Sunday, August 9, 2009

Something a little different...



I am not one for conspiracy theories or looking into the government like it is some big corrupt organization with hidden meanings everywhere so I hope this does not come off like that. I really wanted to share this because it involves optimism and is very creative.


It is the month of August; a resort town sits next to the shores of a lake. It is raining, and the little town looks totally deserted. It is tough times. Everybody is in debt, and everybody lives on credit.

One day, a rich tourist comes to town.

He enters the only hotel, lays a $100 bill on the reception counter, and goes to inspect the rooms upstairs in order to pick one.

The hotel proprietor takes the $100 bill and runs to pay his debt to the butcher.

The Butcher takes the $100 bill, and runs to pay his debt to the pig farmer.

The pig farmer takes the $100 bill, and runs to pay his debt to the feed supplier.

The feed supplier takes the $100 bill and runs to pay his debt to the town's prostitute who in these hard times, gave her "services" on credit.

The hooker runs to the hotel, and pays off her $100 debt to the hotel proprietor to pay for the rooms that she rented when she brought her clients there.

The hotel proprietor then lays the $100 bill back on the counter so that the rich tourist will not suspect anything.

At that moment, the rich tourist comes down after inspecting the rooms, and takes his $100 bill, after saying that he did not like any of the rooms, and leaves town.

No one earned anything. However, the whole town is now without debt, and looks to the future with great optimism.

And that, ladies and gentlemen, is how the United States Government is doing business today.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

12 DAYS OF REDEMPTION

LORIN CHRISTOPHER

It has been a crazy week. My house has almost turned into a recording studio and record label. Lorin Christopher, one of my musical co workers for a few years now was sentenced to a year in prison and was released on a conditional bond for 12 days to attend his mom's funeral and settle any family business. The week has been full of ups and downs because as you know funerals usually cause drama and I am dealing with the one year anniversary of my mom's death which happened to be the day before Lorin's mom's funeral. There has been a lot of raw emotion but we have done some research and this is something we are pretty much calling creative destruction...

It is pretty hard to get someone out of the county jail for 12 days when they are held without bond but we pulled it off. We have been working on a 7 track LP, titled Lorin Christopher - L2...We have done 5 professional photo shoots with camp member Chrisp, and gotten together a marketing plan for his music so we will have everything we need to push his music while he is locked up. He is going to snail mail us blogs to post and tweets. We are going to run with the whole thing and it should get interesting. We have a pretty resourceful camp so this should be a test to see how far we can really take something when the artist himself is behind bars.

Stay Tuned!

Monday, June 8, 2009

Lost and Found.

The High & Mighty


These guys were heavy hitters in the indie hip hop scene in the late 90s out of Philly, and were one of the premier artists on the well-known Rawkus Records roster, which was known for launching careers for: Mos Def, Talib Kweli, and Eminem. The High & Mighty's track "B-Boy Document 99" made big noise, even making it to a Tony Hawk video game soundtrack. I remember somewhere in between they started the group Smut Peddlers with Cage but a beef came about and they disbanded. I am pretty sure if Eminem did not catch the break he did, these guys would be where he is but that is a tough call since they seemed to enjoy the indie scene. I have done all sorts of searching but cannot find anything...Where are they???








Sunday, May 24, 2009

RIP MOM


I miss you mom! I owe all my music knowledge and passion for the artistic side of it to you. Here are some of my mom's favorites!

STEVIE RAY VAUGHN - PRIDE AND JOY


JIMI HENDRIX - LITTLE WING


ROBIN TROWER - DAYDREAM


STEVIE RAY VAUGHN - MARY HAD A LITTLE LAMB


PEARL JAM - YELLOW LEDBETTER


and of course my mom's favorite Jay-Z cut!!
SHOW ME WHAT YOU GOT

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Like A Virgin...Megastore

For years whenever I went out of town for gigs or was out on the road, the first place I wanted to check out was The Virgin Megastore. Virgin is one of, if not the last retail chains that sold up to date vinyl records and all sorts of re-issued old school gems and compilations. There were thousands of CDs, random merchandise, and sometimes a familiar face like: The Roots, Ben Harper, or your favorite gangster rapper in-store signing autographs. My favorite locations, which were in Dallas and New Orleans, were always stocked with great vinyl and I usually spent way too much then I should have. By the end of the summer , all Virgin Megastores will be closed down, because they cannot keep up with the pace of online music distribution hot spots like Amazon and iTunes. For those of us who used to depend on vinyl records to pay the bills before Serato was introduced to the world, this is sad in a way.

On the other hand, even though the cost of a vinyl record averages ten dollars more than a CD, Best Buy will start carrying 200-300 pieces of vinyl in their stores starting in the next few months due to the rise in vinyl record popularity. Mediocre profits are being made of the sales of '12 inch vinyl and they are going to run with it. This is exciting because EMI launched its "From the Capitol Vaults" vinyl initiative with such titles as The Beach Boys' "Pet Sounds," Jimi Hendrix's "Band of Gypsies," and Radiohead's "OK Computer."
I believe that if Best Buy feels the economic climate is healthy enough to do something like that, then that it is great for vinyl junkies, DJs, and for music culture/education.

DIGGING IN THE CRATES OF OKC

CHARLIE'S RECORD STORE - OKLAHOMA CITY

There is also a rise in locally owned vinyl record store sales as well. Oklahoma City has some great diggin spots, such as Size Records, Happy Days, Memory Market, Guestroom Records, and my all time favorite Charlie's Record Store on Classen near Edna's and The HiLo. Charlie will not sell you a record unless he thinks you are worthy to have it. He keeps all the old funk, soul, and old school hip hop rare gems in the back and once you have been in a few times and he has gotten to know you, he will let you check them out. I was with someone the first time they came in and they asked Charlie if he had "The Funky Drummer" by James Brown, which is a highly sampled track. Charlie responded with "You know who else is lookin for that" my friend paused and Charlie rudely replied "You and everyother motherf*cker."

DUSTY FINGERS


When world famous DJs, like DJ Scene and D.J.P came through Oklahoma City years back I took them 'diggin at some spots and they were amazed what they found and how popular the culture of it was here in Oklahoma City. Record 'diggin is almost a whole other culture within itself. I myself was an "O.G. Break" or rare groove digger. Whenever I went and dug in random antique shops, record stores, thrift stores, or anything I ran into around the country, I would look for old funk albums that had drum beats or instrumentals that were sampled to make classic early 90s hip hop tracks. For instance: The Isley Brother's 1970's single "Between The Sheets" which you would never even think of wanting to buy at some random record store, was sampled to make the Notorious B.I.G classic "Big Poppa"

To some DJs, this practice of record digging is serious as sin and they would never tell you their spots or where they got what. Cut Chemist, a well-known producer and DJ for the group Jurassic 5 said when he was touring he would stop through towns and the record store pages were torn out of the phonebook.

My record collection of over a thousand pieces really has not increased since I have started using Serato/Final Scratch 3 years ago. Basically, Serato is a computer program and piece of hardware that runs off of a laptop and still allows turntables and common mixers to be used but your songs run in realtime onto control records like this: A-Trak Final Scratch/Serato Video Demo

In my days of record diggin, everything I ever wanted to find, I eventually did... just short of ten years. My top five dig finds would have to be:


The Winstons - Amen Brother - the most highly sampled song of all time
Galt McDermott - Space -
sampled by Busta Rhymes on "Woo-Ha"
Robin Trower - Bridge Of Sighs
- rare record that has personal value
Main Source - Live At The BBQ -
the first track Nas was ever featured on
Grandmaster Flash - The Message -
Original pressing, shrinkwrapped & mint

On a side note, there is nothing like listening to a record and hearing the crackling sound of old vinyl. I think everyone should have a phonograph/record player in their house and a small collection of records.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Why does T-Pain sound like a robot?

For the past few years, artists like: T-Pain, Lil Wayne, and Gorilla Zoe have educated the masses on the auto tune sound. Tracks like: Chopped & Screwed, Lollipop, & Lost are great examples of this music production tool, which is setting new trends in all genres of music. Honestly I am not a big fan but when an all out rap artist like Lil Wayne does a rock album using this feature it is huge for boundary pushing. The software tool puts an effect on the voice that gives it a robotic or phased sound. Autotune is used to correct pitch but can be used to put that distorted or phased sound on vocals as well.

But...where did that style come from...

The original gangsters of autotune in the hip hop/soul/rnb categories, or vocoder and talk box as it was called then, was pioneed by Zapp and Roger.

VOCODER
The vocoder is a little different concept. It is actually used solely to make that phaser effect on the voice and is an actually a microphone that is extended out of a keyboard which is played in sync of keys and harmonys.




TALKBOX
A talk box, is a small piece of hardware that is connected to a pvc pipe and rests in the artists mouth. It can be played along with instruments to help run harmonys and chords. This makes the possibilities endless. Most people not familiar with old school funk and rnb, would be more familiar with Peter Frampton's Frampton Comes Alive album, which used a talkbox on most known tracks from that album.

Here are some videos of Zapp and Roger at work.
Most of their work has been sampled by everyone from Dr. Dre to EPMD.





Peter Frampton on the Talkbox





CHECK BACK AT THE END OF THE WEEK FOR MY MOTHER'S DAY BLOG :)

The 360 Record Deal

These are some great resources and articles on the infamous 360 Record Deal and in comparison, a breakdown of developmental record deals.

360 RECORD DETAILS & BREAKDOWN

THE 360 RECORD DEAL BLOG

THE DEVELOPMENTAL/DEAL RECORD DEAL


Anyone who is an emerging artist or up and coming indie record label should read this. I myself was doing regional tours, DJing on stage for 2 summers with a pop/hip-hop group, that had a 360 record deal. There is also the developmental/demo record deal which honestly is something I will probally push more to younger artists. I know even though this group I was with thought their 360 deal sounded like a bad thing and they were getting ripped off they actually would've made a ton of money if they did their homework and stuck with it. In the long run they were dropped from the label.

What a nightmare for someone like me who is serious about music and comes to work 100%. There was so much lazyness in this groups camp. Everything for shows was done in procrastination, like soundchecks, appearence, and even taking the stage. I am usually one not to judge but after getting to know our main lead singer, who the group was named after, I can't believe I was even involved with this group. The lead singer was the biggest pre-madonna I have ever worked with. I will say he was a great guitar player but his singing abilities were not up to par and on occaision would try to rap on stage...this just shows you the magic of Pro Tools(his album was produced by Neil Pogue who was the engineer for Outkast's grammy award winning The Love Blow/Speakerboxxx). I remember once doing a rock style cover of "Today Was A Good Day" By Ice Cube and he forgot the lyrics and started doing some weird guitar solo over it. Once, Simple Plan and The Last Goodnight were opening for us and his guitar went out on the first song and he walked off stage. He left the drummer and I up there, so we put on a big show for the crowd doing a drum & scratching solo and of course he got mad that we stole the show(Here is the video of this performance). We never had a stable drummer, and the hypeman was shy and afraid to put himself out there. I remember once we were playing at SXSW in Austin,TX and had a great slot to show our stuff. Our lead singer was making a mountain out of a molehill because he couldn't get a new outfit to wear and it effected the whole show. Luckily on this trip I got to be great friends with the new drummer at the time, Lorin Christopher and we started a camp within the camp. We decided we would just go along for the ride to try to get our names out there and it ended up working. Luckily we both left to pursue other projects. I realized the path this group was on and since I was contracted to the band and not signed onto the label I got out at the right time before they threw me under the bus with their horrible decision making.

Honestly I think the group got lucky and now would be considered a one hit wonder...its funny because they still push that single and its 3 years old. If you look at all their mistakes and attitudes it all goes back to them thinking they were getting ripped off, horrible A&Rs, and lack of authoritave management...I believe this group was hungry to make it in the music world but as soon as a label started doing stuff for them they got lazy...check these articles they are very interesting even if you are just a music junkie.