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What about MySpace?

As Facebook eats the lunch of just about every competitor, I have to wonder -- what happened to MySpace? Are they the spurned middle child between Friendster and Facebook? Do they have a Jan Brady complex that causes them to sit in their bedroom dreaming up imaginary boyfriends?

RockGeek Fact of the Day #5470

40 years ago today, at Kent State University in Ohio, National Guardsmen fired 67 rounds over a period of 13 seconds, killing four students and wounding nine others, one of whom suffered permanent paralysis. Some of the students who were shot had been protesting against the American invasion of Cambodia, which President Richard Nixon announced in a television address on April 30. Other students...

The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse

When I started at Berklee, I got a job in the jazz department at Tower Records. This was before iPods, before MySpace, and at a time when people were still asking what we had on cassette. The jazz department was up on the third floor, and nobody wandered in there unintentionally. As such, it was somewhat remote, and it gave the employee ample time to discover great music. As a new Berklee kid, I...

Repost: Twitter isn’t “over,” I’m over it.

I was in the audience for John Mayer’s interview at last week’s ASCAP Expo in Los Angeles. And in his follow-up post, he challenges folks to respond, repost, and continue a conversation (in more than 140 characters). Listening to John speak, I was mostly impressed with the fact that he’s equally smart and interesting. Without a guitar, he’s still thoroughly engaging. I...

RockGeek Fact of the Day #0420

Bob Dylan’s “Rainy Day Women No. 12 and 35” is referred to as one source of the origins of the term “420” referencing the use of marijuana: the numbers 12 and 35 when multiplied equal 420.

(Like whoa … and if you play “Blonde on Blonde” while you watch Mommie Dearest …. )

There should never be free music.

Anytime you give a track away, people should be buying it -- and the currency of choice is an email address. Second to that, let them pay with a tweet, by becoming a Facebook fan, or creating a post about your music. Any of those currencies may actually be more valuable than the 99 cents they may (or may not!) want to spend.

There’s 1 for you 19 for me …

The music for “Taxman” was inspired by the theme song for the popular 1960s TV series Batman, which was recorded by the Surf Rock group The Marketts earlier in 1966 and hit #17 in the US. George was a big fan of the show. Thwap! Kapow! Bam!
From the Beatles cartoons, 1967 ….

And this … with Eric Clapton, Live in Japan 1994.

I bought new music.

While I spend plenty on iTunes and AmazonMP3, there's something to be said for the experience of seeking music out in the store, looking at the cover art, and waiting 'til you get it home to open, listen, and savor the music.

RockGeek Fact of the Day #237

Two very cool people have birthdays today: Leon Russell and Marvin Gaye. Both geniuses, and both worth sharing a couple clips from. Leon Russell just finished recording an album with Elton John. Elton has often declared Leon to be “a god.” Marvin Gaye was a brilliant songwriter and performer who met an untimely demise at the hands of his own father 26 years ago (yesterday). These are...

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