Downloading music on Internet is fool’s game — and illegal

Democrat & Chronicle: Nick Francesco

Downloading music on Internet is fool’s game — and illegal

That is the headline of this Rochester Democrat & Chronicle piece. You would think that a newspaper would employ people that understand at least the broader meanings of the English language. There are plenty of ways to download music on the internet that are completely legal, and not a fool’s game. Using P2P programs like the ones mentioned in the piece, do fit the description, but this writer makes no attempt to differentiate between grabbing a song off Kaazaa and buying a download from iTunes, Yahoo Music, or an artist’s site.

With journalists like this informing the population, our chances of empowering artists through technology are doomed. When I launched my mp3 store, I announced it on a forum that I frequent. One of the other users commented something to the effect of “that’s cool, but downloading is wrong, and I would never do that to you.” I tried to explain that people paid for the downloads and I got the money, so that was a good thing. He eventually got it, but geez…

Musicians, writers, art and money

Are there any good musicians that are also music writers? I know there are some. Greg Osby does interviews for Downbeat, and D.D. Jackson writes his column for DB. Ethan Iverson even does reviews in that same magazine. I’ve also heard stories from a variety of sources about critics (who will remain anonymous here) and their awful bands or performances. Does being a music writer tarnish one’s reputation as a musician? Does being a musicians tarnish or enhance one’s reputation as a writer? Does getting paid as a writer factor into these questions at all?

I recently heard someone talking about the jazz scene that is developing in Brooklyn. They were talking about some of the places that are having interesting new music, and it was agreed that this was a good thing, but it was also said that the clubs were simply allowing the music, not really supporting it. They would let the bands play, and put out a tip jar, and maybe give them a small cut of the bar, but they weren’t really taking any risk on the music.

Is that bad? Far and away the most adventurous, and arguably the best music I have ever heard in a club setting has been in places that didn’t have a whole lot of risk tied up in the music. If your business’ survival is dependent on your music revenue, you will program conservatively, because your business life depends on it. If your business depends on selling beer to locals between 5 and 10 pm, then you are free to do whatever you like with the music after 10 pm. These are the places that can have really great music scenes, because it is about the music, not the business.

Why do jazz musicians expect to get paid anyway? I mean when we are unknowns getting our stuff together? Classical music composers pretty much know that they will have to teach or something to make a living, because it will be rare that they get paid to compose. Same goes for poets and visual artists, and pretty much any other type of artist. I’m not saying that no artist gets paid, and I am definitely not saying that we don’t deserve to get paid, we do deserve it. But, do we deserve to get paid more than the guy who runs the club? More than the bartender? If there are 15 people in the bar, should we expect to get a couple of hundred dollars for the band?

I’m not sure how all of this is related, other than it is what is on my mind today.

Geldof cancels Italian tour after only 45 fans turn up for Milan gig

Guardian Unlimited Arts | Arts news | Geldof cancels Italian tour after only 45 fans turn up for Milan gig

Millions of people like to hear Bob Geldof talk about causes as diverse as debt relief and the rights of fathers but it seems not so many, at least in Italy, are as keen to hear him sing.

The Irish rock musician and political activist beat a retreat back to London at the weekend after cancelling concerts in Milan and Rome because too few fans had bought tickets.

Only 45 people turned up on Friday at Milan’s Civic Arena for a performance by the 51-year-old singer and songwriter.

That’s jive. I think artists should have enough respect for the people who buy tickets to play for them, no matter how many, or few, there are. Do people onyl deserve to hear him play, if they are in large groups?

This touches on the subject of why performers perform. Some of us do it because we want to share music with people, and some of us do it because we want people to share adoration with us. Most of us do it for some combination of those reasons.

What we can learn about art from fortune cookies

I like Chinese food. The fortune cookie is just a bonus. From Wednesday’s lunch:

A good laugh and a good cry both cleanse the mind.

This made me think about what our goal as artists should be. I often say we should want to move our audience or listeners. I like them term cleanse the mind, as well.

The fortune cookie reminded me of an interview I did shortly after the release of “One“, when I told the interviewer that I didn’t care if people loved or hated my music, as long as it moved them one way or another. That’s hard to say… I don’t mind if people don’t like what I do, but it’s true. If we are making music that affects people enough to make them dislike it, then we have touched an emotional space in those people. That’s what we are here to do.

Bagatellen: Talking About Music

Bagatellen: Talking About Music

The atomization of Western culture is a phenomenon that has been well-documented for some time now. But it seems to me that as music fans this is something we must actively fight. Just as the music we listen to tries to critique modern society, so must we work against its debilitating effects on our ability to reach out to people in human ways. Whether that means trying to start a local listening club or going to greater efforts to build an online community connected by more than pixels on a screen, I don’t know. I don’t have the answers; I only wish to raise the issue.

Contemporary Music’s Hope Is Writ Small, Not Large – New York Times

A nice NYT essay. Subscription required if you follow the link. I quoted some good parts below.

Contemporary Music’s Hope Is Writ Small, Not Large – New York Times

Recently I heard pieces by 12 American composers at two events. The American Composers Alliance at the tiny Thalia Theater played music by people hovering around middle age or beyond. The names at the Counter)induction concert at the equally tiny Tenri Cultural Center averaged about 35.

None of these 12, I think, will ever have festivals devoted to them. Their chances of big commissions by major symphony orchestras or opera houses are equally dim. They have been, or probably will be, recorded, the making of CD’s having become such a user-friendly cottage industry. Judging by their program biographies, all seem to have first-rate musical educations and many teaching jobs.

Posterity does not beckon. There may be no entries in future music encyclopedias. Scholars will not pore over their techniques or the cultural contexts of their lives. Yet these composers are obviously devoted to their work, and to one another’s work as well. A lot of them know exactly what they are doing. How high they aspire I don’t know. I hope their aspirations are more on the order of personal satisfaction and the collegiality of fellow artists than of fame.

This may sound like a sad story, but it is not. That these concerts go on — indeed, thrive — tells us that music as an art keeps moving through time from generation to generation, from language to language and idea to idea. Such progress is usually unremarked by the serious music lover who looks to a Thomas Adès or the next grand premiere for signs of advances in music.

I suggest that it is my 12 men and women who keep music going. Any true lover of baseball will understand. We cherish the skills — indeed, the art — of players at the highest level, but we also feel that the essence of the sport is in the sandlot pickup game, or softball in Central Park. The most satisfying afternoons I have ever spent were not in Yankee Stadium but in minor-league parks in cities like Indianapolis or Richmond, Va.

Music at the highest levels is to be honored and sought after; mediocrity is no prize. But supreme talent can also be a victim of its own success. Size does matter. How many famous pianists have I heard with reputations big enough to command full houses at Carnegie or Avery Fisher Hall who would be so much more effective in spaces seating 500 or fewer? Music is a business, and if you can sell more tickets, you do. The Metropolitan Opera House is bigger than it ought to be because, economically, it has to be.

Indeed, intimacy is one of the prizes our 12 composers have won, though sometimes, I’m sure, in spite of themselves. Concerts like the recent ones at the Thalia and Tenri are invariably played by young musicians of astonishing skill and evident devotion. No one is in these kinds of events for the money. The waiving of fees is a common practice.

At Tenri loose chairs are pulled up around players in one corner of an art gallery space. Anyone who remembers the cinematic history of the Thalia will know how small it is. When I first started covering this kind of event, more than 25 years ago, I usually came away with a sense of having heard very talented people who were frustrated, forlorn and isolated. I hope I have learned better. Certainly these composers, musicians and audiences are at a distance from New York Philharmonic subscription concerts or Great Performers at Lincoln Center. But there is a community here, a kind of musical village, that is taking care of itself very nicely.

There is a quota of aspiring students at these events, a critic or two, a handful of the curious, or just plain admiring concertgoers. But more often than not, the composers and musicians onstage are being received by their colleagues sitting in the audience. A few weeks hence, perhaps in another place, the people onstage will be sitting in the audience, and the people in the audience will be up there playing.

We are still pretty well hypnotized by the big event, the international reputation and the march toward future greatness. This mentality has also caused us to misuse the word “provincial,” which now implies “limiting” when it might more constructively mean “limited.” Being limited need not mean being less sophisticated, less proficient or less intelligent. Small communities can do music’s work at a high level without management or press coverage.

I don’t pretend to understand how the Internet proliferates music as widely as it does. I do know that it is promoting many individual tastes for individual audiences. This makes the prospects for our 12 composers very promising. True greatness will always pursue universality, but it is the very good and the local that keep music’s blood circulating.

By BERNARD HOLLAND

Artist’s role in creativity

This quote was on my Google homepage today:

Art is a collaboration between God and the artist, and the less the artist does the better.

Andre Gide
French critic, essayist, & novelist (1869 – 1951)

I find it is true, that the less I try to control the creative process, the better things usually turn out. I often visualize getting out of the way and letting the music flow unimpeded.

Simon Reade: A life-work balance for artists can be achieved

This Guardian column touches several issues that are familiar to me. Balancing the demands of an artistic life and a family is something I deal with daily. He also makes the good point that without other life experiences, we have nothing to make art about.

Guardian Unlimited Arts | Arts features | Simon Reade: A life-work balance for artists can be achieved

Ravenhill is probably right to recognise that, for him, a family would be a burden on his creativity. But who is he kidding when he claims that his life is all art and nothing else? His claim that abstaining from life is good for your art just doesn’t add up. Life feeds art.

Some other good lines:

I have been able to plough a furrow of childlike creativity in my work. I believe that people younger than me, particularly children, have a clearer and more valid world view than my generation (I’m 40 this week); certainly more so than the older and so-called wiser people who should have known better than to leave us a legacy of impoverishment, pollution and war. The adult world is childish, foolish. A child’s world is passionate, glorious. Through theatre we can recapture that vestigial idealism in all of us.

…without the fuel of life, artistic inspiration will run out of juice. In short, it will be all work and no play. If you’re an artist, you enrich the lives of others. Your own life, therefore, needs to be enriched to start with.

Dewey Donation System

Dewey Donation System

I received the following email from a friend tonight.

I try never to forward mass emails — but this one (I hope you’ll agree) is worthy of sending to everyone you know who is a book lover.

As you might already know — I grew up in Gulfport, Mississippi, where Hurricane Katrina took an enormous toll. Tom and I recently toured the devastation and it’s remarkable that now (10 months later) most places still look like a bomb just went off. It was so much more vast and overwhelming than photos can possibly portray.

The one thing that hit me the hardest was seeing the Gulfport Library in such ruins. I spent nearly every Saturday morning there with my family — I was the Lisa Simpson of our clan — and I knew the librarians/staff there and their collections well. I have so many memories of that place — doing research for hours in high school — writing college papers while seated in the aisles of the stacks of books — reading all the classic children’s literature in their special room devoted to kid’s books — participating in their summer reading programs, etc. It was the place that probably meant the most to me in Gulfport, apart from my home.

So — here’s an easy way to contribute to their re-building effort —

http://www.deweydonationsystem.org/

These nice folks run a book drive each year — in the past, they have supported school districts where funding for libraries have been cut, or even supported libraries in the tsunami-affected areas — and this year (2006) they selected the Gulfport/Biloxi public libraries as their targeted beneficiary.

The libraries in Gulfport/Biloxi have even put together “wish lists” on Amazon.com — and you KNOW how easy it is to order things there — or you can send whatever you like — including just a cash donation — and there’s a place to leave a note, letting them know what you’ve sent and why — the website has everything you need — including an adorable mascot — Dewey (he’s a decimal).

PLEASE (after you send a few books/dollars of your own) consider forwarding this to everyone you know who’s a book lover and who would support this worthy cause — you can spend big/little, you can send your favorites or some classics, you can send anything you like — and be sure it gets directly to the good folks who are rebuilding in Mississippi.

Think for a moment — how different your life would be without books/libraries — and consider what an amazing thing a public library is — it’s a Barnes & Noble where everything is free, so long as you promise to return it.

Thanks for letting me share this with you —

Claire Brantley

Claire is a great person. She has a special spot in heaven because she married a trombone player.

If you are looking for a cool way to share a few dollars you have been blessed with, with some folks who are still only beginning to recover from Hurricane Katrina, consider the Dewey Donation System.

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