (we tried to get Kay West to pry him for Reba divorce details, but she wouldn’t do it), Cindy Watts, Shauna Russell, Tom Roland and Sherod Robertson.

The songwriters and other creative citizens who contributed to those 20 chart toppers were given crystal trophies. The ones I schmoozed included David Kent & Kristi Manna (“Austin”), Paul Overstreet (“Some Beach”), J.T. Harding (“Sangria”) and Ryan Hurd (“Lonely Tonight”).

There will be more of these folks at today’s Blake bash celebrating his most recent No. 1 hits.

Blake Shelton performs for the final installment of Warner Music Nashville's Pickin' on the Patio 2015 to thousands of fans. Photo: MusicRow

Blake Shelton performs for the final installment of Warner Music Nashville’s Pickin’ on the Patio 2015 to thousands of fans. Photo: MusicRow

Nashville To Judiciary Committee: “We’re going out of business on the backs of the digital services”

Invitees and public gather at Belmont on September 22 to speak to representatives of the House Judiciary Committee.

Invitees and public gather at Belmont on Sept. 22 to speak to representatives of the House Judiciary Committee.

Members of the House Judiciary Committee were in Nashville this week (Sept. 21-22) as part of a three-year review to determine if the U.S. Copyright Law is maintaining pace with the digital age. During this Music City trip they visited the Bluebird Café, a reception hosted by RIAA, WSIX’s Bobby Bones Show, and SESAC headquarters. Yesterday, they attended an information session with 21 key industry players at Belmont University.

Committee leaders who were present included Chairman Bob Goodlatte (Virginia) and members Darrell Issa (CA–Chairman of the Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property and the Internet), Blake Farenthold (Texas–Vice Chairman of the Subcommittee on Regulatory Reform Commercial and Anti Trust Law), and Doug Collins (Georgia– Vice Chairman of the Courts, Intellectual Property and the Internet). Also on hand was Marsha Blackburn (Tennessee–Vice Chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee).

Kevin Kadish, co-writer on Meghan Trainor‘s “All About That Bass,” shared that he earned $5,679.00 for 178 million digital streams of the title. “That’s as big a song as anyone can have in their career—No. 1 in 78 countries—but how do you feed your family?”

“It gave me hope to hear Chairman Goodlatte talk about Nashville as one of the fastest growing economies in the nation but he recognized there’s a depression in the middle of the city: the American songwriter,” said Ben Vaughn, Exec. VP, Warner/Chappell Nashville. “We have lost about 80 percent of professional songwriters creating new music. We are desperately asking for the committee to listen to needs of songwriters.”

“Our bottom line is: Are we getting paid a fair amount of money for our product?” posed songwriter Bob DiPiero. “All our songwriters have put in the ‘10,000 hours’ with hundreds of terrible songs. My income shows when I have wildly successful or unsuccessful years. There is no steady stream. One of my greatest allies has been BMI for 35 years.”

Kadish continued with praise for his PRO. “Without ASCAP, I don’t know how I would survive as a songwriter. Financially, they pay the meat of what I make. I understand people may be confused with how the PROs calculate spins etc., but I [wouldn’t] say there is not transparency with them.”

Pictured (L-R): songwriter Barry Dean, House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte (VA), NSAI Executive Director Bart Herbison, Congressman Darrell Issa (CA) songwriters Heather Morgan, Lee Thomas Miller and Congressman Doug Collins (GA).

Pictured at the Bluebird Cafe (L-R): songwriter Barry Dean, NSAI Executive Director Bart Herbison, House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte (VA), Congressman Darrell Issa (CA), songwriters Heather Morgan, Lee Thomas Miller and Congressman Doug Collins (GA).

Prior to the event, NSAI Executive Director Bart Herbison shared with MusicRow: “Probably sometime next year is when Chairman Goodlatte will determine what shape the legislation would look like. Right now, we’re 20 hearings into all this: two aggressive years with the copyright office, the executive branch of government and Congress. Now the members are visiting cities like Nashville to figure out the balance and the political realities.”

Representative Doug Collins.

Representative Doug Collins.

The Songwriter Equity Act, of which Rep. Collins is lead sponsor, was introduced after years of crafting. Although there are opponents in the digital world, Herbison believes its contents are politically achievable.

“If congress hears and passes the Songwriter Equity Act, that would impact future decisions from the rate courts,” continued Herbison. “Before then, the House Judiciary Committee will vote on our issues. Then it goes to the floor of the full House of Representatives, and the same process in the U.S. Senate.”

“Every time I’m in Nashville I’m reminded of the unique relationship between the songwriters and artists,” said Representative Collins. “Songwriters are an integral part of the community, which is what started me to look into the pay and streaming issues. My goal is to make sure we have a wonderfully rich musical heritage for the future.”

• • •

Main points from yesterday’s session:

Pat Collins (President/CEO, SESAC): The full federalization of pre-1972 copyrights is something this town would applaud. Passing legislation for people to use works where the owner cannot be located at the moment would help encourage a more robust database. SESAC supports the creation of a database that could be used by users of music.

Beth Nielsen Chapman (indie artist/songwriter representing Content Creators Coalition and musicFIRST): If Amazon has the capacity to know what I had for breakfast and can show me something in my sidebar, there is no excuse to not have complete transparency with the labels and publishers.

Lee Thomas Miller (songwriter and Board President of NSAI): With the exception of sync fees, the American songwriter has never negotiated what the price of our copyright is worth. The problem is not just transparency. The problem is [streaming services] exist because an antiquated federal law gives [songwriters] a set maximum wage on products we create every day. Entrepreneurs are able to open up shop, practically getting the goods for free to build multi-million, billion dollar companies. We are going out of business on the backs of the digital services. Spotify and Pandora took our music cheap because we can’t say no. They offered it to our culture for free. Not only did they set the value for our music, they gutted it!

David Pomeroy (President, AFM Local 257): I want to make sure Congress doesn’t forget about studio musicians that create the magic that make records great. Everyone on the team deserves to be paid correctly.

On individual streams vs. radio spins vs. sales 

Miller: My question would be: “Who decided what the stream was worth?”

Kadish: You also need to identify that streaming takes away from sales.

Where is the equity?

Vaughn: My job is to invest in the creation of new music. When I think about digital royalty statements, how can I invest in the future of songwriting. Pandora has a $3.79 billion market cap, SiriusXM $22 billion, Spotify $8.5 billion valuation.

Rep. Issa: But [streaming services are] not making any money. One of the challenges in this copyright review is that we are listening to them too, and they show us how much they’re paying out. Market cap is based on a value that they will have later. It doesn’t matter if you can’t get to profit. So we’re trying to figure out where the equity is that allows everyone to have sustainable models. If they haven’t figured out how to be profitable in delivering the service then the consumer is getting value that they ultimately shouldn’t get.

Willing buyer/willing seller

Marc Driskill (GM of Sea Gayle Music and Exec. Dir. AIMP): It is a partnership between the artists and the songwriters, but I don’t think you can have an equitable partnership if the government regulates one partner. [That means] deregulation on the songwriter side. The one place we see equity is sync, where both have the right to negotiate on rates, and its generally 50-50.

David Del Berraco (President/CEO MusicChoice): The reason willing buyer/willing seller works in the sync world is because you have a limited number of [opportunities] with a limited number songs they would like to use. When you’re dealing with thousands of streaming companies and tens of thousands of artists, willing buyer/willing seller does not work. What makes it worse is they all have MFN (most favored nation clauses). They have the power to put [streaming companies] out of business.

Representatives’ Final Thoughts

Blackburn: I think we all agree [the final decision] needs to be fair and transparent. Everyone enjoys the music, we just want to make certain creators stay creating and the industry stays in business.

Collins: We’re dealing with songs and lyrics that change us. I’m going to continue moving forward with the Songwriter Equity Act because we’re dealing with [future generations’] hopes, dreams and ideas.

Farenthold: Technology is flattening the entire world. At the rate Washington moves, we could be stuck with [this decision] for a long time so it is important we get it right, which is why we are spending the time and effort to come up with a hopefully simpler solution.

Issa: The cheapest place to get music in the world—I have no doubt—is here in America. The only question is the balance right and is the ecosystem sustainable? I’m committed to finding that balance that gives us a healthy ecosystem. You don’t agree on everything but hopefully you agree that everyone has to have a sustainable business model.

Chairman Goodlatte: The evolution of our copyright law is not evolving the way it should. We need to change our copyright laws to reflect real value. My concern is government is not really good at figuring out what that is. The bottom line is we are representatives, we will have to represent an amalgam of views that make our copyright laws more transparent and efficient in a way that consumers will appreciate and pay for. It is very important all aspects of the music industry come together as best you can to find common ground because the more consensus you build yourselves, the easier it will be for us to produce something forward-looking that is useful for the next generation to cause the creators of music to thrive.

Mac Davis To Be Honored As BMI Icon

Mac Davis

Mac Davis

BMI will celebrate the songwriting career of Mac Davis by naming him a BMI Icon at the company’s 63rd annual BMI Country Awards on Tuesday, Nov. 3 at BMI’s Music Row offices in Nashville.

The invitation-only event will honor Davis and the songwriters and publishers of the most-performed country songs of the previous year.

“We’re honored to celebrate the incredible career of Mac Davis,” said Jody Williams, BMI Vice President, Writer/Publisher Relations, Nashville. “Artists ranging from Elvis to Avicii have recorded his songs. As an artist himself, Mac’s hits were embraced and loved internationally by both pop and country audiences. He hosted his own network TV variety show, appeared in many feature films, and even starred on Broadway, but Mac’s unique songwriting ability is what really sets him apart. In every way, Mac Davis is a BMI Icon.”

The BMI Icon award is given to songwriters who have had a unique and indelible influence on generations of music makers. An all-star musical tribute will pay homage to Davis, who joins a list of past honorees that includes Vince Gill, Dean Dillon, Tom T. Hall, Kris Kristofferson, Willie Nelson, Hank Williams, Jr., Merle Haggard, Dolly Parton, Loretta Lynn and others.

As a songwriter, Davis wrote several hits for Elvis Presley, Kenny Rogers, Dolly Parton and Rascal Flatts.

Also during the event, BMI will crown the Country Songwriter, Song and Publisher of the Year and salute the writers and publishers of the past year’s 50 most-performed songs from BMI’s country catalog.

Weekly Register: Brett Eldredge Debuts at No. 1

Brett performed his current single “Lose My Mind” this week on Good Morning America. Pictured left to right: George Stephanopoulos, 2016 Miss America Betty Cantrell, Brett Eldredge, Amy Robach, Lara Spencer, Ginger Zee.

Brett Eldredge performed his current single “Lose My Mind” last week on Good Morning America. Pictured (L-R): George Stephanopoulos, 2016 Miss America Betty Cantrell, Brett Eldredge, Amy Robach, Lara Spencer, Ginger Zee.

Brett Eldredge sings his way to the No. 1 country album spot this week, debuting with sales of 51K (44K album only). His sophomore album, Illinois, lands at No. 3 on the overall chart. Eldredge celebrated the Warner Music Nashville release with an album preview event recently at Ocean Way studios in Nashville.

Rounding out the top 5 country albums are: Luke Bryan (27K), Sam Hunt (9K), Zac Brown Band (6.6K) and Eric Church (5.4K)

Bryan and Hunt also have tracks in the country top 5: Bryan’s “Strip It Down” is at No. 1 with 42K TW, and Hunt’s “House Party” is at No. 5 with 26K.

Compared to 2014, the number of downloads being sold by the top country track is down significantly. During the same week last year, Jason Aldean was moving 78K of “Burnin’ It Down.”

In 2015, Cam is the one on fire. Her “Burning House” sold 33K this week, landing at No. 2 country, followed by Chris Janson “Buy Me A Boat” (28K) and Keith Urban “John Cougar, John Deere…” (27K).

Toby Keith’s “Rum Is The Reason” is the top country debut track, coming in at No. 24 with 8.4K downloads.

On the overall charts, The Weeknd has the top album with 99K total activity (48K album only), and Justin Bieber has the top track, selling 128K of “What Do You Mean?”

YTD Albums
Overall -4%
Overall digital -.3%
Country -3.2%
Country digital +4.2%

YTD Tracks
Overall -10.5%
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Bobby Karl Works ‘Eric Church: Inside The Outsider Exhibit’

VIP preview of Eric Church's exhibit at the Country Music Hall of Fame. Pictured (L-R): Pictured are (l-r): Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum's Carolyn Tate, Eric Church, John Peets, and Universal Music Group's Mike Dungan. Photo: Rick Diamond, Getty Images for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

VIP preview of Eric Church’s exhibit at the Country Music Hall of Fame. Pictured (L-R): Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s Carolyn Tate, Eric Church, Q Prime South’s John Peets, and Universal Music Group’s Mike Dungan. Photo: Rick Diamond, Getty Images for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

BOBBY KARL WORKS THE ROOM

Chapter 506

A man I consider to be a Hall of Fame caliber artist has a new exhibit at the Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum, and I bet it won’t be his last.

The museum hosted a preview party on Thursday evening (9/17) for “Eric Church: Inside the Outsider.” It’s just a pocket exhibit, but the star was enormously moved by the gesture.

“I just want to say I grew up as a fan,” said honoree Eric Church at the reception in the Library Reading Room. “I revere country music. I remember walking by the Country Music Hall of Fame and having a ‘moment.’ I was a songwriter who had been told ‘No’ a bunch.

“I just walked through an exhibit that had my name on it,” he added with emotion in his voice. “I can’t believe how far we’ve come.

“I’ve learned one thing: It’s not about me. It’s about the people in this room. I can’t say how much I love each and every one of you.

“Thank you for this.”

John Peets, Mike Dungan, Troy Tomlinson, Arturo Buenahora, Jody Williams, and Donna Hughes were just a few of the Church team members in attendance.

They applauded alongside Chris Horsnell, Kelsey Grady, Lori Badgett, Scott Stem, Vernell Hackett, Holly George Warren, Hunter Kelly, Bob Paxman and Charlie Cook.

“He took his songs to the People and put on shows full of raw energy,” said the senior vice president of museum services Carolyn Tate to the crowd.“Eric converted his fans one club at a time, one theater at a time and finally one arena at a time.

“Thank you for letting us tell your story. We believe this is just the first chapter in a long and very significant career.” My sentiments, exactly.

The pocket exhibit contains stage outfits, hand-written song lyrics, awards, a set list, an autographed George Strait guitar, photographs and other career memorabilia. Between this, the “Dylan, Cash & The Nashville Cats” exhibit and the “Flying Saucers Rock & Roll: Sam Phillips” exhibit, the Hall of Fame is a must-visit more than ever. Go.

Weekly Chart Report (9/18/15)

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