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The Producer’s Chair: Brett James

Brett James released his album Sugarcane last year and is currently developing artist Caitlyn Smith. He lives in Brentwood with his wife Sandy, and their four children.

By James Rea

Don’t miss Brett James on The Producer’s Chair Thurs., May 31, 6 p.m. at Douglas Corner. Details at theproducerschair.com.

Over the past decade, Brett James has had more than 300 songs recorded by some of the biggest artists on the planet including Kenny Chesney, Carrie Underwood, Tim McGraw, Rascal Flatts, Bon Jovi, Backstreet Boys, Daughtry, Kelly Clarkson and Leona Lewis. His songs have appeared on albums with combined sales of over 100 million units. He has had 13 No. 1s, won a 2006 Grammy for “Jesus, Take the Wheel,” and was named ASCAP Songwriter of the Year in 2006 and 2010.

James wrote current Kelly Clarkson single, “Mr. Know It All” and a recent Chesney hit, “Reality.” His producer credits include Kip Moore, Mark Wills, Billy Ray Cyrus, Taylor Swift, Buddy Jewel, Jessica Simpson and Josh Gracin. He is also active in the industry, serving on the CMA and NSAI boards of directors.

• • • • •

Brett James is an Oklahoma native who grew up singing in church, got his first guitar at 18, taught himself to play and by the time he reached college was the lead singer in a rock band. “As soon as I learned three chords, I started writing songs,” he recalls. “Then I went to a Steve Wariner concert and that night I got serious about writing songs.” Following in the footsteps of his father and grandfather, Brett eventually went on to medical school.

In the meantime, he sent his five best songs to his friend Deb Markland in Nashville, whose husband Steve Markland now runs Warner Chappell. Deb’s boss, Reen Nalli, wanted to manage Brett, so they met in Nashville and she introduced him to Cliff Audretch, who in turn took the young songwriter to meet new Arista head Tim DuBois. On Brett’s third day in Nashville, DuBois said “If you move to Nashville, I’ll give you a record deal.”

Brett made arrangements for a one-year leave of absence from med school, loaded up his 1980 Maxima with a garbage bag full of clothes and a guitar, and moved to Nashville.

“When I arrived, something in my gut told me I wasn’t ready for a record deal, so I didn’t call Tim for about nine months. I started waiting tables at Midtown Café, played open mics and started meeting with publishers. Three or four months later, Pat Higdon offered me a pub deal and within the year, I had some decent demos and decided to give Tim a call.”

Brett’s showcase was the first one at the Wildhorse Saloon when they opened in ‘93 and Tim signed Brett that night to Artista/Career Records. They spent a year making the first record, which was produced by Steve Bogard (NSAI) and Mike Clute. As Brett puts it, “The singles stiffed, so they re-grouped and we made another record, but it never got released and I was dropped from label in ‘97.”

Eventually Brett left his deal with Higdon and signed with EMI, but by 1999 he was looking for a new publisher. Mark Bright was just starting Teracel, a co-venture with Sony, and Brett was the first writer he signed, earning about 1/3 of the draw he had at EMI.

“Too many guys hold on to the dream too long. I’d been here going on seven years and I had a family to feed. One night I was at Target on White Bridge Road and I panicked because I couldn’t buy my kid a pair of shoes. Without telling my wife, I wrote a letter to the dean of the med school to see if I could get back in. I had to repeat my second year. I was 30 years old, but I knew that at 36, I’d be working as a doctor. I told Mark Bright I’d been accepted and he told me to keep writing while I was in school. At that point I had cuts on Dean Miller and Kenny Chesney, but Kenny released ‘She Thinks My Tractor’s Sexy’ instead of my song as the single.”

Three days after returning to med school, Brett and co-writer Troy Verges got a cut on Faith Hill’s Breathe album, which sold 7 million copies. He continued to write seven or eight songs per week. Songplugger Kelly King helped him get 33 cuts in nine months, including “Blessed” by Martina McBride, and “Who I Am” by Jessica Andrews. His writing advance increased, he quit med school for the second time and came back to Nashville in 2000. According to Brett, “God had other plans.”

“Through the initial period of pub deals, Pat Higdon and EMI lost a lot of money on me, but they afforded me the opportunity to write about 600 bad songs and demo about 400-500 of them. I’ve now produced close to 2,000 demos in the studio. One day Dann Huff called me when I was still in medical school and said, ‘I love your demos, let’s make a record.’ I got re-signed to Arista by Joe Galante in 2000. I co-produced the album with Dann, put out a single called “Chasing Amy” which went to about No. 29 on the charts. When that single stiffed, Joe Galante called me and said, ‘Brett, I have bad news and good news. The bad news is we’re going to drop you from the label. The good news is I want ‘When The Sun Goes Down’ for Kenny Chesney and ‘The Answer’ for Brad Paisley. Chesney took that song to No. 1 for 6 weeks.”

• • • • •

Producer’s Chair: What is the most important thing that you learned from Dann Huff about producing?
James: You can learn a lot from making a record with Dann Huff. He’s the master. I learned about the atmosphere that he creates, and the respect that he demands, because he’s a musical genius.

Do you plan to continue producing for a long time?
Yes and no. I love producing, but I also love writing. The money isn’t what it used to be for songwriters, by any stretch, because it’s based on record sales. Your advance money is about what you can expect to make, unless you’re writing with the artist. I’m pretty hands on as a producer. For instance, I sang all the background vocals on Kip Moore’s record and I engineered all of his vocals. There’s a huge benefit of being a singer. Whether it’s demos or records, I can sing it for them to convey my thoughts.

Producing is very labor intensive for me. The fun part is tracking and mixing. There is no greater joy than being in the studio with a bunch of musicians. I get to walk into a room with a bunch of my friends and have them spoil me rotten. And I get to drive the ship. The process is such a rewarding collaboration with the musicians.

How did you start working with Kip Moore?
Kip is a pro golfer, a surfer and an outstanding all-around athlete. He introduced himself to me at the Maryland Farms YMCA. He said, “I like what you do and I’d like to be a writer,” and he seemed like a cool guy. Six months went by, we never scheduled anything, and I felt so bad that I was afraid I might see him at the Y.

One day Joe Fisher in A&R at Universal called me and said, “Hey this guy came in my office and said he knows you from the Y, his name is Kip Moore.” So I said, send him over right now. Kip walked in, played two songs, and I said, “OK, you’ve got a publishing deal, now what else can we work on?”

Kip signed with Universal and had a gold record with first single “Somethin’ ‘Bout A Truck,” which has sold 600,000 downloads. He sold 38,000 albums the first week out.

It’s very much a labor of love. He’s like my little brother. I don’t think there’s ever been a more talented songwriter in Nashville and I don’t say that lightly. I think Kip will be a 25 or 30-year heritage artist. The depth of his songwriting is beyond anything I’ve ever seen. He’s going to be selling out arenas and I hope I get to be there every step of the way.

When did you produce Taylor Swift?
When Taylor was 12, Renee Bell signed her to a developmental deal at RCA. They tried several producers and we did a demo with her on a song called “Perfectly Good Heart.” Long story short, RCA didn’t sign her to a full deal. Taylor went back to Pennsylvania for a while, came back seven years later and became the biggest artist in the world. She put one of the songs we cut on the record.

How do you feel about our industry today?
I think our business is going to do what it’s going to do and you have to roll with it. My one complaint is when Nashville loses sight of the-best-song-wins. We once had all these artists that didn’t write, like Reba, George Strait, Faith and Tim, who became stars on the backs of the writers in this town. Now it’s not like that. Staff writer positions went from 1200 at the peak in the ‘90s to about 200 today. Great records get made when the best song wins. It serves our community better and it serves the artists better.

Partial Discography
“Cowboy Casanova” Carrie Underwood #1
“Mr. Know It All” Kelly Clarkson 6 week #1 Hot AC
“The Man I Want To Be” Chris Young 3 week #1
“It’s America” Rodney Atkins 2 week #1
“Summer Nights” Rascal Flatts #1
“Out Last Night” Kenny Chesney 2 week #1
“The Truth” Jason Aldean 2 week #1
“Reality” Kenny Chesney # 1
“What Do You Got” Bon Jovi top 10 AC
“I Love You This Big” Scotty McCreery top 15
“It’s A Business Doing Pleasure With You” Tim McGraw top 15
“Get Off On The Pain” Gary Allan top 15
“Good To Be Me” Uncle Kracker current single
“Life After You” Daughtry top 20 Pop/#4 A/C
“When The Sun Goes Down” Kenny Chesney 6 week #1
“Jesus Take The Wheel” Carrie Underwood 6 week #1
“You Save Me” Kenny Chesney # 2
“Blessed” Martina McBride 2 week #1
“Who I Am” Jessica Andrews 4 week #1
“Keg In The Closet” Kenny Chesney top 10 single
“Love You Out Loud” Rascal Flatts top 5 single
“Drugs or Jesus” Tim McGraw top 10 single

Weekly Chart Report (5/18/12)

EMI Records newcomer Kelleigh Bannen recently kicked off her radio tour to promote her debut single, “Rose Colored Glasses.” She brought a 'fish eye' lens to take photos with her visits with WVVR/Clarksville. Pictured (L-R): Fletch (Fletch & Bailey on WVVR) and Bannen

SPIN ZONE
It’s new No. 1 song time, as Luke Bryan’s “Drunk On You” climbs into the CountryBreakout Chart’s top position after 14 weeks of airplay. Carrie Underwood’s “Good Girl” moves up to No. 2, followed by Eli Young Band’s “Even If It Breaks Your Heart” at No. 3. Brantley, Toby, Kip, and The Band Perry also gain spins inside the Top 10.

Blake Shelton’s “Over” is really on the move, leaping to No. 30 in its third week on the chart. Other new offerings by Lady Antebellum (“Wanted You More”), George Strait (“Drinkin’ Man”) and newcomer Greg Bates (“Did It For The Girl”) are also making quick work of the chart. Lee Brice’s “Hard To Love” and Jake Owen’s “The One That Got Away” are neck-and-neck at No. 55 and 56, respectively, after only two weeks.

Several big debuts are impacting the chart, beginning with Kenny Chesney’s “Come Over.” Chesney and Tim McGraw’s “Feel Like A Rock Star” is in the upper reaches of the chart, but his new solo effort rocketed up to No. 63 in its first week of reporting. Newcomers Florida Georgia Line also made an impression with summertime-ready single “Cruise,” which lands at No. 71. Rascal Flatts’ “Come Wake Me Up” gains 203 spins to hit No. 77, and Due West’s “Things You Can’t Do In A Car” picks up 184 spins to jump to No. 79.

Frozen Playlists: KDOL, KYKX, WBKR, WBYZ, WXXK

Upcoming Singles
May 21
Blake Shelton/Over/Warner Bros./WMN
Bill Gentry/That Kind of Life/Tenacity
Rascal Flatts/Come Wake Me Up/Big Machine
Jake Owen/The One That Got Away/RCA

May 29
Jason Charles Miller/Up To Me/Render
Mavericks/Born to Be Blue/Valory
Big & Rich/That’s Why I Pray/WMN

• • • • •

New On The Chart—Debuting This Week
Artist/song/label — chart pos.
Kenny Chesney/Come Over/BNA – 63
Florida Georgia Line/Cruise/Big Loud Mountain – 71
Rick Monroe/Crazy Not To/Render Records – 75
Rascal Flatts/Come Wake Me Up/Big Machine – 77
Due West/Things You Can’t Do In A Car/Black River – 79
Kristen Kelly/Ex-Old Man/Arista – 80

Greatest Spin Increase
Artist/song/label — spin+
Blake Shelton/Over/Warner Bros. – 446
Lady Antebellum/Wanted You More/Capitol – 421
Kenny Chesney/Come Over/BNA – 374
Jake Owen/The One That Got Away/BNA – 232
Dierks Bentley/5-1-5-0/Capitol – 232

Most Added
Artist/song/label — New Adds
Lady Antebellum/Wanted You More/Capitol – 28
Kenny Chesney/Come Over/BNA – 28
Blake Shelton/Over/Warner Bros. – 18
Rascal Flatts/Come Wake Me Up/Big Machine – 18
Due West/Things You Can’t Do In A Car/Black River – 16
Jake Owen/The One That Got Away/BNA – 15
Heidi Newfield/Why’d You Have To Be So Good/Sidewalk Records – 15
Greg Bates/Did It For The Girl/Republic Nashville – 13
Florida Georgia Line/Cruise/Big Loud Mountain – 11
Lee Brice/Hard To Love/Curb – 10
Little Big Town/Pontoon/Capitol – 10

On Deck—Soon To Be Charting
Artist/song/label — spins
Jessie James/Military Man/Show Dog-Universal – 211
Craig Wayne Boyd/I Ain’t No Quitter/Big Ride – 198
Randy Houser/How Country Feels/Stoney Creek Records – 193
Sean Patrick McGraw/Git Yer Cowboy On/Little Engine Records – 191
Glen Templeton/Sing That Song Again/Black River Entertainment – 180

Black River Entertainment's Sarah Darling kicked off her radio tour this week with 103.7/WSOC in Charlotte. (L-R): Rick Baumgartner (Black River Ent.), Rick McCracken (WSOC MD), Sarah Darling, D.J. Stout (WSOC PD), and Megan Good (Black River Ent.)

Show Dog-Universal’s Trace Adkins paid a visit to Denver’s/KYGO while out on his his “Songs and Stories” Tour. (L-R): John Thomas (PD), Adkins, SDU Regional Promotion Director Lisa Owen, and Garret Doll (MD)

Darryl Worley visited with The Farm backstage at WWYZ/Hartford’s benefit for Wounded Warriors on Monday (5/14). Several country stars participated in the 92.5 "Swingin' and Singin" fundraiser at the Lyman Orchards Golf Club in Hartford. (L-R): Nick Hoffman (The Farm), Worley, and The Farm’s Krista Marie and Damien Horn

MusicRow Awards Final Nominations

MusicRow is pleased to announce the nominees for our 24th Annual MusicRow Awards, Nashville’s longest running industry trade awards show.

The MusicRow editorial team selects a slate of nominees which is then voted on by the magazine’s readers. Outside nominations are accepted for Breakthrough Songwriter, saluting writers and co-writers who scored their first Top 10 hit on MusicRow, Billboard or Mediabase radio charts during the eligibility period (5/1/11 — 4/30/12).

The MusicRow Awards will be hosted at BMI’s Nashville headquarters on Wednesday, June 20 at 5:30 pm. RSVP to [email protected]

Readers were emailed ballots on Monday (5/14). Voting closed at 5 pm on Friday, May 18.

Scroll down to see the complete nominations list or Click here to download the PDF.

DISClaimer Single Reviews (5/16/12)

All stars, no waiting.

Music Row brings out the big guns this week with new entries by George Strait, Rascal Flatts, Little Big Town, Randy Travis, Keith Urban and The Mavericks. And here’s the kicker: Everybody sounds good.

So much so, that we’re dividing up the DisClaimer awards this week. Little Big Town wins the Disc of the Day for group performance. The female Disc of the Day belongs to rising star Gwen Sebastian. And in an extremely tight race, Randy Travis edges out Strait and Urban to take home the Disc of the Day in the male division. But absolutely program all three.

The DisCovery Award goes the newcomers Florida Georgia Line. They’re saying, “Here comes summer” in a big way.

RASCAL FLATTS/Come Wake Me Up
Writer: Sean McConnell/Johan Fransson/Tim Larsson/Tobias Lundgren; Producer: Dann Huff & Rascal Flatts; Publisher: none listed; Big Machine (track)
—This lustrous ballad has it all — a gorgeous melody, terrific audio dynamics, emotional lyrics, towering vocals, pop-crossover potential. In short, the second single from the group’s new Changed CD is a home run.

THE MAVERICKS/Born to Be Blue
Writer: Raul Malo/James House; Producer: Raul Malo & Niko Bolas; Publisher: Big Machine/Raul Malo/Super 98/Notorious Women/Songs of Kobalt, BMI; Valory Music
—It’s in Raul’s nouveau-Orbison mode, full of throb and drama. Irresistibly hooky, if somewhat muffled sounding.

GWEN SEBASTIAN/Met Him in a Motel Room
Writer: Rory Feek/Jamie Teachenor; Producer: none listed; Publisher: none listed; Flying Island (www.gwensebastian.com)
—Longtime MusicRow indie fave Sebastian gained a much higher profile this year as a contestant on TV’s The Voice and as Blake Shelton’s opening act on the road. To capitalize, she’s chosen a superb story song. Her spirited vocal is matched by a brightly bopping track and a lyric about finding God in the strangest places. Thank the Gideons for this one.

GEORGE STRAIT/Drinkin’ Man
Writer: George Strait/Bubba Strait/Dean Dillon; Producer: Tony Brown & George Strait; Publisher: Day Money/Hori Pro/Living for the Night/Sixteen Stars/Sony-ATV, ASCAP/BMI; MCA Nashville (track)
—There’s no happy ending here: He is trapped in the vice of alcohol and finds no way out. Steel licks swirl, fiddles sigh, guitars ripple and a piano adds grace notes as Strait’s weary, sad vocal leads us through a minor masterpiece. You young people take note: This is real country music.

MARTY RAYBON/Dirt Road Heartache
Writer: Melissa Ann Peirce/Jerry Dean Salley; Producer: Marty Raybon; Publisher: Chatawa/Songs of Peer, LTD; Rural Rhythm (track)
—Marty’s hillbilly tenor fits this uptempo bluegrass romp like the proverbial glove. The fleet-fingered instrumental support is dazzling.

JESSIE JAMES/Military Man
Writer: Clint Lagerberg/Cary Barlowe/Jessie James/Nicky Chinn; Producer: Mark Wright; Publisher: Big Loud Songs/Big Loud Bucks/Extreme Freedom/Castle Bound/Bummerman/In La La Land/Nicky Chinn/Ten Ten, ASCAP/SESAC; Show Dog Universal
—She’s the daughter of a man in uniform. She sings well, but the melody just lays there, and the lyric is way too wordy.

KEITH URBAN/For You
Writer: Monty Powell/Keith Urban; Producer: Dann Huff & Keith Urban; Publisher: Crane Song/Toreador/ole/Songs of Universal/Mary Rose, SESAC/BMI; Capitol (CDX)
—The intriguing, involving, minor-key melody draws you in. The lyric of a soldier willing to lay down his life speaks directly to thousands of contemporary Americans. Stirring.

RANDY TRAVIS /More Life
Writer: Mike Reid/Rory Bourke; Producer: Kyle Lehning; Publisher: Rivers and Roads/Rory Bourke, ASCAP/BMI; Warner Bros. (CDX)
—Two of the great voices of our time are together on this disc, with Don Henley adding high harmonies to Randy’s lead vocal. The icing on the cake is that the song is simply awesome and breathtaking. Facing the end, a man wishes only for “More Life,” to “love stronger, stay in the moment one moment longer.” This moved me to my core.

LITTLE BIG TOWN/Pontoon
Writer: Natalie Hemby/Luke Laird/Barry Dean; Producer: Jay Joyce; Publisher: EMI Blackwood/Wruckestrike/Universal-Careers/Barrytones, BMI; Capitol (CDX)
—The production magic of Jay Joyce gives the LBT voices renewed style. The crunchy groove and relaxed party atmosphere are right on the money for summertime. It goes without saying that the singing and harmonies are pluperfect bliss.

FLORIDA GEORGIA LINE/Cruise
Writer: Kelley/Rice/Rice/Hubbard/Moi; Producer: Joey Moi; Publisher: none listed; Big Loud Mountain (www.floridageorgialine.com)
—After an a cappella intro, this takes off like a speedboat on a glassy lake. The track is rushing and wooshing, and the voices are sprightly. What more do you want? Get on board.

IBMA Moving World of Bluegrass To Raleigh

The IBMA’s World of Bluegrass festival is moving to Raleigh, NC for three years, 2013-2015. World of Bluegrass encompasses the IBMA Awards, a business conference, and Fan Fest. Events will center at the Raleigh Convention Center, the Raleigh Amphitheater and Memorial Auditorium, with hotel blocks at the Raleigh Marriott City Center, the Sheraton Raleigh and six additional nearby hotels.

The following dates have been announced, with an option for a five or seven-day event each year:
September 23 – 29, 2013
September 29 – October 5, 2014
September 28 – October 4, 2015

Stan Zdonik, a bluegrass aficionado and professor of computer science at Boston’s Brown University, is Chairman of the Board. He explained, “Raleigh offers us a compact ‘campus’ that includes both indoor and outdoor stages, as well as a state-of-the-art convention center that incorporates a bright and open atmosphere. We’re getting substantial savings and value from Raleigh, both for individual World of Bluegrass attendees and for our organization as a whole.”

Nancy Cardwell, the organization’s interim executive director, assures that IBMA’s office will remain in Nashville. She is in Raleigh for today’s announcement and unavailable for comment but released the following statement: “IBMA hosted our World of Bluegrass events in Owensboro and Louisville, Kentucky before moving to Nashville in 2005. We have a good home in Nashville, and we intend to stay actively involved throughout the year in local efforts to keep a high profile for bluegrass music in Music City, including quarterly ‘Bluebird in the Bluegrass’ songwriter rounds at The Bluebird Café, a ‘September is Worldwide Bluegrass Music Month’ downtown concert organized by the Foundation for Bluegrass Music, teacher workshops in collaboration with the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, and other events produced by local members.”

This year’s World of Bluegrass is scheduled for Sept. 24-30 at the Nashville Convention Center, and includes the IBMA Awards at the Ryman Auditorium on Sept. 27. According to Bluegrass Today, the IBMA’s contract with the convention center is expiring, and some attendees believe prices in downtown Nashville are too high.

The 2011 World of Bluegrass Week, held Sept. 26–Oct. 2, 2011 in Nashville, featured 260 artist performances and drew a cumulative total of 18,070 attendees (an increase of about 2%); including 6,282 at the IBMA Business Conference; 2,226 at the International Bluegrass Music Awards; and 9,562 at Bluegrass Fan Fest. Events were held at the Ryman, Bluebird Café, and Loveless Barn.

The organization has experienced leadership changes in recent months. Former Executive Director Dan Hays resigned in February after 21 years of service. Cardwell was named to the interim post in March.

This spring William Lewis, Executive Director of Raleigh-based PineCone (Piedmont Council of Traditional Music), joined the board as an At Large member. He filled the spot left by Nashvillian Don Light’s resignation. Light manages Dailey & Vincent and The Steep Canyon Rangers.

IBMA Board of Directors

Stan Zdonik, Chairperson/President, Boston Bluegrass Union
Jon Weisberger, Vice-Chairperson
Alison Brown, Recording/Distribution/Marketing, Compass Records
Dan Keen, At Large – Secretary, Belmont University
Cindy Baucom, Broadcast Media, Knee Deep In Bluegrass
Mike Bub, Artists/Composers/Publishers
Donica Christensen, At-Large, Sugar Hill Records
Ron Cox, At Large – Treasurer, Avenue Bank
Janet Davis, Merchandisers/Luthiers, Janet Davis Music Company
Craig Ferguson, Event Production, Planet Bluegrass
Jeremy Garrett, Artists/Composers/Publishers, The Infamous Stringdusters
Craig Havighurst, Print Media/Education, String Theory Media
Carl Jackson, Artists/Composers/Publishers
Rienk Janssen, International – European Bluegrass Music Association
William Lewis, At Large
, PineCone
Todd Mayo, At Large, Music City Roots/Bluegrass Underground
Jim Roe, Agents/Managers/Publicists, Roe Entertainment
Neil Rosenberg, At Large
Dwight Worden, Associations, San Diego Bluegrass Society

Universal Music Publishing Group Signs Mark Nesler

Pictured L-R (back row): Michael Rexford, VP Business Affairs, UMPG; Whitney Williams, Creative Director, UMPG Nashville; Freeman Wizer, Creative Manager, UMPG Nashville; and Mike Milom, Esq., Milom Horsnell Crow Rose Kelley PLC. Pictured L-R (front row): Ron Stuve, VP A&R/Special Projects, UMPG Nashville; Mark Nesler; Kent Earls, EVP/General Manager, UMPG Nashville; and Cyndi Forman, Senior Creative Director, UMPG Nashville.

Universal Music Publishing Group today announced the signing of Nashville hitmaker Mark Nesler to an exclusive, worldwide publishing agreement. Under terms of the deal, UMPG will also acquire an interest in his Nez Music catalog and Little Lola Mae Music catalog.

Nesler’s list of hits is lengthy. He wrote Tim McGraw’s six week No. 1 “Just to See You Smile” on the multi-platinum album Everywhere. He also penned two charttoppers for George Strait: “Go On” and “Living and Living Well.” Nesler also co-wrote No. 1s for Keith Urban (“You Look Good in My Shirt”), Darryl Worley (“I Miss My Friend”) and most recently Billy Currington (“Let Me Down Easy”).

He penned Country Strong, the title track to the film which was recorded by Gwyneth Paltrow. Other hit singles by Nesler include: “For You I Will” (Aaron Tippin), “Heaven In My Women’s Eyes” and “Just Let Me Be In Love” (Tracy Byrd), “Why, Why, Why” (Billy Currington), and “A Different World” (Bucky Covington).

“With 15 + years of writing country hits, Mark continues to be one of the most consistent songwriters in Nashville today,” said Kent Earls, Executive Vice President/General Manager, UMPG Nashville. “We are very honored to acquire such an impressive body of work and look forward to many more successes with Mark.”

“When you walk through the door of UMPG it feels more like home rather than a business. That environment really promotes great songwriting. I’m proud to be a part of the UMPG family,” added Nesler.

Mark Nesler joins the UMPG Nashville roster of hit makers which includes Josh Turner, Keith Urban, Luke Laird, Lori McKenna, Hunter Hayes, Troy Verges, Nathan Chapman, Darius Rucker, Sara Evans and many others.

[Updated] ABC Picks Up “Nashville,” Reba’s “Malibu Country”

Cast of "Malibu Country."

After seeing pilot episodes of Nashville and Malibu Country, ABC will proceed with the new series according to The Hollywood Reporter. 

Nashville is an hour-long family soap set in Music City. As previously reported here and here, Connie Britton and Hayden Panettiere will star. Also appearing will be Eric Close, Powers Boothe, Sam Palladio, Clare Bowen, Jonathan Jackson, Robert Wisdom and Charles Esten. Producers include ABC Studios, Lionsgate and Gaylord Entertainment.

Connie Britton

Malibu Country is a new comedy staring Reba McEntire as a mom who leaves her cheating rock star husband and moves from Nashville to Malibu. She relocates with her mother (Lily Tomlin) and three kids in hopes of relaunching her singing career.

Other actors on Malibu Country include Sara Rue, Julietta Angelo, Justin Prentice, Jai Rodriguez and Owen Teague, with Jeffrey Nordling guest-starring in the pilot with the option to recur. Kevin Abbott penned the pilot. Exec producers include McEntire, Narvel Blackstock, Mindy Schultheis, Michael Hanel, Pam Williams, and Dave Stewart. The show will premier November 2 on the network.

See Nashville and the Malibu Country trailers below.

 

Kenny Rogers HOF Residency Traces Decades of Success

Superstar entertainer Kenny Rogers performed two sold-out shows last week (5/9 and 5/10) at the Country Music Hall of Fame as part of the organization’s Annual Artist-In-Residence program.

Museum Director Kyle Young greeted the packed house on Wed (5/9) highlighting Rogers’ many accomplishments, which include selling more than 120 million records worldwide, recording more than 65 albums during his career and having 21 No. 1 hits.”Tonight is all about his music… and he’s about to sing just for you,” Young told the energized audience.

Rogers opened the show with hits “Something’s Burning” and “Reuben James” from his group, The First Edition. The group formed in 1967 and was later renamed Kenny Rogers and The First Edition.

After revealing his upcoming biography, Luck or Something Like It, Rogers directed the audience to watch the background video for what he jokingly called a “1967 Acid Flashback” and performed “Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Condition Was In).”

Rogers recited some of the song’s lyrics the crowd:

I pushed my soul in a deep dark hole and then I followed it in
I watched myself crawlin’ out as I was a-crawlin’ in
I got up so tight I couldn’t unwind
I saw so much I broke my mind
I just dropped in to see what condition my condition was in

He concluded with the audience, “They just don’t write songs like that anymore.”

Rogers continued tracing the path of his career performing “Walking My Baby Back Home” and “When I Fall In Love.” He shared how he got an early break from a talent show judged by Eddy Arnold and noted, “I’ve been very blessed.”

Following “Ruby, Don’t Take Your Love to Town,” Rogers performed a medley of his chart-toppers, “Through the Years,” “You Decorated My Life,” and “She Believes In Me.” Rogers confessed he chooses love songs that “say what every man would like to say, and what every woman would like to hear.” The audience agreed.

Rogers also brought out surprise guest Billy Currington, and the crooners performed “Standing on the Rock of Your Love,” which was written by Vince Gill.

The audience then got a double dose of surprises as Rogers then summoned Billy Dean from back stage to sing “Buy Me a Rose.”

In keeping with such a personal, intimate performance, Rogers introduced his wife, Wanda, who was sitting in the audience. He then performed the Mike Reid-penned song “To Me” while a video montage of his identical twins, Justin and Jordan, played in the background.

Following his performance of “Lucille,” Rogers shared how his 1980 hit “Lady” was originally written by Lionel Richie for the Commodores but rejected.

Rogers continued with his iconic hit “The Gambler” and expressed appreciation for the movie’s many sequels. Rogers also expressed his appreciation for his duet partner Dolly Parton before performing “Islands in the Stream.”

Closing the show with “Sweet Music Man,” Rogers left the audience feeling as if they had been in his living room listening to songs, stories and past-times. The retrospective was a fun and entertaining look back at Rogers’ remarkable six decades of success.

And fortunately, the surprise announcement of Rogers’ upcoming Warner Bros. Records album produced by Dann Huff means there will be even more to add to this Sweet Music Man’s future retrospectives.

All Photos: Donn Jones Photography

Weekly Chart Report (5/11/2012)

Kix Brooks visited with Lexington/WBUL PD Michael Jordan (R) before a recent show. Brooks’ solo debut, “New to This Town,” is currently making the rounds at country radio.

SPIN ZONE
It’s dude central at the top of this week’s CountryBreakout Chart. Eric Church’s song about hearing “Springsteen” stays at No. 1 for a second consecutive week with a small spin gain. Georgia boys Jason Aldean (“Fly Over States”) and Luke Bryan (“Drunk On You”) are at No. 2 and 3, respectively, and still picking up new plays. It’s an incredibly tight Top 10 however, with only Eli Young Band’s “Even If It Breaks Your Heart” making forward movement to No. 5.

Slow-moving applies to the rest of the chart as well. Keith Urban’s “For You” manages to gain 210 spins, but only moves up one spot to No. 18. Similarly Jana Kramer’s “Why Ya Wanna” adds 180 new spins, but only gets a small bump to No. 23. Easton Corbin, Justin Moore, Love and Theft—all get triple digit spin increases, but only one spot higher positioning.

Outside the Top 40, things are less of a traffic jam. Blake Shelton’s new single “Over” is already to No. 42 in its second week, right on the heels of Montgomery Gentry’s “So Called Life” at No. 41. Lady Antebellum just flew into the chart at No. 63 with “Wanted You More,” and Lee Brice’s “Hard To Love” makes a promising debut at No. 68.

Frozen Playlists: KGRT, KICR, WBKR, WDXX, WKWS, WXMM, WXXK

Upcoming Singles
May 14
Jessie James/Military Man/Show Dog-Universal
Due West/Things You Can’t Do In A Car/Black River
Lee Brice/Hard To Love/Curb

May 21
Blake Shelton/Over/Warner Bros./WMN
Bill Gentry/That Kind of Live/Tenacity
Rascal Flatts/Come Wake Me Up/Big Machine
Jake Owen/The One That Got Away/RCA

• • • • •

New On The Chart—Debuting This Week
Artist/song/label — chart pos.
Lady Antebellum/Wanted You More/Capitol – 63
Lee Brice/Hard To Love/Curb – 68
Jake Owen/The One That Got Away/BNA – 77
Jaida Dreyer/Guy’s Girl/Soundstream – 78
Adam Gregory/High On You/Calusa Entertainment/GMV Nashville – 80

Greatest Spin Increase
Artist/song/label — spin+
Blake Shelton/Over/Warner Bros. – 394
Lady Antebellum/Wanted You More/Capitol – 373
The Band Perry/Postcard From Paris/Republic Nashville – 241
Toby Keith/Beers Ago/Show Dog-Universal – 236
Dierks Bentley/5-1-5-0/Capitol – 235

Most Added
Artist/song/label — New Adds
Lady Antebellum/Wanted You More/Capitol – 29
Blake Shelton/Over/Warner Bros. – 26
Lee Brice/Hard To Love/Curb – 10
Jake Owen/The One That Got Away/BNA – 10
Montgomery Gentry/So Called Life/Average Joe’s – 9
George Strait/Drinkin’ Man/MCA – 9
Little Big Town/Pontoon/Capitol – 9
Kelly Clarkson/Mr. Know It All/19-RCA – 9
Keith Urban/For You/Capitol – 8
Hunter Hayes/Wanted/Atlantic Records – 8

On Deck—Soon To Be Charting
Artist/song/label — spins
Rick Monroe/Crazy Not To/Render Records – 167
Clinton Gregory/Bridges/Melody Roundup – 164
Kristen Kelly/Ex-Old Man/Arista – 159
Florida Georgia Line/Cruise/Big Loud Mountain – 156
Craig Wayne Boyd/I Ain’t No Quitter/Big Ride – 153
Jason Sturgeon/Time Bomb/Toolpusher – 149
Bradley Gaskin/Diamonds Make Babies/Columbia – 147

WMN’s Hunter Hayes visited with KKWF in Seattle earlier in May. His latest single, “Wanted,” is climbing MusicRow’s CountryBreakout Chart at No. 40. (L-R): Mike Preston (KKWF PD), Hunter, Chris Stacey (WMN SVP of Radio Promotion)

Martina McBride recently visited with WGTY/Gettysburg’s staff and took calls from listeners with PD Scott Donato and morning host Kim Alexander. McBride’s latest single, “Marry Me” with Train’s Pat Monahan currently holds the No. 34 spot on the CountryBreakout chart. (L-R): Alexander, Donato, McBride, Cindy Ford (WGTY GM), Kirk Brechbiel (WGTY Sales Manager) and Republic Nashville’s Cliff Blake

Pistol Annies headlined KRTY/San Jose's 20th Anniversary show at Shoreline Amphitheatre a few weeks ago in Mountain View, CA. (L-R) Back: Gary Scott Thomas (KRTY Mornings), Nate Deaton (KRTY GM). Front: Angaleena Presley, Julie Stevens (KRTY PD), Miranda Lambert, Ashley Monroe, Tina Ferguson (KRTY GSM), and Larry Santiago (RCA Nashville)

Charlie Cook On Air: Mother’s Day

Sunday is Mother’s Day. This is a perfect opportunity to salute the mothers that make Country Music so special. We can start by saying that Country Radio is the mother of all radio formats but that would be too easy a line. Oh what the heck—I have already written it so I am just going to leave it in.

It is also an easy reach to talk about the Ryman Auditorium being the Mother Church of Country Music and “Mother” Maybelle Carter being the matriarch of the first family of Country Music. And lastly on this tack, Mother Country Music by Vern Gosdin—“The Voice” before there was The Voice.

The topic of the actual child-bearing mother has also played a significant role in the format.

Merle Haggard takes the pain on his shoulders for not turning out how Flossie had hoped in “Mama Tried.” If she had just taken the train to see Merle in prison, THIS would have been the perfect country song.

Johnny Paycheck took it a step further, saying Mama was a good woman except for how he turned out in “I’m The Only Hell Mama Ever Raised.”

Steve Wariner and Glen Campbell covered all the motherly duties in “The Hand that Rocked the Cradle.” A very similar topic was used for Jamie O’Neal’s ode to mama, “Somebody’s Hero.”

In the case of the Judds, the motherly duties included raising Wynonna on a moving bus. For a few years there the jury was out on how that was going to work but all is well and Wynonna’s crooning about a boy that was crazy for her was a huge hit.

Wy should have known better. Had she been listening to Shenandoah’s “Mama Knows” she would have known that she didn’t really have a chance.

My favorite country song about mothers was from 1974. Melba Montgomery left a lasting impact discussing whether mothers should be paid for all they do for their children in “No Charge.” I’ll bet that kid in the song wishes he could swallow the $15 invoice he tried to pass off for his chores. I’ll also bet that most mothers feel they are paid in full when their children become upstanding citizens of the world.

We can’t really put a price on 18 years (and many more today with kids moving back into their parents’ homes after school) but I can tell you that one of the best tear-jerking songs ever, “26 Cents” by The Wilkinsons, is the most outdated. I listened to it the other day and I am not sure if I teared up because of the mother/daughter relationship or because you cannot find a phone for 25 cents anymore.

This topic is more recently explored in Carrie Underwood’s “Don’t Forget to Remember Me” but the mother in this song apparently knows that a quarter is not going to get it done.

I love that Brad Paisley finds a way to tie in motherhood and the love he has for his children’s mother. Aren’t we all envious of how Brad sees things from another angle? Aren’t we all just flat out envious of Brad for about a thousand reasons anyway?

There are scores more Mother’s Day songs in the format and I would be remiss to exclude the one that most of the husbands should be thinking about regularly. Be sure that Trace Adkins is not the only one telling your wife that she is “One Hot Mama.”

I cannot fail to mention the mother of all mothers in the format. Andrea Swift has raised a beautiful young lady who has taken the musical world to new heights. Mrs. Swift has been at Taylor’s side through it all and we should take a second to thank her for being part of making Country Radio even more in the mainstream because of her marshaling abilities.

And for all of you who still have your mother in your life, make sure that she knows how much you love her. My mother has been gone for a long time but as she looks down on me she knows how much I still love her.

Happy Mother’s Day.