News

Album

LW

TW

Artist

Title

(Label)

TW SPINS

LW SPINS

Weeks on Chart

Spin +/-

Stations

 

2

1

Curtis Grimes

The Cowboy Kind

(CG)

1,393

1,261

14

+132

72

 

4

2

Aaron Watson

July in Cheyenne

(Thirty Tigers)

1,219

1,096

16

+123

68

 

3

3

Josh Ward

Hard Whiskey

(Buckshot Records)

1,169

1,171

11

-2

68

 

1

4

Casey Donahew Band

Small Town Love

(Almost Country)

1,146

1,299

15

-153

67

 

9

5

Kevin Fowler

Love Song

(Kevin Fowler Records)

1,075

907

7

+168

73

 

7

6

JB and the Moonshine Band w/Angaleena Presley

Black and White

(Light It Up Records)

1,022

923

12

+99

65

 

10

7

Zane Williams

Little Too Late

(ZW)

976

900

9

+76

64

 

12

8

Brian Keane

Bar Lights

(BK)

952

812

11

+140

61

 

5

9

Cody Johnson

Dance Her Home

(CJB)

935

1,061

10

-126

61

 

8

10

William Clark Green

Rose Queen

(Bill Grease Records)

904

920

16

-16

60

 

6

11

Granger Smith

Miles and Mud Tires

(GS)

844

1,006

19

-162

61

 

14

12

The Statesboro Revue

Huck Finn

(Vision Ent./Shalley Records)

814

794

20

+20

47

 

16

13

Mark McKinney

Lonely Bones

(Texas Evolution)

804

783

6

+21

64

 

18

14

Sam Riggs

Angola’s Lament

(SR)

799

767

12

+32

55

 

15

15

Cameran Nelson

35 Runs Both Ways

(CN)

787

787

6

-----

53

 

17

16

Whiskey Myers

Home

(Wiggy Thump)

777

782

15

-5

61

 

13

17

Phil Hamilton

Hold On Tight

(Winding Road)

765

798

13

-33

53

 

11

18

Randy Rogers Band

Speak Of The Devil

(MCA Nashville)

677

853

21

-176

51

 

20

19

Reckless Kelly

Every Step of the Way

(No Big Deal)

668

622

5

+46

55

 

19

20

Deryl Dodd

Loveletters

(Smith Ent.)

635

700

21

-65

43

 

21

21

Uncle Lucius

Somewhere Else

(Entertainment One Music)

612

619

11

-7

47

 

22

22

Green River Ordinance

Flying

(GRO)

610

588

5

+22

53

 

23

23

Jason Eady

OK Whiskey

(JE)

594

540

8

+54

44

 

24

24

John Slaughter

Ghost Town

(JS)

569

492

3

+77

46

 

46

25

Wade Bowen w/Brandy Clark

Love in the First Degree

(Lightning Rod Records)

516

304

2

+212

45

 

27

26

Michael Coleman w/Jody Booth

Radio Don’t Sound Like Me

(DMG/CaneyCreek)

515

475

7

+40

41

 

25

27

Rob Baird

Same Damn Thing

(Carnival Music)

510

486

10

+24

42

 

28

28

Kylie Rae Harris

Waited

(KRH)

491

459

8

+32

45

 

30

29

Mike and the Moonpies

The Hard Way

(MATM)

489

453

9

+36

40

 

29

30

Ray Johnston Band

Crush

(RJB)

467

453

12

+14

43

 

45

31

Josh Grider

White Van

(AMP)

454

312

2

+142

36

 

34

32

Dolly Shine

Should’ve Known

(DS)

447

392

3

+55

41

 

32

33

Clayton Gardner

Table for Two

(CG)

439

412

5

+27

43

 

26

34

Brandon Rhyder

Leave

(Reserve Records)

436

479

6

-43

43

 

31

35

Clay Thrash

My Heart

(Grange Records)

427

445

8

-18

37

PHOTO COMING SOON

35

36

Rodney Parker & 50 Peso Reward

Things You Make Me Do

(Smith Ent.)

392

382

4

+10

32

 

38

37

Mike McClure Band

Silver and Blue

(598 Recordings)

381

346

4

+35

37

 

44

38

Aubrey Lynn England

Sad Little Girl

(ALE)

370

318

2

+52

29

 

37

39

Charlie Robison

Brand New Me

(Thirty Tigers/Jetwell, Inc.)

356

366

18

-10

32

 

40

40

Dirty River Boys

Desert Wind

(DRB)

352

338

10

+14

34

 

N

41

Prophets And Outlaws

Soul Shop

(Seven Set Jam Records)

350

247

1

+103

32

 

33

42

Jason Cassidy

Southern Side

(JC)

342

407

16

-65

38

 

42

43

Jarrod Birmingham

December Gone

(JB)

332

330

6

+2

33

 

49

44

Sean Franks & Chapter 11

Catch This Train

(WarRoom Records)

329

295

5

+34

29

 

47

45

Matt Caldwell

Drink Another

(AMP)

327

299

2

+28

34

PHOTO COMING SOON

R

46

American Aquarium

I Hope He Breaks Your Heart

(Last Chance Records)

306

266

4

+40

35

 

48

47

Tommy Joe Wilson

Cold Beer

(River Wild Records)

305

298

2

+7

32

 

43

48

The Rusty Brothers

Revival

(Vision Ent.)

305

324

4

-19

31

 

39

49

Rosehill

The Bible and the Gun

(Cypress Records)

305

344

9

-39

27

 

50

50

Redneck Brown & the Freshwater Donkeys

When I Think About Texas

(RB&FD)

274

293

7

-19

23

 

Non Reports:

1st Week:  KHKX, KOLI, Texas Countdown

 

Freezes:  KECO, KFWR, KNUE, KSCN/KSCH/KOYN, KWEY, Radio Texas Live

Copyright © 2014, the Texas Music Chart. Used with permission from Best In Texas Music Marketing LLC, Houston, TX

George "Porky" ChedwickGeorge "Porky" Chedwick (February 4, 1918 – March 2, 2014) was an American radio announcer known to generations in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania as "The Daddio of the Raddio, " "The Platter Pushin' Papa, " "The Bossman," "Pork the Tork", and a host of other colorful nicknames.

Chedwick was the first white DJ to present a racially diverse audience in a major eastern American city a steady diet of what were, in the summer of 1948, called "race records." The trail he blazed—some 3 years before the more famous Pennsylvania native, Alan Freed, called the music "rock and roll"--was a dual one. Chedwick's original playlist was composed of old R&B and gospel records that he had collected over the years, making him the world's first bona fide oldies DJ. He called the records his "dusty discs," since he would literally have to blow the dust off the 78s before he could preview them at the record stores. Record stores had no demand for the records and would often just give them to Chedwick, or he'd rescue them from bargain bins with what little money he could scrape together. Years later, radio stations, record companies, and concert promoters would take notice and copy Porky's Chedwick's formula, creating the billion-dollar "oldies" rock and roll nostalgia industry which thrives still today. Porky Chedwick has been recognized on the floor of the United States Senate for his pioneering contributions to radio and rock and roll (and countless times around Pittsburgh, including a day-long 50th anniversary oldies concert called "Porkstock", in 1998 at Three Rivers Stadium) and another one in 1999. He was among a group of radio disc jockeys honored in the "Dedicated to the One I Love" exhibit at Cleveland, Ohio's Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, in 1996. He's the only Pittsburgh DJ to be recognized in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. At age 88, Chedwick celebrated his 58th anniversary on the air at Hall of Fame's Alan Freed Radio Studio on August 12, 2006.

Read more at:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porky_Chedwick

Kayla Nettles - Music Charts Magazine® NEW DISCOVERY for March 2014Music Charts Magazine®Presents - "NEW DISCOVERY" - "Kayla Nettles" - for the month of March 2014.

Looking for some "New" music to add to your player and can't find anything that blows you away?

Check out this Music Charts Magazine® "NEW DISCOVERY" Interview with "Kayla Nettles" and be prepared to be excited knowing there is still 100% awesome music out there that you still have not heard.

After you listen to this great radio interview pasted below of "Kayla Nettles" we are sure you will be glad you found this "New Discovery" and Kayla's song "Drive" to add to your music playlist.

When Kayla Nettles was only nine-years-old she performed at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nevada.  From that moment on she knew exactly what she wanted to do with the rest of her life.

That was the turning point, the 18-year-old Nashville country artist says.

On July 27, Nettles released her debut, Drive, with a CD launch party at the Wild Wing Café in Franklin, Tennessee. She’s proud of the amount of time and effort she spent working on the album.Kayla Nettles - NEW DISCOVERY for the month of March 2014 at Music Charts Magazine® dot com

I wanted my EP to stand out from the crowd. I really took the time to pick the original songs that I believe people can relate too and have a better understanding of who I am and where I want to go as an artist.

In addition to singing, Nettles also plays guitar, piano, viola, and violin. Her influences include Taylor Swift, Georgia Strait, The Band Perry and Edens Edge. She says she tries to write music that people can relate too.

The songs on the EP are personal. I hope that they can relate to my songs and get the vibe that I’m putting down.

According to Nettles, the biggest challenge with the album was coming up with funding.

It’s a long process, she says. The funds were kind of the biggest issue. If we placed an order for a thousand CDs then it gets quite pricey.

Originally, from Titusville, Fl., Nettles moved to Waterford, Mich., when she was in the sixth grade. She got into music at an early age thanks in large part to her father’s own musical career.

Music was always a part of my life, she says. When I was three my father shared his love for music with me and would often bring me up on stage with his band.

In 2006, Nettles became the lead singer in Ripchord a rock band that toured the U.S.

Kayla Nettles - Music Charts Magazine® NEW DISCOVERY for the month of March 2014We were brought together through a music recital and really hit it off. We were all very young. The oldest member at the time was 14 years old and we were already traveling from state to state, Nettles says. In just a couple of months of becoming a band we were touring professionally, had a radio tour set up and performed in front of 30,000 people for a 4th of July event.

In 2009, she left Ripchord and moved from Michigan to Nashville in order to further pursue her music career.

Now that I’ve been here for four years, I feel like I’ve accomplished so much, she says.

Shortly after arriving in Music City, Nettles landed a job as a television host for Nashville Spotlight, a local program that helps promotes artists from across North America.

That was kind of my first job when I moved here and didn’t really know anyone, she says. One of the producers that works on the show heard me sing at a bar here in Nashville and he invited me by the studio. It was a really cool experience to meet friends and get some exposure.

Nettles received her vocal training from vocal coach Brett Manning who has previously worked with hKayla Nettle's is the NEW DISCOVERY for March 2014 at Music Charts Magazine®igh profile artists such as Taylor Swift, Hayley Williams, Miley Cyrus, Carrie Underwood and Keith Urban.

I always learn something new every lesson, she says. He is definitely an inspiration. Brett and the other vocal coaches have taken me under their wing and have given me support throughout my career.

I believe in his technique and can look back at past recordings of my voice and hear the difference in my tone, control and knowing how to put emotion in my voice, she adds.

In 2011, Nettles made it to Hollywood Week on American Idol Season 11 and says the experience was extremely beneficial for her as an artist.

Being on American Idol I’ve learned to appreciate my talent and how to connect with my audience on a more personal level when I am singing, she says. It’s a life changing experience. Words really can’t describe the sights, the sounds and the feelings that you experience.

Kayla Nettles - DRIVE - Album Cover - at Music Charts Magazine®She has also spent time behind the scenes learning stage construction and worked under Jonathan Smeeton, who has set up stages for artists such as Taylor Swift, Michael Jackson, KISS and Def Leopard.

Working with Mr. Smeeton was a great experience, Nettles says. I learned about all the hard work and responsibility that goes on behind the scenes to make the artists tour run smoothly.

As a child, Nettles acted in plays and that landed her appearances as an extra in music videos by Kid Rock, Luke Bryan, Eric Church, Hunter Hayes, Gretchen Wilson, Maggie Rose, Jasmine Sagginario, etc..

I really got to connect and hang out with the artists on a more personal level, she says. It’s always fun to see yourself on Country Music Television.

For more information on Kayla Nettles visit -

www.kaylanettles.com

Follow her on twitter @KaylaNettles.

 

 

Radio interested in how to obtain this music please contact us on our contact page and we will be glad to get it to your radio station for radio play. Many thanks to those of you who have already played it.

To find out more about Kayla Nettles:

 

Music Charts Magazine® NEW DISCOVERY for the month of March 2014 - Music Charts Magazine®proudly presents "NEW DISCOVERY" for the month of March 2014 "Kayla Nettles - feature song Drive"

LISTEN to "NEW DISCOVERY" Interview with Kayla Nettles - HERE:

Music Charts Magazine® Presents "New Discovery" Kayla Nettles featuring the song "Drive" - Interview by Award winning DJ Big Al Weekley

 

 

 

Music Charts Magazine® Presents NEW DISCOVERY "Kayla Nettles" - Interview by Big Al Weekley


 

 Music Charts Magazine® NEW DISCOVERY for the month of March 2014 Kayla Nettles

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright © 2012 - 2014 Music Charts Magazine, INC - All Rights Reserved. Contents of this site including text and media may not be reproduced without prior written consent. Audio and video elements of this site are property of their respective owners and are used with permission.


 

About Fred's Country program:

Le program Fred's Country: La musique Country de Tradition avec Frederic (Fred) Moreau. Le program Fred's Country est diffusé sur 65 fréquences FM, 54 radios ou webradios.

Radio Show Host: Fred Moreau

Program Fred's Country w09-2014 - 28 février 2014 à 15:00 - February 28th, 2014

 

 

Music Charts Magazine is proud to be friends with Mr. Moreau and glad to now be one of the many to host Program Fred's Country. ( French/English)

Radio Program "Fred's Country" - Now at Music Charts Magazine!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

Bird - The Life And Music Of Charlie Parker

Date = 25 February 2014

 

Author = Chuck Haddix

 

Genre = Jazz

 

Title = Bird: The Life and Music of Charlie Parker

 

Publisher = University of Illinois Press

 

Review=

            Charlie Parker (1920-1955) is among the most documented jazz musicians.  During a relatively brief recording career (1940-1954), he participated in approximately 250 recording sessions, around 175 as leader. He has been written about extensively, including in books by people with first-hand knowledge of him (such as Ross Russell) and by major critics (such as Gary Giddins).  Several Parker discographies have been published.  Carl Woideck compiled a collection of writings about him; Ken Vail chronicled his life. Mark Miller detailed his time in Canada.  Even a book reproducing his memorabilia has been published.  The list goes on.  Chuck Haddix’s Bird is one of the most recent books to focus on Parker.

            Now, almost sixty years after Parker’s death, a writer needs to have significant new information about—or a fresh approach to--the musician before undertaking a book about him.  Because of the author’s research in census records, city directories, and other documents, Bird provides new information, especially about Parker’s early years.  All knowledge is good, but the facts Haddix discovered are mostly trivial.

            Here are some facts Haddix provides, all of which are new to me.  Commenting on the Hannibal Bridge, he notes that “in 1917, at the peak of rail traffic, 271 trains passed daily through Union Station, the massive stone Beaux Arts train station located on the southern edge of downtown” Kansas City, Missouri (7).  He records that “as a teenager” in Oklahoma, Parker’s mother “worked as a maid for a household of six headed by Mary H. Morris on Main Street in McAlester, the county seat” (7), and that Parker’s father, “born in 1886,” resided “in a rooming house at 311 West Sixth Street in the heart of a crowded slum on the northern rim of downtown Kansas City, Missouri” (7-8).  He observes that Parker played in the band at the 1935 high school graduation of Rebecca Ruffin, who married him the next year; the band performed Elgar’s “Pomp and Circumstance” and the first theme from Coleridge-Taylor’s “An Imaginary Belle” (17).  (Does Haddix mean “Scenes from an Imaginary Ballet”?)  He pinpoints the location of Musser’s Ozark Tavern, where, in 1936, Parker was en route to play when he was injured in an automobile accident that killed a companion:  “three miles south of Eldon, Missouri, at the junction of Highways 52 and 54” (24). Haddix provides numerous addresses, such as those for Kansas City Musicians’ Local 627 (18) and Lucille’s Paradise (28), the Kansas City club where Parker joined the band of Buster Smith.

            As the book progresses, the author presents less new information and increasingly treats familiar Parker material: humiliation by Jo Jones, discovering how to create music he had been hearing in his mind by playing “Cherokee” in a new way, various band affiliations, how he became known as Yardbird (later shortened to Bird), the Benzedrine episode with Rubberlegs Williams, the engagement at Billy Berg’s, confinement at Camarillo State Hospital, recording sessions, relationships with wives and Chan Richardson, death in Hotel Stanhope, and so forth.  Though he interviewed people who knew Parker, including Jay McShann, Haddix based his treatments of events mainly on secondary sources, such as Robert George Reisner’s Bird: The Legend of Charlie Parker (1962), which includes various people’s recollections of Parker, and Mark Miller’s Cool Blues (1989).

            When presenting information from secondary sources, Haddix sometimes seems credulous, as when recounting Parker’s conversation with Einstein (62-63), sleeping under the bandstand during a performance by the Earl Hines band (64), and sleeping all day in a telephone booth (71).  These things might have happened, though in each instance Haddix relies on a single source: first, Junior Williams; second, Billy Eckstine (when citing the source of Eckstine’s quotation, Haddix records the wrong page number at n. 12 on 171; Eckstine’s words are from Reisner’s Bird, 85, not 17); third, Art Blakey. Providing another source for each would have bolstered the author’s claims.

            Because the sub-title implies full treatment of Parker’s life and music, it misleads: Bird is primarily biographical. When discussing music, Haddix mostly treats externals, as the following illustrates.  For Savoy Records, Parker led his first commercial session on 26 November 1945.  Haddix notes that Parker composed tunes for it, addresses the confusion over which pianist (Argonne Thornton or Dizzy Gillespie) and trumpeter (Gillespie or Miles Davis) perform on which selections, states that Parker had horn problems, identifies the number of takes for each tune, believes that Parker undermined the session by approaching it haphazardly, and points out that reviewers praised Parker’s solos while “panning the overall result” (83). The author offers what passes for analysis when commenting on “Now’s the Time,” noting only that Gillespie’s altered chords caused Davis to play “out of key” (82), though he does not demonstrate cause and effect.  Haddix thinks that this recording highlights “Charlie’s Kansas City roots and deep feeling for the blues” (82), but without explaining how.

            Though I acknowledge the difficulty of conveying, in prose, the nature of music, Haddix’s characterization of Parker’s gives little if any sense of its gloriousness—and it is this quality that makes the saxophonist’s life worth documenting. Haddix does not even mention that Parker’s solo on “Ko Ko” (from the “Now’s the Time” session) is widely considered one of the most impressive and important solos in jazz history.  It is so highly regarded that it was in the first group of recordings selected for the National Recording Registry at the Library of Congress (see item 36 at http://www.loc.gov/rr/record/nrpb/registry/nrpb-2002reg.html; accessed 24 February 2014). The Library of Congress justifies its inclusion by stating that it “signaled the birth of a new era in jazz—bebop.”  Though the accuracy of this claim can be debated, Haddix ignores the recording’s significance. To him, it is just another Parker recording.  He also fails to indicate that two of the tunes Parker wrote on the spur of the moment for this session—“Billie’s Bounce” and “Now’s the Time”--are so appealing that each has been recorded hundreds of times. They are part of the jazz repertoire, as anyone who has listened to much jazz can attest. (Ted Gioia identifies them as such in The Jazz Standards [2012].)  “Billie’s Bounce” was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame (2002).  In other words, Haddix does not attempt to do justice to Parker’s music.

            This book needed copy editing.  For example, Haddix writes “fed up towing the Jim Crow line” (69; the correct word is “toeing”) and “he was getting ringing wet” (72; “wringing”).  Because he quotes the latter correctly from a published source, “[sic]” should have been inserted after “ringing” to indicate awareness—if there was awareness--of the error in the source material, an interview with trombonist Trummy Young.  Singer Ethel Waters is identified as Ethyl (77).  Haddix twice states that the Kansas City Call was an African American newspaper (17, 28) and four times notes that Emry Byrd was known as Moose the Mooche (86, 95, 146, 184).  The given name of John S. Wilson is misspelled (171, n. 29). No publication date is provided for Chan Parker’s My Life in E-Flat (172, n. 41). The index identifies the radio program Bands for Bonds as Bands for Bond and alphabetizes Ross Russell according to his given name.  Though relatively unimportant, these and other infelicities should not occur in a book published by a major university press.

            Well-written and generally accurate, Bird will benefit readers who desire an overview of the musician’s life and career. Those already familiar with Parker will learn from it primarily specifics about his early years, such as addresses of various places.  It is not the book to consult for significant new biographical information or for a discussion of or insight into his music.

 

Author = Benjamin Franklin V

Album

LW

TW

Artist

Title

(Label)

TW SPINS

LW SPINS

Weeks on Chart

Spin +/-

Stations

 

2

1

Casey Donahew Band

Small Town Love

(Almost Country)

1,299

1,250

14

+49

67

 

3

2

Curtis Grimes

The Cowboy Kind

(CG)

1,261

1,175

13

+86

67

 

5

3

Josh Ward

Hard Whiskey

(Buckshot Records)

1,171

1,038

10

+133

66

 

7

4

Aaron Watson

July in Cheyenne

(Thirty Tigers)

1,096

977

15

+119

64

 

1

5

Cody Johnson

Dance Her Home

(CJB)

1,061

1,274

9

-213

65

 

4

6

Granger Smith

Miles and Mud Tires

(GS)

1,006

1,115

18

-109

62

 

9

7

JB and the Moonshine Band w/Angaleena Presley

Black and White

(Light It Up Records)

923

878

11

+45

62

 

6

8

William Clark Green

Rose Queen

(Bill Grease Records)

920

1,032

15

-112

61

 

14

9

Kevin Fowler

Love Song

(Kevin Fowler Records)

907

745

6

+162

64

 

11

10

Zane Williams

Little Too Late

(ZW)

900

807

8

+93

59

 

8

11

Randy Rogers Band

Speak Of The Devil

(MCA Nashville)

853

974

20

-121

53

 

12

12

Brian Keane

Bar Lights

(BK)

812

794

10

+18

56

 

15

13

Phil Hamilton

Hold On Tight

(Winding Road)

798

737

12

+61

54

 

10

14

The Statesboro Revue

Huck Finn

(Vision Ent./Shalley Records)

794

810

19

-16

42

 

19

15

Cameran Nelson

35 Runs Both Ways

(CN)

787

627

5

+160

52

 

18

16

Mark McKinney

Lonely Bones

(Texas Evolution)

783

652

5

+131

60

 

13

17

Whiskey Myers

Home

(Wiggy Thump)

782

775

14

+7

58

 

16

18

Sam Riggs

Angola’s Lament

(SR)

767

731

11

+36

53

 

17

19

Deryl Dodd

Loveletters

(Smith Ent.)

700

702

20

-2

46

 

21

20

Reckless Kelly

Every Step of the Way

(No Big Deal)

622

535

4

+87

51

 

20

21

Uncle Lucius

Somewhere Else

(Entertainment One Music)

619

619

10

-----

46

 

23

22

Green River Ordinance

Flying

(GRO)

588

468

4

+120

51

 

22

23

Jason Eady

OK Whiskey

(JE)

540

506

7

+34

40

 

43

24

John Slaughter

Ghost Town

(JS)

492

321

2

+171

43

 

24

25

Rob Baird

Same Damn Thing

(Carnival Music)

486

467

9

+19

41

 

36

26

Brandon Rhyder

Leave

(Reserve Records)

479

380

5

+99

46

 

29

27

Michael Coleman w/Jody Booth

Radio Don’t Sound Like Me

(DMG/CaneyCreek)

475

425

6

+50

42

 

28

28

Kylie Rae Harris

Waited

(KRH)

459

431

7

+28

39

 

30

29

Ray Johnston Band

Crush

(RJB)

453

420

11

+33

40

 

26

30

Mike and the Moonpies

The Hard Way

(MATM)

453

444

8

+9

37

 

31

31

Clay Thrash

My Heart

(Grange Records)

445

407

7

+38

38

 

41

32

Clayton Gardner

Table for Two

(CG)

412

332

4

+80

43

 

27

33

Jason Cassidy

Southern Side

(JC)

407

437

15

-30

41

 

50

34

Dolly Shine

Should’ve Known

(DS)

392

279

2

+113

36

PHOTO COMING SOON

37

35

Rodney Parker & 50 Peso Reward

Things You Make Me Do

(Smith Ent.)

382

363

3

+19

30

 

25

36

John David Kent

Until We Turn Around

(Blackland/Roustabout)

372

459

25

-87

37

 

39

37

Charlie Robison

Brand New Me

(Thirty Tigers/Jetwell, Inc.)

366

348

17

+18

33

 

46

38

Mike McClure Band

Silver and Blue

(598 Recordings)

346

291

3

+55

34

 

35

39

Rosehill

The Bible and the Gun

(Cypress Records)

344

384

8

-40

31

 

34

40

Dirty River Boys

Desert Wind

(DRB)

338

389

9

-51

32

 

40

41

Jesse Raub, Jr.

Bad Intentions

(JRJ)

332

336

12

-4

35

 

42

42

Jarrod Birmingham

December Gone

(JB)

330

325

5

+5

33

 

44

43

The Rusty Brothers

Revival

(Vision Ent.)

324

299

3

+25

31

 

N

44

Aubrey Lynn England

Sad Little Girl

(ALE)

318

270

1

+48

27

 

N

45

Josh Grider

White Van

(AMP)

312

134

1

+178

24

 

N

46

Wade Bowen w/Brandy Clark

Love in the First Degree

(Lightning Rod Records)

304

199

1

+105

25

 

N

47

Matt Caldwell

Drink Another

(AMP)

299

209

1

+90

32

 

N

48

Tommy Joe Wilson

Cold Beer

(River Wild Records)

298

214

1

+84

29

 

48

49

Sean Franks & Chapter 11

Catch This Train

(WarRoom Records)

295

282

4

+13

27

 

49

50

Redneck Brown & the Freshwater Donkeys

When I Think About Texas

(RB&FD)

293

281

6

+12

24

Non Reports:

1st Week:  KKAJ, KTCS, KTTX,

2nd Week:  KYBI

 

Freezes:

KAGG, KFWR, KGFY, KMKS, KOKE, KRRG, KSCH/KSCN/KOYN, KSEL, KVOM, KXAX, WACO

 

On Hold:

KYKC

Copyright © 2013, the Texas Music Chart. Used with permission from Best In Texas Music Marketing LLC, Houston, TX

Lizzie Sider interviews with Music Charts Magazine's Big Al WeekleyMusic Charts Magazine® proudly presents an interview with "Lizzie Sider".

Florida native lends her voice and message to students across state during school assemblies

Boca Raton, FL (January 27, 2014) -- LIZZIE SIDER, 15-year old emerging Country artist, is continuing her tour of elementary and middle schools, by conducting her Bully Prevention Assembly at over 100 schools during January, February and March of 2014, throughout the entire State of Florida. The tour continues after a successful weekend in Nashville, where Sider performed the national anthem at the Nashville Predators game before taking the stage at the historic Bluebird Café. "Bullying doesn't just happen in October during Bullying Prevention Awareness Month, it happens all year," says Lizzie Sider. "As someone who understands what it is like to be bullied, I am on a mission to help anyone who doesn't think anyone will listen."

During the 30 to 40-minute assembly, Sider will encourage kids to help prevent bullying as she recounts her ownLizzie Sider interviews at MusicChartsMagazine.com - Check it out!  Anti-Bully message personal journey as a young student being teased and ridiculed in elementary school, what it felt like, and how she tried to deal with it. In addition, Lizzie discusses the importance of everyone standing up to stop bullying. She will also perform her original song "Butterfly," which Sider co-wrote about her experience and how she overcame the teasing. Her goal is to help kids as a positive role model, having risen above her own ridicule, to pursue a career in music.

As a spokesperson for PACER's National Bullying Prevention Center, which was launched by PACER in 2006, Sider has already visited over 80 schools in California before starting her school tour in Florida.

Sider appeared on The Queen Latifah Show, has been interviewed by Access Hollywood, Billboard, Hallmark's Home & Family show, TIME for Kids, Nashville's Crook & Chase, and was named by the Country Music Association as an "Artist to Watch in 2013." Lizzie, who splits her time between Boca Raton, FL and Nashville, TN, recently participated in her first CMA Music Fest week with her own booth and with a live performance at the famed country music venue, the Wildhorse Saloon. Both "Butterfly" and her follow-up single, "I Love You That Much," charted in the Top 40 on MusicRow. The video for "I Love You That Much" was directed by award-winning Steven Goldmann, whose past credits include Alan Jackson, Martina McBride and Shania Twain. Sider is currently working on her first full-length studio album for release in 2014.

Listen to this Music Charts Magazine® special interview with Lizzie Sider HERE:

 

 

For complete Assembly Tour details, please visit www.LizzieSider.com

 

Keep up with Lizzie Sider via her social sites:

Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/lizziesidermusic

Twitter - https://twitter.com/LizzieSider

YouTube - http://www.youtube.com/lizziesider

SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/lizziesider

Tumblr - http://lizziesider.tumblr.com

Instagram - http://instagram.com/lizziesider

iTunes - https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/lizzie-sider/id476033569

To learn more about PACER, please visit - http://www.pacer.org/bullying/.

 

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Art Pepper - Unreleased Art Vol VIII - Live At The Winery - September 6, 1976Date = 21 February 2014

Artist Name = Art Pepper

 
Genre = Jazz

Title = Unreleased Art, Vol. VIII: Live at the Winery, September 6, 1976

Record Company = Widow’s Taste

Review =

Johnny Hodges, Benny Carter, Charlie Parker, Ornette Coleman—these and perhaps one or two others rank as the major jazz alto saxophonists. If they receive the grade of A, Art Pepper probably deserves A-.  Inventive, impassioned, and technically adroit, he played in an appealing individual style. Over almost four decades (from 1943 until 1982, the year he died), he recorded mostly at a high level, though he was off the scene in the mid 1950s and for most of the first half of the 1960s while incarcerated for heroin addiction, twice in San Quentin.  He rehabbed at Synanon.

Though Pepper was not underrecorded, his widow, Laurie Pepper, has issued a series of his previously unreleased performances on Widow’s Taste, most recently Live at the Winery.  I cannot think of a Pepper album that better demonstrates his skills.  It has flagwavers and sensitive ballads, as well as a blues, all performed by a musician playing at his best, which is something of a miracle, given his troubles along the way. Recorded in 1976 in Saratoga, CA, these performances are emotional, even highly so on one selection.

On the middle-groove, gritty “Saratoga Blues,” Pepper demonstrates his facility with the twelve-bar format.  At the end, he is especially effective when hinting at Charlie Parker’s “Parker’s Mood” but not actually quoting from it.  Some people applaud the tendency of soloists (Dexter Gordon, for example, and Parker himself) to quote from other tunes; I find it lazy, an unsatisfactory substitute for invention: Can’t think of anything original?  Then quote from another tune.

There are three swingers.  “Caravan” and “What Laurie Likes” are intense.  Evidencing the influence of John Coltrane, Pepper plays a long introduction before getting to the melody of the former.  The group plays the latter, melodically similar to Bobbie Gentry’s “Ode to Billie Joe,” in a funk groove, with a bow to Roland Kirk toward the conclusion. Yet “Straight Life,” one of Pepper’s signature tunes and the title of his autobiography (written with Laurie Pepper), is the performance that will most attract listeners who like music performed way up-tempo.  This reworking of “After You’ve Gone” is played so fast that one marvels at bassist Jim Nichols’s ability to keep the beat and at Pepper’s to create.

Though not precisely a ballad, “Ophelia” is far more subdued than the swingers.  Pepper states that he wrote it in order to capture various aspects of women, including their madness and beauty (an obvious reference to Ophelia in Hamlet). I cannot determine the degree to which he succeeds.  It is, in any event, an attractive composition and performance.  “Here’s That Rainy Day” is not only a ballad, but it approaches Frank Sinatra’s 1959 version as the most poignant recording of this song. Pepper’s interpretation ranks, in my judgment, with Miles Davis’s “It Never Entered My Mind” (1956) as among most supernal modern jazz ballad performances.  Pepper was so moved by pianist Smith Dobson’s solo that he almost chokes up when talking about it after the music stops.  He goes so far as to say that Dobson’s solo could serve as a definition of jazz: “That’s what they’re talking about when they say ‘jazz.’”  While Dobson’s solo is beautiful, Pepper’s impassioned playing is even more impressive.  Some soloists, such as Lester Young, insist on knowing the lyrics to tunes they play so they can faithfully render the emotions the words express.  On “Here’s That Rainy Day,” Pepper conveys the sadness and introspection—even the agony--of someone suffering from lost love.  

Live at the Winery is spectacular in every way, so much so that it might be Pepper’s most rewarding album.

 
Author = Benjamin Franklin V

 

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About Fred's Country program:

Le program Fred's Country: La musique Country de Tradition avec Frederic (Fred) Moreau. Le program Fred's Country est diffusé sur 65 fréquences FM, 54 radios ou webradios.

Radio Show Host: Fred Moreau

Program Fred's Country w08-2014 - 21 février 2014 à 17:17 - February 21st, 2014

 

 

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