John Rich & Gretchen Wilson No-Shows at Alabama Concert
- Gretchen Wilson, John Rich, and Cowboy Troy failed to appear at a concert designed to honor Sam Phillips. Although not scheduled to appear Big Kenny filled in for the no-shows. An attorney for the radio station that organized the events says the non-appearances are a breach of contract while a spokesperson for Gretchen Wilson cites a mix-up as far as booking goes.
- Dierks Bentley has been introducing a number of new songs during his shows to get fan reactions. He wants to find the very best songs to include on his next album because he’s not sure how much longer artists will be making albums.
- Peter Kohan points out that despite the poor performance of albums at retail stores last year, e-commerce sites experienced a 2.4% increase for sales of physical CDs.
- Mark Chesnutt admitted that he recorded “Rollin’ With the Flow” to get his people off his back, but now he’s glad they they were on his back to begin with.
- The Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders personally invited Neal McCoy to perform at halftime of this Sunday’s playoff game between the Cowboys and the New York Giants.
- Blake Shelton bought Miranda Lambert a mini-horse for Christmas.
- The video for Ashton Shepherd’s “Takin’ Off This Pain” is pretty cool. It’s kind of like a behind the scenes look at the filming process with everything put together at the end. (Embedding is disabled, so you’ll have to click the picture below to watch the video on YouTube)
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Tagged In This Article
Ashton Shepherd // Big Kenny // Blake Shelton // Cowboy Troy // Dierks Bentley // Gretchen Wilson // John Rich // Mark Chesnutt // Miranda Lambert // Neal McCoy
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16 Comments
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January 11, 2008 at 10:20 am Permalink
Thanks for the props guys.
The Dierks quote ought to make everyone take a step back and wonder what’s going on, because if one of our more successful artists is pondering an album-less future, then what are the grinder indie artists thinking? Now, Dierks records for an EMI label, and they just went the private equity route with continued cuts and changes being spoken about from their top exec. We know tha majors are in it up to their ears. The question is: when the majors fall to their knees will there be an indie scene robust enough to develop all the Country talents we love to listen to and write about so passionately?
January 11, 2008 at 10:28 am Permalink
I sure wish the interviewer would have bothered to ask Dierks to expand on that most cryptic of comments.
January 11, 2008 at 3:51 pm Permalink
I don’t like all this death of the album talk, it’s disheartening–even if things started out in the singles based format to begin with. I’m partial to albums.
Dierks did leave things hanging there, though. Maybe he’d elaborate for us if we contacted him :P
January 11, 2008 at 3:59 pm Permalink
The album format is on life support, and its signals are fading. We’ll just have to get used to it.
January 11, 2008 at 4:18 pm Permalink
Basically I can picture EPs/singles exclusively being offered online within the next ten years. As it stands, the electronics sections of most stores, in terms of CDs, games, and video games, is becoming obsolete with the internet, and while games and video games can be translated fully onto an online source, why should an artist feel obligated to release 11-13 songs when they could release as few as 1 or as many as they pleased?
January 11, 2008 at 4:24 pm Permalink
Oh yea, EPs would be cool, too…as long as the artists focused on quality.
January 11, 2008 at 5:01 pm Permalink
I wish I could find the quote but this isn’t the first time Dierks has predicted the demise of the traditional album. At least he’s not burying his head in the sand.
January 11, 2008 at 5:19 pm Permalink
If artists would be true artists and refuse to produce album “filler” they wouldn’t be in this spot.
As for the video, that’s a creative way to handle things if you have a very short story in your head or a limited amount of usable footage.
And about Shelton giving Lambert a pony for Christmas - that kinda hard hitting stuff is why I keep coming back. Thanks for the update. Now, giving away any free stuff for making me read that?
January 11, 2008 at 5:26 pm Permalink
If the album is on life support, it’s because too many albums are lifeless. One or two great songs, a few good songs, and 5 or more lackluster “filler” songs. To get the good songs you gotta buy the bad songs. If that’s what albums have given us, then good riddance.
But I hope the album remains viable because some music can only be made via album, music like Marty Stuart’s “The Pilgrim” or Willie Nelson’s “Red Headed Stranger.” The death of an album might not be a big loss to the George Strait fan, but it would be to the Marty Stuart fan.
January 11, 2008 at 7:39 pm Permalink
I love Ashton’s song and video and on her label website you can see and hear it in full video and audio fidelity using Windows Media Player. I’d like to think of that tattered screen door as the radio programmers that are standing in Ashton’s way…..
A for the demise of albums hopefully Dierks is a bit premature. The 10 to 13 song album concept dates back to the introduction of the 33.3 rpm LP album back in the early 1950’s where physical limitations keep each side of an LP to about 15-20 minutes of play time. That concept was so ingrained when CDs were introduced in 1982 with much longer playing spans (60-70 minutes) that only the playback media form changed, not the album concept itself.
Now thanks to iPods (and all other MP3 players) and downloadable songs that can be purchased (or stolen) individually, the album concept is old school for all these young’uns that don’t have a sentimental attachment to the album concept. I prefer both physical CDs and full albums, but I’m a dinosaur and the mass market for music sales is with young folks decades younger than myself. I think such short sighted goals will only hasten the demise of the big Nashville labels…….
January 11, 2008 at 10:39 pm Permalink
I sometimes feel sorry for Big Kenny and all the crap he must have to deal with.
January 11, 2008 at 10:55 pm Permalink
I think that the Ashton Shepherd video was an unnecessary and ill-advised risk. Sending smart, traditional material to radio is bold enough these days. Let the pretty girl make a real video and maybe you’ll convert some of the CMT crowd.
January 12, 2008 at 1:03 am Permalink
Ashton Shepard clearly has so much talent, but this song is far from perfect. This song has a great hook; but the lyrics really barely scratch the surface of a marriage that has gone loveless. We never get any hint of why the husband might rather watch tv than his wife in something sexy. And the vocals and the video don’t do much to make us really care why this happened, either.
Spepard’s vocals seem oblivious to the fact that there’s an interesting contrast between Shepard’s claim that “I’m the only one that can set myself free” and her choice to celebrate her decision to end the marriage by drinking alcohol. So many people try to find freedom or comfort or love in alcohol that one wonders if Shepard has really set herself free. The idea that Shepard hasn’t really “set herself free” is given credence by the fact that she tells her husband that she hopes “you miss me every second that I’m gone.” If she was really free of this marriage, why would she care about this?
I really want to like this song; its great when something a bit more “traditional” comes out of a major label. And there is a certain charm to the fact that she is taking the demise of her marriage in such stride. She sees the end of a marriage as the start of new possibilities, and she makes you want to root for her as she pursues a better life and takes control.
January 12, 2008 at 5:28 am Permalink
Jim,
I have to agree with you about Big Kenny. He’s most definitely the yang to John Rich’s yin. When all the political stuff came from Rich’s mouth, Kenny was off working for change in Darfur. The fact that the duo was even on the Dafur benefit album was because of Kenny.
I like Big and Rich more because of Kenny than John Rich, even if I think Rich has the ability to be a greater singer. I just think that Big Kenny’s the better person.
January 12, 2008 at 12:13 pm Permalink
absolutely agreed about big kenny. he’s a class act. the other(s)? eh. i can pass on ‘em.
January 13, 2008 at 8:20 pm Permalink
John Rich is the kind of guy that would drop f-bombs at the top of his lungs in a chuckee cheese….that festival got a better deal if they only got Big Kenny Alphin and didn’t have to deal with John Rich.
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