Archive for March, 2010

Music Industry Scams

This is an interesting look at some scams that float around the music business offering a get (famous/rich) quick scheme.

“Nick Biscardi of Pilot Cloud shares the same sentiments.

Hunter S. Thompson once said, ‘the music business is a cruel and shallow money trench where good men die like dogs and thieves and pimps run free. There is also a negative side.’

In May 2009, we received a message from Joe Bird at Quickstar Productions that they were interested in adding one of our songs to a compilation CD. All we had to do was pay for our share of the pressings ($180) and we get a batch of these comps to distribute however we please.

Fast-forward to February 2010, and we still have nothing to show for it. After we had paid the fee, representatives tried to come after us saying that they had not received payment and tried to get us to pay again. It took until July to get them to acknowledge that they had, in fact, taken our money.

Ever since, whenever we ask about the status of the project, they tell us that things ‘are still in the mastering phase’. This whole ordeal has been one headache after another, and the most frustrating thing is that we’re not even sure; A, if we can get our money back; and B, how to go about reporting any of this to anyone.

We were taken for a ride and this has been a disappointing, eye-opening experience with how shady the music business can be. Live and learn, I suppose. The easiest way to avoid future run-ins like this is to inform anyone and everyone.”

Read the rest via indieonthemove.com

CAUTION: EYE OF NAP under construction!

http://estiaonline.com/yahoo_site_admin/assets/images/Under20construction20Logo20Animated.266174242.gif

Please be patient, it will be a couple weeks before we really get the ball rolling here. New interviews coming soon, in the meantime, please feel free to send me some site suggestions at: mad247@weirdness.com !

Will cause insanity in its musicians and listeners!

Colorado_guy The glass harmonica’s ghostly notes will cause insanity in its musicians and listeners! At least this is what was thought to be true in the 18th century. People were frightened by the harmonica’s sound due to it’s strange interactions with the human brain and ears. Benjamin Franklin invented the glass harmonica in 1761 after being profoundly moved by the sounds of the glass harp

Mark Garufi plays the theme for The Pink Panther On 27 Wine Glasses…

VIA: -GROW A BRAIN-

What would it cost….?

Superfly by Mike Diana

upwards, not downwards

acephalist
n. one who acknowledges no superior

“In America everybody is of the opinion that he has no social superiors, since all men are equal, but he does not admit that he has no social inferiors, for, from the time of Jefferson onward, the doctrine that all men are equal applies only upwards, not downwards.” — Bertrand Russell

Yes, I’m posting from Wikipedia

“The term psychedelic is derived from the Greek words ψυχή (psyche, “soul”) and δηλείν (delein, “to manifest”), translating to “mind-manifesting”.”

http://www.poster-books.com/images/masters-of-rock-issue-7-psychedelic-60s.jpg

Psychedelic music covers a range of popular music styles, genres and scenes, that may include psychedelic rock, psychedelic folk, psychedelic pop, psychedelic soul, psychedelic ambient, psychedelic trance, and others. Psychedelic rock is also commonly called acid rock. Psychedelic music can occur in almost every genre of music, including classical Western art music.

-CONTINUED-

6 Musicians Who Predicted Their Own Death

Spoiler Alert!!

#3. Hank Williams – “I’ll Never Get Out of this World Alive”

Immediately, there’s nothing too shocking or particularly insightful about the title of this song. It’s obvious that everyone is going to die at some point. Most of those people, however, won’t crank out a comical tune about it right before they go. Released in 1952, “I’ll Never Get Out Of This World Alive” was the last single Hank Williams released in his lifetime. The lyrics are your standard down-on-your-luck type of stuff. Troublesome, sure, but nothing life threatening going on. But still, there’s that chorus…

Unfortunate Lyrics:

“No matter how I struggle and strive. I’ll never get out of this world alive.”

What Happened Next:

After reportedly struggling and striving, Hank Williams barely made it out of the rest of the year alive. On the morning of January 1st, 1953, just months after the song was released, he was pronounced dead at the Oak Hill Hospital emergency room.

There is a myth that the song was actually #1 on the Billboard charts at the time of his death, but “I’ll Never Get Out Of This World Alive” actually didn’t reach the top spot until shortly after his death.

Today, Hank Williams is hailed as an innovator in the field of record promotion for being the first to employ the “Die Young and Sell a Ton of Records” technique.

See the other 5 via Cracked.com.

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