Saturday, October 3, 2009

The New Way

Everyone that's paying attention knows that the old mode of selling music is gone. Long gone. This is old news. It's about word of mouth, recommendations from trusted sources and authentic relationships between artists and fans.

What concerns me is that many very thoughtful people who are genuinely concerned with the state of the music industry (as opposed to the record industry) all seem to be headed in the same direction.

We study and listen and talk. We read Seth Godin and what his disruptive notion of permission marketing has inspired. We study the latest trends in D2F (direct to fan) platforms and the financial advantages produced by product bundling (Nine Inch Nails, Metric, etc..) There are some very smart people leading conversations and some innovative platforms in the market or coming to the market place shortly.

But if the smartest and brightest amongst us are all traversing the same path (more or less) will we all arrive at the same place at the same time only to realize there's a finite amount of everything sans bandwidth? Does it matter to be an early adopter when the time line in The Everett Rogers Diffusion of innovations theory / rate of diffusion is now so compressed.

The thought that keeps rising to the top of my mind is this: if most everyone is focused on genuine relationships, direct to fan sales, permission marketing, web metrics and the like how will anyone differentiate themselves from anyone else? The music lover only has so many hours in each day, only so much disposable income although some would argue that getting the fans attention is far more important than getting their money, or that the former leads to the latter.

Perhaps I'm missing the point, and the tools that I mention above will serve the smartest few with additional tools to achieve what we currently see as the real way forward: genuine contact, life long fans, true fans. Fans for life. 1,000 (or 10,000) true fans.

Everyone has access to twitter and facebook but only a few use those tools effectively.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

This Week: Sept. 1, 2008

Summer is officially over and regardless of our mortal delineations of the seasons you can really tell that it's so here in Upstate NY. Of course those that live REALLY Upstate laugh when I call Ulster County "Upstate", but it's relative I suppose.

The tomatoes from the Farmers Market are amazing, as are all the odd looking squashes (?) that I've never previously seen. The days are getting shorter, the sun is hanging lower in the sky. The nights are getting nearly cold and it's a great relief.


LISTENING:
Mike Doughty's Haughty Melodic
Jill Sobule / Underdog Victorious
Rough mixes of the upcoming "Country Classics" record by John Doe and The Sadies
Meredit Bragg record, courtesy of M. Lockwood
Terri Binion
Sea Wolf / Get to the River Before It Runs Too Low - EP
Jim Campilongo (live at The Living Room)
Dean and Britta live
Chris Isaak Live (don't ask)


WATCHING:
the septic guy suck out our tank.... uggh
Family Guy! Family Guy! Family Guy!
Presidential contest stuff / debates

READING:
NYTimes via my iPhone App. Excellent interface.
Salty by Mark Haskell Smith
blogs and more blogs: music blogs, science blogs, political blogs, celebrity blogs

PONDERING:
The sad and unexpected deaths of JH's 15 year old neice, and "Papa" Guardado, President of Hells Angels SF and a very nice guy.
How happy I am to have my new, super simple, one speed beach cruiser bicycle.
The joy of riding a bike in NYC when Park Avenue is closed to motorized vehicles.

Saturday, April 19, 2008

The Week Ending April 18th 2008

LISTENING:
Cass McCoombs
Juana Molina demos
Unreleased Aimee Mann record. (courtesy of Gail)
Lots of support act submissions for the upcoming Jim White Tour
Thom Monahans and Andy Cabics re-mix of John Doe's GOLDEN STATE.
Eduardo Mateo / Solo Bien Se Lame
Unreleasede Loudon Wainwright record (Courtesy of Joe H)
Mahalia Jackson


WATCHING:
The stunning white flowering buds on the trees near my house
Otto, the dog that we are taking care of
HGTV
Presidential contest stuff / debates, op-eds, etc.
StSanders "Shreds" videos (yes... STILL)


READING:
Endgame by Derrick Jensen (depressing)
Here Comes Everyone by Clay Shirky
The New Yorker
poems by Borges

PONDERING:
Sustainability
If major labels will EVER pull their collective heads out of their asses
the stupidity in spades that I seem to be encountering lately
subscription music business models
the root of self loathing
becoming a vegetarian again

TASTING:
home made fish tacos
extremely salty mixed nuts from Whole Foods
super dark chocolate
Chipotle Burrito Bowls

Friday, April 11, 2008

SxSW 2008: Who I Saw

Trilobite
Ra Ra Riot
Zambri
David Dondero
AA Bondy
Deer Tick
Jeremy Fisher
Bowerbirds
Peter And The Wolf
Kevin Devine
Martha Wainwright
The Brother Kite
Sonya Kitchell
Money Mark
Jay Reatard
Clare & The Reasons (3 times)
Alan Hampton
The Watson Twins
Langhorne Slim
X
The Radishes
Vampire Weekend
Golden Dogs
Yellow Fever
Doveman
Portastatic
John Doe
Sons and Daughters
Nicole Atkins

Monday, January 21, 2008

Clare & The Reasons

Death, Taxes and Lousy Weather.
It was cold out. And windy. I don't mind the cold or the wind, but it's a terrible combination, especially at night. Complaining about the weather in New York, however ubiquitous, is predictable and pointless.

Trash Compactor.
One of the reasons that I enjoy living in New York (unlike the lousy weather, see previous para) is that it's all so compact. I live about a mile from my office and depending on which route I choose to walk between the two I come within a block of Bowery Ballroom, Tonic (now closed), Mercury Lounge, Pianos, The Cake Shop, Arlene Grocery and The Living Room. If I want to hear music on a given night I'm lousy with choices. And most nights lately I have wanted to hear music. I'm on a roll.

What's in a name?
I was still nearly a mile away from my destination for the night: a Jam Session being put on by an old friend at Kenny's Castaways. I know, right? It sounds terrible but he's an old friend and an amazing bass player. So off I went to traipse through the cold. As I walked past The Mercury Lounge one name on the little sandwich board looked familiar. "Clare & The Reasons". Ugggh! Who came up with that name? Whatever. I remembered something good about the music on their MySpace. They were on in 15 minutes.


Luck Be A Lady

I thought that I'd peek my head in the door. I saw a few familiar faces and I like The Merc so I went it. It's friendly by NY standards and has a decent selection of beer. The sound is typically good to great, most often when the house sound guys are mixing. I don't know where they find these FOH folks, but man... they know their room and they know music!

Hype Machine.
The people I knew in the crowd were all pretty excited about seeing the show. They weren't over the top, or blabbering on like they'd had their fondness for the music validated by Pitchfork or BV or something. There was no "next big thing" vibe, the room wasn't full of industry people (like me)... they were just genuinely excited about what they knew was going to happen next.

The Proof Is In The Pudding.
And happen IT DID! It was that rare, beautiful and transcendent experience you get when you see the right band on the right night in the right room in the right mood. Great songs, amazing singing. Gorgeous string arrangements, inventive parts and on and on. You could hear the influences... LOTS of influences but nothing that came off that stage was derivative or pandering or even calculated. The songs have been called “cinematic love songs for a modern world” and “old fashioned”. Not a bad stab… I couldn’t do any better I suppose but there's way more to the musical story.

Prognostications.
I believe that beginning at SxSW 2008 much is going to be made of Clare & The Reasons. No one is doing what they do.. and what they do is awesome.

LISTEN NOW VIA MYSPACE.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

The week of January 17th, 2008

LISTENING:
My Brightest Diamond
Clare and The Reasons / The Movie, pretty much non-stop
Clare and The Reasons (live at Mercury Lounge)
Natalie Merchant (live at Hiro Ballroom)
Laura Marling (live at Maxwells)
"Sunday Bloody Sunday" video by Saul Williams
Keren Ann / Not Going Anywhere
Stew / Re-Hab
Lucinda Black Bear
Gary Go / The best demos of 2006
Eduardo Mateo
Simon Diaz

PONDERING:
The stock market
SxSW... will I have time to eat enough Tex-Mex?
Peak Oil
permission marketing
Espresso: to drink, or not to drink

TASTING:
Spicy Kale
Basmati Rice
SQUASH SQUASH SQUASH!
Guinness

WATCHING:
Family Guy twice nightly
The Tom Cruise video about Scientology
Lucien Freud show at MoMA

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

The week of 09 JAN 2008

LISTENING:
Fireflies (live at Mercury Lounge)
Bess Rogers and Dan Romer (Live in Brooklyn)
Jenny Scheinman (Live at Banjo Jim's)
Juana Molina (unreleased sessions with special guests, and demos for the next record)
Eduardo Mateo / Solo Bien Se Lame
Danya Kurtz / Another Black Feather
AA Bondy / American Hearts
Sybarite / demos
Mathew Dear / Leave Luck To Heaven
David Byrne / UB Jesus remix by Mark Saunders

WATCHING:
Walk Hard (the movie, not that great)
There Will Be Blood (the movie, pretty great)
Jeremy Blakes show at the Corcoran in DC
the gorgeous winter light in New York


READING:

Endgame by Derrick Jensen (depressing)
a number of short stories by Jim White
Gloria Steinem Op Ed piece in the NYT about race / gender in the presidential election
my friends facebook pages

PONDERING:
Sustainability
Americas obsession w/ food
money matters
the snow upstate over the last 2 weeks in December
rebuilding the floor of the new wood shed upstate
Ingrid Michaelson: a blip or something more?
my good fortune

TASTING:
roasted chicken, unsplit breasts on the bone, per Cooks Illustrated
kale, kale, kale!
Indian Curry w/ bananna at "Rice" in Dumbo
home made yoghurt (courtesy of Kristine Larsen)
Artisans cheeses from a farm upstate