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Tuesday (May 14) was a good day for Capitol recording artist Chris Cagle.
First came the news that he had been nominated for two CMT Flameworthy Video Music Awards. After that, it was off to the
Nashville headquarters of ASCAP, the performance rights society, to join his co-writer, Jon Robbin, in accepting several trophies
for their first No. 1 single, Cagle's own record, "I Breathe In, I Breathe Out."
Before the awards were handed out,
Cagle met with reporters to discuss his burgeoning career, which currently includes an opening slot on Brooks & Dunn's "Neon
Circus" tour. Originally signed to Virgin Records, which released the first version of his Play It Loud album, Cagle
saw his prospects teeter when Virgin closed its Nashville operations. Fortunately for him, Capitol Records picked up the
album, reissued it with two new cuts and applied the promotional muscle to keep it going.
Cagle admitted he has been
wounded more than once by the cavalier way artists are treated. He told of visiting a radio station at which new records
were visibly categorized under the labels "Playing," "Think About Playing" and "Sucks." He said he found his single, "My Love
Goes On and On," filed in the last category. He noted, however, that the station eventually did play his record. Cagle also
said he found a review of one of his shows in Canada particularly galling. Another sore point: songwriters who wouldn't co-write
with him when he was getting started but who want to now that he's had some hits.
Connie Bradley, ASCAP's senior vice
president, presented Cagle and Robbin their trophies and welcomed them into "ASCAP's No. 1 Club." Cagle momentarily donned
the ornamented jacket that comes with club membership. Bradley pointed out that "I Breathe In, I Breathe Out" had reached
No. 1 in both the Billboard and Radio & Records charts.
Woody Bomar, representing Cagle's publisher,
Sony/ATV Cross Keys, and Jewel Coburn, of Ten Ten Music, Robbin's publisher, handed out plaques to the writers, producer Chris
Lindsey and Bill Catino, Capitol Records' head of promotion. "Behind every great artist is a greater promotional staff," Bradley
observed.
Ticking off Cagle's mounting list of honors -- among them a gold album, Flameworthy nominations for breakthrough
video and hottest video of the year and an Academy of Country Music nomination for best new male vocalist -- Bradley formally
introduced the singer to the throng of well-wishers. Cagle seemed near tears as he acknowledged the applause. "I've been wandering
through this place a long time and seen a couple of these [No. 1 parties] going on. And it's a nice feeling."
Catino
said that the first time the Capitol staff saw Cagle perform was at a Country Radio Seminar show. "He came off the stage sweating,
and the first thing he said was, 'I can do better than this." I said, 'Don't worry. You've got the gig.'" He recalled when
Cagle and "12 to 15" other new artists performed in the round at the KSON charity golf tournament in San Diego. Catino said
that during Cagle's performance, "You could have heard a pin drop." After Cagle finished singing, Catino continued, KSON's
program director told him, "Have his record on my desk tomorrow, and I'll add it in heavy rotation."
Lindsey said Cagle
lobbied hard for "I Breathe In, I Breathe Out" as they listened to songs from which to select the two additions to the album.
"He really believed in it -- and he was right."
Coburn told CMT.com that "I Breathe In,
I Breathe Out" had been around for "four or five years" before Cagle recorded it. Curb Records' David
Kersh cut it for his 1998 album, If I Never Stop Loving You, but it wasn't released as a single.
Among
those on hand to applaud Cagle and Robbin were WE Records' Sherrie Austin and former Mercury recording artist Butch Baker.
Looking
over the crowd that stretched from one entrance of the ASCAP lobby to the other, Bradley concluded, "I don't remember having
a party this big in a long, long time."




