Lonnie Ratliff Country Music Newsletter
November 30th, 2008
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"Spotlight Artist"
" Cindy Standage"
"click" PHOTO below for Official Website
Back to Atlanta, back to high school and back to fine
tune her act. She sang in her school choir, church choir, and charity
benefits, private parties and wherever she could find a stage. It was
while performing in a neighborhood coffee house that she met Marc Stowe,
who would become her closest friend, guitar player and producer. He
was also a young high school student who was the booking agent for the
club. Before long, they were performing together in and around
Atlanta. Mary Sue Taylor, former president of the musicians union,
joined them on piano and together they played at corporate events, at the
Atlanta Festival at Chastain Park and did demo work with Rodney Mills at
Studio One in Doraville, Georgia.
Life went on and they went to
different parts of the country to attend college. They lost track of
each other at that time….Cindy finished school and through the
course of several moves ended up in Arizona. It was there she met and
married the love of her life, Ed Standage. They had 4 children and
she became a devoted mother. She limited her singing to her church
and rocking her children to sleep. Her passion became her
family.
Years went by and her husband, Ed, continued to brag to
anyone who would listen about what Cindy “used” to do.
Being the businessman that he is, he contacted a friend who owns the
Celebrity Theatre in Phoenix. Without her knowing, he made
arrangements for her to send a demo to Randy Travis in hopes of opening his
show when he came to town. The only problem was, she didn’t
have a demo or a band and hadn’t performed live in over 20
years! “No problem, you can do it” he told her. So she
put together a small band, and with the help of Rich Hazelwood, the owner
of Celebrity Theatre, she cut a three song demo and had it sent to Randy
Travis. Two days later the show was booked and Cindy began rehearsing the
new act.
The show went well and Cindy was hooked again. Not only
was she hooked, but her husband and family loved it too. They each
helped her in any way they could. They moved equipment, brought lunch
and/or dinner for the band at all hours of the day and night, rehearsed
lyrics with her… whatever it took, they did it. And they still
do.
Then she got the opportunity to open for Merle Haggard!!
What a great show that was!! She didn’t have much notice for
this and she practiced until her fingers were completely blistered
over. She wrapped black duct tape around each finger and the show
went off without anyone ever knowing. (Unless you look close at the
pictures!)
Country Thunder Arizona was next and the act jumped to a
different level. The stage was huge and the set was long. What
an opportunity this was. People kept asking her how they could buy a
CD. She didn’t have one! It was time to go back to
Nashville….what studio would she use? How would she find the
right musicians? It was at this stage of the game that Classmates.com
popped up on her computer saying that Marc Stowe was trying to locate
her!!!! What!!!! She immediately called him and found out that
he was still in the music business. He had a solo album with Sony Records,
had toured extensively with his band, Face of Concern, and was an
independent producer. It was meant to be….
Cindy went
back to Nashville!!! They picked up where they left off. She
cut a three song demo with Marc playing all the instruments and engineering
it and then back to Atlanta for a reunion with Rodney Mills to have it
mastered at his “Masterhouse”. Marc then played it
for some of his friends at Sony. They liked it! Adam
Engelhardt, one of the top engineers in the Sony Studios, began working his
magic. He brought the best musicians to the studio and with Cindy and
Marc the CD “Same Red Hair” was born. It will be
available early April 2007 just in time for this year’s Country
Thunder.
Her story has come full circle. Marc Stowe is
back, her father, Max Singleton, has a song on the CD and she has recently
rekindled her friendship with Shelby Singleton.
"Click" buttons below for more Cindy Standage websites
No You-Tube Website
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click photo below to watch YouTube
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Songs I Am Promoting
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Jim Carter___________________ Gina Michaells
“Rollin’ on Home for
Christmas”
My name is
Jim Carter and I am a professional songwriter who lives in Nashville,
Tennessee. Now being a
songwriter in Nashville doesn’t make you the exception, it’s
more like you’re just one of the crowd. If I were still living back in my home town of
Indiahoma, Oklahoma and writing songs I would probably be one of a
kind.
A quick side story on being a
songwriter in Nashville.
I’ve lived in Nashville since the late 70’s so
I’ve been around for quite a while. Once upon a time Lacy J. Dalton had a big hit song
called “16th Avenue”. It was a real positive feel good song about the music
business. I like to say that
every songwriter wrote his “16th Avenue” but they
weren’t all so positive.
My version went something like this. (Keep in mind I wrote this many years ago and maybe I
was in a “slight” state of depression at the time.) The title of this song is
“Ton of Cocaine.”
One verse
went like this:
I laid my
guitar down on the floor and put my 38 up to my
head
I said before I write another song
I’d just as soon be dead
But then I
got to thinkin’ if I killed myself wouldn’t nobody know but
me
Cause they’d never ever miss another songwriter
here in Nashville, Tennessee
Chorus :
I’ve
walked a million miles down on Music Row
Tried to
sell my body and had to bare my soul
Wore out my
guitar and damn near ruined my brain
Hell I
couldn’t get a cut with a ton of
cocaine
It’s funny I hadn’t
thought of this song in many years and the other day some of the lyrics
just popped into my head.
There were several more verses but I can’t remember what they
were. I wrote this to be
funny and it still amuses me.
On with the
Rollin’ on Home
story. I co-wrote this
song with another writer named J.B. Smith who is from Michigan. When we originally wrote the song
we were aiming it in the direction of Garth Brooks. He was cutting a Christmas album
that year and I thought the idea really fit him. Needless to say he didn’t cut the song and I
doubt that he ever heard it although we did pitch it to his publishing
company. The story line of
the song is really just taken out of my life. After we moved to Nashville we would go home to
Oklahoma every year at Christmas time. We had an old ‘72 Chevy van and my wife, Linda,
and I would load the Van with presents, kids, and good cheer and take off
for home. We did sing
Christmas carols with the radio just like the song says. We would wire a wreath to the
front of that old van and the kids asked over and over, how many miles to
go? I did have a horse named
Thunder and Grandma would bake a pumpkin pie. We would always hope for snow though we seldom got it
at Christmas time in that part of southwest Oklahoma. It’s a very autobiographical
song.
The demo for “Rollin’ on
Home” was sung by Billy Bob Shane, a real Wyoming cowboy. And yes, that is his real
name. I think he was somehow
kin to Chris LeDeaux. (I haven’t seen Billy Bob in several years so
if somebody out there knows where he is, let us know.) Anyway, I took some copies of the
song to some radio stations around the area in Oklahoma where I’m
from and they played it for several years.
Now Gina Michaells, a young lady
originally from the Philippines and living in Norway has cut a version of
“Rollin’ on
Home”. It has only
been downloaded on the internet (YouTube) for about two weeks and has had
over 500,000 hits. Thank you
Gina!!! Gina’s record
was produced by my good buddy Lonnie Ratliff, one of Nashville’s best
kept secrets. By best kept
secrets I mean he is a phenomenal producer and not enough people know about
him. So if you want to make a
record (CD) call Lonnie.
I’ve had pretty good luck with my Christmas
songs. The first song I ever
got cut was a Christmas song called “I Wish Every Day Could Be Like
Christmas”. It was
recorded by Brook Benton of “Rainy Night in Georgia“ fame. I also had a Christmas song,
“What if Elvis Was Santa Claus” on the Westwood CD, “Dysfunctional Family
Christmas”. Besides the
three aforementioned Christmas songs I remember writing one other but I
can’t recall the name of that one. So I guess it didn’t work out so
well.
I had a couple of songs recorded by Charly McClain, one
of which was a single that went top 10 in Billboard Magazine. The title is “You Are My
Music.” Moe Bandy and Joe Stampley recorded one of my songs and I also got a cut on a Blues singer named Lonnie Brooks. Tracy Lawrence recorded a song I wrote; titled “I Hope Heaven Has a Honky-Tonk”.
All the songs I have just mentioned
were co-written and I sure want to give thanks tp all my fellow co-writers,
without them I wouldn’t have made it very far.
Here’s to…Ancient Times and Distant
Music…
God bless you
all…
Jim
Carter…
Nashville,
Tennessee…
November, 2008…
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This Newsletter section is meant to help introduce you to some of the other Subscribers to this Newsletter. Just click on the Photos or Banners to go to their websites where you can read about them, send them and E Mail or sign their guestbooks. Take a few moments to get to know some of these subscribers. Lonnie Ratliff
"Click" PHOTOS below
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My First Paying Gig
by
Lonnie Ratliff
I guess most musicians remember their first paying gig in the music business and I surprised myself that I had never actually thought much about my own first pickin' job until I heard someone else talking about theirs. It was an easy enough date to remember I just never thought about it until now. It was New Years eve 1962-63; I was almost fifteen years old and had been playing my Harmony acoustic guitar for about six months. That doesn't seem like very long until you realize that from the moment I bought the guitar it had never left my hands except when I had to stop and eat or perform any other life sustaining duties. I could already play in C, D & G chords as long as it was a 3-chord song plus I could sing all the Stonewall Jackson, Porter Wagoner and Hank Locklin tunes I heard on the Opry. My attraction to the Opry and traditional country music would, in the next couple of years, come to lower my "cool factor" with my high school peers by several points when those four shaggy-haired beatniks from England hit America like a category five tornado through an Oklahoma trailer park. I believe my quote at the time was "The Beatles are a passing fad. No one will remember them next year so ya'll need to start listening to Stonewall Jackson." In the 60's that musical attitude did not get you elected class president in Antlers, Oklahoma or anywhere else in America if those of you who are old enough to remember will recall. I didn't care then, or now, come to think of it.
Anyway back to the gig. My dad for some odd reason was over at Barry Trotter's, a local bootlegger, probably discussing the weather, when he learned that Barry was having a New Years Eve party and needed some live music. A fiddle player had been located but they needed a guitar player so my Dad volunteered me for the job. I didn't come from an Ozzie and Harriet background so my Dad letting me play for a bootlegger's New Years Eve party when I was 14 years old didn't even raise an eyebrow of interest but instead was considered a grand opportunity. On the night of the big gig, my Dad drove me there and made arrangements for someone else to bring me home at the end of the night, and I embarked on the musical career/curse that would follow me the rest of my life in one form or the other.
I was introduced to the fiddle player establishing a recurring theme of never meeting musicians until it was time to play. Another habit established that night was looking out over the crowd and thinking what the heck am I doing here? I would grow accustomed to both of these little oddities in nightclubs and honky tonks over the many years.
I soon found out that if the fiddle player and I had one thing in common it was not going to be anything to do with music. It was obvious to me that he didn't listen to our local country music radio station KIHN AM out of Hugo, Oklahoma. I got the feeling after a very short conversation that he probably thought the Louvin Brothers and Hank Williams Sr. were "Pop" acts. I will never forget that strange, sad look in the fiddle player's eyes when I told him I had never heard of a schottische or a Virginia reel and asked him why the songs he played didn't have any words? We quickly decided our repertoire would include me singing one song by myself and then he would play one fiddle tune by himself. We put this plan in action and started the dance. It soon became apparent that our audience was not music critics and were quite satisfied with anything we came up with. The night wore on and it was obvious that not everyone got my dad's message that I was not to be drinking. The dancers would bring the fiddle player a shot of whiskey on a regular basis and every once in a while they would sneak me a drink. After a few drinks the fiddle player realized I could play along to his instrumentals if he called out the chords so we were able to make twice as much noise on each of his songs. Even all these years later I can't bring myself to call it music although that New Year's Eve night everyone thought it was fine.
I only remember one song I sang that night which was a Stonewall Jackson song. I later learned he had written it with George Jones and the title was "Life To Go". The reason I remember it was because I never figured out for thirty years the little twist they had put into the song as songwriters where the prisoner in the song has been in prison for eighteen years but yet he has a baby daughter. The irony becomes rather obvious once you realize, even if it takes thirty years, that prisoners did not have conjugal visits in the sixties and that fact sneaks right past the prisoner in this song as he professes his love for his little baby girl. The fact that I overlooked this has tempered my anger at singers who through the years have changed the lyrics to songs I have written and then recorded versions that make absolutely no sense thanks to their changes. Sometimes singers just don't get it and unfortunately at one time that included me. At least I have tried to learn from my mistakes and I am almost obsessed now with getting the lyrics correct on any songs I produce.
We did not even make an attempt at Auld Lange Syne that night but the party just wound down and every one of the party goers stumbled out the door and headed home. The bootlegger said he would drive me home then he told us the people had passed the hat and we made four dollars so we split that up two dollars each. I remember thinking I could buy me a new set of Black Diamond guitar strings which were fifty five cents at Berry's Drugstore in Antlers and that would still leave me with a profit of a dollar forty five for the night. I wish I could say that was the least I ever made in my career for a night of pickin' and grinnin' but I know there are too many musicians out there reading this for me to try to slip that little white lie by you. When we pulled into my front yard and I was getting my guitar out of the bootlegger's truck, he slipped me a pint jar about half full of moonshine and a couple of R.C. colas left over from the party. He said you and your buddies can have your own little party tomorrow but don't let anyone know I gave you this whiskey. As he drove off into the night, I stashed the contraband under our front porch and sat there on the porch steps and tried to get a handle on this new life as a professional musician that had just been introduced to me.
January 1st, 1963 I woke up much older and thinking I was much wiser. Looking back, I'm not sure I was either but it was obvious those days of youthful innocence were now behind me. Not really afraid, I rather welcomed what I perceived as maturity in my life with what very well could have been nothing more than ignorance. I had to entertain my family over breakfast with tales of my previous night's adventures. Even my Mom seemed interested and looking back over the years I realize she was torn between her love for country music which involved my participation in it and her strong Christian values that would not let her overlook the close ties to sinful living that always seemed to be a big part of the music business.
I parsed my words as I told the family of my big adventure playing guitar and singing by slightly embellishing the good parts and quickly skirting over anything that might arouse suspicions or tie me to any actions that I might have felt a little guilty about. This habit of selective memory would continue as long as I kept playing music and I justified it like all musicians seem to do by just saying "It's all part of the biz". Tom T. Hall kind of hinted at it in his song "Homecoming" with the line "We don't call 'em beer joints Dad, nightclubs are the places where I work. You meet a lot of people there and no, there ain't no chance of getting hurt." Yep, that's how I remember it too Tom T.
After breakfast, I told my twelve year old brother "Check" (Chester) about the secret stash under the front porch, and we decided we needed to let our best friends and partners in crime, the England boys, in on this wonderful bounty my musical talents had made available. Carl, Ralph and Robert England were like extra brothers to us, and we did everything together. That afternoon we gathered up the moonshine and R.C.'s and headed to the England's house. We all went out into the woods, built a fire and broke out the booze. We ranged from about 11 to 15 years old and only had that half a pint of moonshine which I am sure had been watered down for my own safety before it was given to me. Didn't matter it had enough psychological "kick" to it that soon we were all telling wild tales, chasing wild girls and cussing like sailors and saying how much better it would be if we had Coca Colas instead of R.C. Colas for chasers. I remember that as soon as the moonshine was gone we almost instantly sobered up and I am sure our five little minds at that very moment started coming up with five different versions of the story we would tell about our party in the woods. Time has a way of letting reality sneak in and I am sure that other than a few neighborhood boys nobody else ever heard our story which was such a big adventure at the time. This story would have fallen into obscurity except for the fact that forty five years later one of those boys would need a story for a book he was writing on and decided to dust it off for one last telling, hopefully, though not necessary, a little closer to the truth than some of the previous versions.
Copr. 2008 Lonnie Ratliff
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Please take the time to Vote for Erin Hay's little dog "Girlie"
You can still VOTE until December 2nd. That RED warning says you can't enter another DOG PHOTO but you can still VOTE so "Click" those 5 Stars and VOTE for GIRLIE
Go vote for
to help her give her little girl a very Merry
Christmas. Hee!
"To VOTE "Click" on the 5 RED
Stars
on the upper right side of Girlie's
Photo once you go to the
website.
This is a link (Below) to go vote, click on her photo (as seen above) to vote. Thanks!
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REMEMBER YOU CAN ALWAYS CLICK ON ANY PHOTO IN THIS NEWSLETTER OR ANY UNDERLINED TEXT & IT WILL TAKE YOU TO A WEBSITE OR PLAY MUSIC MOST OF THE TIME SO DON'T FORGET TO "click away" SO YOU DON'T MISS ANYTHING - LONNIE
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Lonnie
Ratliff ~ Record Production~ 5
Songs 1.
Cost for 5 songs is $3,750 (Three Thousand Seven Hundred & Fifty
Dollars). This includes Studio, Musicians, Etc! and you end up with a mixed
CD of your project. There are not a lot of hidden costs that will be tacked
on. The only additional costs I can think of would be $150 if you want us
to Master it for you before it goes to your pressing plant. (Call me and I
can explain Mastering to you) The other thing that could cost you later is
that you might have to pay songwriter royalties if you have recorded
someone elses songs and are gonna include it on your CD to sell. (Example =
If you want to record a George Strait song or a Taylor Swift song then you
will have to pay a royalty to use that song) I can help point you in the
right direction to obtain a license from the Harry Fox
Agency. 2. For those artist who
are new at this, Production is just about getting your songs recorded and
ready to be made into CD's that you can sell. I don't press up the 500 or
1000 CD's for you but I can recommend Karen Bruno at Amazon Audio who can take care of
everything for you. I believe it costs about $1500 for a 1000 CD's. A lot
of the artists I produce will cut a couple of 5 song sessions with me and
then put them together and press up a CD they can sell and get their money
back. 3.
First thing we need to do is figure out if we can work together and come up
with something we can both be proud of. You can listen to the artists I
have produced (Click
Here) and get an idea of what I do. If you are a decent singer and I
believe we can make a respectable recording then I will probably be glad to
work with you. 4. Deposits &
Payments: The first thing required is a $200 deposit and once that is paid
we can start putting together your session. I will help you find the songs
if needed and will arrange them for you using any ideas you may have. Once
we find the songs and have picked a date you send me the balance of $3,550
at least 2 weeks before the session date and I book your session at a
studio on Music Row. I normally use Dixiana
Studio. We will cut the basic tracks and overdubs there and then cut
the final vocals, harmonies and mix at Smokehouse
studio. 5. The Band normally will
consist of Bass, Drums, Rhythm Guitar, Piano, Steel Guitar, Fiddle, Dobro,
Electric Guitar & Mandolin. If I believe a particular song calls for a
specialty instrument I will use it and there is no additional charge. I do
not try to cut corners by taking short cuts on the musicians we
use. 6. Original songs. I have about
200 songs in my Music Publishing Company that you are welcome to use
(Royalty Free) if you are using them on any project I
produce. 7. Time it will take to
record. Figure that it will take about 3 days in the studio. If you are on
a tight schedule you're part will be over in two days. First day we cut the
tracks with a scratch vocal and the second day you will sing your final
vocals. I figure you will have up to 45 minutes to sing each
song. 8. Practice Guitar tracks if
needed. If you think you may have trouble singing any of the songs you pick
and do not play an instrument I can record and send you an acoustic guitar
track of the song so you can practice it before you come to
Nashville. 9. Final thoughts. Keep in
mind that you are hiring me to make you sound good and I take my job very
seriously. I will do my best to see that you have a good time in the
studio. I work with some of the best studio musicians in Nashville and they
will do everything in their power to make the best recording of your music
as possible. Feel free to E Mail any of the artists I have worked with (Click Here) before
and ask them any questions you may have about working with me. Once you
have paid your deposit I am on your team and you can call
(615) 742 0666 and ask me any questions you have and I will
try my best to give you an answer. Probably half of the artist I work with
are recording their first CD and have a lot of questions so don't be
embarrassed to ask about anything you don't
understand. I look forward to working
with you and hope I can be a part of your musical
future. Lonnie
Ratliff
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THE DYSFUNCTIONAL BAND.
An example of
“Synergy”
is when a group of musicians make better music
together than they could do separately.
Killer Turtle was not one of
those bands.
In fact they had Reverse Synergy.
They were all
good musicians, but together they stank.
Chuck was a great lead guitarist,
but he had one weird fault…
He always thought he was out of
tune.
He spent half the time with his back to the audience
and
his ear to the strings,
trying to tune up.
Nobody else thought
his guitar needed tuning.
They just thought he was nuts.
Matt had fine technique as a
drummer, except for one problem…
During every fill, between
phrases, he would drag the tempo down a little.
You could hardly
notice it at first,
but fast songs would end up slow, and ballads
almost came to a stop.
He once tried to commit suicide by throwing
himself behind a train.
Herbie was
one of the best, as a bass player,
but after playing with the
dragging drummer,
he began rushing the beat to compensate.
The
other guys tried to find a middle ground to play in
somewhere between
the bass and drums.
Wayne was a
genius steel guitar player with a drinking problem.
The more he
drank, the more vibrato came into his playing,
until it was hard to
tell what key he was in.
Late in the evenings
you had to take
Dramamine to prevent motion sickness.
Jack, the piano man, was
over-educated,
and knew too many nice chords for his own good.
He threw them into his music
in the hopes that the other guys would
eventually learn them,
but they just thought he was playing wrong,
and dreamed of finding a new keyboard player.
Don was a talented lead singer,
but he constantly fiddled with the sound system dials,
causing loud
squealing feedback,
and making the audience cross their eyes, cover
their ears,
and do a pain dance.
One night two simultaneous miracles
happened.
1. A major label talent scout came into the club,
and…
2. The band played one whole song perfectly.
It
happened to be the last song of the evening,
and the agent signed
them to a big bucks recording contract.
If there were any justice in life
Killer Turtle would have been a big flop,
but in the modern recording
studio
the engineers could correct all of their faults.
Their
electronically perfect recordings sounded wonderful,
and were hits.
On personal appearances they pretended to play and sing,
but
actually worked with karaoke tracks.
The moral:
You don’t
have to be good
if you can make people THINK you’re
good.
Jack Blanchard
© 2008.Jack
Blanchard & Misty Morgan...
Grammy Nominees... Billboard's Duet
of the Year.
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* *
* *
* *
* *
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Home page: http://jackandmisty.com
Myspace: http://myspace.com/jackandmisty
CD catalog: http://elvinsystems.com/jm/catalog.htm
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Chart
News:
Lance Miller – “Bacon Frying” – Big 7 Records - retains the # 1 position on the NMW Charts. Total Spins this week 2602
Van Preston – “Everything I've Never Seen” – Unconventional, moves to # 2 spot this week in NMW. 2322 spins
Zac Brown Band – “Chicken Fried” – Atlantic Rec. is at # 3 this week. 2015 spins.
Rascal Flatts – “Here” Lyric Street Rec. moves to #4 with 1989 spins
Lady Antebellum - "Looking For A Good Time" Capitol Rec. Takes the #5 spot this week with 1973 spins.
Randolph Michaud - "Do You Believe Me Now" WHP moves to #20 this week with 1666 spins
John R. Butler/Jamie Cutler Harper - "Where Did We Go Wrong" WHP/Starcut Rec. to #33 with 1323 spins.
Allen Karl "It's Too Early To Cry In My Beer" WHP/Century II Rec. Moves up to #39 with 1182 Spins
Perley Curtis/Erin Hay – “Making Plans” – WHP/WIR Rec. - Moving up the NMW Charts again this week entering the Top 50 at #49 with 1005 spins.
New this week entering the Charts
are: Martina McBride, Heidi Newfield, Brad Long, Steve Free,
Rodney Atkins, Adam Gregory, Sammy Kershaw,
Texarkana.
New Music Weekly (NMW) charts are compiled each week for several genres of music.
For the best in Promotions, call Gary
Bradshaw
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Nashville Showcase Internet Radio Playlist Board
http://members3.boardhost.com/WorldwideDJ/
Special "Thank you" to the DJ's that support these artists who take the time
to tell you thanks on the Internet Playlist Board http://members3.boardhost.com/WorldwideDJ/
For Internet Radio record promotion Contact Lonnie Ratliff = NashvilleShowcase@comcast.net
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Lonnie’s Economy Recording Music Package
Check out my little side business. For you artists that can’t afford the time or money to come to Nashville to record right now or just need a song or two to finish out your CD or to put up on MYSPACE etc! - I have a website of songs I own the Master Recordings on and I can lease you the music track and furnish you with a Mechanical license so you are 100% legal for $250 - The only catch is that you have to be able to sing them in the key they are recorded in so just go to the website below to find out. They are much like the Karaoke tracks you buy except most of them are original songs though not all of them and you will have a Mechanical License giving you the right to use the songs. You can post it on MYSPACE, YouTube, Sing it on American Idol, Put it on your CD to sell or sell downloads of it on the internet. You can pay for these music tracks with your credit card if you prefer. I then mail you a CD with the music track and you just take it into your local recording studio and add your vocals and harmony and you got it. If this sounds like something you may be interested in just go to my website below and see if there is anything you like there that is in your key. I have most of the Lyrics posted. Just “Click” on lyrics to see them. Any questions just E Mail me NashvilleShowcase@comcast.net
Visit my website to see what songs are available
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Nashville Showcase Promotions
Release your music to radio worldwide
1 song = $300
Do you have a song you would like to have released and promoted to radio ?
Maybe a song off your last CD that you think might be a hit or just might get fans interested in your music. Maybe a song you wrote that you think some major artist might cover if you had it out there where someone could hear it or even a novelty song that people would love if just given a chance to hear it.
My package includes a worldwide release to 600 + radio stations on the Western Heart Promotions compilation CD. Your song will be mailed to stations in the USA, Australia, New Zealand, Belgium, Poland, The Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Spain, United Kingdom, and many others as well as to Internet Radio Stations.
I will furnish you with Playlists from the overseas radio stations that play your song along with any comments from DJ's concerning your music.
Promotion will last for 1 month from the date of the first radio airplay of your song.
You can either send me a CD of your song or E Mail me an MP3 file of the song.
You can charge to your credit card through PayPal or send me a check or M.O.
If you are interested and need further information contact me at:
Phone Lonnie Ratliff at: (615) 742 0666
E Mail = NashvilleShowcase@comcast.net
Lonnie Ratliff Updates
A quick rundown of what some of our subscribers are up to
"Click" on PHOTOS below for Websites
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Lonnie . .This
Week we are Featuring the Strangest Gigs our SUBSCRIBERS have
played. ===================================================== "Click" PHOTO above Lonnie
Ratliff Cherokee
Queen - Disney, Oklahoma (Grand Lake) I played a
singles act on the Cherokee Queen back in the 70's. It had already
sunk once and investors brought it up and restored it and put it back in
service. We went out on the weekends for about an hour and a half
tour and then a midnight tour. I remember lots of underage kids would
go on the tour so they could drink without worrying about the law.
The kids hated country music so they went to the other end of the boat from
where I set up. About half the people liked what I was doing so I
played there for a couple of summers. I remember Leon Russell had a
recording studio there on Grand Lake and the Captain would always point out
the lights from it when we got close. It was a fun Gig looking back
on it now. I also played an odd little Gig in Liberal, Kansas
where we split the bill with 4 or 5 strippers at this Go-Go Club but
unfortunately I don't have any photos from
that. Lonnie Ratliff myspace.com/nashvillerecordproducer ===================================================== Most
of my gigs have been memorable in some manner, if only in that there
haven't been all that danged many of them! Some, however, do stand
out! A friend and fellow-folk song collector lived in Columbia, South
Carolina; I saw in the paper that Robert Penn Warren was lecturing at USC
on a Tuesday; with my day off in the radio room on Wednesdays, I could go
to Columbia after work on Tuesday, catch the lecture, then go with Louise
to a coffee house she had told me about. So I called her; absolutely,
with directions to the lecture hall in hand, I left out from the office
with a change of clothes and my guitar. The lecture was cool and
Louise and her boyfriend (who had graciously offered me a bed for the
night), said my car was parked perfectly -- just get the guitar because we
were literally going across the street from the
campus. The
front of the place was the classic diner; one row of booths across the
front window and a counter -- well, I had played small rooms before!
Ooops! "This way," the boyfriend led me away from the counter to a
door that looked like a service entrance, explaining that the place dated
back to Prohibition and the slot in the door meant that nobody who wasn't
recognized was permitted "in back." Okay, time can fuzz stuff up, but
my memory is that the back room was LARGE!! There was already a haze
of cigarette smoke hiding the ceiling, which was pretty high; the place
almost had the feel of an airplane hangar!! A couple of people
sitting at a table had guitars, so we joined them, steadily evolving the
event into a medium-energy hootenanny/barn dance. The popular folk
songs of the day held forth but a little bit of everything that MIGHT be
applicable got included, which brings me to a major revelation in my
life-long music endeavor. Two guys who might have been engineering
students or, had this been at Clemson, agri-business majors, really got
into the music and asked me to play "Ashes Of Love." My throat was
beginning to disintegrate and I only knew the chorus anyhow, but I played
and they sang it. A couple of times.
I
was used to seeing Joe College types at "folk" events and Farmer Frank
types at "country" events, but here we had not so much crossover music as a
crossover audience. And it worked. Some little light went on in
my head and my best guess was that some really interesting things were
about to happen in music. Oh, to give you the date on this
experience, my voice was completely gone by next day when I drove back home
to Greenwood and the next morning I had to call the commanding officer; I
didn't have to tell him I couldn't work that day -- he understood
thoroughly. Which is why at was at home later that same day to hear
Walter Cronkite tell the world that President Kennedy had been
shot. ===================================================== Click
Photos below for more PHOTOS + Joni's MYSPACE
Website Joni
Compretta
===================================================== Jack
Blanchard & Misty Morgan A WEIRD GIG. I was part of a teenage musical trio. We were all
acoustic. We leaned toward Western campfire
music, pop, and boogie. Being the dark ages, The Loft
brothers were Mohawk Indians. Jerry and Ronny's relatives ran the
General Store, the Post Office, We all had
trouble sleeping because we were excited. In
the middle of the night, With a flashlight, they led me to a
strange old musical instrument:.. I started
playing a boogie, very softly. We played for over an hour. That's just one of the weird gigs
I've played. Jack Blanchard © 2008. -- Jack Blanchard & Misty Morgan... Grammy Nominees... Billboard's Duet of the Year. * * * * * * * * * * * * * Home page: www.jackandmisty.com Myspace: http://myspace.com/jackandmisty CD catalog: www.elvinsystems.com/jm/catalog.htm ===================================================== Hey
Lonnie , Kimberly Mae and I was asked to do a show at a nudist camp in
Wills Point Tx. Needless to say we declined but can anyone imagine
me singing in the nude , OMG . Now it wouldn't been all that bad to have seen Kimberly only in a bow tie . Matter a fact it would have been great . But I don't think Becky would have stood still for it. Don't know if that's something would want to use cause we
didn't do the gig. By the way , I'm still working on our song . Later , David & Becky Cline ========================================================
======================================================== Lonnie, Well I have been doing it for almost thirty years now and I have played a lot of strange gigs over the years. We did play a Halloween gig in makeup one time not realizing how badly the makeup was going to run under the stage lights once we began sweating and that was pretty funny. We also had a bass player fall through a stage once which was downright funny but I have to say that the funniest thing that has happened to me while touring was a gig that we didn't play:) The agent gave us the wrong info and we showed up at the wrong hotel to perform. We arrived late the evening before and the night manager, not knowing any better himself, checked us all into our rooms. The next morning we unloaded our gear and started setting up for our show. We did wonder why their were posters of another group posted outside the lounge but we just figured that perhaps they had cancelled. So as we are setting up lo & behold the other group shows up saying what the hecks going on lol. We then call the agent who then tells us we are in the wrong place and that the other hotel had left him several angry messages all freaked out because we hadn't showed up:) We did manage to get to the Holiday Inn which was only a couple of blocks away anyways and the show did go on and we had a free nights stay courtesy of The Best Western Hotel:) All The Best, JK ========================================================== JUDY WELDEN - This was not a
gig per se... but rather my sitting in with the guitarist at a lounge
called THE OTHER MOTHER when I was in Nashville in the mid
90's recording one of my CDs. The bartender there liked the way I
sang HOUSE OF THE RISIN' SUN... so every night
when I'd stop in after after being out on the town, seeing the sites,
etc... he'd insist I sit in with whoever was playing that night (it
varied). Well, the last night I was there, I noticed a table of
5 guys sitting at a table in the back, paying rapt attention..
and not even talking. When I finished singing, I thanked everyone for
their applause.. and headed for the restroom, on the way to which I
had to pass the table with the five guys. As I walked by, one of them
stopped me and asked if I were available. I thought he meant to
chat.. and said I was in a rush to get to the ladies room.
"No", he insisted..." was I available to sing with his band"? (all
of which were sitting there). Turns out word had gotten to them about
the way I sang that song.. and they had come just to hear me. They
were the warm up band for Alabama and needed
a female vocalist for the coming season ... and although I
was quite flattered, I was not able to be on the road then or even
later. I've always wondered how different my life would have been if
I had taken them up on that offer. I don't have a picture of that
night... but the pic here was me in that era... and just might have
been the same outfit I had on that night. I sang HOUSE OF
THE RISIN' SUN in 7 countries in Europe in '98, and
later wrote new words to it (CHURCH CALLED THE RISEN
SON) and it was a #1 song for me in
2000 (Indy chart). You can hear it at
http://www.myspace.com/judyweldenmusic========================================================== REMEMBER
YOU CAN ALWAYS CLICK ON ANY PHOTO IN THIS NEWSLETTER OR ANY UNDERLINED TEXT
& IT WILL TAKE YOU TO A WEBSITE OR PLAY MUSIC MOST OF THE TIME SO DON'T
FORGET TO "click away" SO YOU DON'T MISS ANYTHING -
LONNIE One of the
strangest gigs I ever played was in a well to do area in Houston in River
Oaks. We were playing a private party at a house that was in the last
of it's construction phase. This was a huge three story
mansion. The lady who was throwing the party thought it would be
novel for me, the fiddle player in the band to get on top of the roof to
play acoustically as her guests arrive! They had a fancy driveway
that looped in front of the mansion. The band was set up on the first
floor, so before the band started playing, I had to crawl out the window on
the third story in my full band cowboy uniform and play as the guests
arrived! After they all arrived, I climbed back off the roof and
played with the band on the first floor. They served dinner and
during the last break we all got to eat. I was halfway through a leg of chicken when the lady throwing the party told the leader of the band: "Look, my guests are leaving, tell the fiddle player to get his ass back on the roof!" Those were her words so I climbed back out the window and played while the valets went and dropped their cars off in front so her guests could leave. Bob Rohan AKA Bad Bob Rohan ===========================================================
=========================================================== J. Gale
Kilgore One
of the hardest gigs i played was when, my guitar picker booked us at the
service club at the Webb Air Force Base here in Big Spring, Texas. we
played about an hour of Merle and Charlie and Ray and Buck etc, good ole
country beer drinking dancing music. The only people there was about
eight young black airmen and the club manager . the airmen was just
not country music fans , so they left and the manager said we could
stop and go home if we wanted to but she'd still pay us. We were
really disappointed, cause we was legends in our own
minds. Another
time, i played for happy hour at the officers club with just me and
my guitar and amp and microphone . they was lots a officers there and
about the time i started the crowded thinned out and there was about
fifteen country fans stayed and I was their hero. the reason
they was a big crowd was cause last week they had had strippers for happy
hour and you could just see the disgust on the officers faces when this
country singer,me, showed up with no
strippers. To
add another wrinkle to the happy hour gig, it was raining, which is rare in
West Texas, when i arrived to set up to sang, so I took the vancant
space and parked and rushed in to keep from getting ever thing
wet. when I finished singing one of my songs, they wanted me to
ask on the mike, who parked in the wing commanders reserved parking
space. man I sure did hate to tell
'em it was me. He forgave me and they never ask me back
for that gig for a long time. dont
die with your music in you j gale, my videos on http://www.youtube.com/user/eyeballmusic hear some of my music at http://www.myspace.com/jgalekilgore hear my sound click music at http://www.soundclick.com/bands/pagemusic.cfm?bandID=162102 $19 song demo,and "texas meteorite"good luck charm gift at www.eyeball-records.com email eyeball@crcom.net "texas meteorite"good luck piece,the purfect gift "Click"
Erin & Santa's Photos below to see more Photos from this show in
Sweden ....![]() Erin
Hay www.ErinHay.com It wasn’t really a
strange gig, just a really fun one. I actually had Santa Claus play
saxophone for me at a show I did in ============================================= Hank
Newman Hi Lonnie, I don’t have any pictures but I was playing a
3 day Labor Day gig at a little club in Thanks, Hank Newman ===================================================== Dave
Younger Lonnie,
this is a great idea! I could provide about a dozen after 30 years in the
trenches. Some I can't relate (fifth amendment and all that)..but one stood out in my memory. An agent called and said he had a gig at a place in San Jose called Sherwood Forest. At the time, my band was pure Western Swing...VERY authentic, with the duds, the fiddle, steel, guitar..we specialized in Bob Wills and Hank Thompson tunes. We were our own roadies, so when we were loading in the back door we were the first ones in.I was backing through the door carrying a monitor speaker when I heard a voice say "HEY...YOU WHITE!!!" Those were different times, and thank God those words don't have the chilling effect they had back then...did I mention that my parents had driven 30 miles and brought their best friends...? Well I just turned around, saw that the only white faces were my folks...and I said "You NOTICED?!!?" We were in an entirely African-American Oakland Raiders sports bar...not the typical Western Swing venue. A couple of my bandmates wanted to cut and run,but I told them "Music is music...let's just do what we do." At first the folks there heckled us and did mock "hillbilly" dances while they whooped and hollered. I heard one patron complain loudly "What the hell cracker-assed clown brought all these ku-kluxers in here." We just kept playing. Funny thing happened...before the first set was over the heckling stopped. Whether these good people felt sorry for us, I'll never really know...but pretty soon we were getting requests by NAME for old Western Swing songs. By the end of the night we were in a room full of friends..laughing until tears came at just how ridiculous our differences were. The booking was a strange one, but the gig was one I'll always remember with a smile. Oh yeah...and we got a return booking. Dave Younger ============================================= Begin
Artist UPDATES
here ============================================= Well we have been working on a new CD and
it releases at Disc Makers in about two weeks. Christmas Favorites is the
name on it and it will be on willcoxmusic.com and Itunes and CD Baby. I am
a deputy sheriff with the Harris County Sheriff's Dept. and we have a new
sheriff coming in Jan 2009. His name is Adrian Garcia. We played at
the Texas Music Festival this past summer in Cleveland Texas. Roy Head was
there. We are playing at a Christmas party Dec 13th, 2008 in Crosby, Texas.
Thank all my fans for their support and thank you for asking about our
endeavors. ============================================= Hey Lonnie Just wanted to tell you how much I enjoy your newsletter!! Glad to see you got my label mate Ms Amber Digby as one of your spotlight artists for this issue. It is so good to see and hear a movement toward the more traditional country sound. I think there are so many out there who think that this wonderful style of music has died and gone. Trust me when I say it is alive and kicking hard in the great state of TEXAS!! I am so proud to be on the same label (Heart of Texas Records) with so many truly amazing traditional artists such as Amber, Justin Trevino, Darrell and Mona McCall and Tony Booth. The start of the new year will be bringing me a very busy and hectic schedule...just the way I like it! Dancehall performances, opry performances, radio appearances... and I can't wait to get it started! I am taking this weekend off though so that I can go and see Ms Amber at her CD release party in the Ft Worth Stockyard's Pearl's Dancehall and Saloon and then a night of Loretta Lynn at Billy Bobs Texas. THAT is a great way to spend a weekend in Texas!! Kimberly Murray www.kimberlyshonkytonk.com www.myspace.com/kimurray Don't Forget To "ClicK" LINKS
above to go to Artist
websites Jimmy Payne, Joe
Cruz, music enthusiast Val Palmer, Don Wayne and Joe Sun at the Holiday Inn
Vanderbilt, in Nashville, in September
2008. Hi
Lonnie, Just
a note from the UK to let you know that both Jimmy Payne and I enjoy
reading your
newsletters. Jimmy,
of course, is in Nashville and I am his webmaster, sitting overlooking the
north sea in
England. Nice
to see one of my own photographs used in one of your recent newsletters. It
was on the Joe Sun feature you did recently. It was the one of Joe, in a
red shirt, I took of him when he visited Spain in 2007. I was a resident
there at the
time. Regards, Stan
Laundon, Webmaster for
JP. Copy
to Jimmy Payne. Link
to Joe Sun on MYSPACE ========================================= Lynn
Chisholm I have been no stranger to the stage from
as early as six years old. I have played in many venues throughout Nova
Scotia. I have performed a few numbers at World Famous Tootsie's, Nashville
TN. That was the best moment of my life. I released an album called
'Timing' in 2006 and a second called 'Follow Your Heart' this past summer.
Follow your heart is exactly what I did. It took me right down to Lonnie
Ratliff, my Nashville record producer and fine team of musicians. I
had a wonderful time. Experienced the best in country
music. This little Canadian gal was treated like a queen while I was
there. I have a strong country sound. For years I have been singing with my
father to the sound of Dolly Parton, Loretta Lynn, Hank Williams, just to
name a few. I continue to work hard in this business as an independant
artists and with other artists along the way. I am ready if the right
opportunity arises for another music adventure. Stop by and say hello to me
at www.myspace.com/lynnchisholmmusic or if you are
interested in my portfolio stop by at
www.sonicbids.com/lynnchisholm4 or just give me an email
and tell me about your music successes at
lynn.chisholm@hotmail.com Keep singing
everyone and god bless! Lynn Chisholm, your Nova Scotia
friend. ========================================= Sorry it’s been a while, so
I’m going to have to give you a big overview of what’s been
happening the last few months. As you may know, in July, I competed at
Oh
and the Thanks for being patient everybody. Hope you have a Blessed Thanksgiving! ============================================= PeGGy
LyNN It was a school talent show and it must
have been my very first time on stage. I was about 8 years old and my brother who
was 9 got a part as Tiny Tim. I just stood next my brother while he
sang Tip Toe Through The Tulips. I wore a huge
wedding veil and polished a fake diamond ring that was
about 5 carats. Everyone laughed their heads off!
Wish I had that one on
video!!! ======================================== |
===============================================
Two for One By Lonnie Ratliff Long before songwriting was anything more than a distant dream I developed the habit of listening close to conversations around me and really paying attention to what was being said. I suppose in the back of my mind I may have been thinking about becoming a writer or maybe it was just a natural curiosity. After I listened to these conversations I would then try to build a larger story, song or mental movie in my own mind out of what had been said. Some of these little segments from life have stuck with me to this day and many have ended up in my songs. This is the only conversation I remember that ever developed into two songs that I would later write. II was working at a DX service station in Pryor, Oklahoma during the day and buying and selling cars on the side. It seems like all my life I have always had some kind of little sideline business going on in addition to whatever job I was doing to pay the bills. Anyway the man who owned the DX service station was Brice Wallis and like me he always had his hands in everything. In his case I think he turned his extra efforts into money and not just something else to worry about. Brice’s main job was as a post office letter carrier and his two services stations in Pryor were his sideline. One afternoon we were not very busy at the station and Brice came by and we got to talking and he said there was this little old lady at the end of his mail route who didn’t have any family left and hardly ever got any mail but she was always waiting out on the porch when he came by on his mail route. He said she was always making him some lemonade or cookies and he could tell she just wanted some company and since hers was the last house on his route he would talk to her for a few minutes when he could. Brice said he got into the habit of always saving back some of the junk mail he was supposed to hand out along his mail route just to make sure she got some kind of mail everyday. Over the years he got to know her from these little five minute snippets of visiting and one day he mentioned how the days were getting longer and she said, yes it’s hard to believe that such long days can turn into such short years. Even bac then my inexperienced mind told me that was a pretty profound statement. I also had enough sense to know I didn’t have the talent yet to turn it into a song or story so I just filed it away for future use. This was probably about 1975 and around 1990 or fifteen years later I started the song "Long Days" and soon finished it with Canadian songwriter Sharon Anderson. That in itself would have been a pretty unique songwriter story. I guess that writing "Long Days" may probably caused me to remembered how my great grandmother used to always just sit and wait for the mailman. I stayed with my Grandma Ratliff for a few weeks when I was six years old so I could complete my school term when we moved out of the school district. Grandma Ratliff would always watch the clock and say Lonnie, that mailman is running late today. All of Grandma's kids had grown up and moved to California like so many "Okies" before them. It didn't seem very important to me at the time but it would make Grandma's day to get a letter from one of them. I also remember they didn’t write very often and I saw how sad she would get when she went through her mail and there was nothing there but a catalog or some other kind of advertisement. In my little six year old mind there was just no excuse for them to treat my grandma that way and it left a lifelong impression with me. I am sure that was what made such an impression on me that I made it a point to keep in touch with my mom up until the day she died with a phone call every week and I would always write a short letter or send her a joke I cut out of the paper or some goofy postcard I had found. I took things from this childhood experience and added them to the story Brice told me about the little old lady on his mail route and came up with the second song. The second song "Seed Catalog I wrote with my good buddy Tom Mitchell. I have always felt like in both songs we were able to simplify a pretty complex story. ======================================= ======================================= "Long
Days" (Lonnie Ratliff / Sharon Anderson) Walter Hudson's up at daylight A habit now of sixty some odd years There really ain't much reason 'Cause not that much needs doing around there Forty acres on the edge of town He paid the bank off fifteen years ago He buried Martha last November And for the first time Walter's startin' to feel old (Chorus) All those long days Muscles strained and shoulders bent All those long days He thought would never end Long days without slack End to end and back to back They don't add up, the answer isn't clear How'd those long days turn into such short years (Half
Verse) The old corral is falling down He'll have to fix that up before too long That's where old Jett threw Jimmy And Walter had to make him crawl back on (Bridge)
Leave those muddy boots outside the door Or mama's gonna skin you boys alive Walter hears those sounds from long ago And like old friends they're welcome to drop by (Repeat
Chorus) (Tag) Walter Hudson's up at daylight A habit now of sixty some odd years Songwriters:
Lonnie Ratliff / Sharon Anderson Publisher: Okie Acres Music
(BMI) Songs Of Universal (BMI) Seed
Catalog Writers: Lonnie Ratliff / Tom
Mitchell
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"When It's Too Country For Everyone Else, It's Just Right For Me"
Erin Hay
THE COLLECTION "Click" Photo to purchase Erin's CD's THE CIRCLE
"Click" Yellow Button below to play
Lo-Fi Samples from THE CIRCLE CD
Lo-Fi Music Samples from this 23 song CD
"click" on EBAY Logo below
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REMEMBER YOU CAN ALWAYS CLICK ON ANY PHOTO IN THIS NEWSLETTER OR ANY UNDERLINED TEXT & IT WILL TAKE YOU TO A WEBSITE OR PLAY MUSIC MOST OF THE TIME SO DON'T FORGET TO "click away" SO YOU DON'T MISS ANYTHING - LONNIE