Drake White Sets First Headlining Tour For 2017

Drake White

Drake White

Following the release of his debut album earlier this year, BMLG artist Drake White will kick off his first headlining stint in February 2017. White and his band The Big Fire will take The Spark Tour 2017 to 17 clubs across the US, including a show at Nashville’s Exit/In on April 13.

“I couldn’t be more excited to get out on the road for my first headlining dates,” exclaimed White. “The Big Fire and I are road warriors. We have been playing together for many years so to be out there on our own tour is really special for us.”

White was recently named as one of MusicRow‘s 2017 Next Big Thing artists, and has opened for artists including Willie Nelson, Zac Brown Band and Eric Church.

UPCOMING SPARK TOUR 2017 DATES

Feb. 4: Husson University – Gracie Theatre | Bangor, ME
Feb. 16: Texas Club | Baton Rouge, LA
Feb. 17: Mo’s Place | Katy, TX
March 17: Coyote Joe’s | Charlotte, NC
March 18: The Blind Horse Saloon | Greenville, SC
March 23: Gramercy Theatre | New York, NY
March 24: Paradise Rock Club | Boston, MA
March 25: Mohegen Sun – Wolf Den | Uncasville, CT
April 7: The Dallas Bull | Tampa, FL
April 13: Exit/In | Nashville, TN
April 14: Mercury Ballroom | Louisville, KY
April 19: Jergel’s Rhythm Grille | Warrendale, PA
April 20: Coyote Joe’s | Shelby Township, MI
April 21: 8 Seconds Saloon | Indianapolis, IN
May 5: The Bluestone | Columbus, OH
May 31: Moonshine Beach | San Diego, CA
June 2: Brandin’ Iron | San Bernardino, CA

Inside ‘MusicRow’s’ Touring Issue: Agents Talk Acting

inthisissue-tour2017-rulesoftheroad-570x380

MusicRow recently welcomed a select group of Nashville’s top talent agents to our offices for a roundtable discussion. Here’s what Steve Lassiter (APA Sr. VP/partner), Nick Meinema (UTA Sr. VP), Darin Murphy (CAA Nashville co-head), and Jay Williams (WME partner) had to say about artists who want to venture into the world of film and TV.

Pick up a copy of MusicRow’s new Touring Issue for their in-depth discussion with the agents about the country music touring landscape.

– – –

MusicRow: What advice do you give artists who want to expand their careers into acting?

Darin Murphy: Acting is definitely an option if you have a client who is great in front of the camera. We’ve all seen the success of Blake Shelton on The Voice, and it was great for Keith Urban on American Idol. Kellie Pickler on CMT is a hit. Trace Adkins just finished filming his twelfth movie. But you have to dedicate time to it.

Jay Williams: Artists should make the decision early in their careers, so we can plug them in with [WME’s] L.A. office for film or TV. They will have to take a lot of acting classes. I think they should be open to it, because there are so many more outlets like Netflix, Hulu, and other platforms. A lot of the artists I work with get requests all the time, but they are too busy to stop their main focus of music. That said, it might come later down the road for Dierks or somebody.

Nick Meinema: On the other hand, the number of outlets now dilutes the number of eyeballs. The reality is that building up that side of a career is a process. It’s not an Ed Sullivan situation where you go on TV and all of a sudden your business is flipped. Dwight Yoakam is in Goliath with Billy Bob Thornton, and that will build an audience. Tim McGraw has done it really well; he’s committed to it. An artist has to be committed to it.

Steve Lassiter: Television is an exposure vehicle for the artist. It’s equal to a couple of No. 1 records. But the acting talent has to be there. Travis Tritt is probably not going to get on major country radio anymore, but he is a good actor and he had three or four bit parts this year. What makes it tough is that he is playing 130 shows a year, so we have to pass on a lot of acting opportunities because he’s not available. He lives in Atlanta, which has a major television and film industry, so if he has two days at home, he can go do that. Billy Ray Cyrus has a new show on CMT and it’s doing great. They ordered a second season before the first was over.

agentroundtable_nbt16_a

Pictured at the offices of MusicRow magazine. (L-R): Darin Murphy, Jay Williams, Nick Meinema, and Steve Lassiter.

Brad Paisley Extends Tour With Guests Chase Bryant, Lindsay Ell

Brad Paisley

Brad Paisley

Brad Paisley will continue his successful Life Amplified World Tour with new dates added in February 2017. The tour will be making stops in eastern Canada and the northeast U.S. with special guests Chase Bryant and Lindsay Ell.

Chase Bryant

Chase Bryant

Paisley’s Life Amplified World Tour 2016 has traveled across North America, while his Country Nation College Tour presented by Frontier Communications visited nine campuses last fall.

His current single, “Today,” is resonating with people around the globe and the music video has been viewed over 30 million times.

2017 Life Amplified World Tour dates:

Feb. 1: Essar Centre, Sault Ste. Marie, ON
Feb. 2: Sudbury Arena, Sudbury, ON
Feb. 3: Peterborough Memorial Centre, Peterborough, ON
Feb. 4: Rogers K-Rock Centre, Kingston, ON
Feb. 9: Augusta Civic Center, Augusta, ME
Feb. 10: Moncton Coliseum, Moncton, NB
Feb. 11: Centre 200, Sydney, NS
Feb. 16: Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza, Wilkes-Barre, PA
Feb. 17: Giant Center, Hershey, PA
Feb. 18: Event Center @ Turning Stone Casino, Verona, NY

lindsay-ell-2016

Lindsay Ell

Meghan Trainor Cancels Remaining Tour Dates For 2016

Meghan Trainor. Photo: Epic Records

Meghan Trainor. Photo: Epic Records

Meghan Trainor has canceled the remainder of her performances for 2016, due to an illness.

The 22-year-old “All About That Bass” and “Dear Future Husband” singer announced via Instagram on Thursday (Dec. 8) that she has been put on “strict vocal rest” for two weeks.

Trainor had been slated to perform at the 96.5-FM TIC All Star Christmas concert in Connecticut Thursday (Dec. 8), at Z100’s Jingle Ball 2016 in Madison Square Garden in New York City Friday (Dec. 9), at HOT 99.5-FM’s Jingle Ball 2016 in Washington D.C. Monday (Dec. 12), at Power 96.1-FM’s Jingle Ball 2016 in Atlanta on Friday (Dec. 16), and at the Y100 Jingle Ball 2016 concert in Florida on Sunday (Dec. 18).

Last year, the singer was also forced to cancel tour dates due to vocal problems.

See Trainor’s Instagram message to fans below:

meghan-trainor-instagram

Nashville Agent Shari Lewin Named Partner At WME

Shari Lewin. Photo: Jake Harsh

Shari Lewin. Photo: Jake Harsh

WME agent Shari Lewin, who joined WME’s Nashville office in 2011, has been named as partner, it was announced this week.

Lewin focuses on endorsement deals and brand partnership opportunities for the agency’s entire country roster.

In 2016, Lewin was responsible for landing a television campaign for Brad Paisley to be featured in Nationwide’s “Song for Every Side” campaign. She also designed and executed a 360-deal with Field & Stream naming Jason Aldean the first celebrity spokesperson for the private label hunting / fishing brand sold at Dick’s Sporting Goods.

She secured Nitto Tires as the presenting sponsor and Budweiser as an additional sponsor of Florida Georgia Line’s Dig Your Roots Tour, and she secured Bayer as the title sponsor for Luke Bryan’s Farm Tour for the second year in a row.

She is also a member of the Country Music Association and the Academy of Country Music.

Alan Jackson, Lee Ann Womack Set For Honky Tonk Highway Tour In 2017

Alan Jackson 2016

Alan Jackson 2016

Alan Jackson will embark on the Honky Tonk Highway Tour in 2017, along with special guest Lee Ann Womack on select dates.

Jackson’s 2017 tour will find the superstar playing arena and amphitheatre shows as well as some of the biggest annual festivals and multi-day events on the country music calendar. The first round of tour dates was recently announced, with more to be added soon.

Lee Ann womack

Lee Ann Womack

 

Jan. 20: Tulsa, Okla.; Paradise Cove **
Jan. 27: Pensacola, Fla.; Pensacola Bay Center **++
Jan. 28: Atlanta (Duluth), Ga.; Infinite Energy Center**++
Feb. 25: Laughlin, Nev.; Laughlin Events Center ^^
March 10: Durant, Okla.; Choctaw Casino Resort **
March 24/25: Rancho Mirage, Calif.; Aqua Caliente Casino **
April 8: St. Augustine, Fla.; St. Augustine Amphitheatre ~~++
April 9: Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Tortuga Music Festival **
May 27: Forest City, Iowa; Tree Town Country Music Festival**
June 23: North Platte, Neb.; Nebraskaland Days **
June 24: Manhattan, Kan.; Country Stampede**
Oct. 28: Minneapolis, MN (Target Center) **

**Date is already onsale
^^Tickets onsale Friday, December 9
~~Tickets onsale Friday, December 16
++with special guest Lee Ann Womack

Touring News: Luke Bryan, Vince Gill, Lyle Lovett, Jambo Country

Luke Bryan’s Crash My Playa Adds To Lineup

luke-bryan-lineup

Luke Bryan and CID Presents are adding more artists to the lineup for Bryan’s Crash My Playa all-inclusive concert vacation, set for Jan. 19-22, 2017 in Riviera Maya, Mexico. Old Dominion, Kelleigh Bannen, Brooke Eden, Adam Craig and Lucie Silvas, along with DJ Rock, will join the list of special guests in addition to headliners Bryan, Blake Shelton and Little Big Town and previously announced artists Randy Houser, Dustin Lynch and Brothers Osborne.

Little Big Town will headline the Thursday (Jan. 19) show, followed by Luke Bryan (Jan. 20 and 22 shows) and Blake Shelton (Jan. 21).

View the full performance lineup at crashmyplaya.com.

 

Vince Gill, Lyle Lovett Reunite For Tour Dates In 2017

Vince Gill, Lyle Lovett

Vince Gill, Lyle Lovett

Vince Gill and Lyle Lovett will reunite for a nine-city tour beginning in March 2017. The duo previously teamed for a series of shows in 2015 and 2016. Each show will include solo performances and collaborations, and the artists will serve as their own accompanists.

“For a night like this, there is no plan,” Gill said. “I know Lyle won’t have a plan, and I won’t either. What he plays will inspire me, and probably vice-versa. It’ll be like playing ping-pong. Whatever song he chooses to sing will inspire the next song that comes out of me.”

“I enjoy shows that are not planned out,” Lovett observes. “This will be two songwriters in the round. It’s informal, so there will be lots of ad-libbing. It will be like little snapshots of our experiences.”

“Just two guys sitting on stools, telling stories and singing songs,” Gill says. “No big bands.  I saw James Taylor once with just him and his guitar, and after that show I felt like I knew him a whole lot better than I ever did before. That’s what’ll happen between Lyle and me, too, and I’m looking forward to it.”

Tour Dates:
March 22: Thousand Oaks, Calif.; Thousand Oaks Civic Arts Plaza
March 23: Mesa, Ariz.; Mesa Arts Center – Ikeda Theatre
March 24: Las Vegas; The Smith Center for the Performing Arts – Reynolds Hall
March 25: Reno, Nev. Reno Ballroom
March 26: San Francisco; Nourse Theatre
March 27: San Rafael, Calif.; Marin Center
March 28: San Jose, Calif.. City National Civic
March 29: Visalia, Calif.; Visalia Fox Theatre
March 30: Santa Ynez, Calif.; Chumash Casino

 

Jamboree In The Hills Rebrands As Jambo Country

jambologoBack to celebrate its 41st year with an all-new name and logo, 2017’s Jambo Country music festival will take place over three days from July 13 – 15, once again drawing more than 100,000 fans to Belmont County, Ohio. Formerly known as Jamboree in the Hills, the fans that have attended this landmark festival for decades have always called it “Jambo.”

2017’s headliners will include Thomas Rhett, Jason Aldean, and Lady Antebellum.

Music At Sea: Sixthman’s Rising Tide

Anthony Diaz, CEO of Sixthman

Anthony Diaz, CEO of Sixthman

“Every night I read the guests’ comment cards, because retaining guests is our only way to success. Ideally, we want you to come back and to bring friends because you are so excited about it,” says Anthony Diaz, CEO of Sixthman, which for the past 15 years has worked to bring together fans and bands for unique, intimate music experiences via themed music cruises.

Sixthman’s emphasis on listening to customers’ wants, as well as facilitating a more intimate fan-artist relationship, has been a core value for Sixthman founder and now Chairman Andy Levine since he launched the venture.

Diaz and Levine’s working relationship began when they were college students in the early ‘90s. As bandmates in a group popular at the University of Florida, they had dreams of music stardom. “We recorded a CD in Nashville, did showcases, and thought we were going to be rock stars, but never got that record deal,” Diaz recalls. The band broke up and some members joined with an acoustic duo, Ken and Drew. The new group would rebrand as Sister Hazel.

Levine booked shows for the band and later managed Sister Hazel for several years. They would sign with Universal and score the 1997 hit “All For You.”

Nikki Lane goes bowling with fans during the 2016 Outlaw Country Cruise. Photo: Will Byington

Nikki Lane goes bowling with fans during the 2016 Outlaw Country Cruise. Photo: Will Byington

“They always made the pledge that they would put the fans first,” Diaz recalls. To that end, Levine sought ways to have the band spend time hanging with members of its avid street team. A change meeting with a travel agent during a flight convinced Levine to take a chance on a cruise with the band and team.

In 2001, Sister Hazel, Levine, and 400 of the band’s biggest supporters set sail from Tampa to Key West and Mexico, marking the launch of Sixthman’s flagship festival. The next year, they invited music friends including Edwin McCain and Cowboy Mouth, bringing in a total of nearly 2,000 guests for Sixthman’s first fully chartered ship, The Rock Boat. The initial outing wasn’t without a few learning curves (for instance, The Rock Boat ran out of beer and had to borrow from another Carnival ship). Still, the initial outing was a success and Sixthman was born.

A fully chartered outing became the genesis of a model Sixthman still uses. “We program stages, branding, activities, drink specials and shore excursions. That way it can be a fully immersive experience,” says Diaz.

For years, Diaz watched from afar as Levine’s company grew, adding concerts from Lynyrd Skynyrd and John Mayer. To date, Sixthman has chartered 94 full ships, and hosted more than 835,000 festival vacation days at sea for 207,000 fans, with artists including KISS, Kid Rock, Zac Brown Band, Train, Pitbull, Florida Georgia Line, Paramore, Chris Stapleton and more. The company’s 45 full-time employees work from Sixthman’s headquarters in Atlanta.

Kid Rock performs on his cruise during 2016. Photo: Will Byington

Kid Rock performs on his cruise during 2016. Photo: Will Byington

Diaz joined Sixthman five years ago as Chief Marketing Officer. Since then, he’s been on 45 cruises, and been promoted to Chief Operating Officer, and as of May, to the role of CEO. Prior to joining Sixthman, Diaz spent 13 years with media company Gannett, rising to VP, Sales Strategy and Development, where he was responsible for media sales efforts for 23 television stations and a 250-person sales force.

Diaz says cruises offer a unique concert environment by offering fans more up-close, personal interactions with their favorite artists. “There are only 2,600 people on the ship. You are legitimately on vacation with the band. When Kid Rock is sitting on the pool deck early in the morning with a coffee and just talking to fans, it just blows everyone’s minds. There are no sharpies and selfies.”

A smaller audience and the unique venue has allowed for magical, spontaneous moments over the years. One year, Sister Hazel performed until 6 a.m. when the ship pulled back into port. Another year, the alternative rock band Wideawake performed for two hours during a storm, while fans lined seven stories of the ship’s railing to watch the performance. During one of Kid Rock’s annual cruises, he took over the ship’s PA system at 1:30 a.m., inviting everyone to the pool deck, where he DJ’d for three hours.

For artists, cruises offer the time and space to collaborate with fellow artists. “In the regular festival model, bus number one pulls in, an artist plays a set, goes back to the bus and goes to the next festival. The next artist does the same. Maybe there is some backstage intermingling. With us, they are out there for five days, they are hanging out and they start to collaborate. All of a sudden you have Andy Grammer with Train all singing one of their songs.”

Chris Stapleton and Morgane Stapleton perform during a Sixthman cruise outing. Photo: Will Byington

Chris Stapleton and Morgane Stapleton perform during a Sixthman cruise outing. Photo: Will Byington

While the ships primarily sail November through April, the company’s operations team spends its off season from May through October arranging every nuance of the experience and planning for every contingency: which ports artists should fly into, emergency plans if bad weather hit, what cranes are needed to get artists’ production gear on and off the ship, and even bar setups and napkin branding.

“Every time, I’m amazed at the marvel of logistics that has to happen to put these events on. You are dealing with the elements at sea, and the fact that you sail with what you’ve got. You’re not running down to Home Depot to get more. It forces you to be very disciplined with advanced planning.”

Clustering cruises back-to-back is one efficient use of time and space. “We get on Feb. 3 and do seven cruises in a row,” says Diaz, who notes the cost of chartering a ship alone can enter seven figures. Guests typically exit a ship at 8 a.m., and guests begin boarding for the next cruise at 11:30 a.m. “Our team will fly people in and out to keep fresh troops. You put the full deck stage up once for multiple music festivals, instead of having to put it up and take it down over and over again.”

In the midst of the plethora of planning, Diaz keeps his focus sharp.

“I have three things I have to do: Make the team and guests the star, grow the festivals and take care of our artist partners. The joy I see on guests’ faces when we are pulling away from port and there is sunshine and their favorite band starts a chord on the pool deck, that’s why we do it.”

Upcoming Sixthman cruises for 2017 include the 2nd Annual Walker Stalker Cruise (Feb. 3-6), The Rock Boat XVII (Feb. 10-15), 2nd Annual Outlaw Country Cruise (Feb. 26-March 2), and Kid Rock’s 8th Chillin’ The Most Cruise (April 4-9).

Zac Brown Band performs during a Sixthman sailing. Photo: Will Byington

Zac Brown Band performs during a Sixthman sailing. Photo: Will Byington

Kid Rock performs during one of his Chillin' The Most cruises. Photo: Will Byington

Kid Rock performs during one of his Chillin’ The Most cruises. Photo: Will Byington

Industry Ink: Pam Browne, Liz Rose, Emily Shackelton, Drew Baldridge, APA

Pam Browne, Mike Panaggia Launch DME Entertainment

Former head of Belmont University’s Mike Curb Music Business Program, Pam Browne, has partnered with DME Delivers/DME Sports President, Mike Panaggio, to launch marketing/management company, DME Entertainment Group. Based in Daytona Beach, Florida, the client roster includes Curb Records’ Larry Gordon and indie pop artist, Aprilann.

Browne also serves as Executive Director of the Curb Institute at Bethune-Cookman University. Her career includes time as an entertainment attorney, NFL agent and manager of the multi-platinum group Tag Team (“Whoomp There It Is”).

Panaggio founded DME Delivers, a full-service, direct marketing agency, over 20 years ago. As President of the DME umbrella, he developed DME Sports, a major player in sports marketing and sports training.

Pam Browne

Pam Browne

 

 

Liz Rose, Emily Shackelton Pen Song For Girl Scouts

Warner/Chappell and Girl Scouts of the USA have teamed to release the organization’s first original song, written by WCM/Liz Rose Music songwriters Liz Rose and Emily Shackelton. The song, “Watch Me Shine,” will be spotlighted in Girl Scouts’ new PSA and features Girl Scouts singing backup vocals.

 

 

Drew Baldridge Donates To T.J. Martell Foundation

Cold River Records’ Drew Baldridge recently presented a check for $4,000 to the T.J. Martell Foundation to support medical research focused on finding cures for leukemia, cancer and AIDS. The monies raised were from the country newcomer’s “Rebound from Cancer” campaign in which he teamed up with Premiere Networks and Super 8 for a month-long fundraiser selling limited edition T-shirts at his shows.

Pictured from L-R: Rick Murray, VP Integrated Marketing/Promotions at Premiere Networks, Cold River’s Drew Baldridge, and Tinti Moffat, Executive Director for The T.J. Martell Foundation; Southern Region.

Pictured (L-R): Rick Murray, VP Integrated Marketing/Promotions at Premiere Networks, Cold River’s Drew Baldridge, and Tinti Moffat, Executive Director for The T.J. Martell Foundation; Southern Region.

 

 

 

APA Happy Hour

APA Nashville hosted the Nashville office of the fastest growing music rights management company, ole, for APA Happy Hour recently. Steve Lassiter, SVP/Head of Concerts and team held the gathering in their penthouse suite of One Nashville Place overlooking Music City.

apa-ole-happy-hour

Granger Smith Hospitalized After Concert Injury

Granger Smith

Granger Smith

Granger Smith has been hospitalized after sustaining injuries Friday night (Dec. 2) during his concert at Sayreville, New Jersey’s Starland Ballroom.

Smith was standing on a monitor when it gave way, causing the singer to fall from the stage and into a metal barricade. Still, Granger finished his set, including a performance of “Backroad Song.”

Smith was taken to a nearby emergency room, and was then admitted to a Level 1 trauma center in New Brunswick, New Jersey. His injuries included two separated, broken ribs, as well as a punctured and partially collapsed lung.

“I took a pretty hard spill last night in Jersey,” Smith said via Twitter. “Thx for the well wishes! Y’all mean the world to me. I’ll be out of the hospital & 100% soon!”

All shows and appearances through the weekend have been cancelled, including shows at City Limits Saloon in Raleigh, North Carolina (Dec. 3) and Billy Bob’s Texas in Fort Worth (Dec. 4).

Information about Smith’s additional December shows is forthcoming.