B
Ben Linus
New member
no.just likes.and followers.money cant be the motor
Greg, I know what you mean about musicians being easily hurt. Band I was in in Denver in the 80's was approached by a rep from Web Records in NY. They offered a one year, one album contract, no front. We'd never heard of Web Records and didn't like the minimalistic contract, so we turned 'em down. Kept bar gigging and party playing, making decent money, but not a "living." Then a guy and gal showed up at a party we were playing for a friend.. They were each wearing about $1200 in clothes and had "the professional look". Turned out that the rep from Web thought we were good enough to pass on to a rep from Warner Bros.
They came, told us they thought we would be great if we slowed down a coupla things and made our vocals more understandable. Offered 3 yr/ 3 album deal with $250lk signing bonus if we could come up with 2 more peak level songs in a month. Everything sounded good and right to me, but all the guitarists (major songwriters) could think about was the "censorship" of their creativity. They weren't trying to churn out anything. The drummer kept saying "We're not ready for this." After the month passed and we hadn't come up with anything new, the deal fell off, I told them when Warner Bros offers you a three album contract and a quarter of a mil you're ready and if you think telling you how to make your music sound better is censorship, there was no reason for me to stay. I quit the band and went back to the one I'd been in in the Air Force, the drummer got pegged for counterfeitting, and one of the guitarists put his guitar under his bed and, to my knowledge, has never played again.
Musicians have so many quirks that I sometimes am glad to be soloing now. I still don't make a living, but the people at my church still love to hear my voice and my playing (guitar, bass, piano, drums). Of course, no one in a good church is going to tell you otherwise...
Kudos to your bandmates for standing their ground. Probably a dumb financial decision, but I can respect it.
I respect it too. But man, if I had that decision, I would be a sheep and Warner would be my shepherd.
Really, it's things like this that make me glad that I'm solo as well. I have no control over what other members think! If only I had a mind control machine....... MUAHA
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Yeah, back then those contract advances would put you in the poor house. I read the book Confessions of a Record Producer by Moses Avalon and it was a real eye opener. Unless you had two hit albums you probably would still be paying off the advance from the record company. I wonder if it's different today.
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....if we slowed down a coupla things and made our vocals more understandable.
....all the guitarists (major songwriters) could think about was the "censorship" of their creativity.
Musicians have so many quirks that I sometimes am glad to be soloing now....
Greg, I have to disagree. The breaks in music are few and far between, if they ever come at all. Getting the chance to make a mark nationally, even if the label "helps" you refine or commercialize it, it is a first step to creative freedom. If you've got what it takes artistically, getting on the map, so to speak, with a major label is a stepping stone to creative independence and financial stability. It also enables the real artists in the band to dump the naysayers/hangers-on, reconfigure and make even better music....and money. If you just want to practice your art and control everything in your musical life, that's easy. Just stay in your town and play a small clubs. But if you want to make a living and leave a legacy you can ultimately be proud of, then you have to realize that making a living is a function of turning your art into a business and to succeed in business you have to be able to make good business decisions. I've worked with talented but loser musicians and all they do is bring you down and ensure failure. Too bad Broken_H didn't reorganize and keep plugging away. Perseverance is one of the keys to success.
Greg, I have to disagree. The breaks in music are few and far between, if they ever come at all. Getting the chance to make a mark nationally, even if the label "helps" you refine or commercialize it, it is a first step to creative freedom. If you've got what it takes artistically, getting on the map, so to speak, with a major label is a stepping stone to creative independence and financial stability. It also enables the real artists in the band to dump the naysayers/hangers-on, reconfigure and make even better music....and money. If you just want to practice your art and control everything in your musical life, that's easy. Just stay in your town and play a small clubs. But if you want to make a living and leave a legacy you can ultimately be proud of, then you have to realize that making a living is a function of turning your art into a business and to succeed in business you have to be able to make good business decisions. I've worked with talented but loser musicians and all they do is bring you down and ensure failure. Too bad Broken_H didn't reorganize and keep plugging away. Perseverance is one of the keys to success.
I disagree with your disagreement. That's a naively utopian and idealistic view, and it's really, really, dated. That might have been the case in 1982, but it just isn't so anymore.
The breaks in music are few and far between, if they ever come at all. Getting the chance to make a mark nationally, even if the label "helps" you refine or commercialize it, it is a first step to creative freedom. If you've got what it takes artistically, getting on the map, so to speak, with a major label is a stepping stone to creative independence and financial stability. It also enables the real artists in the band to dump the naysayers/hangers-on, reconfigure and make even better music....and money. If you just want to practice your art and control everything in your musical life, that's easy. Just stay in your town and play a small clubs. But if you want to make a living and leave a legacy you can ultimately be proud of, then you have to realize that making a living is a function of turning your art into a business and to succeed in business you have to be able to make good business decisions.
I think Greg certainly has a point; it's a great time to be an independent musician. You have the potential to reach millions of fans thanks to the internet, recording and production gear is comparatively dirt cheap to what it was in the "good ol' days".
Now when I say that it's a great time to be an independent musician, I don't necessarily mean you can make a living out solely music. You can find success in music while having a day job, and the benefit of a DIY approach is that you get a greater return as far as money in concerned. You don't have to aim for a rock star sized audience. In other words, you can make more money selling albums by yourself to smaller audience then you would by selling albums via a label to an exponentially larger audience.
Every major label artist, before they make a dime is busy touring , selling paraphenalia etc. to pay back the front money the label gave them to sustain an album project...some records sell some don't and some major artists are in hock for years to management before they actually own anything...after the artist breaks even on the cost of the album then and only then do they start to make anything on anymore sales...that is the hard core facts of wanting to be a star...it is only serious money if you are happy doing what you are doing!!!
I haven't read through this thread thoroughly, but has anyone actually defined what "serious money" is?