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Jessica Hopper: Bands Abusing Kickstarter Are Exploiting Fans (Village Voice)
Jessica Hopper: Bands Abusing Kickstarter Are Exploiting Fans (Village Voice)
Looking expectantly at the rest of the world to validate your interests, hobbies or art is a set-up to feel bad, to brood and be jaded that you are not understood. You need to reprogram your relationship with money as a creative person, because the one you have is like a hex. You need to grow-up your success dream and stop this focus on how it'll make you feel better.
·blogs.villagevoice.com·
Jessica Hopper: Bands Abusing Kickstarter Are Exploiting Fans (Village Voice)
Eric Harvey: Maura Johnston: Six reasons why "if you want to get paid for music you should play it live" is an idiotic argument.
Eric Harvey: Maura Johnston: Six reasons why "if you want to get paid for music you should play it live" is an idiotic argument.
for the majority of small bands, touring is a necessary out-of-pocket promotional expense to drive sales for a new release, not a source of profit to offset sales. Not to mention the fact that there’s virtually no radio support for touring acts in all but the biggest cities, thanks to Clear Channel and deregulation leading to the outsourcing of local DJs. I think a lot of musicians love playing live in front of crowds, but hate everything else about touring, which is both financially and emotionally draining.
·marathonpacks.tumblr.com·
Eric Harvey: Maura Johnston: Six reasons why "if you want to get paid for music you should play it live" is an idiotic argument.
Lindsay Zoladz: Hey, Internet Girl: Everyone had something to say this summer about NPR intern Emily White and her generation's attitude toward music—everyone, except Emily White (Washington City Paper)
Lindsay Zoladz: Hey, Internet Girl: Everyone had something to say this summer about NPR intern Emily White and her generation's attitude toward music—everyone, except Emily White (Washington City Paper)
On the NPR intern Emily White and Amanda Palmer and their internet infamy this summer.
·washingtoncitypaper.com·
Lindsay Zoladz: Hey, Internet Girl: Everyone had something to say this summer about NPR intern Emily White and her generation's attitude toward music—everyone, except Emily White (Washington City Paper)
Lindsay Zoladz: Mind Is Your Might: Fiona Apple's Oversharing (Pitchfork)
Lindsay Zoladz: Mind Is Your Might: Fiona Apple's Oversharing (Pitchfork)
…the way that people have written and talked about the searing physical images of her recent performances—her sinewy muscles and berserk movements and haphazardly-scrunchied hair—suggest that she’s providing [an unexpected jolt of humanness in the ever-churning, willfully plastic cultural machine], that she's a savior for those who need one (and, to be sure, not all of us do) from these airbrush’d, cyborg’d, sea-punk’d times. Because the wild physicality of these performances reminds us of our own muscle and bone.
·pitchfork.com·
Lindsay Zoladz: Mind Is Your Might: Fiona Apple's Oversharing (Pitchfork)
Drew Magary: Man Up, Bieber (GQ)
Drew Magary: Man Up, Bieber (GQ)
The label's mission is to make a man out of Bieber. The only person who isn't ready to make a man out of Bieber is Bieber. He wants to be 18. He wants to be a swaggy bro—he seems incapable of being anything else—and that's as it should be. Manhood can wait.
·gq.com·
Drew Magary: Man Up, Bieber (GQ)
Nitsuh Abebe: Indie Grown-Ups
Nitsuh Abebe: Indie Grown-Ups
‘One good indicator of this norm’s normalness? The main criticism you hear about this kind of record—even outweighing references to Starbucks and/or the bourgeoisie—is that it is just too dull to even bother producing any more complex indictment of it. These acts, intentionally or not, have won; they’ve taken a lower-sales, lower-budget version of the type of trip Sting once took, from a post-punk upstart to an adult staple.’
·nymag.com·
Nitsuh Abebe: Indie Grown-Ups
Vulture: Nitsuh Abebe: What’s Really Wrong with the Grammys
Vulture: Nitsuh Abebe: What’s Really Wrong with the Grammys
“The people complaining about the loss of these "non-mainstream" categories aren't really asking for a fair distribution of categories; they're asking for patronage. They're asking for the Recording Academy to act as a booster club and preservation society — to recognize and support these traditions as a special interest. Never mind that this is a kind of support new and fragile musical traditions don't get. Never mind that people in each of these genres are more than capable of recognizing their own achievements, and probably more effectively than the Academy does.”
·nymag.com·
Vulture: Nitsuh Abebe: What’s Really Wrong with the Grammys
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
Jonathan Coulton: On Snuggies and Business Models
Jonathan Coulton: On Snuggies and Business Models
“I should know better than to write this sort of post, because it will inevitably come across as a peevish and whiney response to being called a Snuggie. It probably is that to some extent, and I’m already sorry about it. I am really trying to transcend that though, because I think this stuff is so important. I wouldn’t have authorized Alex to reveal the horribly embarrassing revenue number that I can’t even comfortably mention here if I didn’t think that it would, to some extent, move this conversation past the point where people equate ‘Code Monkey’ with ‘Hamster Dance’ and call it a day. I’m disappointed that it did not. And it’s not about my personal ego. OK, maybe it is a little, but I truly believe that the sooner we all acknowledge the internet is not actually killing art, the sooner we can get back to making things that are awesome.”
·jonathancoulton.com·
Jonathan Coulton: On Snuggies and Business Models
Topspin Media: The Unbundling (and Re-Bundling) of Music
Topspin Media: The Unbundling (and Re-Bundling) of Music
How music became ‘un-bundled’ from CDs as consumers downloaded the one or two songs they actually wanted, and how direct-to-fan sales have re-bundled that music into not just CDs but digital releases, vinyl, and every manner of special package imaginable. “As artists get their arms around all their rights and build direct relationships with their fans we’re seeing artists’ output RE-BUNDLED into higher value packages and average revenue per transaction greater than those delivered by the Compact Disc.”
·topspinmedia.com·
Topspin Media: The Unbundling (and Re-Bundling) of Music
Fluxtumblr: How much longer will record labels remain useful? Or maybe more interestingly, when’s the last time you heard a great unsigned band?
Fluxtumblr: How much longer will record labels remain useful? Or maybe more interestingly, when’s the last time you heard a great unsigned band?
I’m going to write about this post in a few days. “I don’t personally care much about finding ‘great unsigned bands;’ I am not in A&R or publicity. If I was going to spend all of my time focused on listening to the first four or five songs written by a series of unknown acts I would lose my mind, because I am increasingly interested in issues of style and craft that are usually lost on people who are just starting out. I’d rather have people at record labels deal with that and facilitate the process of making finished records. There’s a lot of great labels out there — if I’m going to find something new, I trust them more than anyone else other than my friends and colleagues.”
·perpetua.tumblr.com·
Fluxtumblr: How much longer will record labels remain useful? Or maybe more interestingly, when’s the last time you heard a great unsigned band?
Too Much Joy: Budweiser Bought My Baby
Too Much Joy: Budweiser Bought My Baby
Too Much Joy’s Tim Quirk tells the story of his band’s jingle for Budweiser in the early 90s, and how he feels about bands and advertising then and since. A good companion to Matt LeMay’s ‘Art vs Content’ post from late 2010 (http://www.mbvmusic.com/2010/10/19/living-in-the-age-of-art-vs-content).
·toomuchjoy.com·
Too Much Joy: Budweiser Bought My Baby
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
waycooljnr: How to Get Your Music Reviewed on Pitchfork: An Interview with Scott Plagenhoef, Pitchfork’s Editor-in-Chief
waycooljnr: How to Get Your Music Reviewed on Pitchfork: An Interview with Scott Plagenhoef, Pitchfork’s Editor-in-Chief
“What do you recommend is the best process for getting my music reviewed on Pitchfork? “The easiest way to contact us to email and mail something to me directly, not just to the office. I would also read some reviews, find out which writers might like what you’re doing, and try to contact them directly. Targeting people who seem open to your music is an easy way to help it along. If you do send CDs, I would expect that a one-sheet, while it could be read, is more likely going to be discarded, so if you send a promo CD you should make sure any information that anyone might want– your website, short bio if needed, contact info for booking or PR if you have it, is on the back of the CD case itself.”
·waycooljnr.com.au·
waycooljnr: How to Get Your Music Reviewed on Pitchfork: An Interview with Scott Plagenhoef, Pitchfork’s Editor-in-Chief
Marc Weidenbaum — Despite the Downturn: An Answer Album
Marc Weidenbaum — Despite the Downturn: An Answer Album
I may never get around to listening to this, but the idea is fantastic. "An article in the May 2010 issue of the magazine The Atlantic critiqued the current generation of young music fans for rampant copyright violation. In a small irony, the illustration used to decorate the article interpolated a detail of a preexisting work that appears to not yet be in the public domain. This notice isn’t intended as a criticism of the illustrator — quite the contrary; the illustration is excellent — but instead of the theoretical foundation of the article, which suggests a clear line between right and wrong where there is, in fact, significant ambiguity. I forwarded Traum’s image, and article it accompanied, to various musicians and asked them if they would record a piece of music that took Traum’s picture literally: use it as a score.”
·archive.org·
Marc Weidenbaum — Despite the Downturn: An Answer Album
The Verge Q A: Punk Pioneer Steve Albini on Music Festivals, The Future of Radio and Why He Wants GQ To Fail: The Q: GQ
The Verge Q A: Punk Pioneer Steve Albini on Music Festivals, The Future of Radio and Why He Wants GQ To Fail: The Q: GQ
A strong perspective on music culture, the music business, and the state of things today. "Had Sonic Youth not done what they did I don't know what would have happened—the alternative history game is kind of silly. But I think it cheapened music quite a bit. It made music culture kind of empty and ugly and was generally a kind of bad influence."
·gq.com·
The Verge Q A: Punk Pioneer Steve Albini on Music Festivals, The Future of Radio and Why He Wants GQ To Fail: The Q: GQ
The Guardian: The hip-hop heritage society
The Guardian: The hip-hop heritage society
On the difficulty of preserving and reissuing classical hip-hop records. "The job that falls to those seeking to preserve hip-hop's past remains complex. Those doing the work need to know as much about copyright and contract law as they do about old Pete Rock B-sides, while a grounding in clinical psychology might help in dealing with the artists. It's a combination of specialisms few individuals possess, and it raises the question: just whose responsibility is it to curate the history of a culture?"
·guardian.co.uk·
The Guardian: The hip-hop heritage society
Chicago Reader: Music Column: Plagued by Pitchfork
Chicago Reader: Music Column: Plagued by Pitchfork
"'It sucks,' he says. 'It's no fault of any of the people in the industry, but music is not the main focus of my life. I never really planned on it being that way. When I meet people on the business end of this music-industry thing, they tend to really gross me out. I'm not trying to make money through this.'"
·chicagoreader.com·
Chicago Reader: Music Column: Plagued by Pitchfork