Thursday, May 27, 2010

"Cats" Review Cashbox Magazine

Cashbox Press

http://blog.frankdibussolo.com/?p=15
“Cats” Review Cashbox magazine «
www.blog.frankdibussolo.com
Lost in the torrent of mediocre music is the feeling one gets from greatness. Modern jazz offers many a chance to rediscover the blessings of musical art that the genre’s finest produce. Frank DiBussolo’s ...

~ Cashbox Magazine Press

www.CashboxPress.com

www.CashboxMagazin.com

Article in Cashbox Magazine - Liberty Music Trax

Cashbox Press

http://libertymusictrax.com/content/article-cashbox-magazine

Article in Cashbox magazine Liberty Music Trax
libertymusictrax.com
I am traveling for the Canadian contingent coordinated by Kathy Hahn Canada Stand Coordinator (CIMA) and MIDEM guru. We have the privilege of arriving two days early as Hahn is responsible for the set-up of this enterprising event that brings the Canadian music industry to Cannes, France. ...

www.CashboxPress.com

This "indie princess of pop" is making a career on.. hits!


Cashbox Press http://www.alysonmusic.com/cashbox_apr.html


Cashbox Magazine Phone Interviews
www.alysonmusic.com
This "indie princess of pop" is making a career on...hits! Cashbox Magazine, ILDK Media Independent recording artist ALYSON who, alone, is successfully competing against some of the top artists signed to major labels. ...





http://www.examiner.com/x-1362-NY-Fashion-Examiner~y2009m6d26-Farrah-Fawcett-Picture-perfect


Farrah Fawcett: Picture perfect - NY Fashion Examiner
www.examiner.com
In the last months of Farrah Fawcett's life she revealed to her adoring public that she had remarkable strength and a courageous heart but it will be her wide teethy smile and feathered mane for which ...




Farrah Fawcett on the cover of Playboy, December 1978.




Danish Artist Kajsa Vala Debut Album - Your Train

Cashbox Press

http://www.streetinsider.com/Press+Releases/All+Aboard!+Danish+Artist,+Kajsa+Vala+Debut+Album,+Your+Train,+Reaches+%2315+In+Its+2nd+Week+-+Cashbox+Magazine/5568444.html

www.streetinsider.com

www.streetinsider.com

Cashbox Records signs 2 local artist >> Local News >> The Richmond Register

Cashbox Press


Cashbox Records signs 2 local artists » Local News » The Richmond Register
richmondregister.com
BEREA — Cashbox, a music industry magazine and record label, recently signed contracts with two Madison County artists. Music industry veteran Josh Logan and rising star Kristi Miller have joined Cashbox, which will facilitate sales of their recordings, said Bruce C. ...

NOTICE TO ALL ASPIRING ARTIST FROM THE PRESIDENT OF CASHBOX MAGAZINE, INC.

Cashbox Press :::NOTICE TO ALL ASPIRING ARTIST FROM THE PRESIDENT OF CASHBOX MAGAZINE INC.

http://www.cashboxmagazine.com/News432.htm

Cashbox Magazine News

www.cashboxmagazine.com

In 'Hee Haw,' Berea theater shticks with what works - Topix & Kentucky.com

Cashbox Press http://www.topix.com/city/berea-ky/2010/05/in-hee-haw-berea-theater-shticks-with-what-works-2


In 'Hee Haw,' Berea theater shticks with what works - Topix
www.topix.com
Singer-songwriter Kristi Miller, right, provides some of the live music with fiddler Deborah Payne and others in the show's "house band." IF YOU GO 'Hee Haw' What: Berea Arena Theatre's version of the hit TV show.

----------------

Cashbox Press http://www.kentucky.com/2010/05/13/1263274/in-hee-haw-berea-theater-shticks.html


LexGo.com In 'Hee Haw,' Berea theater shticks with what works
www.kentucky.com
BEREA — Some of the cast of Berea Arena Theatre's production of Hee Haw are sitting around talking about their favorite parts of the classic television variety show when Linda Hays shouts, "Grandpa! What's for supper?!"

Cashbox Records signs 2 local artists

Cashbox Press http://news.tradingcharts.com/futures/7/7/140197577.html


Cashbox Records signs 2 local artists
news.tradingcharts.com
BEREA, May 25, 2010 (Richmond Register - McClatchy-Tribune Information Services via COMTEX) -- Cashbox, a music industry magazine and record label, recently signed contracts with two Madison County artists.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Cashbox Canada - "Hedley"




HedleyNew Album The Show Must Go On
By Karen Bliss
Hedley’s third album, The Show Must Go, is on target to debut in the top 10 on Nielsen SoundScan’s Canada’s top 100 chart, up against fellow Nov. 17 releases from John Mayer, Justin Bieber and Norah Jones, not to mention the current chart-toppers Michael Buble, Carrie Underwood, the Glee Cast and Michael Jackson. Tough company, but Hedley has some loyal fans.



The multi-platinum selling guitar-pop band had its best opening ever at radio with the first single, “Cha-Ching,” in August and has just followed it up with “Don’t Talk To Strangers.” The video has just been serviced to video outlets.
“It is the number one most added. It’s just flying, so that’s really encouraging,” says Shawn Marino, director of A&R, at Universal Music Canada. “And we just got the video. Think Desperate Housewives meets Dexter. It’s a tongue-in-cheek look at an older woman’s appreciation for younger men.
“When we went out with ‘She’s So Sorry,’ [from Hedley’s last album, 2007’s Famous Last Words], there were obviously some early ads, but it just took a little bit more time. ‘Cha-Ching’ was instant as far as locking up radio and locking up video, so it was the most successful start we’ve had.”
Hedley — Jacob Hoggard (lead vocals, guitar, keys), Chris Crippin (drums), Dave Rosin (guitar) and Tommy MacDonald (bass) — is certainly one of Canada’s biggest new pop/rock acts, and the success of Famous Last Words and its 2005 self-titled debut, both double-platinum (200,000 units), has certainly helped lay the ground-base for such an opening this time.
“We spent a lot of time marketing into Quebec on the last record as well, and Quebec was an early adopter of ‘Cha-Ching,’ as they are with ‘Strangers’ now,” says Marino. “We just went out with ‘Strangers,’ so it’s the result of some hard work emerging that market.”
Sales have been consistent and the band has sold out tours nationwide. For the first time, Hedley will be headlining an arena tour — booked by S.L. Feldman & Associates — that starts March 22 in Penticton, BC, at South Okanagan Events Centre and ends two days after the Juno Awards in St. John’s Newfoundland at Mile One Centre on April 20.
“How do we grow it? We’ve made a really strong record here,” says Marino, simply.
On The Show Must Go, Hedley has shifted its sound since its debut album, following Hoggard’s third place appearance on 2004’s Canadian Idol, and is decidedly more pop than it was initially. Canada, typically, has more rock bands, singer-songwriters and roots acts than pop bands, and Hedley has now “found their lane,” as Marino puts it.
“When we did the first record we expected, yes, there will be a certain built-in base by way of [Jake’s] notoriety [from Idol] at that point, but we obviously didn’t rest on those laurels. It was, ‘Okay, how do we grow this band beyond that?’ and the decision at the time was, ‘Let’s go with ‘On My Own’ and ‘Villain’ at rock radio just to see if rock will adapt to this band,’” Marino recalls.
“There’s a feeling at radio that when you go to pop, you can never secure a rock base. And so I think that everybody was just trying to test the waters and see what is this band? Is this a rock-leaning band that can tour with rock acts? And it was immediate, right after that first single, that it was like, ‘No, this is a pop band that sounds rock, that’s got a little bit of punk to it, but it’s mainly a pop band.’
“We never really strayed from that,” says Marino, “but it was just finding how far left or how far right of pop the band would exist, and they dictated that by way of how they play live and what songs they write, so we just helped them find that.
“Some [songs] off the first record, ‘Villain,’ etcetera, would skew rock, but clearly from ballads and ‘321’ up to ‘She’s So Sorry’ and ‘Never Too Late,’ all of these types of songs, they’ve found their niche and they’ve followed it with this record.”
Hedley hasn’t yet had a proper shot internationally. With their first two albums, they fell victim to reshuffling at the labels, the first with Capitol, the second with Geffen. Marino says there is “a lot of interest” for The Show Must Go with Universal Music Canada’s label partners in the States.
“They’re watching the great response of ‘Cha-Ching’ and ‘Stranger’ and the album finally in stores,” says Marino. “We expect to get some traction on that. It feels like as timing we’re set up for Christmas, they need spring or summer of next year before they can get behind it. I don’t have a release date.
“’Cha-Ching’ is up on iTunes in the U.S. and they’re watching what we’re doing and it’s just a question of finding the right timing, but we made a great record. There’s a lot of interest in America and I hope that turns into something.”
For further information: www.hedleyonline.com




Facebook Badge