Power Field Studio

Power Field Studio

segunda-feira, 19 de março de 2018

Trilha Do Filme 'Theory of Everything' Será Relançada Em Vinil

Soundtrack for Stephen Hawking Film 'Theory of Everything' Set for Reissue on Transparent Blue Vinyl




The reissue follows the deaths of Hawking this week & the album's composer Jóhann Jóhannsson in February. 

The soundtrack to The Theory of Everything -- the film about the relationship between the late astrophysicist Stephen Hawking and his first wife -- will get a limited-edition vinyl reissue on April 27. The re-release follows the deaths of the film’s composer, Jóhann Jóhannsson, on Feb. 9, and Hawking, on Wednesday.
The vinyl specialty label Music on Vinyl will reissue the Grammy Award-nominated soundtrack on 180-gram transparent blue vinyl, and the production run is limited to 1,500 individually numbered copies worldwide. (The Theory of Everythingsoundtrack was first released on transparent clear vinyl in 2015, in a limited run of 1,000 copies.)
The Theory of Everything earned Eddie Redmayne an Academy Award for actor in a leading role, for his portrayal of Hawking. The film was nominated for an additional four Oscars: best picture, actress in a leading role (Felicity Jones as Hawking’s wife, Jane), original score (Jóhannsson) and adapted screenplay.
Two-time Oscar nominee Jóhannsson also garnered an original score Academy Award nomination for Sicario. He additionally earned two Grammy Award nominations for best score soundtrack for visual media (The Theory of Everythingand Arrival).
The Theory of Everything soundtrack has sold 13,000 copies in the U.S. across all formats (vinyl, CD, digital, etc.), according to Nielsen Music, through March 8.

Judas Priest - Número 5 Da Billboard 200 Com 'Firepower'

Judas Priest Earns Highest Charting Album Ever on Billboard 200 With 'Firepower'



Rock band Judas Priest debuts at No. 5 on the Billboard 200 albums chart with Firepower — marking the group’s highest charting album ever. The album surpasses the group’s previous chart high, logged when 2014’s Redeemer of Souls debuted and peaked at No. 6.
The Billboard 200 chart ranks the most popular albums of the week in the U.S. based on multi-metric consumption, which includes traditional album sales, track equivalent albums (TEA) and streaming equivalent albums (SEA). The new March 24-dated chart (where Judas Priest debuts at No. 5 and Logic’s Bobby Tarantino IIstarts at No. 1) will be posted in full on Billboard's websites on Tuesday, March 20.
Firepower — the act’s 18th studio effort — bows with 49,000 units earned in the week ending March 15, according to Nielsen Music. Of that sum, 48,000 were in traditional album sales — the act's best sales frame since 2005's Angel of Retribution bowed with 54,000 copies sold. Judas Priest's bow was bolstered by sales generated from a concert ticket/album sale redemption offer in association with the band's tour that began on March 13.
Firepower and Redeemer of Souls are the veteran band’s only top 10 efforts, though the act has been charting since 1978 with Stained Class (No. 173). The group collected its first top 40 set in 1980 with British Steel (No. 34) and its first top 20 effort with 1982’s Screaming for Vengeance (No. 17).
The new album was ushered in by the single “Lightning Strike,” which has so far peaked at No. 21 on the Mainstream Rock Songs airplay chart. It’s the band’s highest charting single on the tally since way back in 1982, when their classic hit “You’ve Got Another Thing Comin’” peaked at No. 4.
Here’s a look at Judas Priest’s history on the Billboard 200 chart:
Title, Peak Position, Peak Date
Stained Class, No. 173, April 22, 1978
Hell Bent for Leather, No. 128, April 28, 1979
Unleashed in the East (Live in Japan), No. 70, Nov. 10, 1979
British Steel, No. 34, July 12, 1980
Point of Entry, No. 39, May 23, 1981
Screaming for Vengeance, No. 17, Oct. 30, 1982
Defenders of the Faith, No. 18, Feb. 25, 1984
Turbo, No. 17, April 26, 1986
Live, No. 38, July 11, 1987
Ram It Down, No. 31, June 18, 1988
Painkiller, No. 26, Nov. 3, 1990
Metal Works ’73 - ‘93, No. 155, June 5, 1993
Jugulator, No. 82, Nov. 15, 1997
Demolition, No. 165, Aug. 18, 2001
Angel of Retribution, No. 13, March 19, 2005
Nostradamus, No. 11, July 5, 2008
A Touch of Evil: Live, No. 87, Aug. 1, 2009
Redeemer of Souls, No. 6, July 26, 2014
Firepower, No. 5, March 24, 2017

quarta-feira, 28 de fevereiro de 2018

Festivais De Música Ao Redor Do Mundo Se Comprometem A Ter 50/50 De Gênero Entre Os Artistas

Music Festivals Around the Globe Pledge to Tackle Gender Inequality


Forty-five international music festivals and conferences, including Midem, A2IM Indie Week and Canada's BreakOut West, have pledged to achieve a 50/50 gender balance across their line-ups by 2022.
The initiative is being led by PRS Foundation's Keychange scheme, which launched last year to with the aim of improving gender equality across the industry. Ambassadors include Garbage singer Shirley Manson, record producer Tony Visconti and Spanish indie-rock band Hinds.  
Among the 45 festivals and events that have signed up to the 50/50 programme is by:Larm (Norway), Canadian Music Week (Canada), Eurosonic Noorderslag (Netherlands), BBC Music Introducing Stages (U.K.), Liverpool International Music Festival (England), North By North East (Canada), NYC Winter Jazzfest (USA) and Oslo World (Norway).
Also on board is Gilles Peterson's Worldwide Festival (France), Wide Days (Scotland), Trondheim Calling (Norway), Waves Vienna (Austria), Westway LAB (Portugal), Pop-Kultur (Germany) Katowice JazzArt Festival (Poland) and Kendal Calling (England) and NYC Winter Jazzfest (USA), among others.
They join Keychange's founding festival partners -- Reeperbahn Festival (Germany), BIME (Spain), Iceland Airwaves, Way Out West (Sweden), Musikcentrum Sweden, Tallinn Music Week (Estonia), MUTEK (Canada) and The Great Escape (U.K.) – in vowing to remove the gender gap in music. 
"The Keychange network of female artists and industry professionals and the festival partners' idea of establishing a collective pledge will significantly accelerate change. I hope that this will be the start of a more balanced industry which will result in benefits for everyone," said PRS Foundation CEO Vanessa Reed in a statement.
Those sentiments were echoed by Keychange's festival partners, with Alex Schulz from Germany's Reeperbahn Festival admitting its "festival stages aren't as balanced as we would like them to be. Welcoming the initiative, Schulz said that Keychange was "promoting a shift that will ultimately be good for our festivals and good for the industry as a whole."
"Achieving gender equality in the music industry requires the joint engagement of men and women from the entire cultural sector," elaborated Oslo World's Alexandra Archetti Stølen, while By:Larm's Linnéa Svenssonenthused, "actions generate attitude and it starts with talent."
"An initiative like Keychange provides clear goals and measures for festivals who are already committed to presenting audiences with more diverse line-ups," added Emma Zillmann from U.K. promoters From The Fields, who run Kendal Calling, Blue Dot and Off The Record.  
"By giving discrimination an ultimatum," Zillmann said, "we're ensuring that equality will eventually be the norm."

Atlantic Records Lança Podcast

Atlantic Records Launches Podcast Initiative


Atlantic Records announced today (Feb. 27) that the label is investing in podcasts, with a dedicated podcast production team and a podcast studio in its New York headquarters. Leading the initiative is VP Tom Mullen, who has hosted the acclaimed "Washed Up Emo" podcast for 124 episodes over seven years. 
"As I discovered doing my own podcasts, they are an incredibly powerful way of feeding fans’ hunger for intimate knowledge of the artists they love, while also connecting them to new voices," Mullen said. "The birth of Atlantic Records Podcasts has been a labor of love for many of us at the company, and I’m looking forward to working with our incredible artists and my label teammates to create an outstanding series of shows devoted to Atlantic music past, present, and future."
"What'd I Say," the first weekly series of Atlantic Records Podcasts, is premiering today and takes its name from the Ray Charles song released by Atlantic in 1959. The show will feature interviews with such Atlantic artists as Jason Mraz, MILCK, Lil Skies, Trivium and Sweater Beats, among others. The label's other planned series include “Inside the Album,” “Respect: Women of Atlantic” and a series devoted to the rich Atlantic archives.
“Music-making is at the heart of our company, and we already have a state-of-the-art recording studio at the center of our offices. We have a constant stream of artists coming through the building, so the next logical step for us was to create an environment where we could spontaneously capture them telling their stories and talking about their music," said Chairman and CEO Craig Kallman and Chairman and COO Julie Greenwald
"With our own podcast team and a dedicated podcast studio, we are able to give fans a unique, insider’s view of our artists, our label, and the creative process in action. With Tom’s deep musical knowledge and podcast expertise leading the charge, we are generating exciting audio content under our own roof, marked by unprecedented insight and immediacy.”

Compositoras Estão Ganhando Terreno Na Televisão

Female Composers & Artists Are Gaining Ground In Television

Germaine Franco attends the U.S. Premiere of Disney Pixar's 'Coco' 





As television shows with strong female points of view continue to swell, the opportunity for female artists and composers to augment TV storytelling is rising in tandem.
Show runners and music supervisors on this season’s roster -- including Showtime’s SMILF, HBO’s 2 Dope Queens, and upcoming series Killing Eve on BBC America and Vida on Starz -- tell Billboard having a female musical voice was at the top of their minds.
“I like a mix of hearing both female and male voices and so I don’t want the gender of the voice to be the reason why… but you can’t help but have female artists because the story is about women,” says Frankie Shaw, who adapted her short film SMILF into the hit series about a single mom who uses unconventional means to make ends meet. “I naturally go to women because that’s whose point of view we’re in.”
Shaw says she’s gotten half the music cues from WFMU radio show Sophisticated Boom Boom, which almost entirely focuses on female artists from varying locales and decades. Princess Nokia and Nellie McKay are among the “new to me” discoveries she’s incorporated into her show.
2 Dope Queens, the new HBO incarnation of the standup show and podcast from comedians Jessica Williams and Phoebe Robinson, closes with a song by NY-based female rapper Nitty Scott, who was brought to the project by Williams and Robinson.
“She’s an indie artist who’s just absolutely fierce, no bullshit, who fits perfectly with the two principals in the show,” music supervisor Dan Wilcox says. “We were looking at some other more obvious choices… but I always like working with artists who are independent. It’s something that really benefits them, and there can be a little more enthusiasm on behalf of the artist involved.”
While the four Dope specials open with a Shamir song, Wilcox says it was “an important part” of the conversation to involve a female musical voice. “In this case, this might well be one of those things where somebody might hear it and say, ‘Who is this?’” he says. “And the money’s not bad for the artist. She owns her music outright, hasn’t sold off her publishing and is not signed to a label, so it’s a big win for her.”
Composer Germaine Franco “was perfect for the part” of scoring Starz’s Vida, which follows the intertwining of two Mexican-American sisters who are reunited after the death of their mother, music supervisor Brienne Rose tells Billboard.
“First of all, she is a female, which is really important because we have a lot of women involved in the show so having that perspective and voice is just an added unique part of it all,” she says. “And she’s also the only Latina composer in the [Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, music branch], which was very special.”
The series also features a slew of female artists, including Jarina De Marco, Maluca Mala, Selena and Magaly Meza. “In traditional Latin music, mariachi music, it’s very male-oriented, but the fun thing is you find a lot of this newer music and the female-fronted artists and bands become this really powerful thing we are able to show through the music,” Rose says.
BBC America’s Killing Eve, which premieres in April, packs female music cues from artists including Anna Karina, Cat’s Eyes and even Brigitte Bardot. “Creatively we thought that the show could really take a vocal on the soundtrack, and it would have been perverse for that vocal to be male when the focus is so female,” says EP Sally Woodward Gentle. “We didn’t rule out having the occasional male voice but in the end we didn’t have any.”
“From the outset, our musical vision for the show included a female voice or voices, and we explored lots of different artists and styles. It was important that the music was reflective of both of our lead characters, who are strong and complex women,” says music supervisor Catherine Grieves.
That exploration also led to the inclusion of recurring music from the band Unloved, fronted by female singer/songwriter Jade Vincent, and whose members David Holmes and Keefus Ciancia scored the series.
Creator Kay Mellor went with a Corinne Bailey Rae reboot of “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough” for the title track of new British TV series Girlfriends, which also features tracks by Amy Winehouse and Rebecca Ferguson.
The song “relates to the three women and reminds me of times spent with my girlfriends,” Mellor says. “I wanted a modern singer from the north of England whose music I love, to give it a more contemporary feel. Corrine Bailey Rae has a quality to her voice. I think it’s really important on a show with strong female PoV, that the song that opens the drama is sung by a woman.”
Similarly, the theme song for Mum, newly available on BBC Worldwide and ITV streaming service BritBox, is “Cups (You’re Gonna to Miss Me)” by Lulu and the Lampshades and Jean Simone, a revival of the 1931 Carter Family Song “When I’m Gone.”
“I think it would have been odd to have a male voice for Mum,“ creator Stefan Golaszewski says. “It's a show that's centrally about specifically female journeys. It was important to me to represent that in all aspects of the piece.”

segunda-feira, 26 de fevereiro de 2018

Merrill-Williams Audio Lança R.E.A.L. 101.3 - Toca-Disco

Merrill-Williams Audio releases the R.E.A.L. 101.3 turntable system


Merrill-Williams Audio LLC of Memphis, Tennessee is proud to announce the latest version of its celebrated R.E.A.L. turntable, the model 101.3. The R.E.A.L. 101.3 retains the essential elements of the 101 and 101.2 models while adding fundamental improvements.
The most essential element retained in the 101.3 is a thoroughgoing approach to energy management design. The plinth consists of rubber elastomer sandwiched with phenolic (hence Rubber Elastomer Acoustic Laminate). All sources of vibration (motor, platter, bearing, and tonearm) are attached only to the elastomer, and each is isolated from the others in such a way that none is allowed to transmit vibration through the laminate.
Also retained are the 101.2’s microprocessor-controlled motor drive with built-in speed strobe, its energy-rejecting elastomer feet, and its sophisticated record-clamping system, which consists of a center weight (also energy-rejecting) and periphery ring. The design of the R.E.A.L. turntable is the recipient of one of only two U.S. patents granted to a turntable (#8,406,122 B2), and the first since 1958.
The improvements in the model 101.3 consist of changes in the material of the platter and the construction of the center weight and feet, in addition to enhanced cosmetics.
The retail price of the R.E.A.L. 101.3 is $7,995. This price includes the peripheral ring and the newly-designed record clamp.
U.S. distribution for Merrill-Williams is now being handled by E.A.R. U.S.A.

CEO Da Gibson Fala Sobre Os Desafios Que Os Fabricantes Estão Enfrentando

Gibson CEO Talks Challenges Facing Guitar Retail Industry: 'These Are Troubled Times'


If Gibson Guitars is in serious financial straits, longtime owner and CEO Henry Juszkiewicz has an extremely good poker face - but he's realistic about the challenges ahead.
Sitting at the head of a conference room table just outside his office at the company's Nashville headquarters just days before Christmas, he's leaning back in his chair while discussing the future of Gibson Brands Inc. with Billboard. Only a few weeks before news that the company's new CFO Bill Lawrence would be leaving the company -- replaced by former CFO Benson Woo -- and less than six months away from $375 million of Gibson's senior secured notes reaching maturity (at which time another $145 million in bank loans will be due immediately if those notes, issued in 2013, are not refinanced by then) he is discussing how both the guitar segment of his company and the music instrument industry as a whole need to embrace the future of retail.

"There are problems with the guitar retail industry," explains Juszkiewicz who has been CEO of Gibson since 1992, after acquiring the company in 1986. "All of the retailers are fearful as can be; they're all afraid of e-commerce, with Amazon just becoming the second largest employer in the US, and the brick and mortar guys are just panicking. They see the trend, and that trend isn't taking them to a good place, and they're all wondering if there will be a world for brick and mortar stores for much longer. It’s a turbulent world to be a retailer, and many of our retail partners are facing that same issue."
The holiday season was kind to Gibson: "We were expecting very good sales and exceeded expectations.  While this refers to our sales to dealers, sales to consumers at the store level were up year on year even more so," says Juszkiewicz. But the company's relationship with its retail partners is under strain. While Gibson announced in a recent press release that it has met all current obligations to the bondholders and is in the process of arranging a new credit facility to replace the bonds, fully expecting the bonds to be refinanced in the ordinary course of business, revenue still fell from $2.1 billion to $1.7 billion over the last three years. From old merchandise clogging store inventory spaces, to retail shops that hire employees who know nothing about the instruments nor how to sell them, the longtime CEO has ideas on how the industry can right the ship.
How long has the guitar retail industry been struggling?
When the stock market collapsed [in 2008], almost all retail across the board fell 30%; not just the guitar sector of that, although I will admit that the guitar business still hasn't fully recovered yet. The musical instrument industry as a whole hasn't recovered; its getting there, but its still not at the same level as where it was before.
How does Gibson plan to embrace e-commerce in an industry where a lot of people still want to get a feel for a guitar before they purchase?
Guitars are unique, and are a lot like clothing. There are some products that I call fashion products, where before you buy it you want to see how it feels and looks on you, and the guitar definitely fits both of those criteria. There is a feeling, and I believe it’s true, that every guitar is slightly different from each other; its made out of wood, and two pieces of wood will always be different from each other. We've always been loyal to retail; we still don't have a site where we sell directly [to consumers]. We probably will in the future, and part of that is in reaction to general trending toward e-commerce. These are troubled times for retail.
Where do you feel that retail has failed the guitar buyer?
The issue for Gibson in retail is that the industry has gone into a really narrow customer focus. In the 50s, music retailers were neighborhood family stores. If Johnny wanted to play an accordion, and Suzy wanted to play saxophone, there were full line stores. They weren't big, but they carried most instruments, sheet music even. It was a neighborhood staple. Those days are gone, and those stores were in deep trouble when rock and roll came along. When that happened, guitars became extremely popular, and everyone became a guitar buyer if not player. That changed the retail quite a bit; even though it was still mom and pop shops, they also became more "rock" shops, and [the business] became much younger. It also became quite unprofitable. As that demand started to decrease in guitar - at this point in time, only people who already played were starting to be the only people actually buying guitars - stores lost their family roots and started concentrating on "real" players. They had to, but they hyper focused on those buyers, and started losing money. They couldn't pay their rent anymore. I like to say, "You know where the good music stores are? Look in a city's pornography district." Sure enough, that's where [they] are. Well, parents with kids don't like to go into those areas to shop. Musicians don't have a problem going into those areas - there are usually a lot of hip clubs around there, too - but this is how the guitar business took a hard left, and left behind a lot of consumers. We've lost a lot of consumers. Women, by and large, aren't comfortable going to guitar stores. If you look around, you'll see a few, but if they are there chances are they're already musicians. You're not going to mom and dad; you're only preaching to the converted.
So how do you find new converts?
With great difficulty. I've been called someone that hates retailers, and I don't; we make a real effort in making sure our retailers make a good profit off of our product. We also serve the consumer, though, and we have to focus on the person that is paying a good deal of their money on us sometimes. The more people that like what we do, the happier the industry is as a whole.
I remember going inside [a defunct music shop in Nashville], and I saw a guy pull into the parking lot in a $150,000 Mercedes. He walks up to the counter where they kept their recording stuff, and he told the young guy working the counter, 'Look, I used to screw around with keyboards and guitar, and I want to put together a little home studio. I'm clueless about it, though, so can you just tell me what to get?' A normal merchant would hear a cash register going off in their head! This kid looked totally confused, said he needed to get something from the stockroom first, and never came back. That guy waited ten minutes before finally leaving. That is the experience that people see over and over again. It's the biggest impediment that we have to getting new people into [buying guitars]. Nobody really walks into those stores anymore without already knowing what they want, and how to get it themselves.
What specific changes do you see needed at the retail level?
The first thing we are doing is try to teach the stores how to merchandise. I've been arguing with retailers for a long time that you have to be a place where [potential customers] can sit and take in the store, and be a destination that is friendly. If you walk into most music stores, there's nowhere to sit. Give me a break! Most stores aren't comfortable places. You don't have the people in the stores that care [that there aren't any new customers].They put all of these guitars on the wall, and they put the best ones out of reach. Because you might steal one? Well, that's one way to look at it, but Apple doesn't look at it that way, and most of their stuff is more expensive than a lot of higher end guitars. Their products are just out on tables for everyone to pick up and look at, and while they have some theft protection, its not like they have a security force in each store. We just have the whole thing wrong. If you want customers, you have to be nice to them, and give them a place where they are comfortable.
Also, the merchants don't have merchandising in our industry. If you are Wal-Mart, every year you are deciding what goes inside of your stores; they know exactly what products are going to be on every square foot of shelf space, and every store is the same. That's what a chain store is supposed to be! Walk into a Guitar Center and try to tell me where anything is. It's obvious that they don't use the same planogram. They don't have the same guitars. You never know what you're going to find when you walk into one. The basics have been around for a long time; it's all about making the customer feel welcome, and helping them out by being knowledgable. That's what the industry needs, because it doesn't have it. We have to get people involved in music, and offer them a helping hand. There's a lot that can be done that just isn't being done. We have to give people options, and we can use new technology to give better experiences to our consumers. Kids are out there creating their own music and their own videos; we have to find a way to be a part of their lives. We're losing by not being a part of their lives, and insisting that they become a part of ours.
How do you get the younger generation, whose music of choice may not be particularly guitar driven, to pick up a guitar?
Kids these days are very eclectic in their interests, and they don't listen to any one genre of music. The younger generation will listen to The Beatles, Dr. Dre, and jazz. They teach themselves Garage Band; they make videos on their iPhones...they give themselves license to create their artistic visions, in as many areas of art as it takes them.
[The industry is] stuck in a time warp, and the 'purists' have a very loud voice on the online forums. If you are a kid today, you have an iPad by the age of two, and if you're not offering new technology you're old. Kids today may think some music from the 50s is kind of cool here and there, but what other industry do you know that hasn't changed since the 50s? Those guitars from the 50s are what the purists want, but we have to have something new and exciting. Imagine if the camera had never changed. Innovation is a part of every business to some degree, but [the guitar industry] hates it. The kids demand it, and if you don't have it, they walk.