Jon Freeman – 05/08/2008
Eddy Arnold
Country Music Hall of Famer Eddy Arnold passed away early this morning (5/8) in Franklin, Tenn. at the age of 89. Known for hits like “Make The World Go Away,” “I’ll Hold You In My Heart (Until I Can Hold You In My Arms),” “I Really Don’t Want To Know” and “You Don’t Know Me,” Arnold reigned over the Billboard country charts for the latter half of the 1940s and continued to chart hits into the 1960s. He reportedly sold 85 million albums to date. Arnold was not only a driving force in the widespread popularity of country music, but a star of television and film as well.
Born in 1915 to a farming family in Chester County, Tenn., Arnold honored his roots by adopting the stage name “Tennessee Plowboy.” After his father passed and the Great Depression set in, Arnold and his family worked as poor sharecroppers and he sang for extra money at various gatherings. In 1940 he joined WSM personality and Grand Ole Opry star Pee Wee King’s Golden West Cowboys, where he gained notoriety on the Opry and toured U.S. military bases. After heading out on his own with his band The Tennessee Plowboys, Arnold acquired a manager in Colonel Tom Parker and recorded Nashville’s first major label session for RCA Records in 1944. He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of fame in 1966. Arnold’s wife Sally Gayhart Arnold passed away earlier this year. They are survived by two children, Richard Edward Jr., of Nashville, and Jo Ann Pollard, of Brentwood, Tenn., two grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.
Pictured (L-R): Bill Monroe, Arnold and George Jones. Photo: Alan Mayor
Sarah Skates – 05/09/2008
05/09/2008
Cristyle, co-writer of Mariah Carey's current hit “Touch My Body” had a productive writing trip to Nashville. Through the collaborative efforts of ASCAP Atlanta's Tremayne Anchrum and Nashville's Dan Keen, Cristyle spent three days writing with ASCAP Nashville songwriters Chris Stapleton, Chris Tompkins and Kyle Jacobs.
Pictured (L-R): Keen, Tompkins, Cristyle, Jacobs and ASCAP's Earle
Simmons.
Memorial services for Eddy Arnold will be held next week. The Country Music Hall of Fame member passed away yesterday (5/8) at age 89. A public viewing in the Country Music Hall of Fame rotunda...
Industry Voting Begins May 16
It’s been an intense week at Music Row preparing for today’s announcement and we are excited to share some new developments! Drum roll please, lift the curtain and voila!—the...
05/08/2008
BMI hosted a reception at their Music Row office for the Tennessee Association of Broadcasters (TAB) in celebration of TAB's 60th anniversary. The event was attended by nearly 100 Tennessee radio and TV broadcasters and more than a dozen songwriters. Leslie Satcher, Tim Nichols and Bob DiPiero performed many of their hit songs, and Lee Thomas Miller closed the show with a hilarious salute to Music Row's “Musica” sculpture. Among dignitaries who addressed the group were FCC Commissioner Deborah Taylor Tate and Tennessee Governor Phil Bredesen. BMI's Mason Hunter presented TAB President Whit Adamson with a gold record commemorating 60 years of dedicated service to the broadcast industry.
Pictured (L-R): BMI's Tom Annastas, attorney William H. Tate, FCC Commissioner Deborah Taylor Tate, Governor Phil Bredesen, TAB Chairman Debbie Turner, BMI's Fred Cannon, songwriter Leslie Satcher, and TAB President Whit Adamson. Photo: John Russell
Warner Music Group has suspended its quarterly dividend in the wake of disappointing financial results—a loss of 25¢ per share for the quarter ending March 31 compared with a loss of 19¢ per share...
Sarah Skates – 05/07/2008
Tyler Waugh
Sarah Skates – 05/07/2008
Tony Morreale
David M. Ross – 05/07/2008
As we pass the five month Nielsen SoundScan mile marker, country music sales departments are in need of special vitamins to lift our numbers back to health. Country album scans through the week of May 5 are down 15.2% compared to overall sales which are down a mere 11.4%. In actual numbers, country albums (physical and digital) sold 14,754,000 units this year and 17,392,000 for the same period last year. As expected, when country sales lag the overall industry, Music City market share suffers. Therefore, it’s no surprise to see country’s market share falling from 10.9% in ’07 to 10.4% in ’08.
“Travelin’ Light”
“The Rodeo Is Over”
“Days of Thunder”
“Burnin’ Bridges”
“Fine Me a Man Like Goober”
“My Block”
“You’re the Ticket”
“Dona Carmela”
“But I Could Be Wrong”
“Hick Chick”