Tim McGraw is taking his record label bosses to court this week in a bid to end his contract with them.

The country star’s lawyers and Curb Records executives will be in Nashville’s Chancery Court on Wednesday battling over whether or not McGraw has sufficiently fulfilled his contract with the label.

The hearing will consist solely of oral arguments and no witnesses will be called.

Curb Records bosses sued McGraw in May for breach of contract, alleging he recorded and delivered his still-unreleased album, Emotional Traffic, prematurely. The label executives claimed they had the contractual right to decide on the timing of McGraw’s album releases.

Responding to the suit, McGraw’s lawyers said, “The label is holding the album hostage from country music in an attempt to force Tim McGraw to serve perpetually under a contract that he has already fully and faithfully completed.”

The singer then countersued Curb and asked the court to award him punitive damages, an advance payment for his latest recordings and a ruling that he has fulfilled his contract.

 

Country star Tim McGraw hobbled onstage at a show in North Carolina on Saturday sporting a corrective boot after breaking his foot in a mystery accident.

The singer has yet to open up about how the injury occurred but he tweeted fans about the break last week.

He joked, “Football, Baseball, car wrecks, bar fights, high school rodeo… and this is the first broken bone I’ve ever had!”

The Live Like You Were Dying hitmaker has also taken to using a cane to help him get around onstage, insisting, “The show must go on.”

 

Tim McGraw and Curb Records could be headed to court over an unreleased album. The independent record label filed a breach-of-contract lawsuit last week against McGraw, claiming the country superstar failed to provide a fifth and final album that met contractual obligations under their deal by an April deadline.

McGraw turned in an album last fall called “Emotional Traffic,” and a No. 1 single from those sessions has been released. But the label contends the singer did not record the songs on the album during a contractually stipulated window, thus breaking the deal.

The label asks a judge in the nine-page lawsuit filed in Davidson County Chancery Court not only to force McGraw to turn in new material for a fifth album, but also to revoke an agreement between the two that eliminated a sixth album from the deal. Curb also wants McGraw barred from signing with another label.

A spokeswoman for McGraw said in a statement Wednesday that McGraw believes he has met the terms of the contract.

“The label is holding the album hostage from country music fans in an attempt to force Tim McGraw to serve perpetually under a contract that he has already fully and faithfully completed,” an email statement from McGraw spokeswoman Ambrosia Healy said.

McGraw, one of country’s top-selling male singers who has crossed over into the film world, has had an often thorny relationship with the label and owner Mike Curb. The two sides clashed about 10 years ago, resulting in an amended record deal that reduced McGraw’s obligation to Curb.

The release of greatest hits albums over the year has angered McGraw and he contends the label has done so to artificially lengthen his contract. He apologized to fans in 2008 after the label released a third greatest hits package.

He thought he was done with the label when he turned in “Emotional Traffic” last fall and told The Associated Press in an interview last month: “All the songs have been done for a long time, and the label has had it. It’s the last album that they have of mine, so they’re trying to hold on to it as long as they can,” he said. “Whenever Mike Curb decides he’s going to play fair, it will be out.”

A message asking for comment from Curb was not immediately returned.

Curb contends McGraw turned in “Emotional Traffic” just two days after the window for his fifth album opened, violating a provision in the contract that says material on an album has to be recorded during a specific time period. Curb says some of the songs were recorded in 2008 or before and that the move was a “transparent tactic” to shorten the length of his deal.

The suit contends there would be “chaos” if artists were allowed to choose which provisions of a contract they will honor.

The move may delay the release of “Emotional Traffic,” but it won’t stop McGraw from sharing the album’s music with his fans, the statement from Healy said.

“Tim McGraw has decided to perform new songs from `Emotional Traffic’ on his current tour because he feels it is one of his best ever. Most importantly, Tim McGraw wants to thank his fans for their continued support in his efforts to release new and exciting music.”

 

Tim McGraw and Curb Records could be headed to court over an unreleased album. The independent record label filed a breach-of-contract lawsuit last week against McGraw, claiming the country superstar failed to provide a fifth and final album that met contractual obligations under their deal by an April deadline.

McGraw turned in an album last fall called “Emotional Traffic,” and a No. 1 single from those sessions has been released. But the label contends the singer did not record the songs on the album during a contractually stipulated window, thus breaking the deal.

The label asks a judge in the nine-page lawsuit filed in Davidson County Chancery Court not only to force McGraw to turn in new material for a fifth album, but also to revoke an agreement between the two that eliminated a sixth album from the deal. Curb also wants McGraw barred from signing with another label.

A spokeswoman for McGraw said in a statement Wednesday that McGraw believes he has met the terms of the contract.

“The label is holding the album hostage from country music fans in an attempt to force Tim McGraw to serve perpetually under a contract that he has already fully and faithfully completed,” an email statement from McGraw spokeswoman Ambrosia Healy said.

McGraw, one of country’s top-selling male singers who has crossed over into the film world, has had an often thorny relationship with the label and owner Mike Curb. The two sides clashed about 10 years ago, resulting in an amended record deal that reduced McGraw’s obligation to Curb.

The release of greatest hits albums over the year has angered McGraw and he contends the label has done so to artificially lengthen his contract. He apologized to fans in 2008 after the label released a third greatest hits package.

He thought he was done with the label when he turned in “Emotional Traffic” last fall and told The Associated Press in an interview last month: “All the songs have been done for a long time, and the label has had it. It’s the last album that they have of mine, so they’re trying to hold on to it as long as they can,” he said. “Whenever Mike Curb decides he’s going to play fair, it will be out.”

A message asking for comment from Curb was not immediately returned.

Curb contends McGraw turned in “Emotional Traffic” just two days after the window for his fifth album opened, violating a provision in the contract that says material on an album has to be recorded during a specific time period. Curb says some of the songs were recorded in 2008 or before and that the move was a “transparent tactic” to shorten the length of his deal.

The suit contends there would be “chaos” if artists were allowed to choose which provisions of a contract they will honor.

The move may delay the release of “Emotional Traffic,” but it won’t stop McGraw from sharing the album’s music with his fans, the statement from Healy said.

“Tim McGraw has decided to perform new songs from `Emotional Traffic’ on his current tour because he feels it is one of his best ever. Most importantly, Tim McGraw wants to thank his fans for their continued support in his efforts to release new and exciting music.”

 

To prepare for his 50-60 city concert tour kicking off in April, country superstar and gifted actor, Tim McGraw looked to the one and only Martha Stewart to get him powered up and ready to hit the road. On today’s edition of THE MARTHA STEWART SHOW (Hallmark Channel, 10 AM ET/9 AM C – same day encore airing, 2 PM ET/next day airing, 1 PM ET),

Martha passed along some energizing recipes from her new Power Foods book, to which Tim responded: “…the guys in my band, they need this bad.” Tim also talked about his newest competition in the country world…his Country Strong co-star, Garrett Hedlund. When asked if he thought Garrett was a star already, Tim nervously replied, “He’s not, but he could be now! It upset me a little bit…You know the saving grace is he’s so ugly!”

Tim McGraw on Country Strong:
Tim McGraw- It’s a true love story, I mean there’s a lot of heart felt love in this film that the characters have for each other.
Martha Stewart- TWO love triangles!
TM- There’s two love triangles.
MS- Oh boy
TM- There’s some tragedy, some redemption, you know there’s everything you’d want and there’s some great music. I mean the actors, Gwyneth did a fantastic job, and Garrett Hedlund…
MS- Did she sing all her own stuff?
TM- She sang all her own stuff, as did Garret, as did Leighton Meester. They all sang their own stuff and for me you know, country music is pretty close to me.

Tim McGraw on Garrett Hedlund:
MS- Is Garrett a country star?
TM- He’s not…but he could be now!
MS- Oh, wow! I thought he was great.
TM- Yeah, it upset me a little bit…You know the saving grace is he’s so ugly! You know!
MS- He is sooo cute, wait till you see this movie!

Tim McGraw on embarrassing his wife, Faith Hill:
TM- I’m trying not to be too messy here cause I don’t want to embarrass my wife. That’s the last thing she says, don’t go on Martha Stewart and embarrass me.
MS- You’re not embarrassing me, it’s such a pleasure to have you on.

Martha on being a groupie:
MS- I could be the cook on one of those buses.
TM- Come on, come on! We’re inviting you right now.
MS- That would be so much fun, to see what it’s like, I was never one of those groupie girls.
TM- OH come on!
MS- NEVER!
TM- Come on!
MS- Nope I just didn’t…
TM- Tell us the stories!
MS- I just didn’t…Nope…I didn’t do that.

 

Tim McGraw isn’t looking for trouble at his concerts, but there are certain things he just won’t ignore.

“It’s all about enjoying yourself and not messing with other people’s fun,” the country singer said in a recent interview. “And certainly I don’t think you should be abusive to women. I think that’s No. 1 right there.”

McGraw, 42, has thrown out disruptive fans from at least two of his concerts in the past year and a half, most recently in July. Video of the incidents taken by fans went viral on the Internet.

At one concert, McGraw stops in the middle of singing “Indian Outlaw,” calls for security and pulls a guy on stage by his shirt so that guards can haul him away.

“Look, I’m the one with the microphone, so if there’s something that needs to be done, and I’m the one who can see it because of where I’m at, then I’m probably the only person who can ask somebody to do something about it, because other people may not be able to see it, security especially,” said McGraw.

His protectiveness may come from being a father of three girls, or maybe just from the way he was raised. McGraw’s new cologne, “Southern Blend,” is marketed to “the true Southern gentleman.” He says that means the scent is “respectful.”

“I mean it’s not offensive. It’s not in your face. It’s not super strong,” McGraw said. “It has just the right weight to it. And I think that’s what a Southern gentleman has. He just does the right thing.”

McGraw made sure his wife, Faith Hill, and three daughters liked the cologne: “It’s gotta be approved by the women in my life before anything can work out for me. So they definitely have the final word.”

In addition to the cologne, McGraw is costarring with Sandra Bullock in the upcoming film, “The Blind Side,” this fall, and he is coming out with a new album, “Southern Voice,” out in October.

He credits his wife for helping him balance all his projects: “She kept me on task.”

 

Tim McGraw and the Black Eyed Peas are scheduled to perform before the NFL season opener.

The NFL announced the musical artists Wednesday for the game between the Super Bowl champion Steelers and the Tennessee Titans in Pittsburgh on Thursday, Sept. 10.

McGraw and Black Eyed Peas, both three-time Grammy winners, will hold a free concert open to the public at Point State Park.

Natasha Bedingfield, Keith Urban and Usher performed before last year’s opener in New York.



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