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Dayna Evans: The Creator and the Critic (COLLAPSE BOARD)
Dayna Evans: The Creator and the Critic (COLLAPSE BOARD)
When there is an influx of content, criticism, information, details, write-ups, reviews, and analyses to be read, it can greatly impede the progress and expansion of art. Suddenly, without even realizing it, it is seven hours later, all you’ve done is read reviews, then you’ve read reviews of reviews, and your mind is so gone that the only thing you know you can do is to pick up that guitar and let out the emotion through your fingers and onto the fretboard, whaling on it until you’re revived enough to return to the digital world.
·collapseboard.com·
Dayna Evans: The Creator and the Critic (COLLAPSE BOARD)
Maura Johnston: What Happened to Music Writing This Year? (NPR)
Maura Johnston: What Happened to Music Writing This Year? (NPR)
In 2012, attempts to stay ahead of readers' innate desires resulted in a collective throwing up of hands. Think pieces and reviews still existed, but they were accompanied by other attempts to lure readers: Trifles like album titles and track listings treated as news items worthy of their own "stories" (to maximize the possibility of people tripping over their fingers and into a unique view); artists out of the public spotlight for more than six months unearthed as if they were creatures from another dimension; Tweets and other public statements by artists taken out of context and drained of their tone so as to stoke "WTF" headlines; superlative-laden lists not even aimed at expressing an opinion in count-downable form; posts with factual errors seen as hits to institutional credibility and opportunities to wring double the traffic out of one story.
·npr.org·
Maura Johnston: What Happened to Music Writing This Year? (NPR)
Eric Harvey: Uncool.
Eric Harvey: Uncool.
So the attempt to launch a from-scratch, celebrity-free outlet for longform music journalism has failed. Can a Kickstarter fail “spectacularly”? I don’t know. But reaching 17% of a proposed goal is something, for sure. This isn’t schadenfreude, though; there’s nothing in the Uncool idea to root against, per se. It’s more an opportunity to consider how campaigns like this, when undertaken in good faith, can underachieve. In brief: the idea may be modern, but the underlying realities are rooted in basic political economic realities that date back a very, very, long time.
·marathonpacks.tumblr.com·
Eric Harvey: Uncool.
Carles: How Indie Finally OFFICIALLY Died: The Broken Indie Machine. (Hipster Runoff)
Carles: How Indie Finally OFFICIALLY Died: The Broken Indie Machine. (Hipster Runoff)
Maybe the indie experiment only existed to create Grimes, the ultimate internet content producer who makes content directly aimed at internet viewers. She is the best example of ‘not being a band/musician’, but instead a ‘playing by the rules’ content generation machine that resonates with humans wasting time on the internet.
·hipsterrunoff.com·
Carles: How Indie Finally OFFICIALLY Died: The Broken Indie Machine. (Hipster Runoff)
The State Of Music: Part 47: Hawaii — Welwing (Choose My Music)
The State Of Music: Part 47: Hawaii — Welwing (Choose My Music)
Hawaii was always going to be a tricky state to cover, detached from the mainland by some 2000 miles its music scene is naturally very insular. Of course I found the usual Ukulele music, but in my eyes no one plays the Uke as wonderfully as Elsa Rae. I also found a lot of hip hop, reggae, a little bit of indie and of course my Hawaii representative Welwing. The first and only instrumental entry into the State Of Music project, Welwing is a one man show headed by Matthew McVickar, a mainland exile doing his thing in the Pacific Ocean.
·choosemymusic.org·
The State Of Music: Part 47: Hawaii — Welwing (Choose My Music)
Tim O'Reilly: Before Solving a Problem, Make Sure You've Got the Right Problem
Tim O'Reilly: Before Solving a Problem, Make Sure You've Got the Right Problem
I was pleased to see the measured tone of the White House response to the citizen petition about SOPA and PIPA, and yet I found myself profoundly disturbed by something that seems to me to go to the root of the problem in Washington: the failure to correctly diagnose the problem we are trying to solve, but instead to accept, seemingly uncritically, the claims of various interest groups.
·plus.google.com·
Tim O'Reilly: Before Solving a Problem, Make Sure You've Got the Right Problem
“Aaliyah would have been on Twitter. It is fucked up that she is dead.”: An Interview with Patricia Lockwood, Poet Laureate of Twitter (HTMLGIANT)
“Aaliyah would have been on Twitter. It is fucked up that she is dead.”: An Interview with Patricia Lockwood, Poet Laureate of Twitter (HTMLGIANT)
The art we like the best is generally the art that has the greatest access to us. So. This tweet has tremendous access to my feelings about Aaliyah. Aaliyah’s voice had tremendous access to me.
·htmlgiant.com·
“Aaliyah would have been on Twitter. It is fucked up that she is dead.”: An Interview with Patricia Lockwood, Poet Laureate of Twitter (HTMLGIANT)
Summer Time in Hell: Bowing Out
Summer Time in Hell: Bowing Out
“This is not something I entirely want to do or say. After this year has ended, Coma Cinema will end it’s run as a recording and performing entity.”
·summertimeinhell.tumblr.com·
Summer Time in Hell: Bowing Out
Topspin Media: Artist Spotlight: “IZ” Kamakawiwo’ole
Topspin Media: Artist Spotlight: “IZ” Kamakawiwo’ole
This success story is almost entirely the result of efforts by my friend Mike Pooley, who works at Mountain Apple Company and is about to go free-lance to offer his digital marketing services to the world! “These efforts are a great example of how an artist can capitalize on viral buzz. By linking to their free-download offer from the YouTube video, Mountain Apple Company harnessed the video’s exposure to increase their fan base. Their store is beautiful & well-designed, and their marketing efforts drove direct-to-fan sales around the globe.”
·topspinmedia.com·
Topspin Media: Artist Spotlight: “IZ” Kamakawiwo’ole
Topspin Media: Getting Practical: A Step-By-Step Guide to Building an Online Marketing Plan That Works
Topspin Media: Getting Practical: A Step-By-Step Guide to Building an Online Marketing Plan That Works
‘Ian Roger’s presentation from New Music Seminar Los Angeles, February 2011.’ A great overview of how bands have used Topsin and online marketing to great success. Some good takeaways here: a) Don't sell anything until you have a few thousand people on your mailing list, b) Until that point, focus most of all on getting known, c) Do something small every week and something big every month, d) Communicate honestly and treat your fans well.
·topspinmedia.com·
Topspin Media: Getting Practical: A Step-By-Step Guide to Building an Online Marketing Plan That Works
In Bb 2.0
In Bb 2.0
"A collaborative music/spoken word project." A collection of YouTube videos of people playing various instruments all in the B-flat key. Start and stop and fade them each in any way at any time. This is awesome.
·inbflat.net·
In Bb 2.0
HIPSTERRUNOFF: The Memefication of Your Band
HIPSTERRUNOFF: The Memefication of Your Band
Sifting through HRO's sorta-haughty satire is worth it for the occasion post like this, where whoever Carles is gets tired of mocking teenagers and writes something true and intriguing about the state of the music industry and popular music culture (at least for the indie set).
·hipsterrunoff.com·
HIPSTERRUNOFF: The Memefication of Your Band
Interconnected: This Isn't a Story I Tell Many People
Interconnected: This Isn't a Story I Tell Many People
Why privacy persists. "Along with new visibilities comes social understanding of those new visibilities." "If the end of privacy comes about, it's because we misunderstand the current changes as the end of privacy, and make the mistake of encoding this misunderstanding into technology. It's not the end of privacy because of these new visibilities, but it may be the end of privacy because it looks like the end of privacy because of these new visibilities."
·interconnected.org·
Interconnected: This Isn't a Story I Tell Many People