Eternal sunshine of the touring band

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records on shelves

Sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll is not the story for most people in the music industry, and it rarely is the tale told by those who love the musicians that are out chasing the dream and living the “good” life.

As someone involved with the rise of the Black Keys, and the fall of her relationship with its drummer, Patrick Carney, Denise Grollmus details the sad, and yet familiar, tale of a relationship that fell apart quicker than an old band shirt.

It may not help get your band on a stadium tour, but it does bring a more human element to a lifestyle too often written out of fantasy.

Snapshots from a rock ‘n’ roll marriage (salon.com)

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Playing for tyrants: the ultimate sell-out?

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Coins in hands

It seems the recent events in Libya have led to some people in the music industry questioning the performance decisions of such big stars as Beyoncé, Usher and Mariah Carey. In the past, all of them played for the current ruler everyone loves to hate, Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, and/or members of his family.

Industry Lashes Out at Mariah, Beyoncé and Others Who Played for Qaddafi’s Family (rollingstone.com)

Given the apparent trend of musicians moving to 360 deals with large music corporations, and the use of product tie-ins to see a recording move a few more units, what else is left? Sure, there remain the acts that will not bite at the big fish because they know there is an equally big hook beneath it, but those artists are getting smaller in number, and the reasoning against such deals is getting weaker as the industry falters. So if playing for a big corporation is alright now, is playing for a dictator the new “selling-out”?

Of course, according to acts like Godspeed You! Black Emperor, simply being involved with one of the majors leads to connections with bomb makers such as Lockheed Martin. Is that any better than doing a one-off show for a ruler that buys those bombs?

Plus, given how nice America and so many other countries were with Libya before the recent uprising (and, to some extent, even during), can one really judge a touring artist for who they played for in the past? Should artists, labels, agents and so many others involved be expected to keep abreast of political movements, relations and ethics? In a case like China, which has a terrible human rights history, should the people of that country be denied a performance from such big acts because their leader has questionable practices?

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Hitlantis: the new version of browsing the stacks?

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Hitlantis. Who's next?

Alright, calm down. I’m not suggesting that this idea will ever replace the feeling of finding something new or sought after amongst a dusty bin of cds or vinyl in a small shop blaring music you’ve never heard, but in today’s digital age Hitlantis just might come close.

Although the web-based version seems a little clunky, and the content is lacking since it is still finding its place in the music application business, I think the iOS version will be where this idea shines. The act of using one’s hand to sort through so much content is similar to browsing a stack, and this way you don’t end up with your allergies acting up.

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