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Little Jimmy Celebrates 90

On December 18, the Grand Ole Opry celebrated the 90th birthday of Little Jimmy Dickens, a 62-year Opry veteran.  Opry member and Dickens’ good friend Brad Paisley led the audience in singing “Happy Birthday” as Opry members Jeannie Seely, Bill Anderson and Jim Ed Brown rolled out his birthday cake.


Earlier in the evening, Paisley had tweeted a photo of the cake with the message:  “Celebrating the 90th B Day of Little Jimmy tonight.  Here’s the cake, and he’s in there waiting to jump out actually.”

Throughout the show, Twitter and Facebook greetings from some of Dickens’ fellow country stars and fans from around the world poured in.  A sampling of other tweets and posts from friends:

Kix Brooks: “90?  He’s been telling all the ladies he’s 76!  Happy Birthday, Little Jimmy!  Hope it’s the best yet!”

Sara Evans: “Little Jimmy, today you are about 32,986 & ½ days old.  90 doesn’t sound too bad after hearing that, does it?  Happy Birthday, we love you!”
Marty Stuart: “Wishing Little Jimmy Dickens a very happy 90th birthday on Sunday – my sincere thanks for bringing country music to new heights.”
Fellow Opry member Trace Adkins visited Jimmy over his birthday weekend, below is a video of their conversation. During the visit, Dickens shares stories of Christmases and birthdays past growing up in West Virginia.

Fallon And Rich Holiday Duet On iTunes

Jimmy’s holiday ballad “Drunk on Christmas” has officially become a tradition on his show. Fallon reintroduced the song (12/16) on his show with country star John Rich, who came decked out in a Santa costume with golden cowboy boots. Seasons drinkings everybody!

In the wake of response to the musical pairing, the “inappropriate holiday duet” will be available exclusively on iTunes starting Dec. 21.

Written by Gerard Bradford and Jimmy Fallon, “Drunk on Christmas” is full of yuletide references and the catchy sing-along line, “gonna get drunk, drunk, drunk on Christmas.”

Chrysalis Fetes Jeff Stevens Producer Honor

(L-R) Victoria Banks, Jim McCormick, Shelley Skidmore, Jersey Ross, Abbe Nameche, Jeff Stevens, Dale Bobo and Patricia Wittmer.

Chrysalis hosted a luncheon to congratulate Jeff Stevens on his inclusion in Billboard’s Year In Music 2010 Hot Country Songs Producers list.

“2010 was a great year for Jeff,” says Chrysalis Nashville Executive VP Dale Bobo. “With another hit single (“Someone Else Calling You Baby”), a gold record for his production on Luke Bryan’s “Doin’ My Thing” album, and now being named one of the top producers in the yearend Billboard rankings. We’re also very proud that Jeff Joined the Chrysalis team this year.”
Jeff is currently producing both the forthcoming “Spring Break” project and the third full length album for Luke Bryan.

As Digital Revolution Continues, Artists Expand Reach

If, as pundits proclaimed 12 months ago, “flat is the new up,” then 2010 will have been a pretty good year for country music sales—at least on the surface. Happily, for the week ending 12/5/2010, YTD country sales (down 5.7%) are handily outperforming the all genre average (down 12.7%) compared with the same period in 2009 according to Nielsen SoundScan.

Unfortunately, beneath the calm waters there are many questions about the future. Radio’s role is morphing. Shrinking margin and shelf space are high on the worry list. Leveraging social networking strategies is a constant challenge and the merits of experimental formats and packaging such as CDs with less than 10 tracks, have stirred much discussion.

The consumer march from physical to digital product is also a closely watched metric. Country digital album sales jumped 30.5% so far this year. Overall digital album sales have only increased a modest 12.7%. These numbers highlight country’s digital album growth, but digital adoption of Nashville artists continues to trail the all genre average. Digital country album sales YTD were about 15.7% of total country album sales (11.4% in 2009); the all genre figure was 27.5% up from last year’s 21.3%. Turning the telescope these numbers also show that country consumers still prefer physical CDs by a wide margin. In fact, about 84 of every 100 purchased country albums were made of plastic.

So what developments should we expect in the race to capture consumer’s hearts, minds and pocketbooks for 2011? To find out, MusicRow asked four seasoned marketing/sales execs to share candid concerns, and offer perspective in terms of where we are today, and what we might be facing in the coming year.

The product balance between physical and digital has all our experts concerned. “The adoption of digital music by the country consumer is being outpaced by the decline of floor space at traditional retail,” says Kelly Rich, VP Sales & Marketing for Big Machine Label Group. “There is still demand for physical product and as an industry we have been forced to find new outlets to make it available. We have forged partnerships in the last few years with non-traditional accounts such as Starbucks, Justice, Hot Topic, Scholastic, Radio Shack, Rite Aid and JC Penney. We recently partnered with Target on a strategic marketing initiative surrounding Taylor Swift’s Speak Now release. This unique approach leverages the value of the music and the artist in a synergistic way that benefits both parties.”

“The percentage of digital country CDs hasn’t kept pace with the other formats,” notes veteran Joe Galante. “This is a real concern as we lose physical coverage due to accounts cutting inventory and facings. We haven’t gotten the consumer to buy into digital CD conversion at a replacement level necessary to sustain the genre, so down the road when physical drops it will lead to a revenue gap. Country has a top 10 of artists who do well in the digital format, but the consumer is picking individual songs and not buying everything. And don’t forget the difference between units and revenue. The revenue loss this year is much greater than the small drop in units might suggest.”

Sr. VP Brand Management & Sales, Warner Music Nashville, Peter Strickland sees a possible silver lining for catalog sales in the face of shrinking shelf space. “I imagine we’ll see strong catalog growth,” he says. “That retail space has been taken away from us, but we can sell physical goods through our online partners or digital catalog which is a big focus now. Also, I’ve heard comments about country becoming a digital single-oriented format. Twenty years ago physical single sales lived in a world of album sales.

People bought singles until they were won over by the artist and then bought the album. It’s not really that different today. There is probably room for both formats to survive. We should view the digital single as a way to introduce people to an artist with the goal of getting them to ultimately buy into the artist’s complete works.”

“Social media marketing is really starting to work to drive both physical and digital sales,” says Curb Records VP Sales, Benson Curb. “It looks like country music will wind up being flat or only slightly down this year and out perform overall. Not much of a surprise given the major releases this fourth quarter. Next year we should see some new acts break out.”

“Country being down a point or two compared to the overall market isn’t bad,” agrees Galante. “However when you realize we put out almost every major act we had in the last 90 days it doesn’t look promising for 2011. Also the incredible performance of the Taylor project really masked a bigger problem for country. We won’t have the same line up in 2011 to hold the volume up so it will be telling to watch first quarter drop offs compared to the prior year.”

Perhaps the year’s most headline-grabbing experiment was Warner’s series of Blake Shelton six-paks in digital and physical format. Capitol also released an eight-song Keith Urban disc in the last quarter and Big Machine launched a few digital only EPs. “Overall, the strategy for Blake Shelton was a huge success,” Strickland avows. “And the six-paks played a major role in that. They gave us visibility. For 12 months Blake’s music was everywhere, and the radio hits kept coming. People were consuming Blake Shelton product—his music, t-shirts and tickets. It all increased across the board. When we first decided to try the strategy we knew we would have a lot of eyes on us. But we never did this thinking that it would be a roadmap for every artist. We look at each artist individually and where their career is to make a decision about how to market them and what kind of packages to put out.”

“We have tested the waters with digital-only EPs to help develop our new artists,” says Rich. “It helps sustain the fan’s need for more music, while the fan base is building to a level that can successfully support a full length release.”

“We have found it tough to make the six pak model work from a profit/margin standpoint,” adds Curb. “We haven’t really tried an 8-pack as of yet, but the idea is something that might work for us with the right artist.”

“2011 is going to be a challenging year,” says Strickland. “I hope that as an industry we break more new artists. Some of the artists that have been around a decade or more are starting to move to the back burner and creating that opportunity. Labels wait to release new artist product until there is demand, so if it takes 30-40 weeks to break those new artists, it will be a slow process. Radio will continue to play a major role in reaching our consumer and letting them know what we have to offer. It’s about coordinating your efforts at radio with respect to their websites, Facebook pages and other social networks that change on a daily basis. How do we merge all that to give us triple the audience from the terrestrial format alone? That is going to be key going forward, utilizing radio to reach an even larger audience than what people hear over the air.”

“Overall, there is yet to be another tool as effective as radio in building awareness for our music,” sums Rich. “And as the digital adoption rate continues to increase and radio’s delivery mechanisms morph, so will the effectiveness of their reach. That said, we embrace and utilize every form of media/social media available to us. Our philosophy is the music business is full of amazing opportunities and we refuse to think differently. Great things can still come from a well executed plan.”

A new book, The Idea Writers by Teressa Iezzi, while aimed directly at copywriters offers advice useful to the entertainment industry, especially if you think of artists as brands. “You’re not just making something that will compete with other brands and other messages created by brands,” Iezzi says. “You’re making something to compete with every other piece of content, every other media experience that a person has during her waking hours….So copywriters [read artists] have a gargantuan challenge to be relevant, but also a great opportunity to be original, to interact with an audience, to have people talk about, spread, and engage with the things they create.” Hopefully, Nashville marketers and the artists [brands] they represent will continue to challenge consumers through brand creativity.

The Judds and Garth Bid Farewell To Larry King

Garth Brooks and The Judds were among Larry King’s final guests, as his venerable CNN show comes to an end this week. Wynonna and Naomi Judd discussed their reunion/farewell tour. Brooks talked about his ongoing shows at the Wynn in Las Vegas, and flood relief benefits opening tomorrow night in Nashville.

See video below. More here.

Jamey Johnson Gets Gold Plaque, Critical Praise

Jamey Johnson’s The Guitar Song has been certified gold by the RIAA and is making numerous best albums of 2010 lists. The 25-song double disc set came in at No. 5 on lists in Rolling Stone and SPIN. Hear Johnson talk about the songs here.

The UMG Nashville project received two Grammy nominations, including Best Country Album and Best Male Country Vocal Performance for “Macon,” with Johnson garnering a third nod for Best Country Collaboration with Vocals for “Bad Angel” with Dierks Bentley and Miranda Lambert.

“My dream already came true,” Johnson says of the accolades. “All I ever wanted was just to get to ride around and sing country music. It’s cool when things like that happen along the way. Because those are the things I never thought I could achieve. Whether or not it’s gold or platinum or hell, diamond for that matter, it wouldn’t surprise me anymore. I’ll just keep doing what I do. I wake up every day and go play some more country music and have another drink.”

Johnson was one of many Nashville performers at the recent Kennedy Center Honors, where he performed a tribute to honoree Merle Haggard. He also met honoree Oprah Winfrey, who joked he should visit her father Vernon’s Nashville barber shop for an eight-dollar haircut.

In early 2011, Johnson will join Kid Rock on his nationwide Born Free tour, opening Jan. 15 in front of a crowd of 60,000 at Detroit’s Ford Field.

Photos: Dallas Frazier; Crazy 8’s

The Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum recently (12/11) honored Dallas Frazier in its quarterly Poets and Prophets: Legendary Country Songwriters series. Frazier discussed his life, career and extensive repertoire, which includes “There Goes My Everything,” “Elvira,” “Beneath Still Waters” and “What’s Your Mama’s Name.”

(L-R): Museum Editor Michael Gray, Dan Penn, John D. Loudermilk, Dallas Frazier, Connie Smith, Whitey Shafer and Red Lane.

••••••

Local songplugging group the Crazy 8’s invited MusicRow Publisher David Ross to its recent lunch meeting for a discussion of music industry issues.

L-R: Jason Krupek, Juli Griffith, chef Arnold Myint, Liz Morin, David Ross, and Drew Alexander

Davidson Named Hot Country Songwriter of the Year

(L-R): EMI’s Hannah Post, Missy Wilson, Josh Van Valkenburg, Dallas Davidson, EMI EVP/GM Ben Vaughn, Laura Wright, and “Big” Tom Luteran.

EMI Music Publishing’s Dallas Davidson will be honored in this year’s Billboard year-end issue as the Hot Country Songwriter of the Year. The award recognizes his nine charted country singles including multiple No. 1 country hits “That’s How Country Boys Roll” (Billy Currington), “Rain Is A Good Thing” (Luke Bryan), “Gimmie That Girl” (Joe Nichols), “All About Tonight” (Blake Shelton), and “All Over Me” (Josh Turner). Davidson also received multiple BMI Awards this year with additional chart-toppers including “Start A Band” (Brad Paisley/Keith Urban), “Put A Girl In It” (Brooks & Dunn), “Honky Tonk Badonkadonk” (Trace Adkins), and “Barefoot and Crazy” (Jack Ingram).

Davidson recently appeared in the TODAY Show Weekend’s “Secrets of Songwriters” special to talk about the tricks of his craft and was also awarded the CMA Triple Play Award earlier this year for “Rain Is A Good Thing,” “That’s How Country Boys Roll” and “Gimmie That Girl.”

Additionally, Davidson recently celebrated the release of the full-length album, Michael Waddell’s Bone Collector: The Brotherhood Album featuring Rhett Akins and Dallas Davidson (Warner Bros.), a collection of songs written by Davidson and Rhett Akins.

CMA Songwriter Series; CMT Radio Live On Tour

CMA SONGWRITERS SERIES PLAYS LIBRARY OF CONGRESS

Bob DiPiero, Brett James, Little Big Town and Lori McKenna headlined the most recent CMA Songwriters Series, held in the Coolidge Auditorium of the Library of Congress in Washington, DC on December 4. This was the second CMA-produced songwriters event held at the Library in 2010, with plans in the works for another one in Spring 2011. (L-R): DiPiero; Little Big Town’s Karen Fairchild; James; McKenna; Library of Congress’ Chief of the Music Division Sue Vita; Pres./CEO The Smith-Free Group and CMA Ex-Officio Board Member Jim Free; Library of Congress’ Head of Acquisitions and Processing Section Denise Gallo, Ph.D; Special Asst. to the Librarian of Congress Suzanne Hogan; and Little Big Town’s Jimi Westbrook, Kimberly Schlapman and Phillip Sweet. Photo: Mitchell Layton

• • •

CMT RADIO LIVE WITH CODY ALAN ON TOUR
CMT Radio Live with Cody Alan was in Decatur, Ill Wednesday night (12/8) as part of the CMT Radio Live with Cody Alan on Tour. The city won the opportunity to host this free concert with the “Bring CMT Radio Live with Cody Alan to Your City” competition on Eventful. Alan and affiliate, WDZQ/95Q-FM in Decatur, were broadcasting live and hosted a concert featuring Justin Moore along with Thompson Square and Brett Eldredge at the Lincoln Square Theater. (L-R) back: Westwood One’s Sue Falco; WDZQ’s Tricia LeVeck; VP Radio MTV Music Group Lori Megown; Eldredge; WDZQ’s Rhiannon; CMT’s Sr. Dir. Music Programming & Promotion Stephen Linn; Thompson Square’s Shawna Thompson; and WDZQ’s Toby Tucker. Front: Moore; Alan; WDZQ’s Kimmy K; and Thompson Square’s Keifer Thompson. Photo: Dingo O’Brien

Sales Engine Whirring As Holiday Looms

Fa-la-la-la-la_____        la–la-la-la.
That familiar melodic snippet nicely sums the panoramic view from your Scribe’s lofty perch, high upon the holiday hilltops watching the SoundScan ticker tape turn. A dozen CDs passed the 20k benchmark on the Top Current Country chart this week, and country’s album sales YTD deficit continued to improve from -6.1% to -5.7%.

There’s been a lot of talk about the balance between digital and physical for country consumers. According to Nielsen SoundScan, 15.74% of 2010 country album sales have been digital. Up about 5% or so from last year, but clearly physical sales continue to own a large share of the sales pie. Loss of shelf space at retail outlets, is certainly an issue to watch going forward.

Tim McGraw’s Number One Hits, caps the hefty onslaught of mainstream country debuts this holiday season. McGraw lands at No. 6 on the Current Country list with sales of over 40k. Ms. Swift tops the chart, by a huge margin shifting over 182,000 units followed in the next two positions by Keith Urban (No. 2; 59k+) and Rascal Flatts (No. 3; 57k+) both enjoying third week sales of their new packages. Jason Aldean’s new project, in its fifth week, is No. 4; moving 47k+ with an RTD (release-to-date) total of 438k. Sugarland’s Incredible Machine now completing its 7th week (No. 5; 47k) has RTD of over 570k.

Also deserving mention is The Band Perry logging in at No. 12 this week and ringing the registers with over 22k album units. TBP is also No. 1 on the country tracks chart. The sibling trio’s “If I Die Young” enjoyed over 47k downloads this week and the song has an impressive RTD total of almost 1.05 million!! Other top track tossers in chart order include Sugarland, Kenny Chesney, Taylor Swift, Tim McGraw, ZBB, Jason Aldean, Blake Shelton and Aldean (again).

Four weeks remain, three of which should post “up” numbers as we approach Dec. 25. Currently (through week ended 12-5-10) country has tallied about 37 million album units leaving about nine million more to go to reach last year’s year-end 46 million total.

Give the gift of music!