
Lt. Bob
Spread the Daf!
no but that's actually gonna happen fairly soon as my wifey builds my website.That's cool. You got any video?
I'll be sure to let you know as soon as I have something that I don't hate.

no but that's actually gonna happen fairly soon as my wifey builds my website.That's cool. You got any video?
I don't use karaoke type tracks since they sound so cheesy ...
I do all my own seq's and have soent around 15 years getting them dialed into where they sound natural and not anything at all like karaoke since I did use to do a duo in BR.
for me the tweaking is more important to keep me happy.I think the extra effort to tweak the midi parts would be worthwhile for the listeners. And if the audience is happy, the bar manager is happy, and if the bar manager is happy.....
for me the tweaking is more important to keep me happy.
Audiences are pretty easy to please but I'm not gonna do that if I'm bored or hate my seq's.
So I constantly tweak them in many different ways.
And that's another reason to use a keyboard. If you're playing tracks on a laptop or a karaoke player, you have to do an entire re-recording of the track. But I can just take my seq's in the keyboard and make even minor changes and then save it. So I can change a seq at a gig and save that.
BTW ..... just an aside but since my keyboards are 15 years old ..... I use 3 1/2" floppies.
I'm old enough I'll be dying fairly soon so why change formats?
So I have boxes and boxes of floppies. I carry about 16 floppies with around 30 songs on each one to gigs. The keyboard reads sirect from floppy so I don't have to load any files. It was a pretty cool system for its' time.
I have 7 or 8 extra floppy drives for my keyboard since that's what wears out and I'm buying a few extra keyboards off ebay.
Specifically I use XP-60's. Got one you wanna sell?
DUDE!!!my neighbor works for them, I can ask him.
DUDE!!!
Tell him you know someone that makes a living with the XP-60 and I'd like to keep them running forever if I can.
I've been wondering if they might have a stack of XP motherboards tossed in a corner aor any stuff like that.
Seriously, I'm sure that stuff's all gone by now but if some was around I wouldn't mind grabbing some.
I'm gonna try to get another 10-15 years out of the things and then I'll probably be senile or dead so that should do it.
My facebook helps a lot as the fans I have on it (612) all actually support what I do... well MOST of them.
On my myspace (32,000 fans/friends -never used a boy either! heh!) I really only get about 5%-10% of people responding to stuff I do. And it's not AMAZING support.
On facebook I can say "hey I put a new song on itunes" and I get 50% support within a few days. On myspace, a week I might get 2% and the rest of the 5%-10% dwindle after some work circulates different circles.
Also, people on my facebook page come to my shows more often. Some are the same people from myspace. I think on facebook though, unlike myspace, people aren't NUMB to getting promoted to as much. In fact, they'll usually respond to distasteful advertising. They take it more personally.
It's worth setting up a facebook music page.
First you'd need a facebook PROFILE. So you'd just sign up to facebook with your regular name or song writing alias or something.
Then you'd create a page for your music using another method.
http://www.facebook.com/help/?page=904
and
http://www.webupd8.org/2009/07/how-to-create-facebook-fan-page-for.html
It depends on what you do. If you are a live musician and someone who sells digital downloads or CDs via CDbaby it's a good way to manage fans since they're already on the social network a few times per week.
You can also integrate it with your blog or website with a little learning.
My facebook helps a lot as the fans I have on it (612) all actually support what I do... well MOST of them.
On my myspace (32,000 fans/friends -never used a boy either! heh!) I really only get about 5%-10% of people responding to stuff I do. And it's not AMAZING support.
On facebook I can say "hey I put a new song on itunes" and I get 50% support within a few days. On myspace, a week I might get 2% and the rest of the 5%-10% dwindle after some work circulates different circles.
Also, people on my facebook page come to my shows more often. Some are the same people from myspace. I think on facebook though, unlike myspace, people aren't NUMB to getting promoted to as much. In fact, they'll usually respond to distasteful advertising. They take it more personally.
It's worth setting up a facebook music page.
First you'd need a facebook PROFILE. So you'd just sign up to facebook with your regular name or song writing alias or something.
Then you'd create a page for your music using another method.
http://www.facebook.com/help/?page=904
and
http://www.webupd8.org/2009/07/how-to-create-facebook-fan-page-for.html
It depends on what you do. If you are a live musician and someone who sells digital downloads or CDs via CDbaby it's a good way to manage fans since they're already on the social network a few times per week.
You can also integrate it with your blog or website with a little learning.
especially Sixth St. venues.
Lol. Facebook and Myspace are the exact same thing.
no...i have no fans on myspace, i have three fans on fb![]()
You're in Austin?? Cool, I'll have to come see your show.