Tag Archives: shaboozey

Sometimes The Buzz Is Bigger Than The Song

If you watched the Grammy Awards on February 4th earlier this year, you may recall Beyonce sporting a cowboy hat, a premonition of what was to come. “Texas Hold ‘Em”, the first single from her forthcoming album Cowboy Carter, dropped one week later during the Super Bowl. It was the latest in a series of big cultural moments for the superstar, who crossed boundaries to wide critical acclaim with Renaissance two years earlier.

If you’ve listened to Cowboy Carter in its entirety, you know it’s not really a Country album. Some songs fit certain genres and others are more challenging to define. But the reality is, Beyonce wore a cowboy hat to the Grammys, sports one on the album cover while waving an American flag, put “cowboy” in the name of the album, and released “Texas Hold ‘Em” as the first single. For better or worse, Cowboy Carter was branded as a Country project from the jump, and that led to an obvious question.

Would Country Radio play it?

If a Country programmer read Billboard on February 26th, she may have felt quite compelled to do so. “Beyonce’s Texas Hold ‘Em Hits No. 1 on Billboard Hot 100” blared the headline. The article mentions how the song hit number one on Billboard’s Country chart a week earlier, the first Black woman to achieve the feat. At that point, it had accumulated 29 million streams, up 51% from the previous week.

Beyonce

Beyonce hit #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and Country charts with “Texas Hold ‘Em”. (Photo credit: A. Carter/Shutterstock.com)

February 26th was also the day “Texas Hold ‘Em” first appeared in our Integr8 USA national callout research in both our Country and Pop tests (at that time, our Pop formatted chart included CHR and Hot AC. Today, the two formats have their own reports). On both Integr8 USA Country and Pop, “Texas Hold ‘Em” debuted towards the bottom. But in Country at that early stage, the Like a Lot score was more than double the Dislike a Lot score. By mid-April, the song was 95% Familiar to Country listeners and plummeted to last in our Country research in a trended decline. This was driven by high polarization, with its “Dislike a Lot” score at least double that of every song but one other on the chart. Despite a different format and sample specifications, “Texas Hold ‘Em” didn’t fare much better on Integr8 USA Pop. Despite its big cultural moment, massive press, and strong streaming numbers, the song simply didn’t resonate with radio listeners.

Contrast this to “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” by Shaboozey, who was featured on two songs on Cowboy Carter. “A Bar Song”, released on April 12th, is in hundreds of millions of streams territory. It first appeared on Integr8 USA Country on May 13th with a 3.74, which ranked it a middling #18 out of 30 songs. But unlike “Texas Hold ‘Em”, Shaboozey’s Integr8 USA graph inclined each week. By August 12th, “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” sat atop the Integr8 USA Country chart with a 4.23, at number one ahead of “I Had Some Help” by Post Malone featuring Morgan Wallen.

Shaboozey’s “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” grew to claim the top spot of Integr8 USA’s Country chart

As is often the case in callout research, polarization is the unseen secret sauce that our subscribers will point to. While streaming numbers are very useful, and we take them into account when selecting hook lists for each Integr8 USA format, they hide the crucial component radio needs that streaming does not.

On-demand platforms, as a one-to-one medium, only need demand from that person. Radio, as a mass-appeal medium, needs to keep as many people tuned in as possible. Higher negatives equal a greater risk of tune-out. “Texas Hold ‘Em” has decent passion scores in our research. But it also has big negative scores, which doesn’t matter so much for streaming but really matters for radio.

We’re continuously learning new things with Integr8 USA, as it uncovers useful anecdotes for subscribers for Pop, Hot AC, Country, and Alternative. We’ve seen historically core format artists releasing songs that would seem like no-brainers that end up being duds in our research. We’ve seen a song with huge amounts of airplay from a buzzworthy artist performing just ok in Integr8 USA CHR and near the bottom on Integr8 USA Hot AC. We’ve seen some artists perform very well across multiple formats (like Shaboozey).

The proliferation of sources for programmers to grab information is great in many ways, but potentially detrimental in others. Don’t ignore other airplay outside of your own. Don’t ignore streaming numbers. Don’t ignore the buzz and cultural moments. But utilize callout research, local if you can, or a high-quality national option like Integr8 USA, to clearly understand how each song fits in your strategy for your listeners.

How Should Country Radio Meet This Crossover Moment?

What a time to program Country music.

At the time of this writing, the top two songs on the Billboard Hot 100 are “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” by Shaboozey and “I Had Some Help” by Post Malone Featuring Morgan Wallen. There are three Morgan Wallen songs in the Top 20. Keep going to find Marshmello & Kane Brown. Dasha. Eminem & Jelly Roll. Luke Combs. Post Malone Featuring Blake Shelton.

The amount of Country crossovers to Pop is mesmerizing, bordering on a phenomenon.

Morgan Wallen himself is stratospheric. One could argue that he’s the current Country version of Metallica, so popular he’s worthy of his own category. Mandatory Morgan, every night at 9!

Morgan Wallen is a crossover hit machine. (Credit: Debbie Wong/Shutterstock.com)

All of this is good news, right? The blurred lines between Country and Pop have certainly broadened the base of the format and created mainstream superstars in a way the Country format could never have done on its own. The Wall Street Journal recently explained that the fans, not the more traditional airplay agenda of record labels in Nashville, are driving this moment.

We see fascinating changes in our research, specifically greater listenership sharing between Country and Pop and Rock radio stations.

The real question is, how does Country radio handle this moment? Just how different are the Country streamers and Country radio listeners? How different are the core and casual Country fans?

It is undeniable that older, traditional notions of what music styles many Country fans want to hear are being thrown out the window, as more and more fans grow up hearing new variations and format fusions.

But what impact will this have on the brand of Country radio stations? How can Country radio truly meet this moment, welcoming a new, different audience without alienating its core?

We believe we don’t know the answer yet, and those in the format need to keep an open mind. If there was ever a time to deploy focus groups and other qualitative research within Country, this would be it. Explore the factions, the blurred lines, and determine which approaches work and which ones don’t.

It’s an exciting time for Country Radio, and if handled properly, a potential inflection point for generational growth. No problem gettin’ tipsy on all this great new music—let’s just not get kicked out the bar!