Archive for March, 2009

Pay It Forward

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I have a challenge for you. Do something nice for someone without expectation of anything in return. It can be something as small as holding a door open for someone or something major like changing a flat tire. Too often, people are so caught up in their own world that they don’t notice (or choose not to help) the people around them. I’ve done it, now it’s your turn. Pay it forward.

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Posted by Allen D. Tate - March 26, 2009 at 9:39 AM

Categories: General   Tags:

Peanuts Linus Sings The Police

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[youtube]6AvBL2Mx2xA[/youtube]

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Posted by Allen D. Tate - March 26, 2009 at 9:31 AM

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The State of the Music Business by John Mellencamp

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Here is an interesting article written by John Mellencamp. I pulled this off of his website … Here is the original link.
chuck
On My Mind: The State of the Music Business by John Mellencamp
March 22nd, 2009 –

Over the last few years, we have all witnessed the decline of the music business, highlighted by finger-pointing and blame directed against record companies, artists, internet file sharing and any other theories for which a case could be made. We’ve read and heard about the “good old days” and how things used to be. People remember when music existed as an art that motivated social movements. Artists and their music flourished in back alleys, taverns and barns until, in some cases, a popular groundswell propelled it far and wide. These days, that possibility no longer seems to exist. After 35 years as an artist in the recording business, I feel somehow compelled, not inspired, to stand up for our fellow artists and tell that side of the story as I perceive it. Had the industry not been decimated by a lack of vision caused by corporate bean counters obsessed with the bottom line, musicians would have been able to stick with creating music rather than trying to market it as well.

During the late 80s and early 90s the industry underwent a transformation and restructured, catalyzed by three distinct factors. Record companies no longer viewed themselves as conduits for music, but as functions of the manipulations of Wall Street. Companies were acquired, conglomerated, bought and sold; public stock offerings ensued, shareholders met. At this very same time, new Nielsen monitoring systems — BDS (Broadcast Data Systems) and SoundScan were employed to document record sales and radio airplay. Prior to 1991, the Billboard charts were done by manual research; radio stations and record stores across the country were polled to determine what was on their playlists and what the big sellers were. Thus, giving Oklahoma City, for example, an equivalent voice to Chicago’s in terms of potential impact on the music scene. BDS keeps track of gross impressions through an encoded system that counts the number of plays or “spins” that a song receives. That number is, thereafter, multiplied by the number of potential listeners. SoundScan was put in place at retail centers to track sales by monitoring scanned barcodes of units crossing the counter. A formula was devised whereby the charts were based 20% on the SoundScan number and 80% on BDS results. The system had changed from one that measured popularity to one that was driven by population.

Record companies soon discovered that because of BDS, they only needed to concentrate on about 12 radio stations; there was no longer a business rationale for working secondary markets that were soon forgotten — despite the fact that these were the very places where rock and roll was born and thrived. Why pay attention to Louisville — worth a comparatively few potential listeners — when the same one spin in New York, Los Angeles or Atlanta, etc., was worth so many more potential listeners? All of a sudden there were #1 records that few of us had ever heard of. At the time we asked ourselves, “Am I out of touch?” We didn’t realize that this was the start of change that would grow to kill, if not the whole of the music business, then most certainly, the record companies.

Reagan’s much-vaunted trickle-down theory said that wealth tricked down to the masses from the elite at the top. Now we’ve found out that this is patently untrue — the current economic collapse reflects this self-serving folly. The same holds for music. It doesn’t trickle down; it percolates up from the artists, from word of mouth, from the streets and rises up to the general populace. Constrained by the workings of SoundScan/BDS, music now came from the top and was rammed down people’s throats.

Early in my career, I wrote and recorded a song called “I Need A Lover” that was only played on just one radio station in Washington, DC the first week it came out. Through much work from local radio reps at the record company, the song ended up on thousands of radio stations. Sing the chorus of “I Need A Lover.” It’s not the best song I ever wrote nor did it achieve more than much more than being a mid-chart hit, but nevertheless, you can sing that chorus. Now sing the chorus of even one Mariah Carey song. Nothing against Mariah, she’s a brilliantly gifted vocalist, but the point here is the way that the songs were built — mine from the ground up, hers from the top down.

By 1997, consumers, now long uninvolved, grew passive, radio stations had to change formats. Creative artistry and the artists, themselves, were now of secondary importance, taking a back seat to Wall Street as the record companies were going public. The artists were being sold out by the record companies and forced to figuratively kiss the asses of their corporate overlords at the time these record companies went public. In essence, the artists were no longer the primary concern; only keeping their stockholders fat and happy and “making the quarterly numbers” mattered; the music was an afterthought.

Long-tenured employees of these companies were sacrificed in the name of profitability and the culture of greed was burned into the brains of even the most serious music lovers. It seemed that paying attention sales, who had the #1 record from one week to next, and who fell or rose on the charts was all that validated music.

One of my best friends in life was Timothy White who had been the editor of Crawdaddy, then Rolling Stone and, finally, Billboard. As a music critic, he championed singers, songwriters and musicians of all stripes. He was a music lover, beloved in the industry and by artists. Timothy, as many of you know, died suddenly, at the age of 50, waiting for an elevator at Billboard‘s office in New York. Artists including Don Henley, Brian Wilson, Sheryl Crow, James Taylor, Jimmy Buffett, Roger Waters, Sting and me thought so much of him that two sold-out concerts — one in Boston and one at Madison Square Garden — were produced to raise money to support his widow, Judy, and family that includes their autistic son. Each of you, who care enough to read this, should ask yourself if people would be there to celebrate your life so lovingly as this.

In the early 90s, Tim started talking to me about the new service called SoundScan. Then the editor of Billboard, he was leery about the whole idea, realizing its potential to turn the record business upside down. He was pressured by his boss, publisher Howard Lander, who had warned that if Billboard didn’t buy into SoundScan, its competitor, Hits, would become the premier music industry trade magazine. I remember performing at a City of Hope benefit dinner in 1996 where he and I argued with Howard on the pitfalls of SoundScan and BDS and how there would be consequences that would not be good for the music business once it was embraced. It was a very unpleasant evening.

Let’s pause here to note that the record business has always been known for its colorful characters like Colonel Tom Parker, Ahmet Ertegun, John Hammond, etc. The most important thing is that different artists were able to express themselves in ways that were uniquely original, expressing their hopes and disappointments. That kind of artistic diversity and the embrace of eccentricity made the recording business great. It also made the record business horrifying in some ways. Look at what happened at Stax Records where financial finagling and skullduggery brought a great enterprise to a screeching halt that ended so many brilliant careers.

During the time of the upheaval wrought by SoundScan, BDS and the “Wall Streeting” of the industry, country music seized the opportunity and tacitly claimed the traditional music business. Country has come to dominate the heartland of America, a landscape abandoned or ignored by the gatekeepers of rock and pop. Great new country music stars came from seemingly nowhere to grow to tremendous popularity; think Garth Brooks.

While all this was going on, technology, just as it always does, progressed. That which, by all rights, should have had a positive impact for all of us — better sound quality, accessibility, and portability — is now being blamed for many of the ills that beset the music business. The captains of the industry it seemed, proved themselves incapable of having a broader, more long-range view of what this new technology offered. The music business is very complicated in itself so it’s understandable that these additional elements were not dealt with coherently in light of the distractions that abound. Not understanding the possibilities, they ignorantly turned it into a nightmarish situation. The nightmare is the fact that they simply didn’t know how to make it work for us.

The CD, it should be noted, was born out of greed. It was devised to prop up record sales on the expectation of people replenishing their record collections with CDs of albums they had already purchased. They used to call this “planned obsolesce” in the car business. Sound quality was supposed to be one of the big selling points for CDs but, as we know, it wasn’t very good at all. It was just another con, a get-rich-quick scheme, a monumental hoax perpetrated on the music consuming public.

These days, some people suggest that it is up to the artist to create avenues to sell the music of his own creation. In today’s environment, is it realistic to expect someone to be a songwriter, recording artist, record company and the P.T. Barnum, so to speak, of his own career? Of course not. I’ve always found it amusing that a few people who have never made a record or written a song seem to know so much more about what an artist should be doing than the artist himself. If these pundits know so much, I’d suggest that make their own records and just leave us out of it. Nora Guthrie, Woody’s daughter, once told me a story about a reception she was at where Bob Dylan was in attendance. The business people there were quietly commenting on how unsociable Dylan seemed to them, not what they imagined an encounter with Dylan would be like. When that observation about Dylan’s behavior and disposition were mentioned to Nora, the response was very profound. She said that Bob Dylan was not put on this earth to participate in cocktail chatter with strangers. Bob Dylan’s purpose in life is to write great songs like “Blowin’ in the Wind” and “The Times They Are A’ Changin’.” This sort of sums it all up for me. The artist is here to give the listener the opportunity to dream, a very profound and special gift even if he’s minimally successful. If the artist only entertains you for three and a half minutes, it’s something for which thanks should be given. Consider how enriched all of our lives are made by songs from “Like A Rolling Stone,” a masterpiece, to “The Monster Mash,” a trifle by comparison.

Now that the carnage in this industry is so deep you can hardly wade through it, it’s open season for criticizing artists, present company included, for making a misstep or trying to create new opportunities to reach an audience, i.e., Springsteen releasing an album at Wal-Mart and, yes, we all know what Wal-Mart is about. The old rules and constraints that had governed what was once considered a legitimate artist are no longer valid. When you think about it, you must conclude that there really is no legitimate business; there is no game left.

Sadly, these days, it’s really a matter of “every man for himself.” In terms of possibilities, we are but an echo of what we once were. Of course, the artist does not want to “sell out to The Man.” Left with no real choice except that business model of greed and the bean counting mentality that Reagan propagated and the country embraced, there is only “The Man” to deal with. There is no street for the music to rise up from. There is no time for the music to develop in a natural way that we can all embrace when it ripens and matures. That’s why the general public doesn’t really care. It’s not that the people don’t still love music; of course they do. It’s just the way it is presented to them that ignores their humanity.

If we have any hope for survival of the music that we all love, compassion must replace name-calling, fairness must replace greed and we need to come together as a musical community and try to understand each other’s problems. I once suggested to Don Henley, many years ago after I had left Polygram, that we should form an artist-driven record label, much like Charlie Chaplin did with the movies when he, more than 90 years ago, joined forces with Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks to form United Artists. Don’s response was correct. He said that trying to get artists and business people together to work for the common good of everyone involved is akin to herding cats. When all is said and done, unfortunately, it’s not really about the music or the artist. It’s about you and your perception of yourself and how you think things ought to be. And we all know that this very rarely intersects with what actually is. Just because you think this is how it should be only makes it just that: what you think; it doesn’t make it true. So let’s try to put our best foot forward and remember that anyone can stand in the back of a dark hall and yell obscenities but if you want a better world it starts with you and the things you say and do.

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Posted by Chuck Gee - March 23, 2009 at 2:06 PM

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Financial Planning

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Dan was a single guy living at home with his father and working in the family business. When he found out he was going to inherit a fortune when his sickly father died, he decided he needed a wife with which to share his fortune.

One evening at an investment meeting he spotted the most beautiful woman he had ever seen. Her natural beauty took his breath away. “I may look like just an ordinary man,” he said to her, but in just a few years, my father will die, and I’ll inherit $200 million.”

Impressed, the woman obtained his business card and three days later, she became his stepmother.

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Posted by Allen D. Tate - March 23, 2009 at 6:37 AM

Categories: Humor   Tags:

Wasted Rock Ranger

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Just a little “old school” rock and roll humor for you. Enjoy!

[youtube]ydsuqDwaooc[/youtube]

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Posted by Allen D. Tate - March 22, 2009 at 9:14 AM

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Let’s Give It To The Bankers

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Here’s a humorous video about the current financial situation.

[youtube]_6DIktq3KIs[/youtube]

Please visit the Uke Jackson website for more of his music and a free download of this song.

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Posted by Allen D. Tate - March 20, 2009 at 8:12 AM

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Ten Questions with Bob Friend from MINX

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bob221. Hey Bob, welcome to Kickacts. com. Tell us a little bit about yourself.

I’ve been playing music since I was 6 years old. I have been in a band playing the club scene since age 14. I’m married and we have 3 children. I like working, Nascar, golfing and making guitars.

2. You play guitar in the band Minx. Tell us about the band and who is in it and the website address.

Bob Friend – Lead Singer, guitar, keyboards / Bobby Barnes – singer, drummer / Preston Buzzard – bass / Russell Mcgregor – lead guitar and we have a myspace page at http://www.myspace.com/minxrocks. I have my own myspace also at http://www.myspace.com/bobfriend67.

3. What type of gear do you use?

My guitar is one I made it is a Friendly Guitar. Line 6 Pod Pro preamp, Carvin 50/50 tube power amp, Sonic 212 Cabinet loaded with Greenback Celestion speakers, Peavey 31 band eq, Yamaha Psr 500 Keyboard, Mic is an EV 967, No effects.

4. You guys have been gigging together for quite a long time. Unlike most bands that rise and fall in a year or so, you maintain, whats the secret?

First a band is like a marriage, it is give and take. Russell and I have played on and off for 25 years. It appears him and I are the only ones that can put up with each other. We like to have fun and love to play music.

5. Do you have any “greatest gig” stories to tell?

Every weekend we play is special to me. But one stand out was when we opened for Firehouse and Vixen.

6. And in the same vein, got any “worst gig ever” stories to share?

No certain one comes to mind, but the nights with equipment failure and brain fart for words tend to be the longest nights.

7. You guys pretty much ruled Double Dukes for years and were their main band until they recently closed. With that gig came some hate or jealousy from other bands that couldn’t get in there. There were some pretty mean spirited messages on band nut about your band. Want to address that?

I don’t ever read band nut. We just make noise and have fun. I feel I’ve something to learn from every band out there. There are a lot of clubs that we can’t get into due to band and management relationships. That’s just the politics of the business.

8. Who are your heroes and what inspired you to take up playing?bob

I love all genres of music. No one hero stands out.I grew up playing with moms Ventures, Elvis and Three Dog Night records (real vinyl). As for my inspiration, my Grandfather played bass in a band and got me started playing.

9. You are also into building your own guitars. How did that get started? Ever thought about building them and selling them?

It all started when I inquired about have a custom guitar built. I looked into several manufactures such as Brian Moore, Godin and several others. It was going to cost around $9500.00 for a make to my specifications. I figured I could build it cheaper. Boy was I wrong. Just kidding. Yes I would consider building for others but it is all hand craftsmanship and they wouldn’t be cheap.

10. # 10 is called “Shout it Loud”. It’s were you get to talk about whatever you want to talk about.
So go ahead Bob, and “SHOUT IT OUT LOUD”!

Loved or hated I plan on making noise until they lay my body to rest. I don’t understand why all of us musicians can’t just get along. We all have one common intrest, MUSIC. Minx members don’t make a habit of bashing other bands. We like to see other bands and learn from them. I feel every band has something special to give. “It’s BEER O’CLOCK!!  1, 2, 3 GO!!!” Because “the more you drink the better we sound.”

Thanks
Bob Friend

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Posted by Chuck Gee - March 20, 2009 at 7:36 AM

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Ten Questions with Preston From MINX

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pre1. Hey Preston, welcome to Kickacts. com. Tell us a little bit about yourself.

Hi, I have been playing bass bass with Minx for about 10 years now, I have 2 beautiful daughters that I spend as much time as possible with, and I am also in to photography.

2. You play bass guitar in the band Minx. Tell us about the band and who is in it and the website address.

Minx is Bobby Friend on lead vocals, guitar and keyboards, Russell Mcgreggor on Lead guitar, Bobby (Skeeter) Barnes on drums and vocals, and myself on bass. The four of us have been together now for over 5 years, and it has helped solidify our sound, while at the same time, we have gained so much confidence in each other, that we can go out and just have fun! We are using our Myspace as our primary site, the address is www. myspace. com/minxrocks

3. What type of gear do you use?

I have a Modulus Flea Bass (still haven’t learned to play like Flea though:), an SWR 350 head and an SWR bass Monitor. I like to keep things simple.

4. You guys have been gigging together for quite a long time. Unlike most bands that rise and fall in a year or so, you maintain, whats the secret?

We all get along great and most of all, we all love to play music! I think that keeping the same lineup helps tremendously, and we have a following that has become like family to us! Without our fans, we would be nothing. I have met so many wonderful people along the way, and I cannot thank them enough for supporting us and just being our friends!

5. Do you have any “greatest gig” stories to tell?

Ahhh, Hogrock several years ago, we had the prime spot and I knew that we would have a killer crowd. I had planned before hand to buy a cheap $79 Kramer bass guitar and ignite it with fireworks, and smash it to bits on our last song! Everything was perfect, the crowd was rockin’, my adrenalin was flowing, and so I lit the fireworks and smashed the bass at the end of Freebird! The crowd went wild, and I was on top of the world! Wow, what a memory for only $79 bucks … uh, then I realized that I left my $300 dollar wireless plugged in to the bass that I had just demolished on stage! Lol! It was still a great memory though, and 4 years later, a woman came up to me and said ” Oh my god, you’re that guy that smashed your guitar at Hogrock, I still have the neck hanging on my wall!” so that made it all worth it!

6. And in the same vein, got any “worst gig ever” stories to share?

Haha, there are several, but one that comes to mind was years ago, when we were really desperate for gigs, we went to a bar outside of Paducah, and they told us they were looking for southern rock, and I thought we could pull it off, but our version of southern rock was way different than what the owner had in mind! We got shut down while playing Rocky Mountain Way, and they made us pack up and go home! Lol!

7. You guys pretty much ruled Double Dukes for years and were their main band until they recently closed. With that gig came some hate or jealousy from other bands that couldn’t get in there. There were some pretty mean spirited messages on Band Nut about your band. Want to address that?

I don’t know why people would be upset at us for playing there so much, after all, we were just trying to stay booked, and Double Dukes was a good gig. I could see where they might take offense at the owners or management for not giving other bands a chance though.

8. Who are your heroes and what inspired you to take up playing?

I have always liked bands that put on a show! Alice Cooper is one of my favorites, but I also grew up with Kiss, Queen, REO Speedwagon, and too many others to mention. I just love music, and will pretty much listen to anything.

9. You are also into photography. How is that going? Do you do it professionally or as a hobby? Favorite things to shoot?kids

I am so glad you asked that! I have really gotten serious with my photography in the last few months. I have set up a studio in my house and have been doing portraits. Thanks to the power of Myspace, I have been getting emails every day asking me about taking some pics! I still have a lot to learn, but I feel like I am getting better at it, and hope to take it to the next level! If anyone wants to check out my work, it can be seen on my Myspace site www. myspace. com/minxbassist or my Taltopia page www. taltopia. com/minxrocks , hope you will take a look!

10. # 10 is called “Shout it Loud”. It’s were you get to talk about whatever you want to talk about.
So go ahead Preston, and “SHOUT IT OUT LOUD”!

Just want to say thanks again to all the people that support the local music scene, keep it up! And thank you Kickacts, you have a good thing going! See ya soon!

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Posted by Chuck Gee - March 20, 2009 at 7:23 AM

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OUR NEW MONTHLY CONTEST!!

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It’s open to everyone but the Staff at KICK ACTS.

Game rules are ez.. Choose the correct movie for each quote. Email your answers to chuck@kickacts.com and put “Kick Acts Contest” in the subject line. Include your real mailing address and email address. Every person entering, whether they get all of the questions right or not, goes into a drawing at the end of the month!!

Prize will consist of a gift bag with goodies in it!! Maybe a T-shirt, cd’s, silly gag gifts and more but you’ll want to win it for sure!!

Drawing will be held on March 31st!!

1. “And ladies and gentlemen of the jury, the prosecution is not going to get that man today, no, because I’m gonna get him! my client, the Honorable Henry T. Fleming, should go right to fucking jail! The son of a bitch is guilty!”

a. Alcatraz
b. And Justice For All
c. Of Mice and Men

2. [singing] “Got a whale of a tale to tell ya, lads, a whale of a tale or two, ’bout the floppin’ fish and the girls I’ve loved on nights like this with the moon above. A whale of a tale and it’s all true, I swear by my tattoo. There was Mermaid Minnie; met her down in Madagascar. She would kiss me anytime that I would ask her. Then one evening, her flame of love blew out. Blow me down and pick me up, she swapped me for a trout!”

a. Madagascar
b. Little Mermaid
c. 20,000 Leagues under the sea

3. “No one would have believed in the middle of the 20th Century that human affairs were being watched keenly and closely by intelligences greater than Man’s.”

a. War of the Worlds
b. Alien
c. John Carpenter’s “The Thing”

4. “You are a worthless street rat. You were born a street rat, you’ll die a street rat, and only your fleas will mourn you.”

a. Stewart Little
b. Willard
c. Aladdin

5. “Simon is a very delicate creature. It took nearly a year and $30,000 to perfect him.”

a. Terminator
b. Robo-Cop
c. Kiss Meets the Phantom

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Posted by Chuck Gee - March 19, 2009 at 2:32 PM

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Government Bailout Special

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Government Bailout Special

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Posted by Allen D. Tate - March 19, 2009 at 12:27 PM

Categories: Humor, Politics & Religion   Tags:

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