Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Hear Pantera Guitarist Dimebag Darrell's Previously Unreleased 'Whiskey Road'

A previously unreleased song performed entirely by Pantera and Damageplan guitarist Dimebag Darrell, "Whiskey Road," is now streaming online. The guitarist, who died 10 years ago this month, recorded the tune in 2001, when Pantera were wrapping up what was to be their final U.S. tour. Guitar World, which premiered the tune and has pressed the song to a vinyl flexi-disc, is also offering a guitar TAB transcription of the track online.



The song is a countryish rocker that begins with acoustic guitar and soaring, "Free Bird"-style steel guitar as Darrell sings in a deep voice about drinking the song's titular libation. "Whiskey road, take me home and wash away the pain," he sings. "Whiskey road, leave me whole and wash me clean again." About halfway through the tune, the Pantera shredder kicks into a bluesy solo, full of the quivering screechy highs you'd expect from him along with some swirling, Allman Brothers–type licks that fit in with the tune's southern rock feel.


In the three years between recording the track and his death, Dimebag Darrell would see the end of Pantera, complete recording of the country-metal album Rebel Meets Rebel with David Allen Coe (which came out in 2006) and put out Damageplan's New Found Power. On December 8th, 2004, a crazed fan shot and killed the guitarist onstage at a performance with the latter band in Columbus, Ohio.


Earlier this month, Darrell's former bandmate, vocalist Phil Anselmo, wrote a heartfelt tribute to the guitarist for Rolling Stone and bore his soul about how his friend's death has affected him over the last decade. "The way he went out, using the word 'murder' is always a stark, cold, hideous thing," Anselmo wrote. "None of this shit gets easier for me. It actually keeps getting tougher and tougher. For me, personally, I've yet to come to terms with it. I don't see the sense. I don't see the everything-happens-for-a-reason attitude. This year is the toughest yet."







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1xyFkPY

via Christopher Sabec Music

Monday, December 29, 2014

One Direction, George Strait, Luke Bryan Are Tops in 2014 Tours

The King of Country Music is once again king of the country road. George Strait had the highest ticket sales of any country music tour in 2014, according to a new list released by StubHub, and he was second only to British pop sensation One Direction overall. Luke Bryan comes in behind his fellow country troubadour at Number Three on the ticket resale website's year-end list, topping Justin Timberlake at Number Four.



"I don't think we realize how huge country music is," StubHub executive Glen Lehrman tells Ad Week. "Traditionally, we think of pop music as the one that is going to drive the most interest in ticket sales — your Beyonce, Katy Perry, Lady Gaga…. George Strait didn't do that many dates, but his last concert ever was by far one of the biggest events we had in 2014."


That final Strait show, at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas (home of the Dallas Cowboys), was attended by 104,793 fans. It set the record for the largest indoor concert ever in North America, topping a previous attendance record set by the Rolling Stones in 1981. The star-studded show (surprise guests included Miranda Lambert, Faith Hill and Eric Church) marked the end of Strait's illustrious, 33-year touring career, but retirement is still a four-letter word. The country icon has promised at least five more albums of all-new material in the coming years.


As for Bryan's spot on StubHub's list, Billboard begs to differ: It places his 2014 touring at Number One among country treks but 14th overall. It lists Strait as Number 16, and agrees that One Direction was the top-grossing touring artist of the year.


Bryan, the reigning CMA Entertainer of the Year, had 1.7 million fans attend his shows this year — numbers combined from three different trips: the That's My Kind of Night Tour, the Farm Tour, and the Spring Break 2014 Tour.


“We’ve played all types of shows this year," says Bryan. "It’s just as exciting to play for smaller capacity crowds during a two-day run in the very northern point of Canada as it is to 60,000 screaming fans at the stadiums shows… or to the first-time fan who may have never been to a concert until the Farm Tour came to their small rural community."


StubHub is expecting big numbers in 2015 from a different crop of touring (or rumored-to-be-touring) artists: Adele, Coldplay, Foo Fighters, Taylor Swift and U2.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/one-direction-george-strait-luke-bryan-are-tops-in-2014-tours-20141229?utm_source=yahoomusic&utm_medium=referral?utm_source=yahoomusic&utm_medium=referral

via Christopher Sabec Music

Martina McBride Signs With Nash Icon

Nash Icon's latest signing is one of the most iconic vocalists of her time. Martina McBride has officially joined the new label, which is a co-venture between Big Machine Label Group and Cumulus Media.



McBride has some old friends at her new company. She teamed with sister imprint, Republic Nashville, for her 2011 LP, Eleven, which yielded the big hits, "Teenage Daughters" and "I'm Gonna Love You Through It." Before Republic, she released ten albums in an 18-year partnership with RCA Nashville. Those lucrative years saw multi-platinum sales, dozens of Top 20 hits and four CMA Female Vocalist of the Year wins, among many other accolades.


The Kansas native's latest project is this year's Everlasting, an album of soul and R&B covers that range from the Supremes' "Come See About Me" to Van Morrison's "Wild Night." Released via her own label, Vinyl Recordings, the LP topped the country charts upon its release, and its namesake tour was largely sold-out.


"It was a good feeling because it was a passion project for me, and it was different," McBride told Rolling Stone Country earlier this year. "There was no single to drive the sales, so none of us knew what would happen with it. To have a really strong week like that is a testament to my fans. It shows the loyalty of my fans and the fact that they are willing to go on this journey with me. Whatever I do next, they are excited about it and curious. It doesn't matter what kind of record I put out."


Still, she hints that her next album — her first on Nash Icon — will have all original tracks. But after that, the singer's bucket list includes gospel, big band & swing and acoustic albums.


McBride joins Reba McEntire as the only two artists now officially signed to Nash Icon, though Ronnie Dunn has hinted via social media that he, too, is partnering with the label. McEntire was the company's flagship artist, announcing an upcoming album along with her new deal and expressing hope that the label will help curb country radio's longtime gender inequality issues. "It's been a weird time in country music for females, and it's in a trend now that I'm hoping is going to be more female friendly, for personal reasons," she told reporters on day of her big Nash Icon announcement, back in October.



Longtime friends — and now labelmates — McEntire and McBride are tied for the most CMA nominations in any vocalist category, with 17 apiece.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/martina-mcbride-signs-with-nash-icon-20141229?utm_source=yahoomusic&utm_medium=referral?utm_source=yahoomusic&utm_medium=referral

via Christopher Sabec Music

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Fabolous on How 'the Golden Era of Hip-Hop' Inspired His New Christmas LP

Tomorrow morning, on Christmas Day, rap fans can wake up and download Fabolous' The Young OG Project. "When you get to a certain age, Christmas is for your kids," says the Brooklyn MC. "Other than that, you're just sitting at home, eating, watching some football. Now this album can become the gift you give yourself."



The LP, which is Fab's sixth overall and first in five years, is his homage to the rap scene of the 1990s. "It's kind of like a vanity project," he says, explaining that the tracks emerged from the ongoing sessions for his still-unreleased Loso's Way 2. "I kept getting these beats that were inspired by Nineties records, so I just busted some raps on top of 'em. I felt like I'm a good person to represent that, because I've been around since the late Nineties, and I'm still putting out music, 15 years later."


Every song on The Young OG Project features an allusion to a classic hit from that era, whether it's a flip of the sample on Nas' "Oochie Wally" (technically released in 2000) or a hook built around a quote from Jay Z's "Jigga What, Jigga Who." "The Nineties, to me, is the golden era of hip-hop – it's when I fell in love with it," Fabolous says. "There was everything from gangster rap, to backpack rap, to flashy, flossy rap, to dance rap, to pop rap, to female MC rap. There were so many lanes and styles, and that's one of the things that helped it flourish."


Adds Fabolous, "Nobody wanted to sound like anybody else. I remember when Ghostface made the accusation that Biggie's album cover was reminiscent of Nas'. He was upset about it. And it wasn't even his album! That was the attitude at that time. Later on, in the 2000s, you started seeing a little bit of the originality slip, where everybody was seeing what was successful and just trying to do that."


When the decade began in 1990, Fabolous was 13 years old, living in Bedford-Stuyvesant's Brevoort Houses projects and just starting to write his own rhymes for fun. "I wasn't even trying to be a rapper," he admits. "It was just a hobby to me."


At the time, he says, "My neighborhood was pretty rough, but we didn't know anything more, so we lived in it and accepted it." He shakes his head, remembering. "Those neighborhoods are not kid-friendly. My mom tried as much as she could to keep me out of the streets. But it's only so much your mom can do in an environment that's pulling you in. You fall victim to peer pressure – the things that go on in the streets are the cool things. You might not be a killer, but you might be carrying a gun because people on the streets rob people. I was a smart kid, and I tried not to put myself in a position that could change my life. But there's a lot of people who were probably just as smart as me and got put in that position. There's no crystal ball. You're just living and trying to survive."


In the midst of that everyday struggle, music was an escape. "Hip-hop brought bright spots in that, you know what I'm saying?" Fab says. "Hip-hop was the thing that brought happiness into the hood. You'd sit outside, chop it up with your friends, listen to music, talk about music. There were barbershop talks about 'Who's the best, Biggie, Jay Z or Nas.'" He laughs. "What's funny about that line is, truthfully, I don't even think Jay Z was on that level at that time. He just put himself up there. He made that the conversation."


By his late teens, Fabolous had developed a quick-witted, punchline-heavy style, but he still didn't see rap as a career. "I just loved to write," he says. That changed in 1998, when New York's powerful DJ Clue invited Fab onto his popular Hot 97 radio show. "I came back to school the next day, and some girl was telling me, 'There was this kid on the radio last night, and he was dope, man. He was saying stuff that I had never heard before, and his flow was crazy.' I was like, 'Yo, that was me!' She was like, 'Get the fuck out of here. No way.' I had to say the rap back to her. I always remember that moment." He smiles. "She was the first person that let me know, 'You might have something here.'"







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1x4rIx3

via Christopher Sabec Music

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Rodney Atkins Preps First Greatest Hits Album

Rodney Atkins will release his first greatest hits collection in February. The album will include his six chart-toppers: "If You're Going Thru Hell (Before the Devil Even Knows)," "Watching You," "These Are My People," "Cleaning This Gun (Come On in Boy)," "It's America" and "Take a Back Road." The other half-dozen tracks span the last ten years of the country singer's career, with the newest being his latest single, "East Sleep Love You Repeat," written by Ryan Bizarri and Walker Hayes (who's also on backup vocals). Hear the song below.



Atkins' career has been one of persistence. He signed with Curb Records in 1996, the very same week that the label also signed LeAnn Rimes. But while Rimes had an almost immediate hit with the multi-platinum selling "Blue," Atkins' first single stalled in the 70s and second single didn't even chart. It was another five years before he had a song in the Top 40, and his first Top 10 came more than seven years after inking his record deal.


"I remember crossing paths with the Dixie Chicks on a radio tour," he tells the Washington Post, recalling his first few, disappointing years. "They were really nice, saying, 'We've heard about you. Great things are going to happen for you.' Then they exploded, while I'm just sitting here doing the same thing, scratching my butt.... I also saw artists get signed over and over, and then they'd get frustrated, quit. But they never really took the bull by the horns. I wanted to do everything I possibly could to make this happen."


The East Tennessee native finally catapulted to A-list country status with the release of "If You're Going Thru Hell," his first Number One and the most-played country tune of 2006, according to Billboard. He held onto those bragging rights again the following year, as "Watching You" —a song inspired by his son, Elijah — was the most-played country track of 2007.


Rodney Atkins — Greatest Hits will hit stores February 3rd and is available for pre-order now.


Rodney Atkins – Greatest Hits track list:


1. "If You're Going Thru Hell (Before the Devil Even Knows)"

2. "Watching You"

3. "These Are My People"

4. "Cleaning This Gun (Come On in Boy)"

5. "Take a Back Road"

6. "Farmer's Daughter"

7. "It's America"

8. "Invisibly Shaken"

9. "Honesty (Write Me a List)"

10. "He's Mine"

11. "About the South"

12. "Eat Sleep Love You Repeat"







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1AEw8Mg

via Christopher Sabec Music

Monday, December 22, 2014

All-Star Project Preps LP Featuring Dave Grohl, Slipknot's Corey Taylor

Teenage Time Killer, a supergroup spearheaded by members of alt-metal vets Corrosion of Conformity, have signed a deal with Rise Records, a rep for the label has confirmed. The band's debut will feature appearances by rockers ranging from Foo Fighters frontman Dave Grohl to Slipknot screamer Corey Taylor. The band recorded the music for the record at Grohl's Studio 606 on the mixing board featured in the Foo Fighters frontman's Sound City doc, according to Kerrang!. Although the label has yet to confirm a release date, one of the group's central members, Reed Mullen, told Indy Week it would come out in January.



Other artists who will appear on Teenage Time Killer's debut include Lamb of God's Randy Blythe, former Queens of the Stone Age bassist Nick Oliveri, Clutch's Neil Fallon, former Dead Kennedys singer Jello Biafra, Fear's Lee Ving, Off!'s Keith Morris and Prong's Tommy Victor. It will also feature current and former members of Misfits, Red Fang, Sunn O))), Bl'ast, Brujeria, My Ruin and Sacred Reich, among others.


In October, C.O.C. posted a minute-long video to their Facebook of Teenage Time Killer recording a hardcore-leaning song that featured guitar by Brian Baker of Bad Religion, Dag Nasty and Minor Threat fame. The video showed the band's nucleus, C.O.C. drummer Mullen and bassist Mike Dean, working with Ghost of Saturday Nite singer Jonny Webber on the song's vocals.


In November, when Indy Week asked Mullen if Teenage Time Killer would be touring, the drummer said it was still up in the air. "Dave Grohl's folks – his management and marketing people – are going to help us do all that with the thing," Mullen said. "We recorded about 98 percent of it at his studio. They were talking about...maybe do something like Kimmel and have three or four different singers come out at one time, like Jello and Lee Ving, maybe Randy from Lamb of God, something like that. All the songs are real short, so we could do, easily, four songs and not go over."







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/13xmHBq

via Christopher Sabec Music

Friday, December 19, 2014

Charlie Daniels' Volunteer Jam 2015 Will Feature Billy Ray Cyrus, Travis Tritt

From the first time the Charlie Daniels staged his Volunteer Jam concert event in Nashville in October 1974, the caliber of talent and number of surprise performers kept fans returning year after year.



To commemorate the legendary concert's 40th anniversary, the star-studded event returns to Music City on August 12, 2015, at Nashville's Bridgestone Arena, with special appearances from Billy Ray Cyrus, Kentucky Headhunters, Montgomery Gentry, the Outlaws, Lee Roy Parnell and Travis Tritt. More guest artists are expected to be revealed soon. Tickets, including special VIP packages, will go on sale Friday, January 30th at the Bridgestone Arena box office and all Ticketmaster locations.


Past performers at Volunteer Jam events through the years have included James Brown, Billy Joel, Willie Nelson, Garth Brooks, Emmylou Harris, Little Richard, Don Henley and Lynyrd Skynyrd.


"We never had any idea how big it would become. Broadcasting around the world and on Voice of America," Daniels says in a statement. "We thought it was a hometown thing. We never realized it would become an international event."


Proceeds from ticket sales will benefit the Journey Home Project, a non-profit co-founded by Daniels to help veterans of U.S. Armed Forces, and also the Predators Foundation, which assists Nashville's NHL pro hockey team in efforts to serve local families in need.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/13J9eHm

via Christopher Sabec Music

Trace Adkins Scores 'Roadrunner' Movie Role, Preps Live DVD

Trace Adkins is set to appear in Roadrunner, an upcoming movie about car racing that's being compared to the classic Burt Reynolds film, Smokey and the Bandit. Clint Eastwood's 28-year-old son, Scott, is the only other publicly known cast member at this point, and a release date has yet to be set.



Adkins, who has also appeared on the big screen in such films as The Lincoln Lawyer, An American Carol and Trailer Park of Terror, admits he's sometimes reluctant to talk about his acting roles. But the country singer, who is currently in the studio recording a new album, admits even a box office flop is good for the soul.


"I've done some [films] that have been pretty bad, but some have been good ones," the candid performer tells the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. "It doesn't even matter. I do them because the stuff I love most about the music business are the days when you're in the studio and that creative thing is happening, and when you're on stage doing live stuff and the creative thing is happening. When you're on a movie set, you're surrounded by incredibly talented, creative people, and I find that environment stimulating and invigorating."


Adkins adds that even though movie and TV roles can be outside his comfort zone, they've helped him grow as an artist. But the country star who won NBC's Celebrity Apprentice a few seasons ago says he has no interest in appearing on another competition-based reality TV series.


To kick off 2015, Adkins will release a 20-track concert DVD on January 13th. Live Country!, filmed last August at the Paramount theater in Huntington, New York, spotlights nearly two hours of Adkins' hits, including "You're Gonna Miss This," "(This Ain't) No Thinkin' Thing" and "Honky Tonk Badonkadonk." (See the complete track listing below.)


Adkins is currently wrapping up the final dates on his Celtic-influenced Christmas-themed the King's Gift Tour.


Trace Adkins, Live Country! DVD:


1. "(This Ain’t) No Thinkin’ Thing"


2. "Songs About Me"


3. "Big Time"


4. "This Ain’t No Love Song"


5. "Chrome"


6. "You’re Gonna Miss This"


7. "There’s a Girl in Texas"


8. "Every Light in the House"


9. "Marry for Money"


10. "Come to Poppa"


11. "Hot Mama"


12. "Heartbreak Song"


13. "Maintenance Man"


14. "It All Adds Up to Us"


15. "Ladies Love Country Boys"


16. "Rock You Up"


17. "I Left Something Turned on at Home"


18. "Honky Tonk Badonkadonk"


19. "Ride"


20. "Take It From Me"







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1v82UQa

via Christopher Sabec Music

Thursday, December 18, 2014

Carrie Underwood, Miranda Lambert, Blake Shelton Lead Big Barrel Country Festival

Much like Stagecoach following Coachella at the same California venue, the East Coast is getting a huge country music festival that will act as a cousin to an annual rock extravaganza. Organizers of the Firefly Festival in Dover, Delaware — this year headlined by Foo Fighters, Outkast and Jack Johnson — have announced the 2015 Big Barrel Country Music Festival. It will take place at the Woodlands of Dover International Speedway on June 26—28, the weekend after Firefly.



While the 2015 Firefly lineup is still under lock and key, the Big Barrel headliners were announced today: Miranda Lambert, Blake Shelton and Carrie Underwood. More than 40 other big Nashville names are also on the bill, including Gary Allan, Merle Haggard, Loretta Lynn and Jake Owen. Three-day general admission passes are $99 and are on sale now at BigBarrelFestival.com.


Lambert's appearance comes in the middle of her 2015 Certified Platinum Tour, which features opener Justin Moore on all dates, with Sunny Sweeney, Ashley Monroe, Danielle Bradbery and Raelyn in select cities. Husband Blake Shelton is now on a three-month break, according to his official tour schedule, with The Voice having wrapped this week (with his fourth win). He'll gas up the tour bus again in late March. Underwood has only a handful of 2015 dates set at this point, as she prepares to welcome her first child this spring.


Lambert and Shelton are also Stagecoach 2015 headliners, alongside Tim McGraw.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1C3ddN3

via Christopher Sabec Music

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Elton John to Wed David Furnish This Weekend in England

Elton John will marry his partner of more than two decades, David Furnish, this weekend at a ceremony in England. The couple underwent a civil partnership in 2005, according Us Weekly, and has been waiting for a same-sex marriage to be legal in the country before planning their wedding; a law went into effect this past March allowing same-sex marriage in England and Wales.



That month, the singer told Matt Lauer that the couple was planning a quiet wedding and that their children would be present. "For this legislation to come through is joyous and we should celebrate it," John said. "We shouldn't just say, 'Oh, well, we have a civil partnership, we're not going to bother to get married.'"


"I think what we'll do is go to a register office in England...and take the boys with us, and a couple of witnesses," Furnish told the Las Vegas Review-Journal (via The Guardian) in a separate interview around the same time.


The couple met in 1993 and now have two sons, Zachary and Elijah. "I was attracted to David immediately," John told Parade in 2010. "He was very well dressed, very shy. The next night we had dinner. After it, we consummated our relationship. We fell in love very quickly."


The singer has always been an outspoken advocate of marriage equality, but has been more vocal this year as he has planned the wedding. This past June, he had powerful words to people who use religion as an excuse to dismiss same-sex marriage. "If Jesus Christ was alive today, I cannot see him – as the Christian person that he was and the great person that he was – saying this could not happen," he told Sky News. "He was all about love and compassion and forgiveness and trying to bring people together and that's what the church should be about."







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1wiKMYg

via Christopher Sabec Music

Eric Church, Jason Aldean, Luke Bryan Are 2014 Country Chart Champs

It was, by all accounts, a very good year to be Eric Church, Jason Aldean or Luke Bryan. But which of them was the year's top country artist overall? It depends on which year-end chart statistics you consult.



Church, whose The Outsiders garnered four Grammy nominations, had the best-selling album of 2014, according to year-to-date Nielsen Soundscan figures, and the LP was Billboard's Number Four country album of the year (on a chart that's topped by three 2013 releases). Selling an impressive 288,000 copies in its debut week back in February, the collection continues to make an impact, having taken home the award for Album of the Year at this week's first-ever American Country Countdown Awards. The Outsiders has since been certified platinum, for sales in excess of one million. Church's Outsiders World Tour, with openers Dwight Yoakam and Halestorm, has, according to Pollstar, sold an impressive 382,112 tickets over 33 shows.


Jason Aldean's Old Boots, New Dirt was the fourth-best-selling album according to Soundscan figures, and the Number Seven country LP of 2014, per Billboard's tabulations. Released in October, the album debuted at Number One on the multi-genre Billboard 200 as well as the Top Country Albums chart. It was the first country LP to ship one million units for the year, which put Aldean in the company of pop heavyweights Taylor Swift, Ariana Grande and Sam Smith. The newly-crowned ACC Artist of the Year also had the Number Two song of 2014 on the Hot Country Songs chart with "Burnin' It Down," which was the Georgia native's first ever to top the all-genre Digital Songs chart.


Taking part in the Number One country song of 2014, "This Is How We Roll," with Florida Georgia Line, was just one aspect of Luke Bryan's incredible 2014, as he ended the year being crowned Billboard's top country act and top male artist. Bryan's Crash My Party album was the second best-selling of 2014, according to Soundscan, and the Top Country Album of the year on Billboard's survey. The LP has sold 2.3 million copies since its August 2013 release and notched an impressive 4.4 million in individual track sales during 2014, including "Drink a Beer," and "Play It Again," which between them topped the charts for 14 weeks.


With his second Number One single, "Beat of the Music," Brett Eldredge topped the year's Country Airplay chart, spending a total of 39 weeks on the list with the hit that was also crowned ACC Song of the Year. Eldredge was named New Artist of the Year at the CMA Awards in November.


The year wasn't exactly overflowing with female acts when it came to chart action and country radio airplay. Miranda Lambert, who had Billboard's eighth best-selling album of 2014 with Platinum, was the Number Seven country act of the year, and the only solo female act among the Top 10. Lambert was also the only solo female artist to earn a Top Five hit ("Automatic") on Billboard's Country Airplay chart.


But, for one of country music's most iconic female artists, it was a huge year across the pond. Dolly Parton's Blue Smoke… The Best of, the UK release of her most recent studio album, which also includes a compilation of some of her most memorable hits, has been certified platinum. Three of the new tracks from that album, "Try," "Home," and Parton's cover of Bon Jovi's "Lay Your Hands on Me" all reached the Top 30 in UK airplay, while the album's title track also hit the Top 40. Parton triumphed at England's legendary Glastonbury Music festival this past summer, which also marked the Country Music Hall of Famer's 50th anniversary of graduating high school and moving to Nashville to pursue her country music dreams.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1whNwoE

via Christopher Sabec Music

Friday, December 12, 2014

Apple Pulls White-Power Music From iTunes

Apple has removed music with racial supremacy–themed messages from iTunes, following scrutiny from the Southern Poverty Law Center (via Noisey). The winter edition of the organization's "Intelligence Report" criticized the company for offering music by white-power groups like Skrewdriver, Max Resist and the Bully Boys, as well as offering a "Listeners Also Bought" feature that suggested like-minded hatemongers.



An Apple spokesperson confirmed to Rolling Stone that music was removed. The company was not involved in the creation of SPLC's report, but took music down as a result of the publication.


Rolling Stone has explored iTunes' store and it appears that several, but not all, of the offending groups on SPLC's list have been removed. (Although Skrewdriver's records are not available, an album billed as a tribute to the band by another artist is still available.)


The SPLC investigation uncovered 54 racist bands on the service and is reporting that 30 of them have been removed. It also reinforced its disapproval of Amazon for continuing to offer digital retail space to hateful artists. The organization, which previously condemned Spotify, reports that the streaming service judges its content by Germany’s Federal Department for Media Harmful to Young Persons; it claims that Spotify has yet to remove music by the artists it identified.


"Apple is doing the right thing by preventing iTunes from being used as a recruitment tool for white supremacists," Heidi Beirich, director of the SPLC's Intelligence Project, said in a statement. "Amazon and other online retailers that continue to sell this music need to realize that they are providing a powerful platform for extremists to reach young people with messages that advocate hate and violence against African Americans, Jews and others."


As the organization reported, it is unknown just how much profit supremacist music was making on iTunes.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1xbpXQ3

via Christopher Sabec Music

Time Jumpers Vocalist Dawn Sears Dies

Dawn Sears, vocalist with the four-time Grammy-nominated band the Time Jumpers, died Thursday (December 11th) after a two-year battle with lung cancer. In addition to her work with the Western swing-influenced band, Sears was also a longtime member of Vince Gill's touring band and an in-demand harmony vocalist. She was 53.


Related: Vince Gill Achieves 'Icon' Status, Talks Mortality


A native of East Grand Forks, Minnesota, Sears was just 14 when she won her first talent contest at a VFW Hall in Grand Forks, North Dakota. At 17, she was touring with a band throughout the West and Midwest. After moving to Nashville in 1987, she signed to Warner Bros. Records and released her debut album, What a Woman Wants to Hear, in 1991. The Barry Beckett-produced LP earned her favorable comparisons to singers Reba McEntire and Shelby Lynne, and featured her husband, fellow Time Jumper Kenny Sears, on fiddle. In 1994, while a member of Vince Gill's band — after a brief hiatus from her solo recording career — Sears became the first artist signed to the reactivated Decca label in Nashville, releasing the album Nothin' but Good. In addition to the Time Jumpers projects and several of Gill's albums, Sears sang harmony on tunes by Tracy Byrd, Ronnie Milsap, Jim Lauderdale, Patty Loveless and Merle Haggard, among others.


In October, McEntire headlined a benefit for Sears, which also featured performances by the Time Jumpers and Riders in the Sky. In a statement at the time, Sears said, "I am on a mission to help fund lung-cancer research at [Nashville's] Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center. A benefit concert is the best way I know how to do that. It is my mission to bring more hope to those of us with lung cancer. I was diagnosed with lung cancer over a year ago and I now have a greater understanding of the daily battle and challenges that people with cancer of any kind face." The event raised more than $100,000.


As a singer with the Time Jumpers, who perform every Monday at Nashville club 3rd and Lindsley, Sears earned thunderous ovations, whether singing rollicking classics like "(Get Your Kicks on) Route 66" or weepy heartbreakers like "If You're Gonna Do Me Wrong, Do It Right." Watch a goose-bump-raising performance of the latter from just this past June below.


Sears is survived by her husband and their daughter, Tess. Funeral arrangements are pending.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1wnYeZo

via Christopher Sabec Music

Man Pleads Guilty to Drug-Related Death at 2013 Electric Zoo

A man whom Feds claimed sold drugs that led to the death of a festivalgoer at the 2013 Electric Zoo has pleaded guilty to one count of conspiring to distribute narcotics, according to The Associated Press.



Patrick Morgan, 24, told the Federal District Court in Manhattan that he had indeed acted illegally by agreeing to obtain ecstasy for a friend in August 2013. The friend then sold approximately 80 pills to concertgoer Jeffrey Russ and his friends. Russ collapsed at the New York City festival and later died at age 23 of acute intoxication from the pills and hyperthermia.


Morgan, whom authorities say also previously sold pills to Russ and his friends, will likely face less than a year in prison because of an agreement his lawyer arranged with prosecutors over sentencing.


The Drug Enforcement Agency arrested the Buffalo, New York resident in July after an unnamed friend of his cooperated with the Feds and provided them with incriminating evidence. At the time of his arrest, the DEA charged Morgan with narcotics distribution and narcotics conspiracy, which each carried maximum sentences of 20 years in prison. He was later released on a $100,000 bond.


Russ' death, along with an unrelated overdose-related death, prompted the cancellation of the final day of the festival that year. Four other attendees were reportedly hospitalized and 31 people were arrested that year.


The Electric Zoo returned this year with increased security and new health measures, including drug-sniffing dogs and plainclothes security personnel, with an eye toward preventing further drug-related issues. Organizers also required festivalgoers to watch a PSA before entering the Electric Zoo.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1wjcgN4

via Christopher Sabec Music

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Maddie and Tae Make Bro-Beating History With 'Girl in a Country Song'

It took a "Girl in a Country Song" to get a girl back to the top of the country radio airplay charts — two girls, to be exact. After a dismal two-year drought, Maddie & Tae's retort to the genre's misogynist clichés ("I hate the way this bikini top chafes!) is the first single by a female to hit the Number One radio slot since Carrie Underwood's "Blown Away." (Miranda Lambert's "Automatic" went Number One this year, but on the Billboard country charts.) It's been a rough ride for the ladies overall of late — while superstars like Faith Hill and Shania Twain dominated in the Nineties, the dawn of beer-swiggin', truck-driving baseball-capped bros has made the charts a pretty unfriendly place for women.



"I think we could definitely get some more ladies out there," Tae Dye tells Rolling Stone Country. "You have Carrie [Underwood] and Miranda [Lambert], but I'd love to seem some more women out there." But even Underwood and Lambert couldn't pull a number one with their collaboration, "Somethin' Bad."


And while male duos like Florida Georgia Line have had no problems reigning radio, it's been since 2006 that a female twosome has done so — with The Wreckers' "Leave the Pieces," capitalizing on Michelle Branch's sizable draw. Maddie & Tae's label, DOT Records (a Big Machine imprint) is certainly celebrating — not only is this a huge stride for the genre and gender, it's their first Number One in 40 years.


The 19 year olds released their self-titled EP in November, but a full-length debut isn’t far behind. Working on songs now, they're hopeful to have the album on shelves come spring.


"We're always trying to write songs, and we already have over two hundred," says Maddie Marlow. "The theme of the record will be honesty, honestly. With everything that Tae and I do, we want to make sure it's true and honest to who we are as people and artists."


For now, the wistful ballad "Fly" will be the next single — a sweeter, less controversial approach than "Girl in a Country Song." But can we expect the new album to contain some similarly provocative material? Is everything fair game to country's new radio queens?


"We haven’t picked the songs yet," says Dye, smiling, "but I am sure there will be!"







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1zp2REP

via Christopher Sabec Music

John Fogerty Denounces 'Angry' Former CCR Members After Lawsuit

Former Creedence Clearwater Revival frontman John Fogerty is less than thrilled that his onetime bandmates are now suing him for a variety of claims, including trademark infringement for allegedly using the band name. Although the lawsuit did not conclude by asking the singer to stop playing his CCR songs live, Fogerty said in a statement that he's standing by his works.



"The people who come to my shows know they will hear me sing and play the songs I wrote and recorded over the past four decades of my career," the singer said. "Every night we play live, I'm thrilled to see all of those fans singing along to the songs that have touched them. I am at a wonderful place in my life. I am playing the music that I love and wrote, with full joy and having my son Shane joining along side of me – It doesn't get much better than that.


"No lawyers, lawsuits, or angry ex–band members will stop me ever again from singing my songs," he continued. "I am going to continue to tour and play all my songs every single night I am out on the road."


Members of Creedence Clearwater Revisited – original CCR bassist Stu Cook and drummer Doug Clifford, as well as the wife of the band's late rhythm guitarist (and John's brother) Tom Fogerty – contend that when John made comments to CTV that he would prefer they didn't tour as CCR, he was violating a contractual agreement, among other claims.


"Using the name is sort of a sacrilege to what we believed when we were young guys in a band together – but you know, I don't sit around and worry about it too much," the singer told the Canadian Press in 2011.


Fogerty's ex-bandmates are seeking damages and injunctions related to the singer's alleged misuse and malfeasance of the band's name, according to their complaint, via The Hollywood Reporter.


The former members of CCR, who disbanded in 1972, have long been at odds with one another. At the group's induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1993, John Fogerty refused to perform with the other members of the group. THR reports that Fogerty sued his former bandmates three years later for misusing the band's name, which eventually led to a settlement agreement in 2001.


Despite the bad blood, Fogerty told the Calgary Herald in 2011 that he had let go of his bitterness toward his ex-bandmates. He also hinted at the time that he would be open to a reunion. "'Never say never' is I guess what people tell you," he said. "In this life, all kinds of strange things come to pass. Realizing that it doesn't really kick up a big firestorm of emotion, it kind of suggests that at least if someone started talking I'd sit still long enough to listen."







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1zKuHJI

via Christopher Sabec Music

Sing Bono's Band Aid 30 Lyrics to Help Fight Ebola

The organizers behind Band Aid 30 – the latest incarnation of Bob Geldof's charitably minded supergroup Band Aid – have issued an "Ice Bucket Challenge"–style viral video call to action to music fans. Using a free iOS app called WholeWorldBand, Band Aid 30 would like people to record themselves singing Bono's "Do They Know It's Christmas?" line, "Tonight we're reaching out and touching you," and then nominate three friends to do the same on social media. The U2 frontman delivers the line at the 1:52 mark in the song's official video.



The app allows users to create a video mix of themselves and up to five other people singing along with the song, which can be uploaded to YouTube, Facebook and Twitter with the hashtag #BandAid30. The organization will collect £1.40 (about $2.20) for every person who participates in the challenge and put it toward the fight against Ebola in West Africa.


"We need to keep up momentum," Geldof said in a statement. "I want us to raise about £5 million but we need people to understand that we've only got three weeks to make a difference."


Geldof and "Do They Know It's Christmas?" co-writer Midge Ure released a new version of the iconic 1984 hit, under the Band Aid 30 moniker, last month. In addition to Bono, the new version also features Coldplay's Chris Martin, One Direction, Ed Sheeran, Sam Smith, Ellie Goulding, Angelique Kidjo, Seal, Sinéad O'Connor and many more artists performing the tune.


Ure recently spoke with Rolling Stone about why they decided to resurrect Band Aid. "It was the hideous synchronicity of the Ebola crisis and the way it's escalated, and the fact that we had this 30th anniversary coming up that everybody was asking us about," he said. "A month ago, this wasn't in the cards. Then Bob got a call from the U.N. saying, 'Can you do it again?'"


Regarding introducing a new generation to the song, Ure contended that they already knew it "because they've heard it blasting out of radios every Christmas since they were born." The hard part would be getting them involved in the charitable side of the cause. "All we can do is hope that Ed Sheeran and One Direction and everyone else plead with the fans not to stream this, not to download this for free," he said.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1AaX03T

via Christopher Sabec Music

Monday, December 8, 2014

Johnny Marr Cancels U.S. Tour Due to Family Illness

Johnny Marr has canceled the remaining scheduled U.S. tour dates of his 2014 tour. A statement on the former Smiths guitarist's website cites a serious, close family illness.



"I'm really disappointed to not be able to play the shows," Marr wrote in a statement. "The touring has been so enjoyable for me and the band, and the audiences have been great everywhere. If it was about just me being unwell I would've found a way to continue as I did when I broke my hand earlier in the year, but to not be there for one of my family is not right. Thank you to everyone for the kind messages. See you soon."


The affected dates include ones scheduled in Washington, Oregon and California, through the 20th. Ticket refunds are available at the point of purchase. The singer-songwriter said he hopes to reschedule the dates.


Earlier this year, Marr put out his second solo album, Playland. He told Rolling Stone that the record picks up right where his solo debut, The Messenger, left off. "I just wanted to take the energy of the band I was touring with and put it into the new songs," said. "I kept on writing as soon as The Messenger came out. I wrote a few songs on the road and kicked them around in soundcheck. I didn't want to change up what I was doing; I just wanted it to be more of it."


Marr began his tour supporting Playland in the U.K., where at one gig he teamed with another guitarist-turned-bandleader, former Oasis member Noel Gallagher. During a set at London's O2 Brixton, the pair played Iggy Pop's "Lust for Life" and the Smiths' "How Soon Is Now?"


Marr recently recorded a guitar part on the song "Ballad of the Mighty Eye," which will appear on Gallagher's upcoming Low Flying Birds LP, Chasing Yesterday. The LP is due out in March.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1yx2Vy9

via Christopher Sabec Music

Jason Aldean Scores Only Platinum-Selling Country Album of 2014

Jason Aldean is in elite — and extremely sparse — company in 2014's heavy metal club.



The country star is one of only three artists to score platinum sales on an album released this year. His Old Boots, New Dirt LP, which debuted at the top of Billboard's all-genre Top 200 chart in October, has now sold more than one million units. That means he's the only country star to release a platinum-seller in 2014, and joins only Taylor Swift and Ariana Grande in platinum album sales for collections released this year.


"We put so much time and passion into choosing the best songs for this album, and this brings a lot of hard work full circle for me," Aldean writes in a statement. "It’s like Christmas came early! I couldn't do it without the best country music fans in the world, who never stop believing in what I do and always follow me, even if I may take a creative left turn every now and then."


Old Boots, New Dirt had more than three million Spotify streams during its first week, setting the record for the biggest country album debut on the music streaming service. (He later yanked the project from Spotify, explaining, " I want everyone who is involved in making my music to be paid fairly.") Additionally, the album had the fourth biggest debut week in all genres this year, selling more than 278,000 copies in its premiere week. Its first single, "Burnin' It Down," was Aldean's first tune to ever top the all-genre Digital Songs chart.


British pop sensation Sam Smith's debut, In the Lonely Hour is expected to join the Aldean, Swift and Grande albums as the fourth 2014 platinum-seller by the end of the year. To compare, ten albums went platinum last year, including projects by Luke Bryan, Florida Georgia Line and Blake Shelton.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1zjYIlg

via Christopher Sabec Music

Phil Anselmo Remembers Dimebag Darrell: 'I Think of Him Every Day'

I remember Dimebag as a warrior. He was not only an incredible guitar player and personality but also within the Pantera gang of band members and road crew, he was a very dynamic personality, always very demanding of everybody. And he had a magic way of showing you his appreciation.



The way he went out, using the word "murder" is always a stark, cold, hideous thing. None of this shit gets easier for me. It actually keeps getting tougher and tougher. For me, personally, I've yet to come to terms with it. I don't see the sense. I don't see the everything-happens-for-a-reason attitude. This year is the toughest yet.


But when I think about Dimebag, 99 percent of the time, it's always the hilarious great times, and then one percent of the time it's regrettable times, on my part. I think of Dime every day of my life. I'm a vivid dreamer and he's in a lot of my dreams. When I dream about Dimebag, it's always good times back when we used to travel in the blue van or his souped-up yellow Camaro, where he would just terrorize his little Arlington, Texas, neighborhood. He was just fucking hilarious, tearing into people's lawns or smashing into fucking mailboxes. He was a fucking wild man.


The first time I ever laid eyes on Dimebag was in 1987 when I tried out for the band. I said, Jesus Christ, look at this skinny guy with this Afro playing guitar. His hair didn't quite reach his shoulders, because he had this real long-ass neck, and it had this bounce to it. Later, I told him, "Dude, you look like a ruffled-up, fucking old Q-tip." And he laughed.


When I joined the band, he was going by "Diamond Darrell." I was always in the process of morphing the band into what we eventually did become, by controlling the cassette deck and turning them guys onto early Mercyful Fate, Slayer and shit like that. After awhile, I was like, "This 'Diamond' shit ain't gonna cut it anymore. Brother, you ought to change that shit to 'Dimebag,'" and the look on his face was priceless, 'cause I could tell he loved it right off the bat. It just cracked his ass up and he went with it from there.


Dimebag was really a big advocate of all things fun. A lot of touring bands will tell you life on the road isn't always a smooth operation. There's hard times, there's mishaps, and it ain't always rosy and pretty; Dimebag was one of those guys that could make a not-so-perfect situation into something special and hilarious and actually fun.


I remember him doing that once toward the end of the Vulgar Display of Power tour. There was this cat who used to come out to shows in a certain town and he was a nice enough guy, but he wanted to hang out a little too much and kind of got on everybody's nerves. The day we got to the town was one of those days where I rolled over on the wrong side of the bunk thinking the worst. I head to my dressing room, and there's this huge, two-page letter from this guy that says, "For Phil." The guy's saying, "I hear you guys have some time off, so I'm planning on coming down to New Orleans and visiting your house. I've got your address, and I'm going to bring my wife with me and she'll give you special favors." And I'm going, "Motherfucker, man. This is a nightmare." I'm furious. I'm beside myself all day long. And about an hour before the show, as usual, Dimebag kicks the door open on my dressing room with a couple shots of whisky in his hand: "Time to get going, motherfucker. Let's go." And he goes, "By the way, that letter, that was total bullshit. I wrote the whole fucking thing." God damn it. I grabbed him and I said, "You motherfucker!" He had me wound up all fucking day long. It made the rest of the night a blast.


But there was another side to him. When it came to Pantera, he was deadly serious. But there was a tongue-in-cheek perfection depending on the mood of what we were writing. When I first joined the band, it felt like I was the "new guy" all the way through Vulgar Display of Power, with the Abbott brothers peeking over my shoulder, picking at my lyrics, which drove me bananas. I remember when we recorded "Cemetery Gates," at the end of the song where I'm hitting the wailing high notes and he's matching me with his whammy bar, that was competition – who can outdo who. And of course he'd hit this crazy high fucking note that there's no way I could. It made him feel awesome for that five or 10 minutes, but later it was always, "Fucking great job, man." When it came to Pantera, he was very particular, and when it came to pushing anyone, whether it be me, Rex or anyone, he could push you, but he was also a great motivator. And he was always working towards the best for whatever particular song we were working on. He'd get the best out of everybody.


"I want to leave his memory sacred."

If he were still alive, I'd damn well know him, because of our love for each other. He was one of my best friends on this planet, and best friends – especially those with strong personalities and integrity – butt heads sometimes. But we always found a compromise. I know for a fact that we would've made more music together. There would've been more Pantera tours. There would've been more albums.


Then, when I think about it, the reality of his death collapses that entire pipe dream, and once again the heart is crushed.


I learned a lot of lessons from Dimebag. There was a time when I was going through a very tough period when it felt like my body was betraying me, and some days I would just have a shitty attitude and that would be my fucking mood for the day. Both Dimebag and our security guy, Big Val, came in one day and said, "You know, Phil, when you roll off that bus, you set the tone for the day with your actions." From that I took a positive from it, and no matter how I'm fucking feeling these days, I make sure I poke my head in and say hello to the opening band, I say hello to the road crew, really just sort of to show a kinder side to myself. Dimebag taught me that making things easier for everyone around me is imperative.


His loss has made me work harder to do his memory justice. I want to leave his memory sacred and do the best that I can do, because I know that's what he would've wanted: my best.


The old saying "there are no guarantees in life" – that's very fucking true. Never take anything for granted. All I can tell his fans is to enjoy every second that you possibly can in this life, because there will be times when we will all be tested. The loss of a parent, the loss of a child. Somehow, we need to have the intestinal fortitude to move forward and make our loved ones proud.


Pantera fans are and always were the greatest. They are part of the family. And the songs that we wrote, those are their songs now. I just hope that everybody who is trying to find closure, just does the best they can every fucking day, because that's the way Dimebag lived it. And that's the way, honestly, he went as well. He was on that stage playing the fucking guitar.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1ATqIeY

via Christopher Sabec Music

Friday, December 5, 2014

Bob DiPiero, Craig Wiseman Trade Hits and Jabs at CMA Songwriters' Series

The casual country fan might not know the names Bob DiPiero, Craig Wiseman, Brett James and Radney Foster, but even the casual music fan knows their songs. On Thursday night, the quartet performed their greatest tracks, almost all of which were made famous by other artists, at New York's Joe's Pub as part of the CMA Songwriters Series, which started a decade ago. But it was much more than a hit parade — on top of the music, the musicians gave the audience insight into the songwriting business, revealed the stories behind their beloved tunes, shared anecdotes that were both hilarious and heartfelt, and traded good-natured barbs.



DiPiero served as the evening's host, though it didn't seem like the guys needed much coordinating. They dutifully took their turns talking and performing, one song at a time, stage right to left, though there were many times when they interrupted each other, both for lighthearted zingers and stories praising the featured songwriter. Wiseman — who donned a black shirt with a shiny AC/DC logo —was particularly fond of making sure the audience had the pleasure of getting him another beer, while DiPiero admitted that his allergy to alcohol always made him "break out in handcuffs." Foster asked everyone to be polite and, relatively, not raunchy because his 80-year-old mother came up from Texas for the show, along with several other family members. Of course, the audience gave her a big round of applause.


The friendship in this fraternity of country songwriters runs deep, with obvious affection — and maybe a tad bit of "why didn't I think of that line" envy — evident during the performances. Wiseman recounted how he ended up recording co-writer Dallas Davidson's offhand comment about rednecks and edited it into the "red, red, red, red, red, red, redneck" refrain of Blake Shelton's "Boys 'Round Here." James relayed how honored he was to be part of "I Hold On," which Dierks Bentley has deemed his most personal song of all time. Foster recalled how some "skinny kid from Australia," otherwise known as Keith Urban, turned "Raining on Sunday" into a hit, and admitted his family now makes Sunday pancakes in the "Keith Urban memorial kitchen."


Not to be topped was Wiseman, who admitted that when he was once asked to collaborate with an artist on a song about a sick wife, he instead crafted a tune called "Titty's Beer." "And a redneck angel sang," he said about the moment he, after hitting creative wall after wall, came up with a song that would be a lot more appealing than lyrics about illness. Colt Ford ended up recording "Titty's Beer," and Wiseman swears it's just a pun, because he would never, ever objectify anything about "the fairer sex."


The best indication of the dudes' ability to cross over to other genres came when James sang "Mr. Know It All," the hugely successful single he helped pen for Kelly Clarkson. DiPiero, who's penned his fair share of hits, took a few minutes to jokingly complain about how Little Big Town borrowed their name from his publishing company, and Rascal Flatts decided to pursue music after jamming on his classic, "The Church On Cumberland Road" — yet neither of them have ever "cut a damn one of my songs."


The night ended, fittingly, with "Live Like You Were Dying," a Grammy-winning hit for Tim McGraw that Wiseman co-wrote. He prefaced it with a story about how he learned to play the G chord at a Bible camp, then realized he could play a few more chords off of that and probably write a few tunes of his own. Needing some bucks, he went back to that same camp to work as a counselor and met an attractive arts and crafts teacher, who just happens to now be his wife of 21 years.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1I9UbWK

via Christopher Sabec Music

Black Keys, Jack White, Paramore Nominated for Best Rock Song Grammys

Paramore's "Ain't It Fun," the Black Keys' "Fever" and Jack White's "Lazaretto" are among the singles eligible to win the trophy for Best Rock Song at next year's Grammy Awards. Beck's "Blue Moon" and Ryan Adams' "Gimme Something Good" round out the nominations in the category.



Earlier this year, Paramore frontwoman Hayley Williams described "Ain't It Fun" playfully as "word vomit" in an interview with Rolling Stone. "It just came out, and now everybody's singing it, it's on the radio, it's really cool," she said. "I don't know if you get that twice in your career. This is the first time we've experienced it, and I'm just really thankful."


Black Keys released "Fever" as a single this past May and accompanied it with a televangelist-themed video, directed by Theo Wenner. Speaking with Rolling Stone, Dan Auerbach said the duo's latest album, Turn Blue, was meant to be a "headphone record." He added, "It pays off to listen more than once."


Jack White named both his latest album and Grammy-nominated song after an obscure word for a house where infirmed people can be treated. This past April, he premiered the single as part of Record Store Day, recording it live and pressing it the same day so he could earn the Guinness World Record for the "world's fastest record."


Beck put out "Blue Moon," which appears on this year's Morning Phase, in January a few days before it featured on an episode of Girls. Like the rest of the songs on the record, the tune is set in the early morning hours, which Beck said he approached on purpose. "There's this feeling of tumult and uncertainty, getting through that long, dark night of the soul – whatever you want to call it," he told Rolling Stone this year with a laugh. "These songs were about coming out of that – how things do get better."


Adams debuted "Gimme Something Good" over the summer and followed it up with a video that features Elvira. Later in the year, he embarked on his first tour with a live band since 2009 after seeking therapy for the inner-ear illness Ménière's disease. "I'm ready for the challenge," he told Rolling Stone before the tour. "I just did that last [acoustic] tour, and I'm so proud of that – like, I am so proud.... When I play music now, it's the safest place."


The organization behind the Grammys, NARAS, is announcing the nominees throughout the day today via its Twitter account. All will be announced by 2 p.m. with the exception of Album of the Year, which will be announced tonight during the TV special A Very Grammy Christmas, which airs on CBS at 9 p.m. EST. The ceremony will air on Sunday, February 8th on CBS.


Here are the rest of the nominees so far:


Record of the Year


Iggy Azalea featuring Charli XCX, "Fancy"

Sia, "Chandelier"

Sam Smith, "Stay With Me"

Taylor Swift, "Shake It Off"

Meghan Trainor, "All About That Bass


Best New Artist


Iggy Azalea

Bastille

Sam Smith

HAIM

Brandy Clark


Best Urban Contemporary Album


Jhene Aiko, Sail Out

Beyonce, Beyonce

Chris Brown, X

Mali Music, Mali Is...

Pharrell Williams, Girl


Best Pop Vocal Album


Coldplay, Ghost Stories

Miley Cyrus, Bangerz

Ariana Grande, My Everything

Katy Perry, Prism

Ed Sheeran, X

Sam Smith, In the Lonely Hour


Best Country Album


Dierks Bentley, Riser

Eric Church, The Outsiders

Brandy Clark, 12 Stories

Miranda Lambert, Platinum

Lee Ann Womack, The Way I'm Livin'


Best Country Song


Kenny Chesney, "American Kids"

Miranda Lambert, "Automatic"

Eric Church, "Give Me Back My Hometown"

Glen Campbell, "I'm Not Gonna Miss You"

Tim McGraw featuring Faith Hill, "Meanwhile Back at Mama's"


Best Pop Solo Performance


John Legend, "All Of Me"

Sia, "Chandelier"

Sam Smith, "Stay With Me"

Taylor Swift, "Shake It Off"

Pharrell Williams, "Happy"


Best Rock Album


Beck, Morning Phase

Ryan Adams, Ryan Adams

The Black Keys, Turn Blue

Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers, Hypnotic Eye

U2, Songs of Innocence







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1I9NLqw

via Christopher Sabec Music

Thursday, December 4, 2014

Hear 'Stand With Hillary,' a Countrified Bid for Clinton in 2016

Potential 2016 presidential candidate Hillary Clinton once declared herself "multi-lingual" due to her ability to flip back and fourth from a stiff Eastern dialect to a Arkansas-fed drawl, and now a new super PAC, Stand for Hillary, is taking her southern roots one step further with the countrified political anthem, "Stand for Hillary." Leave it to a dreamy cowboy to show that there's love for Bill's better half south of the Mason-Dixon.


Related: Campaign 2016: The Dumb Season Starts Early


Written by Miguel Orozco, who wrote several reggae and salsa-vibed pro-Obama Youtube sensations ("Los Mexicanos como se Ilama? Obama! Obama") back in 2008, "Stand with Hillary" is targeted towards "working families and Latinos" per the California-based organization's website.


Though it won't be winning any CMA awards any time soon, the video is a country ballad seemingly inspired by wistful odes like Dustin Lynch's "Cowboys and Angels," featuring a veritable greatest hits of American iconography — tractors, trucks, families hugging children and, naturally, a singer with Gerard Butler eyes and some appropriately torn Levis. Zero tenor saxophone, however.


"Put your boots on, and let's smash this glass ceiling," croons the unnamed vocalist before literally smashing some glass with a construction axe and taking a nice walk in front of — you guessed it — a barn.


Stand for Hillary was founded by former Bill Clinton staffer Daniel Chavez, who told Time he was "deeply inspired by the Clinton family."


Clinton, who famously listed "TBD" on her Twitter profile, has yet to respond to the video — nor confirm a presidential bid — and has previously favored rock acts like the Beatles, the Rolling Stones and the Doors over country artists. (Remember that infamous Tammy Wynette snub?) Time will tell if "Stand for Hillary" changes her tune.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1FRiiFE

via Christopher Sabec Music

Reba Plays 'Referee' in Brooks and Dunn Reunion

It all started over an innocent dinner in Nashville. Reba was there. Kix Brooks was there. Ronnie Dunn was there. (There were others, too, but they don't have a wheelbarrow full chart-topping hits.)


Related: Kix Brooks Spins Candid Thoughts on Today's Country


The three longtime friends were reminiscing about touring together in the Nineties when someone threw out an idea that they should tour again.



"Kix said, 'I'm for it.' Ronnie said, 'I'm in,' and I said, 'You know I'm in!' They're my brothers," Reba says, thinking back to that dinner about six month ago.



And with that, the wheels were set in motion. Little did any of them know at the time that they would end up on a stage at Caesars Palace's legendary Colosseum in Las Vegas in early December after being introduced as Las Vegas' newest headliners.



"We've been going to dinners and going on vacations together, which is pretty amazing considering Ronnie and I hate each other and don't get along," Kix jokes, poking fun at the longtime rumors of discord between him and his career partner of 20 years. "We love hanging out and playing music. We thought, let's do it somewhere besides the campfire."



Over the next roughly two years, Reba and Brooks and Dunn's "campfire," so to speak, will be the 4,300 seat theater in the middle of the desert. But, there's always a chance that sparks could fly. That's why Reba is there.



"We needed a good referee," Brooks laughs. "[Reba] makes us both behave. It really is a great way for Ronnie and I to get back together. I think it's been a great break for both us."



The break, both said, had nothing to do with ill will or distrust, as has been reported time and time again.



"Certainly Ronnie and I always considered ourselves brothers more than friends," Brooks says. "We've never been afraid to express our differences of opinions to each other. We just hadn't swept a lot of stuff under the rug."



"There's never been hate or discord," Dunn adds. "We've never not been friends."



But, the duo and Reba still have a few major obstacles they need to get through before opening their show on June 24th, namely figuring out a set list and a vision for the look and feel of the show. Those are good problems to have, though.



"This is the classiest way for us to come in and put a show together," Reba tells Rolling Stone Country. "You can do things here that you can't do other places. It's going to be a challenge for us. It's going to be the classiest, most entertaining emotional roller coaster we can put together."







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1yqBfyR

via Christopher Sabec Music

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Songwriter Spotlight: Matraca Berg

At just 18, an age when most of her peers were adjusting to life after high school and contemplating college, Matraca Berg was adjusting to life as the co-writer of a Number One country song. The Nashville native penned the 1983 chart-topping T.G. Sheppard—Karen Brooks duet, "Faking Love," with her mentor, Bobby Braddock ("He Stopped Loving Her Today," "D-I-V-O-R-C-E") as a teen, and the hits snowballed from there. The path to success for the Nashville native was seemingly as effortless as her songwriting process.



"When I was 15, songs just started coming into my head almost fully formed," she recalls to Rolling Stone Country. "I would just be constantly writing, every single day. My dad had a couple of cassette players, so I would do that fake overdubbing from one cassette player to the other."


In addition to releasing a series of critically acclaimed albums, including the outstanding Sunday Morning to Saturday Night in 1997, the singer-songwriter followed the success of that first hit with Number One songs for Trisha Yearwood, Martina McBride, Kenny Chesney and Deana Carter, among numerous other big names in country music.


Berg's career destiny was carved into her family tree. Her mother, Kentucky native Icie Berg moved to Nashville to follow her singer-songwriter dreams. She married fellow tunesmith Dave Kirby, the writer of the Charley Pride classic, "Is Anybody Goin' to San Antone," but ultimately left the music business and became a nurse. Still, Matraca — the oldest of Berg and Kirby's three children — was essentially raised on Music Row, surrounded by singers, writers and musicians, including three aunts who were successful backup singers and a steel guitar-playing uncle. When her mother died in 1985, at age 40, Berg was left to care for her siblings, merging her hectic home life with her blossoming career.


At the time Berg was starting out, her co-writing sessions were often with members of the opposite sex, allowing for a "yin and yang" she found to be extremely productive. But the main reason she found herself collaborating with male writers was simply the dearth of fellow female tunesmiths at the time.


"There was Kye Fleming, Pam Rose, Mary Ann Kennedy, Sharon Vaughn… not very many," she remembers. "Of course, everybody assumed I was a girl singer. But I was a songwriter; I wanted to hang with the boys."


Berg is thankful that Music Row times have changed. She now has an influx of female co-writers she calls her "sisters."


"I just went to Massachusetts and wrote with Lori McKenna," she reports. "We wrote two songs in one day. The stuff that we were talking about that you just don't talk about with your male writing buddies makes for very interesting songs. But chemistry is very important whether you're male or female. Some people just don't click."


Although she's found great chemistry with her many collaborators, one of the things she's been unable to do, Berg confesses, is capitalize on the burgeoning "bro country" movement. Consequently, she's experiencing a bit of a dry spell lately, although artists including Ashley Monroe and Train are among those who've recently dipped into Berg's songwriting well for various recording projects.


"I've had some great cuts this year," she explains. "If I could [write a 'bro country' song], I would because this is what I do for a living. Wade Kirby, my stepbrother, writes a lot of those.… I said, 'Could you just show me how it's done?' It was a futile exercise. He said, 'You don't do this kind of stuff, don't even worry about it.' I said, 'Hey, I've got bills to pay.' Tracy Gershon [vice-president of A&R for Nashville's Rounder Records] and I joked around and came up with the term 'bra country.' That's the next movement."


Berg, a member of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, tells the stories behind five of her biggest "bra country" hits:


Deana Carter, "Strawberry Wine" (Berg, Gary Harrison)

I had the title, because we drank that Boone's Farm Strawberry Hill crap 'til we were sick when we were teenagers. We just painted a picture that told the story. Right after I wrote it, my publisher, Pat Higdon had this little barbecue thing where he'd invite publishers and artists to come hear our new songs. Deana was the only artist that showed up! [Laughs] When the time came for her to go into the studio, every girl had passed on it.


It's a five-minute waltz about... ya know. [Laughs] Deana was a brand-new artist and she wanted it as her first single. That shocked me. She was a friend of mine, so I was trying to talk her out of it because I wanted her to do well.


Kenny Chesney featuring Grace Potter, "You and Tequila" (Berg, Deana Carter)

Deana and I were scheduled to write for her next record on RCA. Two days before, we had the Harlan Howard memorial service and there was this montage of artists and songwriters in the video presentation talking about what he meant to us. I was crying for most of the interview, so I thought they'd cut that out because I don't cry real pretty. I said, "He bought me my first shot of tequila." We all went to Tootsie's afterwards and his kids kept sending me shots of tequila. I didn't want to be rude, so I had a two-day tequila hangover.


I don't know how the title came out, but I think Deana blurted it out. We have a mutual friend who lives out in California on Mulholland Drive. When I'd go out there and visit, we would all hang out and have a girl party. She was going through some pretty bad heartbreak about that time, too. So it was a mishmash of what was going on with us at the time. [When Kenny Chesney cut it], it got nominated for every award. One poignant moment when all that was happening was we were at the CMAs or the Grammys, I'm sitting with Deana and she starts crying. I mean, really crying. I said, "Are you OK?" She said, "Nobody's ever sung a song of mine." I was floored. She had her mother with her. We knew we had lost [the award] already, but I stopped being a sore loser because she was having this really sweet moment.


Trisha Yearwood, "Wrong Side of Memphis" (Berg, Harrison)

We were in the kitchen in our little publishing company, Patrick Joseph Music. We had five or six writers there, and we used to hang out in the kitchen and shoot the shit. We were talking about where we were from. Everybody knows I'm from [Nashville]. Gary said, "I'm from the wrong side of Memphis." I looked at him and pointed at him and said, "Mine!" [Laughs] We literally wrote that in about 20 minutes. I lived in Louisiana for about a year, and I was in band and had a boyfriend. I just burned up that road because I missed my mom so much. I was still pretty young when I lived down there. I had a lot of experience on [Interstate] 40. Gary had, too. It was just a really easy song to write. It was one of those gifts; it wrote itself.


Martina McBride, "Wild Angels" (Berg, Harrison, Harry Stinson)

I started this with Harry Stinson. It was originally "Wild Angels on Blue Horses." I don't know what I was smoking that day! The demo was fantastic — it was almost exactly what you hear in Martina's record, only they amped it up because they have more money than I do. Everybody kept putting it on hold and they kept asking me, "What does the song mean?" So I thought, OK, it's time to bring in the closer. I called Gary because rewrites are really difficult for me. Gary came in and saw what needed to be done and it was just like, boom. He truly is a badass. It was about everything that my husband [Nitty Gritty Dirt Band member] Jeff Hanna and I had gone through before we found each other. I was still freshly married, navigating marriage, stepchildren, crazy families and really crazy schedules, because we were both on the road at that point. We were just passing each other in the air. It felt like such a miracle to me that I would find love like that in my thirties. It took a while.


Dixie Chicks, "If I Fall, You're Going Down With Me" (Berg, Annie Roboff)

Annie is a groove-meister. That was a fast one, too. We just wanted to write a really fun song. There's really nothing to it. It's just a fun song like [the Patty Loveless hit,] "I'm That Kind of Girl." I wasn't in that Dixie Chicks' camp of writers, so I was very surprised and very appreciative. I couldn't believe the sales. I've never been on a record that big. It was one of their last hits too, which made me sad. That's just wrong.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1vdTNfR

via Christopher Sabec Music

Kenny Chesney, Zac Brown Band to Co-Headline 2015 Tortuga Music Festival

If you're going to stage a concert on the beach, there's no more appropriate artists to recruit than Kenny Chesney, Zac Brown Band and Jake Owen. All three are set to perform at the third annual Tortuga Music Festival, set for April 11th and 12th in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Chesney and Brown will each headline one night of the weekend event.



Launched in 2013 — Chesney headlined then too — the Tortuga Festival is part concert, part conservation effort, with a focus on preserving the oceans, beaches and marine life of the world. Staged in conjunction with the Rock the Ocean Foundation, Tortuga raised more than $100,000 for ocean research.


Along with Chesney, Owen and Brown, who makes his first appearance, the lineup includes such country-radio acts as Little Big Town, Trace Adkins, David Nail, Sam Hunt and Frankie Ballard, along with more left-of-center artists the Mavericks, the Cadillac Three, Nikki Lane and Drake White. In a display of the country audience's widening taste, California ska-rock group Sublime (with singer Rome Ramirez replacing the late Brad Nowell) is also on the bill, with more artists to be announced soon.


Advance tickets go on sale Friday at 10 a.m. ET.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1vGWefL

via Christopher Sabec Music

Lucy Hale Announces 2015 Tour and Talks 'Blood, Sweat and Tears' of 2014

Forget princess dreams and royal weddings. When Lucy Hale was a young girl growing up in Memphis, singing along to TLC and the Spice Girls, she fantasized about having her own stage, headlining her very own tour.



In early 2015, the singer-actress will realize that goal when the Road Between club and theater outing, named after her debut album, kicks off January 29th in Boston. Singer-songwriter Josh Dorr will open all dates.


"I'm so excited," Hale tells Rolling Stone Country in the exclusive tour announcement. "We've done a radio tour and radio shows, but now we get to do actual shows and do the entire album for people who have been supporting me."


Hale, who plays Aria Montgomery on ABC Family's hit series Pretty Little Liars, says she hopes to extend the tour if the demand and her schedule (she returns to PLL in March) allow. But for now, she says, "We're keeping it short and sweet. We're going to where my music was played on radio and when we stopped for a radio tour, people came to the shows."


She and her musical director are already planning the set list and production for the concerts. Sure to be included are Road Between's first two singles, "You Sound Good to Me" and "Lie a Little Better," as well as several other selections from the June 2014 release. Plus, she has some surprises in store. "I have a few little ideas for covers that are brewing in my mind," she says. "We're coming up with ideas to make it special." If she has her way, a third single — her choice is "Red Dress" — will be shipped to radio around the time of the tour.


It's a busy stretch for Hale. In addition to recently wrapping production of Pretty Little Liars' fifth season, Hale appeared on the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade last week and performed her original tune "Mistletoe" on ABC's CMA Country Christmas special last night. "I've been included in a lot of amazing things this year," she says.


As excited as Hale is for the tour, she admits that performing live can be as "nerve-wracking" as it is fulfilling. "It's the most vulnerable you get," she says. "It gives people more leeway to judge you and judge what you're doing. When you work on an album, you put your blood, sweat and tears into it and you want people to appreciate it."


Though there's still life left in Road Between, Hale says the next album — and beyond — are on her mind. "I'm very proud of Road Between, but I'm two years older and feel like I'm in a completely different head space. I'm always thinking 10 steps ahead," Hale says, adding with a laugh, "I'm already thinking of album Number Three."


Here are Hale's The Road Between 2015 tour dates:


January 29 — Boston, Paradise

January 30 — New York City, Gramercy Theatre

January 31 — Philadelphia, Trocadero Theatre

February 3 — Washington, D.C., The Fillmore

February 4 — Charlotte, North Carolina, The Fillmore

February 5 — Nashville, 3rd & Lindsley

February 7 — Atlanta, The Loft







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/12mhDjj

via Christopher Sabec Music

Monday, December 1, 2014

Craig Campbell, Ronnie Dunn Ink New Record Label Deals

"This year has been a rollercoaster," Craig Campbell told Rolling Stone Country at the CMA Awards last month. "I had my highest-charting single I've ever had ("Keep Them Kisses Coming"), and then my record label closed. But I made a couple of calls…. There was a label in town I really wanted to at least talk to, and it ended up that we started negotiating."



That label was Red Bow Records, home to Joe Nichols, Chase Bryant and David Fanning. Its parent company, Broken Bow Music Group has been one of the biggest indie success stories to ever come out of Nashville, breaking sales records with Jason Aldean and celebrating chart-topping hits with acts including Dustin Lynch, Randy Houser and Thompson Square.


"I've had my eyes on them and am just in awe of how they have been breaking artists and are having so much success in being a powerhouse record label," Campbell tells Billboard, which broke the news of his signing today. "Some people would call them an independent, but they have been kicking everybody's butt."


There's no word yet on the timing of the Georgia native's first album for Red Bow. In the meantime, he's basking in the chart-topping success of Garth Brooks' new album, Man Against Machine. Campbell co-wrote a song on the project, "All-American Kid," with Brice Long and Terry McBride.


It looks like Ronnie Dunn has a brand-new solo record deal, as well — and he's got the hat to prove it. In late October, the singer, who with partner Kix Brooks reached the country-music stratosphere as multi-award-winning duo Brooks & Dunn, began teasing fans via Facebook and Twitter, saying that "something big is about to happen." That something, he not-so-cryptically revealed last week, is his signing to the recently launched Nash Icon Music label, which has already signed Reba McEntire as its flagship artist. Dunn posted a picture of himself on Facebook, wearing what he referred to as his "new company cap." In the accompanying message, the singer mentions Nash Icon and Big Machine (the label group of which Nash Icon is a part). The hat has a "Nashchetta" logo on it, which refers to Big Machine/Nash Icon president Scott Borchetta. Also noted in Dunn's message is McEntire's husband, Narvel Blackstock, another executive with the Nash Icon label.


Interestingly, the label, which is a joint venture between Big Machine and Cumulus Media, means Dunn and his former singing partner are once again employed by the same corporation. Brooks is the host of the Cumulus-owned American Country Countdown radio show, which will premiere the first annual American Country Countdown Awards December 15th on FOX. McEntire will be the recipient of that awards show's first Nash Icon award.


Big Machine Label Group is also home to Taylor Swift, Florida Georgia Line, the Band Perry, Tim McGraw, Rascal Flatts and several other artists.


Several hundred miles north of Big Machine and Red Bow Records, New Jersey's Reviver Records is also reviving another country music career. Country Weekly reports that LoCash (formerly known as LoCash Cowboys) have signed a new deal with the indie label, also home to Lucas Hoge, Little Anthony and Paulette McWilliams, among others. The duo — Chris Lucas and Preston Brust — were formerly with Average Joes Entertainment.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1pIFyUf

via Christopher Sabec Music