Tag Archive for: featured-2

Swift Leads Digital Download Sales Race

According to the RIAA’s latest tally, Taylor Swift is the top-selling digital single artist with over 22.5 million career song downloads to date.
Though it is early in 2011, she is facing competition for the most career downloads from Lady Gaga (20 million digital singles as of February), Rihanna (19 million) and the Black Eyed Peas (17.5 million).
Swift sold more digital downloads during the past decade (2000-2009) than any other RIAA certified artist.
Additionally, all three of Swift’s Big Machine Records albums are RIAA certified triple-Platinum or higher with Taylor Swift (2006) 4x multi-Platinum, Fearless (2008) 6x-multi Platinum, and Speak Now 3x multi-Platinum.
 

Kenny Chesney Joins BMI

Pictured at Texas Stadium during the Dallas stop on Chesney’s 2011 Going Coastal Tour are (l-r): Phil Graham, Senior Vice President, Writer/Publisher Relations, BMI; Clay Bradley, Assistant Vice President, Writer/Publisher Relations, BMI Nashville ; Kenny Chesney; Troy Tomlinson, President & CEO, Sony/ATV Music Publishing Nashville; and Jody Williams, Vice President, Writer/Publisher Relations, BMI Nashville. Photo by Glen Rose


Kenny Chesney has joined the BMI family of songwriters. The superstar has been building a repertoire of hits for more than a decade, leading to his recent twenty-first No. 1 “Somewhere With You.”
His long list of hits includes “No Shoes, No Shirt, No Problems,” “The Good Stuff,” “I Go Back,” “Don’t Blink,” “There Goes My Life,” “She Thinks My Tractor’s Sexy,” “Living in Fast Forward,” and “Everybody Wants to Go to Heaven.”
After taking a break from full-scale touring last year, Chesney recently launched his biggest outing to-date with numerous stadium shows on the schedule.

Star-Studded Events Calendar

Martina McBride is putting on her party shoes...she'll be attending the Leadership Music Dale Franklin Award Gala, and the Best Cellars Dinner.


Best Cellars Dinner—April 25
The twelfth annual Eco-Energy Best Cellars Dinner will be Monday, April 25 at the Hutton Hotel with celebrity guests Blake Shelton, Martina McBride, Kix Brooks, Amy Grant, Big Kenny, Jonathan Cain, Lisa Hartman Black and Clint Black, Kellie Pickler and Dierks Bentley.
These best sellers will team with some of wine’s best cellars for the fundraiser for the TJ Martell Foundation. Among the wine collectors participating are Mary and Sam Beall (Blackberry Farm), Jamie and Larry Beckwith, Tom Black, Jim Clendenen, Chantel and John Esposito, Patricia and Joe Harbison, Nancy and Billy Ray Hearn, Jeff Hopmayer, Irv Lingo, Eliza Kraft Olander, Deby and Keith Pitts and Bill Shea. The wines will be paired with a four course, gourmet dinner prepared by guest chef Ken Frank from La Toque in Napa, California.
The event will begin with an “All Things That Sparkle” reception and silent auction sponsored by David Yurman with sparkling wine provided by Italian Wine Merchants. During dinner, Big Kenny will conduct a live auction.
Music Supervisor Speed Networking—April 19
A limited number of tickets are still available for the Nashville Film Festival and CMA speed networking event featuring top music supervisors. Set for tomorrow (4/19) from 6:30-9 PM at the CMA offices, the event includes food and drinks in an informal setting. This is NOT a pitch session, so please do NOT bring CDs. Tickets are $150/person. Call Ted Crockett (615) 742-2500 with credit card information. More info here.
Grammy Block Party—May 10
The Recording Academy® Nashville Chapter will host its 13th annual Grammy Block Party on Tuesday, May 10 at Owen Bradley Park adjacent to the Music Row roundabout. The performance line-up is a showcase for Nashville’s musical diversity, featuring Laura Bell Bundy, The Civil Wars, Denny Jiosa, Jerrod Niemann, Old Crow Medicine Show, Royal Tailor band and Chancellor Warhol. The event is free for Recording Academy members and $20 for non-members; those signing up for membership at the event will also be admitted for free. Gates open at 4:30 and live music begins at 5:00.
Leadership Music Dale Franklin Award Gala—May 17
Brad Paisley and Keith Urban have been added to the list of superstars set to salute the Country Music Association when the organization is honored at the Leadership Music Dale Franklin Award gala dinner on Tuesday, May 17 at the Renaissance Hotel. They join previously announced performers Little Big Town, Martina McBride, and Ronnie Milsap, as well as special guests Mayor Karl Dean and Metro Nashville Director of Schools Dr. Jesse Register. Reservations to attend the invitation-only fundraiser must be made by May 1. For more information, contact the Leadership Music office at [email protected] or (615) 770-7090.
 

Blake Shelton's "Honey Bee" Treats The Single Like A Full Length Album Release

Peter Strickland


This year’s post-Academy of Country Music Awards sales showed little, if any, overall sales bump (week ended 4/10/2011) according to Nielsen SoundScan. Country album sales inched a meager 1% over the previous week. However, Warner’s Blake Shelton, who debuted “Honey Bee” on the show and co-hosted with Reba, was a notable exception. His new single lodged firmly at No. 1 on the  country digital tracks chart selling almost 139k downloads, more than double the sales of the No. 2 track. Shelton, also posted six additional country digital tracks in the Top 100 all of which showed growth from the previous week of 10%-135%. “Honey Bee” is now the highest selling debut single by a country male soloist—ever.
“Singles often take big jumps based upon TV,” says Warner Music Nashville Sr. VP Brand Management and Sales, Peter Strickland. “Even when a track is played within the context of a show and not necessarily only with a performance, we see big digital spikes.”
Digital tracks usually have a Tuesday debut, but this writer noticed that immediately after Shelton’s Sunday night ACM debut, an email arrived alerting that the song was available at iTunes for purchase. Clearly, a plan was in place. And when SoundScan revealed the single’s impressive sales results, we wanted to find out more. MusicRow “tracked” Strickland while on the road in New York City where he graciously shared some of the behind-the-scenes elements leading to Blake’s strong showing.
“The timing was perfect for a premiere on the ACMs,” explains Strickland. “It gave us some breathing room after the last single to lead into a new single from a new project. Once the performance was confirmed on the ACMs we began building our plan. Knowing how people react to a TV appearance, performance or a song being featured we said, ‘This song has to be available digitally at the same time that the performance takes place.’ We went to our partners and gave them the opportunity to have the track available ‘off cycle’ which would be anything other than a Tuesday.”
Strickland notes, “It was delicate because radio wouldn’t have the single either. So the add date was based around the TV show as well. We delivered the song to radio on Sunday just before the performance, so they could immediately play it. Everything was timed around the performance and making the single available for people to buy. Part of the strategy was that if I could get Blake into the Top 10 overall digitally it puts him on the front page everywhere and then the curiosity factor happens. You know Katy Perry is No. 1 and Blake is No. 2 or 3. People ask, ‘Who is that guy?’ People shop off of the chart.
“All our online strategy was put in place as well. We bought advertising online, engaged the socials, the email database and put some of the older tracks on sale. We actually treated the single like we would a full length album release. We went out and bought TV spots in the Top 10 Blake Shelton markets advertising the single during the show. So people saw the performance and then heard, ‘You Can Buy It Now.’ Those things are hard to measure. If we didn’t buy TV advertising would we still have been at that number? It is hard to say. But taken collectively, it gave us a huge debut, and continued Shelton’s momentum growth.”
All marketers would rather sell an album unit with its higher revenue/profit as compared to a track unit. But with album sales, and the shelf space the physical portion of those sales require, shrinking faster than an over-dried Wal-Mart t-shirt the question arises: Are we entering a new phase for track strategy? “Digital singles are funny,” says Stickland. “You usually release them without a mass audience which means you are not going to have a big first week. It’s not treated like an album in the sense of getting the record all the way up the charts to reach critical mass before making it available in order to get big first week numbers. But we have to figure out how to do things differently. Treating this single as we would an album was a new way of thinking. We are still collecting pennies, but at the end of the day it’s going to lead to a bigger place. It might be an early upfront investment on the full length release in the future or maybe it is about selling five to seven million singles. Either way I’m not going to try and stop the consumer. I want to learn from their habits and hopefully give them more of what they want, when they want it.”
Over a year ago when WMG announced they would release a series of six track album packages on Shelton, there was a lot of marketplace discussion, not all positive. But Shelton’s star has undeniably risen and he’s received an avalanche of publicity. “It was March 2010 when we released the first six pak and wanted to do something different for Blake,” says Strickland. “It appears our decisions were fruitful in many areas, especially increasing Blake’s overall exposure in the marketplace. His appearance on The Voice is a tribute to this career building. Putting him in front of the country consumer and the fringe country consumer has created opportunities. Finally, people have had the opportunity based upon the number of press hits he’s had in the last 12 months to see his personality in addition to the music that he delivers to his base. If you are going to grow a career you have to hit that fringe audience.”
Can treating a single release as if it were a full album make economic sense in some way? “Yes,” says Strickland. “If you aren’t careful with the spend you can be losing money, but at the end of the day it is an investment and part of the marketing strategy for our format’s artists and the various revenue streams they produce. As an industry, we are investing in the artists and more than just record sales.”

Jack White Named Music City Ambassador

Jack White (L) receives the honor from Mayor Dean (R). Photo credit: Joshua Black Wilkins


Mayor Karl Dean and the Nashville Music Council honored Jack White and his Third Man Records with the inaugural Music City Ambassador Award on Saturday, April 16.
“Today’s award recognizes an individual who carries Nashville’s diverse musical message worldwide,” explained Mayor Dean at the ceremony at Third Man Records. “Jack White’s individual talent and unique creative spirit bridges gaps between genres and generations and I couldn’t be more pleased to thank him for his work on behalf of the music industry and its hometown.”
White accepted the honor saying, “Every day we’re excited to be in a city that truly fosters local music and businesses and new ideas. I don’t know another town whose mayor is on the board of its music council.”
Mayor Dean’s co-chair of the NMC, Mary Ann McCready, President of Flood, Bumstead, McCready & McCarthy added, “Jack is a global superstar whose music is successful and celebrated in virtually every genre of music. Jack and Third Man calling Nashville their home is a testament to the city’s creative class.”
The Ambassador Award is voted on by the 50-plus members of the NMC.

 Criteria requires that the recipient be a resident of Middle Tennessee with a career in any branch of the music industry, and demonstrate commitment to Nashville’s unique creative climate and musical diversity.
The Ambassador Award is one of several new initiatives set forth by the Nashville Music Council, which also includes the Entrepreneur Center partnership unveiled last week, and other forthcoming announcements.

Eye On Idol (4/15/11)

Wednesday (4/13) night’s American Idol was themed Songs From the Movies, and kicked off with appropriately dramatic footage of Pia Toscano’s surprise elimination last week. Y’know, like a pivotal scene in a movie. So I figured we were in for a white knuckled, mind-bending results show on Thursday (4/14).
The result, however, proved anti-climactic.
Nashville-via-Huntsville, Ala. native Paul McDonald wound up being the first guy to exit the Top 13 competition, which I hate to say wasn’t a huge surprise. He faced the unenviable task of singing in the first slot on Wednesday night, which past results have shown to be a disadvantage. He then turned in a less-than-inspired version of Bob Seger’s “Old Time Rock & Roll.” Tough odds to overcome.
But I genuinely like Paul, and could see him making a career  fronting a Wilco or My Morning Jacket type outfit. He’s probably not destined to compete with Katy Perry for pop radio airplay, and thank goodness for that.
Joining McDonald in the bottom three were Stefano Langone and Haley Reinhart, both of whom have spent some time there already. If this was American Idol 1993, Langone would be killing it. But as he seems to traffic almost exclusively in a brand of R&B that hasn’t been widely popular since the Clinton presidency (like Boyz II Men’s “End of the Road”), his chances don’t seem too great.
Reinhart, on the other hand, has started to pick up a little steam after big performances of “Bennie and the Jets” and “Piece of My Heart,” but still got the judges’ only criticism on Wednesday. After a solid interpretation of Blondie’s “Call Me,” the judges seized on her song choice and said it wasn’t the best showcase for her voice. Which the American public hears as “You don’t deserve to be here” when compared to the soft praise given to everyone else.
Thankfully Reinhart got a chance to redeem herself on the results show, partnering up with Casey Abrams for the jazz standard “Moanin’.” The two played off one another wonderfully, Reinhart’s voice alternating between a silky coo and that trademark throaty growl. In the middle breakdown, both got a chance to show off their improvisational scat-singing skills to the audience’s delight. A memorable performance.
Scott McCreery and Lauren Alaina have both still avoided the bottom three so far by sticking to their instincts. McCreery teased us a little bit this week with a couple bars of Nilsson’s “Everybody’s Talkin’,” which would have been amazing, but opted instead for the safer “I Cross My Heart” by George Strait. Alaina chose to tackle the Miley Cyrus hit “The Climb,” and sang it winningly. I suspect both will be around for some time yet.
Jacob Lusk gave one of his better performances with “Bridge Over Troubled Water,” a song that Iovine actually suggested to him during rehearsals. I don’t see him winning the competition, but it was enough for the night. And Abrams took yet another left turn with “Nature Boy” a la Nat King Cole, which was strangely subdued for him but interesting nonetheless.
But for now, it looks like James Durbin is trying to run away with this thing. He tried out Sammy Hagar’s “Heavy Metal” from the film of same name, and was joined by guitarist extraordinaire Zakk Wylde of Black Label Society. We’re talking serious metal cred, folks. And what’s more, voters no doubt got a kick out of seeing him tell Jimmy Iovine (respectfully) that he wasn’t going to change his song choice, and proceeding to knock it out of the park.
It’s the story of a one-time underdog, overcoming the odds to emerge victorious. Now that’s a movie I’d watch.

Weekly Chart Report (4/15/11)



Columbia Nashville's Bradley Gaskin recently visited The Bull (WDXB 102.5) in Birmingham, AL and also performed an acoustic set including his debut single “Mr. Bartender” in the "Bull Lounge.” (L-R): Gaskin and WDXB PD Tom Hanrahan.


SPIN ZONE
Rascal Flatts ascends to the CountryBreakout Chart’s No. 1 spot with “I Won’t Let Go,” making the band’s second No. 1 single since its 2010 move to Big Machine Records. Kenny Chesney’s “Live A Little” is within striking distance at No. 2, trailed closely by Keith Urban’s “Without You” at No. 3. The Top 10 has a handful of new entries, including Toby Keith’s “Somewhere Else” at No. 8, Justin Moore’s “If Heaven Wasn’t So Far Away” at No. 9, and Taylor Swift’s “Mean” at No. 10. The next few weeks could get very interesting as these relatively young singles battle for position.
The buzz over Blake Shelton’s “Honey Bee” has become a full on roar, as the singer’s latest jumps 20 positions to No. 35 in its second week on the chart. And a round of applause for the folks at Broken Bow and Stoney Creek, because they’re really on a roll. Following a big No. 1 from Thompson Square, superstar-in-waiting Jason Aldean’s “Dirt Road Anthem makes its official debut at No. 57. Not far behind at No. 62, Aldean’s labelmate James Wesley has one of the fastest rising singles of his young career with “Didn’t I.”
Also making their debuts are Randy Houser’s “In God’s Time” at No. 74, Margaret Durante’s “Maybe Tonight” at No. 78, Daisy Mallory’s “Don’t Grow Up Too Fast” at No. 79, and Carrie Underwood’s “Songs Like This” at No. 80.
Frozen Playlists: KAIR, KITX, KLQL, KNCQ, KTNT, KTTI, WCMS, WKSR, WKWS, WTCR, WYVY





Upcoming Singles
April 18
Jake Owen/Barefoot Blue Jean Night/RCA
Kelly Parkes/Girl With A Fishing Rod/Lofton Creek
Jaron & The Long Road To Love/It’s A Good Thing/Jaronwood/Universal Republic/Nine North
Margaret Durante/Maybe Tonight/Stroudavarious
Jason Aldean/Dirt Road Anthem/Broken Bow
Billy Currington/Love Done Gone/Mercury
Stealing Angels/Paper Heart/Skyville
Acklen Park/I Love You, I Need You/Otter Rapids
April 25
Ash Bowers/I Still Believe In That/Stoney Creek
Mark Cooke/I Love It/CVR/Quarterback
Brantley Gilbert/Country Must Be Country Wide/Valory
Randy Houser/In God’s Time/Show Dog-Universal
Rodney Atkins/Take A Back Road/Curb
Brother Trouble/Summer’s Little Angel/Blaster/Bigger Picture
Jennette McCurdy/Generation Love/Capitol
Susan Hickman/Just Missed This Train/4 L Clover
Corey Wagar/Hurricane/GTR
New On The Chart—Debuting This Week
Artist/song/label — chart pos.
Jason Aldean/Dirt Road Anthem/Broken Bow — 57
Randy Houser/In God’s Time/Show Dog-Universal — 74
Margaret Durante/Maybe Tonight/Emrose — 78
Daisy Mallory/Don’t Grow Up Too Fast/Front Water — 79
Carrie Underwood/Songs Like This/Arista — 80
• • • • •
Greatest Spin Increase
Artist/song/label — spin+
Blake Shelton/Honey Bee/Warner Bros./WMN — 587
Luke Bryan/Country Girl/Capitol — 404
Jason Aldean/Dirt Road Anthem/Broken Bow — 345
Taylor Swift/Mean/Big Machine — 316
Trace Adkins/Just Fishin’/Show Dog-Universal — 261
On Deck—Soon To Be Charting
Artist/song/label — spins
Ashley Gearing/Five More Minutes/Curb — 198
Austin Hicks/I Still Pledge Allegiance/Lick — 186
Mark Cooke/I Love It/CVR — 183
Rachel Holder/Chocolate/All Entertainment — 176
Jason Michael Carroll/Numbers/For The Lonely/Quarterback — 162
Most Added
Artist/song/label — New Adds
Blake Shelton/Honey Bee/Warner Bros./WMN — 32
Jason Aldean/Dirt Road Anthem/Broken Bow — 28
James Wesley/Didn’t I/Broken Bow — 19
Reba/When Love Gets A Hold Of You/Starstruck/Valory — 14
Lucy Angel/Serious/GForce — 10
Randy Houser/In God’s Time/Show Dog-Universal — 9
Sugarland/Tonight/Mercury — 9

Stealing Angels recently stopped by WBEE/Rochester, NY to share their new single, “Paper Heart.” Pictured (L-R): Skyville President Kevin Herring, WBEE’s Billy Kidd, Jennifer Wayne, WBEE’s Bob Barnett, Skvyille East Regional Theresa Ford, and Tayla Lynn and Caroline Cutbirth


WKSR/Pulaksi, TN secured Eric Lee Beddingfield and others to perform at the banquet for the 10th Annual Governor's One Shot Turkey Hunt. The hunt is an annual fundraiser for the TWRA (Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency) and benefits youth hunting in Tennessee. Pictured (L-R): Randy Barber of Rebel Dawg Records, Jason Phillips (Beddingfield’s hunt guide), Beddingfield, Wes Barker and manager Craig Campbell.


The Dirt Drifters stuck around Las Vegas the day following the ACM Awards to visit with KCYE. Pictured (L-R): Matt Fleener, Ryan Fleener, Cadillac Jack (MD/PM), Nick Diamond, Jeremy Little, Jeff Middleton, WMN VP Promotion Bob Reeves, and KCYE OM/PD Justin Chase

Former Managers Sue Rascal Flatts

Former Rascal Flatts managers Turner NicholsTrey Turner and Doug Nichols—are suing the three band members in Davidson County Chancery Court reports Courthousenewsservice.com. The managers are represented by Jay Bowen with Bowen & Unger.
According to the complaint, the management firm whose oral agreement with the band ended last February after more than a decade, is demanding 15% from the act’s upcoming tour which Turner Nichols claims they negotiated and ends June 2013.
The Turner Nichols filing states, “The plaintiff has guided the defendants’ careers to success as internationally famed singers and recording artists, as multi-platinum record sellers, and as tremendously successful touring artists who have achieved astounding financial success, earning hundreds of millions of dollars.”
In addition to 15% from the tour which extends for the next two years, Turner Nichols requests commissions based upon TV appearances and DVDs it claims to have negotiated and is asking the court for a declaratory judgment and damages for breach of contract and unjust enrichment.
MusicRow reported the split between Rascal Flatts and Turner Nichols on Feb. 7, 2011. At that time the band commented, “We will always consider Trey and Doug to be a part of our family. We have nothing but the utmost respect and appreciation for the work that we’ve done together over the past ten years.” Trey Turner and Doug Nichols were also quoted saying, “The Flatts are great guys and will always be part of our family as well. We wish them nothing but the best.”
On March 10, MusicRow then reported that Rascal Flatts had joined with Clarence Spalding’s, Spalding Entertainment for management. The band is currently signed to Big Machine Records. They were previously part of Lyric Street Records until the label unexpectedly shuttered last year.
In a statement released today (4/14) Rascal Flatts said, “We are disappointed they have chosen to file as we had hoped to address these issues privately, however we hope that this can be resolved amicably.”

Sugarland Station Sweetens iheartradio Lineup

Fresh from winning the ACM’s Top Vocal Duo of the Year Award, Sugarland’s Jennifer Nettles and Kristian Bush have debuted their web-based Sugarland Radio station for Clear Channel and Frontline Management’s Artist Personal Experience (A.P.E.) Radio. The station went online April 11 and can be heard at www.iheartradio.com.
“I’m so excited to give fans this look behind the curtain at Sugarland and show what makes Kristian and me tick,” says Nettles. “People may be surprised about some of our musical influences, and we’ve got some great stories to share.”
Programmed by Nettles and Bush, Sugarland Radio features the band’s hits as well as an eclectic selection of their favorite songs from rockers Arcade Fire, Coldplay, Band of Horses, The Cure, and R.E.M., to country stalwarts Steve Earle and Emmylou Harris. Additionally listeners will get to hear Nettles and Bush discuss songwriting, stories from the road, nostalgic items from their youth, charitable causes, and their musical origins.
As part of Clear Channel’s iheartradio network, Sugarland Radio joins a diverse lineup that includes stations programmed by Kenny Chesney, Maroon 5, Weezer, and the Eagles.
 

Music Council Partners With Entrepreneur Center

(L-R) Janet Miller, Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce; Butch Spyridon, Nashville Convention & Visitors Bureau; Nashville Mayor Karl Dean; Tawn Albright, Rockhouse Partners; Joe Galante, former chairman, Sony BMG Nashville; Mary Ann McCready, Flood Bumstead McCready & McCarthy; and Michael Burcham, Entrepreneur Center. Photo: Judith Hill


The Nashville Music Council and Nashville Entrepreneur Center have launched a partnership to provide direct support to local start-ups in music, digital media and entertainment. The partnership includes a formalized agreement to work together to nurture and support business ideas with the potential to impact the digital media and music entertainment sector.
“Cities seeking to grow and prosper in the 21st century have to support innovation and entrepreneurship in key industries,” said Mayor Karl Dean at an April 12 event. “The music industry, in particular, is ripe for new ideas and new business models that will help shape its transition into the digital age. This partnership between the Music Council and the Entrepreneur Center will help ensure that the future leader and leading ideas of the music industry are being cultivated right here in Nashville.”
Led by Vanderbilt faculty member and accomplished business leader Michael Burcham, Nashville’s Entrepreneur Center is an incubator for ideas and business start-ups targeting four distinct areas for local growth: health care, technology, social enterprise and digital media & entertainment. Since its official launch in the summer of 2010 with private and public support, the EC now encompasses more than 8,000 square feet of physical space and a staff of successful industry leaders. The EC is the “front door” for new entrepreneurs, helping them navigate the available options and resources.
The new joint initiative is multi-faceted. It includes events held by the EC for the Music Council where entrepreneurs will have the opportunity to obtain valuable executive-level interaction and feedback on business plan presentations. The EC will also sponsor a formal mentoring program for the Music Council that will pair an industry leader with a start-up(s) venture. Four experienced and successful mentors have been elected to kick off the official mentor program:
>>Co-founder and Managing Partner of Rockhouse Partners Tawn Albright
>>ASCAP President Tim DuBois
>>Former Chairman of Sony Music Nashville Joe Galante
>>Entrepreneur in Residence of Claritas Capital Mark Montgomery
Have a start-up idea?
Requests for meeting and applications can be obtained via the EC website, www.entrepreneurcenter.com, or through email at [email protected].
“The music and entertainment industry is an entrepreneurial business,” said Mary Ann McCready, partner at Flood, Bumstead, McCready & McCarthy Inc. and co-chair of the Nashville Music Council. “It makes complete sense for the Music Council to support its local entrepreneurs, and the EC is a great vehicle for doing this.”