Chris Stapleton, Scotty McCreery, Luke Bryan Earn RIAA Certifications

Chris Stapleton‘s 2015 album Traveller has now earned triple-platinum status, according to the RIAA, which issued several certifications on Thursday (June 7).

Multi-platinum certifications were also issued for singles including Luke Bryan‘s “Huntin’, Fishin’ And Lovin’ Every Day” (2x platinum) and “Drink A Beer” (2x).

Scotty McCreery‘s No. 1 hit “Five More Minutes” earned platinum certification.

Gold certifications went to Brett Eldredge (“Somethin’ I’m Good At” and “The Long Way”), Brett Young‘s “Mercy,” and Bryan’s “Light It Up,” “Move,” and “Most People Are Good.”

Weekly Register: Kane Brown, Florida Georgia Line’s Chart Successes Continue

Kane Brown, Florida Georgia Line

Kane Brown returns to No. 1 with this week’s best-selling country album, according to Nielsen Soundscan. His self-titled album moved 17K in total consumption this week.

Following at No. 2 is Jason Aldean‘s Rearview Town with 16K, with Luke CombsThis One’s For You at No. 3 with 13K. Thomas Rhett‘s Life Changes lands at No. 4 with 12K, while Chris Stapleton‘s Traveller rounds out the Top 5 with 11K.

On the country digital song sales chart, Bebe Rexha and Florida Georgia Line continues its monumental success of “Meant To Be,” which moves 21K this week, pushing its total to date to 1.104 million.

Kane Brown’s “Heaven” moved 17K this week, for 492K in total sales to date. Kenny Chesney‘s “Get Along” moved 16K, while Jason Aldean’s “You Make It Easy” moves 13K. Dan+Shay’s “Tequila” rounds out the Top 5 with 12K.

The top country digital song sales debut comes this week from Eli Young Band‘s new track, “Love Ain’t,” which lands at No. 14, and moved 6.4K.

 

Spotify Names Blake Shelton’s Ole Red Its ‘2018 CMA Fest Headquarters’ With 50 Performances

Spotify will make Blake Shelton/Opry Entertainment Group’s Ole Red restaurant and music venue its “2018 CMA Fest Headquarters.” Not only will the streaming service play host to 50 afternoon and late-evening shows for the public, but Spotify has partnered with the CMA to enhance its Music Fest App.

The recently re-launched, enhanced Hot Country Playlist is behind the offering, delivering opportunities for country fans to connect with stars of the genre during the 2018 CMA Fest, June 7-10. Artists include ACM New Group of the Year Midland, singer-songwriter Michael Ray, five-time Grammy nominee Hunter Hayes, Canadian Country Music Awards’ Female Artist of the Year 2011 Tenille Townes, ACM Awards’ New Female Vocalist of the Year Lauren Alaina and many more.

Spotify will also have a presence at CMA’s Music Streaming Lounge on Friday June 8 at Xfinity Fan Fair X at Music City Center. Fans will have the opportunity to discover Spotify’s new features, and make Spotify playlists in-person with country artists performing at the festival.

Throughout the festival, fans will be able to authenticate with Spotify in the Music Fest mobile app, offering the ability to stream music from each of the performing artists, will have access to co-curated playlists and can generate playlists of select CMA Fest artists inside the app.

For schedule updates, visit olered.com/spotifyhotcountry

Spotify’s Hot Country Playlist Lineup At Ole Red

Thursday, June 7

11:00 A.M. Austin Jenckes
12:00 P.M. Muscadine Bloodline
1:00 P.M. Adam Doleac
2:00 P.M. Riley Green
3:00 P.M. Stephen Carey
4:00 P.M. Tyler Dial
5:00 P.M. Abby Anderson
6:00 P.M. Dillon Carmichael
7:00 P.M. Morgan Wallen
8:00 P.M. Levi Hummon
9:00 P.M. Chris Lane
10:30 P.M. Michael Ray
12:00 A.M. Hunter Hayes & Friends

Friday, June 8

11:00 A.M. Noah Schnacky
12:00 P.M. Anna Vaus
1:00 P.M. Mason Ramsey
2:00 P.M. Austin Burke
3:00 P.M. Swon Brothers
4:00 P.M. Brennin
5:00 P.M. Tegan Marie
6:00 P.M. Adam Sanders
7:00 P.M. Filmore
8:00 P.M. Brandon Ray
9:00 P.M. Maggie Rose
10:30 P.M. Jackie Lee
12:00 A.M. Craig Campbell

Saturday, June 9

11:00 A.M. Cam
11:45 A.M. Jimmie Allen
12:30 P.M. Maddie & Tae
1:15 P.M. Lindsay Ell
2:00 P.M. Jillian Jacqueline
2:50 P.M. Rachel Wammack
3:40 P.M. Mitchell Tenpenny
4:30 P.M. Tenille Townes
5:20 P.M. Cale Dodds
6:10 P.M. RaeLynn
7:00 P.M. Kassi Ashton
7:50 P.M. Cassadee Pope
8:40 P.M. Lauren Alaina
9:30 P.M. Midland
12:00 A.M. Late Night Jam with Cole Swindell

Sunday, June 10

11:00 A.M. To Be Announced
12:00 P.M. Rhett Walker
1:00 P.M. To Be Announced
2:00 P.M. Hannah Ellis
3:00 P.M. Kalie Shorr
4:00 P.M. To Be Announced
5:00 P.M. To Be Announced
6:00 P.M. Radio Romance
7:00 P.M. Red Marlow
8:00 P.M. To Be Announced
9:00 P.M. Thompson Square
10:30 P.M. To Be Announced

FlyteVu Furthers Growth with Two New Hires

Entertainment marketing agency FlyteVu has announced two new additions to its Nashville office. Olivia Laster has joined as Project Manager and Kathryn Brassfield as Operations Manager.

As Project Manager, Laster will work on a number of the agency’s accounts including Tennessee Tourism, Cracker Barrel and Red Cross. Prior to joining FlyteVu, she was a Promotion Specialist at Sony Music Nashville spearheading brand partnership campaigns, including Sarah Cannon’s Band Against Cancer, Sandals Resorts, and Hard Rock Hotels. She worked on artist projects from Tim McGraw and Faith Hill, Carrie Underwood, Brad Paisley, LANCO, Cam and more.

Brassfield joins FlyteVu after recently graduating from Vanderbilt University Owen Graduate School of Management and holding a position as Marketing Communications and Event Coordinator. She will help manage the FlyteVu Nashville office and assist with finance and office operations.

“Olivia and Kathryn are two of the best young talents in the business, both with tremendous work ethic and positivity. Their individual skillsets will continue to propel our growth and strengthen our culture” said Laura Hutfless, Co-Founder of FlyteVu.

Laster and Brassfield can be reached at [email protected] and [email protected].

Weekly Register: Jason Aldean, FGL Retain Chart Leads

Jason Aldean‘s Rearview Town is at No. 1 again this week on the country albums chart, moving 26K in total consumption according to Nielsen Soundscan. Kane Brown‘s self-titled album lands at No. 2, with 19K, followed by Luke CombsThis One’s For You at No. 3 with 13K. Thomas Rhett‘s Life Changes is at No. 4 with 12K, followed by Keith Urban‘s Graffiti U at No. 5 with 11K.

The top country album debut this week was from former American Idol winner Trent Harmon, whose debut BMLG project You Got ‘Em All, debuted at No. 34 with 3.9K.

On the digital country songs rankings, Florida Georgia Line and Bebe Rexha‘s “Meant To Be,” moved 23K this week, for 1.083 million in sales to date.

Kane Brown‘s “Heaven” is at No. 2, with 21K. Jason Aldean takes the third spot with “You Make It Easy” making 14K in sales. Kenny Chesney‘s latest single “Get Along” is at No. 4 with 13K, followed by the debut from Spensha Baker, “Old Soul,” at No. 5 with 13K.

Weekly Register: Jason Aldean, Kane Brown Top Sales Charts

Jason Aldean‘s Rearview Town returns to No. 1 again this week on the country albums sales chart, with 24K in total consumption, according to Nielsen Soundscan.

Kane Brown‘s self-titled album follows at No. 2 with 19K, with Keith Urban‘s recently released Graffiti U, which sold 16K. Luke CombsThis One’s For You is at No. 4 with 14K, and Thomas Rhett‘s Life Changes rounds out the top five country albums this week with 12K.

Country’s top five digital songs are Brown’s “Heaven” at No. 1, with 25K, followed by the Bebe Rexha/Florida Georgia Line collaboration “Meant To Be” at No. 2 with 25K. Aldean’s “You Make It Easy” is at No. 3 with 16K, followed by Kenny Chesney‘s “Get Along” at No. 4 with 13K. Blake Shelton‘s “I Lived It” rounds out the top 5 with 12K.

The top country debut track this week is Sam Hunt‘s “Downtown’s Dead,” which debuts at No. 11 country with 9.7K.

UMG’s Annie Ortmeier and Tony Grotticelli Welcome Ad Partners During Music Biz Panel

Pictured (L-R) Tony Grotticelli, Kim Pham, Jeppe Faurfelt, Annie Ortmeier. Photo: Instagram/Music Biz

Universal Music Group Nashville’s VP Marketing and Digital Accounts Annie Ortmeier led a panel on digital advertising Tuesday (May 15) at Music Biz called Flip That S#!t.

“As the industry has shifted from a physical/download medium to streaming, we’ve shifted from a click-rate model to an engagement model,” said Ortmeier. “About two years ago we started to run entirely different campaigns to streaming audiences versus download audiences. We saw a much higher engagement rate with streaming audiences.”

Ortmeier’s team member at UMG, VP Digital Marketing Tony Grotticelli participated with the panel alongside Kim Pham from UMG’s advertising agency Dash Two and Jeppe Faurfelt of Linkfire, which provides extensive insights behind clicks.

Pushing To Playlists

“It’s not, ‘How do we get people to buy,’ it’s, ‘How do we get people to engage,” retorted Pham in reply to Ortmeier observing the click-rate evolution.

“You’re never gonna make your money back [promoting] a song,” said Grotticelli, to which Ortmeier explained. “If you’re releasing one single, we never just push to that three-minute track,” she said. “We always push to a playlist that’s often named for an album or single, but doesn’t stop with one song. It’s about 25+ songs that take the user on a journey.”

Keeping Fresh Data

“With Linkfire, we’ve been playing around with a lot of re-targeting strategies,” said Pham. “Really honing in on current fans. So we track down who views video up to a certain percentage, and practice ad sequencing.”

“If your trying to objective is to drive to streams, follows or playlists, then you should make it as seamless as possible to get there,” said Faurfelt. “One thing we suggest is removing the full video on your landing page.”

Ad Sequencing

Retargeting graphic shows four ad campaigns, retargeted based on audience metrics. Audience 1 targets fans of the artist/related artists and retargets the ‘bounced.’ Audience 2 retargets visitors who previously clicked through to a specific service (Spotify, for instance). Audience 3 had previously shown purchase intent. Audience 4 drives to known fans to buy concert tickets. [CLICK TO ENLARGE]

“One ad does not serve everybody anymore,” said Grotticelli, explaining how various ads are used throughout the promotion process.

“You’re not going to see the same message for six months, you’re gonna see nuances,” noted Ortmeier of ad fatigue. “There’s a balance in how many times you have to be hit with a message before you take an action.”

“We want the consumer to see our ads three times on the same platform, but not more than that,” reported Pham.

“It’s interesting because if you’re selling a ticket, you could move your objective to try to upsell to a VIP experience or sell some merchandise afterwards,” said Faurfelt of ad tailoring.

Perfecting The Process

“When we started [in this industry], people were optimizing for CPC (cost per click), thinking that if you clicked on a link then you were interested,” said Faurfelt “Maybe you just had fat fingers, and that wasn’t the case. It’s really what happens after you click.

“iTunes let’s us measure the impact of the traffic we’re sending there,” he continued of his company, who recently secured a partnership with Pandora to provide data insights. Adding to those third-party sites such also including Ticketmaster.

Grotticelli similarly praised Google/YouTube, Spotify and socials like Facebook, for the availability of that data. “If we get more data from your company that our ads work, we will serve more ads to you,” he declared.

“But we have touring data, merchandising data, streaming data, download data, how do you combine all those in to one dashboard,” asked Faurfelt of fragmentation challenges. “Or you have to think about the bounce rate. It may be that it’s not the right time for the fan to engage,” he continued. “You don’t want to shove things down [a superfan’s] throat because they’re going to find your content anyway, or at a different time. So success lies in interpreting all those signals that you can’t track all the time.”

“To be honest, we can’t put together a perfect ROI on streaming advertising just yet,” admitted Ortmeier, of all those struggles.

“We’re so fragmented,” Grotticelli concurred, citing the wide availability of digital music today. “But you’re talking about a label [UMG] that sold a ton of physical product with George Strait and Alan Jackson exclusives. It’s about taking a wholistic approach to marketing. By itself, in a silo, I don’t think any of this works—digital, traditional, billboard. But if I served you an ad and you saw a billboard, maybe there’s a chance you’d engage in the playlist.

Email and SMS

“Email is still very valuable,” said Ortmeier. “We can also advertise against or exclude people that are already on your list.

“We actually have a text that goes out every Friday with new playlists and the growth has been great, and unsubscribes have been really low,” she continued. “We don’t engage [texts] that often, because you can burn people very quickly. It has to be a very engaged consumer.”

“One of our artists has grown their mobile list larger than their email list,” cited Grotticelli.

Geo Targeting And Tours

“We primarily do geo-targeting with tours,” said Ortmeier. “We’ve done a lead-in saying, ‘Before you go, listen here.’ The engagement was really positive around it—friends were tagged they were going to the show with. Afterwards, we turned around to, ‘Relive your experience and listen again.'”

“[Geo Targeting] has been a really successful model for new artists,” said Grotticelli. “But it’s really venue specific if people are going to buy tickets digitally, or that day.”

“You can also do geo-targeted social posts, so it’s not just limited to ads,” added Pham.

“We’ve studied all Ticketmaster sales and we’ve been able to day-part when sales are made,” she continued. “Facebook and Google search are top drivers, and we found people buy tickets when they’re at work. And people like to buy on desktop.”

Keeping Artist Mystery?

“It all starts with the artist,” said Grotticelli. “We do not move until the artist says. If they want to be in the forefront, it’s up to them. You’ll see Kip Moore talking to his fans, or Keith Urban and his wife that’s super organic. We’re not telling people to break down the third wall—if you want to keep mystery, that’s okay. Sam Hunt’s a great example of that.”

“Artists less engaged socially is where we usually need to do more advertising,” realized Ortmeier. “Because we need to keep them in the conversation.”

“But if I had $1,000, I would say to put $900 into a cool video and $100 to get it out there,” concluded Grotticelli of his belief that quality art will find its way to the consumer.

Weekly Register: Jason Aldean’s ‘Rearview Town’ Returns To The Top

Jason Aldean returns to No. 1 on this week’s country albums chart, with Rearview Town moving 26K in total consumption, according to Nielsen Soundscan. Luke CombsThis One’s For You is at No. 2, with 21.9K, followed by Keith Urban‘s Graffiti U at No. 3 with 21.6K. Kane Brown‘s self-titled album is at No. 4 with 18K, with Thomas Rhett‘s Life Changes rounding out the Top 5 with 12K.

The top country album debuts this week include The Lacs at No. 24, with 5K sold, and Drake White‘s Pieces selling 2.7K.

Weekly Register: Keith Urban’s ‘Graffiti U’ Tops Country Albums

Keith Urban debuts at the top of this week’s country albums rankings (total consumption), with Graffiti U earning 144.7K in sales in its first week, according to Nielsen Soundscan. Jason Aldean‘s Rearview Town comes in at No. 2 with 31.9K.  Willie Nelson‘s Last Man Standing debuts at No. 3 this week, with 26.4K. Kane Brown‘s self-titled album is at No. 4 with 17.8K. Luke Comb‘s This One’s For You is at No. 5 with 12.4K.

 Morgan Wallen’s EP, If I Know Me, debuts at No. 11 on the country albums rankings, with 7.9K.

On the Digital Genre Country chart, the Bebe Rexha/Florida Georgia Line collaboration “Meant To Be” continues to reign, with 31.6K moved this week (over 1 million total).

Mason Ramsey, who recently signed with Atlantic and Big Loud, debuts at No. 2 with his single “Famous,” earning 18.8K. Jason Aldean‘s “You Make It Easy” is at No. 3, with 18.3K. Kane Brown’s “Heaven” is at No. 4 with 18.2K. Kenny Chesney‘s “Get Along” rounds out the Top 5 with 13.9K.

 

Warner Music Group Sells 75 Percent Of Spotify Shares For $400 Million

Warner Music Group has sold 75 percent of its shares in Spotify, for an estimated $400 million. WMG CEO Stephen Cooper stated that $300 million would go to shareholders, noting the company will share equity proceeds with distributed labels if that stipulation is included in their agreements.

Cooper also emphasized that Warner Music Group has full confidence in Spotify. “Just so there won’t be any misinterpretation about the rationale for our decision to sell, let me be clear: We’re a music company, and not, by our nature, long-term holders of publicly traded equity,” he said. “This sale has nothing to do with our view of Spotify’s future. We’re hugely optimistic about the growth of subscription streaming, we know it has only just begun to fulfill its potential for global scale. We fully expect Spotify to continue to play a major role in that growth.”

During the first quarter of 2018, WMG’s recorded music operations turned $791 million, and Warner/Chappell Music Publishing turned over $174 million in the first quarter.

The move follows a similar strategy from Sony Music earlier this year, when the company sold 17.2 percent of its Spotify shares, earning upwards of $260 million.