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| It Was 40 Years Ago Today |
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| :: Posted by Sid Smith on Tue., Mar 27, 2012 |
That Mel, Boz, Ian & Robert played in Boston supporting Yes with Bill Bruford still on drums. It was at this gig that Bill seized his opportunity to ask Fripp about meeting up and discussing some ideas once they were back in the UK.
Two months after this gig was recorded, in May 1972 Fripp and Bruford kept the meeting they'd promised each other to see what, if anything, might happen.
You can grab the concert via the mail order store.
More news
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Paul Geller of Grooveshark accuses Fripp of being economic with the truth
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Tue., Oct 18, 2011
Grooveshark's Paul Geller has written to Digital Music News accusing Robert Fripp of being economic with the truth. Check out Mr Geller's call for truth and transparency here.
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2OAPT Pix
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Tue., Oct 18, 2011
There's a great gallery of photographs by Mark Colman taken at the 2OAPT's appearance in Portland here.
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Grooveshark
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Tue., Oct 18, 2011
There's an insight into the working methods of Grooveshark in the comments section of the Digital Music News. My thanks to Rockette for sending in the following post. He writes "The row about Grooveshark rumbles on at
Digital Music News. Most commentators deplore the
company’s lack of ethics, and of course there are the usual dismissive
comments from Brave-New-Worlders claiming that the only future for the
music biz is for all artists to give away their tracks for free.
This recent anonymous post caught my eye:
I work for Grooveshark. Here is some information from the trenches:
We
are assigned a predetermined ammount of weekly uploads to the system
and get a small extra bonus if we manage to go above that (not easy).The
assignments are assumed as direct orders from the top to the bottom, we
don’t just volunteer to "enhance" the Grooveshark database.
All
search results are monitored and when something is tagged as "not
available", it get’s queued up to our lists for upload. You have to
visualize the database in two general sections: "known" stuff and
"undiscovered/indie/underground". The "known" stuff is taken care
internally by uploads. Only for the "undiscovered" stuff are the users
involved as explained in some posts above. Practically speaking, there
is not much need for users to upload a major label album since we
already take care of this on a daily basis.
Are
the above legal, or ethical? Of course not. Don’t reply to give me a
lecture. I know. But if the labels and their laywers can’t figure out
how to stop it, then I don’t feel bad for having a job. It’s tough
times.
Why
am I disclosing all this? Well, I have been here a while and I don’t
like the attitude that the administration has aquired against the
artists. They are the enemy. They are the threat. The things that are
said internally about them would make you very very angry. Interns are
promised getting a foot in the music industry, only to hear these people
cursing and bad mouthing the whole industry all day long, to the point
where you wonder what would happen if Grooveshark get’s hacked by
Anonymous one day and all the emails leak on some torrent or something.
And,
to confirm the fears of the members of King Crimson, there is no way in
hell you can get your stuff down. They are already tagged since you
sent in your first complaint. The administration knows that you can’t
afford to sue for infringement.
Judging by the way
Grooveshark have conducted themselves in their dealings with Declan
Colgan and Robert Fripp, this has the ring of truth. In the old days,
the enemy of musicians were what Zappa called "the old cigar-chomping
guys"; now it appears there is a new foe, somewhat younger but just as
devious and unscrupulous. As Pete Townshend said, "Meet the new boss,
same as the old boss".
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Play it Frippy, very Frippy
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Tue., Oct 18, 2011
My thanks to Andrea Tolin for alerting me to this episode from Live At Daryl's House. Andrea writes "during the "Greg Biek" part, the guitar player tells to the keyboard
player to slow down, to take his time....and Daryl said 'play it Frippy,
very Frippy'".
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Markus Reuter Talks
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Sat., Oct 15, 2011
Here's an interview with Markus Reuter, who is currently turning a few heads on the 2OAPT tour. For those unfamiliar with Markus' work there's Kopfmensch a kind of young persons guide to Markus Reuter. Details about each of the tracks is available here.
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KC Is An Elite Club
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Sat., Oct 15, 2011
"King Crimson is an elite club", says Belew. "There have only been seven
members in the last 30 years. Having Tony, Pat and myself onstage,
three legitimate Crimson players, will make this as close as currently
possible to the actual thing." Here's a link to the full interview.
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Grooveshark Problems with Truth & Ingestion
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Fri., Oct 14, 2011
Digital Music News have an article featuring the correspondence between various members of the DGM team and Grooveshark. There's an interesting response from Grooveshark's Paul Geller where he says that Grooveshark's original claim to have legitimately licensed KC material (something they told fans who queried KC tracks being made available) was due to "ingestion problems"and that Mr.Geller didn't know "where that mistruth originated".
Make sure you scroll down to the comments section as well and feel free to make your own thoughts heard.
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Baidu - Bad News For Artists?
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Fri., Oct 14, 2011
It may be old news to you but eyebrows were raised at DGM Towers upon discovering that the major record labels have entered into a deal to stream content with China’s major search engine, Baidu. "Baidu will pay a fee to the labels for each time a song is downloaded or played in a stream. It will also share revenue from online ads if that revenue exceeds a certain amount, as well as provide promotional support for the labels. The companies declined to disclose financial details of the agreement."
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We Asked Grooveshark What They Pay Artists. And This Is What They Said...
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Thu., Oct 13, 2011
My thanks to SSImuse for sending in this article published in Digital Music News.
We Asked Grooveshark What They Pay Artists. And This Is What They Said... Saturday, October 08, 2011
It’s one simple question. But getting Grooveshark to answer it was a complicated affair - and ultimately, one that produced a very complicated answer. Attempt #1: Email Digital Music News (to Grooveshark SVP Paul Geller): How much does Grooveshark pay artists, labels, or other rightsholders per on-demand stream? On any song? [two attempts, no answer] Attempt #2: @ Digital Music Forum West Friday, Q&A session immediately following a presentation by Grooveshark SVP Paul Geller. Digital Music News (Paul Resnikoff): "Right now Grooveshark has money coming in. I’m curious to know on a granular basis - on a per on-demand stream basis - what is the rights holder receiving? What is the artist getting, what is the label getting - per stream, per actual song?" Geller (from stage): "So all of the contracts that we’re doing now are rev-share based, except for those with the PROs. The PROs get their statutory rates, and so do the publishers for interactive. And, the rest of them is just a pro-rata share. So I think that’s the common way to go about it now, I think that’s the only way that you can subsist on this type of money. And that’s why I think that we have to be creative about how to get more money into this ecosystem, because I don’t think anyone sees those numbers and is really inspired by them, I think people look at them and say ’well this is a soft landing for the music industry,’ it’s ’hopefully we don’t have to lay off too many people.’ And that’s why I think that Grooveshark is out there trying to be creative about how to infuse the industry with more money in ways that I don’t think are commonplace right now." Digital Music News: "But if I’m an artist coming onto Grooveshark, what should I expect? What kind of check should I expect if I get - let’s say - 100 plays?" Geller: "I think there are plenty of independent artists out there that can expect to be paid a good amount of money, if they’ve gone it alone or gone without a label and they’ve promoted themselves in a way that is effective and you know - they’re big. So if you’re looking for a per-stream rate number..." Digital Music News: "Yeah, something, some number." Geller: "Well I can’t give you a number because it’s really hypothetical. But I can tell you this, though: moving forward, we’re going to be completely transparant about how people are paid. And you can log in as an artist, you can see how many streams you’re getting. And that artist payment system is going to be completely on-demand, so when we roll out this direct-to-artist payment system, you’re not going to need a label. You don’t need a big label to claim your money, that’s not what we’re trying to do. This is an open platform where anyone in the world can distribute their music anywhere in the world. And I think the licensing question is a question - it’s complicated. We’re aggressive about licensing and when we go directly to the artist, the artist has complete control. You have complete control over what you put on Grooveshark and what you don’t." SSImuse comments: "I think that’s pretty self-explanatory, don’t you?" Indeed!
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