Posts Tagged ‘artists’

Post Your Own Wikipedia Page - All Artists

Saturday, June 13th, 2009

Tuesday, June 09, 2009 


Category: Music

From Bob Lefsetz letter:

There’s an ultimately boring article on Wikipedia in today’s “New York Times”. For those scoring at home, the article focuses on editing, with the primary controversial topic being Scientology.

I’ll leave the details out, if you’re that interested, you can click through. But what got me to write this was the sidebar, wherein the genre of Panic At The Disco was delineated to be one of the controversial topics.

I’m thinking Panic At The Disco’s fifteen minutes of fame are just about up, but a synapse fired when I was reading this article and I realized, Wikipedia is just like Google, a dominant resource.

I was sitting in the audience at the L.A. Acoustic Music Festival enraptured by Natalie MacMaster and I started to wonder, what exactly is her story?

I didn’t go to her website, which probably wouldn’t render too well on my BlackBerry anyway, I Googled her Wikipedia site and clicked through and started reading.

Turns out she does 250 dates a year. Fascinating, since she just had a baby in February and already has two other kids… When is she home?

And the wealth of information on Bruce Cockburn was truly exhaustive. Drilling down to his honorary doctorates… And I didn’t even know that Jimmy Buffett did Cockburn songs!

If you go to the act’s website, you get Flash animation, you get hyped, you get sold. Sure, you might be able to listen to some music, but the band’s site is not a good place for basic information. You end up with a history that reads like a corporate bio and tour dates and maybe a message board. Whereas when you go to Wikipedia, the site loads just about as fast as Google and you get the raw information.

In other words, make sure your act has a Wikipedia entry!

Unless you want to build mystery. Then you should have neither a Wikipedia page NOR a website. But that twentieth century game is rarely played anymore. Acts complain they can’t break through, not that their privacy is in jeopardy. Therefore, when you launch a new act, you should create a Wikipedia entry!

If the act is brand new, keep the entry limited. If the entry doesn’t fit the act’s status, it ends up looking like hype and it is ignored. If you’re creating your own Wikipedia entry, think of it as a true encyclopedia essay. They might have a page on the Beatles, but Haircut 100 would get just a few lines. But at least online, every act is entitled to an entry!

If you’re lucky, you’ll become big enough that fans will start adding and changing your Wikpedia page. Don’t worry about accuracy. Mistakes make it look like you didn’t write it, they make fans feel superior, wanting to make corrections or just feeling closer to the band than those editing entries. The key is to have a presence, a starting point, where a newbie can get up to speed, can find out who you are and begin his fandom.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/08/technology/internet/08link.html?ref=business

Source: http://lefsetz.com/wordpress/

UK Government Funds Music Rehearsals

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009


Category: Music

Government funds music rehearsals

The Beatles

The Beatles played in Knotty Ash during their rise to fame

Budding British bands are being offered the chance to pursue their musical dreams in new rehearsal spaces opened by the government.


The first has been unveiled in Knotty Ash Youth Centre in Liverpool, where The Beatles played in 1962.

Others will follow in Bristol, Norfolk, Hastings, St Austell in Cornwall and Washington in Tyne and Wear.

Culture Secretary Andy Burnham said they were located in deprived areas that had few other youth facilities.

“These fully-equipped spaces will make a big difference for young people who are looking for somewhere to practise, spend time and find an outlet for their creative skills,” he said.

‘Valuable skills’

The scheme is being co-ordinated by former Undertones singer Feargal Sharkey, who is now head of music industry body UK Music.

“The benefits stack up socially, economically and culturally - and hopefully some of those young people will pick up valuable skills and go on to work in one of our fantastic creative industries,” he said.

“The Knotty Ash facility will plug directly into Liverpool’s thriving music scene and local music business - encouraging creativity, bringing the community together and benefiting a new generation of musicians.”

A total of 10 new rehearsal spaces are due to open by the end of the year using £500,000 of government money. Locations are also being sought in Manchester, Nottingham and Leicester.

Source:  BBC News

Ontario Proposes New Law For Online Ticket Sales

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009


Category: Music

The Ontario government took aim yesterday at U.S. entertainment giant Ticketmaster by introducing a new law that would block companies from charging scalpers’ prices for tickets to concerts and sporting events on resale websites they own.

The proposed legislation follows an uproar over Ticketmaster’s relationship with a subsidiary ticket resale website, TicketsNow.com, that allows people to sell tickets above face value. A class-action lawsuit filed in February alleges that Ticketmaster diverts tickets to TicketsNow to sell them for a higher price.

Attorney-General Chris Bentley said yesterday that he has heard “loud and clear” from consumers in Ontario that they are not getting fair access to tickets for their favourite events. What the legislation would do, he said, is make it illegal for primary and secondary ticket sellers owned by the same corporate entity to sell tickets to the same events at higher prices.

“It’s the foundation for fairness,” Bentley said at a news conference.

“There’s a perception out there that if you benefit from both sides of the equation there’s not only a perception but a real concern about fair access to tickets.”

Individuals could be fined up to $5,000, companies up to $50,000 for breaking the proposed rules.

Ticketmaster could not be reached for comment.

But the proposed legislation would do nothing to stop brokers and agents corporately unrelated to Ticketmaster from reselling tickets at inflated prices on TicketsNow. Officials at Ticketmaster have said TicketsNow is open to anyone reselling tickets. They have also said TicketsNow is being singled out for the widespread practice of reselling tickets above face value.

New Democrat MPP Peter Kormos said the legislation does not go far enough. Ontario already has anti-scalping laws on the books, but these are rarely enforced, he said.

What the government should do, he said, is put a cap on the fee resellers charge, say at 6 per cent of the face value of a ticket. “The legislation will do nothing to protect consumers from being ripped off by corporate scalpers,” he said.

Artists from Bruce Springsteen to Charley Pride have lashed out at TicketsNow and other online resale sites for charging fans inflated prices for concert tickets.

Bob Runciman, interim leader of the Progressive Conservatives, said his party will likely support the legislation but said it’s unfortunate that Premier Dalton McGuinty and his government appeared to be in the dark on this matter.

“It had to be left to Bruce Springsteen to bring this to his attention,” he said.

Bentley said he drafted new legislation after officials at Ticketmaster declined his request to follow practices already in place in Alberta and Manitoba that bar the company from benefiting in the resale of tickets.

“They would not take that approach in Ontario,” he said.

The last time Bentley bought concert tickets was for a Britney Spears concert. But he quickly pointed out they were for his daughters, now 22 and 24, and that he did not attend.

Source: Globe & Mail

Resources For Your Band - from Music Promotion Newsletter

Monday, April 27th, 2009

j02867393.gifThis is a music oriented newsletter filled with great stuff.  Here’s the link for the whole story:

http://www.bigmeteor.com/newsletter/apr2009.shtml 

SECTION FIVE: HELPFUL RESOURCES FOR YOUR BAND

5.1 RESOURCES - GENERAL

SoundSpar
Chris contact@soundspar.com
www.soundspar.com
A new battle of the bands website for unsigned artists. Sign up free today!

Music BC
#530-425 Carrall St., Vancouver, BC V6B 6E3
PH: 604-873-1914 FX: 604-873-9686
http://www.musicbc.org
A non-profit society dedicated to providing information, education, funding, advocacy, awareness and networking opportunities to nurture, develop and promote the spirit, growth, and sustainability of the BC Music community.

Bandit A&R Newsletter
68-70 Lugley St., Newport, PO30 5ET UK
PH: +44-1983-524110
John bandit.icb@aweber.com
http://www.banditnewsletter.com
Helping ambitious bands target their demos to labels, publishers etc.

The Pitch - Advice From A Pro

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

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Here is an article from Ruth Ratny’s ReelChicago e-newsletter.  What gets me is the claim - networks are dead.  The Internet is the new media outlet.  WOW!  And there’s lots of Internet.  Lots of people/companies/Indie projects needing songs. 

We need a group of go-to songwriters who can create song material quickly.  Songwriters/artists with radio quality recording equipment that can lay vocal tracks over backing tracks in hours.  If that’s you, shoot us an e-mail and we’ll chat.  ~ R

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 ‘Always accept a beverage when offered’
Laurie Scheer advises on how to ace a pitch session

Laurie Scheer connects the Heartland to Hollywood

There will be thousands of visual media outlets in the next few years, said “media goddess” Laurie Scheer, talking to filmmakers eager to learn first-hand from this Hollywood insider in our midst at last Saturday’s IFP conference

With the proliferation of outlets providing so many opportunities to sell content, “you must think beyond the traditional 60- to 90-minute format,” she asserted.

“Networks are dead,” she proclaimed. “You must think online, because that’s where it’s going to be.”

Scheer, who has been teaching at Flashpoint Academy this year, is preaching the gospel of multiplatforms — matching content ideas with multiple outlet opportunities in order to sell your project.

“Know that your content is needed,” she said. “Know that whatever cable show is doing well, say on the Discovery Channel, be assured the producers are looking for companion pieces.”

In order to pitch like a pro, you have to know what’s going on in the ever-changing marketplace, Scheer’s strongest advice is to research.

“It’s all there on the internet. Read the weekend box office grosses, learn who the leaders are, what topics or stories are selling right now,” she urged. “Your idea must resonate with the current culture.” A good place to look for trend is, in all places, the Wall Street Journal.

The reason for all this homework? “So you won’t look like an idiot when you get a chance to pitch.”

And when you are in the producer’s office pitching your idea, “Present yourself as the only one who could be attached to this project. You’re the expert.

“Tell them what your involvement in the production will be. Do you want to sell the idea? Direct, produce? You know what you know, and they know you know what you want.”

Your pitch must be down pat,” she said. “You must speak with authority, anticipate questions about the project and have different versions of your pitch ready.”

In addition, at the session you will need a one page synopsis and a short 3-5-minute trailer on what your show is about.

Scheer then offered a piece of advice you don’t get in books. “When offered a beverage, take it. Then be very specific about how you want it. ‘I’ll take a decaf latte with soy milk,’” as a way to display your confidence.

Scheer’s advice comes from many years in the forefront of cable programming. She was VP/programming for WE Women’s Entertainment, and developed and produced shows for other cable companies.

Scheer is the pitching coach at NATPE’s convention and L.A. TV festival and will speak at the upcoming NAB on multi-platform and digital marketing.

In addition to teaching at high level colleges, she is a mainstay of Media Bistro seminars. You can catch Scheer in action May 6 at a Media Bistro seminar on “How to Write for Online,” at the Theatre Building, 7-10 p.m. See mediabistro.com/courses/cache/instr176.asp. —Ruth L Ratny

Walking in This World - The Practical Art of Creativity - By Julia Cameron -Excerpt

Friday, March 20th, 2009

running-from-backside.jpg

“One of my favorite ways to talk with friends is to walk with them.  I love being engaged with the larger world and with each other.  I love having my thought interrupted by the raven sailing in to land on a stone wall.  I love the slow drift of autumn leaves, of snowflakes, of apple blossoms - each in season.  Walking and talking humanize my life, draw it to an ancient and comforting scale.  We live as we move, a step at a time, and there is something in gentle walking that reminds me of how I must live if I am to savor this life that I have been given.”  

iTunes Streaming Service Rumored

Friday, March 6th, 2009

j0286739.gif

Thursday, February 12, 2009 


Category: Music

Apple is believed to be wrapping up a new feature in iTunes 8 that will allow
users to stream their iTunes video purchases directly from the company’s servers
for playback anywhere, anytime without eating up local storage.

Dubbed iTunes Replay, the service would allow iTunes shoppers to build out
their digital video collection without worrying about the space needed to store
the often hefty media files. It’s unclear whether Apple plans to charge for the
service, which is said to support both iTunes Movie and TV show purchases.

One of the main complaints users have with video purchases on iTunes is that
they are forced to either throw away their files after watching them, or find a
place to store the large files either on their hard drive or by burning them to
DVDs. By storing their video content for them and allowing users to stream it
for viewing as often as they want, Apple would essentially be offering a media
center alternative.

iTunes Reply on other devices

The iTunes Replay service could also improve the experience of the company’s
Apple TV set top box, allowing users to stream purchased media directly from
Apple’s servers without ever syncing or copying files between Apple TV and a
computer running iTunes, and without filling up the devices’ limited hard drive
space, which currently tops out at 160 GB.

The ability to stream purchased content directly would also benefit users of
mobile devices such as the iPhone and iPod touch, which have an even greater
limit on local storage capacity but already have the ability to stream QuickTime
content directly over the air.

Amazon’s Video on Demand (formerly known as UnBox) and the Instant Watch
service from Netflix already provide video streaming, but both involve DRM
hurdles erected by the studios that complicate the experience, as they are
typically viewed through a web browser (although Amazon has an appliance
partner deal with Tivo, and Netflix has partnered with Roku and the Xbox 360).

Apple’s mobile devices, iTunes and Apple TV already accommodate the DRM
protection the studios demand for playback of their content, meaning that no
new layers of complication are necessary. Additionally, Apple has a wider selection
of video content to choose from in iTunes.

The disadvantage to streaming video content rather than playing it from a
downloaded file is that users will need to maintain high quality Internet bandwidth
throughout playback, or face interruption as the stream is buffered. Streaming
playback of HD content also typically requires better than DSL (1.5 Mbps) service.

If Apple continues to offer both downloads as well as streaming video on demand,
it will remain differentiated from streaming-only services like Netflix Watch Instantly
in that users on a slower Internet connection will be able to download HD titles in
advance and watch them via local playback, or even unplug their Apple TV and bring
it and their downloaded content to a location without Internet service for viewing.

Apple gearing up for new streaming traffic

iTunes Replay would arrive on the heels of last month’s report that Apple has
shifted its online content delivery strategy to include a provider in Limelight
Networks, joining longtime Apple partner Akamai Technologies. Having two
different providers could help greatly optimize the delivery of streaming
content to the millions of customers who use iTunes.

Frost & Sullivan analyst Dan Rayburn connected the change to Apple’s
booming digital download business, which he said is growing at a “crazy” rate.

“We already know that no CDN [content delivery network] has unlimited
capacity and can only handle so much traffic at any given time,” Rayburn
said. “If you are Apple, using more than one CDN is just smart business.”

Source: http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/09/02/11/apple_prepping_itunes_replay_
on_demand_video_service.html

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Video is here to stay.  Shoot your band or yourself performing at
as many venues as you can.  These videos have marketing potential. 
We are signing videos into our new video catalog so contact us if
you have some.  We’d love to view your work.

The Future Of Music

Thursday, March 5th, 2009

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The Future: letter from Bob Lefsetz

There’s too much music made by too many people and performers are frustrated they’re broke and listeners are completely overwhelmed. What’s going to happen?

Hit music will survive. Even if the definition of a hit is a shadow of its former self. There won’t be as many sales, few people will even be aware of the track and the act will not be able to tour, or, if so, very briefly (did you catch the gross for the Jonas Brothers movie…ALREADY has-beens?)

Making it is so difficult that most “musicians” give up very early in the process. It’s easy to write and record a song and distribute it. Everything that was difficult yesterday is easy today. You just fire up GarageBand, select some loops, create a track and upload the result to MySpace and you’re an “artist”!

Well, no. You’re someone who’s recorded a track that most people don’t care about, probably because it sucks. But what if it’s good?

It almost definitely isn’t. But, if it were, most people STILL wouldn’t care, because they’re not aware of it. So, we’ve got two halves of the pie, quality and awareness.

Let’s start with quality. You can be a supernova like Picasso, incredibly good from the start. But it’s almost impossible. Usually you’ve got to experiment, practice, go down the road to dead ends until you finally come up with something good. And most people don’t have the patience for this process. Everybody wants instant fame. And instant riches. And it’s easier than ever to be instantly famous, but it doesn’t pay well. You can be on a reality TV show and be broke and working as a waitress. Furthermore, fame doesn’t possess the ogle value it used to. We make fun of the famous. As for riches…they’re almost unreachable. Which is why most “artists” give up.

It was easier in the nineties. The formula was simple. If you were incredibly cute or beautiful you got a record label to sign you and put a ton of money behind you, filming an expensive video for ubiquitous airplay on MTV and paying radio stations to play your record. The system was easy to figure out. Even though there was a winnowing process, which frequently had little to do with musical talent. Today? If you can get a label interested, they want to pay less and own more and success is a fraction of what it once was. Which is why if you want to be rich and famous you start a Website. Unless you’re truly a musician.

A true musician HAS to play. The money is secondary. As is fame. Sure, you want both, but you’ve got no choice. And now, with the field separated so clearly between the wannabes and the true devotees, we can start to see the future of the music industry. Those who see themselves as musicians are going to practice and play for Malcolm Gladwell’s 10,000 hours, building an audience all along the way, and eventually a great portion of the rest of the public is going to wake up and pay attention.

Mutt Lange started off doing sound-alike records. Reg Dwight recorded demos. So many of the stars of yore paid incredible dues. So when they were finally foisted upon the marketplace we were stunned by their talent. “Your Song”? A classic still performed today. A Jonas Brothers track? That’s an exercise in finance, based on marketing. Just like no one wants Hanson anymore, in a few years the Jonas Brothers will be a nostalgia item that does a fraction of their present business. The boys have got experience in promotion, in acting, but in music? Their musical history is very brief, they’ve got very little in the way of chops. Rather than practicing in their basement, they’re busy performing in throwaway Disney pics.

You don’t have to be thirty to get enough experience. Those piano lessons your parents make you take count. As do all those rehearsals in the aforementioned basement. And no matter how good your musical skills, performing is a separate talent completely. Like an NBA player with enough games under his belt not to choke in the playoffs, you’ve got to perform enough to be able to hit every note and keep the audience in the palm of your hand. So when people drag their friends to your show, they’re mesmerized.

Everything you hated is essentially gone. Looks-based music. Formulaic radio. Usual suspect writers and producers. They all still exist, but suddenly they’re the sideshow. The real money is in the bands that play live. But people really only want to see the dinosaurs in quantity, because they’ve been at it so long that they’ve not only got a catalog of great tunes, they’re great on stage.

Walk into the wilderness with me. If you believe in yourself, you’re never going to give up, you’re going to play until you make it. And believe me, if you put in all that time and no one is paying attention you will give up, that life is just too frustrating. But if you’ve got talent, you’ll see signposts along the way, enough positive feedback to keep you going.

So, maybe we’ll have a vibrant music scene in the future. When the old game plays down to nothing (and Terra Firma just wrote down their EMI investment), and the new music-based acts have enough hours/time/practice/performance under their belt to gain a head of steam. Instead of being worked on a track by a street-teamer looking to get ahead, a true friend will hip you to something that blows your mind to the point where you’ll have to tell everybody else you know.

The opportunities are not only in playing, there are giant holes in infrastructure as well. These new acts need managers. Organizations akin to labels to run their businesses. Even concert promoters to believe in them and showcase them live. None of the old farts want anything to do with these developing acts, because the payday is so far away, and a trickle at first.

We could be on the verge of a renaissance. But it could take five years to start to come clear and ten to burst into a supernova. Practice, practice, practice. If you’re truly good, you’ll find an audience. But remember, it won’t happen instantly and you’ll struggle as opposed to living the high life. You’ll be driving a rickety old van as opposed to flying first class. But when the money starts to come in, it will POUR!

Yes, you want to get paid. But even more, you want people who are touched by your original music, who NEED to go to the show. Which will be cheap. Because you’ll want a big tent, you’ll want to include everybody. That’s the Net ethos. The old boys are about being exclusionary, whereas today’s kids know everybody else in their entire town!

The audience is waiting. Listeners want something great to pop up on their radar, that they can believe in. It’s human nature. Think of listeners, not executives or gatekeepers. You can write the script. We’re ready for you!

Source:

Visit the archive: http://lefsetz.com/wordpress/
*********************************************
Everybody can write poetry.  They teach us that in grade school.  Anybody
can write a song.  

If that song releases some pent up emotion or demon or lovely feeling,
then writing the song is a good thing.  I do agree songwriters and
performing artists need to practice, practice, practice.  And I also
believe the cream rises to the top.
So keep at it and your songs will improve just as you performance skills
improve.
~ Roberta :-) 

 
 

Songs2Share Newsletter #3

Friday, February 27th, 2009

February 15, 2009

We’ve Found Our Specialty 

Songs2Share staff agree that we are now a song licensing company focused on LOVE SONGS!!!  Everybody sings them.  A lot of movies use them.  So we are seeking them out and will be known in the industry as the best love songwriters in town.  Check your song catalogs songwriters+  Everyone has a love song or two.  Visit the website, LOGIN and upload your love song submission.  We’ll e-mail you when we receive them.

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A Songs2Share Celebration

We just finished up negotiations with the Robert’s Gym Board, in Roberts Illinois = and they are very happy to have S2S hold our first concert in their building!   Mark your calendars for June 28, 2009.  We’ll be closing out the Roberts celebration of Ford County’s 150th birthday. We are also exploring the idea of small house jams.  We have a staffer who wants to do drumming circles and this will help keep her entertained!

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VIDEO

Apple is believed to be wrapping up a feature in iTunes 8 that will allow users to stream their iTunes video purchases directly from the company’s servers for playback anywhere without eating up your own storage space.  =  We’ve added video to our marketing program.  Videotape everything.  Buy a good camera.  Video is here and very saleable!
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New Songwriter ~ Annie Jackson is working a song with S2S.

Josh at Ji! Designs made us a great animated banner and is now working  a header/banner for our MySpace sites. 

Thanks and a hug to each one of you.   

SONGS2SHARE Is Here For You

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

SONGS2SHARE Is Here For You (Client E-mail)
Category:
Music

Occassionally I get mail from songwriters that move me in a very good way.  A special way.  Here is an e-mail exchange that moved me today.

Hello David, When I first started co-writing songs with Clare about 7 years ago, that first time I heard her piano to my words brought tears to my eyes as well.  I know that feeling.  I still get it today with some of the emotionally moving songs I co-write.  We recently finished a song titled HEAVEN inspired by my new daughter in law’s cousin’s unexpected passing.  The song is meant to be sung when a love is lost and upon hearing my lyric set to melody, it too brought a mist to my eyes.  Songs are powerful. 

Being able to help give you that same experience is a blessing for me.  Believe me, I have tears welling up right now as I read your e-mail.  I’ve had a few other composers be WOWed by other artists working their songs and then when they heard the song, it was like – an emotional experience for them.  Most songwriters I work with are early in their careers and hearing their song fine tuned is very exciting for them.

Thank you so much for this e-mail.  I am on the lyrics this weekend.  You did right to shorten the song.  I think it’s the perfect length for the message.  You may upload As Sparrows Fly at the S2S website anytime. 

Fondly,

Roberta Annicks

Founder

www.Songs2Share.com

A Song Licensing Company

From: david  [mailto:@hotmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, August 26, 2008 9:17 AM
To: Roberta
Subject: RE: Break My Heart

Hello,Roberta,I just don,t know what to say.When i heard the piano version of Guillhermo,s it brought tears to my eyes. He played it like he personally felt my emotions.No matter what happens now i am already touched,thank you so very much,
kind regards——David,—-by the way, your going to break my heart,was originally more than 5 minutes long,i felt i had to shorten
it.This made me sad,but sometimes it is for the best.   God bless.Is it too soon to send another song ie,As Sparrows Fly.





From: @sbcglobal.net
To:
@hotmail.com
Subject: Break My Heart
Date: Mon, 25 Aug 2008 21:40:29 -0500

Good Evening David, I’m listening to your Break My Heart and loving it a bit more each time.  I don’t expect you to do anything until I’ve had time to study the lyric.  Did you receive Schroeter’s piano accompaniment?  What did you think?

I love the intimacy of your vocal and guitar.  It’s great.  I also hear a dramatic sounding piano song as well.  We can go either way or both.  This is a great song. 

Fondly,

Roberta Annicks

Founder

www.Songs2Share.com

A Song Licensing Company

Currently watching :
The Newton Boys
Release date: 2002-05-21