Friday, December 21, 2007

Brad Paisley's Christmas Plans

(www.gactv.com)

Brad Paisley has been looking ahead to Christmas for some time now, as he plans on luring his whole family to his Tennessee farm for the holidays. "I'm looking forward to throwing down a gauntlet and saying, 'We're gonna start traditions,' because in my family we're the first ones with a baby. So I'm looking forward to being able to say, 'Okay folks, this is how it's gonna be. We built this nice farmhouse and you're gonna come see us if you wanna see this baby.' He's gonna be 10 months old at Christmas, and it's old enough to tear paper off things, so that's a start. That'll be fun."

**RESULTS** Top 20 Countdown

Top 20 Countdown
Week of December 23 - December 29
 
 
1     Our Song
       Taylor Swift

2     Garth Brooks
       More Than A Memory
 

3     Billy Ray Cyrus / Miley Cyrus
       Ready, Set Don't Go

4     Josh Turner
       Firecracker
 
 
5     George Strait
       How 'Bout Them Cowgirls
 
 
6     Sugarland
       Stay

 
7     Toby Keith
       Love Me If You Can
 
 
8     Brooks & Dunn
       God Must Be Busy
 
 
9     Eagles
       How Long
 
 
10    Reba McEntire / Kelly Clarkson
        Because Of You
 
 
11    Sara Evans
        As If
 
 
12    Brad Paisley
        Online


13    Kenny Chesney
        Don't Blink
 
 
14    Carrie Underwood
       So Small
 
 
15    Jason Aldean
       Laughed Until We Cried
 
 
16    Brooks & Dunn
        Proud of the House We Built


17    Rascal Flatts
        Winner At A Losing Game
 
 
18    Gary Allan
        Watching Airplanes
 
 
19    Alan Jackson
        Small Town Southern Man
 
 
20    Craig Morgan
        International Harvester


The following songs ranked 21 - 25 did not make our top 20 and will be eliminated during next weeks voting.  However, they will return upon members requests and/or future polls:
 
Chris Cagle - What Kinda Gone
Chuck Wicks - Stealing Cinderella
Rodney Atkins - Cleaning This Gun (Come On In Boy)
Keith Urban - Everybody
Montgomery Gentry - What Do Ya Think About That
 
 

Carrie Underwood's Christmas Plans

 
Carrie Underwood says that her fame and fortune haven't changed the way her family celebrates the holidays, except maybe in the quality of gifts she gives. "Christmases are pretty much the same," she tells Dial-Global. "Generally it's just the family hanging out at a family member's house. I would imagine the gifts from me have gotten a bit better over the past couple of years [laughs] . But we pretty much just do the same things that we always did. And I know my family is very frustrated because they don't know what to get me."

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Early Member of Hank Williams' Drifting Cowboys Dead at 79

 
James Ervin "Jimmy" Porter, one of the first members of Hank Williams' Drifting Cowboys band, died Saturday (Dec. 15) at his home in Hoover, Ala. He was 79. In his self-published autobiography, My Life as a Musician, he tells of learning to play the electric steel guitar when he was 12 and joining Williams' group a year later. "Dad took me to Hank's and we played several songs and he sang. The only song I remember was his theme song, 'Happy Rovin' Cowboy.' I played 'Steel Guitar Rag' and a couple of other songs, and Hank offered me the job." Porter said he backed Williams "on and off" from 1941 until late 1943 or early 1944. He later played with Curly Fox and Texas Ruby on tour and on the Grand Ole Opry. He was buried in Montgomery, Ala.

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Lonestar Performs for Armed Forces TV

 
Lonestar will join Aaron Neville and gospel/pop group Take 6 in a special musical tribute to our men and women in the Armed Forces.

Holiday Notes from Home, hosted by Lorianne Crook and Charlie Chase and produced by the Air Force Reserve, will be broadcast to the soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines and Coast Guardsmen serving our country around the world.

In the show, taped at the Grand Ole Opry House in Nashville, Lonestar performs "My Christmas List," "Jingle Bells" and "Away in a Manger," accompanied by the Band of the United States Air Force Reserve and the Air Force Strings. These selections can also be found on the group's latest album, My Christmas List, available exclusively at Cracker Barrel Old Country Stores and online at crackerbarrel.com.

Holiday Notes From Home will air in full length on Armed Forces Television on Christmas Day, Dec. 25. A special one-hour version of the show will also air on GAC tonight at 9 p.m. ET. Check this site for additional air dates and times. Lonestar is also set to perform on Fox & Friends Dec. 24.

New Willie Nelson CD Due in January

(www.gactv.com)

Fresh from receiving BMI's prestigious Icon Award, Willie Nelson will release his new album, Moment of Forever, on Jan. 29, 2008.

Produced by Music Row veteran Buddy Cannon and Kenny Chesney, the album was recorded in a series of sessions earlier this year in Nashville. The album is introduced by the title song and first single, which was written by Kris Kristofferson and Danny Timms, and has already become a concert favorite with fans during Willie's 2007 tours.

Kenny duets with Willie on the swinging honky-tonk tune "Worry B Gone," written by Guy Clark, Gary Nicholson and Lee Roy Parnell, and he also co-wrote the track "I'm Alive." Other songs include Randy Newman's "Louisiana," Bob Dylan's "Gotta Serve Somebody," Dave Matthews' "Gravedigger" and "The Bob Song" written by Big Kenny of Big & Rich. The album also features two new songs written by Willie and one from his sons Lukas and Micah of the rising band 40 Point.

Nelson will jumps back on the road again in 2008 with a tour schedule that includes an appearance at the Super Bowl XLII Tailgate Party in Phoenix/Glendale on Feb. 3 and a two-night appearance with the Dallas Symphony on March 5 and 6.

Taylor Swift Celebrates 18th Birthday With Kellie Pickler

(www.cmt.com)

Taylor Swift celebrated her 18th birthday at a party on Thursday night (Dec. 13) in the Nashville nightclub Lot 7. Guests included Kellie Pickler, Big & Rich's John Rich and new artists Lady Antebellum and Chuck Wicks. Swift chose a pink theme for the party. She wore a pink dress by Betsey Johnson and received a customized pink Chevy truck as a birthday gift from her label, Big Machine Records. Swift's "Our Song" reached No. 1 on the Billboard country airplay chart earlier in the week.

Tim McGraw, Dwight Yoakam Will Co-Star in Film

(www.cmt.com)

Tim McGraw and Dwight Yoakam have accepted roles in the romantic comedy Four Christmases, which will be released during the 2008 holiday season. The cast also includes Robert Duvall, Sissy Spacek and Reese Witherspoon. All three actors have won Oscars for portraying country singers. John Favreau and Vince Vaughn, who co-starred in the 1996 film, Swingers, are also in the cast, along with Kristin Chenoweth. Seth Gordon will direct for New Line Cinema and Spyglass Entertainment.

Dan Fogelberg Dies of Cancer at 56

(Edward Morris, www.cmt.com)

 

Singer-songwriter Dan Fogelberg died Sunday (Dec. 16) at his home in Maine after fighting prostate cancer for several years. He was 56. Although he made his biggest impact in pop music -- via such hits as "Longer," "Same Old Lang Syne," "Hard to Say"
and "Leader of the Band" -- he had strong ties to Nashville and country music.

Daniel Grayling Fogelberg was born Aug. 13, 1951, in Peoria, Ill. His father, whom he would immortalize in song, was a band leader, his mother a classically trained singer.

Fogelberg dabbled in art and acting at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana but drifted inexorably toward singing in campus coffee houses. He was discovered by U of I alumnus Irving Azoff, who was then just starting his own show business career. Under Azoff's encouragement, Fogelberg dropped out of college and moved to Los Angeles, where he eventually signed a deal with Epic Records.

Impressed by the music of an ad hoc band of Nashville session players called Area Code 615, Fogelberg chose its bass player, Norbert Putnam, to produce his debut album. The singer even moved to Nashville while he was making the album and established enduring relationships with some of the town's top players. Home Free was released in 1972 to scant critical attention. Ultimately, however, Fogelberg would record all or parts of three other albums in Music City.

Over the next several years, Fogelberg experimented musically, working with a variety of producers and co-producers, including rocker Joe Walsh. One of his more musically adventurous forays was his 1978 collection, Twin Sons of Different Mothers, which he recorded and co-produced with flute player Tim Weisberg.

In 1980, Fogelberg experienced his biggest single, the wistful "Longer." It stayed two weeks at No. 2 on Billboard's pop chart and went No. 1 on the adult contemporary list. During the early '80s, three of his singles also reached the lower niches of the country chart.

While living in Colorado, Fogelberg began listening to bluegrass music and even sat in with Chris Hillman's band at the 1984 Telluride Bluegrass Festival. The following year, he recorded the bluegrass-saturated High Country Snows in which he drew on the singing and picking talents of Hillman and Herb Pedersen (later to form the Desert Rose Band), Vince Gill, Ricky Skaggs, Jerry Douglas, Emory Gordy Jr., Charlie McCoy, Al Perkins, David Grisman, Jim Buchanan and Doc Watson. By this time, his career as a popular artist had peaked.

While often compared in sound and lyrical sensitivity to James Taylor, Fogelberg had a substantially shorter chart life, scoring all his hit singles between 1975 and 1987. After High Country Snows, he continued to release albums -- 10 of them -- until 2003, but none achieved the notice and stature of his earlier works. He was diagnosed with cancer in 2004.

Jason Aldean Enjoying Fatherhood

(www.gactv.com)

feature

With a few days off the road for the holidays, Jason Aldean is enjoying spending time with his family, including his oldest daughter, Keeley, who he says is "4, going on 16."

"She'll talk to you like she's in her mid-20s," Jason tells Dial-Global. "She uses words that I don't even know what they mean! She's really smart. I know everybody says that about their kid, but she's very smart, very cool. It's just weird that sometimes when I'm talking to her I forget that I'm talking to a 4-year-old."

Realizing that Keeley gets much of her new vocabulary from TV, Jason says he often jokes with her, "I know you're not getting that from Dora the Explorer, so where is that coming from?"

Jason foresees he will have some challenges when Keeley becomes a teenager. "Believe me, I was a teenage guy. I know what's up!" he says. "I know all the stories. Any guy who comes to my house trying to give me some line — I've used it myself, so it ain't gonna happen."

Jason, who also has a 4-month-old daughter named Kendyl, says that when you have kids, every day you learn something new. He adds, "It's been a very cool experience being a dad."

Monday, December 17, 2007

Taylor Swift Tickled Pink by Birthday Party

(www.gactv.com)

Last Thursday, before a night of celebration, Taylor Swift started her 18th birthday alone at the computer with a purpose — registering to vote.

"I did it online in my pajamas!" the country-music star told People magazine later that night at her birthday party, hosted by her parents Andrea and Scott, at the popular Nashville nightspot Lot 7.

Taylor spent much of the day with close pals from high school, doing her hair and nails and selecting a short hot-pink Betsey Johnson dress for the party. "It was between this and a black dress," she said, "but I knew all my friends would be in black, so I went with the pink. I love pink!"

Scott Borchetta, president of Taylor's label, Big Machine Records, must have known that because he gave Taylor a bubblegum-pink Chevy truck as a present. Taylor was thrilled, though she added that her fans are the ones who really made her birthday wishes come true.

"What I really wanted for my birthday was a No. 1 record, and I got that, too!" Taylor's third single, "Our Song," jumped to the top of Billboard's Country Singles chart this week, her first No. 1.

The 200 guests at the party included Kellie Pickler, Chuck Wicks, Lady Antebellum and Big & Rich's John Rich, who led the crowd in singing "Happy Birthday." And although the invitation specified no gifts, John gave Taylor a beautiful Judith Leiber purse.

Taylor has had a lot to celebrate lately. After receiving the CMA 's Horizon Award last month, she just scored a Grammy nomination for Best New Artist.

New Alan Jackson Album Coming in March

feature

(www.gactv.com)


Alan Jackson is putting the finishing touches on his new album, Good Time, due March 4, 2008, and featuring his self-penned current single, "Small Town Southern Man."

After releasing two chart-topping albums in 2006 — the multi-award winning inspirational collection, Precious Memories and the Grammy-nominated Like Red on a Rose — Alan shifts his focus to songwriting; for the first time, he wrote every song on the new disc.

The video for "Small Town Southern Man" was shot last week by award-winning director Roman White and will be coming to GAC soon. Other songs on the new album include "Sissy's Song," inspired by a friend of Alan's who passed away, the nostalgic "1976," and "Country Boy," about the joys of being just that. Good Time reunites Alan with longtime producer Keith Stegall, who produced or co-produced all but one of his previous albums.

Alan recently made a guest appearance in the White House's annual "Barney Cam" holiday video, in which President Bush's Scottish Terrier aspires to become a junior park ranger. Alan appears in a dream sequence, saying, "Junior park ranger? Okay, Barney, now you've gone country." The video can be seen at whitehouse.gov/barney.

Kenny Chesney Has Shoulder Surgery

feature

(www.gactv.com)

Kenny Chesney has been spotted around town in Nashville with his arm in a sling, but his management says it's nothing serious.

So what happened to the country star? A source tells People magazine that Chesney underwent a "minor procedure to his shoulder" to treat pain resulting from an "active lifestyle" and that he is recovering nicely. Chesney's reps had no further comment.

In other news, Kenny has been named Billboard's Top Country Tour of 2007. Grossing more than $71 million dollars and drawing in excess of 1.1 million fans, his Flip Flop Summer tour ranks fourth overall this year behind reunion tours from legendary bands the Police and Genesis and pop star Justin Timberlake.

Upon hearing the news, Kenny said, "We wanna play for whoever wants to come out and rock with us. And part of that is figuring out how to give them a show like they've never seen before — whether it's what we do with the lights, the sand bar down front or what's on the video screens. We're a long way from being on one bus, pulling a trailer, but the connection we have with the fans who come every night is every bit as intense as it was when we were selling out those little clubs."

Kenny also had a strong presence on the radio in 2007. Country Aircheck/Mediabase recently named him Top Performer of the Year for being the single most heard artist in the country format. With four songs in the magazine's 2007 Top 100, Kenny spent a total of 14 weeks at No. 1 this year.

"You can have all the production in the world .. .and a great show, but you also have to have the songs," Kenny said in response to the honor. "If people feel like you're singing about something they know, something they live or really feel, they let you know. They call the radio station, they sing along in a whole other way at your shows. This is one more time where I can feel our fans out there .. .and it blows me away."

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Taylor Swift Turns 18 Today

 
On the heels of a double platinum debut album, her first No. 1 song and a Grammy nomination, Taylor Swift is celebrating her 18th birthday tonight with a special invitation-only party near downtown Nashville.

Taylor tells Dial-Global that turning 18 for her is "just another birthday" but that she is looking forward to being able to register to vote. She says it's okay if people still refer to her as a "girl" or a "teenager," noting, "I just want people to think of me. I'm not going to complain about how they think of me."

Taylor also tells the Minneapolis Star-Tribune that "there's a lot to be celebrating this year. I've been so blessed."

One of the things Taylor is thankful for is her supportive parents. Having grown up on a Christmas tree farm in Wyomissing, Pa., she says she owes her confidence to her mother. "When I would have school projects to do when I would have to make a presentation, like when I was in fourth grade, we would stay up that whole night before, just practicing different things to say," she says.

Taylor also admits that although she's written a lot of love songs and jokes in concert that guys shouldn't cross her because she'll write a song about them, she has had "only one actual, official boyfriend. I tend to be able to use my imagination and take something that was maybe one conversation and turn it into an entire song," she says.

While most other high school seniors are busy this month working on college applications, Taylor, who is home-schooled, is preparing to record her second CD. She has written more than 20 songs, including one with pop star Colbie Caillat. "I can guarantee you that this [CD] will outdo the first one," she said. "I want to make it a better continuation of the first. I'm not going to throw anyone for a loop by changing styles."

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Carrie Underwood's Special No. 1

 

Yesterday, Carrie Underwood spent her afternoon at two Music Row parties celebrating the success of her latest No. 1 single, "So Small," a song she says is especially meaningful to her.

"It's very special to me," she tells Dial-Global. "Not just because it's my first No. 1 as a writer, but I loved how it turned out. I love to listen to the song. I love to sing the song. And I feel very blessed to have had a part in it, in something that's a message that I like to put on display for the world."

"So Small" is Carrie's fifth No. 1. She'll follow it up by releasing another song she co-wrote, "All-American Girl," to country radio.

Being new to songwriting, Carrie says she felt that was an important skill to add to her growing resume. "I think things just naturally end up being more personal and more believable if you had a hand in their creation," she explains. "If you can get in there and write things in a song the way you would say them or the way you would think about them, it's just much more believable. You're on stage and you're singing something that you believed in so much that you sat down and wrote it down on a piece of paper."

Jason Aldean to Headline at Theaters and Clubs

 
After opening shows for Rascal Flatts this year, Jason Aldean will headline a tour of theaters and clubs in early 2008. The tour kicks off Jan. 17 in Columbia, Mo., and will travel to 20 cities in the U.S. and Canada through early March. "I have learned a lot from being on the road with Rascal Flatts this year about the kind of arena tour I want to have one day," Aldean says. "But the first step is to go back to some smaller venues and keep building our fan base one show at a time. We won't stop playing until everybody in the place is on their feet and having a good time." Aldean also performs with Blake Shelton during a New Year's Eve show at Rupp Arena in Lexington, Ky.

Sara Evans Co-Hosting The View

(www.cmt.com)

Sara Evans travels to New York City this week to co-host ABC's The View on Wednesday and Friday (Dec. 12 and 14). Evans, Gloria Estefan and actress Kate Walsh are among the celebrities filling in for co-host Elisabeth Hasselbeck, who is on maternity leave. Evans recently released her Greatest Hits album.

Travis Tritt Sues Record Label

Travis Tritt has filed a $10 million lawsuit against Category 5 Records, the Nashville-based label that released his latest album, The Storm, in August. Filed Tuesday (Dec. 11) in federal district court in Nashville, Tritt alleges that Category 5 and label president and CEO Ray Termini misrepresented the company's financial resources and expertise and denied him creative control over his recordings. Termini is also CEO of Haven Healthcare, a nursing home chain that is based in Middletown, Conn. The Connecticut attorney general's office is investigating Haven Healthcare, which declared bankruptcy in November, to determine if Termini illegally used Medicaid funds to help launch the record label. Termini has denied misusing the money. Tritt, who has a four-year contract with the label, claims Category 5 currently owes him almost $400,000. Established in 2005, Category 5 also released Sammy Kershaw's Honky Tonk Boots album in 2006.

Monday, December 10, 2007

The Eagles Are Back on Top of Country Chart

The Eagles Are Back on Top of Country Chart
Toby Keith, Taylor Swift Debut Christmas Songs
(Edward Morris, www.cmt.com
)

After falling back to second place for two weeks, the Eagles' Long Road Out of Eden has again sprung to the top of Billboard's country albums chart, swapping positions with Garth Brooks' The Ultimate Hits. Meanwhile, Carrie
Underwood's "So Small" tops the songs chart for the third week in a row.

There are only two albums surfacing this week as Music Row surrenders to the seasonal doldrums. They are the multi-artist CD, Original American Classics: Country Greats, which comes aboard at No. 73, and the Hit Crew's DJ's Choice: Blue Collar Christmas, edging on at No. 75.

The new songs are Toby Keith's "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree" (No. 51), Taylor Swift's "Christmases When You Were Mine" (No. 56) and Underwood's "All American Girl" (No. 58). Cole Deggs & the Lonesome's "Girl Next Door" returns at No. 60.

Trooping behind the Eagles and Brooks, in order, are Underwood's Carnival Ride, Swift's self-titled debut and Rascal Flatts' Still Feels Good. Rounding out the Top 5 songs, also in descending sequence, are Brooks' "More Than a Memory," Kenny Chesney's "Don't Blink," Josh Turner's "Firecracker" and George Strait's "How 'Bout Them Cowgirls."

The hullabaloo attending Thursday's (Dec. 6) announcement of the final Grammy nominations should shake up the charts a bit next week. Otherwise, we can all settle in for a long winter's nap.

Saturday, December 8, 2007

Rosanne Cash Recovering After Brain Surgery

(www.spinner.com)


Rosanne Cash is on the road to recovery after undergoing brain surgery last week. The country songstress and eldest daughter of Johnny Cash was suffering from an undisclosed, but reportedly rare condition. She's expected to make a full recovery.

A posting on Cash's official website reads, "Rosanne is back home recovering comfortably from her surgery. She extends thanks and appreciation for all the love, good wishes, prayers and kindness."

Cash will soon resume work on a new album for Manhattan Records, a follow-up to her Grammy-nominated 'Black Cadillac' CD.

Friday, December 7, 2007

Darryl Worley Weds

 
Darryl Worley and his girlfriend, Kimberly Perkins, were married in a ceremony in Columbia, Tenn., on Sunday, countryhound.com reports.

Guests included family and a few close friends, including Darryl's band and road crew. The ceremony was conducted by Darryl's father and his co-manager, Rendy Lovelady. Darryl's brother, Tom, served as best man.

Darryl and his first wife, Beverly, were divorced in 2006.

Keith Urban Loves George Strait's "Cowgirls"

 
Keith Urban says one tune he is "really, really loving right now" is George Strait's "How 'Bout them Cowgirls," which is a big Top 5 hit already.

Keith tells MSN Music that when he recently bought Strait's CD, It Just Comes Natural, he played that song eight times in a row. "It pulls me right back into all the reasons I got into country music," he says. "It just sounds like a classic song."

Keith says he also sees a lot of his wife, Nicole Kidman, in the song, which is one reason it appeals to him so much. "All the traits he's singing about fit her to a T. Really just everything about it — that essence of strength. It's just beautiful."

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Sara Evans Sings at National Christmas Tree Lighting

(www.cmt.com)

Sara Evans will join President George W. Bush at the 84th annual lighting of the national Christmas tree on Thursday (Dec. 6) in Washington, D.C. During the ceremony, Evans will perform "Silent Night," "O Come All Ye Faithful" and "Go Tell It on the Mountain," accompanied by the United States Air Force Band and the St. Albans and National Cathedral Schools Choir.

Grammy Nominations Announced

(www.gactv.com)

Taylor Swift photo courtesy of Big Machine Records.

December 6, 2007 — GRAMMY nominations were announced this morning, and several country stars found themselves on the ballot. Vince Gill was nominated in the all-genre Album of the Year category for These Days; Carrie Underwood's "Before He Cheats" was nominated for Song of the Year; and Taylor Swift received a nomination for Artist of the Year.

The 50th Annual GRAMMY Awards will be held on February 10, 2008, at Staples Center in Los Angeles and once again will be broadcast live in high definition TV and 5.1 surround sound on CBS from 8 – 11:30 p.m. (ET/PT).

Nominations in country music are as follows:

Best Female Country Vocal Performance
(For a solo vocal performance. Singles or Tracks only.)

"Simple Love"
Alison Krauss
Track from: A Hundred Miles Or More: A Collection
[Rounder]


"Famous In A Small Town"
Miranda Lambert
Track from: Crazy Ex-Girlfriend
[Columbia Nashville]


"Nothin' Better To Do"
LeAnn Rimes
[Curb Records]


"Before He Cheats"
Carrie Underwood
Track from: Some Hearts
[19 Recordings/Arista Nashville]


"Heaven, Heartache And The Power Of Love"
Trisha Yearwood
[Big Machine Records]

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

[VIDEO] Vince Gill & Chet Atkins - Christmas Songs




If you are unable to view this video in e-mail, go to http://countryinsider.blogspot.com

Taylor Swift Enjoys Record Week

feature
More than a year after the release of her debut, Taylor Swift just enjoyed her best sales week ever.

Taylor's self-titled CD sold 88,342 units this past week, a 36 percent increase from last week, and her biggest sales week since its release in October 2006. In the three weeks since she performed at the Country Music Association awards and won the Horizon Award, Taylor scanned 220,823 albums, according to Nielsen SoundScan.

Taylor's current single, "Our Song," is first on the Country Digital sales chart and sixth on Billboard's Country Singles chart and is her fastest moving single to date. Her single "Teardrops on My Guitar," which reached No. 2 on the country charts earlier this year, is currently in the Top 25 on Billboard's Mainstream Top 40 chart. Her rendition of "Last Christmas," from her Christmas EP Sounds of the Season: The Taylor Swift Holiday Collection", is now first on Mediabase's Top 25 Current Most-Played Christmas Songs.

Taylor will join Akon, Quincy Jones and Linkin Park tomorrow morning to announce the nominations for the "50th Annual Grammy Awards." The Grammys will air live on CBS from Los Angeles on February 10, 2008.

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

ACM Awards Move to Sunday Night

(www.cmt.com)

The Academy of Country Music Awards will take place on May 18, the first time the show has been held on a Sunday night. The ceremony will air live from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas on CBS. In addition, the ACM will sponsor live country music concerts on Fremont Street, a celebrity motorcycle event and a post-awards concert.

Natalie Maines Speaks Out on Murder Case

(www.cmt.com)

Natalie Maines has written a letter on the Dixie Chicks' Web site encouraging donations for legal fees to free the West Memphis Three, whom she believes were wrongly accused of murdering three children in 1993. Damien Echols, Jesse Misskelley, and Jason Baldwin were teenagers when convicted in 1994 for the deaths of three 8-year-olds in West Memphis, Ark. Maines said she recently watched two HBO documentaries about the case, researched the story online and corresponded with the wife of one of the accused murderers. In the letter, Maines writes, "The evidence is so strong that at the very least the judge will grant a new trial, but hopefully he will overturn the verdict and these guys will finally be sent home to their lives and families. I know that this is a hard thing to just take my word on, so please look at the case and the evidence for yourself. I am confident that you will see the DNA evidence is irrefutable and that these three men did not get the kind of trial that is promised to us -- as Americans."

Garth Brooks Sells 85,000 Tickets in L.A.

(www.cmt.com)

Garth Brooks sold more than 85,000 tickets in 59 minutes for five upcoming concerts in Los Angeles. Although he was previously scheduled for only one concert, Brooks will now perform two shows on Jan. 25 (6 p.m. and 10 p.m.) and three shows on Jan. 26 (1 p.m., 5 p.m. and 10 p.m.) at the Staples Center. All proceeds from the concert will benefit recent fire victims and firefighters in California. "It's a beautiful thing when everyone pulls together," Brooks said. "California just raised a ton of money for their own. I'm so proud to be part of this."

Natalie Maines Speaks Out on Murder Case

(www.cmt.com)

Natalie Maines has written a letter on the Dixie Chicks' Web site encouraging donations for legal fees to free the West Memphis Three, whom she believes were wrongly accused of murdering three children in 1993. Damien Echols, Jesse Misskelley, and Jason Baldwin were teenagers when convicted in 1994 for the deaths of three 8-year-olds in West Memphis, Ark. Maines said she recently watched two HBO documentaries about the case, researched the story online and corresponded with the wife of one of the accused murderers. In the letter, Maines writes, "The evidence is so strong that at the very least the judge will grant a new trial, but hopefully he will overturn the verdict and these guys will finally be sent home to their lives and families. I know that this is a hard thing to just take my word on, so please look at the case and the evidence for yourself. I am confident that you will see the DNA evidence is irrefutable and that these three men did not get the kind of trial that is promised to us -- as Americans."

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Country Singer Hank Thompson Dies of Lung Cancer at 82

(www.foxnews.com)


DALLAS — Hank Thompson has died of lung cancer just days after canceling his tour. The country singer was 82.

Thompson died late Tuesday at his home in the Fort Worth suburb of Keller, said spokesman, Tracy Pitcox, who is also president of Heart of Texas Records.

"He was battling aggressive lung cancer," Pitcox said Wednesday in a statement. "He remained conscious until the last couple of hours and passed away peacefully at about 10:45 p.m. on Tuesday night surrounded by his friends and family."

The last show Thompson played was Oct. 8 in his native Waco. That day was declared "Hank Thompson Day" by Gov. Rick Perry and Waco Mayor Virginia DuPuy.

Fans loved Thompson's distinctive gravelly voice and his musical style, a mix of honky-tonk and Western swing. He was named to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1989.

His first recording was "Whoa, Sailor" in 1946. That year, he started a band called the Brazos Valley Boys, which won Billboard magazine's touring band of the year award 14 consecutive times.

Thompson had 29 hits reach the top 10 between 1948 and 1975. Some of his most famous songs include "Humpty Dumpty Heart" and "A Six Pack to Go."

His album "The Wild Side of Life" reached No. 1 in 1952. It inspired a famous "answer song" written by J.D. Miller, "It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels." Recorded by Kitty Wells, the song was the first No. 1 hit by a woman soloist on the country music charts and made Wells a star.

Thompson grew up a fan of Gene Autry, which fueled his love of the guitar. By the time he finished high school, he was playing on a local radio show, where he was featured as "Hank the Hired Hand."

He served in the Navy, and studied electrical engineering at Southern Methodist University, the University of Texas and Princeton.

Thompson considered a career in engineering, but remained in show business. He caught the attention of Tex Ritter, who helped him get a contract with Capitol Records.

Pitcox said Thompson requested that no funeral be held.

A "celebration of life," open to fans and friends, will be held Nov. 14 at Billy Bob's Texas, a Fort Worth honky-tonk.

Survivors include his wife, Ann. He had no children.

Gill, Mandrell Among Walk of Fame Inductees

(www.cmt.com)

Rodney Crowell, Bob DiPiero, Vince Gill and Barbara Mandrell were inducted into the Music City Walk of Fame during ceremonies Monday (Nov. 5) in Hall of Fame Park in downtown Nashville. Inducted posthumously were music publisher and record producer Buddy Killen and rock icon Jimi Hendrix, who spent time playing in Nashville clubs during the early '60s after completing his military service at nearby Fort Campbell, Ky. His sister, Jaine Hendrix, represented the family at Monday's induction.

Jeffrey Steele Rules at BMI Awards

(www.cmt.com)

Jeffrey Steele was named songwriter of the year and his song, "What Hurts the Most," won song of the year honors at Tuesday night's (Nov. 6) BMI Country Awards presentation in Nashville. Steele, who was also named BMI's country songwriter of the year in 2003, co-wrote "What Hurts the Most" with Steve Robson. It was a No. 1 hit for Rascal Flatts. Steele won his latest songwriter of the year prize for composing "What Hurts the Most" and two other Rascal Flatts hits -- "My Wish" and "Me and My Gang" -- along with Steve Holy's "Brand New Girlfriend" and Keith Anderson's "Every Time I Hear Your Name." Sony/ATV Music Publishing Nashville was named publisher of the year for the sixth consecutive time, and Willie Nelson was honored with the BMI Icon award during the black-tie dinner at the performing right organization's offices on Music Row.

LeAnn Rimes to Tour With Kenny Chesney

(www.cmt.com)

LeAnn Rimes will be Kenny Chesney's special guest next year on his Poets & Pirates tour. Specific dates have not been announced, but work is already underway on the concert production. "I think LeAnn Rimes is as good a singer as there is out there, and she knows how to have fun onstage," Chesney said. "I am a big fan, and everybody better be ready for a pretty incredible time. I know I'm looking forward to seeing her out there and getting to hear her sing." Chesney's upcoming road work follows this year's Flip Flop Summer Tour which included appearances at six NFL stadiums. Ticket sales totaled more than 1.2 million for the 57 dates of his 2007 tour. Rimes performs Tuesday night (Nov. 6) on Dancing With the Stars and will sing with Reba McEntire on Wednesday's CMA Awards show. Both programs will air on ABC.

Rosanne Cash to Undergo Brain Surgery

(www.cmt.com)

Rosanne Cash will undergo brain surgery in New York for a rare but benign condition, it was announced Tuesday (Nov. 6) on her official Web site. The singer-songwriter, daughter of the late Johnny Cash, has been diagnosed with chiari I malformation, a congenital malformation of the skull that affects the brain and spinal cord. "It's nothing like a tumor or hemorrhage or anything," manager, Danny Kahn, told the Associated Press. "It's elective surgery." As a result, Cash has canceled the final four dates of a national tour promoting her latest album, Black Cadillac. The cancellations include shows this week in Kansas City, Lafayette, Ind., and Kent, Ohio, and a Nov. 30 date in Washington, D.C. Following her recover, she plans to return to the studio to finish work on her debut album for Manhattan Records, resume touring and complete a new book to be published in early 2009.

Country Music Pioneer Hank Thompson Retires

(www.cmt.com)

Country Music Hall of Fame member Hank Thompson has announced his retirement from a career that has spanned seven decades. Thompson, 82, was released from the hospital Wednesday (Oct. 31) after being diagnosed with an undisclosed illness. He is recovering at his home near Fort Worth, Texas. A honky-tonk singer and leader of his band, the Brazos Valley Boys, Thompson scored a total of 29 Top 10 singles, including "The Wild Side of Life," which spent 15 weeks at No. 1 in 1949. Other hits include "Humpty Dumpty Heart," "Rub-a-Dub-Dub" and "A Six Pack to Go." Thompson, who has canceled all of his tour dates, last performed on Oct. 8 in Waco, Texas, his birthplace.

John Michael Montgomery Launches New Label

(www.cmt.com)

John Michael Montgomery has created his own record label, Stringtown Records, and will serve a chief executive officer of the new company. The first scheduled release is a new album Montgomery will record with producer Byron Gallimore, who produced his 2004 album, Letters From Home. Sessions have not begun on the project, and no release date has been set. During his tenure on Atlantic Records, Montgomery enjoyed seven No. 1 singles, including 1993's "I Love the Way You Love Me" and 2000's "The Little Girl." Former Decca Records head Shelia Shipley Biddy will serve as Stringtown's president while continuing to work as an artist manager at Hallmark Direction Company, which also represents Montgomery. The new label is expected to sign other artists after the release of Montgomery's album.

Clay Walker Donating $25,000 to Multiple Sclerosis Research

(www.cmt.com)

Clay Walker announced Tuesday afternoon (Nov. 6) at the Vanderbilt Stallworth Rehabilitation Hospital in Nashville that his foundation, BAMS (Band Against Multiple Sclerosis), will donate $25,000 for research toward a cure for multiple sclerosis. Walker also said the foundation plans to donate a similar amount toward MS research annually during the next three years. Walker, who was diagnosed with MS in 1996, said, "It is important for me to give back now because I have been so blessed." He later added, "There are a lot of people out there who aren't doing so well with multiple sclerosis, and we want to be their ray of hope."

Saturday, November 3, 2007

Taylor Swift's Work Ethic


(www.gactv.com)

Taylor Swift's parents taught her early on to put her heart into her work, and she learned that lesson well.

Taylor tells the Colorado Spring Independent that her parents stressed: "Have high hopes, but never expectations about what you're going to get in life," and now she says, "I still can't believe [my success]. I'm just trying to work so hard."

Taylor has already opened on tour for Rascal Flatts, George Strait, Kenny Chesney, Brad Paisley and Tim McGraw & Faith Hill. She's been able to bring her live music performance to more than a million fans.

"I'm really, really lucky to be able to tour with all these people," she says. "I've had five major tours in a year and a half. I don't take vacations. I don't take weeks off. I'm so lucky; I should play every night."

While fans won't see a new album from Taylor until this time next year, she will sing in 33 states in just three months this fall. And Target stores have already released her six-song holiday exclusive, for which she wrote two new songs and rewrote the melody for "Silent Night."

"I like the holidays a lot," she says. "I grew up on a Christmas tree farm, so the holidays for me were about helping Dad lug trees up a hill, putting them on people's cars."

If Taylor keeps it up, it's likely she'll reach just the future she's hoping for. "In 10 years, I'll be 27," she says. "I hope I'm still doing this. I'd love to be headlining."

Carrie Underwood Hosts CMA Radio Preview Show

(www.gactv.com)

Premiere Radio Networks' 2007 CMA Awards Preview Special, hosted by reigning CMA Female Vocalist of the Year, Carrie Underwood, begins today.

The four-hour radio special, which airs in advance of The 41st Annual CMA Awards, will feature music and interviews with top stars including Kenny Chesney, Brad Paisley, George Strait, Keith Urban, Brooks & Dunn, Martina McBride, Rascal Flatts, Miranda Lambert and Sugarland, among others. The special will be broadcast to stations nationwide.

Carrie is nominated for three awards at this year's CMA's, including Female Vocalist of the Year, as well as Single and Music Video of the Year, both for "Before He Cheats." The song also received a nod in the "Song of the Year" category.

Carrie performed on the CMA Awards in 2005 — on the day her debut disc, Some Hearts, was released — and in 2006 took home two awards in her first year of eligibility. She will perform again on this year's show.

Garth Brooks Takes Over SIRIUS' Prime Country

(www.gactv.com)

SIRIUS Satellite Radio will celebrate the release of Garth Brooks' The Ultimate Hits by turning over the reins of its Prime Country channel to him for two weeks beginning Nov. 5.

Garth Brooks Radio will air on SIRIUS channel 61 and will feature Garth's music with his own personal introductions. He will also play some of his favorite country acts and discuss what each means to him.

"Garth Brooks is an unparalleled worldwide star, and we are excited to have him take over an entire SIRIUS channel, bringing his unique blend of creative energy and singular charisma to our airwaves," said Scott Greenstein, president of entertainment and sports for SIRIUS. "In keeping with SIRIUS' tradition of creating exclusive, artist-branded channels dedicated to the most iconic figures in music history, the launch of Garth Brooks Radio will give our listeners an innovative and direct connection to a country legend."

Lonestar Plans Christmas CD, Tour



(www.cmt.com)

Lonestar will release a new album, My Christmas List, through Cracker Barrel stores on Tuesday (Nov. 6). The project is the first featuring the band's new lead singer, Cody Collins. It features nine Christmas classics and two new songs written especially for the album. In addition, the band will embark on a Christmas tour on Nov. 29 in Dubuque, Iowa, with tour stops planned in Connecticut, Rhode Island, Maryland and North Carolina.

Friday, November 2, 2007

Ronnie Dunn's Answered Prayer


(http://www.gactv.com)

Brooks & Dunn's Ronnie Dunn is known as a religious man, and Country Weekly recently asked him if there had ever been a moment when he knew with certainty that God heard his prayer.

"I went to my knees — the only time I've done it — I dropped to my knees in a field in Oklahoma years ago," Ronnie says. "I said, 'I've come to the end of my rope. This is it. I've done it.' And I had. I was with a weed-eater a mile out in the middle of some 106-degree prairie. I said, 'I'm either gonna make it in this business or I have ruined my life. I don't know where to go, what to do.' "

Ronnie says as he got up and started walking back home, his wife, Janine, drove up and said, "A guy named Tim Dubois just called and said for you to call him."

Ronnie says he knew who Tim was but hadn't been talking to him. "I went and picked up the phone, and he goes, 'I want to take 'Boot Scoot' and cut it for a single with Asleep at the Wheel.' I'm like, 'Ahhh, that's not what I wanted to hear.' But at least someone on the end of the line liked it.

"It happened that quick — just like that," Ronnie continues. "All the religious training I had, the one thing I remember them teaching that really stuck with me was when it is truly the end of the line, and your pride and everything you have is washed out of the picture — when you could never doubt that it's coming from some other place [he snaps fingers] just like that lightning striking right where you are, that happened. And it started all this...it started it."

Friends Say Goodbye to Porter Wagoner



(www.gactv.com)

At the Grand Ole Opry House yesterday, some of the many people Porter Wagoner inspired during his lifetime tried to find a way to say goodbye to the man who was always saying hello, The Tennessean reports.

The service included music by Marty Stuart, Ricky Skaggs and the Whites, Vince Gill, Patty Loveless and the Oak Ridge Boys' Duane Allen, who performed with former members of Porter's band, the Wagonmasters.

"Goodbye Porter" were the last words Dolly Parton said to her longtime duet partner. Dolly did not sing "I Will Always Love You," the song she wrote years ago for Porter. "I was afraid I couldn't get through it," she said before leading the Grand Ole Opry cast in singing Hank Williams' "I Saw the Light."

Dial-Global reports that a very emotional Dolly sat on the front row during the service, wiping tears from her eyes, especially when Vince sang "Go Rest High on That Mountain," a song he noted was the last one Porter heard before he passed away on Sunday night.

Many in country music attended the service, including Opry members Garth Brooks, Trisha Yearwood, Martina McBride, Travis Tritt, Steve Wariner, Little Jimmy Dickens, Jan Howard, Jeannie Seely and new Country Music Hall of Fame inductee Ralph Emery.

The night before, with Marty Stuart's Sparkle & Twang exhibit as background, Emmylou Harris, Buddy Miller, Jim Lauderdale, Rodney Crowell, Mike Farris and other artists paid tribute to Porter at the kickoff to the Americana Music Conference. Porter was originally slated to appear at the tribute.

"We've been so inspired by him for so long," said Emmylou, who sang three of Porter's songs with Buddy before inviting Jim up to sing "Satisfied Mind."

Two important Jeans in Porter's life — daughter Debra Jean and duet partner Pretty Miss Norma Jean — were on hand, as well as other notables, including former Attorney General Janet Reno.

"My daddy had every intention of being here tonight," said Debra Jean, who accepted an American Original award on behalf of her father.

Monday, October 29, 2007

Porter Wagoner dead at 80


(http://www.tennessean.com/)

Country Music Hall of Famer Porter Wagoner died Sunday, the same day country music dignitaries gathered at the Hall to induct its three newest members.

Mr. Wagoner, known as “The Thin Man From West Plains,” was 80. He had been admitted to an undisclosed Nashville-area hospital on Monday, Oct. 15 and it was announced he had lung cancer. Mr. Wagoner was released to hospice care on Friday, a Grand Ole Opry spokeswoman announced.

Mr. Wagoner’s contributions to country music are manifold and consequential. Marty Stuart, who produced this year’s much-heralded comeback album Wagonmaster, calls him “an American master and a cornerstone of our music.”

A hit-maker for more than a quarter-century, he was a Country Music Hall of Famer and a three-time Grammy winner whose best-loved singles included “A Satisfied Mind,” “Misery Loves Company” and “Green, Green Grass of Home.”

His syndicated television show allowed him to serve as an ambassador for the genre, and it proved invaluable in spreading the fame of Wagoner’s hand-picked “girl singer,” Dolly Parton, with whom he had hit duets including “Just Someone I Used To Know” and “Making Plans.”

In the studio, he was an innovator who tweaked traditional country arrangements and found fresh sounds in a genre that often tugs against change.

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Wagoner's Lung Cancer Moving "Aggressively"

(http://www.the9513.com/)

According to WSM DJ Eddie Stubbs, Porter Wagoner’s lung cancer is moving aggressively and on Friday Porter was transferred from the hospital to a hospice care facility. The Associated Press has more info.

Twister FM Country Radio - Listen Online!

Now you can listen to Twister FM radio online! Just go to http://twisterfmradio.listen2myradio.com/. Twister FM radio is powered by Country Insider and Listen2MyRadio. We play today's country and yesterday's favorites. Country Hits of the 70's, 80's, 90's, and today! Give it a try and listen today. We've also included a link on the Country Insider Y! Groups homepage at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/countryinsider.

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Taylor Swift Promotes Safe Teen Driving With Carols

(www.cmt.com)

Taylor Swift will serve as a judge for a contest that encourages teens to rewrite traditional holiday carols into songs about safe driving over the holidays. Titled Holiday Holla, the contest is sponsored by the Allstate Foundation. Swift will help select the final winners at the Mall of America in Minneapolis on Dec. 8. She will also perform at the event. "This contest is a fun and creative way to make teens and their parents aware of how dangerous the holiday season is for teen drivers," said Swift.

Lorrie Morgan Files For Divorce

(http://www.cmt.com/)

Lorrie Morgan has filed for divorce from Sammy Kershaw. She filed for divorce on Tuesday (Oct. 23) in Sumner County (Tennessee) Chancery Court. Morgan and Kershaw were married Sept. 29, 2001. She cited irreconcilable differences in the filing and asked for enforcement of a prenuptial agreement executed on Sept. 6, 2001. They separated in early August. Kershaw recently ran unsuccessfully for lieutenant governor of Louisiana. She has been married five times. He has been married four times.

Porter Wagoner Moved to Hospice Care

Porter Wagoner, who was recently diagnosed with lung cancer, has been released from the hospital and moved to hospice care on Friday, a spokeswoman for the Grand Ole Opry said.

Wagoner, 80, a member of the Grand Ole Opry since 1957, was hospitalized Oct. 15. Hospice workers will now do what they can to make him comfortable, Opry spokeswoman Jessie Schmidt said.

The Missouri-born Wagoner, whose hits include "Carroll County Accident" and "Green Green Grass of Home," has been enjoying a comeback that saw him recording again and gaining new fans.

Wagoner was the opening act for rockers the White Stripes at a sold-out show at Madison Square Garden in Manhattan this summer and also performed on the "Late Show with David Letterman."

His latest CD, "Wagonmaster," was produced by Marty Stuart and released in June. It earned Wagoner some of the best reviews of his career.
Wagoner, who is known for his rhinestone stage outfits, helped launch the career of Dolly Parton by hiring her as his duet partner in 1967. They were the Country Music Association's duo of the year in 1970 and 1971, recording hits including "The Last Thing on My Mind."

The two continued to record and perform together occasionally over the years, hitting No. 2 in 1980 with their duet "Making Plans."
Some of Wagoner's other hits include "A Satisfied Mind," "Company's Comin'," "Skid Row Joe" and "Misery Loves Company."

He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2002.

(http://www.newsvine.com/_news/2007/10/26/1052606-porter-wagoner-moved-to-hospice-care)

Monday, October 22, 2007

Big Kenny & Wife Visit Sudan

feature

October 22, 2007 — Big Kenny Alphin of Big & Rich and his wife, Christiev, left Nashville for Akon, Sudan, last Thursday to take medical and school supplies, musical instruments, clothing and building tools to the Kunyuk School for Girls.

The school has held a deep place in their hearts over the last year. They originally donated money to the school at Kenny's No. 1 party for the song "Last Dollar," which was recorded by Tim McGraw. At the time there were 250 girls enrolled at the school and their classroom consisted of a chalkboard nailed into a Baobab tree. Enrollment at the school has since increased to 1000.

"When I first learned of the school it was through Reverend and physician, Gloria White Hammond, of Boston," Kenny says. "Today there are over one thousand girls at the school as the horrific conflicts continue in the north and Darfur, leaving most of these children orphaned."

At his own expense, Kenny chartered a cargo plane to take the 25 crates of supplies to the area. In addition, he will be performing for the children with friend and fellow musician Damien Horne.

"Whether they are abused across the street or across an ocean, all people deserve freedom and basic human rights," he says. "I would spend every nickel I could get my hands on to help these people. It is the worst humanitarian crisis on our earth and it is time we did something to stop it."

Trisha Yearwood Finds Balance in Life

feature

October 22, 2007 — Life is good for Trisha Yearwood these days. Her single, "Heaven, Heartache and the Power of Love," is soaring up the charts, and she's about to release a new album of the same name on November 13. Not to mention, she's married to country superstar Garth Brooks and will share the stage with him in front of nine sold-out crowds next month in Kansas City.

Even with her very busy schedule, Trisha tells Dial-Global she's been happier than ever lately. "My life feels really balanced," she says. "I feel like it's a really good combination of family and music and I get a chance to do what I love to do, but my priority is my life and my family. They allow me to do this, which is wonderful. And I have this great balance."

Trisha says she thinks her age may be a factor as well. "I don't stress over things that aren't important anymore," she says. "I enjoy every day more. I enjoy being in the studio. I enjoy making music, and I enjoy being at home and in the kitchen, cooking a meal for my family. Being happy in your life allows you to be happy in everything that you do and that's where I'm at."

Trisha is scheduled for upcoming appearances on "The Today Show," "Late Night with David Letterman," "The View" and GAC, where she will be December's Artist of the Month.

California Wildfires Threaten Tanya Tucker's Home

 
Tanya Tucker's residence is one of approximately 500 homes evacuated in Malibu, Calif., as a result of wildfires that have destroyed more than 2,400 acres in the area. Tucker, who was in Las Vegas at the time, said her 18-year-old daughter Presley took their four dogs with her when she left the house Sunday morning (Oct. 21). So far, approximately 1,500 Malibu residents have been evacuated because of the fires which have already destroyed five homes and damaged nine others in the area. Throughout Southern California, at least 250,000 people have been forced to flee their homes because of the wildfires that have destroyed some 200,000 acres. Shortly after Tucker's daughter left their home, fire helicopters began dropping water on the neighborhood to deter the blaze. "All my stage clothing -- boots, belts and wardrobe -- is in that house," Tucker said. "I have so much memorabilia since I just moved from Nashville to Malibu." Tucker relocated to Malibu in July.

Kid Rock Charged in Atlanta Brawl

(www.cmt.com)
 
Kid Rock and five members of his entourage are free on $1,000 bond each after being charged with simple battery following a Sunday morning (Oct. 21) fight at a Waffle House restaurant in Atlanta. Kid Rock had completed a sold-out show at the Tabernacle, an Atlanta concert venue, on Saturday night when his bus stopped at the restaurant around 5 a.m. Sunday. According to police, the altercation began after one of the restaurant's customers, 39-year-old Harlen DeJon Akins, recognized a woman in Kid Rock's entourage and exchanged words with her. A fight began inside the restaurant and escalated when it moved to the parking lot. Kid Rock and his crew left the scene on their tour bus which was stopped by police a short distance from the restaurant. Rock and his five companions were arrested on misdemeanor charges. Police said Akins faces a felony charge of criminal damage to property for allegedly breaking one of the restaurant's windows when he punched it during the fight. It was designated a felony because the window was valued at more than $500. Kid Rock's tour continues Tuesday (Oct. 23) in Phoenix.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Porter Wagoner Battling Lung Cancer

Porter Wagoner Battling Lung Cancer

(www.cmt.com)

Grand Ole Opry member Porter Wagoner, 80, has been diagnosed with lung cancer, an Opry spokesperson confirmed Sunday afternoon (Oct. 21). Although the nature of his illness had not been previously disclosed, Wagoner has been listed in serious condition since being admitted to a Nashville-area hospital on Monday (Oct. 15). In May, he celebrated his 50th anniversary as an Opry member during a special segment of the show hosted by Marty Stuart and featuring guest appearances by Patty Loveless and Wagoner's longtime duet partner, Dolly Parton. Wagoner was inducted into Country Music Hall of Fame in 2002.

Jessica Simpson Plans Move to Nashville

(http://www.gactv.com/)

Several Music Row heavy-hitters tell Brad Schmitt of Nashville's WKRN that Jessica Simpson not only intends to launch a country career, but she also plans to move to Nashville.

Jessica's Dukes of Hazzard co-star Willie Nelson is going to help her make her first country album, and Jessica is currently in town meeting artists, like John Rich and Vince Gill, as well as Music Row execs, including Sony BMG honchos, and songwriters Aimee Mayo ("Amazed") and Hillary Lindsey ("Jesus, Take the Wheel")

Word is that Creative Artists Agency agent-to-the-stars Rod Essig — who handles Tim McGraw, Faith Hill and Reba McEntire among others — has been Jessica's guide around town. No word on a label, a producer or a release date.

At new tequila-bar hotspot Agave this week, Jessica's tablemates included Kellie Pickler, John Rich, her dad/manager Joe Simpson and Hank Williams, Jr.'s daughters Hilary and Holly Williams.

Friday, October 19, 2007

Reba #1's Certified Double Plantinum

(www.reba.com)

Congratulations Reba!
Reba #1's has been certified DOUBLE PLATINUM by the RIAA!

Sara Evans Hits the Road with Chevrolet

(www.gactv.com)

Sara Evans kicks off a new tour in Fort Wayne, Ind., tonight with sponsorship from Chevrolet Malibu. The tour ends on November 17, in Poughkeepsie, N.Y.

Josh Turner, Luke Bryan and George Ducas will join Sara on various dates throughout the tour. Sara is featured with the new Chevy Malibu in the 2008 Chevy Country Music calendar available for download at chevynation.com/country.

Concert attendees will be able to have a virtual experience with an onsite fan photo opportunity booth that lets them have their picture digitally inserted with Evans and the Chevy Malibu. Fans will be given a card at the venue that will allow them to retrieve their photo at the Chevy Malibu website.

"I am so excited to have the all new Chevy Malibu sponsoring my upcoming tour," Sara says. "I have always been a huge fan of Chevy cars and trucks and can't wait to have Chevy on the road with me!"

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Billboard Top 200

8/29/07

The soundtrack to Disney's "High School Musical 2" remains atop The Billboard 200 for a second week. The set moved 367,000 copies in the United States, according to Nielsen SoundScan. The sales decrease is the smallest second-week slump for an album that started with 500,000 or more since Kenny Chesney's "When the Sun Goes Down" declined by only 36% in February 2004.

Miley Cyrus' Disney double-disc set "Hannah Montana 2 (Soundtrack)/Meet Miley Cyrus" slips 2-3 with 58,000, a 30% drop in sales. Another soundtrack, New Line's "Hairspray," climbs 5-4 despite a 17% sales hit with 53,000, while the "NOW 25" hits compilation flip-flops with it, 4-5, with 52,000 (-20%). Fueled by the popularity of the current single "Big Girls Don't Cry," Fergie's "The Dutchess" (will.i.am/A&M/Interscope) continues its rebound 7-6 with 50,000 (-5%).

Eclectic Interscope artist M.I.A. arrives at No. 18 with her sophomore album, "Kala," which moved 29,000. It's the follow-up to 2005's "Arular," which reached No. 3 on the Top Electronic Albums chart and No. 14 on Heatseekers.

Other big debuts this week include Cartel's self-titled Epic album, which was written, recorded and produced inside of a bubble for MTV reality show "Band in a Bubble." The album bows at No. 20 with 28,000. Also new: Rilo Kiley's "Under the Blacklight" (Warner Bros., No. 22, 27,000), Universal South artist Joe Nichols' "Real Things" (No. 23, 26,000), country veteran Travis Tritt's "The Storm" (Category 5, No. 28, 23,000) and indie rock act the New Pornographers' best charting effort yet, "Challengers" (Matador, No. 34, 20,000).

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Joe Nichols' Real Things Review

Real Things: Joe Nichols

Coquet-Shack.com

- Aug 15, 2007


Joe Nichols new album, "Real Things" places this hugely talented singer at the very top of the tree, beyond George Strait, Alan Jackson and a long list of other Nashville luminaries.

He out Country's Strait, outsings Jackson and if there's any justice this album will spawn at least six top ten hits for Nichols.

The best track - and a surefire number one - is his take of Red Foley's "If I Could Only Fly".

Nichols vocals are breathtaking: how he gets that break into his voice in the second line is beyond me, but it's absolutely brilliant.

Lee Ann Womack duets this one with Nichols, and her brilliant harmonies are as good as anyone could produce.

The lyrics, written years ago, are better than almost everything Nashville can produce these days.


Nichols' has the ability to make you believe he really lived the experiences he sings about. "Ain't Nobody Gonna Take That From Me" is life's memories wrapped up with a memorable chorus.

And the lyrics of the last verse.....

"Like this morning, I woke up,
"To a little voice that spoke up:
"Sayin': 'Daddy, please, fix a bowl of Rice Krisperies."
"You're the bestest friend that I ever had."
"You know I love you Dad.'"

are absolutely brilliant.

The lead off single - "Another Side Of You" is one of the best Country songs of 2007 and will make the top ten, if not the top slot.

Just when this album gets to the stage (as every Country album does) where the next track sounds much like the last, Nichols spins the wheel a little harder and comes up with "It Ain't No Crime".

Musically, it steps outside the box for intro, back into the box for a chorus so catchy, you'll be humming it in your sleep, and in and out of the box on the choruses.

This has a unique feel and I'd say it has every chance of being a top ten single.

"She's All Lady" first showed up sung by Jamey Johnson last year. He co wrote the track and we thought Johnson's version was superb. Nichols takes it and makes it his own.

The lyrics include one of the best put-down's we've heard in years.


When a female fan approaches the singer at a show and makes "romantic advances", the singer (who has a partner) turns her down with the words:

"You're all woman, but she's all lady."

Brilliant and ANOTHER chart chance.

Country music has a split personality when it comes to alcohol. Some songs sing it's praises as a "way of getting over".

The rest, in the main, warn of the dangers alcohol represents.

This one does neither. There's no question Nichols is using alcohol to hide his pain, but he also acknowledges that things won't go better until he's got through his "Whiskey Years". Superb.

"Let's Get Drunk And Fight" on the other hand, is in the first category.

Here, the struggling couple (he's been stone cold sober, she's been cold as ice), decide to get drunk so they can fight., keep the neighbours awake.

We don't have the credits for this track, but whoever that lady is singing the chorus harmonies, she deserves a medal.

The song ends with a bar-room chorus singing along. This has every chance of making the top of the charts if Nichols' label decides to put it out as a single.

The close mic work proves how good Joe Nichols' vocals are. On "Real Things" the vocals are sung so softly that if Nichols did it in a large room, those at the back would barely hear him.

The lyrics are pure down-home Country - and the whole song is probably too Country for Nashpop radio.

While Nichols is the master of the slow, close mic song, he can turn it up too. "Comin' Back In A Cadillac" is a high speed romp about a backwoods boy with high ambitions and plans to come home in a Cadillac having "a pile".

"All Good Things" is a beautiful heartbreaker. The music is gentle, Nichols vocals are captivating and the lyrics are clever without being trite.

The lyrics on "Who Are You When I'm Not Looking?" are brilliant. This is a love song but it's way off romantic and it's far from mushy.

It's the words, above everything else, that show how much this singer is in love with the subject. Superb.

"The Difference is Night and Day" is another old-style Country heartbreaker and Nichols is at his close mic sensitive best for "All I Need Is A Heart".

Coquet-Shack's view: Simply the best album of 2007!!

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Jim Lauderdale Plans Another Bluegrass CD

(cmt.com)

Singer-songwriter Jim Lauderdale will release another bluegrass album, The Bluegrass Diaries, on Sept. 18 on Yep Roc Records. The project follows last year's Grammy-nominated Bluegrass. His 2002 album with Ralph Stanley, Lost in the Lonesome Pines, won a Grammy for best bluegrass album. Lauderdale's future projects include collaborations with guitarist James Burton and Grateful Dead lyricist Robert Hunter, with both slated for release within the next nine months.

 




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Trace Adkins Raises Awareness of Food Allergies

(cmt.com)

Trace Adkins will serve as this year's honorary chairman of Walk for Food Allergy: Moving Toward a Cure. The walk will be held in 20 cities with an additional online version. Adkins' daughter, Brianna, now 6, was diagnosed with a peanut allergy when she was 18 months old following a severe reaction to peanut butter. She is also allergic to eggs and milk. Food allergy afflicts one in 25 Americans and one in 17 under age 3.

 





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