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Flatts Set To Kick Off 2007 CMT Music Awards
February 28th, 2007 under Uncategorized. [ Comments: none ]

                                                                

Rascal Flatts will kick off this years CMT Music Awards. The guys will sing a song voted on by the fans. You can go CMT.com and vote for your favorite out of these choices: "Fast Cars & Freedom, Life Is A Highway, or Me and My Gang. Make your choice and make sure to tune into the awards show that night to see what they will perform!

 

Also don't forget to VOTE! Rascal Flatts are up for two awards; Best Video of the year for "What Hurts The Most", and Best Video by a group for "Life Is A Highway" and  "What Hurts The Most." http://www.cmt.com/shows/events/cmt_music_awards/2007/vote/

The awards show airs live April 16 from The Curb Event Center at Nashville's Belmont University. It will also be streamed online at CMT.com and broadcast nationally by CMT Radio.
 

 


“Stand” Climbing The ACC Charts
February 25th, 2007 under Uncategorized. [ Comments: none ]

 

Rascal Flatts latest single "Stand" from their Quadruple Platinum album "Me & My Gang" has been making a big impact on the country music charts. The single has jumped from #22 on the ACC charts to #14.  The trio plans on making a music video for their latest hit.


Nashville & CMA Celebrate “Flatts Tuesday”
February 20th, 2007 under Uncategorized. [ Comments: none ]

 

The city of Nashville and the Country Music Association honored Rascal Flatts todayin a Mardi Gras- themed event. The Flatts were the best selling act of 2006 of ALL genres of music.

Prior to the formal celebration, guests dined in the Hall of Fame's lofty Curb Conservatory on such Cajun delicacies as crusty crawfish salad, chicken etouffée, gumbo and shrimp and grits. Beads and masks festooned the dining tables. Les Kerr & the Bayou Band provided the luncheon music.

Afterward, the proceedings shifted to the nearby Ford Theater where a projected photo of Rascal Flatts' Me and My Gang album cover loomed as the stage backdrop. Museum director Kyle Young welcomed the crowd, noting that it was appropriate "to stop occasionally and celebrate great achievement."

Tammy Genovese, the CMA's chief operating officer, jokingly declared the day "Flatts Tuesday." She then introduced Brooks & Dunn's Kix Brooks, who is also chairman of the CMA's artist relations committee.

Glancing behind him at the gigantic album cover — which depicts the three Flatts members in poses suggesting profound exhaustion — Brooks cracked, "We have a picture here that is somewhat like a funeral." Then in his most funereal voice he intoned, "They were a nice bunch of guys. I wish that one in the middle [the spike-topped Gary LeVox] I hadn't made so much fun of his hair."

Brooks said he first heard Rascal Flatts when they sang at a fan club party, adding that he was instantly bowled over by the band's sound. "They toured for us early in their career," he said, "and it was obvious where they were headed. … I'm here just to give them a big old pat on the back.""I'm not surprised at the success they've had," I'm really excited for them. They've got hearts as big as this building and more talent than we can talk about. I'm here to give them a really big pat on the back. Continued success fellas and congratulations."

Genovese returned to podium to recite some Rascal Flatts sale statistics. She reported that Me and My Gang, alone, has so far sold more than 4 million copies and that the band has sold a total of 13.7 million albums during the last six years. "Guys," she said, turning toward the band standing offstage, "that's not a gang. It's a nation of music lovers."

Representatives from the offices of Nashville Mayor Bill Purcell and Tennessee Gov. Phil Bredesen read proclamations commending the group.

Randy Goodman, president of Lyric Street Records, the band's label home, pointed out that Rascal Flatts have raised more than $1.4 million for the Vanderbilt Children's Hospital in Nashville. He also noted that the trio performed to more than 1 million fans in 74 cities during 2006.

Connie Bradley, head of Nashville's ASCAP office, recalled that she and publisher Donna Hilley took the band members to lunch in 1999, before the band had a record contract. After lunch, she continued, the guys climbed into the back seat of her new car and asked if she wanted to hear some of their songs. She agreed, but when they handed her a cassette of the songs, she realized the car was so new to her, she couldn't find the cassette player. She said all three Flatts were leaning over the seat and frantically punching buttons before the player finally revealed itself.

BMI representative Jody Williams thanked the band for generating "millions and millions" of dollars for the writers and publishers who have songs on their albums.

Following a video illustrating their sales figures and major media appearances, the three band members — LeVox, Jay DeMarcus and Joe Don Rooney — ambled to the stage to a standing ovation.

DeMarcus set the tone of their appearance by immediately warbling the first few words of "Hotel California" — a reference to the much carped about fact that the band was assigned to sing a tribute to the Eagles instead of being allowed to perform their own music at the recent Grammy awards.

LeVox struck a somewhat more serious note, observing that, "It's an awesome thing to broaden [the appeal of] country music." Referring to the breadth of that appeal, he said, "As of now, we've got them locked in from about 5 years old to 85."

Rooney urged all the band's well-wishers to remember the importance of fans. "They put a lot of heart and soul and passion into the music they love." Of their meteoric career, he concluded, "It's rolling on. I hope it doesn't stop until we're back here in the Hall of Fame for another reason one day." That allusion to eventual membership in the Country Hall of Fame was not lost on the crowd, which cheered in agreement.

"We take seriously the art of making music and try to put a lot of hard work and dedication into our albums," says Jay DeMarcus. "We are very thankful to our fans who have given us the best jobs in the world and are grateful to CMA, the City of Nashville and the Country Music community for making this our special day!"

(From: CMT.com & RascalFlatts.com)


Me and My Gang Quadruple Platinum
February 16th, 2007 under Uncategorized. [ Comments: none ]

 
Rascal Flatts' 2006 release Me and My Gang has been certified quadruple platinum for shipment of 4 million units. The tally comes from digital downloads and retail stores but not promotional record club sales. The album sold 721,000 units in its first week and is their fastest-selling release yet. Singles from Me and My Gang include "My Wish," "What Hurts the Most" and "Stand." The trio has sold more than 13.7 million units total.


Carrie Underwood & Rascal Flatts To Team Up At Grammy’s
February 6th, 2007 under Uncategorized. [ Comments: none ]

Carrie Underwood will team up with Rascal Flatts to perform at the 49th annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles. They will be singing a tribute to country rock. Underwood, is nominated for best new artist and best country female vocal performance for "Jesus, Take the Wheel". The Flatts are nominated for  Best Country Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal for “What Hurts The Most.” “What Hurts The Most,” written by Steve Robson and Jeffrey Steele, was also nominated for Best Country Song, which will be awarded to the writers. The Grammy's will air LIVE on CBS Sunday (February 11) at 8:00 ET.

 

 

 

 

 

 


Flatts featured in ASCAP’s “PLAYBACK” Magazine
February 2nd, 2007 under Uncategorized. [ Comments: none ]

                                                                                       THE WORLD IS FLATTS – AN ARTICLE BY BRIAN MANSFIELD

 As they continue to sell out arenas and sell millions of albums, Rascal Flatts find that the secret to success is writing and discovering great songs.

The facts speak for themselves… The three members of Rascal Flatts — lead singer Gary LeVox, bassist Jay DeMarcus and guitarist Joe Don Rooney are the reigning American Music Awards, CMA, ACM and CMT Vocal Group of the Year. Their recent tour grossed nearly $50 million, drawing more than one million fans, and placing them 12th among all touring acts. According to Nielsen SoundScan, their album, Me and My Gang, was the Number Two bestselling record of 2006 with 3.4 million albums sold. In its first week, Me and My Gang moved 721,747 copies, the biggest first week in sales across all genres in 2006. It was also the group’s fourth multi-platinum album in a row.

If that isn’t impressive enough, for the second consecutive year in a row, Rascal Flatts wrapped up the year as best-selling country artist in the world.

Rascal Flatts debuted in 2000, almost exactly 20 years after another mega-selling country act, Alabama, had its first Top 20 country hit. The trio has since sold more than 13 million albums, including more than three million of its latest, Me and My Gang, 2006's best-selling country album. In November, the band won the Country Music Association's Vocal Group of the Year for the fourth time (only the Statler Brothers have won it more).

LeVox, 36, grew up mimicking George Jones and Stevie Wonder, Keith Whitley and Peabo Bryson, resulting in a vocal style that blends bluegrass timbre with R&B phrasing. The band derives its approach to fusing elements of country and pop from LeVox's unique voice. That approach has made Rascal Flatts arguably the most popular act with country's youngest fans – an audience that got even younger recently when the band covered Tom Cochrane's "Life Is a Highway" for the Disney movie Cars. They've also become one of the artists of choice for American Idol contestants, with Carrie Underwood and Josh Gracin both singing their songs on the show.

Recently, LeVox, DeMarcus and Rooney have been writing songs for the next Rascal Flatts album, planned for the fall of 2007. They often write together on the road, when bus trips put them together for long stretches.

"The three of us sit on the bus during days on the road, just to kill time," LeVox says. "One of us has a melody or a lyric idea. We just sit together and knock it out."

Each of the last three Rascal Flatts albums has had one song written by all the members of the group. LeVox estimates they write between 30 and 50 songs to get the one keeper. They've pitched some of the other songs to other acts, with little luck so far.
"I think the curse is putting our names on them," he says. "Artists will listen to them and go, 'Well, then, why didn't they cut it?' We may have to go under some aliases."

All three members of the group write with other writers as well. And the band gets plenty of good material from outside writers like Steve Robson ("What Hurts the Most," "Feels Like Today," "My Wish"), Brett James ("Love You Out Loud") and Joe Henry ("Skin (Sarabeth)").

The band has found ongoing success with the songs of Neil Thrasher (ASCAP's Country Songwriter of the Year in 2004) and Wendell Mobley. LeVox, DeMarcus and Rooney have each written with the songwriting team, which has placed seven cuts with Rascal Flatts, including four on Me and My Gang.

"Some writers, you just absolutely click with on all levels," says LeVox, who wrote the hits "I Melt" and "Fast Cars and Freedom" with the pair. "That's what Neil and Wendell and myself have. We're always focused on the same things. We love the same type of melodic structures."

Levox and the two songwriters typically write together once or twice a month. Sometimes they'll write long distance while LeVox is on the road, with Thrasher and Mobley playing melodies over the phone.

"Our cell-phone bills are high, but hopefully it's a hit and we can pay for it," LeVox says.

Other times, writers will join them on the bus, like Monty Powell, who wrote "Pieces" on Me and My Gang with the trio.

"We usually try to get one or two songs done a day with Monty," LeVox says. "Monty writes really, really quick. He's non-stop. He just keeps going and going and going. We take full advantage of that. He came out yesterday, and we've got three written already."

Like most country acts that don't write all their own material, Rascal Flatts' members spend a lot of time sorting through tunes in search of the perfect album. The group's motto when listening to new songs is "Don't bore us, get to the chorus."

"We've always tried to cut 12 singles and not have filler or 'album cuts,'" LeVox says. "There's no such thing as that to us. I think that's been the key to our success. We go through thousands and thousands of songs and find the ones that mean the most to us, that hit us the most. Something that we've lived or been a part of."

The hits came early and quickly for Rascal Flatts. The band's self-titled debut yielded three Top 10 singles – "Prayin' for Daylight," "This Everyday Love" and "While You Loved Me." With a follow-up disc nearly ready, the group and its label, Lyric Street Records, considered closing the book on the first album. Then a Nashville air personality played the album's final track – a gentle, inspiring waltz called "I'm Movin' On" – and everything changed.

"Churches were using it," LeVox recalls. "Alcohol rehab, 12-step programs were using it. It grew a life of its own."

"I'm Movin' On," written by Phillip White and D. Vincent Williams, eventually won the Academy of Country Music's Song of the Year award in 2002. It also brought credibility to a band that had appeared at the tail end of pop's boy-band craze and had been dismissed initially by some as a late effort to cash in on the fad. More than any other song, "I'm Movin' On" established Rascal Flatts as a force to be taken seriously.

"They didn't look at what we were wearing; people weren't talking about hair-care products or the flavor-of-the-month thing," LeVox says. "We were taken seriously for our artistry. It wasn't about a live show. It wasn't about any of that stuff. It was just about the lyric and the melody and the delivery of a great song."

Just as "I'm Movin' On" became something of a surprise hit, so did "Skin (Sarabeth)," a tale of a teenage girl with leukemia that first appeared as a hidden track on the group's 2004 Feels Like Today CD.

"It was kind of its own little masterpiece, you know?" LeVox says of the Joe Henry song. "It stood outside of just a number on the back of the CD cover. We definitely thought it could be a single. It was really special. But you don't really know."

"Skin (Sarabeth)" eventually reached the second slot on Billboard Magazine's country singles chart and won a 2006 ASCAP Country Music Award, as did two other Rascal Flatts hits, "Fast Cars and Freedom" and "What Hurts the Most."

Those songs and others have helped make Rascal Flatts one of country music's most successful touring acts. Having started their career opening for the likes of Kenny Chesney, Toby Keith and Brooks & Dunn, the trio has graduated to headlining arenas. The band's 2006 tour drew in more than a million fans, making it one of the year's most successful tours in any genre.

A Rascal Flatts concert is a high-energy affair that includes pyrotechnics and confetti cannons. Suggest that maybe explosions don't really belong in a country show, and LeVox is ready with a quick comeback: "Chris LeDoux and Garth Brooks taught us how to do that. We learned from the best."

There's also a fly gag that takes the three musicians to a smaller, second stage. "We sing some acoustic stuff, just the three of us, out in the back of the house," LeVox says.

The band will use the current set when the Me and My Gang tour continues during the first half of 2007, but LeVox says they'll introduce a new stage show for summer concerts.

"We've been in these markets a lot over the past four or five years," he says. "You've definitely got to keep bettering yourself, keep giving them a different look and something to get them to come out to the show."

Like Alabama before them, Rascal Flatts fills arenas, sells millions of albums and slowly makes believers out of the most reluctant observers. But none of that would be possible if they weren't singing songs that connected with listeners on an emotional level.

"We've been blessed that the songwriters thought enough of what we bring to the table that they pitched us their top-shelf stuff, even on the first album," LeVox says. "A lot of times, that doesn't happen. They never know if a new act is going to break through or not. They took a chance on us, and we'll forever be thankful and grateful for them pitching us some great stuff."


Rascal Flatts Receive Three CMT Music Award Nominations
February 1st, 2007 under Uncategorized. [ Comments: none ]

 

 

 

 

 

 

The first round of the 2007 CMT Music Awards Nominees have been announced and the Flatts are nominated for three times- Video of the Year- ("What Hurts The Most") and Group Video of the Year- ("What Hurts The Most") and ("Life Is A Highway"). To vote for these videos visit: This Link

This a awards show where the fans will select the from the top nominees in each of the 8 categories. Then on February 28, CMT will then announce the top four finalist in each of the 8 categories, with the exception of the Video of the Year. The final nominees for the Video of the Year will be announced at the beginning of the show and fans will have the opportunity to vote throughout the LIVE broadcast on CMT.com or via mobile phone to choose the big winner of the night. The show will air LIVE April 16 at 8:00pm EST.