From Sarah Buxton-Stupid Boy

You should know that when we were recording my version of "Stupid Boy", Dann Huff wanted the track to end when I said "…long gone, long gone…"at the end.  He didn’t want a solo section at all.

It took a lot of convincing, but I finally said, "DUDE.  FREE BIRD.  The song has to end with the epic soundtrack of her LEAVING THIS ASS HOLE!"   I told him he never puts monster solos on his country tracks and WHY!  I mean, he WAS in Giant…

He smiled, reluctantly, and the next time I went over to his house, he played me his solo and it was the one you hear on my track.  

To this day, I swear, that song never would have done a damn thing if we hadn’t put the solo on there…  Keith wouldn’t have recorded it, you wouldn’t have loved it…

You really listen.  It is much appreciated in a world with no attention span.

LOVE!
Sarah

Motivation

I went to this Metallica art exhibit last night. And although I had a fascinating conversation with Bob Rock wherein he told the story of his manager, Bruce Allen, imploring him to check out Michael Buble, ("You’re gonna want to leave, just give it THREE SONGS!") and how this led him to doing half of Buble’s last two albums the highlight was the freewheeling dinner after the show.

Sitting around a seemingly endless rectangular table at a Japanese restaurant I became engaged with one Brian Bumbery, who told me he was wearing his ten dollar Uniqlo jeans and this devolved into a conversation about mileage runs, Brian’s got Premier Executive 100k status on United, and suddenly we were best friends. To the point where I got Brian’s backstory. How he went from broken home to becoming the publicist for Metallica, Muse, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Green Day, My Chemical Romance… A journey from paying half his salary to live in a tiny apartment with his significant other to planning this gallery event we just attended.

After Brian was gone, standing on the sidewalk I asked the assembled multitude if Brian was any good. THE BEST! HE’S RELENTLESS! NOT THAT HE’S OVERBEARING, HE JUST CONVINCES OUTLETS THAT HIS BANDS DESERVE THE COVER!

And it was after listening to Brian’s life story that Mike Dirnt chipped in with tales from his own, interactions with his estranged dad and his decision to wash cars instead of having a paper route.

He was in second grade, maybe it was third, Mike wasn’t sure. And he went to stay at a friend’s house but was warned his buddy would be getting up early, leaving to deposit papers on doorsteps around the neighborhood. And Mike just couldn’t understand it, all this torture for sixty bucks a month.

So Mike went into business for himself. Washing cars. He’d knock on neighbors’ doors, point to where he lived, and said he was washing cars for a buck. He didn’t want the high rent vehicles, he wasn’t interested in those worried about their cars getting scratched, but those who truly had dirty vehicles.

And Mike ended up making sixty bucks a WEEKEND!

Which he mostly blew on candy and the like, but he needed the money, he had none.

Is it any wonder that Brian Bumbery and Mike Dirnt became successful? People just see the end result, they’ve got no idea of the hard work it takes to truly establish yourself. Or they think shortcuts work. Sure, there are exceptions, like Kelly Clarkson and Carrie Underwood, then again their overnight television success was preceded by years of slogging in obscurity.

It’s so hard to make it. We’re exposed to only the successes, not the failures. But these people NEEDED to make it. Not only for the notoriety, but frequently purely to exist, they had no backstop, no one to call to pay the bills.

That’s the American way.

And isn’t it interesting that despite those from good families getting great educations who end up wealthy as a result of inheritance or financial/professional jobs, the true innovations come from those highly motivated, who risked it all.

The Power Of Free Music

In a world where SoundScan sets a minimum price to appear on their chart is the most valuable perch number one at the Pirate Bay?

Let’s start with what everybody seems to be interested in, money. What’s the best way to make a lot of money?

The major labels knew how. They controlled radio and retail, not allowing anybody else to play. And they reaped all the rewards.

To this day it’s almost impossible to get your record on the radio if you’re an indie act, and in the days of physical retail, if you weren’t aligned with a major, you could never get paid, no matter how many units you sold.

This is the game the content industries are trying to cement in stone with SOPA/PIPA. It’s got nothing to do with theft/copyright infringement. That’s a smoke screen. They want control.

And online, they’ve lost it.

Pretty Lights, an act with no label who answers only to himself built an empire on giving his music away for free.

So what would you rather have? The revenue from sales of an album or a career where you could go on the road and make millions, over a hundred thousand bucks a night?

This is what the Web has empowered, this is what the content industries want to stop.

Read every word of the above article.

And when you’re done with that, read this press release from the Pirate Bay:

I’m not saying I endorse the Pirate Bay’s position, but it does raise the question of the cleanliness of the copyright holders’ position but more importantly it asks whether it is truly possible to shut the operation down.

I’m not saying we should shrug our shoulders and give up fighting piracy, I’m just saying we should fight infringement with business solutions. It’s hard to argue against piracy when one has to wait months to rent the DVD or stream a file of a film now playing in theatres. Why? Why not allow me to pay for the privilege?

And allow me to pay for streaming music services, where I can hear what I want on demand instead of having to find a BitTorrent seed, download the file, decompress it and then import it into iTunes just to find I don’t even like it.

In the old days, Pretty Lights would have to sign with a major label, where he would be beholden to their release schedule and creative input and would get a tiny share of any revenue accumulated.

But in the old days, a major label never would have signed Pretty Lights. Because radio didn’t play electronic music, there was no market for it.

But the Web demonstrated that there’s a huge market for electronic music, that’s what blew the scene up, the easy availability of files and the rabid discourse about the music and concerts.

This is the new world.

And if you don’t think it’s better than the old world, you’re one of those rich media companies as opposed to an individual, who has no trouble paying for what he truly wants if it’s delivered in a fashion that accommodates him.

Also, you’ve got to know where in the food chain to charge!

Like that old joke goes…

The baby bull says to the papa bull, "Let’s run down the hill and screw one of those cows!"

And the papa bull replies…"Let’s walk down and screw them all."

Don’t be blinded by the old model. The greater riches for the greater number of artists and people is in the new world, undeniably.

The Power Of Blogs

Are you best off:

1. Getting 3 minutes on CNN.

2. Getting published in the Sunday Opinion section of the "New York Times" and having your column reach #6 on the most emailed list.

3. Having "a guest post you wrote, published on the blog of one lone dude in SF obsessed with fat loss, female orgasms, and lifting Russian kettle bells?"

For the record, the blog in number 3 is that of Tim Ferriss.
And the answer is #3. It is the only promotion that significantly moved books for Michael Ellsberg, driving sales of his tome from #1,295 to #45 on Amazon.

But how did Mr. Ellsberg get this guest post position? By becoming friends with Mr. Ferriss, not asking for anything for a very long time. Ellsberg suggests investing two to ten years in the relationship. Which is very different from blasting e-mail to a zillion bloggers which doesn’t work because bloggers are being pitched all day long and have more power than the mainstream media.

Because bloggers have clearly defined personalities, their readers are passionate. Hell, if you want to know what’s going on in the political world don’t read the newspaper, read the blogs!

And I’m saying all this not because I want you to curry favor with me, please no, refrain from that, but because in the past week we’ve seen the mainstream media get it wrong so many times.

1. SOPA/PIPA

The mainstream media had no idea of the power of the Web.

2. South Carolina Primary

The mainstream media said it was a fait accompli, Romney had the nomination sewn up. And now suddenly, Gingrich wins. Huh?

I think the issues inherent in SOPA/PIPA are important, but the big stories this week are how both the movie and music industries found out that the public is not on their side and that Congress is all about satiating the public, that individual votes trump huge corporate donations.

In other words, everything’s up for grabs. The institutions are not to be trusted, we’ve had a virtual earthquake and everybody’s in a panic and we won’t know what’s going on until the tsunami recedes, which could take years.

I won’t quite endorse the Firesign Theatre’s philosophy, that everything you know is wrong, but it’s close. The power is now with the individual.

And this changes everything.

For those averse to reading, you can get the essence of the article here:

But I highly recommend reading from the beginning, especially if you’re wealthy and powerful, this changes everything: