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Nashville Honors Industry Titan Joe Galante with Bob Kingsley Living Legend Award

Pete Fisher (Opry Vice Pres. & General Mgr), Joe Galante, Bob Kingsley, and Kenny Chesney

Pictured (L-R): Pete Fisher (Opry Vice Pres. & General Mgr), Joe Galante, Bob Kingsley,
and Kenny Chesney. Photo: Chris Hollo/Grand Ole Opry

“Nashville would not be Nashville without Joe Galante,” said CMA CEO Sarah Trahern.

“He’s the odometer everyone looks up to,” said artist manager Clint Higham.

“He’s the godfather,” said Warner Music Nashville president John Esposito.

Ronnie Dunn Hollo 7639-2

Ronnie Dunn. Photo: Chris Hollo

Those were a sample of the high praises that flowed last night (Feb. 10) for a Nashville transplant from New York who signed or developed some of the biggest artists in the past 20 years. Artists including The Judds, Miranda Lambert, Kenny Chesney, Lorrie Morgan, Ronnie Milsap, Sara Evans, Carrie Underwood and Brad Paisley.

Numerous artists and industry members gathered to honor Joe Galante with the Bob Kingsley Living Legend Award, during a dinner held at the Grand Ole Opry. The evening came as a surprise to Galante, who attended under the ruse that he was part of a taping for the television show Nashville. The soiree also benefited the Grand Ole Opry Trust Fund.

Video clips of praise and career anecdotes rolled in from Underwood, Lambert, Connie Bradley, Hazel Smith, Mike Dungan, Randy Goodman, Clint Higham, Sarah Trahern, Jim Ed Brown, Aaron Tippin and more.

Throughout the evening, artists and songwriters performed songs that became well-known titles through Galante’s work, and peppered the festivities with witty and insightful anecdotes of his career, including Kenny Chesney, Matraca Berg, Sara Evans, Lorrie Morgan, Naomi Judd, Lonestar, Kellie Pickler, Phil Vassar, Ronnie Milsap, Ronnie Dunn, Foster & Lloyd, Kix Brooks, K.T. Oslin, Sylvia, Eddie Raven and Brett James.

“He was fun to be around,” said Lorrie Morgan. “We did a lot of radio visits together. He was fun when he needed to be, and a businessman when he needed to be. But he got the artists. He wouldn’t push you into a song that didn’t mean something to you.”

After signing Morgan, Galante teamed her with her first producer, Barry Beckett. “I had been carrying around this demo of me singing, ‘Dear Me,’ for years, because I had been a demo singer. I presented it to Beckett, and he took it to Joe, and they both thought it would be my first hit. They got who I was. A lot of times we butted heads on picking out songs, but I was smart enough to know to listen to him, because he is a great song guy.”

Galante first joined RCA in New York as a budget analyst. In 1973, he was assigned to RCA’s Nashville office as Manager of Administration. What was meant to be a two-year, temporary assignment was instead the beginning of a decades-long career establishing many of country’s modern superstars.

Possessing both a keen business mind and an impeccable A&R ear for great songs and artists, Galante became an integral part of the marketing initiatives for Waylon Jennings, Dolly Parton, and Ronnie Milsap.

Lorrie Morgan. Photo: Chris Hollo

Lorrie Morgan. Photo: Chris Hollo

During last night’s celebration, Milsap recalled how Galante encouraged him to become a multi-format artist, to expand outside of the country realm. “It was a lesson that stuck with me throughout my career,” said Milsap, who performed a medley of his hits, including the appropriate “What A Difference You’ve Made In My Life” and “I Wouldn’t Have Missed It For The World.”

In 1982, Galante was named head of RCA’s Nashville division. At age 32, he had become the youngest person to run a major country label. Additionally, he was the first executive to rise to that level through the ranks of marketing, rather than A&R or similar creative roles. Under Galante’s tenure, band Alabama became superstars, and artists signed to the label included Vince Gill, The Judds and Clint Black.

Stories of Galante’s tenacity, passion and competitive spirit abounded. Fellow executives recalled his reputation as a tireless worker, a demanding yet compassionate boss, and a consummate strategist who always had a plan.

Backstage in the pressroom, Kix Brooks recalled how Galante helped relight the creative spark in duo Brooks and Dunn when they were ready to call it quits after about 10 years in the business. “We had this meeting with Joe and he convinced us we still had gas in the tank. He found a song called ‘Nothing ‘Bout You,’ and I came up with a song called ‘Only In America.’ He said, ‘You guys get into a room together, and get back to that magic.’ We started talking about things that matter and came up with this album called Red Dirt Road. I admire him so much that I built a house right next to him,” Brooks said. Brooks performed an acoustic version (sans Dunn) of the duo’s 2003 “Red Dirt Road.”

“When he first heard the song, we thought it was a beautiful love song,” the members of Lonestar said of what would become their signature tune “Amazed,” “but I don’t think we had any idea it would do what it did on the country charts. We had the pop mix. Joe always has his eye on the prize, and that prize is making every artist he works with as big as they can possibly be. He just knew what a hit song sounded like and a hit artist sounded like.”

In 1990, after heading RCA Nashville for several years, Galante was brought back to RCA’s New York office as the national President of RCA Records label—U.S., becoming the first Music Row label head to run the entire U.S. operation of a major. It was Joe that convinced Dave Matthews Band to sign with RCA. He asked Dave to write down how much he made the prior year. Dave wrote it down. Joe added three more zeroes to that figure and said, “That’s why you sign with RCA.”

By the mid-‘90s, Galante was back at RCA Nashville, which would later become Sony Music Nashville, housing RCA, BNA, Arista, and Columbia. In the 2000s, his label was back on top, accounting for a third of the top songs on the country charts, as home to Carrie Underwood, Brad Paisley, Alan Jackson, Brooks & Dunn, Kenny Chesney, Miranda Lambert, Martina McBride, and others.

In 2010, Galante stunned the industry with the announcement that he was retiring, a decision that didn’t sit well with fellow label head Mike Dungan. “I told Joe, ‘You can’t leave the industry. Who am I going to have to fight with?,’” Dungan quipped during a video tribute segment. “Do you realize that I get up every morning and what fires me up is thinking, ‘What is Joe Galante going to do to me today?’ The framework of how Nashville operates now is based on his principles.”

Far from taking it easy, this energetic leader and game changer currently holds a leadership role at the Nashville Entrepreneur Center, mentoring a new generation of creative, ambitious entrepreneurs.

“He raised the bar for everybody,” summed Brooks. “You gotta have Earnhardt on the track to make everyone race hard.”

Weekly Register: Early Grammys Sales Bump

Miranda Lambert performs "Little Red Wagon" during the 57th annual Grammy Awards. Photo: Grammy.com

Miranda Lambert performs “Little Red Wagon” during the 57th annual Grammy Awards. Photo: Grammy.com

Soundscan’s sales week closed at midnight on Sunday (Feb. 8) following the Grammy Awards, but in that short window a few artists who performed on the show experienced sales bumps. Country queen Miranda Lambert offered her feisty “Little Red Wagon,” which rode in with a 100% gain, selling 15K tracks and pulling in a 65% album increase (6.1K). Fellow performers seeing album boosts include Eric Church (up 55% with 6.8K) and Brandy Clark (275% with 1.6K). A bigger impact is expected in next week’s numbers.

On the country charts, Sam Hunt is still dominating at No. 1 on the tracks list with “Take Your Time” (47K), and No. 1 on the albums list (15K TW to cross the 300K mark).

Taylor Swift, who did not perform on the Grammys telecast, remains in the No. 1 spot on the Top 200 this week.

Nashville indie turned Warner Bros. signee Sturgill Simpson took his turtles all the way down—or should we say up—to swim over the 100K album threshold this week.

Top 5 Country Albums TW
Sam Hunt, 15K
Jason Aldean, 10K
Carrie Underwood, 8.6K
Florida Georgia Line, 7.8K
Eric Church, 6.8K

Thomas Rhett’s “When I Was Your Man” is the top country track debut, coming in at No. 2 with 28K downloads, and securing T. Rhett’s second single in the top 5.

Mark Ronson and Bruno Mars are still funking it up with the No. 1 overall track, as their “Uptown Funk” moved 319K TW and 3.5 million RTD.

Top 5 Country Tracks TW
Sam Hunt, “Take Your Time” 47K
Thomas Rhett, “When I Was Your Man” 28K
Blake Shelton ft. Ashley Monroe, “Lonely Tonight” 28K
Thomas Rhett, “Make Me Wanna” 26K
Luke Bryan, “I See You” 24K

Year To Date
Country digital album sales are up +10.7% YTD, while total country album sales are flat at 0%. YTD all-genre album sales are down -1.7% and overall digital albums are down -1.5%.

YTD overall track sales are down -12.1% and country tracks are down -18.9%.

Grammy Awards Recap: Sam Smith’s Golden Evening

Sam Smith

Sam Smith

The Grammy voting audience stayed with British neo-soul singer Sam Smith during the 57th annual Grammy Awards on Sunday evening (Feb. 8). Smith took home Grammys for Best New Artist, Song of the Year and Record of the Year (both for “Stay With Me”), and Best Pop Vocal Album, for In The Lonely Hour.

“Thank you all for the best night of my life,” said Smith.

After picking up three awards this year, Beyoncé became the second most-awarded woman in Grammy history (20 total Grammys). She was honored for best surround album, as well as Best R&B Song, and Best R&B Performance (both for “Drunk In Love”). This places Beyonce’s trophy tally behind Alison Krauss, who has 27 career wins.

Country-turned-pop songstress Taylor Swift presented the first award of the evening, for Best New Artist. She also imparted some advice to the nominees. “As a former loser of Best New Artist in 2008, you’re gonna be fine, just shake it off,” said Swift. The honor went to Smith. Country singer-songwriter Brandy Clark was among the nominees for the award. Clark took the stage later in the evening for an acoustic performance with Dwight Yoakam providing harmony. She performed fan favorite “Hold My Hand” from her sterling, Grammy-nominated album 12 Stories.

Miranda Lambert was the first country performer of the evening, giving a swagger-filled rendition of “Little Red Wagon” from her album Platinum. Lambert was nominated for four trophies. Nashville resident and “All About That Bass” songstress Meghan Trainor helped present the award for Best Country Album, which went to Lambert’s Platinum. It was Lambert’s lone win of the evening. “I love every album in this category. I put my heart and soul in this record. Thank you for this amazing night,” said Lambert.

Eric Church performs during the 57th Annual Grammy awards. Photo: Grammy.com

Eric Church performs during the 57th Annual Grammy awards. Photo: Grammy.com

Keith Urban introduced Eric Church, who performed “Give Me Back My Hometown,” which was nominated for Best Country Song.

As previously reported, Carrie Underwood, Glen Campbell, Rosanne CashThe Band Perry, Lecrae, and For King & Country were among Grammy winners earlier in the evening, prior to the telecast on CBS. Underwood picked up a Best Country Solo Performance Grammy for “Something In The Water,” while The Band Perry won Best Country Duo/Group Performance for their rendition of Campbell’s “Gentle On My Mind.”

Campbell himself picked up a Grammy win as a songwriter (along with Julian Raymond) in the category of Best Country Song for “I’m Not Gonna Miss You.” Rosanne Cash earned Best Americana Album for The River & The Thread.

For King & Country took home Best Contemporary Christian Music Album for Run Wild. Love Strong. Live Free. Lecrae (feat. For King & Country) earned Best Contemporary Christian Performance/Song for “Messengers.”

Perhaps the most anticipated performances of the evening belonged once again to Smith and Beyonce. Sam Smith teamed with Mary J. Blige for a duet of “Stay With Me,” backed by a choir, while Beyonce performed a rendition of the Gospel classic “Take My Hand Precious Lord.”

Overall, Nashville’s eclectic music scene made a strong showing on music’s biggest night.

Miranda Lambert performs "Little Red Wagon" during the 57th annual Grammy Awards. Photo: Grammy.com

Miranda Lambert performs “Little Red Wagon” during the 57th annual Grammy Awards. Photo: Grammy.com

Selected 57th Annual Grammy Winners (in bold)

Album of the Year
Beck, Morning Phase
Beyonce, Beyonce
Ed Sheeran, x
Sam Smith, In the Lonely Hour
Pharrell Williams, Girl

Record of the Year
“Fancy,” Iggy Azalea ft. Charli XCX
“Chandelier,” Sia
“Stay With Me (Darkchild Version),” Sam Smith
“Shake It Off,” Taylor Swift
“All About That Bass,” Meghan Trainor

Song of the Year
“Chandelier,” Sia
“All About That Bass,” Meghan Trainor
“Shake It Off,” Taylor Swift
“Stay With Me (Darkchild Version),” Sam Smith
“Take Me to Church,” Hozier

Best New Artist
Bastille
Iggy Azalea
Brandy Clark
Haim
Sam Smith

Best Country Album
Riser, Dierks Bentley
The Outsiders, Eric Church
The Way I’m Livin’, Lee Ann Womack
12 Stories, Brandy Clark
Platinum, Miranda Lambert 

Best Country Song
“American Kids,” Kenny Chesney
“Automatic,” Miranda Lambert
“Give Me Back My Hometown,” Eric Church
“I’m Not Gonna Miss You,” Glen Campbell
“Meanwhile Back at Mama’s,” Tim McGraw ft. Faith Hill

Best Americana Album
The River & The Thread, Rosanne Cash
Terms of My Surrender, John Hiatt
Bluesamericana, Keb’ Mo’
A Dotted Line, Nickel Creek
Metamodern Sounds in Country Music, Sturgill Simpson

Best Country Solo Performance
Carrie Underwood, “Something In The Water” 
Eric Church, “Give Me Back My Hometown”
Hunter Hayes, “Invisible”
Miranda Lambert, “Automatic”
Keith Urban, “Cop Car”

Best Country Duo/Group Performance
The Band Perry, “Gentle On My Mind”
Miranda Lambert With Carrie Underwood, “Somethin’ Bad”
Little Big Town, “Day Drinking”
Tim McGraw feat. Faith Hill, “Meanwhile Back At Mama’s”
Keith Urban Featuring Eric Church, “Raise ‘Em Up”

Best Country Song
“I’m Not Gonna Miss You”
Glen Campbell & Julian Raymond, songwriters (Glen Campbell)
Track from: Glen Campbell, I’ll Be Me Soundtrack
Label: Big Machine Records

“American Kids”
Rodney Clawson, Luke Laird & Shane McAnally, songwriters (Kenny Chesney)
Track From: The Big Revival
Label: Blue Chair Records, LLC / Columbia Nashville

“Automatic”
Nicolle Galyon, Natalie Hemby & Miranda Lambert, songwriters (Miranda Lambert)
Track from: Platinum
Label: RCA Nashville; Publishers: Sony/ATV Tree Publishing/Pink Dog Publishing admin. by Sony/ATV Music Publishing, LLC/Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp./EMI Blackwood Music Inc./Wruckestrike

“Give Me Back My Hometown”
Eric Church & Luke Laird, songwriters (Eric Church)
Track from: The Outsiders
Label: EMI Nashville; Publishers: Sony/ATV Tree Publishing/Longer And Louder Music, admin. by Sony/ATV Music PublishingLLC/Songs Of Universal , Inc./Creative Nation Music/Twangin And Slangin, admin. by Songs Of Universal, Inc.

“Meanwhile Back At Mama’s”
Tom Douglas, Jaren Johnston & Jeffrey Steele, songwriters (Tim McGraw Featuring Faith Hill)
Label: Big Machine Records

Best Rock Performance
Ryan Adams, “Gimme Something Good”
Arctic Monkeys, “Do I Wanna Know?”
Beck, “Blue Moon”
The Black Keys, “Fever”
Jack White, “Lazaretto”

Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song
Lecrae feat. For King & Country, “Messengers”
Francesca Battistelli, “Write Your Story”
Crowder, “Come As You Are”
MercyMe, “Shake”
Needtobreathe, “Multiplied”

Best Gospel Album
Erica Campbell, Help 
Ricky Dillard & New G, Amazing [Live]
William McDowell, Withholding Nothing [Live]
Smokie Norful, Forever Yours
Anita Wilson, Vintage Worship

Best Contemporary Christian Music Album
For King & Country, Run Wild. Live Free. Love Strong.
Francesca Battistelli, If We’re Honest
Natalie Grant, Hurricane
MercyMe, Welcome to the New
Royal Tailor, Royal Tailor

Best Gospel Performance/Song
Smokie Norful, “No Greater Love” 
Erica Campbell feat. Lecrae, “Help”
Karen Clark Shearda, “Sunday A.M. [Live]”
Mali Music, “I Believe”
The Walls Group, “Love On The Radio”

Weekly Chart Report (2/6/15)

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DISClaimer: Sans Bro Country, Nashville’s Songwriters Shine

kip moore i'm to blame

Kip Moore

With no bro country in sight this week, the Nashville songwriting community is strutting its stuff.

Will Hoge, Austin Webb, Carrie Underwood, Kip Moore, Bobby Wills and Keith Urban all have new singles with true composing craftsmanship on display. And two of them wind up with this column’s awards.

Canadian Bobby Wills wins the DisCovery Award. He’s already an award winner north of the border, and here’s hoping he can duplicate that success stateside. Longtime “DisClaimer” favorite Kip Moore takes home the Disc of the Day prize. This guy seems to go from strength to strength.

Coincidentally, both of these fellows are singing “bad-boy” songs.

Bobby Wills

Bobby Wills

BOBBY WILLS/Crazy Enough
Writers: Pyle/Aldridge/Wills; Producer: Michael Pyle; Publishers: none listed; Willing (track)
-Infused with personality and raucous energy. The sidewinder guitars are perfect for the on-the-edge lyric. His ad-libbed chuckles in mid song are groovy, too.

KIP MOORE/I’m To Blame
Writers: Kip Moore/Justin Weaver/Westin Davis; Producer: Brett James; Publishers: WB/Cool Change/Music of the Corn/Magic Mustang/Reefer Road/Big Loud Bucks, ASCAP/BMI; MCA (CDX)
-The double-tracked vocal, distinctive rhythmic sounds, banjo ripples and urgent production are all ear catching, not to mention the excellent n’er-do-well lyric. This one’s a keeper.

AUSTIN WEBB/All Country On You
Writers: none listed; Producer: none listed; Publishers: none listed; Streamsound
-There’s no telling what a gal might do if you cross her. She might go “Carrie Underwood” your truck, flip you the bird, “tear you something new,” binge on your credit card or “post naked pictures with your ink showin’ through.” Cleverly written and produced with zippy zest.

CARRIE UNDERWOOD/Little Toy Guns
Writers: Carrie Underwood/Chris DeStefano/Hillary Lindsey; Producer: Mark Bright; Publishers: Carrie Okie/EMI April/Sugar Glider/Sony-ATV/WB, BMI/ASCAP; Arista (track)
-Carrie follows her hit baptismal rocker with a thunderous, complex, layered production about a little girl who wishes mommy and daddy would stop fighting. Power pop.

WILL HOGE/Middle of America
Writers: none listed; Producers: none listed; Publishers: none listed; Cumberland/Thirty
-Little slices of life from the heartland add up to one fine, rocking anthem. He sings with just as much passion as there is in the songwriting. I love this guy. Please make him a star.

SHERRY LYNN/What Are You Running From
Writers: Leah Crutchfield/Brian Nash; Producer: none listed; Publisher: none listed; Steal Heart
-The instrumental arrangement is way bigger than her vocal ability.

KEITH URBAN & ERIC CHURCH/Raise ‘Em Up
Writers: Jaren Johnston/Jeffrey Steele/Tom Douglas; Producers: Nathan Chapman/Keith Urban; Publishers: Sony-ATV Harmony/Texa Rae/Jeffrey Steele/BPJ/tomdouglasmusic, ASCAP/BMI; Capitol (CDX)
-As uplifting and positive as its title implies. Both men sing with conviction and authority. The instrumental track both crackles with energy and dazzles with echoey splendor. This thing is a smash if I’ve ever heard one.

MICHAEL RAY/Kiss You In The Morning
Writers: Justin Wilson/Michael White; Producer: Scott Hendricks; Publishers: Magic Mustang/Big Loud Bucks/Downtown DMp/Music of Parallel, BMI; Warner Bros.
-He pretty much sounds like every other male country performer.

THE MAVERICKS/All Night Long
Writers: Raul Malo; Producers: Raul Malo/Niko Bolas; Publishers: Big Machine/Raul Malo, BMI; Valory (track)
-This horn-punctuated, salsa-inflected slab of latino pop kicks off the upcoming Mavs collection, Mono. Elsewhere on the CD, you’ll find flavors of r&b, classic balladry, Tex-Mex, swing, folk and more. All of it sounds pretty dang cool.

MICHAEL TURNER/Matches and Moonshine
Writers: Pete Stewart/Brian White/Megan Conner; Producer: Ilya Toshinsky; Publishers: none listed; Rustic
-Dreamy and sultry in the verses; pert, bright and bopping in the choruses. I guess it’s either creative or jarring, depending on your point of view.

Weekly Register: Sam Hunt Hangs At No. 1

sam hunt11

Sam Hunt is No. 1 on the country tracks and albums charts.

It’s slow in sales land this time of year. In this post-holiday draught, there aren’t any notable new country releases this week, and there are none on the immediate horizon. The album release schedule starts to warm up in March, when new product is expected from Toby Keith, Luke Bryan, Darius Rucker and Josh Turner.

In the meantime, Sam Hunt hunkers down at No. 1 on the country tracks and albums charts. An overall sales uptick is expected from Sunday night’s Grammy Awards. Stay tuned.

Top 5 Country Albums
Sam Hunt, 14K, 288K RTD
Jason Aldean, 10K, 818K RTD
Carrie Underwood, 10K, 262K RTD
Blake Shelton, 9K, 317K RTD
FGL, 7K, 548K RTD

It is worth noting that indie turned new Atlantic signee Sturgill Simpson is swimming at No. 8 with 5K/ 97K RTD.

On the total consumption albums chart, the top three slots belong to Taylor Swift (101K), Ed Sheeran (74K) and Meghan Trainor (68K). The top country stars on the list are Sam Hunt at No. 16 with 25K, and Carrie Underwood at No. 24 with 18K.

The Mark Ronson ft. Bruno Mars hit “Uptown Funk” dances at No. 1 on the tracks chart, selling 365K TW and 3.2 million RTD.

Top 5 Country Tracks
Sam Hunt “Take Your Time” 43K/339K RTD
Blake Shelton ft. Ashley Monroe “Lonely Tonight” 28K/ 343K RTD
Thomas Rhett “Make Me Wanna” 25K/ 405K RTD
FGL “Sun Daze” 25K/ 446K RTD
Luke Bryan “I See You” 24K/ 371K RTD

 

Black River Rages On With New Signing

(L-R: Catalog Manager Kelly Bolton; Creative Director Dave Pacula; Josh Okeefe; Manager Gillie Crowder; VP of Black River Publishing Celia Froehlig; Black River Entertainment CEO Gordon Kerr)

Pictured (L-R): Catalog Manager Kelly Bolton, Creative Director Dave Pacula, Josh Okeefe, Manager Gillie Crowder, VP of Black River Publishing Celia Froehlig, Black River Entertainment CEO Gordon Kerr

VP of Black River Publishing Celia Froehlig today (Feb. 2) announced the signing of Josh Okeefe to the company. “Josh is a fantastic writer, artist and producer; one of the rare talents we publishers are always on the lookout for,” said Froehlig. “We are so happy to welcome him to the BRE family.”

Okeefe grew up in Derby, England and attended Brighton Institute of Modern Music in the UK. Following the advice of his academic directors, Okeefe left for Nashville at the age of 19.

“Black River was a dream,” said Okeefe, “and still is a dream.”

The announcement of Okeefe’s signing comes on the heels of Black River Entertainment’s CEO Gordon Kerr’s announcement that Froehlig renewed her contract with Black River Publishing.

BREAKING NEWS: ACM Awards Nominations Revealed

Entertainer_ACM

Entertainer of the Year Nominees

The Academy of Country Music began revealing the final nominees this morning (Friday, Jan. 30) for the 50th Academy of Country Music Awards, via its social media outlets.

Miranda Lambert is this year’s leading nominee, with eight nominations, including an Entertainer of the Year nod. She picked up her ninth nomination for Female Vocalist of the Year; she is the current record holder for the most consecutive wins in that category.

Dierks Bentley received seven nominations, followed Florida Georgia Line with five nominations. Eric Church, Luke Bryan and Kenny Chesney each earned four nominations, while Carrie Underwood, Jason Aldean and Kacey Musgraves earned three apiece.

Rounding out the coveted Entertainer of the Year category are Jason Aldean, Luke Bryan, Florida Georgia Line, and legendary entertainer Garth Brooks. Brooks holds the record for the most number of wins in this category. If he wins, it will mark his seventh Entertainer win. This also marks the first Entertainer nomination for Florida Georgia Line.

Dierks Bentley cements his first Single Record of the Year and Video of the Year nominations, both for “Drunk On A Plane.” He is also up for Vocal Event of the Year, Male Vocalist of the Year, Album of the Year (for Riser), and is nominated twice in the Song of the Year category for “I Hold On,” as both songwriter and artist.

First-time ACM nominees this year include Jaren Johnston (two nominations: Album of the Year, producer for Dierks Bentley’s Riser and Vocal Event of the Year, for “The South”), Chris Stapleton (nominated as a songwriter in the Song of the Year category for “Drink A Beer”), Brothers Osborne (Vocal Duo of the Year), Maddie & Tae (Vocal Duo of the Year), The Cadillac Three (Vocal Event of the Year for “The South”), and The Swon Brothers ( Vocal Duo of the Year).

The awards show will take place April 19 at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. Blake Shelton and Luke Bryan return to co-host the event.

Entertainer of the Year
Jason Aldean
Garth Brooks
Luke Bryan
Miranda Lambert
Florida Georgia Line

Vocal Event of the Year
Lonely Tonight – Blake Shelton Featuring Ashley Monroe, Producer: Scott Hendricks, Record Label: Warner Bros. Records
Meanwhile Back At Mama’s – Tim McGraw Featuring Faith Hill,  Producers: Byron Gallimore, Tim McGraw, Record Label: Big Machine Records
Somethin’ Bad – Miranda Lambert Duet With Carrie Underwood, Producers: Chuck Ainlay, Frank Liddell, Glenn Worf, Record Label: RCA Nashville
The South – The Cadillac Three Featuring Florida Georgia Line, Dierks Bentley & Mike Eli, Producers: Dann Huff, Justin Niebank, Record Label: Big Machine Records
This Is How We Roll – Florida Georgia Line Featuring Luke Bryan, Producer: Joey Moi, Record Label: Republic Nashville

Video of the Year
American Kids – Kenny Chesney. Director: Shaun Silva, Producer: Don Lepore
Cop Car – Keith Urban, Director: John Urbano, Producer: Michelle Abnet
Drunk On A Plane – Dierks Bentley, Director: Wes Edwards, Producer: Clarke Gallivan
I’m Not Gonna Miss You – Glen Campbell, Director: James Keach, Producer: Julian Raymond
Somethin’ Bad – Miranda Lambert Duet With Carrie Underwood, Director: Trey Fanjoy, Producer: Trent Hardville

Vocal Group of the Year
Lady Antebellum
Little Big Town
Rascal Flatts
The Band Perry
Zac Brown Band

Male Vocalist of the Year (tie)
Jason Aldean
Dierks Bentley
Luke Bryan
Eric Church
Brad Paisley
Blake Shelton

Female Vocalist of the Year
Brandy Clark
Miranda Lambert
Martina McBride
Kacey Musgraves
Carrie Underwood

Vocal Duo of the Year
Brothers Osborne
Dan + Shay
Florida Georgia Line
Maddie & Tae
The Swon Brothers

New Artist of the Year (currently open for fan voting)
Brett Eldredge
Tyler Farr
Sam Hunt
Kip Moore
Thomas Rhett
Chase Rice
Cole Swindell
Dan + Shay

Album of the Year

Old Boots, New Dirt, Jason Aldean
Producer: Michael Knox
Record Label: Broken Bow Records

Pain Killer, Little Big Town
Producer: Jay Joyce
Record Label: Capitol Records Nashville

Platinum, Miranda Lambert
Producers: Chuck Ainlay, Frank Liddell, Glenn Worf
Record Label: RCA Nashville

Riser, Dierks Bentley
Producers: Ross Copperman, Jaren Johnston
Record Label: Capitol Records Nashville

The Outsiders, Eric Church
Producer: Jay Joyce
Record Label: EMI Records Nashville

Single Record of the Year (awarded to artist/producers/record company)

“American Kids” Kenny Chesney
Producers: Buddy Cannon, Kenny Chesney
Record Label: Blue Chair Records/Columbia Nashville

“Automatic” Miranda Lambert
Producers: Chuck Ainlay, Frank Liddell, Glenn Worf
Record Label: RCA Nashville

“Dirt” Florida Georgia Line
Producer: Joey Moi
Record Label: Republic Nashville

“Drunk On A Plane” Dierks Bentley
Producer: Ross Copperman
Record Label: Capitol Records Nashville

“I Don’t Dance” Lee Brice
Producer: Lee Brice
Record Label: Curb Records

Song of the Year (awarded to songwriters/publishers/artists)
American Kids – Kenny Chesney, Songwriters: Rodney Clawson, Luke Laird, Shane McAnally
Publishers: Big Red Toe Music (BMI), Creative Nation Music (BMI), Farm Town Songs (BMI), Smack Ink (ASCAP), Songs Of Universal, Inc. (BMI), Twangin And Slangin Songs (BMI), Universal Music Corporation (ASCAP)

Automatic – Miranda Lambert, Songwriters: Nicolle Galyon, Natalie Hemby, Miranda Lambert
Publishers: EMI Blackwood Music, Inc. (BMI), Pink Dog Publishing (BMI), Sony/ATV Tree Publishing (BMI), Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp. (BMI), Wruckestrike (BMI)

Drink A Beer – Luke Bryan, Songwriters: Jim Beavers, Chris Stapleton
Publishers: House of Sea Gayle Music (ASCAP), Sony/ATV Tree Publishing (BMI), WB Music Corp. (ASCAP)

Follow Your Arrow – Kacey Musgraves
Songwriters: Brandy Clark, Shane McAnally, Kacey Musgraves
Publishers: 351 Music (BMI), Highway 508 Songs (ASCAP), House of Sea Gayle Music (ASCAP), Smack Ink (ASCAP), Universal Music Corporation (ASCAP), Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp. (BMI)

Give Me Back My Hometown – Eric Church
Songwriters: Eric Church, Luke Laird
Publishers: Creative Nation Music (BMI), Longer And Louder Music (BMI), Songs Of Universal, Inc. (BMI), Sony/ATV Tree Publishing (BMI), Twangin And Slangin Songs (BMI)

I Hold On – Dierks Bentley
Songwriters: Dierks Bentley, Brett James
Publishers: Atlas Holdings (ASCAP), Big White Tracks (ASCAP), External Combustion Music (ASCAP), Songs of Brett (ASCAP), WB Music Corp. (ASCAP)

Radio category nominations and the Songwriter of the Year nominees were previously announced Thursday, Jan. 29.

EXCLUSIVE BREAKING NEWS: ACM Announces 2015 Songwriter Of The Year Nominees

ACMThe Academy of Country Music has revealed the nominees for its Songwriter of the Year Award exclusively with MusicRow.

Rodney Clawson, Ashley Gorley, Luke Laird, Josh Osborne, and Chris Tompkins are the five finalists.

The Songwriter of the Year honor will be presented during the 9th annual ACM Honors event, to take place Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2015 in Nashville.

During last year’s 8th annual ACM Honors event, Shane McAnally was named Songwriter of the Year, and feted with a performance by Kelly Clarkson, Kacey Musgraves, and Lady Antebellum’s Hillary Scott.

The remainder of the nominees for the 50th Academy of Country Music awards will be revealed Friday, Jan. 30 at 7:30 a.m. CT via the ACM’s social media sites.

The 50th Academy of Country Music Awards will be presented live from AT&T Stadium on Sunday, April 19 at 8 p.m. ET on CBS Television Network.

screen shot of songwriters

ACM Songwriter of the Year nominees (L-R): Chris Tompkins, Rodney Clawson, Luke Laird, Josh Osborne and Ashley Gorley

DISClaimer: Royal Tailor, For King & Country Light Up CCM

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For King & Country

To say that DisClaimer is woefully behind in reviewing CCM recordings would be the understatement of the year.

For fans of the genre, some music in this column might be old news. For the rest of you, welcome aboard my voyage of discovery as we survey current Contemporary Christian Music CDs, plus a few traditional gospel offerings.

The column is dominated by such CCM veterans as Michael W. Smith, MercyMe, Steve Taylor, Ginny Owens and the Newsboys, not to mention such Southern gospel old-timers as Gold City and Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver. But you’ll also find three current Grammy Award nominees here, and two of them are this week’s DisClaimer award winners. The Disc of the Day goes to Royal Tailor, and the DisCovery Award belongs to For King & Country.

STEVE TAYLOR & THE PERFECT FOIL/A Life Preserved
Writers: none listed; Producer: none listed; Publisher: none listed; Splint (track)
-Steve Taylor has come the closest of anyone in his field to being the embodiment of a rock star. At least he has always looked and sounded like one, to me (remember Chagall Guevera?). His new incarnation and Kickstarter-funded comeback CD with “The Perfect Foil” is titled Goliath. That’s where you’ll find this psychedelic gem, complete with space-cadet vocals, spare guitar stinging and throbbing rhythm. Despite 30 years in the biz, he retains his satiric wit and his alternative cred.

MICHAEL W. SMITH/The Old Rugged Cross
Writers: George Bernard; Producer: Kyle Lee; Publishers: public domain; Cracker
-It is mildly jarring to realize that one of the founders of the CCM genre is now an eminence. Smitty’s current project for Cracker Barrel is a collection of hymn standards like “Just as I Am,” “What a Friend We Have in Jesus” and “Softly and Tenderly.” It leads off with a straightforward reading of this 1913 chestnut. The production is tastefully restrained, just piano, strings, dobro and light vocal harmonies.

ROYAL TAILOR/Ready Set Go
Writers: Tauren Wells/Cole Walowac/Jeff Pardo; Producer: Cole Walowac; Publishers: Sony-ATV Tree/Songs of Third Base/Brentwood Benson/Meaux Jeaux/Da Bears Da Bears Da Bears/Capitol CMG, BMI/SESAC; Provident/Sony
-This melodic rock group’s current CD is nominated as CCM Album of the Year at the Grammy Awards. It has already yielded such hits as “Remain” and “Original.” The current single/video is a frothing, propulsive collaboration with the rapping Capital Kings, whose Cole Walowac produces. Unlike many of these things, the combination of the soaring tenor vocals and urgent speaking lines is perfectly balanced. The whole Royal Tailor CD totally rocks. Buy it.

Royal Tailor

Royal Tailor

DOYLE LAWSON & QUICKSILVER/Will You Go
Writers: Steve Watts/Doyle Lawson; Producer: Doyle Lawson; Publishers: Red Bud/Top O Holston, ASCAP/BMI; Mountain Home
-Bluegrass Hall of Fame member Lawson has released 40 albums, half of which have been gospel projects. His Quicksilver has seven IBMA Vocal Group of the Year awards and multiple Dove and Grammy nominations. This thrilling call-and-response, raise-the-rafters toe tapper is just one highlight from the group’s Open Carefully, Message Inside collection. These men can flat-out SING. I remain an enormous fan.

NEWSBOYS/Hallelujah for the Cross
Writers: Ross King/Todd Wright; Producer: Seth Mosley; Publishers: Simple Tense/Todd Wright, ASCAP/BMI; First
-The repertoire of this durable pop-rock foursome takes a turn toward the traditional on its latest album. They give a kick, a push and a U2 vibe to oldies such as “His Eye Is on the Sparrow” and “All Hail the Power of Jesus’ Name,” as well as to this rousing title tune. Exciting and ear opening.

GINNY OWENS/No Borders
Writers: Ginny Owens/Wordspring/Josh Bronleewe/Benji Cowart; Producer: Josh Bronleewe; Publishers: ChickPower/Wordspring/Word/Howie Cowie, SESAC/ASCAP; ChickPower/Word
-I have always thought that this CCM singer-songwriter deserves mainstream pop stardom. Others have sometimes agreed, since she has been featured on a Lilith Fair tour and at the Sundance Film Festival. Her songs have been heard on the soundtracks of the TV series Roswell, Charmed, Get Real and Felicity. To date, she has sold nearly a million records, largely to the Christian community, despite the fact that her lyrics are seldom church-y. Her latest CD is called I Know a Secret, and it ripples with electronic washes over her gorgeous piano work and glistening vocal performances. Start with this hopeful, uplifting track, then dive into the rest of one of the year’s best female listening experiences.

FOR KING & COUNTRY/Run Wild
Writers: none listed; Producers: Seth Mosley/For King & Country; Publishers: none listed; Fervent/Curb
-The Smallbone family has faced its share of tribulations since migrating to Music City from Australia. But now everything is coming up roses for brothers Luke and Joel. Their group, For King & Country, is up for a CCM Album of the Year Grammy Award with its CD Run Wild, Live Free, Love Strong. It kicks off with this stately rock stomper featuring guest Andy Mineo. If you know these guys at all, it’s probably for the anthemic, sing-along hit “Fix My Eyes.” This shows that there’s a lot more where that came from.

LARRY STEPHENSON BAND/Pull Your Savior In
Writers: Larry Stephenson; Producers: Ben Surratt/Larry Stephenson; Publishers: Lee-Dawn, BMI; Whysper Dream
-Stephenson is celebrating his 25th anniversary in bluegrass with a gospel collection. His workmanlike lead tenor singing and mandolin work anchor a band that never misses a note, as you’ll hear on this self-composed CD title tune. The rest of the repertoire is drawn largely from familiar bluegrass songwriters such as Randall Hylton, Donna Ulisse, The Louvin Brothers, Lester Flatt and Albert E. Brumley. The whole thing sounds heartfelt.

MERCYME/Shake
Writers: MercyMe/Soil Olds/David Garcia/Ben Glover; Producers: David Garcia/Ben Glover; Publishers: MercyMe/Wet as a Fish/Soul Glow Activator/D Soul/Universal/Brentwood Benson/9t One/Arlose, ASCAP/BMI; Fairtrade/Provident (track)
-This big rollicking hit from MercyMe’s Welcome to the New collection is nominated for a Grammy as CCM Song of the Year. The five-man group attacks it with shouted gusto and plenty of oomphy rhythm. The band’s current single, “Greater,” is also on this CD, and it is even more dance happy. I believe this is MercyMe’s 10th nationally distributed album, and something tells me this is their year for Grammy glory.

GOLD CITY/Nothing But The Blood
Writers: traditional; Producer: Gordon Mote; Publishers: public domain; New
-For good old-fashioned, four-square gospel harmonizing, you can’t beat these Alabama boys. Their current Hymn Revival collection will send you straight back to church. It kicks off with this steadily building altar call and keeps right on going.