Power Field Studio

Power Field Studio

segunda-feira, 20 de março de 2017

Spotify Informa Que Vai Bloquear Os Usuários Que Usam De Graça O Aplicativos De Escutar Os Top News

Spotify is reportedly going to block free users from listening to its hottest new music


People who use Spotify without paying may be blocked from listening to some of the hottest new music on the platform,according to a new report from The Financial Times.
The music streaming service is reportedly nearing a new deal with the major music labels. And one part of that deal would — on a temporary basis — make some of the top releases on the platform available only to users who have paid for subscriptions.
So the next Frank Ocean album, say, might become available on Spotify — but unless you've paid for a subscription, you'll have to wait a while before you can actually listen to it.
These negotiations with labels are essential to Spotify's future plans. The Swedish company plans to go public, but first it needs certainty about the terms on which it uses the major labels' music on its platform.
Spotify has been long resistant to the idea of restricting some of its music to just its paid subscribers. But according to the FT, it has received a concession in return — it will pay less to the labels in royalty fees on each song.
Taylor Swift refused to put her new album on the platform in 2015 because the company would not restrict it to premium-only users, an incident that sparked heated debate over how music should be valued and whether ad-supported music streaming services pay artists properly.
Competitors, like Apple Music, do not offer a free tier at all — though it does provide temporary free trials to potential subscribers.
The negotiations, with Universal, Sony, and Warner, could reportedly be completed within weeks.
Spotify currently has more than 50 million paid subscribers, according to its site, and over 100 million overall. There are more than 30 million songs on the platform.

O Melhor E o Pior Dos Vocais ao Vivo Isolados Top 10


Best And Worst Isolated Live Vocal Feeds Of 10 Top Artists

First of all thanks to my friend Bobby Owsinski   for this article.



Usually on a Friday I post an isolated track from the studio mix of a hit song. The studio is one thing, since we’re after perfection and there are many tools to help achieve that (including hard work). That said, top artists make most of their money from live performances, so maybe we should take a listen to the isolated live vocal feed from those.
Here are 10 of today’s most famous artists live on stage with just their bare naked isolated vocal track. You be the judge as to how good they are.
The performers are Selena Gomez, Taylor Swift, Ariana Grande, Rihanna, Beyonce, Britney Spears, Justin Bieber, Katy Perry, Demi Lovato, and Mariah Carrey.
Please note: The comments on the video are not mine, but I agree with them.



Chuck Berry Novo Album Está Pronto Para Ser Lançado Em Breve!

Chuck Berry’s New Album Still Set for Release Following His Death


“Chuck had no greater wish than to see this album released to the world, and we know of no better way to celebrate and remember his 90 years of life than through his music”


Last October, on his 90th birthday, Chuck Berry announced Chuck, his first studio album in 38 years. “I’ve worked on this record for a long time,” he said. “Now I can hang up my shoes!” In the wake of Berry’s death on Saturday, his family has announced that the album is still coming out. “While our hearts are very heavy at this time,” reads their statement, on Berry’s Facebook, “we know that Chuck had no greater wish than to see this album released to the world, and we know of no better way to celebrate and remember his 90 years of life than through his music.” Further details will be revealed this week, along with new music. Read the post below, and head here to see artist tributes to Berry.

sexta-feira, 17 de março de 2017

A Sua Idade Ainda Ê Um Problema Na Indústria Da Música?

Is your age still an issue in the music business?


Three questions with the same answer:

Story #1: For a couple years I played as a sideman in a band that’d made a pretty good name for itself in “indie” circles after more than a decade of national touring. While we were on one of those tours, they were simultaneously shopping a new album to labels and contemplating a name change.
I asked them, why the hell would you change your name (and a cool name, at that) after spending so much time building a reputation and following?

Story #2: I once opened an email from a Portland musician who was starting to have some success nationally, and the email was basically an apology to his fanbase for lying about his age. Turns out, he was actually 5 or 6 years older than he’d let on. He had a career outside of music. His life wasn’t all rock-n-roll glitz and glamor like he’d wanted us to believe.
I asked myself, why lie about a handful of years?

Story #3: I heard about a band that recently had a major (MAJOR) hit after two decades of releasing music. The band was consciously trying to avoid drawing too much attention to their back catalog or their career prior to hitting it big.
I thought to myself, why — if you suddenly have millions of new fans — wouldn’t you encourage them to stream or buy the best stuff from your previous records too?

I think the answer to all three of these questions is: the artists (and the managers, publicists, or labels they worked with) assumed — correctly or not — that age isn’t an asset in this industry; that audiences want freshness (if not youth); and that acknowledging you’ve been in the trenches for so long might somehow tarnish a prospective fan’s impression of you.

What’s in a number!?

Oh, I’ve never heard of you, but you’ve put out 6 records already? You must be old news!
Oh, You’re making pop music in your mid-30’s? Ewwww. 
Oh, it’s so much easier to promote an up-and-coming band. Less baggage!
Like, we’re all supposed to be fully-realized artists by age 18? Debut at #1? Never have any missteps or mere brushes with success? I call bullshit.
In all three of the cases above, I didn’t blame the artists. I felt bad for them. They were just dealing with a very real (or at least really perceived) pressure often placed on musicians to be young — and if not young, new.

But let’s deal with real life for a second.

Real life, where most people don’t hit it big on their first try.
Real life, where everyone ages, and sometimes for the better.
Real life, where diligence, productivity, and passion can yield results in the long run.
Why should it be any different in the music world?
Here’s the silver lining: it’s not different (under sane circumstances); you really can be young, old, new, seasoned, whatever. You can be YOU, and still find success — IF you define success as something that sustains you, pays the bills, and connects with audiences. 
Sure, if you want to be a teen-targeted pop star who sells out Madison Square Garden, you better get famous young. But if you’re making music for a more mature audience, it doesn’t matter how old you are, or how far back your career reaches, or how many albums you’ve put out.

Don’t invest your soul or your art in something that only pays dividends to the young and new. Everyone eventually is neither of those things.

Youth-obsession is a sickness in our culture. It’s a black hole that swallows our time, money, passions, relationships, health,… and it often pays nothing back but anxiety and self-contempt.
As far as your music career goes though, there’s a cure!
  1. Every year at Folk Alliance International I’m reminded that a whole economy exists around house-concerts and listening rooms where audiences pay good money to listen to older artists (some of them relatively obscure) perform their songs. It feels so freeing, inspiring, community-oriented — especially because the music is kickass — to be in a musical space where age is not a barrier to success. No matter what genre you perform, there’s probably a similar community out there for you. Find it. Join it. Nurture it. It will nurture you back as you develop your talents, go gray in the beard, and change the ways you interact with your audience year after year.
  2. With streaming platforms, music releases no longer have a shelf-life since there’s no such thing as shelf space. This also means there’s less focus on the “end-cap” mentality of pushing whatever is newest. My automatically-generated Discover Weekly playlists on Spotify contain just as many catalog songs as they do new releases, meaning old songs can continually be served to new listeners. They never get stale! Also, Perrin Lamb and Craig Cardiff, two CD Baby artists who’ve seen big things happen through Spotify playlisting, have both had their biggest playlist successes with songs that’d already been out for years. And when an artist like that finds success, their new fans DO go back and listen to other previous releases. That means a deeper connection, more loyal fans, and more streaming revenue.
  3. And as for changing your name, or hiding your history, in order to appear shiny and new — okay, maybe you’re one in a thousand bands who takes that approach and has a big win. But the other 999 bands are now left traveling the same road they were already on, only without the benefit of whatever fanbase, press quotes, touring history, and catalog was associated with the old band name. If you have a crappy or confusing band name, change it right away. If your name suits you but you’re just worried the magic has worn off, dig in instead. Stick with the name, the fans, the “journey” (self help alert!). Keep putting out better and better music. Just like your actual name, hopefully the band name that you kept over the long haul comes to represent something that improved with age.
At least that’s my opinion. Do you disagree? What’s your experience been like as a musician when it comes to age or “newness?” I’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments.

PRS for Music A Nova Plataforma Prova Eficiência Contra a Pirataria

PRS for Music's New Anti-Piracy Platform Proves Effective


One year after launching, PRS for Music’s Anti-Piracy System (MAPS) is striking a blow for artists and rights holders.
In the past 12 months, the U.K. collection society claims to have located 5 million infringing URLS and removed over 80 percent of reported links, as well as sending over 136,000 take down notices to websites linking to or hosting PRS for Music repertoire illegally.
PRS’ Member Anti-Piracy System, which enables users to track and request take downs of unlicensed material and was developed in association with the Publishers Association, has also forced 220 illegal websites to close and seen more than 275,000 live links de-listed from Google’s search pages.
According to the latest data from the U.K.’s Intellectual Property Office (IPO), an estimated 78 million music tracks were accessed illegally online in just the United Kingdom over a three month period (dating from March to May 2016). That number was, however, down from the corresponding period in 2015 when IPO reported 96 million tracks being illegally accessed online.
“We are proud to be able to tackle piracy on such scale, as well as empower our members to take action to protect their own repertoire,” said PRS for Music anti-piracy unit manager Sharan Ghuman in a statement.
Simon Bourn, PRS head of litigation, enforcement and anti-piracy, added that “as a licensing body” the organization’s “first approach is always to take steps to work with new digital platforms, to find a mechanism to license rather than enforce.” He went on to say that as the digital landscape evolves, “it is our mission to ensure that those who mandate us with their rights are always paid fairly for the use of their work, today and in the future.”
In December, a joint investigation between PRS for Music and City of London’s Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit (PIPCU) resulted in the conviction and sentencing of Wayne Evans for illegally uploading the U.K.’s Top 40 singles to various torrent sites and distributing tracks through his own website. The 39 year-old was sentenced to 12 months.
Since beginning its own takedown program in 2011, British labels trade body BPI has sent 450 million notices to Google and Microsoft’s Bing, with over 82 million URLs sent to Google last year alone.

quinta-feira, 16 de março de 2017

Promovendo Sua Música Internacionalmente - Da Maneira Correta

Promoting Music Internationally – The Right Way


First of all thanks to Jesse Lakes CEO / Co-Founder from GeoRiot for this article


If you’re promoting music online, you’re probably encouraging listeners to purchase using links to iTunes and Amazon. On top of that, you’re probably using the Amazon Associates and iTunes Affiliate Programs to earn money from your referrals (but if not, you should be). The process should be that they click your iTunes or Amazon link, go to the music you’re promoting, purchase it, then rock out all night long.
Seems pretty straight forward, right?
Sadly, not so much. It doesn’t matter if you’re promoting music from your website, blogs, social media, or elsewhere, most marketing channels inherently have an issue that you may not even be aware of – something we call the Purchasing Gap.
The basic gist is that your fans click your links from any number of devices, with various operating systems, from all over the world. Unfortunately, online music stores, like iTunes and Amazon, are actually country/region and device-specific. If you send listeners to the wrong storefront, a storefront that doesn’t work with their device or credit card, then the probability of them going through with that purchase is slim to none.
For example, if someone using an Android phone or tablet clicks your iTunes link, you just lost out on a potential sale because Android users can’t directly purchase from iTunes. Not good.
On top of that, due to digital rights licensing (among other things), fans can only purchase digital tracks in the same country their credit card is based. This means if you send a German user to Amazon.com, they won’t be able to purchase because they can only buy digital music downloads from Amazon.de.
Okay, so it’s really difficult to cater to every one of your listeners!
While using lots of different links might be a solution, it quickly gets really confusing for your audience and might look something like this:
Digital Music Distribution, sell your music online
“Wait… where do I click?
So – if you’re promoting music that spans countries, devices, and storefronts, you’re probably curious how to ensure your fans can make a purchase with their existing account, in their local currency, language, and from the device they are currently using.
Further, if you’re using a fragmented affiliate program like Amazon’s, you may also be asking how to make sure you’re using the correct parameters to earn commissions from those international sales. Great questions.
Luckily, GeoRiot has a solution to these challenges in the form of a single link. Our “Genius Links” can be targeted differently based on a listener’s geographic location, device, operating system and even date. After adding in your affiliate parameters to the GeoRiot dashboard all you need to do is paste your iTunes or Amazon link into our Link Creator, add in optional custom scenarios, then grab the globalised link and paste it anywhere you want to promote your music.

Digital Music Distribution, sell your music online

These Genius Links help you ensure every click quickly makes it to the appropriate purchase destination, with the relevant affiliate parameters attached, so your fans end up exactly where they want – in the most convenient place to buy your music. They can then enjoy your new tunes and you end up with some money in your pocket. Everyone wins.
Sign up, absolutely free.

segunda-feira, 13 de março de 2017

Ozzy Osbourne “Crazy Train” Guitarra Isolada

Ozzy Osbourne “Crazy Train” Isolated Guitar

First of all thanks to Bobby Owsinski for this article.


There are few guitar players that you can truly say are influential, but Randy Rhoads is certainly one of them. His playing on Ozzy Osbourne’s initial solo album set the guitar world on fire, and for many metal players, it’s still the bar that everyone aims for. When “Crazy Train” exploded onto the radio guitar players everyone said to themselves, “What the f$*k was that?” and that’s exactly what we’re going to listen to today – Randy’s isolated guitar track from that hit. Here’s what to listen for (the guitar enters at 0:19 on the video).

1. Yes, that’s two guitar parts spread left and right and not an electronic double (actually producer Max Norman claims that there’s a third part in the middle but for the life of me I can’t hear it). You can hear some inconsistencies with some of the harmonics and chords, but there are very few. Pretty amazing how close the parts are.

2. The ambience that you hear on the guitars is mostly from the room, again according to Norman. There’s also a little bit of an AMS 1580 delay set to a light flange.
3. The solo at 2:49 is just one guitar panned a bit to the left with a short delay from the AMS on the right.

4. Randy used a fully cranked Marshall 100 watt amp (no master volume) with 2 cabinets, so it was a full stack – unusual for recording. The mic on the cabinet was an SM-58 (!!), with an AKG 451 a few feet back outside the amp room, and a couple of Shure SM87s in the room. The use of microphones intended for live may have come from the fact that Norman was primarily a live sound engineer before moving over to the studio.