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Veronica Ballestrini- Follow Twitter @VeronicaBal



Last Updated: 1/5/2010

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Status: Single
City: Connecticut, Nashville
State: Tennessee
Country: US
Signup Date: 8/6/2005

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October 14, 2009 - Wednesday 

October 9, 2009 - Friday 
October 6, 2009 - Tuesday 

Current mood:  grateful

Mohegan Sun

Spotlight Shines On Local Country Up and Comer Veronica Ballestrini At Mohegan Sun

Posted by Mohegan Sun on Oct 05 2009, 03:15 PM
Connecticut native Veronica Ballestrini to take the stage with a free performance and signing event on October 8th  
 
UNCASVILLE, CT (October 1, 2009)— Southeastern Connecticut native and singing sensation Veronica Ballestrini takes the stage in The Shops at Mohegan Sun on  Thursday, October 8th. The aspiring Country singer and songwriter will perform songs from her debut album, entitled What I’m All About, at 7:00pm, followed by a signing event at 7:30pm.  

 

Nicknamed “V,” Ballestrini and her popularity have beaconed over the past four years with an emphatic following that has amassed 11.5 million plays on MySpace, with over 120,000 followers and 7.5 million page views. Ballestrini’s Pop-Country sound has generated a wave of praise from a variety of outlets including The New York Times, MusicRow.com, The New London Day, YallWire.com and Aristopr.com. Notable appearances include a visit to the Country Music Awards, the Wagon Wheel Country Music Festival, Country AirCheck, Nashville Songwriters Association International, Country Weekly Magazine and Music Row Magazine. Marie Claire Magazine also profiled her earlier this year as one of six Nashville artists to watch for. Her debut album is available now at SpinStreet in The Shops at Mohegan Sun.   

 

 Mohegan Sun, owned by the Mohegan Tribe, is one of the largest, most distinctive and spectacular entertainment, gaming, shopping and meeting destinations in the United States.  Situated on 240 acres along the Thames River in scenic southeastern Connecticut, Mohegan Sun is within easy access of New York, Boston, Hartford and Providence and located 15 minutes from the museums, antique shops and waterfront of Mystic Country.  More information is available by calling 1.888.226.7711 or visiting mohegansun.com

September 30, 2009 - Wednesday 

Category: Music
Heyyy hey hey!!!
Come join me at 3rd and Lindsley this Thursday Oct. 1st at 6:30pm a show to benefit "Women Rock For The Cure"! :)



Women Rock For The Cure (WRFTC) is committed to fighting breast cancer by utilizing the passion, creativity and strength of the entertainment industry to find inspiring ways to raise money for Susan G. Komen for the Cure® Greater Nashville, as well as creating awareness programs for men and women of all ages.

I will be playing a set with my full band... If you're in Nashville (or in the area) I would LOVE to see you there!! I'm exciteddd.

Love :)
xoxo~ V
August 16, 2009 - Sunday 
Hey hey hey :) I'm excited to let you know, I will be performing and having a PRE RELEASE PARTY for my full studio album ("WHAT I'M ALL ABOUT") at the GAP store! This party/performance will take place from 7:00 - 9:00 pm @ Brass Mill Center Mall in Waterbury, CT in celebration of GAP 40th Anniversary!! If you're in the area, I'd love to see you there! Come party and be the first to hear my new songs off my album "What I'm All About".


Hope to see you soon <3
xoxo~ V
August 3, 2009 - Monday 
Here is the article from Sunday August 2nd New York Times paper. I thought I would post it here. sooo cool.

Thanks you everyone for your continued support <3


Country's New Face: It's Young and Blond


IN a video posted to YouTube in January 2008, Veronica Ballestrini — then 16, blond, precocious — sits on a wrinkled couch wearing a pink Abercrombie & Fitch zip-up hoodie and clutching a guitar. “Today one of my fans messaged me, and he thought I should do a Taylor Swift song,” the singer said, then began a committed, occasionally imperfect version of Ms. Swift’s “Teardrops on My Guitar.”

It was one of several videos she posted over the span of a few months, revealing a streak of determination at apparent odds with the casualness of the videos, each one filmed on a different couch or chair.

When she first began recording music at age 13, “I had no idea about anything, nothing about the industry or radio or singles,” Ms. Ballestrini recalled last month, on the phone from Peoria, Ill., during her first tour of country radio stations. “But I did know I needed a lot of fans.” And so from her Connecticut home Ms. Ballestrini set about cultivating an audience online: MySpace, Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, DigitalRodeo and more.

A year and a half later, all the screen time has begun to pay off. Last spring she recorded a proper video for “Amazing,” a single of her own, and uploaded it. After a couple of weeks it was picked up by CMT.com, the digital arm of Country Music Television, and shown on CMT Pure Country, the network’s all-video digital channel.

A young female country singer savvily using online media to construct a career built on largely self-written songs about teenage experiences? The Taylor Swift Playbook is making the rounds.

Ms. Swift, 19, who has sold more than seven million records in the last four years, has proved to be seismic in Nashville. And thanks to the pop crossover success of Ms. Swift and Carrie Underwood, 26, who has sold 10 million albums, notions of where a country star might fit in are being rewritten almost daily.

“Taylor is having such massive success,” said David Ross, publisher and editor of the Nashville trade magazine Music Row. “Should we be surprised that marketers are saying, ‘Hey, I need a Taylor too?’ ”

The next generation proposes a range of options. It includes clean-scrubbed country-leaning pop singers like Ms. Ballestrini, chipper country modernists like Jesse Lee, the TV-child-star-turned-musician Jennette McCurdy, sassy country-rock sirens like Jessie James and even some young women with a more traditional Nashville style, like Mallary Hope and Katie Armiger. (Both, perhaps not coincidentally, are brunettes.) Even Miley Cyrus is making a land grab: her single “The Climb,” from the recent “Hannah Montana: The Movie” soundtrack album, has been a hit at pop radio as well as country.

The groundwork for this movement was laid in 2005, the year Ms. Swift signed her recording contract and Ms. Underwood won the fourth season of “American Idol,” validating the idea that a country singer could still succeed on a pop stage, something that hadn’t truly happened since Shania Twain in the 1990s.

In hidebound Nashville, though, where male acts easily dominate the genre in sales and recognition, their success was by no means a given. In April Ms. Underwood won entertainer of the year, the top prize at the annual Academy of Country Music Awards, making her the first solo female artist to do so since Ms. Twain in 1999.

Together, Ms. Swift and Ms. Underwood began clearing huge swaths of brush out of Nashville’s clogged pathways. The duo, along with their fellow blond country singer Kellie Pickler, 23, the former “American Idol” contestant and Ms. Swift’s best friend, were photographed together at a December 2007 Nashville Predators hockey game, making a public show of unity. In July 2008 the three appeared on the cover of Country Weekly magazine under the headline “Girls Rock!”

In 2007 Ms. Swift and Ms. Pickler were both opening acts for Brad Paisley; they also appeared in his video for “Online.”

“The reaction to these guys was spectacular,” said Bill Simmons, Mr. Paisley’s manager. “We watched Taylor explode.”

Mr. Simmons now also manages Mallary Hope, 22, who this week will digitally release her debut EP, “Love Loves On” (MCA Nashville). For “all the kids sitting at home right now who are 12 and 13 and who want to be Carrie and Taylor,” Ms. Hope said, the success of those singers “gives all of these dreamers some hope.”

Apart from some notable exceptions — Tanya Tucker, LeAnn Rimes — youth has often been a liability in Nashville. More than any other genre, country music leans heavily on storytelling, an area where life experience, or perceived life experience, makes a difference.

Katie Armiger, 18, began coming to Nashville four years ago in search of a record deal. “At that time there were not any artists out like me,” she said, adding that a couple of labels offered her contracts but “told me that I would be on the shelf for five to six years.” Last year Ms. Armiger released “Believe” (Cold River), her second independent album, and her videos play regularly on the GAC (Great American Country) music channel.

“In the past, I’ve seen talent at a young age and was averse to starting a business relationship,” said Mike Dungan, the president and chief executive of Capitol Records Nashville. “I felt our radio partners wouldn’t be receptive to it.”

Last month Capitol announced the signing of Jennette McCurdy, 17, a star of the Nickelodeon show “iCarly,” who arrives with a built-in fan base. When she began posting videos of herself singing in a husky, twangy voice, she said, “I got a huge response from my online site community.”

Veronica Ballestrini, who has cultivated fans using an online strategy, at a fund-raiser in Nashville.

Even though Ms. McCurdy has a leg up on her peers thanks to her acting profile, her use of video and social media to promote herself reflects a new approach to generating attention that, while common in other genres, is still coming slowly to country, which has long lived and died with radio airplay.

But as the radio industry has consolidated, playlists have become more restricted. The target demographic for country radio, which has historically been middle-aged women, hasn’t helped usher in younger stars, though executives say that for new artists to have stability they must attract mothers as well as their children. As a result, Mr. Dungan said, “as the talent has changed, and as the lines have blurred between genres, there’s been opportunities that have been missed.”

To a degree, video has filled in the gaps. “In this current environment, video channels can play a more important role in breaking an artist,” said Ed Hardy, president of GAC. “We’re playing young artists next to the superstars.” The channel was an early supporter of Ms. Swift, featuring her in a series of biographical shorts as she released her first single in 2006.

And such exposure is translating into sales. Take Gloriana, an exuberant new roots-pop group featuring two female singers: Cheyenne Kimball, 19, and Rachel Reinert, 20. The group will release its vibrant self-titled debut album on Tuesday on Emblem/Warner Brothers, but it has already sold more than 200,000 digital singles, a number Gator Michaels, senior vice president at Warner Brothers Records Nashville, said was “disproportionately high” given its radio airplay. He attributes the sales to the band’s heavy presence on video channels and aggressive online marketing. Gloriana is also an opening act, along with Ms. Pickler, on Ms. Swift’s current arena tour. (It arrives at Madison Square Garden Aug. 27.)

“What you’re seeing is a greater divide than ever in the correlation of radio hits and record sales,” said Craig Kallman, the chairman and chief executive of Atlantic Records, a major label that has been increasingly making overtures to Nashville, most recently with the signing of Jesse Lee, 22.

“Everything points to Taylor Swift,” Ms. Lee said. “The timing for me couldn’t have been any better.” Ms. Lee will release her charming debut album, “It’s a Girl Thing,” this fall, featuring production by Mark Bright, who has worked with Carrie Underwood, and Nathan Chapman, a main producer on both of Taylor Swift’s albums. The result is a fusion of styles palatable to mainstream pop tastes, Ms. Lee said: “I get all these messages from these young fans: ‘I don’t really like country, but I like your song.’

“My iTunes sales have far exceeded my chart position on radio, so if it’s not radio play, what is it?” Ms. Lee continued. “I answer back every person who writes me. I’m active on Twitter. People are finding me through YouTube.”

Meanwhile, the radio industry, in the early stages of a sea change in how it tracks listener habits, has lost its position as the genre’s reliable indicator of success. “Airplay,” Mr. Michaels said, “feeds our egos well, but what we actually do is sell music.”

Ms. Swift was among the first country artists to aggressively use online media to promote herself. “That helped apply a lot of pressure to radio, or helped them notice her, depending how you look at it,” Mr. Ross said. But country music still lags behind other genres in its use of the Internet. Music Row recently began publishing a chart tracking Twitter followers of country acts. Apart from Ms. Swift, Ms. Cyrus and her father, Billy Ray, no country artist has more than 100,000 followers, a threshold crossed by several major and minor stars in other genres: Justin Timberlake, Moby, Matisyahu, Jim Jones, even Jon Secada.

So when someone like Ms. Ballestrini arrives essentially unannounced and begins to attract attention, it’s significant. She is “really the first artist to pop up in a completely independent sense, getting noticeable figures online on her own without a major machine,” said Jay Frank, the senior vice president for music strategy at Country Music Television.

One of the first label meetings Ms. Ballestrini, who will release her album “What I’m All About (TimBob) this month, took was with Jive Records, home to Britney Spears and Justin Timberlake. “They saw me as a pop artist,” she said. “Without the banjo and the fiddle, this could be a pop album.”

Hearing Ms. Swift and Ms. Underwood on pop radio stations means that for a new generation of listener, country is no longer taboo. “Eighteen- to 29-year-olds, you used to ask them what they listen to, and they’d say ‘All kinds of music except country,’ ” Mr. Frank said. “Now that’s changed. If we nail it right as a community, we’ve got an audience that we’ll take with us for the next 20 years.”

Regenerating its audience is something that’s been heavily on the mind of Nashville of late. In March the Country Music Association released the results of a 2008 marketplace study it commissioned, the largest in its history. The findings identified one of the largest locuses of growth potential as “pop country” listeners, whom it described as “very urban, responding to new, female, pop-leaning country artists.”

Whitney Duncan, 24, whose debut album, “Right Road Now” (Warner Brothers Nashville), is due out this fall and who as a teenager languished on Capitol Nashville for three years, said, “If they’re listening to Taylor, maybe they’ll turn on CMT and watch other videos.”

Or if Jessie James, 21, whose glossy self-titled debut will be released on Mercury this month, has her way, maybe they won’t have to turn on CMT at all. Her album features a mélange of influences, from country to soul to teen-pop.

Last month, coming off a brief run supporting the Jonas Brothers (they share a management team), Ms. James opened for the rising pop-rock band the Honor Society at the Gramercy Theater, trying to win over a few hundred skeptical teenage girls.

“I always wanted to be a country singer,” Ms. James said before the show, recalling her experiences trying to get a Nashville record deal. “They thought I was too pop, too sexy, too brunette.”

So rather than force pop into her country, she’s opted for the opposite approach. “It’s been a struggle to continue keeping my country influences, but I’ve fought for it,” she said of being on a mainstream record label.

For Ms. James, the best way to infiltrate a newly flexible Nashville is from the outside. “I want to be able to play the Grand Ole Opry on Tuesday and then fly off and do the MTV Awards on Saturday,” she said. “I want to do what Taylor’s doing: I want to be able to go both ways.”
July 22, 2009 - Wednesday 
Hey hey hey :) I just got back to Nashville from being on radio tour. We've visited 50 stations so far, and they all have been awesome. We're promoting my new single "Amazing" and I have had the chance to meet a ton of great people!!

We're finishing up the final things for my album "What I'm All About", it will be out mid August! I cant wait for you to hear the new songsssss. :)

on August 1st I'm playing a show at the "Sand Jam" (Camp Lejeune, NC) it's open to the public, so if you're in the area, come on out! I'm soooooo excited :)

Below is a clip of the interview (and my new song "Don't Say") with Bryan Scott from WNCY (Green Bay, WI) He is such a coooool guyy! Click the link below:

http://www.wncy.com/stationfiles/blog/bryanonair/index.asp

Thanks for all your love & support
xoxo~ Veronica
July 14, 2009 - Tuesday 

Current mood:  anxious
Heyyy!,
 I am  getting set to release my album “What I'm All About" in August 2009 featuring the current single “Amazing,” and  I want to throw a CD release party for the album. The only problem is that I don't know where I should throw it? On one hand, I am from Connecticut, so perhaps I will bring it on home, but on the other hand I have been in Nashville quite a bit in the last few years so Tennessee is also home.  Then again, I am all about my fans and want to bring the party to you!!  So I am asking that you help me decide where the Party will be!   My team decided that the top city with the most eventful demands wins the show.  Voting ends on July 30, 2009.

Just click the banner below and register to vote!




Thanks for taking the time to vote!!
xoxo~V
July 8, 2009 - Wednesday 
Hey hey hey!!! It's your turn on YouTube!!!!  Upload a video to YouTube of you performing/singing/dancing/singing along  to one of my songs and send me the link to: VeronicaBallestrini@gmail.com and you could appear on my Myspace pageee :-)

This weeks video is below:




Do you have a video of you performing one of my songs? Upload it to YouTube and send me the link to: VeronicaBallestrini@gmail.com and it could be added to my Myspace page!



Looking forward to seeing the videos!!!
xoxo~ V
June 16, 2009 - Tuesday 
Hey :-) Sooooooo this past week was the CMA Music Festival in Nashville. It was a blast. To start it all off, on Wednesday I was in the "Country Weekly Fashion Show" which took place at the Wild Horse Saloon.. I wore this yellow & black rocker-ish shirt from FLAVOUR, black pants, and some highhhh heels. They were the highest and hardest heals I've ever had to walk in, it wasn't really smart of me to pick this day to wear them. ha  I thought I was going to fall off the runway, but I didn't!!  Backstage, I got to see a lot of cool people including, Chuck Wicks, Keith Anderson, Crystal Shawanda, Adam Gregory, Love & Theft and many others. Wednesday night I hosted part of the "Celebrity Softball Game". It was really cool seeing all the artists play. I met Carrie Underwood for the first time, she is very nice. After that, we headed straight to band rehearsal to practice our new set. Thursdayyyy I was in the media rooms all day doing interviews and Thursday night I played at the Operation Troops Aid benefit at the Cadillac Ranch. Thank you Mark for allowing me to be apart of that!!! The event raised $9,000 for the troops!! Fridayyyy I was in the convention center and had the chance to meet tons of my Myspace friends and new fans, signed tons of autographs. (if you have a picture of us, send it over, I'd love to see it!!) Friday night was my show at the Hard Rock Stage! I played a lot of my new songs including a song I wrote on keyboard titled “Eskimo Kiss”.  Thank you Scott Welch for making that possible! Saturday was my fan party and show!!! I want to thank ALL of you that came out to it!! And also thank you to my mom, dad, Glenn Sweitzer, Cliff Downs, Jason Scot, Andrea, Mike, Joey, Chad, Ryan, My aunt Cathy, aunt Barbara, Uncle Ty, Tyler Tia, Amy and everyone at Digital Rodeo for setting it  up!! :-) This year I graduated from high school and I missed my graduation, so half way through my set they surprised me and brought up a cap and gown and Jason Scot sang his new song "Hope"... It made me cry. It was so sweet!! :-) We took a "class picture" too!! Hehe (look below) Sunday was the last day of the festival. In the morning we went to the "Starkey Hearing Foundation" event. I saw two little girls get hearing aids put in for the first time. It was so touching to see the look on their faces when they could hear for the first time. It made me realize how fortunate we are to have our hearing… After this event I signed and met more fans in the Convention center and that was the last of the Fest. New pictures coming soon! Thank you everyone for making CMA Music Fest awesome!!! See ya next year ;-)

If you get a chance, pick up a copy of this weeks "Country Weekly".. I'm in the "Listen Up" section :-) yeaaaaaa!!

xoxo~ V


May 24, 2009 - Sunday 

Current mood:  thankful
Heyyy!! Everyone!
Just a quick update!  To say THANK YOU!! THANK YOU!!  THANK YOU!!!   My Music Video "Amazing"  is still playing on the  CMT channel.  This is Amazing!! and it is all because of you .... Thank you so much for believing in me.

Also,  My video"Amazing"  is still running in  the TOP 12 COUNTDOWN, called THE 12 PACK. This is the Fourth week and It is still holding on at  number 6!! Yahoo to all my friends and fans!! You are making it happen for me.........I t would be great to make it  to number 1,   but  I am very thankful to even be in the running... Please keep the votes strong. 

 Here is the link to CMT pure 12 pack count down.
 

If you have not seen my video on TV , just stop over to CMT.COM and you can check out the video and leave comments on my page or my message board.

Digital Rodeo is throwing me the largest Fan Party during CMA Music Fest:

At the Karma Lounge (Above Cadillac Ranch) on June 13th at 2PM. It all free for my friends, Neighbors and fans.  So, Please stop by for a private acoustic show, food, drinks, and exclusive CD and other merchandise...............

I hope to see you all there.

xoxo~V
May 3, 2009 - Sunday 

To all my neighbors, friends, fans, teachers and family,


You have chosen to join me on my journey to live my dream. It doesn't matter if you're my friend from Myspace, neighbor from digital rodeo, member of my CMT page, friend on facebook, follow me on twitter, read my newsletters, talk to me at a concert or just simply listen to my music anonymously.  "You are why, I am who, I am today".


I started my Myspace page back in 2005 and never imaged all of this would ever happen. I was so excited to just be able to put my music up on the internet and reach out to people with it. Never did I beleive it would result in this. All of your support is so amazing and I really could not do any of this with out you. Before I started my Myspace I was so nervous to sing infront of people. I would turn around and face the wall when ever I sang. (haha. yea...) Because of your support and encouragement you have given me uncommon confidence and courage to keep striving for my dream.

I have heard from you about your ups and downs, your dreams, your music, your relationship troubles, daily school work struggles, and in the midst of all this you have helped me to become me. What I have learned about life from all of you is to seize it, magnify it, glorify it and be grateful for all the gifts I'm blessed with.


Your loyalty and support is amazing and means more then words can say. I could not have done it without each and everyone of you!!!!

Thank you thank you thank you from the bottom of my heart.... <3
xoxo~ V


April 29, 2009 - Wednesday 
Hey hey hey!!! The new version of my music video for "Amazing" is now up on CMT.com!!!

This is so cool. CMT is awesome!! Please check out the music video and let all your friends know too!! If I get enough plays then I'll be on TV. wooot woooot!! ;-)


Click to watch Veronica Ballestrini, Amazing.


Copy the code below to share the banner:



Thank you thank you thank you
Love you all
xoxo~ V
April 28, 2009 - Tuesday 
Hey hey hey. I posted a new song "Pray When It Rains" up on my Digital Rodeo page.. This song is off my new album which is due out in June 2009!!

Many times people only pray when it's raining and when things are going bad... But we should really pray all the time, even when it's sunny. ;-)

Listen to the new song by going to:
www.digitalrodeo.com/veronicaballestrini

xoxo~ V
April 16, 2009 - Thursday 

Hello hello hello!! You may have noticed my music video for "Amazing" has come down off my Myspace and Youtube! But it's all good :-)... The new updated video for "Amazing" will premier on CMT.com shortly!!! eeek! All the meetings went great today and I am really excited about all the cool things happening :-) I will have an artist page on GAC.com and CMT.com, which is so cool! I will let you know more details as soon as possible ;-).. Next week we are headed up to Connecticut (my home state) to shoot a documentry/EPK (Directed by Glenn Sweitzer)! We'll be shooting all around my hometown, the highschool I went to, shows, interviews, hanging out with my friends,  and just basically where I came from and who I am... On April 23rd we start my first ever RADIO TOUR!! promoting my single "Amazing" which goes to radio May 11th!!

Ohhhh, TWEET TWEET! I just got a Twitter account! so FOLLOW ME! and keep up with what I'm up to ---> It's www.twitter.com/veronicabal

I hope to see you sooon <3

God bless
xoxo~ V

P.S. We've teamed up with Digital Rodeo and have an awesome contest going on!!! You could win a chance to come to the CMA Music Festival!! Just go to: www.digitalrodeo.com/veronicaballestrini  for details