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    <title>Wilshire</title>
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    <dc:language>en</dc:language>
    <dc:creator>affiliates@bmi.com</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights>Copyright 2008</dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2008-07-23T22:00:01-05:00</dc:date>
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      <title>BMI Film &amp;amp; Television Awards Tout Composers of Year&#8217;s Top Film and Television Music</title>
      <link>http://www.bmi.com/news/entry/536623</link>
      <description></description>
      <dc:subject>Yoav, Barnes, Katreese, Gregson&#45;Williams, Rupert, Jean, Bates, Tyler, Bryant, Del, Clinton, George S., Danna, Mychael, Edelman, Randy, Elfman, Danny, Fenton, George, Goldsmith, Jerry, Golub, Peter, Gregson&#45;Williams, Harry, Jablonsky, Steve, Kamen, Michael, Kiner, Kevin, Mancina, Mark, Menken, Alan, Mothersbaugh, Mark, Newman, Thomas, Ottman, John, Pelfrey, Danny, Post, Mike, Rabin, Trevor, Ross, William, Schifrin, Lalo, Townshend, Pete, Williams, John, Williams, Lenny, Wilshire, Wilson, Brian, Young, Christopher, Zigman, Aaron, Film&#45;TV</dc:subject>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em><a id="f831" class="f831" href="/affiliate/C831">Christopher Young</a> Honored for Outstanding Career Achievement;</em> 
<em><a id="f855" class="f855" href="/affiliate/C855">Peter Golub</a> Receives Classic Contribution Award</em></p>

<p>BMI honored the composers of music featured in the past year's top-grossing films, top-rated prime-time network television series and highest-ranking cable network programs May 21 at its annual Film & Television Awards. Held at the Beverly <a id="f813" class="f813" href="/affiliate/C813">Wilshire</a> Hotel, the black-tie gala was hosted by BMI President & CEO <a id="f1068" class="f1068" href="/affiliate/C1068">Del Bryant</a> and Film/TV Relations Vice President Doreen Ringer Ross, who handed out more than 80 BMI Crystals throughout the evening.</p>

<p><a href="/news/entry/536622">View Full List of Award Winners</a></p>

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<p>A highlight of the ceremony took the form of the Richard Kirk Award presentation to esteemed composer Christopher Young. Named after late BMI Vice President Richard Kirk, the prestigious award is given annually to a composer who has made significant contributions to film and television music. As the 2008 honoree, Christopher Young joins an elite list of peers that includes <a id="f948" class="f948" href="/affiliate/C948">George S. Clinton</a>, <a id="f2296" class="f2296" href="/affiliate/C2296">Harry Gregson-Williams</a> (PRS), <a id="f2468" class="f2468" href="/affiliate/C2468">Jerry Goldsmith</a>, <a id="f578" class="f578" href="/affiliate/C578">Thomas Newman</a>, <a id="f2597" class="f2597" href="/affiliate/C2597">Michael Kamen</a>, <a id="f851" class="f851" href="/affiliate/C851">Mark Mothersbaugh</a>, <a id="f282" class="f282" href="/affiliate/C282">Danny Elfman</a>, <a id="f2360" class="f2360" href="/affiliate/C2360">Alan Menken</a>, <a id="f853" class="f853" href="/affiliate/C853">Mike Post</a>, <a id="f1079" class="f1079" href="/affiliate/C1079">Lalo Schifrin</a> and <a id="f2847" class="f2847" href="/affiliate/C2847">John Williams</a>.</p>

<p>Award-winning composer Christopher Young has carved out an enviable niche in the upper pantheon of Hollywood composers. The UCLA Film School alumnus first turned heads with fiendish scores for horror and science fiction projects, and he proceeded to garner accolades for work on macabre and fantastical films including <em>Hellraiser</em>, its Saturn award-winning sequel and <em>Species</em>, along with BMI award-winners <em>Ghost Rider</em>, <em>The Grudge</em> and <em>The Exorcism of Emily Rose</em>. Young became a master of suspense, composing music for thrillers including <em>Copycat</em> and BMI honoree <em>Entrapment</em>, as well as dramatic and critical tours-de-force including Golden Globe nominee <em>The Shipping News</em>, <em>Wonder Boys</em>, <em>Rounders</em> and BMI award-winner <em>Swordfish</em>. He also fleshed out the haunting nuances and electrifying action sequences of box office gold <em>Spiderman 3</em>. The New Jersey native has also excelled in television composition, earning two Emmy nominations for telefilms <em>Last Flight Out</em> and <em>Norma <a id='f3480' class='f3480' href='/affiliate/C3480'>Jean</a> & Marilyn</em>. A dedicated mentor, Young has taught classes at USC, served as an advisor for the Sundance Institute's Film Composers Lab and created an innovative residential development to house aspiring composers in Los Angeles.</p>

<p>BMI also presented the Classic Contribution Award to Peter Golub in recognition of his progressive direction of the Sundance Institute's Film Composers Lab for the past ten years. An accomplished composer of film, theatre, ballet and concert works, Golub is a natural fit for the lab, which aims to enhance the role of music in independent film. His acute composition work includes scores for documentaries <em>I.O.U.S.A.</em> and <em>Wordplay</em>, along with films including <em>The Great Debaters</em>. Universally acknowledged as an unparalleled apprenticeship for the next generation of composing elite, the workshop has invaluably benefited from Golub's creative intuition and steady guidance.</p>

<p>BMI's Emmy-winning composers were also feted; the accomplished list included <a id="f2657" class="f2657" href="/affiliate/C2657">George Fenton</a> (PRS) for the awe-inspiring documentary <em>Planet Earth: Pole to Pole</em>; <a id="f1082" class="f1082" href="/affiliate/C1082">William Ross</a> for the 79th Annual Academy Awards; <a id="f1796" class="f1796" href="/affiliate/C1796">Lenny Williams</a> for <em>Nature: Christmas in Yellowstone</em>; <a id='f4014' class='f4014' href='/affiliate/C4014'>Yoav</a> Goren for <em>The XX Olympic Winter Games: The Stories of Torino</em>; <a id="f3587" class="f3587" href="/affiliate/C3587">Katreese Barnes</a> for <em>Saturday Night Live</em>'s "Dick in a Box"; Gary Deinstadt, Billy Barber, Ron Komie, <a id="f603" class="f603" href="/affiliate/C603">Danny Pelfrey</a> and David Traugh for <em>Guiding Light</em>; along with Wes Boatman and John Henry Kreitler for "Love is Ecstasy" from <em>Passions</em>.</p>

<p>Legendary rocker turned lauded composer <a id="f2292" class="f2292" href="/affiliate/C2292">Pete Townshend</a> (PRS) took home the evening's most awards, with three BMI Crystals for <em>CSI</em>, <em>CSI: Miami</em> and <em>CSI: NY</em>. Composers garnering two awards each were <a id="f3086" class="f3086" href="/affiliate/C3086">Steve Jablonsky</a> for <em>Transformers</em> and <em>Desperate Housewives</em>; <a id="f3499" class="f3499" href="/affiliate/C3499">Rupert Gregson-Williams</a> (PRS) for <em>Bee Movie</em> and <em>I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry</em>; George Fenton for <em>Fool's Gold</em> and <em>Planet Earth: Pole to Pole</em>; <a id="f3277" class="f3277" href="/affiliate/C3277">Mychael Danna</a> for <em>Surf's Up</em> and <em>Medium</em>; <a id="f834" class="f834" href="/affiliate/C834">Aaron Zigman</a> for <em>Step Up 2: The Streets</em> and <em>Why Did I Get Married?</em>; <a id="f3088" class="f3088" href="/affiliate/C3088">Kevin Kiner</a> for <em>Amazing Race</em> and <em>CSI: Miami</em>; Mike Post for <em>Law & Order</em> and <em>Law & Order SVU</em>; and Matt Koskenmaki for <em>Hell's Kitchen</em> and <em>The Ultimate Fighter</em>.</p>

<p>The night's winning composers for top-grossing films and critically acclaimed gems also included past Richard Kirk Award recipient Harry Gregson-Williams (PRS) for <em>Shrek the Third</em>, <a id="f861" class="f861" href="/affiliate/C861">Trevor Rabin</a> for <em>National Treasure: Book of Secrets</em>, legendary composer and past Richard Kirk Award recipient Lalo Schifrin for <em>Rush Hour 3</em>, <a id="f983" class="f983" href="/affiliate/C983">John Ottman</a> for <em>Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer</em>, <a id="f501" class="f501" href="/affiliate/C501">Mark Mancina</a> for television drama <em>Criminal Minds</em>, <a id="f278" class="f278" href="/affiliate/C278">Randy Edelman</a> for romantic comedy <em>27 Dresses</em>, <a id="f131" class="f131" href="/affiliate/C131">Tyler Bates</a> for horror favorite <em>Halloween</em> and pop music architect <a id="f815" class="f815" href="/affiliate/C815">Brian Wilson</a> for HBO dramedy series <em>Big Love</em>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
      <dc:date>2008-05-22T01:00:00-05:00</dc:date>
    </item>

	<item>
      <title>Daryl Hall and John Oates named BMI Icons at 56th Annual Pop Awards</title>
      <link>http://www.bmi.com/news/entry/536615</link>
      <description></description>
      <dc:subject>Daughtry, Polow Da Don, Hinder, Three Days Grace, Aguilera, Christina, Bee Gees, The, Brown, James, Bryant, Del, Crosby, Stills &amp; Nash, Fall Out Boy, Five For Fighting, Garrett, Sean, Hayes, Isaac, King, Michael, Lennon, John, Ne&#45;Yo, Nickelback, Ono, Yoko, Parton, Dolly, Pink, Rihanna, Santana, Carlos, Simon, Paul, Snoop Dogg, Wilshire, Wilson, Brian, Pop, Rock, BMI Pop Awards</dc:subject>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>'Lips of an Angel' Earns Song of the Year, <a id="f3443" class="f3443" href="/affiliate/C3443">Polow Da Don</a> Takes Home Songwriter of the Year & EMI-Blackwood Secures Publisher of the Year Honors</em></p>

<p><a href="/news/entry/536616">View List of Award Winning Songs</a></p>

<p>BMI held its 56th Annual Pop Awards tonight, May 20, honoring <a id="f3716" class="f3716" href="/affiliate/C3716">Daryl Hall</a> and <a id="f3717" class="f3717" href="/affiliate/C3717">John Oates</a> as BMI Icons. Famed songwriter and producer Polow Da Don earned the coveted Songwriter of the Year crown, <a id="f3441" class="f3441" href="/affiliate/C3441">Hinder</a>'s ubiquitous "Lips of an Angel" garnered Song of the Year honors and Publisher of the Year went to EMI-Blackwood Music, Inc. Held at the Beverly <a id="f813" class="f813" href="/affiliate/C813">Wilshire</a> Hotel in Los Angeles, the invitation-only ceremony was hosted by BMI President & CEO <a id="f1068" class="f1068" href="/affiliate/C1068">Del Bryant</a> and BMI Vice President/General Manager, Los Angeles, Barbara Cane and also recognized the writers and publishers of the past year's 50 most-performed pop songs from BMI's extensive catalog of more than 6.5 million compositions.</p>

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<p>The evening's capstone took the form of a musical tribute to Daryl Hall and John Oates, who were named BMI Icons in recognition of their "unique and indelible influence on generations of music makers." With this award, they join an elite list of previous BMI Icons that includes <a id="f136" class="f136" href="/affiliate/C136">the Bee Gees</a>, <a id="f2712" class="f2712" href="/affiliate/C2712">Crosby, Stills & Nash</a>, <a id="f692" class="f692" href="/affiliate/C692">Paul Simon</a>, <a id="f916" class="f916" href="/affiliate/C916">James Brown</a>, <a id="f815" class="f815" href="/affiliate/C815">Brian Wilson</a>, <a id="f366" class="f366" href="/affiliate/C366">Isaac Hayes</a>, <a id="f598" class="f598" href="/affiliate/C598">Dolly Parton</a> and <a id="f6" class="f6" href="/affiliate/C6">Carlos Santana</a>.</p>

<div class="artist_frame_3"><ul>
<li><img src="/images/musicworld/h/hall_d_2_150.jpg"> Daryl Hall</li>
<li><img src="/images/musicworld/o/oates_j_2_150.jpg"> John Oates</li>
<li><img src="/images/musicworld/p/polow_da_don_1_150.jpg"> Polow Da Don</li>
</ul></div>

<p>The effervescent popularity of Daryl Hall and John Oates's magical collaborations springs from the duo's devout passion for Philly soul and buoyant pop harmonies. Warmly accessible and expertly polished, Daryl Hall and John Oates's smooth production utilizes undeniable hooks and innate contemporary lyrical sensibility. The resulting eight no. 1 singles, three double-platinum and two platinum albums catapulted the pair into pop superstardom; in 1987, Daryl Hall and John Oates became the best-selling rock duo of all time. Skilled songwriters, they are both members of the Songwriters Hall of Fame, together boasting 24 BMI Pop Awards and a catalog studded with 14 BMI Million-Air award songs, including "She's Gone," "Everytime You Go Away," "Kiss On My List," "Maneater" and "Sara Smile." They have prompted a surge of interest and homage from a diverse bevy of new artists, who cite the pair as definitive influences. Restless creators, Daryl Hall and John Oates have spent much of the last decade touring throughout the world.</p>

<div class="artist_frame_2"><ul>
<li><img src="/images/musicworld/h/hinder_1_150.jpg"> Hinder</li>
<li><img src="/images/musicworld/h/howes_b_1_150.jpg"> Brian Howes</li>
</ul></div>

<p>Polow Da Don's resounding claim to the BMI Songwriter of the Year title stems from penning four songs among the year's top 50: the Pussycat Dolls' "Buttons," featuring <a id="f69" class="f69" href="/affiliate/C69">Snoop Dogg</a>; Fergie's "London Bridge" and "Glamorous," featuring Ludacris; and "Runaway Love," recorded by Ludacris and featuring Mary J. Blige. Fergie's emphatic shout, "Polow!" in "London Bridge" embedded Da Don's first name in the pop culture psyche, while his hit-making expertise catapulted him to behind-the-scenes impresario. Polow Da Don's first BMI Pop Songwriter of the Year win arrives on the shoulders of his first four BMI Awards, underscoring his unparalleled breakout success in 2007.</p>

<p>Hinder's "Lips of an Angel" garnered Song of the Year bragging rights thanks to generating the most airplay of any tune on BMI's most-performed pop song list during the designated award period. Co-written and recorded by BMI songwriters and Hinder band members Blower, Cody Hanson, Mark <a id='f2887' class='f2887' href='/affiliate/C2887'>King, Michael</a> Rodden and Austin Winkler, along with producer <a id="f3699" class="f3699" href="/affiliate/C3699">Brian Howes</a> (SOCAN), the wistful tune climbed to the no. 1 slot of Billboard's Pop 100, Hot Digital Songs and Top 40 Mainstream charts, achieving broad crossover success. Country artist Jack Ingram's recording of the song also resonated, reaching the top 20 tier of Billboard's Hot Country Singles chart. Published by EMI-Blackwood Music, Inc. and Hinder Music Co., "Lips of an Angel" also earned the Internet Song of the Year win as the most performed song on the Internet during the award period.</p>

<p>EMI-Blackwood Music, Inc. claimed its BMI Pop Publisher of the Year crown with a staggering 14 award songs and highest percentage of copyright ownership among the year's top 50. In addition to publishing Song of the Year "Lips of an Angel," EMI-Blackwood's catalog includes award-winners "Money Maker" (Ludacris feat. Pharrell), "Break It Off" (<a id="f1340" class="f1340" href="/affiliate/C1340">Rihanna</a> feat. Sean Paul), "Glamorous" (Fergie feat. Ludacris), "Hurt" (<a id="f86" class="f86" href="/affiliate/C86">Christina Aguilera</a>), "Nothing Left to Lose" (Mat Kearney), "The Riddle" (<a id="f306" class="f306" href="/affiliate/C306">Five for Fighting</a>) and "U + Ur Hand" (<a id='f3100' class='f3100' href='/affiliate/C3100'>Pink</a>).</p>

<p><a id="f579" class="f579" href="/affiliate/C579">Nickelback</a> also enjoyed a big night as members Chad Kroeger, Mike Kroeger, Ryan Peake and Dan Adair (all SOCAN) each took home three BMI Pop Awards; songwriters earning two awards each included Christina Aguilera; Hinder's Blower, Cody Hanson, Michael Rodden, Mark King and Austin Winkler; Snoop Dogg, Chris <a id="f3640" class="f3640" href="/affiliate/C3640">Daughtry</a>; <a id="f1086" class="f1086" href="/affiliate/C1086">Sean Garrett</a>; <a id="f3400" class="f3400" href="/affiliate/C3400">Three Days Grace</a>'s Adam Gontier, Barry Stock, Brad Walst and Neil Sanderson (all SOCAN); Brian Howes (SOCAN); <a id="f1338" class="f1338" href="/affiliate/C1338">Fall Out Boy</a>'s Pete Wentz, Patrick Stump, Joe Trohman and Andrew Hurley; <a id="f3127" class="f3127" href="/affiliate/C3127">Ne-Yo</a>; Pink; and will.i.am.</p>

<p>Publishing companies Universal Music Publishing Group (Irving Music/Songs of Universal, Inc./Universal Music-Careers/Universal Music-Z Songs), Sony/ATV Songs LLC, Warner/Chappell Music Group (Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp./Unichappell Music, Inc.), Songs of Windswept Pacific, Cherry River Music Co., Chicago X Softcore Songs, Hinder Music Co., Hitco Music, My Own Chit Publishing, Pink Inside Publishing, Super Sayin' Publishing, Surface Pretty Deep Ugly Music, Team S Dot Publishing, will.i.am music, inc. and Xtina Music each garnered multiple awards.</p>

<p><img src="/images/musicworld/k/knapp_t_1_150.jpg" class="photo-wrap">The BMI Foundation's 11th Annual <a id='f2379' class='f2379' href='/affiliate/C2379'>John Lennon</a> Scholarship was presented to burgeoning jazz/pop songwriter Travis Knapp for his song "Before You Go." &#160;A recent graduate of Ithaca College where he studied music and anthropology, Knapp is currently recording his sophomore collection of original music. Established in 1997 by <a id="f3129" class="f3129" href="/affiliate/C3129">Yoko Ono</a> in conjunction with the BMI Foundation and matched by generous donations from Gibson Musical Instruments, the prestigious John Lennon Scholarship program recognizes and fosters auspicious young songwriters between the ages of 15 and 24.</p>]]></content:encoded>
      <dc:date>2008-05-21T01:00:01-05:00</dc:date>
    </item>

	<item>
      <title>BMI Honors The Bee Gees as Icons at 55th Annual Pop Awards</title>
      <link>http://www.bmi.com/news/entry/534982</link>
      <description></description>
      <dc:subject>AFI, Bee Gees, The, Bice, Bo, Blunt, James, Brown, Chris, Brown, James, Bryant, Del, Carey, Mariah, Crosby, Stills &amp; Nash, DioGuardi, Kara, Fall Out Boy, Garrett, Sean, Gibb, Maurice, Gibb, Robin, Hayes, Isaac, Lennon, John, Ne&#45;Yo, Nickelback, Ono, Yoko, Parton, Dolly, Santana, Carlos, Simon, Paul, Wilshire, Wilson, Brian, Winans, Bebe, Wreckers, The, Pop, BMI Pop Awards</dc:subject>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a id='f259' class='f259' href='/affiliate/C259'>Kara DioGuardi</a>, <a id='f1086' class='f1086' href='/affiliate/C1086'>Sean Garrett</a> Share Songwriter of The Year Honors; &#8220;Because of You&#8221; Named Song of The Year; Warner/Chappell Music Takes Publisher of The Year Accolades</strong></p>

<p>BMI staged its 55th Annual Pop Awards on May 15, honoring <a id='f136' class='f136' href='/affiliate/C136'>the Bee Gees</a> as Pop Icons; Kara DioGuardi and Sean Garrett as Songwriters of the Year; &#8220;Because of You&#8221; as Song of the Year; and Warner/Chappell Music as Publisher of the Year. Hosted by BMI President &amp; CEO <a id='f1068' class='f1068' href='/affiliate/C1068'>Del Bryant</a> and BMI Vice President/General Manager, Los Angeles, Barbara Cane and held at the Regent Beverly <a id='f813' class='f813' href='/affiliate/C813'>Wilshire</a> Hotel in Beverly Hills, the black-tie, invitation-only dinner recognized the writers and publishers of the past year&#8217;s 50 most performed pop songs from BMI&#8217;s catalog of more than 6.5 million compositions.</p>

<p><a href="/news/entry/534983">BMI Pop Awards Song List</a></p>

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<p>A highlight of the ceremony was the musical tribute to legendary singing trio the Bee Gees. The brothers Gibb were honored as BMI Icons for their &#8220;unique and indelible influence on generations of music makers.&#8221; Accepting the awards were Barry and <a id='f2868' class='f2868' href='/affiliate/C2868'>Robin Gibb</a>, and Yvonne Gibb, wife of the late <a id='f900' class='f900' href='/affiliate/C900'>Maurice Gibb</a>. The tribute saw <em>American Idol</em> finalist Katharine McPhee perform &#8220;Immortality,&#8221; <a id='f1550' class='f1550' href='/affiliate/C1550'>Bebe Winans</a> singing a medley of &#8220;Nights on Broadway&#8221; and &#8220;How Deep Is Your Love&#8221; and Kelly Rowland performing &#8220;Emotion.&#8221; The musical partnership of Barry, Robin and Maurice Gibb has produced some of the most timeless songs ever written, including &#8220;Night Fever,&#8221; &#8220;How Can You Mend a Broken Heart,&#8221; &#8220;Staying Alive,&#8221; &#8220;I Started a Joke,&#8221; &#8220;How Deep Is Your Love,&#8221; &#8220;Jive Talkin,&#8221; &#8220;You Should Be Dancing&#8221; and &#8220;Run To Me.&#8221; The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees signature three-part harmony has endured for more than four decades, and with this award they join an elite list of previous BMI Icons that includes <a id='f2712' class='f2712' href='/affiliate/C2712'>Crosby, Stills &amp; Nash</a>, <a id='f692' class='f692' href='/affiliate/C692'>Paul Simon</a>, <a id='f916' class='f916' href='/affiliate/C916'>James Brown</a>, <a id='f815' class='f815' href='/affiliate/C815'>Brian Wilson</a>, <a id='f366' class='f366' href='/affiliate/C366'>Isaac Hayes</a>, <a id='f598' class='f598' href='/affiliate/C598'>Dolly Parton</a> and <a id='f6' class='f6' href='/affiliate/C6'>Carlos Santana</a>.</p>

<div class="artist_frame_3"><UL>
<LI><IMG src="/images/musicworld/d/dioguardi_k_3_150.jpg"> Kara DioGuardi</LI>
<LI><IMG src="/images/musicworld/g/garrett_s_1_150.jpg"> Sean Garrett</LI>
<LI><IMG src="/images/musicworld/m/moody_b_1_150.jpg"> Ben Moody</LI>
</UL></div>

<p>Kara DioGuardi and Sean Garrett tied for the coveted BMI Songwriter of the Year title, placing three songs each in the most performed list of 50. The trio of tracks earning DioGuardi her first Songwriter of the Year Crystal includes &#8220;Real Thing&#8221; (<a id='f3211' class='f3211' href='/affiliate/C3211'>Bo Bice</a>),&#8220;Walk Away&#8221; (Kelly Clarkson) and &#8220;I&#8217;m Feeling You&#8221; (Santana featuring <a id='f820' class='f820' href='/affiliate/C820'>The Wreckers</a>).  Tonight marked her seventh BMI award; she received a BMI Latin Award in March. Garrett picked up his first Pop Songwriter of the Year Crystal for penning &#8220;Run It!&#8221; (<a id='f2200' class='f2200' href='/affiliate/C2200'>Chris Brown</a>), &#8220;Check On It&#8221; (Beyonc&#233; featuring Slim Thug) and &#8220;Grillz&#8221; (Nelly featuring Paul Wall, Ali &amp; Gipp). Garrett now holds 12 BMI Awards in both the Pop and Urban categories, including being named one of the BMI Top 10 Urban Producers at last year&#8217;s honors.</p>

<p>&#8220;Because of You,&#8221; co-written by BMI songwriters Ben Moody and David Hodges, along with Kelly Clarkson, and published by 12:06 Publishing, Smellslikemetal Publishing, EMI-Blackwood Music, Inc. and Dwight Frye Music, Inc., was named BMI Pop Song of the Year for scoring the most airplay of any song on the most-performed list during the award period. &#8220;Because of You&#8221; earned the trio a huge top ten Billboard Hot 100 hit and the #1 spot on Top 40 radio, where it spent six weeks at the peak position, and was included on Clarkson&#8217;s second release, <em>Breakaway</em>.</p>

<div class="artist_frame_3"><UL>
<LI><IMG src="/images/musicworld/h/hodges_d_1_150.jpg"> David Hodges</LI>
<LI><IMG src="/images/musicworld/a/afi_2_150.jpg"> AFI</LI>
<LI><IMG src="/images/musicworld/b/blunt_j_1_150.jpg"> James Blunt</LI>
</UL></div>

<p>Warner/Chappell Music (Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp. &amp; Unichappell Music, Inc) claimed its BMI Pop Publisher of the Year prize with 11 songs on the top 50 list and the highest percentage of copyright ownership of this year&#8217;s awards. Warner/Chappell Music CEO Dave Johnson accepted the company&#8217;s 13th BMI Pop Publisher of the Year Crystal.</p>

<p>BMI also recognized the performance achievements of two other songs: &#8220;Miss Murder,&#8221; which earned Most Performed Song on College Radio kudos for <a id='f85' class='f85' href='/affiliate/C85'>AFI</a>&#8217;s Hunter Burgan, Adam Carson, Davey Havok, Jade Puget and Ex Noctem Nacimur Music (publishers); and &#8220;You&#8217;re Beautiful,&#8221; BMI&#8217;s Internet Song of the Year award for songwriters <a id='f3099' class='f3099' href='/affiliate/C3099'>James Blunt</a> (PRS), Amanda Ghost (PRS), Sacha Skarbek (PRS), and David Platz Music, Inc., EMI-Blackwood Music, Inc., Universal-Songs of PolyGram International, Inc., for tallying the most hits on BMI-licensed web sites during the award period.</p>

<div class="artist_frame_3"><UL>
<LI><IMG src="/images/musicworld/g/ghost_a_1_150.jpg"> Amanda Ghost</LI>
<LI><IMG src="/images/musicworld/s/skarbek_s_1_150.jpg"> Sacha Skarbek</LI>
<LI><IMG src="/images/musicworld/s/shackelton_e_1_150.jpg"> Emily Shackelton</LI>
</UL></div>

<p>Taking home two BMI Pop Awards each were <a id='f1338' class='f1338' href='/affiliate/C1338'>Fall Out Boy</a>&#8217;s Andrew Hurley, Patrick Stump, Joe Trohman and Pete Wentz; <a id='f9' class='f9' href='/affiliate/C9'>Mariah Carey</a>; <a id='f3127' class='f3127' href='/affiliate/C3127'>Ne-Yo</a>; and <a id='f579' class='f579' href='/affiliate/C579'>Nickelback</a> members Daniel Adair, Chad Kroeger, Mike Kroeger and Ryan Peake (all SOCAN). Publishing companies EMI-Blackwood Music, Inc., Universal Music Publishing (Irving Music/Songs of Universal, Inc./Universal-Songs of Polygram International, Inc.), BMG Music Group (Killer Tracks/Zomba Songs), Sony/ATV Songs LLC, K&#8217;Stuff Publishing, Chicago X Softcore Songs, Rye Songs, and Super Sayin&#8217; Publishing were each cited for multiple award-winning songs.</p>

<p>The BMI Foundation&#8217;s 10th Annual <a id='f2379' class='f2379' href='/affiliate/C2379'>John Lennon</a> Scholarship was presented to 21-year-old Berklee College of Music student Emily Shackelton. A native of Northern Minnesota, she was awarded a $10,000 scholarship for her song &#8220;Goodbye&#8221; by the Foundation. Established in 1997 by <a id='f3129' class='f3129' href='/affiliate/C3129'>Yoko Ono</a> in conjunction with the BMI Foundation and matched by generous donations from Gibson Musical Instruments, the John Lennon Scholarship program recognizes the talent of young songwriters between the ages of 15 and 24.</p>

<p>High-resolution photos will be available on May 16 at press.bmi.com. To request access, please contact mediarelations@bmi.com.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <dc:date>2007-05-16T01:00:01-05:00</dc:date>
    </item>

	<item>
      <title>2007 John Lennon Scholarship Winners Announced</title>
      <link>http://www.bmi.com/news/entry/534910</link>
      <description></description>
      <dc:subject>Smits, David, Cohen, Jeff, Lennon, John, Ono, Yoko, Wilshire, Pop, Rock, Foundation, John Lennon Scholarship</dc:subject>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><A href="/news/entry/534907">Emily Shackelton</A>, a 21-year-old Berklee College of Music student, has won first place and a $10,000 scholarship for her song, "Goodbye," in the 10th Annual <A id="f2379" class="f2379" href="/affiliate/C2379">John Lennon</A> Scholarship competition. Recognizing the best and brightest young songwriters between the ages of 15 and 24, the scholarships were announced by Ralph N. Jackson, President of the BMI Foundation, Inc.</p>

<p><strong>Listen to the winning songs:</strong></p>

<p><a href="#" onClick="window.open('/media/2007/lennon/eshackelton.mp3', 'mywindow','width=350,height=100')">Goodbye</a> by Emily Shackelton</p>

<p><a href="#" onClick="window.open('/media/2007/lennon/kferguson.mp3', 'mywindow','width=350,height=100')">Don't Forget to Breathe</a> by Kyle Ferguson</p>

<p><a href="#" onClick="window.open('/media/2007/lennon/ddaisey.mp3', 'mywindow','width=350,height=100')">Where to Begin</a> by Derek Daisey</p>

<p><a href="#" onClick="window.open('/media/2007/lennon/zhillyard.mp3', 'mywindow','width=350,height=100')">Rain Like This</a> by Zach Hillyard</p>

<p><a href="#" onClick="window.open('/media/2007/lennon/dsmits.mp3', 'mywindow','width=350,height=100')">Overrated</a> by David Smits</p>

<p>Shackelton, a Minnesota native, will receive her award onstage in a special presentation during the BMI Pop Awards ceremony, to be held May 15 in Los Angeles at the Regent Beverly <a id='f813' class='f813' href='/affiliate/C813'>Wilshire</a> Hotel. The black-tie dinner recognizes the writers and publishers of the past year&#8217;s 50 most performed pop songs from BMI&#8217;s catalog of more than 6.5 million compositions.</p>

<div class="artist_frame_3"><UL><LI><IMG src="/images/news/2007/lennon_eshackelton_150.jpg"> Emily Shackelton</LI><LI><IMG src="/images/news/2007/lennon_kferguson_150.jpg"> Kyle Ferguson</LI><LI><IMG src="/images/news/2007/lennon_ddaisey_150.jpg"> Derek Daisey</LI></UL></div>

<p>Tying for second place and each receiving $5,000 scholarships were Catawba College student <A href="/news/entry/534908">Derek Daisey</A> for his song &#8220;Where to Begin,&#8221; and Augustana College student <A href="/news/entry/534906">Kyle Ferguson</A> for his song &#8220;Don&#8217;t Forget to Breathe.&#8221;  Honorable Mentions and $1,000 awards went to Berklee College of Music student <A href="/news/entry/534905">Zach Hillyard</A> for &#8220;Rain Like This,&#8221; and to University of Colorado Boulder student <A href="/news/entry/534909">David Smits</A> for &#8220;Overrated.&#8221;</p>

<div class="artist_frame_2"><UL><LI><IMG src="/images/news/2007/lennon_zhillyard_150.jpg"> Zach Hillyard</LI><LI><IMG src="/images/news/2007/lennon_dsmits_150.jpg"> David Smits</LI></UL></div>

<p>The 2007 judges included hit songwriter <A id="f223" class="f223" href="/affiliate/C223">Jeff Cohen</A>, Zomba Songs&#8217; Jennifer Blakeman, Dimensional Music Publishing&#8217;s Neil J. Gillis, esteemed jazz specialist Suzan Jenkins, and Spirit Music Group&#8217;s Justin Kalifowitz.  The preliminary judging panel included Charles Feldman, <a id='f3816' class='f3816' href='/affiliate/C3816'>Samantha Cox</a>, Wardell Malloy, June Neira, and Ben Tischker, all from BMI's New York-based Writer/Publisher Relations team. Thousands of students representing schools from every state participated in the competition.</p>

<p>Established by <A id="f3129" class="f3129" href="/affiliate/C3129">Yoko Ono</A> in 1997 in conjunction with the BMI Foundation, the John Lennon Scholarships have been made possible through generous donations from Ono with matching funds from Gibson Musical Instruments. Almost $200,000 has been awarded over the last ten years to students from select colleges, universities and music schools, and from national submissions from the National Association of Music Education/MENC chapters.</p>

<p>The BMI Foundation, Inc. is a not-for-profit corporation founded in 1985 to support the creation, performance, and study of music through awards, scholarships, commissions and grants. Tax-deductible donations to the Foundation come primarily from songwriters, composers and publishers, BMI employees and members of the public with a special interest in music. Because both the Foundation staff and the distinguished members of the Advisory Panel serve without compensation, over 95% of all donations and income are used for charitable grants.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <dc:date>2007-05-03T17:20:00-05:00</dc:date>
    </item>

	<item>
      <title>George S. Clinton to Receive Richard Kirk Award at BMI Film &amp;amp; Television Awards</title>
      <link>http://www.bmi.com/news/entry/534760</link>
      <description></description>
      <dc:subject>Clinton, George S., Elfman, Danny, Goldsmith, Jerry, Kamen, Michael, Menken, Alan, Mothersbaugh, Mark, Newman, Thomas, Post, Mike, Richman, Lucas, Schifrin, Lalo, Williams, John, Wilshire, Film&#45;TV</dc:subject>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="/images/musicworld/c/clinton_g_2_150.jpg" alt="photo" width="150" height="85" class="photo-wrap" /> Composer <A id="f948" class="f948" href="/affiliate/C948">George S. Clinton</A> will receive the prestigious Richard Kirk Award for outstanding career achievement at the BMI Film &amp; Television Awards, to be held Wednesday, May 16 at the Regent Beverly <A id="f813" class="f813" href="/affiliate/C813">Wilshire</A> Hotel in Beverly Hills. The black-tie, invitation-only dinner will also honor the composers of the past year's top-grossing films, top-rated prime-time network television series and highest-ranking cable network programs. BMI&#8217;s President &amp; CEO Del Bryant, and BMI&#8217;s Vice President, Film/TV Relations, Doreen Ringer Ross, will make the presentation.</p>

<p>Bestowed annually on a composer who has made significant contributions to the realm of <A href="/filmtv">film and television music</A>, the Richard Kirk Award is named after past BMI Vice President Richard Kirk. As the 2007 honoree, George S. Clinton enters an ambit of elite colleagues including composers Henry Gregson-Williams, <A id="f2468" class="f2468" href="/affiliate/C2468">Jerry Goldsmith</A>, John Barry, <A id="f578" class="f578" href="/affiliate/C578">Thomas Newman</A>, <A id="f2597" class="f2597" href="/affiliate/C2597">Michael Kamen</A>, <A id="f851" class="f851" href="/affiliate/C851">Mark Mothersbaugh</A>, <A id="f282" class="f282" href="/affiliate/C282">Danny Elfman</A>, <A id="f2360" class="f2360" href="/affiliate/C2360">Alan Menken</A>, <A id="f853" class="f853" href="/affiliate/C853">Mike Post</A>, <A id="f1079" class="f1079" href="/affiliate/C1079">Lalo Schifrin</A> and <A id="f2847" class="f2847" href="/affiliate/C2847">John Williams</A>.</p>

<p>George S. Clinton&#8217;s versatility and sheer musical prowess have placed the Grammy-nominated maestro in the upper-echelon of Hollywood composers. The recipient of six BMI awards and composer for a myriad of films, Clinton&#8217;s scores have lent depth to thrillers including Mortal Kombat and Wild Things; supplied deft timing to comedic smashes Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery and its two sequels; and helped paint poignant moments in Joe Somebody, quirky moods in 3,000 Miles to Graceland and foreboding atmospheres in The Astronaut&#8217;s Wife. An active member of the film community, George S. Clinton also serves as an advisor at the Sundance Institutes&#8217; Composers Lab.</p>

<p>The gala ceremony, will also salute BMI's Oscar, Golden Globe and Emmy-winning composers. BMI will also present the Classic Contribution Award to composer and conductor <A id="f2497" class="f2497" href="/affiliate/C2497">Lucas Richman</A>. Richman has led the BMI Conducting Workshop in Los Angeles since it inception, celebrating 10 years when the workshop commences in June. The Workshop is a two-week course taught by Richman, designed for working BMI film and television composers who wish to refine their conducting skills.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <dc:date>2007-04-04T15:11:00-05:00</dc:date>
    </item>

	<item>
      <title>Music&#8217;s Biggest Stars Salute BMI Icons Crosby, Stills &amp;amp; Nash</title>
      <link>http://www.bmi.com/news/entry/534257</link>
      <description></description>
      <dc:subject>Bryant, Del, Crosby, Stills &amp; Nash, DeGraw, Gavin, Krauss, Alison, Lennon, John, Maroon 5, Weezer, Wilshire, Pop</dc:subject>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Some of the biggest names in music were on hand to salute legendary
singing trio Crosby, Stills & Nash as they were crowned BMI Icons at the
performing right organization's 54th Annual Pop Awards. Held May 16 at
the Regent Beverly <a id='f813' class='f813' href='/affiliate/C813'>Wilshire</a> Hotel in Los Angeles, the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame inductees were honored for their "unique and indelible influence
on generations of music makers."</p>
                <p><img src="/news/200605/images/pop_csn_large.jpg" width="450" height="219"></p>
                <p>Singer/songwriter <a href=
"/musicworld/onthescene/200308/gdegraw.asp">Gavin DeGraw</a> led the CSN
tribute with a jaw-dropping medley that included "Carry On," "Almost Cut
My Hair" and "Teach Your Children." Twenty-time Grammy Award-winning
bluegrass queen <a href=
"/musicworld/features/200405/akrauss.asp">Alison Krauss</a> and dobro
master <a href= "/musicworld/features/200107/jdouglas.asp">Jerry
Douglas</a> from her Union Station band brought down the house with
"Long Time Gone"</p>
                <p>Red-hot rockers <a href=
"/musicworld/onthescene/200312/maroon_5.asp">Maroon 5</a>, whose members
                  were themselves feted with the BMI Pop Song of the Year trophy
                  for "She
                  Will Be Loved" and as BMI Songwriters of the Year (along with crunk
                  rapper <a href= "/musicworld/onthescene/200412/lil_jon.asp">Lil
                    Jon</a>), belted out "Our House." Rounding out the all-star musical
                  salute, which was led by music director Michael Thompson, was Allman
                  Brothers Band frontman Gregg Allman, who was backed by Krauss and
                  Douglas on "Southern Cross."</p>
                <p>Hosted by BMI President/CEO Del Bryant and Los Angeles VP/GM
                  Barbara Cane, the 54th annual BMI Pop Awards also recognized
                  the writers and publishers of the 50 most performed songs on
                  U.S. radio and television from the past year. In addition to
                  the Icon tribute and the announcement of the Song and Songwriters
                  of the Year, EMI Music earned its second consecutive BMI Pop
                  Publisher of the Year Crystal, <a href=
"/musicworld/features/200509/weezer.asp">Weezer</a>'s "Beverly Hills"
                  was named College Song of the Year and "1, 2 Step" received BMI's very
                  first Internet Song of the Year award. The gala ceremony also included a
                  special presentation to 21-year-old Catawba College student Dennis E.
                  Reed, Jr., named first place winner of the <a href=
"http://bmifoundation.org" target="_blank">BMI Foundation</a>'s 9th
                  Annual <a href= "/news/200605/20060516b.asp">John Lennon Scholarship
                    Awards</a>. </p>]]></content:encoded>
      <dc:date>2006-05-16T21:08:00-05:00</dc:date>
    </item>

	<item>
      <title>BMI Pop Awards Honor Crosby, Stills &amp;amp; Nash as Icons at 54th Annual Ceremony</title>
      <link>http://www.bmi.com/news/entry/334811</link>
      <description></description>
      <dc:subject>Baby Gerry, Bell, Thom, Black Eyed Peas, Bowlegged Lou, Brown, James, Bryant, Del, Crosby, David, Crosby, Stills &amp; Nash, DeGraw, Gavin, DioGuardi, Kara, Full Force, Hall &amp; Oates, Hayes, Isaac, Jazze Pha, Lennon, John, Lil Jon, Los Lonely Boys, Maroon 5, Nash, Graham, Neptunes, The, Ono, Yoko, Parton, Dolly, Reed, Dennis E., Santana, Carlos, Simon, Paul, Usher1, Weezer, Williams, Pharrell, Wilshire, Wilson, Brian, Ying Yang Twins, Pop, BMI Pop Awards</dc:subject>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><STRONG> Rockers Maroon 5 Share Songwriter of the Year Crown with Rapper Lil Jon and See 'She Will Be Loved' Named Song of the Year; EMI Music Repeats Publisher Win </STRONG></p><P>BMI staged its 54th Annual Pop Awards on May 16, with top honors given to BMI Icons Crosby, Stills & Nash; Jesse Carmichael, Ryan Dusick, Adam Levine and Mickey Madden of Maroon 5 and Lil Jon as Songwriters of the Year; "She Will Be Loved" as Song of the Year; and EMI Music as Publisher of the Year. Hosted by BMI President/ CEO <A id="f1068" class="f1068" href="/affiliate/C1068">Del Bryant</A> and Los Angeles VP/GM Barbara Cane at the Regent Beverly <A id="f813" class="f813" href="/affiliate/C813">Wilshire</A> Hotel, the black-tie dinner recognized the writers and publishers of the past year's 50 most performed pop songs from BMI's catalog of more than 6.5 million compositions. </P><p>

<TABLE align="center" width="450" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="news-extras-box"> <TBODY><TR><TD width="125" rowspan="4" class="news-extras-text"><IMG src="/news/200605/images/pop_thumb.jpg" width="125" height="83" border="0"></TD><TD width="325" class="news-extras-text"><A href="#" onClick="window.open('/images/news/2006/pop/pages/01_LC2_5997.html','mywindow','width=600,height=400')">BMI Pop Awards Photo Slideshow</A></TD></TR><TR><TD class="news-extras-text"><A href="/news/entry/534257">BMI Icon Tribute</A></TD></TR><TR><TD class="news-extras-text"><A href="/news/entry/534256">2006 BMI Pop Awards song list</A></TD></TR><TR><TD class="news-extras-text"><A href="/news/entry/534258">Crosby, Stills, & Nash Bio</A></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></P>

 <P>A highlight of the gala ceremony featured a musical tribute to legendary singing trio Crosby, Stills & Nash, who were honored as BMI Icons for their "unique and indelible influence on generations of music makers." The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees, whose signature three-part harmony has endured for more than three decades, join an elite list of previous BMI Icons that includes <A id="f692" class="f692" href="/affiliate/C692">Paul Simon</A>, <A id="f916" class="f916" href="/affiliate/C916">James Brown</A>, <A id="f815" class="f815" href="/affiliate/C815">Brian Wilson</A>, <A id="f366" class="f366" href="/affiliate/C366">Isaac Hayes</A>, <A id="f598" class="f598" href="/affiliate/C598">Dolly Parton</A> and <A id="f6" class="f6" href="/affiliate/C6"></A>Carlos Santana. </P> <P align="center"> </P><TABLE width="450" border="0" align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="photo-box"> <TBODY><TR align="center" valign="top"><TD class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200605/images/pop_LES_1524.jpg" width="450" height="207"></TD></TR><TR align="center" valign="top"><TD align="left" class="photo-td">Martin Bandier and his EMI Music Publishing team accept the publisher of the year award</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE> <P>The musical partnership of <A id="f2713" class="f2713" href="/affiliate/C2713">David Crosby</A>, Stephen Stills and <A id="f1015" class="f1015" href="/affiliate/C1015">Graham Nash</A> has produced some of the most timeless rock songs ever written, including "Marrakesh Express," "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes," "Helplessly Hoping," "Guinnevere," "Teach Your Children," "Wooden Ships," "Dark Star" and "Just a Song Before I Go." Called "the voice of an entire generation," CSN has just announced a summer reunion tour with Neil Young. </P><P align="center"> </P><TABLE width="450" border="0" align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="photo-box"> <TBODY><TR align="center" valign="top"><TD width="150" class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200605/images/pop_maroon5.jpg" width="150" height="85"></TD><TD width="150" class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200605/images/pop_lil_jon.jpg" width="150" height="85"></TD><TD width="150" class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200605/images/pop_csn.jpg" width="150" height="85"></TD></TR><TR align="center" valign="top"><TD width="150" class="photo-td">Maroon 5</TD><TD width="150" class="photo-td">Lil Jon</TD><TD width="150" class="photo-td">Crosby, Stills & Nash</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE> <P>Pop-rockers Maroon 5 were joined on stage by rapper Lil Jon to collect their BMI Songwriter of the Year Crystals for placing three songs each on the most performed list of 50. The trio of tracks earning Maroon 5 members Jesse Carmichael, Ryan Dusick, Adam Levine and Mickey Madden the prestigious title were "Sunday Morning," their two-time BMI Pop Award-winning smash, "This Love," and Song of the Year "She Will Be Loved." </P><P>Lil Jon picked up his third Songwriter of the Year win - he was both BMI's top <A href="/news/200505/20050518a.asp">Pop</A> and <A href="/urban/">Urban</A> writer in 2005 - for penning "Lovers and Friends" (Lil Jon & the East Side Boyz featuring <A id="f70" class="f70" href="/affiliate/C70">Usher</A> & Ludacris), "Goodies" (Ciara featuring Petey Pablo) and "Salt Shaker" (<A href="/musicworld/onthescene/200603/ying_yang_twins.asp">Ying Yang Twins</A> featuring Lil Jon), the latter two of which also made the list of top songs at the <A href="/news/200508/20050827a.asp">2005 BMI Urban Awards</A>. He was also honored at that ceremony as writer of the Song of the Year ("Yeah!"), as well as named one of BMI's Top 10 Urban Producers. </P><P>Included on Maroon 5's multi-platinum debut, <I>Songs About Jane</I>, "She Will Be Loved" was named BMI Pop Song of the Year for scoring the most airplay of any song on the most performed list during the award period. Co-written by the band's four BMI members, and published by Careers-BMG Music Publishing and February Twenty-Second Music, "She Will Be Loved" earned Maroon 5 their second Grammy <A href="/news/200602/20060209a.asp">this past February</A> for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal; they were named Best New Artist the <A href="/news/200502/20050214b.asp">previous year</A>. </P><P>EMI Music Publishing (EMI-Blackwood Music, Inc./EMI-Hastings Catalog, Inc./Stone Diamond Music) claimed its second consecutive BMI Pop Publisher of the Year prize with 18 songs on the top 50 list, giving the publishing giant the highest percentage of copyright ownership in award songs. EMI Chairman & CEO Martin Bandier accepted the company's 11th BMI Pop Publisher Crystal. </P><P>In addition to the Song of the Year, BMI also recognized the performance achievements of two other songs: "Beverly Hills" earned Most Performed Song on College Radio kudos for songwriter Rivers Cuomo of <A href="/musicworld/features/200509/weezer.asp">Weezer</A> and publisher E.O. Smith Music, and "1, 2 Step," written by BMI Top 10 Urban Producer <A id="f990" class="f990" href="/affiliate/C990">Jazze Pha</A> and published by Bubba Gee Music, Noontime Tunes and Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp., received BMI's very first Internet Song of the Year award by tallying the most hits on BMI-licensed web sites during the award period. </P><P>Three other songs besides "This Love" took home a second BMI Pop Award, including "Heaven" by <A href="/musicworld/features/200412/los_lonely_boys.asp">Los Lonely Boys</A>, which also won last year; D.H.T.'s version of "Listen to Your Heart," which earned a Pop Award in 1990 for the recording by Roxette; and the <A id="f358" class="f358" href="/affiliate/C358">Hall & Oates</A> remake of "I'll Be Around," which won a Pop Award in 1972 for the original Spinners hit written by <A href="/musicworld/features/200205/tbell.asp">Thom Bell</A> and Phil Hurtt. </P><P> Songwriters <A href="/musicworld/onthescene/200308/gdegraw.asp">Gavin DeGraw</A>, <A href="/musicworld/onthescene/200203/kdioguardi.asp">Kara DioGuardi</A>, George Pajon, Jr., will.i.am of the <A href="/musicworld/features/200603/black_eyed_peas.asp">Black Eyed Peas</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/200108/pwilliams.asp">Pharrell Williams</A> of <A href="/musicworld/features/200212/neptunes.asp">the Neptunes</A>, and <A id="f914" class="f914" href="/affiliate/C914">Full Force</A> members Paul Anthony, <A id="f1554" class="f1554" href="/affiliate/C1554">Baby Gerry</A>, B-Fine, <A id="f991" class="f991" href="/affiliate/C991">Bowlegged Lou</A>, Curt-T-T and Shy Shy each scored two BMI Pop Awards, while publishers Careers-BMG Music Publishing/Zomba Songs, Cherry River Music Co., Dimensional Songs of the Knoll, El Cubano Music, Ensign Music LLC, February Twenty-Second Music, Forceful Music/Mokojumbi Music, G. DeGraw Music, Inc., K'Stuff Publishing, Songs of TVT, Sony/ATV Songs LLC, Universal Music Publishing Group (Songs of Universal, Inc./Irving Music), Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp., Waters of Nazareth Publishing and will.i.am music, inc. were each cited for multiple award-winning songs. </P><P> Another of the ceremony's highlights included a special presentation to 21-year-old Catawba College student Dennis E. Reed, Jr., first place winner of the <A href="/news/200605/20060516b.asp">BMI Foundation's 9th Annual </A><A id="f2379" class="f2379" href="/affiliate/C2379">John Lennon</A> Scholarship Awards. The Charlotte, North Carolina native, who got to share the stage with some of music's biggest stars, went home with a $10,000 scholarship for his song, "Out of Control." Established in 1997 by Yoko Ono in conjunction with the BMI Foundation and matched by generous donations from Gibson Musical Instruments, the John Lennon Scholarship program recognizes the talent of young songwriters between the ages of 15 and 24.</P>]]></content:encoded>
      <dc:date>2006-05-16T18:00:00-05:00</dc:date>
    </item>

	<item>
      <title>3 Doors Down, Lil Jon, EMI Top BMI Pop Awards; Paul Simon Honored as Icon</title>
      <link>http://www.bmi.com/news/entry/234450</link>
      <description></description>
      <dc:subject>3 Doors Down, Adams, Yolanda, Anderson, Bill, Arnold, Brad, Berry, Chuck, Black Eyed Peas, Branch, Michelle, Brown, James, Bryant, Del, Diddley, Bo, Evanescence, Five For Fighting, Fountains of Wayne, Green, Al, Hayes, Isaac, Holland&#45;Dozier&#45;Holland, Kelly, R., Lennon, John, Lil Jon, Lil&apos; Kim, Linkin Park, Little Richard, Los Lonely Boys, Lynn, Loretta, Mann, Barry, Maroon 5, McLachlan, Sarah, Morrison, Van, Nickelback, Parton, Dolly, Price, Sydney, Roberts, Matt, Santana, Carlos, Seal, Sham, Simon &amp; Garfunkel, Simon, Paul, Stone, Joss, Townshend, Pete, Twain, Shania, Usher1, Weil, Cynthia, White Stripes, The, Wilshire, Wilson, Brian, Winans, Mario, Ying Yang Twins, Pop, Rock, Feature, BMI Pop Awards</dc:subject>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<P>BMI announced its 53rd Annual BMI Pop Awards on May 17, with top honors given to <A href="/musicworld/features/200306/3_doors_down.asp">3 Doors Down</A>'s "Here Without You" as Song of the Year, <A href="/musicworld/onthescene/200412/lil_jon.asp">Lil Jon</A> as Songwriter of the Year, and EMI Music Publishing as Publisher of the Year. </P> 

<P><TABLE align="center" width="450" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" bgcolor="#000000"> <TBODY><TR><TD><IMG src="/news/200505/images/pop_more.jpg" width="450" height="53"></TD></TR><TR><TD height="5"></TD></TR><TR><TD class="awards-extras-text"><A href="#" onClick="window.open('/images/news/2005/pop/pages/01.html','mywindow','width=600,height=400')"><FONT color="#FFFFFF">Pop Awards Photo Slideshow</font></FONT></A></TD></TR><TR><TD class="awards-extras-text"><A href="/news/entry/534314"><FONT color="#FFFFFF">2005 BMI Pop Awards Song List</FONT></A></TD></TR><TR><TD class="awards-extras-text"> <A href="/news/entry/534315"><FONT color="#FFFFFF">Paul Simon's BMI Awards List</FONT></A></TD></TR><TR><TD class="awards-extras-text"><A href="/news/entry/234451"><FONT color="#FFFFFF">2005 Lennon Scholarship Winners</FONT></A></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></p>

<P> <A id="f1068" class="f1068" href="/affiliate/C1068">Del Bryant</A>, President & CEO, and Barbara Cane, Vice President & General Manager, Writer/Publisher Relations, Los Angeles, hosted the dinner event. The writers and publishers of the 50 most performed songs of the past year were recognized, plus the overall song, songwriter and publisher winners. A highlight of the gala, staged at the Regent Beverly <A id="f813" class="f813" href="/affiliate/C813">Wilshire</A> Hotel in Beverly Hills, was a tribute to songwriter/artist <A href="/musicworld/features/200101/psimon.asp">Paul Simon</A>, who was named a <A href="/icons/icons2_content.asp">BMI Icon</A>. </P><P align="center"> </P><TABLE width="450" border="0" align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="photo-box"> <TBODY><TR align="center" valign="top"><TD class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200505/images/pop_3doors.jpg" width="300" height="150"></TD><TD width="150" class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200505/images/pop_liljon.jpg" width="150" height="150"></TD></TR><TR align="center" valign="top"><TD class="photo-td">3 Doors Down</TD><TD width="150" class="photo-td">Lil Jon</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE> <P></P> <P> "Here Without You" won the title of BMI Pop Song of the Year, with songwriters <A id="f886" class="f886" href="/affiliate/C886">Brad Arnold</A>, Todd Harrell, Chris Henderson and <A id="f1070" class="f1070" href="/affiliate/C1070">Matt Roberts</A> of the group 3 Doors Down accepting; this distinction is given to the song tallying the most feature broadcast performances during the eligibility period. Published by Escatawpa Songs and Songs of Universal, Inc. and included on 3 Doors Down's Republic/Universal CD <I>Away From the Sun</I>, "Here Without You" has already been certified as a BMI Million-Air (with two million broadcast performances) and was previously honored as BMI's <A href="/news/200405/20040512a.asp">2004 Most Performed Song on College Radio</A>. Lead singer Brad Arnold was also named Songwriter of the Year at the <A href="/news/200205/20020514a.asp">2002 BMI Pop Awards</A>. </P><P align="center"> </P><TABLE width="450" border="0" align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="photo-box"> <TBODY><TR align="center" valign="top"><TD class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200505/images/pop_nickelback.jpg" width="300" height="150"></TD><TD width="150" class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200505/images/pop_psimon.jpg" width="150" height="150"></TD></TR><TR align="center" valign="top"><TD class="photo-td">Nickelback</TD><TD width="150" class="photo-td">Paul Simon</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE> <P></P> <P> Lil Jon wrote four songs on the Most Performed List of 50 to collect the BMI Pop Songwriter of the Year crown. The songs earning him the title were "Damn!" (YoungBloodZ featuring Lil Jon), "Freek-A-Leek" (Petey Pablo), "Get Low" (Lil Jon & the East Side Boyz featuring the <A id="f74" class="f74" href="/affiliate/C74">Ying Yang Twins</A>) and "Yeah!" (<A id="f70" class="f70" href="/affiliate/C70">Usher</A> featuring Ludacris and Lil Jon). </P><P> Of the 88 songwriters who received 2005 BMI Pop Awards, two were triple winners: Chad Kroeger (<A id="f2974" class="f2974" href="/affiliate/C2974">SOCAN</A>) of <A href="/musicworld/features/200203/nickelback.asp">Nickelback</A> and <A id="f2461" class="f2461" href="/affiliate/C2461">Sham</A>. Other writer/artists earning awards included <A href="/musicworld/features/200301/mbranch.asp">Michelle Branch</A>, <A href="/musicworld/onthescene/200411/five_for_fighting.asp">Five for Fighting</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/200308/linkin_park.asp">Linkin Park</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/200403/smclachlan.asp">Sarah McLachlan</A>, <A id="f2292" class="f2292" href="/affiliate/C2292">Pete Townshend</A> (PRS), <A href="/musicworld/features/199909/shania.asp">Shania Twain</A>, <A href="/musicworld/onthescene/200312/maroon_5.asp">Maroon 5</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/200412/los_lonely_boys.asp">Los Lonely Boys</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/200405/r_kelly.asp">R. Kelly</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/200311/seal.asp">Seal</A> (PRS), <A href="/musicworld/features/200009/lilkim.asp">Lil' Kim</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/200412/evanescence.asp">Evanescence</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/200306/white_stripes.asp">the White Stripes</A>, <A href="/musicworld/onthescene/200401/fountains_of_wayne.asp">Fountains of Wayne</A>, <A id="f985" class="f985" href="/affiliate/C985"></A><A id="f3291" class="f3291" href="/affiliate/C3291">Mario</A> Winans and <A href="/musicworld/onthescene/200312/black_eyed_peas.asp">the </A><A id="f151" class="f151" href="/affiliate/C151">Black Eyed Peas</A>. </P><P> Paul Simon was saluted as a BMI Icon for his "unique and indelible influence on generations of music makers." In a career dating back to the 1950s, Paul Simon has established himself among the best and most popular songwriters of the rock era. His songs have bookmarked moments in the lives of millions, whether with words of love, longing, humor, politics or, above all, hope. He has incorporated the rhythms of his native New York with those from as far away as Brazil and South Africa. </P><P> For his efforts, he is a 12-time Grammy winner, a two-time Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee (as <A id="f2371" class="f2371" href="/affiliate/C2371">Simon & Garfunkel</A> and as a solo artist), the recipient of the Kennedy Center Honors and the Recording Academy Lifetime Achievement Award, an Oscar nominee, an Emmy Award winner, and the much-honored co-founder of the Children's Health Fund. His songwriting catalog has earned 39 BMI Awards -- including multiple citations for "Bridge Over Troubled Water," "Mrs. Robinson," "Scarborough Fair" and "The Sound of Silence" -- and amassed nearly 75 million broadcast airplays, according to BMI surveys. </P><P>After a video tribute, the musical salute to Simon featured performances by <A href="/news/200405/20040512a.asp">2004</A> Icon recipient <A href="/news/200405/pop_bwilson.asp">Brian </A>Wilson (who sang "The Sound of Silence"), British sensation <A href="/musicworld/onthescene/200409/jstone.asp">Joss Stone</A> ("Mother and Child Reunion"), Adam Levine and James Valentine of the Grammy-winning band Maroon 5 ("Homeward Bound") and soul gospel diva <A id="f1076" class="f1076" href="/affiliate/C1076">Yolanda Adams</A> ("Bridge Over Troubled Water"). </P><P> Simon enters the elite company of previously praised BMI Icons, including <A href="/news/200211/country%5Fbanderson.asp">Bill Anderson</A>, <A href="/news/200208/20020807a.asp">James Brown</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/200207/bmi_icons.asp"></A><A id="f887" class="f887" href="/affiliate/C887">Chuck Berry</A>, <A id="f890" class="f890" href="/affiliate/C890">Little Richard</A>, <A id="f888" class="f888" href="/affiliate/C888">Bo Diddley</A>, <A href="/news/200308/20030806a.asp">Isaac Hayes</A>, <A href="/news/200305/pop_hdh.asp">Holland-Dozier-Holland</A>, <A href="/news/200411/country_llynn.asp">Loretta Lynn</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/200504/csantana.asp"></A><a id='f6' class='f6' href='/affiliate/C6'>Carlos Santana</a>, <A href="/news/200311/country_dparton.asp">Dolly Parton</A>, <A href="/news/200408/20040827a.asp">Al Green</A>, <A href="/news/200410/20041005a.asp">Van Morrison</A> and <A href="/news/200405/pop_bwilson.asp">Brian Wilson</A>. </P><P> EMI Music Publishing (EMI-Blackwood Music, Inc./EMI-Stone Agate Music), with 11 award songs, claimed the BMI Pop Publisher of the Year prize, given to the publishing concern with the highest percentage of copyright ownership in award songs. EMI's winning songs were "100 Years," "Bright Lights," "Damn!," "Freek-A-Leek," "Get Low," "Heaven," "I Don't Wanna Know," "I Heard It Through the Grapevine," "Into You," "Unwell" and "Where Is the Love." EMI Chairman & CEO Martin Bandier accepted the crystal trophy. </P><P> Other publishers garnering three or more awards were Universal Music Publishing (Irving Music/Songs of Universal, Inc./Universal-Songs of PolyGram International, Inc.); Warner/Chappell Music Group (Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp. and Rick's Music, Inc.); Careers-BMG Music Publishing, Inc./Loco De Amor Music/Zomba Songs Inc.; and White Rhino Music. </P><P> In addition to Song of the Year "Here Without You," BMI recognized the performance achievements of two other songs. "Someday" by Nickelback earned Most Performed Song on College Radio kudos for songwriters Chad Kroeger, Mike Kroeger, Ryan Peake and Ryan Vikedal of the group and publisher Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp. <A href="/news/199912/1999121488.asp">"You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'</A>," the most performed composition in BMI's repertoire of 6.5 million musical works, was certified as a 10 Million-Air, meaning it has been broadcast 10 million times. "You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'" was written by Phil Spector, <A href="/musicworld/features/200205/mann_and_weil.asp"></A><A id="f1071" class="f1071" href="/affiliate/C1071">Barry Mann</A> and <A id="f1549" class="f1549" href="/affiliate/C1549">Cynthia Weil</A>, and published by ABKCO Music, Inc., Mother Bertha Music, Inc., and Screen Gems-EMI Music, Inc. </P><P></P><TABLE align="center" width="300" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="photo-box"> <TBODY><TR align="center" valign="top"><TD class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200505/images/pop_pspector.jpg" width="150" height="150"></TD><TD width="150" class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200505/images/pop_mann_weil.jpg" width="150" height="150"></TD></TR><TR align="center" valign="top"><TD class="photo-td">Phil Spector</TD><TD width="150" class="photo-td">Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE> <P> Another special presentation was the announcement of the First Place winner of the 2005 <A href="http://bmifoundation.org/pages/JLennon.asp" target="_blank"></A><A id="f2379" class="f2379" href="/affiliate/C2379">John Lennon</A> Scholarship Awards. <A id="f2383" class="f2383" href="/affiliate/C2383">Sydney Price</A>, a 17-year-old junior at Booker T. Washington High School for the Visual and Performing Arts in</P>]]></content:encoded>
      <dc:date>2005-05-17T20:00:01-05:00</dc:date>
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      <title>BMI Hands Out Over 100 Awards at Annual Film/TV Gala</title>
      <link>http://www.bmi.com/news/entry/234057</link>
      <description></description>
      <dc:subject>Avant, Beal, Jeff, Cerf, Christopher, Copeland, Stewart, Davis, Don, Davis, Jonathan, Edelman, Randy, Elfman, Danny, Foster, David, Goldsmith, Jerry, Hagen, Earle, Kamen, Michael, Kent, Rolfe, Korn, Kuo, Gary, Matrix, The, Menken, Alan, Mothersbaugh, Mark, Newman, David, Newman, Thomas, Oler, Kim, Post, Mike, Schifrin, Lalo, Shapiro, Theodore, Sherman, Robert, Townshend, Pete, Williams, John, Williams, Lenny, Williams, Patrick, Wilshire, Film&#45;TV, Rock, Important, BMI Film TV Awards</dc:subject>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<b>Mark Mothersbaugh Honored for Outstanding Career Achievement</b> <p> BMI honored the composers and songwriters of the music from the past year's top-grossing films, top-rated prime-time network television series and highest-ranking cable television shows at its annual Film & Television Awards dinner on May 12. Held at the Regent Beverly <a id='f813' class='f813' href='/affiliate/C813'>Wilshire</a> Hotel in Beverly Hills, the black-tie gala was hosted by BMI President and CEO Frances W. Preston. Preston and Doreen Ringer Ross, BMI's Vice President of Film/TV Relations, gave out more than 100 awards during the ceremonies. 

<p><table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="news-extras-box"> <tr> <td align="center"><a href="/news/entry/534326">Click here</a> for the 2004 BMI Film/TV Awards Song List</td> </tr> <tr> <td align="center"><a href="/news/entry/534327">Click here</a> for Film/TV awards event photos</td> </tr> </table> </p> 

<p> One of the highlights of the evening was the presentation of the BMI Richard Kirk Award for Outstanding Career Achievement to composer/artist Mark Mothersbaugh. Named after late BMI Vice President Richard Kirk, the prestigious award is given annually to the composer who has made significant contributions to film and TV music. Former recipients of the award include John Barry, <a href= "/news/200305/20030515a.asp">Randy Edelman</a>, <a href= "/awards/2002/spiderman.asp">Danny Elfman</a>, Charlie Fox, <a id='f2468' class='f2468' href='/affiliate/C2468'>Jerry Goldsmith</a>, <a href= "/musicworld/features/200203/ehagen.asp">Earle Hagen</a>, <a href= "/news/200311/20031119a.asp">Michael Kamen</a>, <a id='f2360' class='f2360' href='/affiliate/C2360'>Alan Menken</a>, <a href= "/musicworld/features/200006/tnewman.asp">Thomas Newman</a>, <a id='f853' class='f853' href='/affiliate/C853'>Mike Post</a>, <a id='f1079' class='f1079' href='/affiliate/C1079'>Lalo Schifrin</a>, Alan Silvestri, Richard and <a id='f686' class='f686' href='/affiliate/C686'>Robert Sherman</a>, <a href= "/news/200105/20010517a.asp">W.G. "Snuffy" Walden</a>, <a href= "/awards/1999/filmtv.asp">John Williams</a>, <a id='f810' class='f810' href='/affiliate/C810'>Patrick Williams</a> and Hans Zimmer. <p align="center"> <table width="450" border="0" align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="photo-box"> <tr align="center" valign="top"> <td class="photo-td"><img src="/news/200405/images/filmtv_mmotherbaugh.jpg" width="300" height="150"></td> <td width="150" class="photo-td"><img src="/news/200405/images/filmtv_mpost.jpg" width="150" height="150"></td> </tr> <tr align="center" valign="top"> <td class="photo-td">Mark Mothersbaugh</td> <td width="150" class="photo-td">Mike Post </td> </tr> </table> </p> <p> One of the most unique and prolific contemporary composers in film, television, interactive media and commercials, Mothersbaugh was a founding member of influential rock group Devo, parlaying his <a id='f113' class='f113' href='/affiliate/C113'>avant</a>-garde musical background into the world of scoring for filmed and animated entertainment. An artist both musically and in the literal definition, Mothersbaugh has created an aural framework with his scores for the forthcoming films <i>Lords of Dogtown</i> and <i>The Life Aquatic</i>, as well as having scored the hugely successful <i>Rugrats</i> television, stage and film franchise. He has also scored a diverse array of films and television shows, including <i>Thirteen</i>, <i>The Royal Tenenbaums</i>, <i>Rushmore</i>, <i>200 Cigarettes</i>, <i>The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle</i>, <i>Happy Gilmore</i>, <i>The Mind of the Married Man</i>, <i>Power Puff Girls</i>, <i>Pee Wee's Playhouse</i>, <i>Beakman's World</i> and more. With over 100 credits in the medium including over 400 commercial credits, Mothersbaugh is also co-owner of Mutato Muzika, an umbrella company that is home to a full-time staff of composers and music editors. <p align="center"> <table width="450" border="0" align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="photo-box"> <tr align="center" valign="top"> <td class="photo-td"><img src="/news/200405/images/filmtv_korn" width="450" height="150"></td> </tr> <tr align="center" valign="top"> <td align="left" class="photo-td"><div align="center">Korn</div></td> </tr> </table></p> <p> At the dinner, Mothersbaugh was honored by some of the directors he's worked with, as well as by the characters from <i>Rugrats</i>. Director Wes Anderson (<i>Bottle Rocket, The Royal Tenenbaums, The Life Aquatic</i>) called Mothersbaugh a "conceptual artist...his studio is kind of like Andy Warhol's factory. He's very versatile, his mind is constantly spinning and coming up with different things, and he's not locked into any one direction. He's more interested in trying everything." <p> "What Mark brings to my movies that's the most important to me has to do with the tone to them," said Anderson. "He's drawn to something - his sense of humor and a sort of wistfulness to him - that is the right kind of chemistry for my movies. It fixes the oddness of the movies and mixes into it something that has to be just right, and somehow he knows where that needs to fall." <p> Director Catherine Hardwicke (<i>Thirteen, Lords of Dogtown</i>) said she was a fan of Motherbaugh's work and wanted him to score her directorial debut <i>Thirteen</i> but was afraid he might not want to do the low-budget film. "I just tried to think of things that would get him excited about doing it," she said. Describing a scene in the movie that she thought would appeal to his creative side, she said she asked him, "Mark would you be interested in creating the sound of brain cells popping?" <p> Hardwicke went on to describe Mothersbaugh as, "Quirky, crazy, super imaginative, super creative...you don't know what the answer will be and that's the fun of it. He will surprise you with something you didn't plan on, or didn't anticipate. That's what I like, I want to be surprised," she said. "He wants to make it work and delight you too. He gets into a character's head and understands that words can be too heavy handed. I think his music helps carry us places and makes us feel things." <p> Other top winners at the BMI Film & Television Awards included legendary composer Mike Post, who received the most nods with three for <i>Law & Order, Law & Order: SVU</i>, and <i>Law & Order: CI</i>. Also feted were double winning composers <a href= "/musicworld/onthescene/200308/ddavis.asp">Don Davis</a> for <i><a id='f515' class='f515' href='/affiliate/C515'>The Matrix</a> Reloaded</i> and <i>The Matrix Revolutions</i>, <a id='f577' class='f577' href='/affiliate/C577'>David Newman</a> for <i>Daddy Day Care</i> and <i>The Cat In The Hat</i>, <a href= "/musicworld/onthescene/200011/tshapiro.asp">Theodore Shapiro</a> for <i>Along Came Polly</i> and <i>Starsky & Hutch</i>, <a href= "/musicworld/onthescene/200205/rkent.asp">Rolfe Kent</a> for <i>Freaky Friday</i> and <i>Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde</i>, Teddy Castellucci for <i>Anger Management</i> and <i>50 First Dates</i>, <a id='f2292' class='f2292' href='/affiliate/C2292'>Pete Townshend</a> for <i>CSI: Crime Scene Investigation</i> and <i>CSI: Miami</i>, and Rob Cairns for <i>The Bachelor</i> and <i>The Bachelorette</i>. <p> BMI also honored the composers of the highest-ranking cable television shows of the year, including Butch Hartman and Guy Moon for <i>Fairly Oddparents</i> and <i>Danny Phantom</i>, Mark and Bob Mothersbaugh for <i>All Grown Up</i>, <a id='f1081' class='f1081' href='/affiliate/C1081'>Stewart Copeland</a> for <i>The Amanda Show</i>, <a href= "/musicworld/onthescene/200005/dcuomo.asp">Douglas Cuomo</a> for <i>Sex and the City</i>, and Brian S. Friedman and Rick A. Friedman II for <i>Punk'd</i>. <p> The Most Performed Song from a Motion Picture was awarded to the band <a href= "/musicworld/features/200207/korn.asp">Korn</a> for their song "Did My Time" from <i>Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life</i>. "Did My Time" was written by <a id='f1016' class='f1016' href='/affiliate/C1016'>Jonathan Davis</a>, David Silveria, Munky, Fieldy and Head, and published by Evileria Music, Fieldysnuttz Music, Gintoe Music, Musik Munk Publishing and Stratosphericyoness Music. <p> BMI's Emmy Award winning composers were also honored, including <a id='f1011' class='f1011' href='/affiliate/C1011'>Jeff Beal</a> for <i>Monk</i>, <a href= "/musicworld/features/200107/lions.asp">Christopher Cerf</a> and Glen Daum for <i>Sesame Street</i>, <a id='f1796' class='f1796' href='/affiliate/C1796'>Lenny Williams</a> and Chris Biondo for <i>National Geographic Explorer</i> - "Hornets From Hell," A.J. Gundell, Jerry Pilato, Dominic Messinger, <a id='f2494' class='f2494' href='/affiliate/C2494'>Gary Kuo</a> and <a id='f1734' class='f1734' href='/affiliate/C1734'>Kim Oler</a> for <i>All My Children</i>, John Henry Kreitler for "Forever Near" from <i>Passions</i>, and <a href= "/musicworld/features/200112/dfoster.asp">David Foster</a> and Linda Thompson for "Aren't They All Our Children" from <i>The Concert For World Children's Day</i>.]]></content:encoded>
      <dc:date>2004-05-12T18:00:00-05:00</dc:date>
    </item>

	<item>
      <title>BMI Plays &#8216;The Game of Love&#8217; for Song of the Year at 52nd Annual Pop Awards</title>
      <link>http://www.bmi.com/news/entry/234056</link>
      <description></description>
      <dc:subject>Martin, Ricky, 3 Doors Down, Aguilera, Christina, Anderson, Bill, Arnold, Brad, Audioslave, Bedingfield, Daniel, Berry, Chuck, Big Tymers, Bowie, David, Branch, Michelle, Brown, James, Cam&apos;ron, Carlton, Vanessa, Christy, Lauren, Christy, Lauren, Creed, Crow, Sheryl, Diddley, Bo, Dilemma, Dixie Chicks, Edwards, Graham, Eminem, Evanescence, Foo Fighters, Fountains of Wayne, Game, The, Grohl, Dave, Hayes, Isaac, Holland&#45;Dozier&#45;Holland, Horowitz, Andrew, Ja Rule, Kelly, R., Kid Rock, Lennon, John, Linkin Park, Little Richard, Lopez, Jennifer, Matrix, The, Nicks, Stevie, Ono, Yoko, Parton, Dolly, Queens of the Stone Age, Roberts, Matt, Spock, Scott, Twain, Shania, Uncle Kracker, Williams, Pharrell, Wilshire, Wilson, Brian, Country, Pop, Rock, Foundation, Feature, BMI Pop Awards</dc:subject>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[BMI saluted the past year's 50 most performed songs during the 52nd Annual Pop Awards on May 11, with superlatives reserved for "<A id="f326" class="f326" href="/affiliate/C326">The Game</A> of Love" as Song of the Year, <A id="f1848" class="f1848" href="/affiliate/C1848">Lauren Christy</A> and <A id="f1075" class="f1075" href="/affiliate/C1075">Scott Spock</A> as Songwriters of the Year and Warner/Chappell Music Group as Publisher of the Year. Frances W. Preston, President & CEO, and Barbara Cane, Vice President & General Manager, Writer/Publisher Relations, Los Angeles, presented BMI Citations of Achievement during the dinner event honoring the writers and publishers of the top 50 songs. A highlight of the gala, staged at the Regent Beverly <a id='f813' class='f813' href='/affiliate/C813'>Wilshire</a> Hotel in Beverly Hills, was a tribute to artist/writer/producer <A href="/musicworld/features/200007/bwilson.asp">Brian Wilson</A>, named a <A href="/news/200404/20040408a.asp">BMI Icon</A>.<P></P>

<TABLE align="center" border="1" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="450" class="news-extras-box"> <TBODY><TR><TD align="left" class="news-extras-text"><A href="/news/entry/534364">Click here</A> for photos from the event</TD></TR><TR><TD align="left" class="news-extras-text"><A href="/news/entry/534365">Click here</A> for the 2004 BMI Pop Awards Song List</TD></TR><TR><TD align="left" class="news-extras-text">Click for bios of: <A href="/news/entry/534367">Brian Wilson</A> <STRONG>|</STRONG> <A href="/news/entry/534368">Gregg Alexander</A> <STRONG>|</STRONG> <A href="/news/entry/534366">The Matrix</A></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

<P>"The Game of Love" earned the BMI Pop Song of the Year Crystal for songwriter Gregg Alexander and his publishing company Keepin' It Real How 'Bout You Music Publishing; this distinction is given to the song tallying the most feature broadcast performances during the eligibility period. Recorded by <A href="/musicworld/features/199911/santana.asp">Santana</A> featuring <A href="/musicworld/features/200301/mbranch.asp">Michelle Branch</A>, "The Game of Love" was a #1 single from Santana's Arista album <I>Shaman</I> and has already been certified as a BMI Million-Air (one million broadcast performances). Multi-instrumentalist and producer Alexander won a <A href="/awards/1999/pop.asp">Pop Award in 1999</A> for "You Get What You Give," a hit for his former group, the New Radicals. Alexander co-wrote "The Game of Love" with Rick Nowels (share not licensed by BMI). </P><P align="center"> </P><TABLE width="450" border="0" align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="photo-box"> <TBODY><TR align="center" valign="top"><TD width="150" class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200405/images/pop_bwilson.jpg" width="150" height="150"></TD><TD width="150" class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200405/images/pop_galexander.jpg" width="150" height="150"></TD><TD width="150" class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200405/images/pop_matrix.jpg" width="150" height="150"></TD></TR><TR align="center" valign="top"><TD width="150" class="photo-td">Brian Wilson</TD><TD width="150" class="photo-td">Gregg Alexander</TD><TD width="150" class="photo-td">The Matrix</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE> <P></P> <P> Lauren Christy and Scott Spock contributed three to the Most Performed List of 50 to share the BMI Pop Songwriter of the Year crown. The songs earning Christy and Spock the title were "Complicated" and "I'm With You," both #1 singles for Avril Lavigne, and "The Remedy (I Won't Worry)," recorded by Jason Mraz. Christy and Spock, along with <A id="f2286" class="f2286" href="/affiliate/C2286">Graham Edwards</A> (PRS), are also known professionally as songwriting/production team <A href="/musicworld/features/200401/matrix.asp">The Matrix</A>. Other artists for whom they have written songs are <A href="/musicworld/features/200212/caguilera.asp">Christina Aguilera</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/200001/dbowie.asp">David Bowie</A>, <a id='f3550' class='f3550' href='/affiliate/C3550'>Ricky Martin</a>, Ronan Keating, Liz Phair and Hootie & the Blowfish. </P><P> With 11 songs represented, Warner/Chappell Music Group (through its companies Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp. and Unichappell Music, Inc.) claimed the BMI Pop Publisher of the Year prize. Les Bider, Chairman & CEO of Warner/Chappell Music Group, accepted the crystal obelisk. The Publisher of the Year accolade is given to the publishing concern with the highest percentage of copyright ownership in award songs. Warner/Chappell's top performing tunes were "Are You Happy Now?," "Crazy In Love," "Complicated," "<A id="f257" class="f257" href="/affiliate/C257">Dilemma</A>," "I'm With You," "In A Little While," "Mesmerize," "Miss You," "Picture," "The Remedy (I Won't Worry)" and "Soak Up The Sun." </P><P> Brian Wilson was saluted as a BMI Icon for his "unique and indelible influence on generations of music makers." One of the most revered pop music creators of the last 50 years, Wilson co-founded the Beach Boys and co-wrote such seminal rock and pop songs as "Good Vibrations," "I Get Around," "God Only Knows," "California Girls," "Help Me, Rhonda" and "Wouldn't It Be Nice," among many others. Collectively with the Beach Boys and individually, he helped to create the sound that defined a generation and painted the picture of the West Coast "surf" sound. His genius is embedded throughout the group's history, but it particularly resonates on their legendary 1966 release, <I>Pet Sounds</I>. </P><P> After an Icon video tribute, <A href="/musicworld/onthescene/200401/fountains_of_wayne.asp">Fountains of Wayne</A> performed "Be True To Your School," followed by Wilson Phillips - featuring Wilson's daughters Carnie and Wendy - singing "In My Room." Wilson and his band took the stage for several songs, closing with "Good Vibrations." </P><P> Wilson enters the elite company of previously praised BMI Icons including <A href="/news/200308/20030806a.asp">Isaac Hayes</A>, <A href="/news/200211/country%5Fbanderson.asp">Bill Anderson</A>, <A href="/news/200208/20020807a.asp">James Brown</A>, <A href="/news/200305/pop_hdh.asp">Holland-Dozier-Holland</A>, <A href="/news/200311/country_dparton.asp">Dolly Parton</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/200207/bmi_icons.asp"></A><A id="f887" class="f887" href="/affiliate/C887">Chuck Berry</A>, <A id="f890" class="f890" href="/affiliate/C890">Little Richard</A> and <A id="f888" class="f888" href="/affiliate/C888">Bo Diddley</A> . He is also the first person to be honored by BMI as both an Icon and with the President's Award (in 1995). </P><P> Of the 80 songwriters cited, nine were double winners: <A href="/musicworld/features/200201/scrow.asp">Sheryl Crow</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/200105/rkelley.asp">R. Kelly</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/199911/jlopez.asp">Jennifer Lopez</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/199909/shania.asp">Shania Twain</A>, N.E.R.D.'s <A href="/musicworld/features/200108/pwilliams.asp">Pharrell Williams</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/200301/foo_fighters.asp">Foo Fighters</A>' <A id="f1336" class="f1336" href="/affiliate/C1336">Dave Grohl</A>, Nate Mendel and Chris Shiflett, and matchbox twenty's Rob Thomas. </P><P> Other writer/artists earning awards were <A id="f108" class="f108" href="/affiliate/C108">Audioslave</A>, <A href="/musicworld/musicpeople/200311/dbedingfield.asp">Daniel Bedingfield</A> (PRS), <A href="/video/200308/bmi_urban_awards_2003/bigtymers01.hq.asp">Big Tymers</A>, Michelle Branch, <A href="/musicworld/features/200308/camron.asp">Cam'Ron</A>, <A href="/musicworld/onthescene/200205/vcarlton.asp">Vanessa Carlton</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/199911/creed.asp">Creed</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/200212/eminem.asp">Eminem</A>, <A href="/musicworld/onthescene/200306/evanescence.asp">Evanescence</A><A>, </A><A href="/musicworld/features/200201/ja_rule.asp">Ja Rule</A>, <A href="/musicworld/onthescene/199909/kidrock.asp">Kid Rock</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/200308/linkin_park.asp">Linkin Park</A>, <A href="/musicworld/onthescene/200403/queens_of_the_stone_age.asp">Queens of the Stone Age</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/199911/chilipeppers.asp">Red Hot Chili Peppers</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/200306/3_doors_down.asp">3 Doors Down</A>, <A href="/musicworld/onthescene/200106/unclekracker.asp">Uncle Kracker</A>, and Unwritten Law. </P><P> Publishers garnering three or more awards were EMI Music Publishing (EMI-Blackwood Music, Inc./EMI-Unart Catalog, Inc./EMI-Virgin Songs, Inc.); Careers-BMG Music Publishing, Inc./Zomba Songs Inc.; Universal Music Publishing Group; Dwight Frye Music, Inc.; Mr. Spock Music/Scott Spock Songs; Rainbow Fish Publishing (Christy's company) and Sony/ATV Songs LLC. </P><P> "When I'm Gone" by 3 Doors Down enjoyed Most Performed Song on College Radio kudos for songwriters <A href="/news/200205/20020514a.asp">Brad Arnold</A>, Todd Harrell, Chris Henderson and <A id="f1070" class="f1070" href="/affiliate/C1070">Matt Roberts</A> of the group. Included on 3 Doors Down's Republic/Universal CD <I>Away From the Sun</I>, "When I'm Gone" is published by Escatawpa Songs and Universal-Songs of PolyGram International, Inc. </P><P> Another special presentation was the announcement of <A id="f1012" class="f1012" href="/affiliate/C1012">Andrew Horowitz</A> as the 1st Place winner of the 2004 <A href="http://bmifoundation.org/pages/JLennon.asp" target="_blank"></A><A id="f2379" class="f2379" href="/affiliate/C2379">John Lennon</A> Scholarship Awards. A student at the University of Michigan, Horowitz earned a $10,000 scholarship for his song, "Goodday." Established in 1997 by <A id="f3129" class="f3129" href="/affiliate/C3129">Yoko Ono</A> in conjunction with the <A href="http://bmifoundation.org/home.asp" target="_blank">BMI Foundation</A>, the John Lennon Scholarship Awards recognize the talent of young songwriters between the ages of 15 and 24. More than $125,000 has been awarded over the last seven years through generous donations from Ono and Gibson Musical Instruments. The BMI Foundation is a not-for-profit corporation dedicated to encouraging the creation, performance and study of music through awards, scholarships, commissions and grants. </P><P> Five of the 2004 top Pop songs are repeat achievers: "Heaven," first honored in 1985 for writer/artist Bryan Adams; "Landslide," a 1998 Pop Award winner for Fleetwood Mac's <A href="/musicworld/features/200108/snicks.asp">Stevie Nicks</A> and the <A href="/news/200311/20031104a.asp">2003 BMI Country Song of the Year</A> via its recording by the <A href="/musicworld/features/200006/dixiechicks.asp">Dixie Chicks</A>; plus <A href="/news/200305/20030514a.asp">last year</A>'s winners "Complicated," "One Last Breath" and "Soak Up The Sun." </P><P> BMI's Citation of Achievement performance certificates are given annually in recognition of popularity in the field of popular music, as measured by feature broadcast performances on American radio and television. This year's Pop Awards eligibility period ran October 1, 2002 through September 30, 2003.</P>]]></content:encoded>
      <dc:date>2004-05-10T19:00:00-05:00</dc:date>
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