Archive for September, 2010

Monday Inspirations

Monday, September 20th, 2010

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Monday InspirationsHere are 3 weekly ideas for song lyric, poems, instrumental titles, photos, video, short story or anything they inspire you to create.  Use the title if you like & make something!  It is yours for free.  A gift.  :-)

153.  Make Me Purr
When you pet a contented kitty, it will make a purring sound.  We associate the word purr, with a happy kitty.  Make Me Purr because I want to be a happy kitty too!

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154.  Tease Me As You Undress
We were talking about flirting and teasing and how the French have the art of the strip tease down to a - tee!  You know the famous song lyric…”But you can leave your hat on…”  Well, Tease Me As You Undress, we’ll figure out the rest+

155.  WAVEY
Let’s do a wave!  Put your arms up and stand up, then put your arms down and sit down = all around the stadium.  There is a guy on the Woodstock documentary calls himself Wavey Gravey.  WAVEY is when something moves from end to end.  A good word for music.  Music is WAVEY.

Monday Inspirations

Monday, September 13th, 2010

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Monday InspirationsHere are 3 weekly ideas for song lyric, poems, instrumental titles, photos, video, short story or anything they inspire you to create.  Use the title if you like & make something!  It is yours for free.  A gift.  :-)

150.  The Blank Stare
We’ve all been talking to someone and noticed they had The Blank Stare on their face - like they were a million miles away.  The Blank Stare is all we can perceive while they float away on a tangent of thought.

151.  Someone To Hold
In the early dawn I want Someone To Hold
When the gale blows I want Someone To Hold
In the noon day sunlight I want Someone To Hold
When spring buds and autumn falls I want Someone To Hold
At 3 a.m., in a quiet room I want Someone To Hold
In the glow of holiday snow I want Someone To Hold
When the year turns I want Someone To Hold

152.  Volume UP!
Volume UP!  Volume UP!  Volume UP!
Are we ready?  1, 2, 3, 4 - bing bang bowella chew wop, bowella chew wop with the Volume UP!  I come over to you and take your hand, eye to eye … Let’s do it!  Are we ready?  Dance baby dance.  Volume UP!

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Make Your Music Stand Out - Re-post

Monday, September 13th, 2010

5 Tips To Make Your Music Stand Out From The Noise

By Jay Frank

Jay FrankThe Internet probably looks like a big, sprawling competitive mess to a new musician.  Is it virtually impossible to break through when it’s barely physically possible to hear 5% of all music that’s released each week?  It actually is, but you better pay close attention.  If you think the genius of your music is the only guiding force, think again.  So many factors guide the listener to your song and your talents are likely the last.  Unless you want to be the proverbial tree falling in the forest, here are five quick, handy tips to follow:

  1. Make your song intros 7 seconds or less.

The attention span of the modern consumer is shorter than ever.  Distractions are everywhere and the competition has never been greater.  Engage someone quick or risk them moving on.  The data backs this up. Thankfully, most listeners discover songs at the same point: the beginning.  Play into that and make the first 10 seconds of your song the most important.  Your musical career truly depends on it.

2. Figure out how to get people to listen more than once.

So you made a very impactful song that engaged your listeners.  Congratulations.  That’s enough to make an impact on someone for cocktail party chatter.  But one tenet that has held true for years is that it takes 5 to 7 listens for someone to engage heavily enough to sing the song - let alone purchase it.  If you can’t come up with engaging ways to get multiple listens, that first listen was mostly for naught.

3. Proliferate your music everywhere you can.

The industry seems to have forgotten and/or ignored the fact that music sold the most when it was in more distribution outlets.  Now, so much attention is paid to the three biggest retailers and exposure platforms that everything else is forgotten.  You need to strike anywhere your potential listener resides.  Free vs. paid and stream vs. download is irrelevant.  If you’re invisible, you don’t exist.  Get your music up everywhere you can.

4. Make sure you can find your music in search results.

Did you try searching for your band’s name before you named your band?  What’s your competition there?  When you named the song, did you see what else is up in competition for those same words?  How about other songs?  With so much clutter out there, you have to be found easily.  If you can’t easily make it to the top 3 search results, then change your name or song title so that your music can be found.

5. Make more music more often.

So you impacted, they listened to the song more than once, saw you everywhere and found you easily.  They “liked” you on Facebook. Now you have a fan!  Want to keep them around?  Don’t milk your song to death.  Focus on your fans and keep giving them music.  Don’t give them an excuse to go to another artist as a fan.  You’re not as unique as you think you are.  Make sure the fan pays attention to you and not someone else, and you’ll be well on your way to a successful career as a musician.

Jay Frank is the author of FutureHitDNA and is the SVP of Music Strategy at CMT. Jay has held senior management positions at Yahoo! Music and The Box Music Network.

Call For Music - Women’s Clothing Ad

Saturday, September 4th, 2010

Music Dealers.com has posted 2 new calls both for Women’s Apparell.  Here’s one:  
Due Date:

09/06/2010 - 6:00pm

TV Commercial - Womens Apparel

Music Call: 

Client is looking to license music for an upcoming TV commercial. The music should have high energy in a poppy-indie-dance vein. Something to really push the spot forward. Not too electro or Hip-hop. Touches of those elements are OK. Lyric content could be anything about what a girl wants, thinks about or something that could resonate with them. Anything really as long as it’s not offensive. The singer could be male or female.

Genre: 

Indie Pop

Emotion: 

Driving, Fun, Upbeat, Positive

Vocals/Instrumental: 

Vocal

Explicit Lyrics: 

No

Duration: 

Full Songs

Other Info: 

The songs should be hip and cutting edge! Nothing offensive!

Women Musicians Seize On Social Media - Re-post

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Control Your Image: Women Musicians Seize On Social MediaListen: to the story:

http://www.npr.org/blogs/therecord/2010/08/19/129300878/women-musicians-use-social-media-to-craft-their-image





Pink Twitter bird; Mito Habe-Evans / NPR

Mito Habe-Evans / NPRGiven that more women than men use social media, shouldn’t the Twitter bird be pink?

This story is part of Hey Ladies, our ongoing series of radio and online reports about women musicians working today. Read stories, get advice and discover music here.More women than men use social media, according to several studies. And more women musicians seem to be finding it a good way to connect with fans and sell records without having to resort to some of the old marketing cliches.If there is a poster child for the independent woman artist of today it might be Zoe Keating


The 38-year-old cellist comfortably supports her young son and husband by performing and selling her music.Keating is classically trained — though she has played with a rock band or two. Now she usually plays solo with a Macbook at her feet. Using a software program she wrote Keating creates interwoven loops of her music on the computer as she performs.She says the music industry didn’t know what to do with her. “When I first started out doing this and I approached record labels and managers and agents they all said, ‘Well, what you do is interesting, but what’s the story?’” she says. “‘We can’t figure it out. It’s complicated. And it seems kind of niche, and it doesn’t really seem like it would go anywhere.’”If Keating’s music wasn’t easily classified, then her look wasn’t right for the record companies either. “I do think it’s kind of harder for women to be noticed if they’re not young and sexy and hot,” says Keating. “And I don’t think I’m young and sexy and hot.”



 Keating is striking in a very unconventional way. She has a pile of red dreadlocks on top of her head and pale, almost translucent, skin. She’s a former Information Architect and made a living in the tech world before she became a full time musician.Zoe Keating; courtesy of the artist

courtesy of the artistZoe Keating filled out our questionnaire about the tribulations and achievements of women working in music right now. You can read her full responseas well as 700 more, at the Hey Ladies: Being A Woman Musician Today interactive.

“I think that social media is really, like, the only way for somebody like me to craft my image,” she says.And Keating has done it masterfully. She has more than 1.3 million followers on Twitter, which she adopted early on. She tweets about everything from how best to get her cello on a plane, to where she’s playing next, and how much she loves the view from a cabin in Colorado.“That’s what fans want now,” says Keating. “The want to know you.”Keating’s fans pushed her most recent album Into the Trees to number seven on the Billboard Classical charts — and that’s without any formal publicity.Older musicians are tapping social media too.


In 1987 Suzanne Vega hit the top of the international charts with “Luka” off her second album Solitude Standing. Although many of Vega’s subsequent albums got good reviews, she never had that kind hit again. Vega was dropped by two record labels.“The idea of putting out a new album with nobody to release it was disturbing to me,” says Vega.


Vega began to use social media to gather up her fan base. She assembled more than thirty thousand friends on Facebook and has more than 800,000 views on her MySpace page. She is also rerecording and releasing — on her own label — all of her old material so that she can reap the performance royalties. Whereas the information on her old albums was devoted to her dark lyrics, with social media Vega’s fans can see more of her.


“Because what I do through Twitter, and what I do through the Facebook and even sometimes the blogs is I’m much more able to show off my sense of humor and my personality than just say the lyrics which tend to be very serious,” Vega says.Vega has a list of the people who follow her and respond to her postings. “


The idea that there could be someone in Turkey, for example, who was a fan that I didn’t know that could write to me directly and when I when to perform in Turkey she would actually be there at the shows — that was amazing to me.”


But it isn’t so surprising to Linda Abraham, an analyst at Comscore who did a study of how men and women use social media. Comscore tracks online behavior. The study found that 56 percent of women say they use the Internet to stay in touch with people compared with only 46 percent of men. In general women spend more time online too. And that was true not matter what country Comscore studied.“You often find one pattern of behavior in one part of the world and a different pattern of behavior in another part of the world,” she says. 


“But the study that we did with regard to social media specifically — regardless of the cultural differences — this tendency for women to be more social on the internet superseded those cultural differences.”But hearing a marketing person talk about social media is exactly what worries Rebecca Gates. In the old times Gates was one half of the Spinanes.


“Now you will have a Facebook page and you will have a Friendster page and a Posterious and on and on,” she says. “I’m kind of like, ‘Oh, dude.’ I thought this was the new — this was the new times.


When the Spinanes hit almost 20 years ago they were sold as unusual combination of chic singer and guitarist, and a drummer. Thanks to social media Gates can fill out the image. “I’m getting a chance to present a lot more well-rounded and sort of faceted persona.”


Or as Keating put it, for a lot of women the only way to move forward is to make your own path, get out your machete and cut your way through. Or click your way through.

UKULELE ~ Re-post

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

  • guardian.co.uk, ..Tuesday 17 August 2010 15.19 BST..
  • Article history

    ..Tiny TimDuke of uke … Tiny Tim tries to work his magic on an unconvinced Dick Martin. Photograph: Corbis/Bettmann..

    What is it? A tiny, four-stringed guitar that can look comical or cute when strummed, first popularised in early 21st-century Hawaiian music.

    Who uses it? Although there are still some leading Hawaiian ukulele players, such as Jake Shimabukuro and Ohta-san, by the 1920s the ukulele had become most associated with music hall and vaudeville. Uke-shredder Roy Smeck, master Disney tunesmith Cliff “Ukulele Ike” Edwards and George Formby all made the instrument a household name. It was perhaps his obsession with vaudeville and outsider uke legend Tiny Tim that attracted influential indie songwriter Stephin Merrittto the instrument, and recently the uke has found a firm home in a kind of camp, droll Magnetic Fields-indebted indie pop, courtesy of the Bobby McGee’sJens LekmanAllo Darlin’Patrick Wolfthe Half Sisters,Herman DuneUni & Her Ukulele, and Darren Hayman.

    The instrument’s inherent comic potential means that it’s still par for the course in musical comedy, too. Some of which, like the the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain, is mildly amusing, but most of it, frankly, isnot. Here’s a Spotify playlist.

    How does it work? Ukuleles come in four flavours: soprano, concert, tenor and baritone. The most common tuning is C – so the strings are tuned G, C, E, A – although the slack-key open tunings particular to Hawaiian music are sometimes also used. Here’s an online tutorial:

    ..


    Where does it come from? It’s actually from Portugal. Some Portugese instrument-makers had been working on a variant of the cavaquinhobefore they emigrated to Hawaii in the 1880s, where their ukuleles became a staple of immigrant street parties.

    Why is it classic? It’s a tricky one. Jens Lekman referred to the ukulele as “an emasculated guitar”, which makes a good case for it as a guitar stripped of the machismo and phallic connotations of the six-string. Hawaiian and ragtime-style ukulele has a dainty, nimble sound that’s softer than a mandolin and sweeter than a banjo. But, as with theglockenspiel and recorder, there is a bit of a cringey, twee faux-naivety now attached to the uke.

    What is the best ever ukulele song? Tip Toe Thru the Tulips With Me by Tiny Tim is still great – but supposedly disliked enormously in serious ukulele circles.

    ..


    Five facts and things
    Although arguably one of the figures who helped popularise the ukulele in modern indie pop, Jens Lekman later turned on the four-string, saying the ukulele had “become another beardo instrument” and insisting “if there’s two things I will never do, it would be grow a beard and pick up the uke again”.

    The Hawaiian locals were so impressed by the new Portugese guitars in the late 19th century that King David Kalakaua was moved to make the ukulele pretty much the official instrument of Hawaii. The name “ukulele” is a Hawaiian portmanteau that can translated as “jumping flea” or “the gift that came here”.

    George Harrison became a big aficionado of the uke while in the Beatles. His obsession must have rubbed off on bandmate Paul McCartney, who later played pseudonymously credited ukulele on the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band’s I’m the Urban Spaceman.

    Although George Formby would refer to it as a ukulele, the instrument he mostly played was actually a banjolele – a kind of uke/banjo hybrid.

    In 1960s Canada, a teacher named J Chalmers Doane implemented a new school programme that used the ukulele as the primary teaching instrument in music classes. Ukuleles were inexpensive, child-sized, and fairly easy to get to grips with – making them an equivalent to how recorders and glockenspiels were introduced into school music rooms in the UK.

     

     

    Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2010/aug/17/ukulele

  • How Many Hours/Day Should I Practice My Guitar?

    Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

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    “How many hours/day should I practice my guitar?”

    This is a very important question if you want to learn not just guitar but anything really.
    If you ask around, people will advise you that exercising at the very least four hours/day is the best way to learn to play guitar fast. Well, a lot of comments could be made to this statement.

    First, playing the guitar involves many skills that need to be practiced separately. Here are a few:

        * Right hand exercises (finger/plectrum picking, rhythm)
        * Left hand (practicing chord changes, scales, arpeggios etc…)
        * Reading
        * Sight Singing
        * Ear Training
        * Improvisation

    These are just a few aspects of guitar playing of course but each of them demands conscious attention in order to be mastered.

    So, what do you do? Do you spend hours and hours practicing each specific skill, before
    moving to the next one?  Do that and you will soon get completely bored only by the idea of going to your practice room!

    What you can actually do is to choose to practice 3 times a week. In my experience, 3 hours/session are plenty.

    Here’s what I like doing. I work on 2 or 3 skills that I want to develop. For example:
        * Chord changes
        * Rhythmic patterns
        * Improvisation on a particular song that I decided to add to my repertoire

    That’s lots, believe me! Once I have decided the topics, I divide my practicing time into 3 (e.g., 45 minutes on each topic/skill). I also take breaks, drink some tea, stretch etc…every 20-30 minutes.  In doing so, you give your brain the opportunity to work on as many as skills as possible, skills that are necessary to work together during performance.

    The last, and perhaps, most important step, is to spend the last 20-30 minutes practicing just for the fun of it. With no attachment whatsoever to the outcome. In doing so, you’ll relax, feel free of making mistakes and guess what…you’ll practice playing out of your intuition, with no rules to observe…

    This, altogether, will leave in your brain a feeling of pleasure that will motivate you to start your next practicing session. Practicing even complicated tasks will become fun-
    and not a chore…

    So, to summarize…

    Go to your practice room, spend only a few minutes practicing one single skill and then stop. After a few minutes, a good cup of coffee and some stretching, start working on something else…you will soon build up a standard practicing schedule that will take your guitar playing to the next level in no time.
    This is what I personally do. As with any advice you decide to take on board in life, you might want to adapt my approach to your particular situation. Bear in mind that practicing your guitar should always be fun and something to look forward to each and every day. So let go of your frustrations if you relize you need more practicing sessions in order to master a specific skill. It will happen, I promise.

    Francesco

    Also visit: www.topguitarlessonsreviewed.blogspot.com

    http://www.topguitarlessonsreviewed.com