Lots of good stuff happening out there and it’s time we plugged in to some of it if only to counter the “real” musical happenings being covered by all of the sites who think that Kanye West canceling (or postponing) a show is news. I get it. No fun finding out your wife is being held at gunpoint. Just not headline news in my part of the world.
Archive for Sam Wilson
Frank Gutch Jr: Amy van Keeken & Timeloop Touring Western Canada; Spotify: The Boil On the Ass of the Music Industry; Plus Notes
Posted in Opinion, Review with tags . Evie Sands, Adam Marsland, Amy van Keeken, Angharad Drake, Beachy Head Music Club, carl anderson, Daisy House, Daniel Ek, DBAWIS, Don't Believe a Word I Say, Doug Hammond, Duggy Degs, Elephant Revival, Filligar, Frank Gutch Jr., Indie Artists, Indie Music, Lisbee Stainton, Morphine, music, music videos, Nigel Godrich, Pacific Soul Ltd, radio, Records, Rob Martinez, Rumer, Sam Wilson, Schuyler Fisk, segarini, Shook Twins, Spotify, Sweet Home Oregon, The Green Pajamas, The Sundowners, thom yorke on October 4, 2016 by segariniFrank Gutch Jr: Daisy House— An A&R Dream
Posted in Opinion, Review with tags Captain Beefheart, Daisy House, David Graves, DBAWIS, Don't Believe a Word I Say, Doug Hammond, Floating Points, Frank Gutch Jr., gary heffern, Gileah Taylor, Green Pajamas, Harry Nilsson, Indie Artists, Indie Music, Jeff Kelly, Legendary Shack Shakers, music, music videos, Nick Hornbuckle, Old Californio, Peter Hackett, radio, Records, Robert W. Walker, Sam Wilson, segarini, Stephen Young & The Union, Steve Young, Sweet Home Oregon, Tatiana, The Navins, Tom House, Vinnie Zummo, Western Man, Whitehorse on June 21, 2016 by segariniIn all my years in music, I never worked for a label. I wanted to. But I wanted to work only in A&R. Artists and Repertoire. They were the people who found the artists, who were liaison between the artist and label management, who groomed the performers and worked with them on the songs for their albums and maybe just the direction of focus. I knew a few A&R people in L.A. They loved it. They wouldn’t have done anything else. Most of them, when their A&R gigs ended, got out of the business because it was a sewer everywhere else. Sales? The pits. Promotion? Real work. Management? A path, most of the time, to disaster. I mean, A&R was where the adventure was. And is.