Singing Sensation Susan Boyle
Story: Taylor Alexander
Photo: deadline press & picture
See her moving performance for yourself!
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Story: Taylor Alexander
Photo: deadline press & picture
Pisces Inspired Makeup Look from Xsparkage
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Story: Taylor
Graphics: 19th letter
Check out this season's high voltage beauty trends!
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1. Find ways to get ordinary people who love music, to love your music.
2. Play live often and don’t worry (at first) about getting paid for every gig.
3. Know your instrument inside-out.
Prior to late 70’s, more often than not, the music that is our heritage was made by musicians who, from the time they took up their instrument, worshipped at the feet of some master bluesman, jazz player, folk legend, songwriter, or whatever. The habit of these inspired musicians was an appetite for perfection. A need to be not just ‘good enough’, but GREAT. Why settle for less. Whatever developing stage you are at, go beyond it, re-commit yourself to your instrument or voice. Take lessons, or better yet, sit yourself down at your CD player and choose a favorite guitar player’s record, and listen closely to what they are playing. then re-play it, and re-play it again. Challenge yourself to go beyond your limitations. Who knows, maybe you will fall into some new territory, wherein you will find yourself, your ‘sound’, and increase your chance to stand out from all the mediocrity that is your competition. Believe it or not, record labels love to hear innovative, accessible new sounds. Actually in their heart of hearts, that is what they are really hoping to hear on every new demo they get, and from every new act they go see at a live venue. You see...in the business of music, when we hear something new, original, and accessible to people, we can then invest in you with more security, believing that if we put our ‘label brand’ on you, with our talents of promotion and marketing coming to the front, then we ‘have something’, and your music becomes our music, and we work together to broaden you audience appeal. It’s kinda like a partnership ...something about ‘Art and Commerce’...they can work together you know?!
4. Protect your investment...register your songs for proper copyright protection.
5. Design and write your promotional materials so they stand out.
6. Know the labels and music publishers you hope to be signed to.
7. Have your own ‘Entertainment Law Attorney’ to represent you.
8. Choose a well-connected and respected personal manager.
Managers who do this job for a living can only take on clients that generate income. Making money as a personal manager is no easy task, and many upcoming artists forget that if any moneys are to be generated from their music, it can takes years for the flow of that income to be reliably there. So, as a band develops self-management, or gets help from intern/student manager-wannabees, can help pave the road for professional management.
Over the years I have heard several horror stories about ‘managers’ that approach upcoming acts and say that for X amount of dollars, they can do such and such for the artist. No... this is not the way legit personal managers work. Well-connected and respected personal managers get paid a negotiated fee for their services (get it in writing) for any and all business transactions they are responsible for (15%-20%) over a particular contract period. Please Note...No musicians should ever pay a fee to a so-called ‘manager’ who will not do any work UNLESS they are paid up front. Flim-Flam men and women still abound in this business... be forewarned.
One of the most important jobs of a manager is to secure recording and publishing contracts for their clients, this is why it is so essential to choose well connected and well respected managers. The music business is a ‘relationship’ business. Who know who, and who can get to know who, and who did what successfully for who is what this management game is all about. Choose carefully those people who will be representing you in any business dealings.
9. Don’t take advice from anyone unless you know that they know what they are talking about.
To be quite candid, the best rules in the music business comes from the experience of building your own career; learning from your own interactions with the gatekeepers at labels, the media, management, and booking companies as to what is right or wrong for you. For every Do or Don’t there is an exception to a so-called ‘rule’. As I reflect on the advice I sought out and listened to over the years, the most valid tips came from people who walked the walk, and talked the talk. If you feel that the source you have contacted knows what they are talking about, and has had first hand experience doing what you want to learn about, that is the only feedback that might stand up over time. Choose carefully.
10. Musician...Educate Thyself! If you want a record deal, learn what a record deal is, and learn something about the business of music.
Today there are dozens of outstanding books available on every conceivable topic related to the business of music. They can be found in bookstores, libraries, and through the Internet. In addition, there are many schools that now offer 2- 4 year programs on the business of music. Seminars, and workshops are available on a year round basis in most major American cities. Consultants, Attorneys, and Business Organizations are all around and so it is only myth, superstition, stubbornness, and immaturity that stand in the way of any musician making a commitment to educating themselves about the business that exists to exploit their music.
I cannot stress how important I feel this issue is. Educating yourself is THE most important suggestion I can make to help you have a chance at success.
If you won't learn about the business side of this industry, do you really expect the professionals you encounter to sit down and teach you? Get Real!
Please...spend some time and money educating yourselves about the music business, . A few hours now, can protect your future forever!
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Christopher Knab is an independent music business consultant based in Seattle, Washington. He is available for private consultations on promoting and marketing independent music, and can be reached at 206-282-6116 or by email at: Chris@Knab.com
Chris Knab's new book, 'Music Is Your Business' is available NOW.
Visit the FourFront Media and Music website for more information on the business of music from Christopher Knab.
Become Magazine was given rights to re-post this article by: Christopher Knab
Source: www.knowthemusicbiz.com
by Ed Ackerson
Read Ed Ackerson's 10 tips for success before your next studio visit. Ed has worked on a wide range of major label and indie projects nationally and internationally.
1. Know what you want to sound like- as you write and rehearse songs, think about what sort of sounds you like and how you’d like your material to come across sonically. It’s good to be able to describe the sound you’re after to the producer/engineer at the studio in reasonably specific terms. Also, make sure everyone in the band is more or less on the same page about your sound.
Source: www.knowthemusicbiz.com
Event: WHIP APPEAL POWERSHOOT 9
"LIMITED SPOTS/CLOSED SHOOT"
What: Unlimited Photos inc: Celebrity Hair, Make-Up, Wardrobe Styling for FREE!!
Host: Whip Appeal Modeling Club
Start Time: Sunday, March 1 at 11:00am
End Time: Sunday, March 1 at 7:00pm
Where: WHIP APPEAL MODEL CLUB
ATTENTION: YOU MUST COME BY OFFICE TO RSVP AND ASK FOR KYM, 11a - 7p, M-F
DEADLINE: 2/27/09
1417 DUTCH VALLEY PLACE, ATLANTA 30324
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Story : Staff
While their current single “Rotate” featuring Busta Rhymes and red-hot producer Ron Browz is heating up at radio in the US, Capone and N.O.R.E. are heading across the Atlantic this week for their European tour in support of their new album Channel 10. The guys will be returning to the States at the end of February, just in time to promote their release. The tour dates are as follows:
January, 23 2009 09:00 PM - Dynamo - Zurich, Switzerland
January, 24 2009 09:00 PM - Kugl - St. Gallen, Switzerland
January, 28 2009 09:00 PM - Fahrenheid 100 - Dresden, Germany
January, 29 2009 09:00 PM - Shake Club - Hamburg, Germany
January, 30 2009 09:00 PM - Melkweg - Amsterdam, Holland
January, 31 2009 09:00 PM - VK Concerts - Brussels, Belgium
February, 1 2009 09:00 PM - JZE - Essen, Germany
February, 2 2009 09:00 PM - Bogen 2 - Cologne, Germany
February, 3 2009 09:00 PM - Conne Island - Leipzig, Germany
February, 4 2009 09:00 PM - Centrum Club - Erfurt, Germany
February, 7 2009 09:00 PM - Coupole - Biel, Germany
February, 8 2009 09:00 PM - Registratur - Munich, Germany
February, 11 2009 09:00 PM - The Fresh - Warsaw, Poland
February, 12 2009 09:00 PM - La Friche - Marseille, France
February, 13 2009 09:00 PM - Elysee Montmartre - Paris, France
February, 14 2009 09:00 PM - Blanco Town - Corsico via Milano, Italy
February, 15 2009 09:00 PM - Amager Bio - Copenhagen, Denmark
C-N-N also recently shot the video to “Rotate” in New York, with buzzing director Rik Cordero, (“Arab Money” and Nas’ “Sly Fox”) the duo plans to premiere the video in February. “Rotate” is currently available on I-Tunes and other digital outlets.
Channel 10 will be available on all formats Spring 2009 on SMC Recordings.
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Chris "Ludacris" Bridges' WeMix To Educate Artist
New York, NY (PRWEB) January 5, 2009 -- WeMix, the online music collaboration community co-founded by Chris "Ludacris" Bridges today announced a major artist education initiative involving numerous musicians and producers. Joining Ludacris in the program are Gym Class Heroes front man Travis McCoy, Grammy Award-winning producer and artist Wyclef Jean, Grammy Award-winning musician/producer/artist Mike Shinoda of Linkin Park and Fort Minor, Academy Award-winning hip-hop stars Three 6 Mafia, and notable others.
"It's an honor to be surrounded by so many talented stars who want to speak directly to new artists and help them elevate their careers," said Bridges. "It's our responsibility as established artists to never forget the struggles facing new talent as they break in to the music business."
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She asked a couple of months ago: "London's not a white city so why should our catwalks be so white? I go to castings and see several black and Asian girls, then I go to the show and look around and there's just me and maybe one other coloured face. Jourdan is the first black model in 15 years that walked Prada!
Congrats Jourdan on being name Model of 2008!
Want to find out more about Supermodel Jourdan Dunn?
Link to her homepage right here.
The Parisian couturier, who is credited with pioneering the hugely successful unisex look, had been suffering from leukaemia and succumbed to pulmonary complications yesterday at a hospital in Cannes.
In a tribute, French president Nicolas Sarkozy said Lapidus had "democratised French elegance and classicism" by making fashion available to ordinary men and women.
Lapidus's designs, beloved of French celebrities such as Brigitte Bardot and Alain Delon, became famous in the 1960s when fashion was looking for a way of keeping up with the social changes sweeping Europe.
His quirky label, created in 1951 and now run by his son Olivier Lapidus, came to be defined by the clean lines of unisex and military clothing and, most of all, by his famoussandy-coloured safari suit.
"Ted was the first designer of the nouvelle vague [new wave]," Lapidus's sister, Rose Torrente-Mett, told Agence France-Presse. "The whole world knew him."
After becoming a member of the Chambre Syndicale de la Haute Couture, Paris's exclusive high-fashion club, in 1963, Lapidus soon diversified the business into accessories, which he believed had a more lucrative future.
A funeral service will be held for the designer on Friday. He will be buried in the rambling Père Lachaise cemetery in eastern Paris alongside such greats as Oscar Wilde, Jim Morrison and Chopin.
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