Spin Magazine has a pretty interesting article this month highlighting what folks in the music industry make. Anyone else see this? Obviously I am interested in it, and from the limited knowledge that I have it seems kind of accurate. What they did was take anonymous people willing to share what they make, and then asked them the pro’s and con’s about their specific job.

Some of the highlights for me were the Music Blogger making $35,000 a year, the Rappers Bodyguard making $150,000 a year, and the (twenty year) Veteran Touring Artist making $40,000 a year. This list goes on from merchandise seller to photographers to the band managers, and from what I can tell they seem pretty close. The online version doesn’t have all the positions but there are a bunch. I assume most of this is general market, mainstream music, but I don’t think the “Christian Market” is much different in most of it. Except for maybe the rappers bodyguard. I don’t know what Toby pays.

My only question is where I fall into this scale.

Read The Article

Popularity: 60% [?]

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Mar
31
2008
7:34 am

Well, Kristin and I have been talking about it for a while, but we finally started watching Lost last night.

Neither one of us had seen even a minute of the show previous to last night. It’s not like we had something against it, it’s just that, at first, we couldn’t commit to being in the same place in front of our TV every time the show was on. We don’t have anything to record it, so if we missed one we would be stuck. Then it got to the point where we were too behind to start watching.

I have continued to hear how amazing this show is, and how it’s like a movie and not like regular TV, and how it keeps getting better and all that, but still didn’t have time to give it a chance. Now with ABC running full screen, high definition, full episodes for free, we decided to give it a shot. We started at the beginning and watched the two pilot episodes last night. I think it just might be as good as everyone has been saying. Right up front though, I am a little annoyed that Jack seems to know everything about everything, but I’m sure that something weird will happen with him.

So anyway, we are a little behind all of you, but I’m cool with that. I think it’s awesome that we are so far behind and we have so many episode to watch to be current. No waiting for the next one.

I assume most of you watch Lost, but is there anyone that doesn’t watch it? More interesting to me, is there anyone that doesn’t like it?

Popularity: 70% [?]

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Mar
30
2008
6:42 am

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Well, it’s not bad, but it’s broken. See that little piece hanging down there next the the arrow. I guess that’s not good. Blue got the splint today and the hard cast comes Monday or Tuesday. He’s excited about a cool cast and getting to play lots of video games. Baseball will have to wait this year. He’s still a tough one though. Just a little disappointed we didn’t get to bring the wheelchair home.

Popularity: 51% [?]

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Mar
29
2008
2:22 pm

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Blue is a tough kid. One time he shoved a vacuum extension down his throat, and bruised both sides of his throat. He still asked for a popsicle and just sucked on it and spit it out so he didn’t have to swallow. He’s usually never hurt, and has the reflexes of a drunken cat. You know, quick and agile but rubbery enough to bounce off stuff.

Well, yesterday Blue decided to jump off the coffee table over his baby brother and land on his oversized bean bag. What he didn’t count on was Cooper standing up and sticking his head in the way of Blue’s passing feet. Blue feet caught on Cooper’s head knocking Blue off balance and sending him landing right onto his right ankle. A loud pop, some screaming and crawling away, then some ice and calming down followed, but because of Blue’s tough history we are having a hard time telling just how bad it is.

This morning Blue still can’t walk. The swelling is minimal, but he’s not the type to not walk, so we are taking the next step. The emergency room. I will keep you updated and hopefully get some cool pictures.

Popularity: 51% [?]

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Mar
29
2008
8:27 am

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At the risk of offending bunches of people and possibly shaking up the readership here, I feel like I should tell you something. You are potentially being manipulated. If you read blogs, any blogs, most likely you are being manipulated. If you write a blog, most likely you are manipulating. From this point on I will include myself in these statements by using the word “we”, though I am realizing that what I am about to say is something I want to try not to do.

We are narcissistic bloggers. We, for one reason or another, think others care about what we have to say. That’s why we have a blog. We think intently about what we say in order to appear a certain way to those who are reading. We scratch and claw to get more readers, and figure out ways to draw more attention to ourselves. We will steal, cheat, and manipulate others into talking about us on their blogs. We try to come up with something more clever and newer than anyone else and we need to do it first. And we do it for stats. Stats that tell us that we are more important that someone else. You didn’t want to know that did you? Or maybe you already did know it.

Here’s one way we do this, and it’s a complaint I have heard several times about blogs. We go on an on about something because we are the “experts”. We want others to know we are the “experts” and we hope that they think we are smart. I’ve done it, and several other people have too. Sure we want to put our best foot forward and come across a certain way to our readers, and many times we sacrifice authenticity in doing so. We only show people what we want them to see, and sometimes that’s not the “real us”. It’s the blogging us. The “public” us.

Now, I’m not saying there is anything wrong with thinking through what you write on a blog, or even word things a certain way to prove a point. All I am saying is lately I have seen several blogs become an arm wrestling match for attention and the authenticity of many of those blogs have suffered. And I feel like I am just as guilty as anyone else falling into that trap and I don’t really like it. We have stopped blogging in a genuine, authentic way and are focussing on simply getting more people to click on our names.

Here’s the deal. I want this place to be a place where I am as authentic as I can possibly be, and I encourage you to take that to your blog. If there is authenticity in your writing it doesn’t matter if there are 10 or 1000 people reading your blog. Am I off base here? Now, I know that I have paid attention to my stats before. I have watched them go up and know when they drop. Today I started wondering why. My job right now is to get people to read other peoples blogs. Mainly the artists that I am working with to benefit their careers. I could be wrong about this, and maybe I am, but it’s something that I have seen a lot of lately, and I’m not quite sure how to not get sucked into it.

What do you think? Do you fall into this?

Popularity: 73% [?]

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Mar
27
2008
8:18 pm

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Pray for our friends. Pray for his wife. Pray for his kids.

Popularity: 53% [?]

Mar
27
2008
1:24 pm

msdebate.jpgSo we got pretty much a lot of the same answers on the first post, but there were a few good points, pointed out by some folks. Now, first I would like to point out that I am not suggesting that we throw out Myspace all together. From a marketing end that would be stupid. I realize that it’s something that has to exist, but I still hold to what I say in that an artists Myspace page needs to point to something that doesn’t suck. We all (mostly) agree that Myspace sucks, but I think all of us see the usefulness of it.

If we all agree that it sucks, but has to be there, why not have that point to something that doesn’t suck. Shaun made some great points in the comment section about spreading yourself out there enough that no matter what avenue people are on there is a way to find you. That’s an obvious good call. Tim also made some good points about the reach of Myspace over anything else out there. But again, why spend the time, where there could be a giant button that directs the reader to something more personal and that, again, doesn’t suck?

Dale over at IdeaDen is neck deep in artists online presence and rebutted with this post, which also states that while Myspace sucks, it also may “rule”. Dale writes:

It allows people to modify….er eh…destroy their profiles and make their site look more like a drunken programmers product after a Mountain Dew shortage. Despite all of its shortcomings, one thing remains true…if you want to find out about music and connect to the bazzzillllions of people looking for it…then Myspace is king.

Well written and true. As sad as that is. I think my big question is, What Next? What happens when Facebook is the “kind of sucks, kind of rules” thing and we are on to bigger and better? How many artists are leaving behind too many un-updated sites that are causing more confusion for their career than it is helping it? Do they need to hire someone full-time simply to make sure all of these social networking things are consistent? Or do all of these places simply point to one consistent place, and that being the “.com”?

Just thoughts. Thanks for all the input. What do you guys think?

Popularity: 58% [?]

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Mar
27
2008
9:33 am

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