It’s only taken 8 months but I feel comfortable back in the captain’s chair at my record label after having not done it for the past 5 years. Re-issuing old albums will continue to be my bread and butter but I will always keep supporting and promoting independent music. It’s where I started and will always have a special place in my heart. The spirit of original and new music is what drives creativity forward. Nostalgia is full of sign posts but without new music to build and cultivate new paths the road ends and the sign post will read ‘dead end’.
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Archive for biography
JAIMIE VERNON – HOW TO BE A SUCCESSFUL INDIE ARTIST
Posted in Opinion, Review with tags biography, Bob Segarini, Bullseye Records, Canadian Music, CD Baby, David Komie, DBAWIS, Don't Believe a Word I Say, email, entertainment lawyer, Facebook, Haileerosemusic, incorporate, independent music, Instagram, iPhone, iTunes, Jaimie Vernon, Myspace, original music, Pandora, Photos, Pinterest, Presence, Reverbnation, Rock and Roll lawyer, self-promotion, Soundcloud, sounds incorporated, Spotify, success, SXSW, TuneCore, tweet, Twitter, Unsigned Sealed & Delivered, You've Got Mail on May 7, 2016 by segariniJAIMIE VERNON – ONE FINE MORNING WITH SKIP PROKOP
Posted in Opinion, Review with tags albert Grossman, biography, Bob Segarini, book, book publisher, Bullseye Records, Canadian Music Todd Miller, crowdfunding, David Clayton Thomas, David Quinton-Steinberg, DBAWIS, Don't Believe a Word I Say, Drum Corps, Gordon Lightfoot, Greg Godovitz, Hendrix, Isle of Wight, Jaimie Vernon, Jamie Prokop, Jefferson Airplane, Joplin, kapipal, life story, Lighthouse, ministries, Monterey, One Fine Morning, Optimist Club, Radio That Doesn't Suck, rehab, Ronnie Hawking, Skip Prokop, Sunny Days, The Paupers, Travels With My Amp on March 26, 2016 by segarini
Sometimes stuff just falls into your lap. Some call it luck. Some call it Karma. I’ve always thought of it as a birthday present from a distant relative halfway around the world who chose to send the parcel by cargo ship rather than airmail. Better late than never.
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