Thursday, January 8, 2015

Listen to Reba McEntire's Empowering 'Going Out Like That'

With the release of her first new music in nearly five years, Reba McEntire confirms she is back in a big way. The Oklahoma native's latest sass-filled track, "Going Out Like That," which was released on Monday, January 5th, is already Number One on iTunes' country chart. The upbeat tune about a woman who nurses a broken heart by putting on her red dress and high heels for a night on the town, debuted this week on the nationally syndicated America's Morning Show with host Blair Garner. (Listen to "Going Out Like That" below.)



"When you listen to thousands of songs trying to find just the right one to record, a really great song jumps out at you," McEntire says of the tune penned, somewhat surprisingly, by three men: veteran songwriters Ben Hayslip, Rhett Akins and Jason Sellers. "That's exactly what 'Going Out Like That' did to me. It jumped out because it's a great song with up-tempo sassiness! The first time I heard it, a man was singing the demo. When I sang it coming from a female perspective, it became a woman's power anthem."


Produced by Tony Brown, with whom McEntire has scored numerous hits, the track is the first release from the superstar entertainer's debut album for Nash Icon Records, slated for an April release. The album will also feature the singer collaborating for the first time with veteran producer James Stroud.


A joint venture label between Big Machine Label Group and Cumulus, Nash Icon Records, for which McEntire is the flagship artist, will produce new music and live events from some of Music City's most prolific artists of the past four decades. McEntire has, in fact, been making records since 1976, when she had her first charted single on Mercury Records. To date, the singer has scored 25 Number One singles on the Billboard charts.


In June, McEntire and her longtime friends, Kix Brooks and Ronnie Dunn, will take up a musical residency at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas.







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Genocide and Kim Kardashian: The Bloody History Behind System of a Down's Tour

Between their spasmodic rhythms and jagged melodies, System of a Down have always been committed to a sobering cause: raising recognition for the Armenian genocide of 1915. The group's self-titled debut LP contained a song called "P.L.U.C.K.," in which frontman Serj Tankian sang "A whole race, genocide/Taken away all of our pride," and over the years the band has held several one-off "Souls" concerts to help raise awareness of the tragedy.



Now the group, whose members are all children of survivors, is commemorating the 100th anniversary of the genocide – in which Ottoman Turks began arresting and executing some 1.5 million Armenians, something that Turkey and several countries still refuse to recognize officially – with an international tour named "Wake Up the Souls." This will end on April 23rd, the day before Armenia commemorates the anniversary, with the group's very first performance in the country of their ancestors. The band plans on livestreaming the concert so people all over the world can watch.


System of a Down have also set up an interactive "heat map" on their website, allowing fans to learn about how different parts of the world have reacted to the genocide, including which countries have officially recognized it. Elsewhere, they host a call to action motivating fans to ask the Turkish president and parliament for recognition.


"Part of it is bringing attention to the fact that genocides are still happening, whether you use the word 'genocide,' 'holocaust' or 'humanitarian catastrophe,'" Tankian says. "None of that is changing. We want to be part of that change. We want the recognition of the first genocide of the 20th century to be a renewal of confidence that humanity can stop killing itself." He chuckles. "I say that, laughing, because obviously it's ridiculous."



Why have you decided to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide with a tour?

This is a recommitment and expansion of some of the work that we've been doing with the Armenian genocide for years. The whole "Souls" concept became a tour, and it's something that we all believe in because we're all children of survivors of the genocide. It's important for the recognition of the genocide as an end result, as well as attaining justice.



What are the steps toward attaining justice?

I think for us it's important for Turkey to know its own history in a truthful manner. It's not just about the genocide of the Armenians, Greeks and Assyrians, but what's going on now. There are no executable international agreements that have to do with stopping the genocide. Irrespective of a number of great U.N. bodies and even U.S.-based bodies in terms of genocide prevention, there's no binding resolution on any genocide or holocaust occurring. We still see them happening. I read in today's press that they discovered a mass grave in Deir Ezzor in Syria of ISIS massacres of this one tribe there, and it reminded me of all the bones that are under those sands in Deir Ezzor from the first genocide of the 20th century in the exact same place. If that's not symbolism, I don't know what is.



Your grandparents both lived through the Armenian genocide. What did they tell you about it?

They had these incredible, haunting stories of their survival. They were both toddlers, small children. My grandmother and her grandmother were saved by a Turkish mayor in a small city, as they were being marched through Turkey toward Syria, toward Deir Ezzor, the desert. They were saved in that way. My grandfather lost the majority of his family on the pogrom. He ended up in a number of different orphanages and ended up in Lebanon, in terms of finding a home there and growing up there. Just really heart-wrenching stories.


When my grandfather was still alive, we had them on camera for this film that we were part of called Screamers. It was a nice partial telling of his story, which was very fulfilling for me. We got a camera crew to tape 16 hours of these important stories that are disappearing because the survivors are almost all gone.


You've played in Armenia as a solo artist. How was that experience for you?

It was really amazing. The first time was with my band, the F.C.C., on my solo tour throughout Europe. We played a show in a beautiful, large theater. The second time, I played with an Armenian orchestra called the Opera Orchestra of Armenia. We played at the opening of a non-profit technology center called Tumo. There were about 11,000 people in this beautiful courtyard by a park, on a built stage overlooking this gorgeous gorge. It was truly amazing. A lot of youth, a lot of excitement. It was really very encouraging as to what the future of Armenia has to embrace.



Have you gotten a sense of how people there feel about the band doing this concert?

In Armenia, our status is unparalleled. I don't want to use any monikers like the Beatles or anything, but it's a unique kind of thing. So we want to go there and play for the people, which we've never done as System of a Down. It's quite exciting.



How is it that System of a Down have never played Armenia?

You know, that's a really good question. I don't have a direct answer to that. We've been asked to play, but it's never transpired either due to timing or the challenge of investment in infrastructure. It takes time for any of the large performance infrastructure to take place.



Has the band ever played in Turkey?

No. We were looking into Turkey as one of the dates of this Wake Up the Souls tour. We needed to get permission from the government, based on our outspokenness about the genocide and against the actions of [then-Turkish Prime Minister Recep] Erdoğan's government in particular. At the time, the new prime minister had just stepped in, which was the old foreign minister, and of course Erdoğan became president and left the prime minister's post. We waited a while, but we never got a response, so we planned the rest of the tour.



What is your relationship with Turkish fans like? It must be hard for you not to be able to play for them.

Totally. I personally want to go play there. Our relationship with them has been really cool. Years ago, someone planted things in the Turkish press trying to denounce us, I'm assuming an agent of the government, saying that we've done things that we've never done. So we put up something on our website saying that all of this is misinformation, please don't listen to it. It's all lies. Our fans were the ones that protected us in Turkey. They wrote to the editors of those newspapers who were planting this misinformation, this disinformation, and fought for us. Our jaws dropped. Here we have fans in Turkey that are protecting System of a Down. No society is unipolar.



Do you think Turkey will ever recognize the genocide?

I think it's very possible. I just read that there is a resolution for recognition for all past crimes, including the Armenian genocides – named specifically – that was just introduced to the Turkish parliament by a minority Kurdish MP, Sebahat Tuncel. Although I'm sure they don't have majority to pass it, that's an amazing sign not just of courage for her to bring that up, but that times could be changing, and that's a positive thing.



Speaking of times changing, there are Armenian celebrities drawing attention to the genocide lately.

Absolutely. For all the flak people give Kim Kardashian, I could say that with her yearly commemorations of the Armenian genocide and spreading that word, she's been valuable. She's been great.



She can raise a lot of awareness.

Absolutely. She's got more Twitter people than I do, that's for sure [laughs].



Shifting topics, it's been 10 years since the last System of a Down album. Are you guys talking about making a new one yet?

There has been talk, and we are going to play this tour, come back and we're going to see where we are. If we have songs that work for System, if I have them and Daron [Malakian, guitar] has them. The openness is there to work together, but we haven't made any particular plans that we can announce.



Have you personally written songs with System in mind?

I have a few that could apply, but I'm not sure until the time comes where I can actually play them for the guys and see if it's something that vibes off them.


Right now, I'm actually focusing on a film score. It's actually a really cool score, and it's for a film based on, again, the genocide. That's all I'm dealing with right now. It's called 1915. It's a very interesting drama that's actually shot in Los Angeles at the Los Angeles Theater, a very old and distinguished theater. It's a really, really interesting psychological thriller, modern story. It deals with denial and the psychological impacts of a genocide rather than the physical aspects of it.



Getting back to a new System album, I'm sure your fans are curious where you're at.

They will be the first to know. Fans will know before the press knows, I assure you.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1w3tmKr

via Christopher Sabec Music

2015 People's Choice Awards Winners Include Hunter Hayes, Taylor Swift

It was all about the fans at the 2015 People's Choice Awards Wednesday night, and the fans really, really love Taylor Swift. The country-gone-pop star took home Favorite Female Artist, Favorite Pop Artist and Favorite Song for "Shake It Off." Her former tourmate Ed Sheeran won Favorite Male Artist and Favorite Album for X.



In the country categories, Hunter Hayes was the upset victor for Favorite Male Country Artist, beating hitmaking heavyweights Blake Shelton, Brad Paisley, Luke Bryan and Tim McGraw. "That's quite the category, and I don't know what I'm doing with this," the multi-instrumentalist humbly said upon accepting the award. "I'm so blessed to get to do what I love, and you guys give us the chance to get to do what we do. I have unbelievable parents who believed in my obsession with music, and I have a fantastic team around me, fantastic friends… and the best fans in the world."


Lady Antebellum stake claim to Favorite Country Group, for which they thanked family, fans — and famous fan, Ellen DeGeneres. The trio also delivered their high-energy "Freestyle" on the show. (Watch the performance below.)


Carrie Underwood has her seventh career People's Choice trophy with her win for Favorite Female Country Artist, topping the category that also included Dolly Parton, Faith Hill, Lucy Hale and Miranda Lambert. See the full list of 2015 People's Choice Awards nominees and winners in the music categories below, and click here for the full list of winners including TV and movie categories. (Winners in bold.)


Favorite Male Artist

Blake Shelton

Ed Sheeran

John Legend

Pharrell Williams

Sam Smith


Favorite Female Artist

Beyoncé

Iggy Azalea

Katy Perry

Sia

Taylor Swift


Favorite Group

Coldplay

Imagine Dragons

Maroon 5

One Direction

OneRepublic


Favorite Breakout Artist

5 Seconds of Summer

Charli XCX

Fifth Harmony

Meghan Trainor

Sam Smith


Favorite Male Country Artist

Blake Shelton

Brad Paisley

Hunter Hayes

Luke Bryan

Tim McGraw


Favorite Female Country Artist

Carrie Underwood

Dolly Parton

Faith Hill

Lucy Hale

Miranda Lambert


Favorite Country Group

The Band Perry

Florida Georgia Line

Lady Antebellum

Rascal Flatts

Zac Brown Band


Favorite Pop Artist

Beyoncé

Jennifer Lopez

Jessie J

Sia

Taylor Swift


Favorite Hip-Hop Artist

Drake

Iggy Azalea

Jay Z

Nicki Minaj

T.I.


Favorite R&B Artist

Chris Brown

Jennifer Hudson

John Legend

Pharrell Williams

Usher


Favorite Album

G I R L by Pharrell Williams

Ghost Stories by Coldplay

In the Lonely Hour by Sam Smith

My Everything by Ariana Grande

X by Ed Sheeran


Favorite Song

"All About That Bass" by Meghan Trainor

"Bang Bang" by Jessie J, Ariana Grande & Nicki Minaj

"Maps" by Maroon 5

"Shake It Off" by Taylor Swift

"Stay with Me" by Sam Smith







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Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Seth Avett, Jessica Lea Mayfield Prep Elliott Smith Covers Album

This March, Jessica Lea Mayfield and Seth Avett of the Avett Brothers will release an album of covers by late singer-songwriter Elliott Smith. The album, titled Seth Avett and Jessica Lea Mayfield Sing Elliott Smith, is the product of three years of on-and-off collaborations between the two, and will feature twelve songs that span the entire discography of Smith’s career.



The album is a loving tribute that reflects the two singers' shared admiration for Smith, whose fragile, aching ballads and Beatles-influenced pop gems earned him an intense cult following throughout his career and in the decade-plus since his tragic death in 2003.


"It came about so naturally; there was nothing insincere about it," says Avett of the upcoming LP. "It only exists because me and Jessica love Elliott Smith's songs."


"Everyone who's an Elliot Smith fan takes the lyrics and relates them to themselves," adds Mayfield. "When Seth is singing, I forget for a moment that they're Elliott Smith songs, and when I'm singing them it's the same thing. I'm singing the lyrics as if it were my own song."


Mayfield has a long history with the Avett Brothers, serving as a frequent tour opener and providing the band with cover material of her own. Her upcoming record with Avett will be one of both artist's more bare-boned projects, highlighting the duo’s gentle harmonies and soft-spoken guitar playing.


The pair will be touring this spring in support of Seth Avett and Jessica Lea Mayfield Sing Elliott Smith, which is out March 17th.







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Blake Shelton, Brad Paisley Lead Huge Shaky Boots Festival 2015 Lineup

The 2015 country-music concert event season seems destined for a solid success with the announcement of the new two-day Shaky Boots Festival near Atlanta, featuring appearances from Blake Shelton, Brad Paisley, Dierks Bentley, Jason Isbell and several more big Nashville names.



The inaugural event will take place May 16-17 at the KSU Sports and Entertainment Park in Kennesaw, just north of the Georgia capital, and also include performances from Rascal Flatts, the Band Perry, Dwight Yoakam, Sara Evans, Kristian Bush, Joe Nichols, Old Crow Medicine Show, Justin Moore, Eli Young Band, Kip Moore, Jana Kramer, Josh Thompson and more than a dozen additional acts on three stages throughout the festival. Shaky Boots is the sister festival to Atlanta's Shaky Knees rock festival, which takes place one week prior to the debut event.


Two-day weekend passes for the festival will go on sale at www.shakyboots.com this Thursday, January 8th, starting at $169 with applicable service fees. VIP Ticket packages (at $499) will include access to exclusive lounges and viewing areas; catered lunches and dinners; complimentary beer; and access to private restrooms and cash liquor bars. Exclusive luxury suites are also available.


The Shaky Knees and Shaky Boots festivals make up one of three major rock and country cousin events in 2015. This is the ninth year that Coachella and Stagecoach will share the same California desert venue, separated by just one week in April. And the producers of Delaware's annual Firefly Festival have announced the new Big Barrel music festival, which boasts Carrie Underwood, Miranda Lambert and Blake Shelton as its first headliners this June.







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via Christopher Sabec Music

Monday, January 5, 2015

Scotty McCreery Trades Pop for Classic Country on New LP

For his next album, Scotty McCreery is ready to take his signature deep-barrel baritone down a more classically country road — because the "Feelin' It" singer is hoping to feel a few less pop hooks and few more banjo strums in his evolving sound.



"We just had the meeting with the label and the album is a go," McCreery tells Rolling Stone Country. "And I'm going to make a country music record. That's what I had to try to convey to the label and they were all for it. The stuff I grew up with was that kind of music — I want to have some depth and portray a different side."


Since he burst into public consciousness with his rendition of Josh Turner's "Your Man" delivered in notes so low it was as chuckle-inducing as it was impressive for a teenage kid from North Carolina, McCreery has cut a steady string of singles that mix his love of traditional Nashville with a twangy teen-appropriate gloss common to American Idol alums. But he's hidden little hints on past records, like "Carolina Moon" from 2013's See You Tonight, that give an indication to where he hopes to go sonically. "I have songs like that one where I have Alison Krauss doing background vocals," he says, "and those are my favorite songs I've ever done. So I'll play the game a little, but I'm going to try to stay true to what I love." Many of McCreery's American Idol choices reflected these roots: George Strait, Alan Jackson and Travis Tritt, among them.


McCreery is heading into studio this month in Nashville, and his next single will be from the forthcoming record, expected in the third or fourth quarter of 2015. Another difference this go-round? McCreery is planning on co-writing many of the tracks himself. "I love songwriting, it's a way to explore what's going on upstairs," he says, a practice he's honed just by surrounding himself with Nashville's top names in the craft, like Ashley Gorley, Ross Copperman and busbee. "These writers are the world's best, and I just try to pick up little things they do. Most of the time, it starts with a guitar."


After a mixed reception to See You Tonight, which failed to reach the platinum numbers of his 2011 debut, Clear as Day, McCreery's ready to focus more on the music and less on the constant demands of pleasing radio. "We're going to try and make an album — we're not looking for a quick single," he says in that unmistakable tone. "Honestly, we're starting at ground zero."







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Friday, January 2, 2015

Lady Antebellum, Gavin DeGraw Help Nashville Ring in 2015

Judging from the reaction of a record-breaking live crowd lining the streets of downtown Nashville Wednesday night, the city's sixth annual Jack Daniel’s Bash on Broadway was "freakin' awesome," as Lady Antebellum sang.



The country trio was one 40 acts who appeared on ABC's Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve ’15 With Ryan Seacrest, the iconic TV special that has been helping the calendar turn for four decades. Nearly 130,000 people showed up in 29-degree temperatures to ring in 2015 Nashville-style, a dramatic increase from the 85,000 revelers last year.


The first of the two live broadcasts from Nashville featured pop singer-songwriter Gavin DeGraw, who played "Finest Hour," first urging fans to "act like this is the song you danced to in high school," before the national cameras turned to his adopted hometown of Nashville. "Finest Hour" is the title track from the singer's greatest hits album that released this fall.


Growing up in Upstate New York, DeGraw watched the show to ring in the new year as a kid, while his grandfather told him he should head to Nashville someday. "Now, here I am. I am floored to be invited to play New Year's Eve," he said of the show that he describes as "part of our DNA." DeGraw is part owner of a bar on Nashville's famed Lower Broadway, the honky-tonk lined street which was packed sidewalk-to-sidewalk with revelers wearing Happy New Year hats.


While only "Finest Hour" was broadcast nationally, DeGraw entertained the growing crowd in Music City for nearly an hour, with a high-energy performance that included some high-fiving through the audience.


Less than an hour later, the live broadcast returned to the Central Time Zone when Lady Antebellum played "Freestyle" from 747 (one of our picks for the top country albums of 2014), complete with horn accompanists and the crowd-pleasing paraphrasing of Macklemore. Next, Hillary Scott's vocals were highlighted with "Bartender," as curtains behind the musicians opened so the world could see Nashville's riverfront.


ABC's Nashville star Charles "Chip" Esten was the emcee for the nationally televised parts of the evening, while Great American Country's Storme Warren did the honors the rest of the night. This was the first year that Nashville was featured as one the cities on the ABC special, an effort that took five years of negotiations, according to Butch Spyridon, president of the Nashville Convention and Visitors Corp.


DeGraw and Lady A were not the only stars with country cred on the small screen. Florida Georgia Line and country-gone-pop phenom Taylor Swift played from New York. "It makes sense," DeGraw says. "Country music is the original American music."


After Lady A's two-song live broadcast, Nashville's Apache Relay played to their hometown audience (rocker Kristen Capolino kicked off the show before DeGraw). Then Lady Antebellum returned to the stage to play a longer set and aid in the countdown to midnight. As a giant, 15-foot musical note dropped from a height of 130 feet and fireworks lit the sky, the evening's other performers joined Lady Antebellum back on stage. After the traditional "Auld Lang Syne," the group offered "something special for Nashville," singing "Amazing Grace."


As some of the almost 130,000 fans started streaming away from the stage, others formed a conga line down Lower Broad to the group's rendition of "All Night Long," giving the South its own city that never sleeps.







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