Showing posts with label Spotify. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spotify. Show all posts

Friday, December 20, 2013

FINAL DEPRAVITY Supporten DR. LIVING DEAD! und DUST BOLT In Münster

Metal Hammer, Musix, Metalnews.de present:
Radioactive Intervention Tour 2013
DR. LIVING DEAD!
special guests:
DUST BOLT
FINAL DEPRAVITY

29.12.2013 - Sputnikhalle, Münster
Einlass 19:00 Uhr | Beginn 20:00 Uhr

Hört das ganze neue FINAL DEPRAVITY Album Thrash Is Just The Beginning auf Bandcamp:

Also available on iTunes | Amazon MP3 | Spotify.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Reunited DARKNESS To Play First Show In New Line-Up This Saturday

By Featured Artists

Legendary reunited thrashers
DARKNESS from Altenessen, Germany are about to play the first show in their reformed new line-up - at Ages Of Metal Festival in Oostrozebeke, Belgium this Saturday, September 28!

Out of the three albums DARKNESS had released from 1987 to 1989, especially their debut Death Squad is commonly regarded as a genre classic and serves as a blueprint for Thrash Metal to the day.

DARKNESS celebrated their 25th anniversary at the cathedral of Teutonic Thrash, Essen-Altenessen’s Zeche Carl, in December 2012 and announced the band’s official reunion this summer. 

The new line-up features a household name: KREATOR bassist Christian “Speesy” Giesler. Commented Speesy: “There’s just two bands I’d like to play music with - KREATOR and DARKNESS.”

Joining original DARKNESS members Arnd (now vocals) and Lacky (drums) are also former JAPANISCHE KAMPFHÖRSPIELE guitarist Bony and guitarist Mike (TRAPPED INSANITY).

Welcome back, death squad! \m/

Pic by Jörg Litges | lautundinfarbe.de

Bang your heads to DARKNESS - Death Squad on Spotify:

Monday, September 9, 2013

Re: SOUND - “Why Do We Need 60-70 Strings For A Pop Album? It Makes The Difference.”

By Peter Nordahl, Producer of the new Agnetha Fältskog album, A.

“Why do we need 60-70 strings for a pop album? The answer is simple, it makes the difference.

First of all it makes the difference just to record with real strings rather than to use sample sounds or any other artificial sound library because real strings are alive and breathe. 

Normally we would use 15-20 strings for pop projects but we felt that we needed something special because we were working with one of the finest voices of our time.

Agnetha’s mature and clear voice needed the back-up of the warmth that only a full orchestra could create. An orchestra with its own sound and richness of overtones. An orchestra where you almost can smell the sound of wood while playing. An orchestra that would lay out the red carpet for Agnetha to tell her stories… 

...I wish everybody could be in front of a large orchestra to feel the power that is totally unstoppable.”

Read the full article at the official Agnetha Fältskog website.

A Myrra Malmberg-filmed video clip of producer Peter Nordahl conducting Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra in the new song I Should've Followed You Home can be seen below. This song comes off Agnetha's new album, A, and features Gary Barlow singing a duet with Agnetha.



Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Music Download And Stream, Neither Black Nor White…The ‘Grey Spot’ Is Taking Over

Music Download And Stream, Neither Black Nor White…The ‘Grey Spot’ Is Taking Over 


A guest post by Tommy Morriello, Crash Bang Management (a.o. Exumer, Onslaught, Gama Bomb)  



As a music manager I am frequently confronted with the question of whether or not I am pro or against illegal and/or free music download and streaming… I used to be pretty much against it like U2′s manager Paul Mcguiness. 

I have not changed my mind in regard to the rights an artist has – to get paid for what he does – but I see now that the source of the problem and the solution lie far away from the music end-consumer. 

Music download can be something positive, and it is! I do believe that viral marketing can have a huge impact on someone’s popularity and therefore further his career. The main question is: how to make a profit and run a business, where there is no real income from it’s main product – in this case the music? 

I hear a lot of people talking about merchandise and live shows being the real solutions for the future – I just like to remind everyone that merchandise and live shows already were parts of an artist’s income before the advent of the Internet. Therefore this is not only a weak, but also an absolutely stupid, answer to the problem.

You must now be thinking that I am still against free download and streaming, but no, I am not. I just believe that those who offer it for free should pay for using music as part of their advertising arsenal.

Spotify, iTunes, YouTube, Telecom and even mobile phone companies being some of many corporations that take advantage of a product that lacks or has outdated, general and global regulations, simply lobby their way through and around royalties and copyrights, under the “we promote” flag.

Nokia comes with Music and that’s cool. But who does Nokia pay for this great feature? And how much? 

Companies, which use 3rd party products, brands or services, pay insignificant amounts of money to Artists and labels, forcing them to either join this “criminal” scheme or to be doomed to oblivion.

A year ago I was talking with a business manager from a known German indie label, analyzing Spotify’s popularity and he told me that it was a necessary evil. The label had to join since everyone was doing it. The label had over a 2 Million plays from 40 different artists.

That Label got £440 for the lot, and after taking their commission (25%) of £110 plus £250 for campaign-advertising. The remaining £80 was proportionally divided, £40 going to the artists. There you can see how much 1 year on Spotify will give you…

Now remember before you slander a record label, keep in mind that not all of them are bad and almost none of them are making huge profits nowadays!

If you take the recent article from The Independent about superstar Lady Gaga, who probably has better royalty rates than the above mentioned label, she got around £108 for 1 million plays.

I am not sure, but I would bet my life that the label invested a slightly bigger amount in order to promote the “Lady” in question.

I believe that digital sales could easily be obsolete in a couple of years, and all music available could be for free to listen to, if artists and labels would get their share from these Multi-billion-dollar companies.

If music is not to be sold over the counter, that is fine – neither will newspapers, movies or books in the future – but those who provide means of mass distribution and also earn billions through advertising and attracting investors should pay their suppliers accordingly, in this case the music industry and the artists.

This is the “Grey Spot” in the music business, leave the end consumer alone. At present, music distribution is a free product for Internet giants who managed for years, to stay away from the spotlight, blaming either the consumer or the labels for something that they are creating: the utter downfall of the artist as a professional worker.

If you have the illusion that indie labels make a lot of money, you are wrong. I see many A&R directors, PR managers working out of passion, driving to meetings in 1997 Toyota Corollas, and sleeping at travelodges.

Indie labels sometimes fight to present new products and even help bands to tour, knowing that this might be a risk investment with no compensation at the end of the day.

The idea of free music is now moving to another level. Some of the big festivals (especially in Europe) offer artists a spot on the festival, telling them that this is a great opportunity for them to promote themselves. Artists go there, play for free and on top they spend a couple of thousands in transport and lodging, so a sold out festivals can put their names on the bill and make even more money.

If this idea of promotion sticks, then we will see the demise of professional agents, managers, crews and artists, who will simply stop working, as there is no more money whatsoever to be made, never mind a living.

Stage production in the last 10 years has never been so bad. If we compare it to the ’80s (OK, they were a bit over the top), even smaller acts would back then offer something for your eyes besides the music.

If no action is taken, soon we shall see music, currently an industry employing thousands of people, becoming a hobby like gardening, or knitting in few years.