How Do Singles Differ From Album Cuts?

What is the difference between a song that is released as a single and one that is included on an album, or as they're called these days, a CD?

Many times they are basically the exact same song. That is, the tracks recorded for the album are used but augmented and remixed to make the single. This is common practise although I've never heard a story of The Beatles ever doing that. The Beatles recorded every song as a potential single and when they collected enough of these they released them together as an album. But plenty of other bands do it all the time so what exactly is the difference?

Here's the album version of Fleetwood Mac's Rhianon:

And she can sing and write songs too!

The first thing you'll notice is how dry the guitar is and how the snare is only hitting every other beat. Overall the dryness and loudness of that snare drum makes this version sound like a demo.


And here's the single version of Fleetwood Mac's Rhianon:

Poor Christine, from band fox to band keyboard player overnight.

 On the single version the vocals and instruments have much more presences and a smoother sound (echo). This may be due to mastering but this version is much lusher even though the instrumentation is the same as the album cut. The background vocals are much more upfront and the lead guitar slightly mixed back.

And finally here's an example of Eric Clapton playing the SINGLES version of Cocaine live:

Eric playing Cocaine before it became a huge hit.

Now here's Clapton doing the ALBUM version of Cocaine live:

Clapton playing Cocaine AFTER a huge hit.

See what a major difference the album version is to the singles version even when played live?

The Future Of Ripping Off Artists

From an article in Rolling Stone Magazine:

David Byrne Criticizes Streaming Music Services

October 11, 2013 2:45 PM ET
 
After David Byrne declared Monday that the richest one percent are draining New York's cultural resources, the former Talking Heads frontman is leveling similar criticism at the Internet and streaming music services in a new essay for The Guardian, writing that the new landscape will leech away creative content from the world.

Byrne says he understands why people stream music. "For many music listeners, the choice is obvious – why would you ever buy a CD or pay for a download when you can stream your favorite albums and artists either for free, or for a nominal monthly charge?" he writes, noting that Spotify is the second largest source of digital music revenue for labels in Europe. But streaming services like Spotify, Byrne says, result in padded pockets for labels, not artists.

"The amounts these services pay per stream is minescule – their idea being that if enough people use the service those tiny grains of sand will pile up. Domination and ubiquity are therefore to be encouraged," Byrne writes. "The major record labels usually siphon off most of this income, and then they dribble about 15-20 percent of what's left down to their artists." Byrne points out that a band of four people receiving a 15 percent royalty from Spotify streams would need 236,549,020 streams to secure an annual minimum wage of $15,080.

Even Daft Punk, who racked up 104,760,000 Spotify streams for "Get Lucky" by the end of August, won't rake it in: they'll make only around $13,000 each for those streams. "This is just one song from a lengthy recording that took a lot of time and money to develop," Byrne writes. "That won't pay their bills if it's their principal source of income. What happens to the bands who don't have massive international summer hits?"

Artists will be out of work in a year if they rely almost solely on streaming revenue in the future, Byrne says, and not everyone can support themselves with big tours, die-hard fans and label support. "Up-and-coming artists don't have that advantage," Byrne writes. "Some haven't got to the point where they can make a living on live performances and licensing, so what do they think of these services?"

Though some artists see view Spotify as a positive and accessible way to spread their music and give listeners a risk-free way to listen, Byrne disagrees with their assessment, saying there are other paths of discovery like the artist's website, sites like Bandcamp and even previews on Amazon. "I like what I hear, there is often the option to buy," he says.

He continues, "I also don't understand the claim of discovery that Spotify makes; the actual moment of discovery in most cases happens at the moment when someone else tells you about an artist or you read about them – not when you're on the streaming service listening to what you have read about (though Spotify does indeed have a 'discovery' page that, like Pandora's algorithm, suggests artists you might like)." 

Because labels have a controlling interest in Spotify, artists don't necessarily stand to benefit from the growth of the service, Byrne writes. Spotify dished out more than $500 million to U.S. major labels for the rights to license their catalogues, with another payment to follow; the labels also received equity, becoming partners and shareholders in Spotify, which is estimated at $3 billion in value. "That income from equity, when and if the service goes public, does not have to be shared with the artists," Bryne writes. "It seems obvious that some people are making a lot of money on this deal, while the artists have been left with meagre scraps."

Byrne ultimately doesn't have a solution, though he does have a big concern regarding streaming as a main method of consuming creative content in general. "Perhaps we might stop for a moment and consider the effect these services and this technology will have, before 'selling off' all our cultural assets the way the big record companies did," he writes. "Musicians might, for now, challenge the major labels and get a fairer deal than 15 percent of a pittance, but it seems to me that the whole model is unsustainable as a means of supporting creative work of any kind. Not just music."
He finishes with a bleak warning. "What's at stake is not so much the survival of artists like me, but that of emerging artists and those who have only a few records under their belts," Byrne writes. "Without new artists coming up, our future as a musical culture looks grim."

 He's complaining that it's the labels that make all the money from streaming music not the artists. This is another example why it's the LABELS that are obsolete, not the artists. If the artists upload their music themselves to Spotify they would make the money. There has always been a major disconnect between musicians and the business of music with both sides wanting to keep them separate but there is no longer enough of a pie to cut up. 

Musicians don't seem to have a problem with considering management part of their act. They split their "artist royalties" with their manager, sometimes equally as with Van Halen where there was a five way split. In the future the manager will be the band's record company president as well and the band members may have to assume the roles of various record company personnel. Sure, it will cut into their drinking, snorting and womanizing time but if they want to keep continuing to pay someone else for all the work that's essential to their career then they have to shut up about only getting 15%. Once the musicians start seeing how much work is involved beyond the writing and performing of three minute pop tunes they'll start to understand why they're being "ripped off".

How to Rock n Roll

How to Rock and Roll


A lot of people take interest in being a rock musician/star. The term "rock star" does not mean to be a good musician, it just means that you are popular and you want to get wasted and all of the other cliches involved in rock. To rock you do not need drugs. It's just a passion and love for rock 'n roll that makes you rock!

Steps

  1. Find your uniqueness. If you like something don't let anyone tell you otherwise about what you like.
  2. Find the type of rock you like.
  3. Find a store to get some clothes from, like Hot Topic, for example.
  4. Head down to guitar center and pick up an instrument. Pick out the instrument that appeals to you.
  5. Read up on your rock history, get some biographies and study up!!
  6. Learn your instrument, and combine styles. Expand to as many bands as you can to influence your playing.Be serious about your instrument. Don't think you rock because you own an expensive guitar but can't play it.
  7. Start a band. Hopefully you have some friends that are into rock music and are musicians themselves so you can start a band with them. When your band has a great bond, you are sure to make great music. If you guys don't like each other, you are not going to make good music.
  8. Jam a bit. Find a garage or a recreation center, or even the band room at school.
  9. Finally get your ass out there on the stage and ROCK!! Show the crowd your intensity. Forget about everything and let the rock sink in then everything will fall into place.

  • Be original.
  • Use your musical flaws as advantages!
  • Find heroes, admire them and learn from them but don't copy them.
  • If stage fright is an issue, just take a deep breath, throw your head back and just let it flow out.

  • Don't forget, "It's a long way to the top if you wanna rock 'n roll"-AC/DC
  • YOU DON'T NEED DRUGS TO ROCK. PEOPLE WILL TRY TO GET YOU TO USE THEM. JUST SAY NO. How do you think so many great rock musicians died so young.

Article provided by wikiHow, a wiki how-to manual. Find author credits at the original wikiHow article on How to Rock and Roll. All content on wikiHow can be shared under a Creative Commons license.

Cracked And Catchy

Here's something interesting from Cracked.com:

Which Is the Catchiest Song?

Nothing in the world is as subjective as music. Everyone reading this has, at some point in their life, shared a life-changing song with a friend who said, "Eh, I wish it had more drums." Besides, if record companies could rely on math to tell them what's going to be a hit, the music industry would be easy. Well, guys, we have good news ...

London researchers started by observing thousands of volunteers singing along to various songs and took careful note of which ones produced the most uncontrollable enthusiasm from the participants. Once they had their sample, they started breaking the tracks down into their core elements. So, you want a hit? You need detailed musical phrases, a lot of pitch changes, and a male voice with a high vocal range. If you have a good, shouty rock ballad with a simple, memorable hook, then you've got yourself a catchy song. For example, the top match in their experiment was Queen's "We Are the Champions":

With this simple power ballad, Freddie Mercury unleashed the perfect storm of elements that make it impossible not to sing along if you hear it playing. The simple hook embellished by Mercury's ability to switch from baritone to punch-in-the-nuts pitch and everywhere in between is the code to a complete brain hijacking.

The same can be said about "Livin' on a Prayer" by Bon Jovi, which also scored high on the list of both catchy songs and big-haired '80s bands:

According to the researchers, a song is more addictive if the vocalist manages to spit out more words before needing to take a breath, like "She says we gotta hooooold ooooooonnnn to what we've got (breathe) 'cause it doesn't make a difference if we make it or not!" Combine that with Jon Bon Jovi's powerful, high-pitched yelling in the chorus, and you have crack for the ears.

Oddly, it was reported that a key requirement of catchiness is that the singer has to be male. The researchers speculate that we're tapping into some inherent psychological intuition to follow male tribal leaders into battle. Which of course is ridiculous, because who would follow Freddie Mercury into battle? Actually, scratch that. That would be goddamn amazing.


It's In The Limo

For my birthday I got a slew of Rock & Roll books. One of which is What You Want Is In The Limo by Michael Walker. It focuses on the year 1973 and on three particular rock tours of that year, The Who's Quadrophenia, Led Zeppelin's House Of The Holy and Alice Cooper's Billion Dollar Babies.


I'm enjoying this book because it's a real trip down memory lane. First of all on the back cover is a photo of Robert Plant posing with Vanessa Gilbert a girl with whom I went to high school.


Then there was the fact that I attended the Who concert and Alice Cooper's Billion Dollar Babies show at the Hollywood Bowl. That was the third and last Alice Cooper show I attended as the audience was full of kids and their grandparents. When Alice got chased around the stage by a giant tooth trying to hit him with a giant toothbrush as part of his dentist visit induced drug dream I figured he was now aiming to become a Saturday morning cartoon character and no longer for me. That didn't stop my friend and I going after the show to the Continental Hyatt House hotel on Sunset Blvd. where we figured the band would be having their after show party / orgy.

We got into the elevator and planned to stop at each floor until we saw what seemed to be a party going on but a burly roadie type came up and stopped the elevator door from closing. Then Alice Cooper himself stepped into the elevator with us and we rode up  knowing we wouldn't have to guess which floor we'd get off on (pun intended). Unfortunately, after Alice exited the elevator the burly bodyguard once again extended his arm, this time to prevent me and my friend from getting off (more ways than one). We really weren't disappointed as although we didn't get to go to his party we did get to ride in the elevator with him.

It's interesting to see the sort of things that were going on around you now being written about in books.

Easier Than It Sounds

In a recent blog post I commented on how much I like the guitar arrangement of Joan Baez's song Diamonds & Rust and I included a Youtube video of her playing it live. It always sounded rather complex to me and I was impressed that Joan played it solo. After watching her do it in the video it didn't look too difficult so I Googled a tutorial on how to play it.

Hmm... this looks strangely familiar.

It's always funny when you learn a guitar part from a rock record that you assumed was tricky to play and then turns out to be quite simple. Obviously, this young girl can play Diamonds & Rust and it's very simple yet elegant and what's even more surprising to me is that it's very similar to the intro to The Tooners' song I'm Growing Away From You. No wonder I like it.

Another example is when The Tooners were performing the Rock & Roll Rehab Show at the Hayworth Theater a friend of the band who was friends with Mickey Dolenz of the Monkees was coming to see the show and I suggested she bring Mickey to a performance. In the event he actually showed up the band rehearsed playing Last Train To Clarksville on the off chance we could get him on stage during the encore to sing it with us. That would have been a dream come true.  It didn't happen, but when I told the plan to our friend the singer-songwriter (and The Tooners' guest lead guitarist on our Rocktasia CD) Jerry Strull, he said that song would be too difficult for us (me) to play. I was insulted and thought maybe I was playing it wrong since Jerry is the guitar expert, not me, but when he showed me how he played the picking intro I realized he was playing it in the wrong key. In the right key it is a very simple riff. This was another example of overestimating the difficulty of playing rock guitar parts that sound intricate and complex but are really quite simple.

Now I am not saying these parts are simple as a way to belittle or disparage them, quite the opposite. I've even had musicians ask me to show them some of my tunes and had them comment that they assumed the songs were much more difficult than they are. The really great songs are simple. The best thing you can do as a songwriter is write a very simple part that's easy to play but that sounds impressive. Sometimes when you learn how to play these parts you get a little disappointed as when a magician shows you how a magic trick is done and you're a little embarrassed that you were fooled by such a simple trick but after you get over feeling tricked and stupid you began to appreciate the genius of the simplicity. So it is with music.
 

ZZ Top Pass Up A Hit

Michael Montrose was the bass player for our New Wave band Womanizer back in the Eighties and his distinctive sounding fretless bass adds an eerie atmosphere to The Tooners' Seance single. He also played in The Bottles with Jerry Strull and the band BOOG (Band Of Old Guys). Recently he sent me a photo of him with ZZ Top guitarist Billy Gibbons. I think he was pitching his motorcycle tune Mr. Glide to him for ZZ Top's next CD.

Maybe Mike should have kept his beard?
Mike's a biker and has one of the giant monstrosities that is really a car without doors or a roof. Mr. Glide's a cool bike tune but I think ZZ Top are into Hot Rods rather than Choppers. Mike's got some great stories of playing back in the days of Love-Ins in L.A.'s Griffith Park and the psychedelic Sunset Strip. I should get him to write down some of them for you to read here. In the meantime check out his original solo music HERE.


I've Lost My Appetite

Yes, it has come to this. Just when you think "poor Stephanie, she's so talented, why does she has to turn herself into some monstrosity like Lady Gaga to get her music noticed?" comes this example of modern music marketing. It's the Vegan Black Metal Chef, an online cooking show starring a "Black Metal" musician. It's not very musical but then I don't find "Black Metal" very musical anyway.

Without the subtitles you wouldn't even realize the "lyrics" don't rhyme.

I don't begrudge the guy's success at doing what he he's doing to get noticed as a "musician" (or as a chef), but this really seems like a gag from the cartoon show Metalocalypse. This is Rock & Roll lifestyle taken to an extreme. Why don't they make a new TV series that looks like a cross between The Munsters or the Adams Family and The Monkees and have it be about a "Black Metal" band?

It bothers me that the generic style of Rock music these days is either Metal or Punk. Of all the styles to have survived into becoming the caricature of music those two, along with Rap, are the worst examples of the genre. I like that they exist, the more the merrier, but don't make every story, movie or TV show about a rock band a Metal or Punk band. There are other kinds of Rock & Roll.

Guitar Playing With Style

I'm a big fan of acoustic guitar arrangements, songs that are finger picked or that have one acoustic guitar playing chords for a rhythm and another one playing lead lines. James Taylor is an expert at this playing a bass line, sometimes even with his thumb, while playing chords with enough 'hammer-ons' and 'pull-offs' to simulate two or three guitars.

One song with a great guitar arrangement is Joan Baez's love/hate song to Bob Dylan Diamonds And Rust. I always assumed that some session player wrote and played the picked arrangement, the intro is especially intriguing, but this video from 1975 shows Joan playing the whole arrangement live.

Hey Bob, can you play guitar like this?

This gives me a new respect for Joan Baez although I've always liked this song and listen to it often on my iPod. Other songs with the same sort of arrangement are If You Could Read My Mind by Gordon Lightfoot, Roads To Moscow by Al Stewart, Operator by Jim Croce and Heat Of The Night by The Tooners.

One of the most underrated guitar players in my opinion and an expert in this style of playing is Paul Simon. He is a one man band. 

It's not just the complexity gotten out of one guitar, played in the same manner as a piano, but the sound. I especially love that shimmering guitar sound. Another couple of tunes that have a great acoustic guitar sound are Black Water by the Doobie Brothers and Dear Jill by Blodwyn Pig.






Radio Self Promotion

In the past when I was shopping for an independent radio promoter to push one of our songs I found they all said the same thing, namely that all their competition were incompetent scam artists and that they were the only one that actually did what he said he would. They only thing he said he would do is mail our CD to the radio stations he had on a list of stations that played our style of music and that he would call the program director at each station once a week for six weeks to see if the station was playing our song.

I asked these promoters how they got the station's program director, the person in charge of choosing the songs to be played, to play the songs we wanted? He said he didn't. That wasn't his job. All he does is mail out the CDs and calls to see if they're getting played. He can't make anyone actually play anything. I asked couldn't the artists do that themselves? "Yes", he said, "but they don't, and won't". He's right.

How many musicians who claim they would love to get commercial radio airplay would take the first step to Google what the procedure is for doing just that? Relatively few I would assume knowing the musician types I've known in my life. That part of the Music Business is "beneath them".

What percentage of those who would do a little research would also find the names of radio stations throughout the country that play their style of music, compile a list of those stations' addresses and then find the name and telephone number of their program directors? A very small percentage would do all that.

Now, what percentage of those people would spend the time and money to purchase the shipping materials, the mailing labels and the postage (which these days probably costs more than the CDs themselves), and actually mail out hundreds of CDs across the country? Keep in mind these CDs are ones that are now not going to be able to be sold at live gigs or in local record shops or through online sales.

In the old days sending out CDs hoping to get radio airplay was tricky because even if you got heavy rotation on major stations it wouldn't do you any good unless you had major distribution to get your CDs in record stores while your song was hot on the radio. Distribution for an Indie release was very difficult unless you were getting major radio airplay so it was a Catch 22 situation. Even if you got distribution because of radio it took a while to get all those CDs in the stores and your window of opportunity with radio play was very short. Luckily these days that's not a problem once your CD is on iTunes and Amazon.com (easily done through CD Baby).

Okay, so back to those very few ambitious, goal oriented, world domination minded future mega-stars that have even bothered to send their music out to radio, how many of those that do are going to actually have the persistence and tenacity to call dozens of radio stations, nationwide, until they can talk with the Program Director? And here's the real catch; how many of those who talk to a program director can speak well enough and articulate enough to convince a program director that he or she is a mature, intelligent person with the type of personality it takes to succeed in the music business? Because at this point it's not just how good the music is but the impression the musician makes over the course of a phone call. Does he or she have "it", the charisma and personality to make other people believe in his or her potential and thus agree to become part of their team? Or will the Program Director, you know, think that maybe, ah, the person on the line is, uh, kinda, uh, not very, you know, interesting, or something...

And not only should a musician keep making phone calls for the four to six weeks a radio campaign usually lasts but should continue to make phone calls to keep the relationship that's begun continuing and to let the program directors know to expect your next single, even if they all passed on your last one, because you're in it for the long run. You are a professional, just like them.

So, now what percentage of musicians from the beginning of our survey do you think might actually succeed at getting their music radio airplay on their own? Extremely few I would think. However, that means that those that can do these things are in a very elite group with relatively little competition. They also are in a very different league than the independent promotion people who are passionless paid by the phone call employees completely indifferent to the music they're pushing. Whereas radio people love what they do, love music and appreciate those who make it and love it as much as they do.

If you're one of those you began reading this thinking you could do it but now are realizing that it is probably way too much work and way too much of a long shot anyway, congratulations, you've just saved yourselves a lot of wasted time and money.