Power Field Studio

Power Field Studio

segunda-feira, 10 de outubro de 2016

135.000 Ingressos Do Glastonbury (Esgotado) Foram Vendidos Em 50 Minutos

135,000 Glastonbury tickets sold out in just 50 minutes

Revellers dance as George Ezra performs on the Pyramid stage at Worthy Farm in Somerset during the Glastonbury Festival in Britain, June 27, 2015. REUTERS/Dylan Martinez

In news that will surprise no-one, Glastonbury 2017 has now sold out.
Registered fans of the three-day festival prepared to battle it out this morning at 9am to secure some of the 135,000 tickets available to get caked in mud next summer.
And by 9.50am, all of the tickets were gone, after the unsurprisingly huge demand caused some issues, which meant the tickets sold in a slower time than recent years. Last year's batch sold out in 30 minutes and the previous year's went in 27 minutes.
Emily Eavis, co-organiser of the festival and youngest daughter of Glasto founder Michael Eavis, also tweeted to say the tickets had all been snapped up.
Tickets have now sold out. Thank you for your huge support and loyalty and we are sorry to those who missed out.

On Thursday night (October 6), coach and ticket packages for 2017 sold out in only 23 minutes, leaving people just a bit miffed at missing out.
And if you also missed out on this morning's ticket scramble, it's not over yet. Next Spring, there will be the usual resale of unwanted tickets.
Daft Punk, Radiohead, The Stone Roses and Lady Gaga are among the rumoured headliners for next year's festival.
Glastonbury 2017 runs from June 21-25 and will be the last edition before the festival takes its traditional break in 2018. Whether it'll be coming back to Worthy Farm remains to be seen though.
One potential issue with a Glastonbury festival in 2019 is that a planned move from the legendary Worthy Farm to a new site has fallen through.
Michael Eavis was eyeing up Longleat Safari Park as a potential new permanent home for the festival, due to a pesky gas pipe causing issues at the current site, but the owner of the Longleat estate, Lord Bath, has been overruled by his son.

domingo, 9 de outubro de 2016

Os Selos De Música Do Reino Unido Recebem US3.5 Milhões Do Governo Para Incrementar As Vendas Globais

U.K. Labels Receive $3.5M Government Funding to Boost Global Sales

British labels and musicians are set to benefit from £2.8 million ($3.5 million) in government funding to help them break into international markets.
Delivered by the Department for International Trade in partnership with labels trade body BPI, grants of between £5,000 ($6,000) and £50,000 ($62,000) will be available to independent labels, distributors and management companies to help promote British artists around the world.
Funding will be made available until 2020 with the first round of nominations opening on Oct. 10 via BPI’s website. The deadline for applications is Nov. 7 with successful applicants due to be announced in December.
[readmore:7503668]
From 2014 to 2016, the Music Export Growth Scheme (MEGS) awarded £1.6 million ($2 million) in grants to over 100 homegrown artists, including Brit Award winners Catfish and the Bottlemen, Public Service Broadcasting, London Grime MCs Ghetts and Afrikan Boy and 2014 Mercury Prize winners Young Fathers.
They helped contribute to the U.K.’s success as the world’s second largest music exporter behind the U.S., with British artists accounting for almost one in almost every six artist albums sold worldwide in 2015, representing a record 17.1 percent share of the global market.
Five of 2015’s top-selling artist albums also came from U.K. acts, thanks to successful records by Coldplay, One Direction, Sam Smith, Ed Sheeran and, of course, Adele’s 25. Last year additionally saw British artists claim their highest-ever share of the U.S. artist albums market, when homegrown acts gained a record 17.6 percent share -- up from 12.2 percent in 2014, according to BPI figures.

sábado, 8 de outubro de 2016

Dica De Livros MÚSICA - 8 Livros De Alguns Artistas

8 Rockin' Reads That Celebrate Music

First of all thanks to my friend Brad Tolinski for this tip.







Music lovers, read it and weep—here are eight of the best rockin’ reads by and about the musicians we all know and love.
this-is-our-song
This is Our Song (Simon & Schuster)
Taylor Swift has been doing her sparkly, bigger-than-life, hit song-writing thing for 10 years and this book, put together by author Tyler Conroy and Swift’s fans (aka Swifties), documents and celebrates everything about the 26-year-old songstress.
play-it-loud
Play It Loud: An Epic History of the Style, Sound, and Revolution of the Electric Guitar (Doubleday)
Music journalists Brad Tolinski and Alan di Perna are so passionate about the electric guitar they wrote the book on it, delving deep into the instrument’s history, greatest hits and artists.
conversations-with-mccartney
Paul DuNoyer’s Conversations With McCartney (Hodder & Stoughton) spans 35 years of interviews and conversations with the former Beatle, offering personal and extremely intimate insights into the legendary musician.
born-to-run
Born to Run (Simon & Schuster) 
For decades, fans have been talking about Bruce Springsteen. Now, in his new autobiography, (released along with the companion album, Chapter & Verse), Bruce tells his own story, revealing things we never knew about the song Born to Run as well as everything from his ultimate magic trick to why he says he’s a bit of a fraud.
i-am-brian-wilson
I Am Brian Wilson (Da Capo Press) 
You know the hits—“Wouldn’t It Be Nice,” “God Only Knows,” “I Get Around,”—now read the story as told by the Beach Boy himself.
john-lennon-vs-the-usa
John Lennon vs. The USA: The Inside Story of the Most Bitterly Contested and Influential Deportation Case in United States History (Ankerwyke Publishing) by Leon Wildes
This is the story of the attempted deportation of John Lennon and Yoko Ono, circa 1972, which is doubly interesting in light of immigration being one of the hottest topics in today’s presidential race.
morrissey-marr
Morrissey & Marr: The Severed Alliance (The Overlook Press) by Johnny Rogan
This 25th anniversary edition revisits the friendship, musical partnership and tumultuous breakup of The Smiths’ Morrissey and Johnny Marr, adding subtext to the band’s greatest hits.
new-york-rock
New York Rock: From the Rise of The Velvet Underground to the Fall of CBGB (St. Martin’s Griffin) 
Author Steven Blush’s go-to book about the sub-cultures of rock n’ roll is packed with anecdotes from 1,500 musicians, journalists, artists and club owners 

 

É Uma Dica Simples - Como Fazer Uma Música Cover Ser Ótima

It's Just Small Tip:  How to Do a Great Cover Songs


First of all than to Robin Yukio

Work with what you’ve got. Play to your strengths (literally). If you have a great range, showcase it with big sweeping melodies (Queen, Mariah Carey, and other non-cheesy artists as well!). If your tone is average but you have a great sense of groove, cover more rhythmic songs that highlight that. Choose a song that could have been written for you.

Find your key. Just because the original singer can hit that low G doesn’t mean that’s what is best for you. Find your best range and make sure you are hitting your sweet spots. There are plenty of apps that can transpose your favorite song to your perfect key if you don’t want to do it yourself (or, there are people like me that can help you).

Do it your way. Unless you are playing a wedding and it’s the couple’s special song, don’t feel married to the original version. Try different embellishments. Find your voice and treat the tune like you wrote it.

Experiment with arrangement. Try changing the time signature/feel. (Here is my rendition of Outkast’s “Hey Ya” as a waltz, for example.) Make a rock song into a ballad, or vice versa. Put jazz chords to a simple pop song. Turn a heavily produced number into a minimalist piece (this is also a good way to go if you are still struggling with self-accompaniment).

Get permission. If you’re playing an open mic, this isn’t such a big issue. But if you plan on recording a cover and sending it out into the world, check out the info on licensing at the Harry Fox Agency.

sexta-feira, 7 de outubro de 2016

A Maior Revolução Musical Da História Aconteceu em 1991! Você Concorda?

The biggest musical revolution in the history of popular music happened in 1991 - Do You Agree?

In 1850s, Franz Lizst’s technically demanding Romantic compositions for solo piano had the ladies swooning.
A century later, Elvis Presley did the same belting simple lyrics over three chords on a guitar.
A few short decades after that, Coolio topped the charts with bassy synth, snare, and vocals that mostly consisted of a rhythmically-spoken monologue. 
There’s no doubt that music changes over time, especially popular music.
But it’s rarely easy to say, definitively, exactly how it changed and when.
Now, a group of scientists publishing in the Royal Society of Science says they’ve figured out how to use data to sniff out the most pivotal periods in the history of popular music.
They hope that their approach will bring some objectivity to debates about trends in musical history. 
“You can say, ‘This is really when it happened,’” one of the authors, Armand Leroi, told the LA Times. “It’s not just, ‘Things were really cool at CBGB’s or on the Sunset Strip back then.’”
It turns out that ‘it’ — the biggest musical revolution in the history of popular music — really happened in 1991, with the rise of rap and hip hop to the pop charts.

Making a data set out of the Hot 100

The researchers started with the Billboard Hot 100, a list of the most-successful singles in America dating back to 1958. The Hot 100 is published weekly, but songs will often remain on the chart week to week.
They took the charts from between 1960 and 2010 and used Last.fm to get 30-second-long audio segments of as many as they could — 17,094 songs, or 86% of the unique singles on the Hot 100 from 1960-2010. 
Then they fed these 30-second segments into a couple of programs to analyze them quantitatively.
They used NNLS Chroma to extract the most salient chords from the audio. Then they broke their song segments into relative chord changes. A change from C Major to A minor would be represented as M.9.m — i.e. a change from a Major chord to a minor chord, with the second chord’s root nine half-steps higher than the first chord’s.
The highlighted bars show the loudest chords.
Then they did something similar for timbre, using mel-frequency cepstral coefficients(MFCCs), “which approximate the human auditory system’s response” to sound.
This gave them a quantitative way to represent timbre. With this, they were able to algorithmically group very short snippets of these songs into audio files like the ones below, based on timbre type.
You can listen to these files — which sound pretty crazy — here.
They then had volunteers annotate these clusters by hand, selecting from the following tag set, (including tags like mellow, aggressive, dark, bright, calm, energetic, smooth, percussive, instrument: piano, `ah', `ee', `ooh').
Then they made topic sets of chord changes or timbre tags that frequently occurred together, and not with other chords changes or timbre tags. In doing so they borrowed a tool out of textual analysis.
Then they tracked the frequency with which these topics occurred across the Hot 100 over the decades:
Harmonic topics over the decades: H3 correlates most highly to songs tagged disco, funk, and RnB, hence this topic’s swell in popularity in the 1970s.
H5 — no chords — correlates most highly to songs tagged rap and hip hop, thus the sudden rise in chordless songs in the 1990s.
Timbral topics over the decades: T4 seems to show the sinusoidal popularity of harmonic piano pop; T5, the repeated rise and fall of energetic guitar rock.

About those revolutions

Screen Shot 2016 09 27 at 11.47.45 AMA screenshot from the music video for Biz Markie's "Just a Friend." YouTube
In 1990, in the upswing of the biggest musical revolution of the past 50 years, Biz Markie’s  Just a Friend  peaked at number 9 on the Hot 100.
This analysis, while by no means capturing every feature of these songs, still seems to be tracking some musically meaningful aspects of them.
This study is able to point out that, timbrally, Fall-out Boy is the most “guitar, loud, energetic” artist in the Hot 100 in the past 50 years.
And it's also able to tell that minor 7th chord changes were basically introduced with disco in the 1970s and haven’t left pop music since.
To study how music changed over time, they plotted the rate of change in the proportions of harmonic and timbral topics. “[The analysis] suggested that while musical evolution was ceaseless,” the authors write, “there were periods of relative stasis punctuated by periods of rapid change.”
Rate of change, represented on a color gradient, for windows of time ranging from 1 to 10 years following each quarter from January 1960 through December 2010.
Blue coordinates indicate least change, followed by green, then yellow, with red and brown being the most. Significant revolutions are marked with vertical black lines.
The climactic periods in the history of American popular music are: the last quarter of 1963, the last quarter of 1982, and the first quarter of 1991.
As they write in the paper, the biggest revolution was the one in 1991 correlated to the proliferation of rap music to the popular charts.
“The rise of rap and related genres,” the paper reads, “appears to be the single most important event that has shaped the musical structure of the American charts in the period that we studied.”

Major musical revolutions 1960-2010

Their analysis didn’t end there: the researchers also used their data to critique the “British Invasion” theory of American rock and roll.
From the paper: 
On 26 December 1963, The Beatles released I want to hold your hand in the USA. They were swiftly followed by dozens of British acts who, over the next few years, flooded the American charts. It is often claimed that this ’British Invasion’ was responsible for musical changes of the time.
But the revolution of the 1960s hit its peak in late 1963.
the beatles 1963The Beatles in 1963. AP
Their analysis revealed that the “evolutionary trajectories” of many musical styles were already established by the time the Beatles hit the scene, “implying that, whereas the British may have contributed to this revolution, they could not have been entirely responsible for it.”
Groups like the Beatles and the Rolling Stones did, “fanned [the revolution’s] flames.”

Earlier revolutions

Leroi said he was surprised that the rap revolution of the 1990s made a bigger splash in the data than the Beatles and their generation did.
“Being a victim of boomer ideology, I would have guessed it was [the 1960s],” he told the LA Times.
The rap revolution of 1991 might be challenged by future research, the paper hints.
“We are interested,” the authors write in the conclusion, “in extending the temporal sample to at least the 1940s — if only to see whether 1955 was, as many have claimed, the birth date of Rock’n’Roll.”

quinta-feira, 6 de outubro de 2016

Dê Uma Olhada No Estúdio E Na Casa Do Prince

Get an exclusive first look inside Prince's home and studio, Paisley Park

Al Roker toured the Minnesota estate that became Prince’s home and workshop, and which has been turned into a public museum and tribute to the music legend, who died from an accidental painkiller overdose in April.



Samantha Okazaki / TODAY
Prince recorded some of his greatest hits in the Studio A sound booth and control room, which is still set up just the way he liked it (Prince symbol, and all).
Prince’s handwritten notes remain laying about inside the control room of Studio A, filled with his keyboard and guitars — just two of the 27 instruments he played on his records. Prince was using the studio to work on a jazz album that will be released in the future.
Samantha Okazaki / TODAY
Prince's hand-written notes.
In the Purple Rain room, visitors will see the script, guitar, and even one of the motorcycles Prince rode in the movie. The film generated an album that spent 27 weeks at the top of the charts and sold more than 20 million copies. It also earned a music Oscar for Prince, who became the first person to have the number one movie, song, and album at the same time.
Samantha Okazaki / TODAY
Prince's movie and multi-platinum album Purple Rain serves as the inspiration for this room, which includes this motorcycle. 
Samantha Okazaki / TODAY
Prince's Academy Award for 'Purple Rain' and 2004 Grammy for 'Musicology' on display
Prince was known for his elaborate outfits, all of which were custom made, said Paisley Park’s archivist, Angie Marchese.
“He was a very tiny guy, which actually brings us to very unique and unusual circumstances, sometimes finding mannequins properly sized to be able to display the clothing,” she said.
Samantha Okazaki / TODAY
Prince was known for his complex and radical taste in fashion, but what many don't know is that he kept almost every outfit and he had a pair of matching shoes to go with each one. The archives now contain thousands of articles of clothing. 
“Because like the Purple Rain outfits that you'll see here, Prince had a 22 and a half inch waist at the time, in 1984.”
But Prince rarely threw anything away, making her job a bit easier.
“We do have an amazing inventory because Prince saved everything,” Marchese said.
Samantha Okazaki / TODAY
Just outside of Studio A is Influence Hallway, featuring this custom-designed mural that represents Prince's greatest musical influences.
Al was joined on the tour by two of Prince’s sisters, Norrine and Sharon Nelson, who said their brother’s energy and spirit could definitely be felt in the exhibit, which they described as a good representation of his legacy.
"It is, and he did plan it to be a museum. Everything is strategically placed," Sharon Nelson said. "And when the fans come in they'll see that it is."
Her sister Norrine Nelson agreed.
“It’s truly Prince. He thought all this through," she said. "He had a vision and he finished it.”
Later, during a live interview with Prince's younger sister, Tyka Nelson confirmed that her brother had planned out much of what the museum looks like. She said she hopes guests will experience something personal during their visit.

quarta-feira, 5 de outubro de 2016

Com Vinil Tyco (Scott Hansen) Estabelece Uma Presença Física

With Vinyl, the Musician Tyco Establishes a Physical Presence



Scott Hansen, who performs spacey electronic rock under the name Tycho, at a soundcheck in Philadelphia.

In the age of the surprise digital album, what about the vinyl fans?
That has become one of the stranger puzzles in the music industry, as more musicians orchestrate special releases with online services, while at the same time sales of vinyl LPs have come to represent an increasingly important chunk of those artists’ income.
Scott Hansen, who records spacey electronic rock under the name Tycho, has come up with one solution. Tycho’s new album, “Epoch,” was released online on Friday. Following a pattern laid out by stars like Beyoncé, Kanye West and Frank Ocean, it arrived with no advance notice.
Yet to accommodate fans who also want the release on physical formats, Tycho’s record label, Ghostly International, will be offering a custom slipmat — the felt pad that sits on a turntable — to customers who place advance orders for the vinyl record at their local record store. The slipmat will become available in about two weeks, and physical versions of the album, on both vinyl and CD, will come out in January.
The staggered timing lets Mr. Hansen and Ghostly release the music quickly — Mr. Hansen said he put the finishing touches on the recording just two weeks ago — while also giving a tangible dimension to what is otherwise digital ephemera. Mr. Hansen, a former graphic designer, handles the artwork of his records himself, and their look and feel are a major part of their attraction to fans; of the 70,000 copies of Tycho’s last album, “Awake,” that were sold, 26 percent were on vinyl.
Photo
The vinyl version of Tycho’s new album, “Epoch,” will be released in January. CreditMolly Smith 
“We’ve always been really concerned with the physical experience,” Mr. Hansen said. “A lot of people want the vinyl so that they feel that this music is real, it’s not just a digital file.”
The plan also reflects how deeply many basic aspects of music marketing are now in flux, as the industry is being reshaped by streaming media. According to the Recording Industry Association of America, streaming now accounts for 47 percent of retail sales in the United States, and physical formats only 20 percent.
Vinyl records, which are often priced at a premium, have grown so quickly that they now generate almost half the sales revenue of CDs. Yet a decades-old manufacturing infrastructure means that labels must often wait months for a pressing plant to turn around a new record.
Independent labels like Ghostly must also manage the demands of digital services, which want exclusive content, and independent record stores, still a vital channel for sales and promotion.
“It’s a balance to make sure everyone’s happy,” said Bryan Duquette, Tycho’s manager. “If you placate Spotify and Apple, then the physical retailers are bummed.”
Photo
Mr. Hansen at the Mann Center in Philadelphia.CreditKatrina d'Autremont for The New York Times 
For Mr. Hansen and many other artists, an instantaneous digital release has a powerful lure as a means to connect to his audience and jump-start what can otherwise be a grueling monthslong promotional schedule.
“I’m tired of the buildup,” he said. “Just release it. It’s fresh. It hasn’t been sitting around for four months. This is new — it feels like now.”
For fans of major acts, a surprise online release can create a communal moment, with reactions that ricochet across social media. Yet as this release strategy trickles down to lesser-known artists like Tycho, the effect is less clear.
Sam Valenti IV, the founder of Ghostly, described the slipmat as a “passport stamp” for fans, a way to seize on the release of new music yet still have a keepsake in physical form to function as a placeholder until the final product comes out.
“Streaming music is fantastic, but record stores still have a place as the physical manifestation of music culture,” Mr. Valenti said. “How to balance those things is a beautiful tension right now.”