E-Mail Of The Day

From Dave Cool:
Subject: Guitarist Jon Gomm turns down Britain’s Got Talent: "Simon Cowell can kiss my ass"

Hi Bob,

A video by UK guitarist Jon Gomm recently went viral thanks to a tweet from British comedic legend Stephen Fry. Here’s the story, the video that went viral, and the tweet:

"’Wow!’ Stephen Fry’s one-word tweet catapults guitarist from obscurity to an audience of 2 MILLION listeners":

http://bit.ly/yAUVjY

Jon is now getting a lot of attention in British media, and even got a phone call from Britain’s Got Talent. Here’s what Jon’s manager told them:

"To all those dreamers and wannabes who may somewhat foolishly believe in the integrity of shows like The X Factor and Britain’s Got Talent: A producer from BGT just called me to ask if Jon Gomm would like to take part in the show. I happen to know for a fact that the open auditions took place months ago and there are anxious hopefuls all over the country waiting for their phones to ring to see if they’ve made it to the TV stage of the audition process. In the meantime, producers are calling musicians who have shown zero interest in appearing on the show to invite them to take part and groom them for victory. As a long time loather of all reality/talent shows I told them where to shove it in no uncertain terms. These programmes are exploitative bollocks. Don’t believe the bullshit people. Simon Cowell can kiss my ass."

https://www.facebook.com/jongommofficial?sk=wall&filter=2

Thought you might enjoy that, you don’t see independent artists saying no to the establishment like that (and turning down "instant fame") very often…

Cheers,

DC

1. For years we’ve heard no act has ever broken on the Internet. That’s now patently untrue.

2. P2P file sharing was supposed to kill music, so why didn’t this guy give up and get a service job?

3. The train is leaving the station on Twitter, get on it now, Twitter is where news is both made and spread.

4. The nineties were the era of YES, today is the era of NOW! Don’t be afraid to say no, especially if you’re in it for the long haul.

5. In the old days managers would be afraid to speak the truth, fearful they’d be blackballed by the system. We now live in an era of honesty, and if you speak the truth people resonate, just like me, that’s why I’m printing this e-mail!

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From Ken Ehrlich

From: Ken Ehrlich
Subject: Grammys
Date: February 14, 2012 4:20:59 PM PST
To: Bob Lefsetz

i don’t know who you are, or what you have against me, but if you think i’m out of touch, putting on a show that features dance music with david guetta and deadmau5, performances by every major contemporary act, and trying together the generations, then what the fuck do you call yourself?

it’s because of people like you that the music business is in the trouble it is now, you dinosaur.

stop trying to appear to be relevant. it’s not working

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We Are All Weird

Linda Chorney didn’t win the Grammy.

You remember Ms. Chorney, she’s the woman who used the Grammy365 program to get herself a nomination. That was remarkable.

Unfortunately, Ms. Chorney’s music was not. Despite the worldwide press, there was no spike in sales, no embrace by the public, she’s still a marginal artist playing to marginal audiences.

Because her music is not remarkable.

You have to be remarkable. Not good, not better than the people on the radio, but remarkable, which Seth Godin defines as being worthy of being talked about.

There was nothing to talk about in Ms. Chorney’s music. She was selling average stuff to average people, and today that’s a death sentence. That’s what the big boys try to do, in an ever less successful fashion. You can’t beat them, and you don’t want to be them.

I’d hire Ms. Chorney to get the word out, to establish a grass roots marketing campaign any day of the week, that was what was remarkable about her efforts, not the music.

But it’s all about the music.

You’ve got to aim low. Don’t try to reach everybody, just somebody. And if this somebody doesn’t tell other somebodies, you’re doomed. Want to know when to give up? If people aren’t spreading the word about you. Used to be you could buy advertising, get in front of people. But that was before the Internet revolution, before we not only became immune to hype, but completely disregarded it.

And once you get the reaction you desire, from this small crop of people, bond with them. Know who they are, give them special offers, something to talk about, the same way Zappos built its business upon free overnight shipping, upon customer service. Wanna know something great about Amazon? Frequently if you don’t like something, they refund your money and just tell you to keep it. It’s not worth the time and effort to send it back, it’s their gift to you. Friends have told me this story again and again, that’s how you build a business, that’s today’s advertising.

Assuming you’re great to begin with.

And Amazon is pretty great.

I’m not talking about the company that fights paying sales tax and is trying to take over the universe, but the one with the well-designed website that reliably delivers your product. Shopping at Amazon is much better than going to Best Buy, any physical retailer, which is why I do most of my shopping there, the same way I go to Google. Bing is not remarkable, it’s just Microsoft’s version of Google, who needs that? Microsoft should have thought small, and grown from there. The same way Apple started out making the iPhone and ended up in search, that was not anticipated, it grew to that point.

My inbox is inundated with people who want to succeed the old way. They want someone else to pay to make them famous. As if fame paid the bills. If you think all those reality TV stars are rich, you’re sorely mistaken. Never before have so many been famous for nothing. You might win the lottery, you might get a major label deal, they might lay down a million to advertise you, you might be well known. But can you sell music and tickets and last? Those are completely different questions.

And then there are those who complain the majors just don’t get their music. That’s no longer their job. It’s yours. If it’s that good, you can grow your own audience, if you can’t, it’s probably not that good.

As for signing with an indie… Do you really want a less financially stable operation trying to do it the same way as the major? I’m not saying all indies do this, but if they’re major label copycats, avoid them, you’re saving yourself from a disheartening experience.

Marketing comes last, music comes first.

And marketing is not oppressing the public, dunning them to pay attention, but giving them tools to spread the word.

We’re living in the connection revolution, you need no money to start. If you think you can’t afford it, give up today, you don’t understand the game.

And you can’t get rich fast. If that’s your desire, go to Vegas, play the lottery. Now it’s about making fans one by one over time. It’s the only way to establish a base, which will pay dividends for decades if you’re lucky.

Anybody can go on "Idol" or "X Factor" and sing the hits. That’s easy. But write a hit? That’s almost impossible. And what is a hit? Sure, it’s something you hear on Top Forty radio, but today a hit might have the most YouTube views. And on YouTube, there are no restrictions. Your song can feature goose farts. Your voice doesn’t have to be good. It’s just that the music has to be remarkable.

We’re never going back to the old ways. Never ever. Lament the machinations of Doug Morris and his wannabes, the sun is setting on their era. Not because I said so, but because the Internet changed the game, eliminated their monopoly on distribution and allowed everybody to play.

Furthermore, everybody doesn’t want to hear the same thing.

Once upon a time, there were only three TV networks, we all watched the same programs. Today we’re all weird, watching a zillion cable channels, if not turning off cable and surfing Internet video. We’re only going to have more choices, there will only be more fragmentation.

Will there be superstars in the future?

Of course!

But those who last will have paid years of dues. Will gain their audiences slowly. Beware of anybody who makes it overnight, their time in the spotlight will probably be gone soon.

P.S. All of the above was inspired by Seth Godin’s remarkable interview:

Listen to it. Seth lays it all out. Most people don’t have the time, they can’t click through and spend twenty five minutes. But those who do are those who will win. Because those who do know an ounce of preparation exceeds a million spam messages, which might make the sender feel good but will be deleted by all the tastemakers whose image is burnished by promoting something great.

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Grammys Beat The Super Bowl

"According to Bluefin Labs, the Grammys earned 13 million social comments. That breaks the record from last week’s Super Bowl and absolutely dwarfs every other entertainment event from the last year."

Social Media Helps Grammys Achieve Huge Ratings in Broadcast and Social TV

THAT’S the power of music!

Enough with the hogwash about how the Internet killed the music business. People care more about music than even sports, which are supposedly all about participation.

Read this article, look at the graphics, it’s brief and easily comprehensible.

The bottom line is we’re sitting on a gold mine. People are engaged with music, they’ve got opinions, they care. The Internet has allowed fans to become ever closer to musicians, the gap has closed.

The public has turned the music business topsy-turvy. It hasn’t eviscerated it so much as realigned it. Doesn’t matter what the fat cats say, nor traditional media, it all comes down to what the people think.

P.S. The Grammys may have forgiven Chris Brown, but not the public, most of the comments on social media were negative! Meanwhile, he appeared on the telecast twice. Shows that Ken Ehrlich and CBS are out of touch.

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