Chris Young Says He’s “Grateful” Longtime Label Partner Stuck With Him After “First Three Singles Tanked”

Chris Young Says He’s “Grateful” Longtime Label Partner Stuck With Him After “First Three Singles Tanked”

In October 2006, Chris Young dropped his self-titled debut album on Sony Music’s RCA Nashville imprint.

More than 13 years later, Chris is still signed to RCA Nashville. He has released seven studio albums through the label, with an eighth, Raised on Country, on the way. While Chris has scored 11 No. 1 singles during his time with RCA Nashville, his first three singles—“Drinkin’ Me Lonely,” “You’re Gonna Love Me” and “Voices”—barely made dents on the chart at No. 42, No. 48 and No. 37, respectively. But RCA Nashville stuck with Chris—and the rest, as they say, is history: 2 billion on-demand streams, 12 million singles sold, 11 career No. 1 singles, 2 Grammy nominations and more.

As Chris told Kix Brooks of American Country Countdown, he’s “grateful” for his longtime label partner, because “RCA believed in me” when many artists under similar circumstances would have been “done.”

“Just the fact that I’m still on the same label from the beginning of my career until now is incredible,” says Chris to Kix. “And, you know, it’s a testament to working with RCA. When I first started out, the first three singles tanked, so most artists are done by like tank number two [laughing], if not the first one. It was cool that RCA believed in me. That was back when Joe Galante was running the label. That guy was—and still is—a very shrewd businessman, a very smart guy, and one to not pull punches, so the fact that he saw something there and said, ‘I want to keep this guy around and make another record,’ and now, you look at what that’s turned into . . . I’m pretty grateful for that.”

Chris’ new single, “Drowning,” which he co-penned with Corey Crowder and Josh Hoge, is currently No. 25 on the Billboard Country Airplay chart after 30 weeks.

photo by NCD

Lady Antebellum Switches Gears With Release of New Single, “Champagne Night” [Listen]

Lady Antebellum Switches Gears With Release of New Single, “Champagne Night” [Listen]

One week after debuting “Champagne Night” during NBC’s prime-time series Songland on April 13, Lady Antebellum announced that the tune will serve as the trio’s new single.

Hillary Scott, Charles Kelley and Dave Haywood of Lady A served as the guests artists on Season 2/Episode 1 of Songland, which gives four songwriters the chance to have one of their original tunes produced by a mentor—Shane McAnally, Ester Dean or Ryan Tedder—and recorded by the guest artists.

Singer/songwriter Madeline Merlo penned the episode’s winning song, “Champagne Night,” with Lady A and Shane McAnally. “Champagne Night,” which is the first song from the prime-time series to become a radio single, impacted country radio on April 20.

“We had a blast bringing this song to life for our episode,” said Hillary Scott. “We started the process of the song over the winter in a very different time and headspace. But now, with everything going on, it’s almost like that little dose of exactly what I need right now—a light and fun little reminder to enjoy the simpler moments.”

The announcement likely means the end of Lady A’s single, “What I’m Leaving For,” which is currently No. 39 on the Billboard Country Airplay chart after nine weeks. Penned by Sam Ellis, Micah Premnath and Laura Veltz, “What I’m Leaving For” is featured on Lady A’s 2019 album, Ocean, and followed the release of lead single, “What If I Never Get Over You.”

Watch the video for “Champagne Night” below.

photo by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com

Kelsea Ballerini Goes to Country Radio With New Single, “The Other Girl,” Featuring Halsey [Listen]

Kelsea Ballerini Goes to Country Radio With New Single, “The Other Girl,” Featuring Halsey [Listen]

Kelsea Ballerini shipped her new single, “The Other Girl,” to country radio on April 20.

“The Other Girl, which was penned by Kelsea, Shane McAnally and Ross Copperman, features vocals from pop star Halsey. The new tune is the second single from Kelsea’s 2020 self-titled album, following her Top 20 lead single, “Homecoming Queen?”

Kelsea and Halsey recently teamed up for the 70th episode of CMT Crossroads, which aired in March.

While Kelsea, 26, has scored five No. 1 hits on the country charts since dropping her debut album in 2015, Halsey, 25, has earned a handful on No. 1 songs on the pop charts since releasing her 2015 debut album, including “Him & I,” “Eastside” and more.

As Kelsea told Kix Brooks of American Country Countdown, collaborating with your friend makes “perfect sense.”

“We are [friends],” says Kelsea to Kix. “I’ve always wanted to do a CMT CrossroadsI love collaborating—but I always wanted to do it with someone that I was comfortable with. You’re doing nine songs with that person, so it’s like you really want to be able to connect to their music and just them as a person, and so Halsey and I have been friends for a couple of years now and, it made perfect sense to kick it off with Crossroads.” 

Listen to Kelsea’s new single, “The Other Girl,” featuring Halsey.

photos by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com

Jimmy’s blog: Sankey says his focus is on preparing for football Labor Day weekend

Jimmy’s blog: Sankey says his focus is on preparing for football Labor Day weekend

By Jimmy Hyams

SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey is paddling through unchartered waters as a deadly coronavirus has paralyzed his conference, our country and countless communities.

Without a playbook, Sankey is trying to oversee a league, restart playing games, and make critical decisions in an effort to return to normalcy for 14 colleges and universities in an 11-state footprint.

It’s a daunting task, fighting this invisible enemy.

“None of us in our undergraduate or graduate courses had this particular section or this lesson,’’ Sankey said in an exclusive interview on SportsTalk WNML on Friday. “So we’ve had to build a bridge as we crossed the river and write the manual as we’re doing so.’’

Sankey made the “emotional’’ decision to shutdown the SEC men’s basketball tournament March 12, shut down athletic events until April 15, then May 31.

He watched thousands of athletes not complete their season and thousands more not even start their season.

He realized the negative impact of “pulling them away from the foundation of their lives, their class schedules, their practice schedule, their games or events’’ and the impact of their “mental well being.’’

Sankey has had almost daily conversations with SEC athletic directors and weekly talks with presidents and chancellors. He tasked athletic directors with providing a “clear description of what is going on in your state.’’

As COVID-19 has overtaken the United States (and world) Sankey has seen many milestones go by the wayside: the SEC men’s basketball tournament, the SEC baseball tournament, the national championships for swimming and diving and indoor track and field, and baseball and softball, and the many spring sports that never started.

The SEC Spring Meetings in Sandestin, Fla., were canceled.

The SEC Football Media Days in Atlanta are scheduled for July 13-16. Sankey is hopeful they will be held.

“We’re certainly preparing for that,’’ Sankey said, realizing each day, each week that goes by could shed a different light on the subject.

“I’ve got a team working on `what ifs.’ Like what if this happens in the fall, what do you do with our sports.

“I’ve got a team working with, how do we celebrate the return of our sports, because I think that will be a big deal (starting with soccer, then volleyball, then football).

“We’ve got a team working on media days. Their focus is on the preparation for each of those teams as scheduled.

“Then we go into our contingency thinking. So if we can’t gather together in mid-July, which is (more than 11 weeks away), we have space to make those decisions.

“We want to continue to prepare for what we want to happen, then be guided by circumstances and information so that if we have to adjust, we’ll be ready.’’

Unlike some conferences, the SEC has not had to exercise 10 percent paycuts across the board for SEC office employees.

“That’s a credit to my predecessors,’’ Sankey said. “We’re in good financial position.’’

Sankey said the SEC has worked to cut 12.5% out of the budget for this year. He also said some staff is taking vacation at this time. He also said other staff members are “working busier now’’ than under normal circumstances as they try to deal with questions that are tough right now to answer.

Sankey is aware that not playing football this season would have a devastating impact on the finances of schools and universities and communities.

For example, football derives 67% of the revenue in the athletic department at Tennessee – or an average of over $100 million per year over the past five years. You can bet the amount is similar at Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, LSU and several other SEC schools.

The economic impact on the Knoxville area for seven football home games in a season is about $355 million annually – that includes hotels, restaurants and bars, gift shops and some 3,800 jobs.

The football fiscal revenue for 50-plus public schools among the Power Five conferences is $4.1 billion.

Not only does football bring in billions, but many schools donate millions back to the university through revenue gained by the athletic department.

There was a time when Tennessee’s athletic department donated $6 million to UT then sold about 15,000 season tickets to UT at face value and UT turned that into $10 million in donations for the right to buy season tickets.

In other words, not having football would likely cost SEC schools well over $100 million in donations it gets from athletic departments.

Sankey didn’t know an exact amount, but he knows it’s a lot.

“If we’re in a circumstance where we’re unable to play football next fall,’’ Sankey said, “I actually leave the football field and think about campuses. Then I think about our culture and our society.

“So given the economic challenges that now exist that didn’t exist 60 days ago, you play that forward into the fall and if we’re still in this public healthy crisis that prevents these activities, that’s a really big question.’’

In some cases, universities are among the largest employers in a city. You have the game-day impact, the ticket takers, the users, the parking attendants.

Sankey shutters at the thought.

“That’s why I’d rather not deal with hypotheticals,’’ he said.  “I focus very specifically on my responsibility and that is to be prepared to play football come Labor Day weekend. That’s a hope I think we need to give people. I can’t promise it, though.’’

Sankey added, with tongue in cheek: “I haven’t had an officiating complaint in five weeks and I miss that, because it came with playing games.’’

Many pro sports have said they would play games without fans in the stands.

Would the SEC?

“I don’t have to answer that question right now,’’ Sankey said, noting he’s got weeks before he has to make that decision.

What you play college football on campus if campuses are not open to students?

“Campuses are certainly the host,’’ Sankey said. “…I do think, fundamentally, activity on campus is one of the important steps we’re going to have to take to bring back college football or college soccer, whatever it may be.

“One of the questions we have to answer with the asset of time right now, what does campus activity look like in the future.’’

What happens if one conference is ready to return to football but another is not? Would that be a conference or NCAA decision?

Sankey noted that the decisions about playing conference basketball tournaments were left up to the individual conferences.

“That’s probably a lesson or example that we are independent identities,’’ Sankey said.

Since then, Sankey said, there has been a “lot of conversation between autonomy conferences. The preference would be to go down the road together.’’

Sankey said the NCAA has a football oversight committee that is considering all options.

“Now, if there is one small niche that is inactive,’’ he said, “but perhaps the entire SEC and others are able to function, that is one of those hypotheticals we don’t have to answer now. But you would think there would be a bit of room in that decision making.’’


Sponsored by Big Kahuna Wings: The wings that changed it all 

April 21: Live-Stream Calendar With Michael Ray, Aaron Watson, Band of Heathens & More

April 21: Live-Stream Calendar With Michael Ray, Aaron Watson, Band of Heathens & More

Country stars are trying to do their part to keep us entertained during our self-quarantines (hopefully) due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Here’s a rundown of what to expect as some of our favorite stars perform live and chat via social medial.

April 21 (updated throughout the day)

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Falcons PBP Voice Wes Durham talks football, draft and shares John Ward stories

Falcons PBP Voice Wes Durham talks football, draft and shares John Ward stories

Wes Durham and Vince Ferrara / Credit: 99.1 The Sports Animal

By Vince Ferrara / @VinceSports

Wes Durham, Atlanta Falcons play-by-play voice and ACC Network host/play-by-play announcer, joined me this week on my Zoom video and radio series during this quarantine period we’re in. Go to the Blogs tab under my name anytime to access my blogs. You can also click HERE for now.

Durham discussed adjusting to the current climate as a versatile broadcaster, the start of the ACC Network, the considerations for when college football and the NFL play again, what the Falcons may do in the first round of the NFL Draft, he answered my “3 For V” questions and shared praise for legendary Vols voice John Ward.

Here’s one quote from Wes Durham on John Ward:
“It always meant a lot when I got a chance to spend time with John because when I got the Vanderbilt job at 26 in 1992, Vince, John and Larry Munson (Georgia) and Jim Fyffe at Auburn, the late Jim Fyffe at Auburn and Eli Gold at Alabama were the first handful of guys to reach out to a young guy doing games. They were just so gracious and we became friends. It always meant a lot.”

Watch that entire interview below.

Gabby Barrett’s Debut Single, “I Hope,” Reaches No. 1 on Billboard Country Airplay Chart

Gabby Barrett’s Debut Single, “I Hope,” Reaches No. 1 on Billboard Country Airplay Chart

For just the fourth time in 14 years, a solo female artist’s debut single has reached No. 1 on the Billboard Country Airplay chart.

Gabby Barrett’s debut single, “I Hope,” hit No. 1 on both the Billboard Country Airplay chart and Mediabase chart this week.

Gabby is now the fourth solo female artist in 14 years to score a No. 1 hit on the Billboard Country Airplay chart with her debut single, following Carly Pearce’s “Every Little Thing” (Nov. 2017), Kelsea Ballerini’s “Love Me Like You Mean It” (June 2015) and Carrie Underwood’s “Jesus, Take the Wheel” (Jan. 2006).

“I can’t believe this is happening . . . this is amazing,” said Gabby. “Thank you to country radio for being so welcoming and supportive. And to my husband, family, fans, label, team and everyone who has supported me along the way—this would not have been possible without you. God is good, all the time.”

Penned by Gabby, Zachary Kale and Jon Nite, “I Hope” was produced by Kale and Ross Copperman.

Charlie Daniels Forms Partnership to Help Veterans During COVID-19 Pandemic

Charlie Daniels Forms Partnership to Help Veterans During COVID-19 Pandemic

The Journey Home Project, a nonprofit that supports veterans in their return, rehabilitation and reintegration back into civilian life, has partnered with Code of Vets, a nonprofit that uses social media to raise awareness and funds for veterans in distress.

Charlie Daniels, who is the chairman of The Journey Home Project, announced that the goal of the partnership is to aid veterans who are suffering during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“[Founder] Gretchen Smith and the folks at Code of Vets cover the guys below the radar, the ones with immediate needs and no place to turn, with a rapid deployment type response to veterans in desperate circumstances,” says Charlie. “These are the same veterans who put their lives on the line to protect our freedom. Our nation is pretty distracted by the coronavirus pandemic we’re all dealing with, but the need in the veterans world goes on, and the urgent need for funds is truly critical. I would ask you to join The Journey Home Project in supporting Code of Vets in providing for the needs of our most worthy citizens.”

Donations can be made at codeofvets.com.

In pre-COVID-19 times, Code of Vets assisted veterans with mental health crisis, unemployment, housing and transportation, among others, but they are encountering new obstacles during the COVID-19 pandemic. Pressing issues for vets include:

  • Unable to pay bills due to layoffs
  • Spike in food assistance requests
  • Unable to afford basic needs such as: water, electricity, gas
  • Increase in veteran suicides
  • Unable to afford room or board due to job loss
  • No access to rent, mortgage, car payment relief or deferred payment programs
  • Unable to reach the VA (by phone/in-person) for necessary mental health appointments

photo by NCD

Brad Paisley Says His Free Grocery Store Is Serving “Three Times the Amount of People We Expected”

Brad Paisley Says His Free Grocery Store Is Serving “Three Times the Amount of People We Expected”

Brad Paisley made a virtual appearance on the Today show on April 20 to chat about his new single, “No I in Beer,” and his new nonprofit, The Store—a free grocery store in Nashville that serves individuals and families experiencing food insecurities and financial hardship.

Brad and wife Kimberly Williams-Paisley teamed up with Belmont University and Second Harvest Food Bank of Middle Tennessee to create The Store, which was slated to open in mid-April, but due to the COVID-19 pandemic and recent tornado devastation in Middle Tennessee, the grocery store opened one month early in mid-March.

“We had about a week of operating like we expected when we opened in March, and here we are opening something like this when, basically, all hell breaks loose,” said Brad on Today. “Now we’re already serving three times the amount of people we expected right away. We thought we would soft roll this thing out, like a slow build to what we would become, and all of the sudden we’re kind of thrown into the fire with it, but it’s really going well so far—knock on wood—I think.”

The Store operates as a year-round free grocery store that allows people to shop for their basic needs. Clients will be given the opportunity to come to The Store for a one-year period. There is no charge to those referred or to the people and agencies that send them. They may shop for food to supplement their income during times of crisis and as they work toward self-sufficiency. Brad and Kimberly were inspired to get involved in the Nashville project after volunteering at a similar organization, Unity Shoppe, in Santa Barbara, Calif.

The Store is located at 2005 12th Ave. S. in Nashville.

photo by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com

NFL Draft Preview: Mike Keith explains Titans draft operations, league trends and talks Jauan Jennings

NFL Draft Preview: Mike Keith explains Titans draft operations, league trends and talks Jauan Jennings

Mike Keith and Vince Ferrara / Credit: 99.1 The Sports Animal

By Vince Ferrara / @VinceSports

As part of our 99.1 The Sports Animal 2020 NFL Draft coverage, presented by UT Athletics, we are doing some Zoom Video and Audio interviews. We’re working hard to get you ready for pretty much the only thing going on in sports that happens to be immensely popular anyways, the NFL Draft.

Get your UT sports tickets at AllVols.com.

I visited with Tennessee Titans play-by-play voice and director of broadcasting Mike Keith to focus in exclusively on the NFL Draft for our coverage. You can catch Mike weekly on SportsTalk here on 99.1 THe Sports Animal as well as a part of The OTP Podcast on the Titans’ website.

We discussed the specifics on how the league’s draft will operate, how the Titans were already a step ahead of some teams in remote operations, what trends her anticipates in the draft, what the Titans’ needs are in the draft, how GM Jon Robinson approaches the draft, an evaluation of Vols wide receiver Jauan Jennings and much, much more.

Watch that full interview with Mike Keith below.

Visit our mock draft central page here and don’t miss our draft special on our station throughout the entire first round starting at 8pm April 23 here on 99.1 The Sports Animal.

Weather

  • Forecast
  • Currents
  • Planner