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"World-class thinking about music, business, publishing and the general world of media" - Campaign
chaplin
Tuesday, January 30, 2007
Strangely Strange
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A Star Is Born
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Monday, January 29, 2007
The hits keep right on comin'
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Saturday, January 27, 2007
Going the pretty way
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Friday, January 26, 2007
The power of negative thinking
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Wednesday, January 24, 2007
Just do it
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Going back to go forward
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Tuesday, January 23, 2007
For those in peril
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Contrast with the kids on BBC3's Sweet 16 who are doing their GCSEs at a fairly tough school in Tottenham. All their dreams seem to be painfully out of whack with their actual prospects. The career plan of the lad last night was simple to "be famous" and he travelled to Turkey to sort out the one thing he felt was holding him back, his nose. One of the girls, when asked to describe her friends, said they were "popular and pretty". The boy tonight wants to be a rapper. Watch it.
Monday, January 22, 2007
Department Of Cake And Eat It
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Nothing's gonna change their world
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The daily business of being a rock star involves a profligate waste of electricity and airplane fuel; they gather around them vast retinues and fleets of pantechnicons such as would make Eddie Stobart blush; they consider they have a God-given right to invade the peace and quiet of anyone unfortunate enough to live in the vicinity of their open air gigs; whenever one of their records stiffs they blame it on the fact that the record company didn't flood the outlets by over-producing copies; they are incapable of going anywhere unaccompanied or by public transport; they buy huge houses that they rarely visit; their indulgence in drugs supports corrupt governments and criminal cartels and wherever they go they tend to leave a trail of waste.
Hardly eco-warriors, no matter how many songs they sing about it.
Sunday, January 21, 2007
Pet Sounds
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Saturday, January 20, 2007
Anger management
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Ever since man crawled out of the bog he has discriminated against people on the grounds of difference. It's either done minutely and silently and never results in any action or in societies that enshrine that discrimination in law. As a human tendency there is no more chance of "racial prejudice" (which is what they actually called it in the 60s) being stamped out than we will stamp out lust, avarice, anger, pride, gluttony or any of the seven deadly sins. It can be contained, discouraged and its most extreme excesses legislated against but it isn't going to go anywhere. Those commentators popping up this week to tell us that "Britain is a racist society" have been unable to point to anywhere on earth where people are blind to differences of pigmentation, accent or religion. It's a human tendency which is shared by every human on earth.
In the same week Janet Street Porter is in the papers because she's alleged to have used "racist abuse" at some neighbour over a parking dispute. I've had my dealings with JSP and while I don't believe she would make any racially controversial remarks to anyone, I would be more than ready to believe she unleashed a volley of abuse on very little provocation. And actually it's the abuse that's the problem in both these stories – the lack of tolerance, the tendency to fly off the handle as soon as somebody gets in our faces, the feeling that we have a civic right to our anger, the desire to hear the sound of our own voices raised in indignation and assumed hurt, the pathetic petulance of it all. Whichever less than pleasant part of our personality all this anger derives from is beside the point. It's that Channel 4 should "confront".
Friday, January 19, 2007
"Cut or uncut?"
Thursday, January 18, 2007
"Salford calling"
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On Simon Mayo's Five Live show yesterday talking about the future for record shops in the light of the feature in the current issue of Word. Usually Simon broadcasts from Shepherd's Bush but on certain days (such as Prime Minister's Question Time) the show is done from the BBC's very busy studio in Millbank, just across the road from Parliament. Now today, in the light of the licence fee settlement, I hear Mark Thompson talking on Simon's programme and insisting that the BBC's planned move to Salford will go ahead. Paul Fox popped up to point out that since the Olympics is coming to London and politics is based in London, this seems like a funny time to be moving everything to Manchester. Broadcasters are always talking big about the need to decentralise. It's a good way to drum up backing from government. Everybody approves in principle but nobody approves in practice apart from the people who happen to live at the new location. Ask Malcolm Gerrie how hard it was to get acts to travel to Newcastle to appear on The Tube. Given that and the fact that the senior management and top talent at the BBC will simply find a way to avoid going, I don't believe it will ever happen. If the BBC has to move a studio across London in order to be nearer to a power centre, how much sense does it make to move so much of its operations two hundred miles away from the hub of finance, the media, government and show business? And I know it's not fair but this country is too small to decentralise and too crowded to cross.
Tuesday, January 16, 2007
One giant leap for a hack
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Sunday, January 14, 2007
Copyright and book keeping: a cautionary tale
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Nine months ago I was contacted by somebody from Universal DVD who was putting together a DVD of John Martyn at the BBC. They wanted to use some ancient clip from Whistle Test which happened to feature me introducing him and they were seeking my permission. I said fine. They said, we have to pay you something. Because I've had lots of experience of the amount of palaver attached to paying trifling sums of money in cases like these, I said, don't bother, just send me some wine. They eventually came back and said they couldn't do that and they'd need me to sign a form giving them permission and then send them an invoice for £100. I duly did this (plus VAT). This was in May. Months later we were going through the books and found it hadn't been paid. So I got on to them. They did a search and came back saying I needed to fill in a form to become one of their official suppliers before I could get paid. You know the kind of thing: sort codes, VAT numbers, next of kin etc. I still didn't get paid. Three months later they paid me, but they missed off the VAT. Now, once you've made out a VAT invoice, you have to get it paid or the VAT man wants to know what you're up to. So I get on to them again. Just before Christmas they send me that missing VAT, but it's wrong by £2.50. So almost a year later I'm still chasing a sum of money that I never asked for and a number of people both at my end and at Universal's have had their valuable time wasted. Now I'm not asking for sympathy but my point is this: as the entertainment and media industries get more and more complex and diverse, how much more of people's time is going to be occupied chasing signatures in order to clear this or that footling item? I don't have any moral rights here. I don't add any commercial value to John Martyn's DVD. If they'd just left me in and not said anything I wouldn't have been particularly bothered. I know that the producers of these Whistle Test DVDs have to waste months chasing down bass players of long-forgotten bands in order to tell them that if they sign to clear this twenty five year old performance they're entitled to £53.34 or whatever it is. It is an unsustainable model devised for a different era. No wonder Bill Gates is talking about buying out musicians for life.
Saturday, January 13, 2007
I want my aaawwww TV
Somebody should think of a name for the increasing number of home-edited montages from new generation sitcoms that are starting to appear on YouTube. The classic example is made up of clips of will-they-won't-they screen couples cut to romantic music. I think it began with Dawn and Tim on The Office. It went wild with their counterparts Jim and Pam on the American version. It continues with Caroline and Mac in Green Wing. I think it's rather sweet. It certainly seems to indicate that lots of these long-running comedy programmes are actually love stories in heavy disguise.
Friday, January 12, 2007
Never before and never again
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Tonight's Timewatch Beatlemania film wasn't up to much. The producers tried to pass off their collection of home movie footage and people who've not been interviewed much as a coherent chronology and the absence of any Lennon/McCartney material was plain laughable. However, Maureen Cleave, the same person to whom Lennon gave the "bigger than Jesus" interview, talks sense. "They went from nothing to being the best known people in the English-speaking world. In just two years." That's fair comment. On the left is the cover of the issue of Datebook that picked up the Evening Standard "Jesus" interview and started the whole scandal in the Bible Belt. Amazing nobody took any exception to the story that's above it on the cover, in which McCartney uses the "n" word.
Joni Mitchell in concert
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Last night I happened to catch the last few numbers of a BBC In Concert recording of Joni Mitchell from 1970. There she was in a long frock surrounded by a small selection of adoring fans. She was looking beautiful and sounding astonishingly good. She played California with a dulcimer on her lap, then Big Yellow Taxi and then Both Sides Now, all of which were only months old at the time. Amazing to reflect that she'd only been a professional singer for a few years at that point and yet she'd already laid down the foundation stones of her reputation. This isn't "early Joni Mitchell". It's the finished item. She's said to be making a comeback this year and if that includes some live work, these are the songs that people are going to be calling for.
Monday, January 08, 2007
Why should anyone care about the chart?
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All this talk of a revolution taking place in the charts now that downloads are included in the calculations overlooks the larger question – in a downloading world, why the hell does anyone other than the record companies or the chronically insecure need a chart at all?
Charts were introduced as a means of helping record shops decide which of the many new releases they should stock. A song went in at number 43 on the basis of how many copies it sold in a small number of shops, all the other record shops ordered it, people went into the shops, listened to whatever was new to the chart, in some cases bought it, more copies were thus manufactured and distributed, radio play was cranked up, TOTP appearances booked and so it went on, around and around.
It was a model that was built for the world of physical distribution, where resources had to be managed and directed in order to make the machine work. Somebody had to decide how many copies of a record were pressed and where they were sent to. Who's doing that today?
The business analysts would call it a "push" model. People responded to the limited amount of material that could be placed before them at a given time.
But the same business analysts will tell you that the web is all about "pull". Everything in the world is now front of you and all you've got to do is choose what you want. If a million people decide to buy the MIKA single today, the record company won't have to manufacture any more copies and get them into the distribution chain.
It's no longer a physical business. This ought to be embraced by all right thinking people for the amount of waste and expense it saves. But it doesn't seem to be that way. The people who are clinging most desperately to the life rafts of the Old Ways are the record companies, the broadcasters and the acts themselves, all of whom are trying to find a way of deciding who's This Week's Winner when the truth is that nobody cares any more. There is no such thing as the most popular record any more. It's a dead parrot. If it wasn't nailed to the perch by the the bureaucrats at the BBC and the BPI (who between them are historically responsible for the slow decline in interest in the charts) it would be pushing up daisies by now. HMV are bailing already. Who's next?
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