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Bobby Karl Works The 2013 Grammy Block Party

Pictured (L-R): Singer/Songwriter and GRAMMY Nominee Will Hoge; Susan Stewart, South Regional Director, The Recording Academy; MCA Recording Artist Kip Moore; Suzanne Alexander, GAC host and Nashville Chapter Board member Shawn McSpadden of Red Light Management.Photo by Frederick Breedon

Pictured (L-R): Singer/Songwriter and GRAMMY Nominee Will Hoge; Susan Stewart, South Regional Director, The Recording Academy; MCA Recording Artist Kip Moore; Suzanne Alexander, GAC host and Nashville Chapter Board member; Shawn McSpadden of Red Light Management. Photo by Frederick Breedon


If you lifted your face into the spring breeze, gazed at the community of music people gathered around you and listened to the fabulous sounds wafting from the stage, you would be perfectly justified in thinking you were in the exact best place in the universe yesterday evening at the Grammy Block Party.
“Thank you, everybody, for being out on a beautiful day in Nashville,” said Mayor Karl Dean at the annual event (May 14). He really is the Music Mayor, the first one to graduate from Leadership Music, the first one to convene a Mayor’s Music Council and the first one to oversee a Music Makes Us education initiative. He said the Recording Academy’s Nancy Shapiro was the force behind the last named.
Mayor Dean also stated that this year, Nashville has been cited as a boom town, been called the “It” city and heralded as one of the four top cities in the world to visit.
“The Grammy nominations concert was a big moment,” he added, “But the one that means the most to me is that Rolling Stone said we were the best music scene in America. It’s a great city, and I thank you.”
“We do this event for you, our members,” said Recording Academy Nashville director Susan Stewart. “We’re proud to be part of this community.”
Jon Randall Stewart (no relation) is the current president of the Nashville Chapter board. “I hope everybody’s having a good time,” he said. We were. He described the good work done by the chapter’s MusiCares office. Event coordinator Alicia Warwick thanked the many sponsors.
As I mentioned, the music was extraordinary. Kristen Kelly, The Megaphones and Southern rockers The Rhett Walker Band heated things up. Will Hoge was triumphantly soulful during a set that included his much-nominated “Even If It Breaks Your Heart.” New country sensation Kip Moore and terrific Americana music makers The Lone Bellow were booked to cap the festivities.
Oweing to the perfect weather, women were in their spring frocks, lightweight blouses and sun dresses. Gents were attired in short-sleeved sport shirts, polos, Hawaiian tops or t-shirts.
Everywhere you looked in the crowd, there was a talented Somebody. Schmoozing fabulons included Doug Howard, Rod Essig, Tracy Gershon, Dan Hill, Jay Frank, the band Stovall, Allen Brown, Trey Fanjoy, Lisa Harless, Steve O’Brien, Bob Paxman, Walter Campbell and Marc Oswald. I don’t know if he was kidding or not, but Chuck Ainlay maintained that May 14 is Studio Engineers Day. “We should throw a party,” he suggested, gesturing at his surroundings.
The event was staged at Owen Bradley Park and on Music Square East. The space is the “back door” of ASCAP and the “front door” of BMI. Working the “room” were Becky Harris, Chris Keaton, Charles Dorris, Ed Salamon, Doak Turner, r&b record makers Jo Carter and Jonathan Winstead, Dave Pomeroy, John Grady, Frank Liddell, Joe Scaife, Kyle Frederick, Brian Kolb, former Detroit Tigers baseball standout and now Music City singer-songwriter Andy Kropf, Bob Doyle, Fletcher Foster, Dan Dailey, Doug Casmus, Matt Singleton, Misty Loggins, Cindy Watts, Leslie Roberts, Not Just Country Nashville TV producer Michael West, Rich Fagan, Lori Badgett, Raeanne Rubenstein, Erika Wollam-Nichols, Sarah Skates, jazzman and percussionist Marcus Finnie, John Ingrassia, Chandra LaPlume, Pat McMakin, Earle Simmons, Steve Griel, Diane Pearson and Gary Paczosa.
Not to mention such Recording Academy Nashville staffers as Ashley Ernst, Laura Crawford and Lyn Aurelius, intern Casey Elliott, who was/is as enthusiastic about The Lone Bellow as I am. Which proves she has good taste. Former Grammy U Nashville rep Bryan Downing reports that he has left Combustion Music and is freelancing as a guitar man, notably in the band of “Gunnar” (Sam Palladino) on the TV show Nashville. Look for him in tonight’s episode on bass.

No. 1 Party: Lee Brice's 'I Drive Your Truck'

I drive your truck trade photo11

Pictured are (L-R): ASCAP’s Mike Sistad; Disney Music Publishing’s Barbara Vander Linde; This Music’s Rusty Gaston; co-writers Jimmy Yeary and Connie Harrington; Sony ATV Music Publishing’s Tom Luteran; co-writer Jessi Alexander; Lee Brice; father of fallen soldier Jared Monti, Paul Monti; BMI’s Perry Howard; Curb Records’ Mike Curb, and BMG Chrysalis’ Kos Weaver.


A recent No. 1 party honoring Lee Brice‘s “I Drive Your Truck” and the ballad’s writers, Connie Harrington, Jimmy Yeary and Jessi Alexander, held more emotion than your typical Music Row shindig.
The song was inspired by the passing of U.S. Army Sergeant 1st class Jared Monti. Harrington got the idea for the song after hearing a talk radio interview where Jared Monti’s father, Paul Monti, told the story of his son’s death and how he kept his son’s truck in remembrance. Paul Monti was on hand during the celebration to honor his son’s legacy. “I have never been able to listen to the song beginning to end,” said Monti. “That song has touched so many people.”
The event was held at the Country Music Association offices and hosted by Mike Sistad of ASCAP and Perry Howard of BMI. Those in attendance included Curb Records chairman Mike Curb, Sony/ATV’s Tom Luteran, “I Drive Your Truck” producers Kyle Jacobs and Matt McClure, THiS Music’s Rusty Gaston, Kos Weaver, Brad Hill, Avenue Bank’s Ron Cox.
Yeary recalled that Harrington was understandably emotional throughout the writing of “I Drive Your Truck,” and they used the emotional response as a barometer to create an even more powerful song. “If she didn’t cry on a line, we didn’t write it,” quipped Yeary.
All three songwriters credited the song’s success to Brice’s powerful, soulful vocal rendition. “We wanted the right person–someone with conviction and passion, and no one sings it like him,” said Alexander, who also dedicated the song to her late mother. Harrington agreed, saying, “You sang from the bottom of your heart and it tore mine apart, in a good way.”
Though he clearly preferred to let the spotlight rest solely on the songwriters during the event, Brice did speak briefly to thank the song’s writers, Mike Curb and the promotion and label staff, as well as his wife and his management. He also thanked Paul Monti. “This is more than a No. 1 song,” said Brice.
Curb summed up the event’s atmosphere as he told Monti, “We wonder how we can say thank you to those who gave the ultimate sacrifice. [Harrington, Yeary and Alexander] were able to say ‘thank you’ in a way that the whole world will know of the great service of your son.”
 
 

Shovels and Rope Lead Americana Nominations

(L-R  T Bone Burnett, Jim Lauderdale, Lisa Marie Presley, Elizabeth Cook, Americana Executive Director Jed Hilly, Buddy Miller)

Pictured at today’s announcement (L-R): T Bone Burnett, Jim Lauderdale, Lisa Marie Presley, Elizabeth Cook, Americana Executive Director Jed Hilly, Buddy Miller


Rising duo Shovels & Rope lead the nominees for the 2013 Americana Music Association Honors & Awards with four nominations. Emmylou Harris and Buddy Miller follow closely with three nods each. Other nominees include Rodney Crowell, John Fullbright, Lauderdale, The Lumineers, JD McPherson, Milk Carton Kids, Bruce Robison & Kelly Willis, Richard Thompson, and Dwight Yoakam.
The nominee announcement ceremony took place today (May 14) in Los Angeles at the Grammy Museum®. AXS TV broadcast the event, and will air an encore presentation tonight at 9PM ET/6PM PT.
Today’s celebration kicked off with an Americana tribute to George Jones featuring Miller and Lauderdale leading an all-star band comprised of Fats Kaplin, Brian Owings and Jay Weaver. The music continued with performances by Lisa Marie Presley with special guest T Bone Burnett, Elizabeth Cook and the Milk Carton Kids.
The Americana Honors & Awards, presented by Nissan, will return to the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville on Sept. 18, 2013, as part of the Americana Music Festival, running Sept. 18-22. The show, featuring Lauderdale as host and Miller leading the All-Star Band, will air live on AXS TV.
In more Americana news, the organization is developing a multistate tourism venture called the Americana Music Triangle. USA Today has the story.
 
Shovels and Rope

Shovels and Rope


2013 Americana Honors and Awards Nominees
Album of the Year
Buddy & Jim, Buddy Miller & Jim Lauderdale
Cheater’s Game, Kelly Willis & Bruce Robison
From The Ground Up, John Fullbright
O’ Be Joyful, Shovels & Rope
Old Yellow Moon, Emmylou Harris/Rodney Crowell
Song of the Year
“Birmingham,” Shovels & Rope
“Good Things Happen to Bad People,” Richard Thompson
“Ho Hey,” The Lumineers
“North Side Gal,” JD McPherson
Artist of the Year
Buddy Miller
Dwight Yoakam
Emmylou Harris
Richard Thompson
Emerging Artist of the Year
JD McPherson
John Fullbright
Milk Carton Kids
Shovels & Rope
Duo/Group of the Year
Buddy Miller and Jim Lauderdale
Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell
Kelly Willis and Bruce Robison
Shovels & Rope
Instrumentalist of the Year
Doug Lancio
Larry Campbell
Greg Leisz
Jay Bellerose
Mike Bub

'Nashville' Renewed For Second Season

NashvilleAs ABC announces its renewals and cancellations for next season, Nashville fans will be happy to hear that the Music City-based drama is among the shows picked up for a second season, according to several reports. The series stars Hayden Panettiere as Juliette and Connie Britton as Rayna James. This means fans can look forward to more of the ups and downs of fame these two country stars experience in the next season.
Unfortunately, Reba‘s current series, Malibu Country, was not one of the series slated to continue. It has been canceled after one 18-episode run. The comedy featured the singer-actress as a singer whose career is on the downward slope. In the show, she moved her family from Nashville to California for a post-divorce start at a new life.

The Producer’s Chair: Trey Bruce

trey bruce1By James Rea
In 1989 when Trey Bruce put away his rock ‘n’ roll drumsticks and moved to Nashville from Memphis to pursue songwriting, little did he know that his accomplishments would be so significant. He is a hit songwriter with over 200 cross-genre cuts and the co-founder of Big Tractor Music, which he launched in 1993 with Scott Hendricks. During his career Bruce has earned 13 ASCAP Awards, an Emmy Award, 5 No. 1 singles, multiple top 5 and top 10 hits, and an Academy of Country Music Song of the Year nomination. He is also one of Nashville’s top producers. Some of Bruce’s production credits include five Trace Adkins albums (More, Chrome, Comin’ On Strong, Greatest Hits 1, Greatest Hits 2), Chris Ledoux’s critically acclaimed One Road Man and Greatest Hits, Rebecca Lynn Howard’s Forgive, and Lynyrd Skynyrd’s Gods and Guns.
In 1990, the very first song he wrote and demoed, “Things Are Tough All Over,” (a co-write with Lisa Silver) was cut immediately by Shelby Lynne. The track, produced by Billy Sherrill, was a top 15 hit and resulted in Bruce’s first publishing deal with MCA Music.
He celebrated the first of three No. 1 Randy Travis records with “Look Heart, No Hands” in 1993. Since that time, he has had songs recorded by Faith Hill, Trisha Yearwood, SHeDAISY, Trace Adkins, Reba McEntire, LeAnn Rimes, Carrie Underwood, Deana Carter, Diamond Rio, Lorrie Morgan, Rebecca Lynn Howard, Gary Allan, Chris LeDoux, Jo Dee Messina, and the list goes on.
Bruce left Big Tractor in 2005 to partner with Kenny MacPherson and became VP of A&R and Creative for Chrysalis Music’s Nashville office. At Chrysalis, Bruce signed and developed new artists, wrote a ton of new songs and built a catalogue of roughly 800 songs in five years, as well as cuts in the rock format and No. 1 singles in Australia and Canada. “I wrote 542 of those songs and I signed KingbillyChris Janson and Kree Harrison to my Chrysalis subsidiary,” he recalls. “There was the constant threat of being bought by another big conglomerate so it was a tough build. We didn’t look up, we just hit it hard for five years. I also produced Skynyrd in that period. Ken Levitan at Vector was managing Trace Adkins, and he called and said, ‘Will you write some songs with Skynyrd?’ So we wrote 5 or 6 songs, then they asked me to demo the songs and I did and he said, ‘Wow, they sound like records, do you want to cut the record?’”
In 2001, Bruce won an Emmy in the best original song category for “Where There Is Hope” and in 2002, he wrote and produced a song for the NBC TV show, Providence, and produced one song on the motion picture soundtrack, Where The Heart Is.
He’s a proud Leadership Music alum, a two-time troubadour of the Chateau de Marouatte songwriters retreat in France, a member of NSAI, CMA, NARAS, and he’s currently partnered with The Royalty Network.
The Producer’s Chair: What’s your best business advice for songwriters trying to get deals?
Trey Bruce: If you’re not an artist, or directly “hip-connected” to a hit artist early-on, it’s very difficult. I know writers who had deals at one of the three major publishing companies because they were “Jo-Bob’s” best friend or playing guitar on the road with him and they weren’t even good writers, but they were in the close proximity so they had a good chance of getting songs on records by that artist.
How did you manage to get a cut with your very first demo?
The singer in the rock band I was working with knew an engineer at MCA and he got me an appointment with Al Cooley. Noel Fox was Al’s boss. I’d written three country songs and I’d been to several publishers and I played Al a couple of songs and he ran down the hall and got Noel to come meet me. They asked me to come back and write with their writers, including Lisa Silver, and we wrote ‘Things Are Tough All Over.’ The next week they demoed it and a couple of weeks later Al called and said Bob Montgomery at CBS had put it song on hold for Shelby Lynne and they’d like to give me a publishing deal. That got me $8000 a year and I was there three years. I was delivering pizzas the first time I heard it on the radio.
What defining moment took you from producing demos to producing major artists?
I was in my last couple of months at MCA and I was going to re-sign there, when I received a call from Scott Hendricks. I had a No. 1 hit with Randy Travis called “Look Heart, No Hands” and Scott said, “I just cut a song of yours on Steve Wariner and I’ve got two more songs over here that I really like. There are several companies in town that have offered me a subsidiary publishing company, if I sign a hit writer. Would you work for me?” So we started Big Tractor with Tim Wipperman.
I was producing my own demos at MCA and one of the first songs I demoed at Big Tractor was “Whisper My Name,” which was also a No. 1 hit on Randy Travis. We got going really quickly and then, a couple of years later, Scott still owned Big Tractor but he was running Capitol Records. He signed Deanna Carter, Keith Urban and Trace Adkins. He asked me to produce Chris LeDoux and that’s how I started making records.
Did Scott mentor you as a producer?
I was the only writer with Big Tractor; for about two years there was just Scott and me. I would do demos and borrow his gear and his good microphones and go to County Q like everybody else. I’d go to the studio at night when Scott was mixing Brooks & Dunn, and Lee Roy Parnell and Restless Heart and I watched him make records. I picked up the fundamentals of how to make a record and how to look for songs, and I picked up Scott’s work ethic—he would stay until four in the morning and just not quit. I remember Scott saying, “I won’t hire anybody who doesn’t work as hard as me.”
Do you have a favorite engineer?
David Buchanan, David was a Belmont grad, intern at Omni, then he went to County Q. He did a lot of the Trace records, Chris LeDoux and Rebecca.
Tell me about your first major artist sessions in the studio with Chris LeDoux.
Chris found songs at record stores in the filler on other albums. We were at the old Woodland Studios in East Nashville and it was a really good day. I was confident because I was surrounded by my engineer, David Buchanan, and my team of players who I’d been in the studio with for a few years. These players hadn’t been on a bunch of big records, so we really had a lot of fun. Working budgets was new to me but I had a production assistant, so it was nice to delegate some authority to other people. Chris was a gentle giant, a sweet guy. I remember he was about 49 or 50, hard as a rock wall and super nice, quiet and not over-confident about his musical abilities. He was just a lucky cowboy who was great at his trade and felt fortunate that he had a second career doing what he really loved, and he wrote the book on how he was going to do it. I wouldn’t say I didn’t have doubts, but I was never scared. I don’t make music out of fear.
How did you end up producing Trace Adkins?
I started producing Trace on his third record. Scott left Capitol and Trace called one day to ask me to produce his records. Scott had nothing to do with it. We had some big records. I’d already done two full albums and I called Scott and said, “Garth’s régime is gone at Capitol, do you want to make this record with me?” The first Greatest Hits was a big record. All we had to do was find one song. Chris Lacey from Warner/Chappell brought me a guitar/vocal of a song called “Then They Do.” That song really brought Trace back because he was having a rough time getting attention at Capitol under Garth’s régime.
Why haven’t we heard more from Rebecca Lynn Howard since “Forgive”?
I started writing with Rebecca right before she turned 18. I fell in love with her vocals. She’s probably one of the finest singers that ever came to Nashville. She started getting record label attention really quickly. She made two or three albums before she made Forgive. It was all under the Universal umbrella and there was a subsidiary label that Emory Gordy Jr. ran and he did a record on her and maybe a second record and then he moved up to Decca where Mark Wright was. I was writing with her and they were cutting some of my songs and I called Mark and said, “I’m begging you, this is her third album, let me cut it with you.” It moved up from Decca to Universal and Mark Wright and Tony Brown called me and said, “we want you to do this record.” I worked a long time on that record, about a year, and the whole time, “Forgive” was on hold with Faith. So I called Byron Gallimore and he called Faith and she said, if it [was going to be Rebecca’s] first single, she’d let it go. She sent Rebecca roses when it came out. It was running away at radio. I couldn’t walk into a restaurant without getting my back patted from everybody. Bruce Hinton retired right on the front of the single and by the time Luke Lewis took over during the course of a 40-week run up the radio charts, Mark Wright and Tony Brown left and he hired Dave Conrad. All my team was gone and they told me Luke was pulling the single. It was at No. 15 with a bullet and the next week it was gone. We got an ACM Song of the Year nom against four other No. 1 records. It limped up to No. 10 after they pulled the promotion and then it disappeared. They asked me to do another record, and I said, “I can’t, I’m done.” So Emory Gordy came back in and did a record on her, then she went to Joe Galante at BMG and then she was never heard of again. It breaks my heart to this day. Rebecca Lynn Howard is a massively gifted artist.
Why do you think single downloads are so popular with consumers?
Buying 99 cent singles isn’t even the point anymore. It’s all on the cloud. For $10 or $15 per month you can get whatever you want from Spotify. That is the first thing that has happened that I think can generate income that pushes us back towards the ‘90s income. If every household in America bought subscriptions, we’d be making a lot more money than 99 cent downloads. Spotify is the MySpace of streaming, which is good news, which means that something is going to come along that will pay us better.
Someone is going to come up with an artist-centric version of streaming, where they don’t cut the labels in first. I think the labels are in at Spotify for 40 percent. Spotify did independent deals with each major label and said, “What is it going to cost us to have your music?” and to hell with what the copyright owners and artists think. So when two or three artists step up and decide not to go back to the majors with their next record, because they can just hire each of those departments a la cart, then they’re going to do their own version of Spotify. Even if it takes three artists to do it, it’ll make news. It’s direct-to-fan and cutting out as many middlemen as possible. You just have to rent those publicity and marketing departments. They’re probably becoming more important than radio promotion. It takes a ton of money to get a country single up to No. 10 and then even more to get it to No. 1. Get rid of all that and just worry about distributing music, traditional brick-n-mortar marketing and internet marketing. It’s a lot cheaper to do a great marketing plan online and at late night TV and NPR than to put these traditional country radio promotion teams out there. That’s why it’s exciting because at least we know that we’re moving in a hopeful direction. I’m more optimistic right now than I have been in five or six years.
For more, visit www.theproducerschair.com.

Weekly Chart Report (5/10/13)


SPIN ZONE

MCA’s Drake White (R) recently visited with WIL's Danny Montana (L) to promote his debut single, “The Simple Life.

MCA’s Drake White (R) recently visited with WIL’s Danny Montana (L) to promote his debut single, “The Simple Life.”


According to Tim McGraw‘s new single, which features Taylor Swift (and Keith Urban on guitar), the “Highway Don’t Care”—but radio sure does. The single has topped the MusicRow Country Breakout Charts with 3546 spins this week, after only 12 weeks on the chart. Brad Paisley‘s warm-weather anthem, “Beat This Summer,” is heating up the charts, jumping from No. 4 to No. 2 this week. Eric Church‘s former No. 1 song, “Like Jesus Does,” lands at No. 3, followed by The Band Perry‘s “Done” at No. 4 and Blake Shelton‘s “Boys Round Here,” which climbs from No. 9 to No. 5. Jake Owen holds steady at No. 6 for a second week with “Anywhere With You,” while The Henningsens continue their steady climb up the chart. The family trio’s single “American Beautiful” is at No. 7 this week. The Top 10 gets three new singles this week. Luke Bryan‘s “Crash My Party” crashed into the Top 10, leaping from No. 14 to No. 8. Zac Brown Band‘s “Jump Right In” did just that, rising from No. 13 to No. 9. Kip Moore‘s “Hey Pretty Girl” rounds out the Top 10, upping two slots from No. 12 to No. 10 this week.
Radio is apparently saying a great big ‘Hello’ to Lady Antebellum‘s “Goodbye Town,” as it is this week’s greatest gainer with 546 spins, landing at No. 47. Blake Shelton‘s “Boy’s Round Here” gained 391 spins, enough to jump into the Top 5 this week. Thomas Rhett‘s “It Goes Like This” earned 379 spins, soaring up the charts from No. 60 last week to No. 37 this week. Chris Young‘s “Aw Naw” gathered 536 additional spins this week, enough to put it in the No. 48 spot. Luke Bryan‘s “Crash My Party” lands at No. 8 with an added 335 spins.
Plenty of new singles were launched at the chart this week. Lady Antebellum‘s “Goodbye Town” notched the highest debut, at No. 47, followed by Trace Adkins (featuring Colbie Caillat)’s “Watch The World End” at No. 59, Joe Nichols‘ “Sunny and 75” at No. 73, Morgan Frazier‘s “Yellow Brick Road” at No. 77, Breelan Angel’s “It’s My Turn” at No. 78, Lennon & Maisy Stella (who portrayed sisters Maddie and Daphne on the television show Nashville)’s “Ho Hey” at No. 79 and Steve Richard‘s “Keep On Rollin'” at No. 80.
Frozen Playlists: KGMN, KYTN, WIBL, KXBZ

Upcoming Singles
May 10
Kellie Pickler/Someone Somewhere Tonight/Black River Entertainment
May 13
Joe Nichols/Sunny and 75/Red Bow
Keith Urban/TBD/UMG
Chris Young/Aw Naw/RCA
Trace Adkins (feat. Colbie Caillat)/Watch The World End/Show Dog–Universal-New Revolution
Frank Ortega/Two Places at Once/Villa One Records
Lee Brice/Parking Lot Party/Curb
Mark Chesnutt/When The Lights Go Out (Tracie’s Song)/Nada Dinero
Adam Fears/There’s A Girl Out There/LandStar-Flying Island
May 20
Ashley Monroe/You Got Me/Warner Bros.-WMN
Jana Kramer/I Hope It Rains/Elektra Nashville-WAR
Adrianna Freeman/Just a Girl/AFM Entertainment
May 27
Dustin Lynch/Wild In Your Smile/BBR
John Fogerty w/ Miranda Lambert feat. Tom Morello/Wrote A Song For Everyone/Vanguard
Ali Dee/It Ain’t/Diamond Dee
Alexandra Lee/Dancin’ Round the Fire/Wild Blue Records
June 3
Lydia Hollis/All For You/HMG
June 16
Travis Tritt (feat. Tyler Reese)/Sometimes Love Just Ain’t Enough
July 8
Downday/Back In The Day/Render
 
• • •
New On The Chart—Debuting This Week
Artist/song/label — chart pos.
Lady Antebellum/Goodbye Town/Capitol Nashville – 47
Trace Adkins f. Colbie Caillat/Watch The World End/Show Dog-Universal – 59
Joe Nichols/Sunny and 75/Red Bow – 73
Morgan Frazier/Yellow Brick Road/Sidewalk Records – 77
Breelan Angel/It’s My Turn/MisBhavin’ – 78
Lennon & Maisy Stella/Ho Hey/Big Machine Records – 79
Steve Richard/Keep On Rollin’/Force MP – 80
Most Added
Artist/song/label — New Adds
Lady Antebellum/Goodbye Town/Capitol Nashville – 39
Chris Young/Aw Naw/RCA Nashville – 28
Thomas Rhett/It Goes Like This/Valory Music Group – 27
Lee Brice/Parking Lot Party/Curb – 17
Branch & Dean/The Dash/SSM Nashville – 15
Trace Adkins f. Colbie Caillat/Watch The World End/Show Dog-Universal – 14
Joanna Smith /Girls Are Crazy/RCA Nashville – 10
Billy Currington/Hey Girl/Mercury Nashville – 9
Tyler Farr/Redneck Crazy/Columbia Nashville – 9
Greatest Spin Increase
Artist/song/label — spin+
Lady Antebellum/Goodbye Town/Capitol Nashville – 546
Blake Shelton/Boys Round Here/Warner Bros. – 391
Thomas Rhett/It Goes Like This/Valory Music Group – 379
Chris Young/Aw Naw/RCA Nashville – 536
Luke Bryan/Crash My Party/Capitol/UMG Nashville – 335
On Deck—Soon To Be Charting
Artist/song/label — spins
Branch & Dean/The Dash/SSM Nashville – 180
Tyler Barham/17 & Young/YN Records – 174
Emerson Drive/She’s My Kind Of Crazy/Open Road Recordings – 169
Shelley Laine/Born Again American/SLG – 165
Chuck Wicks/Salt Life/Chuck Wicks – 164
 
Stoney Creek Records' Parmalee recently paid a visit to its home state of North Carolina to play its single “Carolina” for WSOC/Charlotte. Pictured (L-R) Top: WSOC’s ‘Big Sexy,’ Chele Fassig, and Parmalee’s Matt Thomas. Bottom: Rob Taanner (WSOC), Scott Thomas (Parmalee); WSOC’s Brittney Carson, Rick McCracken, Barry Knox and Josh McSwain.

Stoney Creek Records’ Parmalee recently paid a visit to its home state of North Carolina to play its single “Carolina” for WSOC/Charlotte. Pictured (L-R) Top: WSOC’s ‘Big Sexy,’ Chele Fassig and Parmalee’s Matt Thomas. Bottom: Rob Taanner (WSOC), Scott Thomas (Parmalee); WSOC’s Brittney Carson, Rick McCracken, Barry Knox and Josh McSwain.


Gloriana recently visited with Bill Reed of KTST. The trio was featured in the May 7th season finale of the hit CW’s ‘Hart of Dixie’ performing the single "Can't Shake You.” Pictured (L-R): Gloriana’s Mike and Rachel, Bill Reed, and Gloriana’s Tom.

Gloriana recently visited with Bill Reed of KTST. The trio was featured in the May 7 season finale of the hit CW’s Hart of Dixie. performing the single “Can’t Shake You.” Pictured (L-R): Gloriana’s Mike and Rachel, Bill Reed and Gloriana’s Tom.


 

Primetime 'Nashville': Why Don't You Love Me

Rayna greets Scarlett and Will at Edgehill Republic's CMA nominations party on the General Jackson showboat.

Rayna greets Scarlett and Will at Edgehill Republic’s CMA nominations party on the General Jackson showboat.


Episode 119: Why Don’t You Love Me
Rayna and Deacon’s romance continued to heat up on last night’s (May 8) new episode of Nashville. But she’s holding back a huge secret that could destroy their relationship: Maddie is his biological daughter. In the meantime, they settled in to their rekindled romance. Snuggling at home, Deacon strummed guitar and they quietly sang “The End of the Day,” a song written by Madi Diaz and Sarah Siskind, which made its Nashville premiere.
Rayna, Juliette and their teams gathered at a party on the General Jackson riverboat to celebrate the stars’ CMA nominations. Still nursing a heart broken by scheming Dante, Juliette was on a self-medicating binge, and showed up at the party drunk. Rayna slyly complimented Juliette’s “80 proof” perfume. Just before Juliette was to take the stage, Deacon quit her band. So she recruited her new roadie Avery to fill in. Given the circumstances, she switched the set and debuted the song “Used” (written by Ross Copperman and Heather Morgan).
Scarlett scored an invitation to the party thanks to her new record deal with Rayna’s imprint on Edgehill Republic. Watching in the audience, she was shocked to see her ex Avery onstage with Juliette—especially when the star planted a kiss on him.

Avery also debuted a song on the episode, “The Morning of the Rain,” penned by actor Jonathan Jackson, who plays Avery.
Meanwhile, Scarlett’s current beau Gunnar missed the boat show because he was in the studio cutting a demo. Problem is, the producer isn’t interested in Gunnar’s ballads, instead he goes for the darker material that Gunnar skimmed from his dead brother’s journal and passed off as his own.
Downtown at the Mayor’s office, Coleman resigned his post as Deputy Mayor and is secretly waiting for Rayna’s ex, Teddy, to lose his job as Mayor—probably at the hands of Rayna’s sister Tandy or her father Lamar.
Cliff hangers: At the end of the episode, Dante called Juliette and threatened to leak a damaging tape. Also, E! is reporting that two characters will die during the show’s season finale on May 22. My totally uncorroborated prediction is that we will say adios to Peggy, Teddy’s ex girlfriend played by Kimberly Williams Paisley.
Nashville has yet to be renewed by ABC, but TV insiders expect a greenlight when the network reveals its 2013-14 primetime lineup on Tuesday, May 14. As always, new music from the show is available on iTunes.

Weekly Register: Pirate Flags and A Bottle Of Rum

chesGrid Talk On The Emerald Seas
Country’s sailor of the emerald seas, Kenny Chesney, pulled into Nielsen SoundScan harbor this week with almost 153,000 debut units in tow (43% digital) and No. 1 positions across both the Country and Top 200 album charts. Great news like that would surely be a reason to pour some Blue Chair Bay Rum to celebrate. Especially when the rum is named after your own label, Blue Chair Records. (KC’s previous release Welcome To The Fishbowl debuted the week ended 6/24/12 with 193k.)
Unfortunately, even the Chesney stimulus was not buoyant enough to keep country sales above water. YTD country album sales dipped from a meager +.4% last week to -.4% this week. Looking back to the same time in 2012, it’s easy to see why the numbers fell. During the week ended 5-6-12 there was a Carrie Underwood debut (Blown Away) with 267k units and Lionel Richie’s Tuskegee in release week 6, at No. 2 logging 64k units. This week’s No. 2 position, behind Chesney, was the affable Blake Shelton also in release week 6, but with a lighter load of about 35k in weekly scans. Therefore the YTD slipped.
But speaking about Shelton, the Voice coach performed a sizzling rendition of “Need You Now” with a very sultry Shakira on last night’s show. The video link is here. Is it my imagination or does Shelton seem to be sweating like crazy? Also send out a full-scale extreme star power alert: watch 16-year-old Danielle Bradbury sing “Maybe It Was Memphis.”
weeklygrid5-5-13The Randy Rogers Band also jumped in and out of bins this week with Trouble gathering a No. 3 position on the country chart with almost 26k units (62% digital).
Next week anxious fans will receive Lady A’s new Golden, plus Chesney’s wk 2 tally, which will strengthen country’s YTD stats. (Lady A’s last album scored a robust 347k units the week ended 9-18-11.) And there’s more! Watch for a new Pistol Annies and a solo effort form Natalie Maines.
Weekly Register, after a thorough analysis of the upcoming week and exhaustive comparison research now predicts with great certainty, it’s a lock that country YTD sales will float into positive territory next week.
weeklygrid4-28-13Tracking Our Progress
Chesney’s No. 1 album debut was also reflected, although to a lesser degree, on the tracks chart. The island pirate hoisted six tracks onto the country top 100 with the highest, “Pirate Flag” landing at no. 12 with almost 39k downloads. Eleven notches higher up the chart at No. 1 (again!) is the irrepressible duo named after something you can’t even see, Florida Georgia Line. FGL slugged out another combined 145k downloads of its massive multi-format hit “Cruise.” The song is now blessed with over 3.1 million downloads RTD. Actually the country version of the song registered almost 54k of the 145k this week with the remix featuring Nelly contributing the additional 95k.
fglnellyAlso deserving mention in slots No. 2 and 3 are Darius Rucker “Wagon Wheel” and Blake Shelton w/Pistol Annies “Boys Round Here” which sold 102k and 99k respectively. Rucker’s track is already Platinum and Shelton’s just turned Gold.
Country track sales are up a solid 7.4%, while all genre tracks are off, -2.6%. In actual numbers, YTD 2013 country track sales total 62.1 million units, comparing nicely with last year’s 57.8 million total.
There’s been a lot of great music hitting the streets this spring with more on the way, so make sure you’ve got some wrapped ’round your ears.
In the meantime, keep listening to the ringing of country’s Weekly Register…

DISClaimer: Don't Complain That Authentic Country Singers Can't Be Found

DISCovery Winners: Lennon and Maisy

DISCovery Winners: Lennon and Maisy


The music on the TV soap Nashville is consistently better than most of what the “real” country-music industry produces in its namesake town. For one thing, the show spotlights the songwriting of the likes of David Olney, Lucinda Williams, Patty Griffin, Sarah Buxton, John Paul White, Kacey Musgraves and Georgia Middleman, rather than the parade of hacks who provide the bulk of the material you hear on country radio. For another thing, most of the tracks are produced by T Bone Burnett, who knows more about roots music than most Music Row producers even suspect.
That said, it gives me great pleasure to present a DISCovery Award to Lennon Stella & Maisy Stella for their delightful performance of The Lumineers’ “Ho Hey” from the show’s second soundtrack CD.
For those of you who complain that authentic country singers can no longer be found, I direct your attention to Chris Young. He is country, and he is great. He is also this week’s winner of the Disc of the Day prize.
Chris Young receives Disc of the Day for

Chris Young receives Disc of the Day for “Aw Naw.”


CHRIS YOUNG/Aw Naw
Writer: Chris Young/Chris DeStefano/Ashley Gorley; Producer: James Stroud; Publisher: EMI Blackwood/Maple Kind/EMI April/Sugar Glider/External Combustion/Out of the Taperoom/Songs of Southside Independent, BMI/ASCAP; RCA
—This man is one helluva hoss of a country singer. In this righteous stomper, he’s a barroom boy trying to do the right thing and go home. But while electric guitars twang and percussion thumps, he gives in to temptation.
MORGAN FRAZIER/Yellow Brick Road
Writer: Morgan Frazier/Jim Brown/Steve Clark; Producer: Buddy Cannon; Publisher: Curb/Sweet Manic/House of Sea Gayle/Antlered One/Mom’s Place, ASCAP; Sidewalk
—Frazier, who records for the Curb imprint Sidewalk Records, has just been announced as the Grand Prize Winner of this year’s John Lennon Songwriter’s Competition. Her co-written single for Sidewalk is a cleverly penned bopper wherein she feels lost in a romance Land of Oz “where nothin’s real.” The icing on the cake is that she sings with fiery zeal.
LENNON STELLA & MAISEY STELLA/Ho Hey
Writer: Jeremy Fraites/Wesley Schultz; Producer: T Bone Burnett & Gabriel Wichter; Publisher: The Lumineers/Songs of Kobalt, BMI; Big Machine (track)
—These sisters play the daughters of “Rayna Jaymes” on the TV soap Nashville. On it, they introduced their charming take on The Lumineers’ breakthrough song a couple of weeks ago. Now it’s a single, and it sounds as lilting and lovely as it did on the small screen. Their harmonies are heavenly, and the crunchy backing track strums along splendidly.
CHANTAL KUEGLE/Now That I Get to Drive
Writer: Chantal Kuegle/Tami Hinesh; Producer: Kent Wells; Publisher: none listed, SOCAN/BMI; Go Time (track)
—She has a solid alto delivery that completely takes charge of the song. The track rocks, but is tastefully mixed so that it never overwhelms her.
JANA KRAMER/I Hope it Rains
Writer: Rachel Proctor/Kelley Lovelace/Jerry Flowers; Producer: Scott Hendricks; Publisher: EMI Apirl/Shadowcash/Didn’t Have to Be/EMI Blackwood/JFLO, ASCAP/BMI; Elektra
—I like this artist, but I’m still waiting for her to perform an undeniable song. In this case, the poppy, harmony-soaked choruses are ultra catchy, but the verses kinda just lay there.
BOBBY ARMSTRONG/Rodeo
Writer: Bobby Armstrong/Darrell Brown; Producer: Darrell Brown; Publisher: Bobby Armstrong/Grey Ink/Kobalt, ASCAP; BA
—The speedy, neo-rockabilly track cooks with gas. The song is loaded with hooks. There’s nothing particularly “country” about his vocal style. The single comes packaged with a dance-mix version.
SCOTTY McCREERY/See You Tonight
Writer: Scotty McCreery/Ashley Gorley/Zach Crowell; Producer: Frank Rogers; Publisher: Scotty McCreery/External Combustion/Out of the Taperoom/Songs of Southside Independent/Who Wants to Buy My Pub, BMI/ASCAP; Mercury/19 (CDX)
—Breezy and easy-going, this wafts along carried by its innocence, charm and earnestness. For the romantic young and the romantic young at heart.
CHRIS CAGLE/Dance Baby Dance
Writer: none listed; Producer: none listed; Publisher: none listed; Bigger Picture (ERG)
—Daddy watches his little girl grow up. Complete mush, but impossible to resist and beautifully melodic.
RANDY HOUSER/Runnin’ Outta Moonlight
Writer: none listed; Producer: none listed; Publisher: none listed; Stony Creek (ERG)
—Houser’s comeback does my heart good. He was born to sing, and this bouncy song is perfectly concocted for summertime listening. Eminently playable.
THE WESTERN SWING AUTHORITY/I’ve Got a Feeling
Writer: Shane Guse/Larry Wayne Clark; Producer: Jason Berry & The Western Swing Authority; Publisher: Brainchild, SOCAN; WSA (track)
—These folks are sort of the Canadian version of The Time Jumpers. Their new single is a bluesy, hold-her-tight, slow dance, buoyed by swaying fiddles, dreamy steel notes and deftly plucked guitar licks. Lead singer Stacey Lee Guse sounds like she just stepped out of a 1940s cabaret. Lush and fabulous. The album is called All Dolled Up. Seek it out.

ASCAP Honors Top Christian Songs

ASCAP honored a plethora of artists and songwriters at last night’s (May 6) ASCAP Christian Music Awards, held at the Franklin Theater in Franklin, Tenn. After opening with a prayer, group Finding Favour began with an acoustic performance of “Slip On By.” Jon Egan, on the worship staff at Life Church in Colorado Springs, Colo., performed “Overcome,” and shared the story’s origin. Daniel Bashta also performed his self-penned song “God’s Not Dead.”
Phil Keaggy, who has recorded more than 50 albums and who dominated the Dove Awards’ Instrumental album award category from 1998-2001, was awarded with the Golden Note award. Keaggy’s close friends Chris and Jan Harris introduced Keaggy and congratulated him not only on the award, but on celebrating 40 years of marriage to wife Bernadette. ASCAP’s Paul Williams called Keaggy a “soul catcher, because when you play, you catch our souls.”
Keaggy did just that, when he brought the crowd to their feet in an extended standing ovation while he performed “Salvation Army Band” on acoustic guitar.
Other top awards handed out that evening included Christian Music Publisher of the Year, which Capitol Christian CMG took home for a 10th consecutive year. Song of the Year went to Matt Redman‘s “10,000 Reasons.” Matthew West was honored as Songwriter/Artist of the Year. Ben Glover, who has earned more than 20 No. 1 hits on both the Country and Christian charts was honored as Songwriter of the Year.
ASCAP’s Michael Martin and LeAnn Phelan were on hand to honor the writers and publishers of some of Christian music’s best-selling compositions.Those in attendance included Michael W. Smith, Amy Grant, Chris August, Jason Gray, Brandon Heath, Dan Muckala, Josh Wilson, The Afters and others.

Pictured (L-R): ASCAP’s LeAnn Phelan, Paul Williams, Phil Keaggy, ASCAP’s Michael Murphy, ASCAP CEO John LoFrumento.

Pictured (L-R): ASCAP’s LeAnn Phelan, Paul Williams, Phil Keaggy, ASCAP’s Michael Martin, ASCAP CEO John LoFrumento.


Songs honored during the evening include:
1. “Carry Me To The Cross,” performed by Kutless and written by Nick de Partee. Publishers: Capitol CMG Music Publishing, Indecisive Music Publishing, Thirsty Moon River Publishing
2. “10,000 Reasons,” written and performed by Matt Redman. Publishers: Said and Done Music, sixsteps Music, Thankyou Music, worshiptogether.com songs
3. “White Flag,” performed by Passion ft. Chris Tomlin and written by Matt Redman. Publishers: Said and Done Music, sixsteps Music, Thankyou Music and worshiptogether.com songs
4. “God’s Not Dead,” written by Daniel Bashta and performed by Newsboys. Publishers: Go Forth Sounds, sixsteps Music, worshiptogethersongs.com
5. “Live Like That,” written by Ben Glover and performed by Sidewalk Prophets. Publishers: 9 T One Songs and Capitol CMG Publishing
6. “Proof Of Your Love,” written by Mia Fields, Ben Glover and Joel Smallbone and performed by For King and Country. Publishers: 9 T One Songs, Capitol CMG Publishing, Method To The Madness, Shankel Songs, Shout! Music Publishing, Warner/Chappell Music Publishing
7.”Busted Heart,” performed by For King and Country and written by Ben Glover and Joel Smallbone. Publishers: Method To The Madness, Screaming Norman Music, Shankel Songs, Warner/Chappell Music Publishing
8. “Jesus Friend of Sinners,” written by Matthew West and performed by Casting Crowns. Publishers: Combustion Music, Songs For Delaney and Warner/Chappell Music Publishing.
9. “Forgiveness,” Written and performed by Matthew West. Publishers: Combustion Music, Songs For Delaney, Warner/Chappell Music Publishing.
10. “Overcome,” written by Jon Egan, Benji Cowart and Michael Weaver and performed by Jeremy Camp. Publisher: Vertical Worship Songs
11.”I Need A Miracle” performed by Third Day, and written by David Carr, Mac Powell, Mark Lee and Tai Anderson.
12. “Trust In Jesus,” performed by Third Day, and written by David Carr, Mac Powell, Mark Lee and Tai Anderson.
13. “The Light In Me,” performed by Brandon Heath and written by Dan Muckala and Brandon Heath. Publishers: Big Skwawka Music, Wintergone Music.
14. “Good To be Alive,” performed by Jason Gray and written by Jason Gray and Brandon Heath. Publishers: Big Skwawka Music, Centricity Music Publishing, Nothing Is Wasted Music and Sony/ATV Music Publishing.
15. “Learning To Be The Light,” performed by Newworldson and written by Joel Parisien and Thomas Salter. Publisher: Sony/ATV Music Publishing.
16. “Love Come To Life,” performed by Big Daddy Weave and written by Michael Weaver. Publishers: Weave Country, Word Music
17. “Redeemed,” performed by Benji Cowart and Michael Weaver and performed by Big Daddy Weave. Publishers: Weave Country, Word Music.
18. “One Thing Remains,” performed by Passion ft. Kristian Stanfill and written by Brian Johnson and Jeremy Riddle. Publishers: Bethel Music Publishing, Mercy Vineyard Publishing.
19. “The Hurt and the Healer,” performed by MercyMe and written by Bart Millard, Barry Graul, James Phillip Bryson, Nathan Cochran, Michael Scheuchzer, Robby Shaffer. Publishers: Wet As A Fish Music, Simpleville Music
20. “When Mercy Found Me,” performed by Rhett Walker Band, written by Jeff Pardo. Publisher: Simple Tense Songs
21. “You Lead,” performed by Jamie Grace and written by Tim Rosenau and David Wyatt. Publishers: Songs of Emack, Capitol CMG Publishing.
22. “Me Without You,” performed by TobyMac and written by David Garcia. Publishers: D Soul Music, Capitol CMG Music Publishing
23. “He Said,” performed by Group 1 Crew featuring Chris August and written by Ben Glover and David Garcia. Publishers: 9 T One Songs, Capitol CMG Publishing, D Soul Music.
24. “All This Time,” performed by Britt Nicole and written by David Garcia, Britt Nicole, and Ben Glover. Publishers: i T One Songs, Britt Nicole Publishing, Capitol Christian CMG Publishing, D Soul Music
25. “Center Of It,” performed by Chris August and written by Ben Glover and Chris August. Publishers: 9 T One Songs, Capitol CMG Publishing, Word Music