Subject: RE: Bob Geldof
Bob,
You're right about Geldof. We invited him to accept an award at the Abrams Superstars Programming Convention in 1986 following his triumphant Live Aid project and he said yes. His band (The Boomtown Rats) had appeared a couple years earlier to perform at our meetings in San Diego and while onstage, Geldof basically trashed all the radio folk in attendance. Brutally. But following Live Aid, it seemed he'd mellowed a bit. After a couple calls, he said he'd come and accept our award and address our clients. I made arrangements for him to fly first class from London to Miami where I would pick him up and ride with him to our convention site in Ft. Lauderdale. I got to the airport plenty early and when his flight arrived, Bob was nowhere to be found. I tried calling his house in Europe but got no answer. This was well before email and texting too so I assumed he'd given us the finger once again and blown us off. When I arrived at the opening cocktail party ready to deliver the bad news, I was shocked to see Bob already there, mingling with the crowd and charming everyone. When he saw my incredulous look of disbelief, he smiled and said "I missed my flight." Instead of trying to rebook, he simply walked over to the BOAC counter and asked if they had a flight that could get him to Miami. Geldof said, "They remembered me from Live Aid and my flight on the Concorde. They had a flight leaving in 20 minutes so they told me to just hop aboard." And he did. Without a ticket. Talk about a free ride. After landing in Miami, he grabbed a cab and rode up to Ft. Lauderdale, beating me to the party by a half hour. The next day, he gave an impassioned speech about human caring and how we all have it in us to be just like him. Well, maybe not the free airline ticket part. That was pure Geldof.
Check out "This Is The World Calling" to get what he's talking about. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h8fiJEeaFrk
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From: Ken Kragen
Subject: Re: Bob Geldof
Bob, I love that the best Geldof story was about playing boggle with Barbara Streisand and Gregory Peck because it was in my breakfast room that we did that. They were my neighbors and it's always been a memorable night for me and my wife Cathy as well. Geldof and Streisand were an incredible competitive match for each other. They'd get like 50 words a turn while the rest of us struggled to get at least 10. Two amazing intellects.
I've got a few dozen Bob Geldof stories. He's certainly outspoken. When I was managing Kenny Rogers we flew him over from England to present him an award at the United Nations for his humanitarian work. As he accepted he chose to use the moment to criticize strongly the UN.
The fact is however, that Bob Geldof was clearly the inspiration for me organizing the "We Are The World" recording. When Harry Belafonte saw the pictures on television of children starving to death in Africa he sought me out to organize a concert to raise money for a relief effort. I suggested instead that Geldof's "Do They Know It's Christmas" which had become a big hit in England was a perfect blueprint for us here in the US and that we could do it even bigger with the artist we had like Michael Jackson and my client Lionel Richie as well as so many others.
I flew Geldof over where the recording session at A&M Studios in Hollywood and he gave a terrific talk to the assembled artists about how important it was that they were doing this. Unfortunately he also went in into the adjoining sound stage where a few hundred agents and managers spouses and others connected to these artists had congregated to watch on a large projection television we had placed there. He criticize them for eating the The food we laid out for them since it was going to take all night to accomplish the recording session. A large part of the crowd left as a result before I could get in and rescue things. Bob had fed the artists at his London recording session With Kentucky fried chicken he went out and bought and he didn't realize everything at our place had been donated.
Probably the funniest moment of all with Bob was at the press conference we had a few days after the recording. We had some T-shirts and sweatshirts left over so I brought them and offered them to the media who were there. Bob immediately stood up and said loudly "Fuck That! If you people want the shirts you can pay for them." Bob and I left with our pockets stuffed with cash which we gave to the USA for Africa charity.
I guess I'm a bit jealous of Bob for the fact that he got knighted by the queen which he greatly deserved. On the other hand I ended up with the United Nations Peace Metal.
Ken Kragen
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Subject: Philip Lynott Statue
Hi Bob
I enjoyed your letter on Dublin
Especially your visit to the Philip Lynott statue ..
The Bruce Springsteen comment about the Boys Are Back in Town owes a lot to Philip listening to Greetings from Asbury Park NJ
This was in a time when artists would buy the album and have it on the turntable constantly..
The song was originally called ' GI Joe is Back '
It was about a GI coming home from Nam and hooking up with the old gang .
However it was changed to the Boys in studio after my suggestion to make it more universal .. every town every gang and every one called Johnny ..
Enjoy your time in Dublin
Chris O'Donnell
Manager
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Subject: Re: Re-Elton John
Bob,
Did Steve Knill mention that before slinging vinyl for MCA out of Cleveland, he was Eric Carmen's bass player in the Raspberries? Too modest to be the rock star that he is.
By the time the Elton/Ray tour was mounted, I had escaped Toledo for KDKB/Phoenix, where they did a final dress rehearsal at Frank Lloyd Wright's architectural and sonic masterpiece, Grady Gammage Memorial Auditorium. The audience, as best I can recall was no more than fifteen people, comprised of me, a bunch of MCA execs, and the PD's from LA's reining rockers, KWST and KLOS.
I've seen Elton a lot through the years, but never better than in Las Vegas for his "Million Dollar Piano" residency. Management told me that Elton thought they were pulling his leg when they offered him $500K per 70 minute set, and was still skeptical when they told him the catch was he had to do two sets a night, or ten sets a week. That's right, $5M a week to get on the elevator and go from penthouse suite to his own theatre. Sweet gig, and he definitely made the most of it. He was in top form, and it was the cleanest stage setting, best lighting and best sound I can remember experiencing.
Jon Sinton
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Subject: Pittsburgh and Anti-Semitism
Dear Bob,
You are so correct that Anti-Semitism is always there, just laying dormant until something awakens it. I can recall a Platinum artist at Elektra asking me if I was "Jewing" her down on tour support, more than one artist asking me not release their albums in Israel, a Chairman of a major music group stating "Oh, right - forgot you're Jewish" when I was asking about budgets and the Vice President of Sales at Warner Brother Records asking me in front of his Italian pals at a Martell Dinner, if I knew what "Morto Christi" meant - means Christ Killer in Italian. It's always there and it doesn't take a lot to flush it out.
Love your columns.
Best regards
Bill Berger
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From: Mike Flanigan
Subject: Re: My Night With Dwight
Dwight is a character. I booked him several years ago, his tour manager wanted to know if we had a washer and a dryer. He took his jeans, washed them, then put them in the drier for ten minutes, then Dwight put them on. They dried while he was wearing them and they were the tightest jeans I have ever seen. "Women like tight jeans" he said, "Even if they don't like my music".
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Subject: Re: My Night With Dwight
Bob,
When we booked him at The Halsey Company from day one with the GUITARS, CADILLACs video just smoking hot, out on the road Dwight would read encyclopedias on the bus. I kid you not. This was long before the internet. He is very intelligent and extremely well read.
James Yelich
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Subject: Re: My Night With Dwight
Hi Bob I've written to you many times.
This is a subject I know a bit about.
I worked with Dwight years ago and this Summer on the LSD tour. Lucinda, Steve Earle and Dwight. It was nothing short of special every night. Dwight knew everyone and everything on the tour, how it sold what it all cost. I found him super smart and respectful. He knew what my job was and gave a shit about the crew. I've toured for the past 10 years with all the major Hip Hop and a few Pop Artists. Good if you like your show in a box, and above it all no vibe or real respect for anyone from the top.
I would march into a dark alley for Dwight.
I forgot how much I missed live music no computers and hearing music played from the heart. Sometimes it's sloppy but it's always true. And they were good every night.
Great Article Bob what fun, you don't always sound like you have as good a time.
And the Band, Mitch, Eugene, Jamison, Eric
Fucking tight band
See you next summer Dwight
Bobby Schneider
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Subject: Steve Lukather-Sirius XM TODAY!
Bob
A simple fact about the most under-appreciated band and supreme players that made up Toto is that 30 years after their string of hit records---the living core of the band can still sell out good-sized halls in Europe (they're still Stars in Holland) and Japan as well as numerous other markets internationally.
Why ?....because they were/are GREAT players and they made terrific records.
The question remains....why aren't they in the Rock 'n Roll Hall of Fame ? ! ?
If one listens to Luke's burning guitar and the late Jeff Pocaro's driving percussion----that IS Rock 'n Roll.
Yet Abba's in the R 'n R H of F......sure, they had a flock of huge hit records but they're about as rock 'n roll as Peggy Lee !
The Hall of Fame should be embarrassed.
Regards
Bob Sherwood
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Subject: Re: Steve Lukather-Sirius XM TODAY!
Hi Bob,
A quick cute story about "Africa" that just happened a couple of weeks ago. My 36-year-old son picked up his 4-year-old son and a classmate from preschool and was headed home with the 2 of them in the back seat. It had been raining but stopped. The little classmate looked out the window and said "It has stopped raining". My grandson turns to him and says "But it is still raining in Africa". His friend looks at him puzzled and my grandson says "you know...like the song." It was all my son could do to maintain control of the car.
Neal Barfield
Atlanta, GA
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Subject: Re: Steve Lukather-Sirius XM TODAY!
Steve Luthaker - what a guy! About 15 years ago, Toto were playing Bercy Arena (like Madison Square Garden but in Paris!) and I opened for them. I was thrilled to be there because Bobby Kimball, long before he joined Toto and sang Africa to the top of the charts, had done backing vocals on my second album LOST GENERATION (1975) produced by the late great Paul Rothschild (Doors, Janis, Paul Butterfield ...) and this would be the first time I had seen Bobby since Elektra Studios on La Cienega Blvd in '75. Apparently back then, Paul Rothschild had brought Bobby and virtuoso slide guitarist Sonny Landreth up from Louisiana to LA to get them a record deal and produce them. Don't know what happened with that project but I do know that when Paul asked Bobby and Sonny how much they wanted for their sessions on my album they looked at each other for a moment and replied in unison, "Can you pay our rent?" Priceless! So that night at Bercy, while I was reminiscing with Bobby, my son Gaspard who was about 13 years old and had just starting playing the guitar, grabbed my acoustic and was wandering around strumming it backstage when he ran into Steve who was warming up on his own guitar. Steve looked at Gaspard and said, "Hey, you wanna play something together?" to which Gaspard replied. "Sure … do you know Little Red Rooster?" and Luthaker laughed and said , "I think so," and they gave it a shot, standing outside my dressing room while 20,000 people were waiting for Toto to come on stage. My son has never forgotten that magic moment and neither have I. What a guy!
All the best,
Elliott Murphy
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From: John Boylan
Subject: RE: Richie Furay Delivers At The Troubadour
Hi Bob,
Just one correction to this really nice piece about a wonderful musician: Richie hired Timothy B. Schmit after Randy Meisner quit Poco in a dispute with Jim Messina over mixing issues. Randy didn't go unemployed for long - I hired him almost immediately to help form Rick Nelson's Stone Canyon Band, after which he became a founding member of the Eagles. And the ultimate irony is that years later, when Randy Meisner left the Eagles, Glenn and Don hired Timothy to replace him.
Best,
JB
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From: Tom Ross
Subject: Re: Richie Furay Delivers At The Troubadour
I was another person who never dreamed I would be here 50 years later but your article on Poco lit up my memory bank with much nostalgia. Poco was the very first "newcomer" that I was convinced was the American answer to the Beatles. I spent so many evenings with the band as their agent, along with my friend and mentor Larry Heller, who had signed the band to APA. Rusty was the most incredible steel guitarist, Richie and Randy's vocals were pure honey and then spun with Tim's high end voice and we knew nobody was doing music and harmonizing like they were. I always was bothered that the East coast never got their sound as strongly as they were revered on the West. They worked the road hard and built a great foundation across the country. They were set to explode but it just never happened and it has plagued me that these standouts never reached the super success they deserved! I think their manager was so difficult to get along with that it kept them from going all the way to the end-zone as he was very stubborn and pompous and often wouldn't let the Band be accessible to many folks who wanted to be part of their success and career. They were always a gifted and special group in my career and it was heartbreaking that the music they played wasn't met with much more of the fabric of the times they lived and wrote about. The fact that they still have such ardent and loyal followers from those days is proof that the public missed out on some exceptional players who created a happy and festive feeling and they can still pick up the pieces to re-create their specialness. Thanks for recapturing and reminding what made them so unique. Cheers, Tom Ross
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Subject: Re: Richie Furay Delivers At The Troubadour
Sorry, Richie is pro-trump ultra-rightwing whack-a-doo espousing to be a Christian but really non-"Christian" in everything he stands for, this (for me) has fully negated everything positive he's done musically in the past. These are serious times, those that aren't with us are destroying anything that remains of this country, a hypocrite tying to make a living from his past while downplaying his true beliefs when he can put a few asses in seats to make some cash. No.
G. DaPonte, Joshua Tree CA
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Subject: Re: Richie Furay Delivers At The Troubadour
Bob,
I feel the same way about Pastor Furay's exemplary music career.
But…if you dig a little, (very little), you will find that he became an extreme right-wing pastor of, (what some believe to be tantamount to), a religious cult. For example: Jews won't be allowed in heaven if they don't accept Christ as their savior.
He's fervent, diehard Trump supporter who shows very little "Christian Love" to those who dare to disagree with him, politically, on his Facebook page. A professed "man of peace and love" that who is, at times, driven to anger and snark. A man that believes HIS truth is the only truth, that his tax dollars, when used to help those less fortunate, is socialism. A man that professes his jingoistic patriotism and love of the Constitution, but feels no compunction about censoring or deleting fact-based comments that undermine his, sometimes ridiculous, political stances. Facts don't matter if they collide with bible verse…or common sense
If he feels the sands moving under his feet in a political discussion, he lashes out. In July of 2015, on a post where he decried America "unravelling at the seams" under the Obama administration, (that happened during our sustained drought in California and the ensuing wildfires), I brought up that I didn't think God really cared about Obamacare or marriage rights for gay Americans. The He likely was more concerned about the destruction of the environment and the plight of the poor and he replied:
" I think He does care; Oh, by the way, how's the water situation out there in CA under the environmental protection agency and how are the poor doing out your way … ", as if those were a direct result of liberal policies. That God had smitten us with a drought because he hates gay people..or something.
Yes…I love his music from the Springfield to Poco to the SHF band…and still listen to all of them, regularly. I have met him and have heard others talk about how nice he is, in person. And he was very nice when I was buying his CD at a show that the band I was in, at the time, opened for him. But he is much more than his music, these days. To be honest, politically, he's pretty fucking scary. As are some of his followers...
Credit where credit is due ? He did pray for me. Several times, if I am to believe him.
Scott Sechman
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Subject: "Late for the Sky" story
Bob,
To maybe help certify your desert album choice:
Bruce Springsteen came into a record store I was running.
He looked through all the cassettes we had and bought "Late for the Sky" by Jackson Browne.
I asked why he chose that one...
His answer...
I need it for when it's real late and I'm out driving all alone.
Marty Bender
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From: Sir Harry Cowell
Subject: Re: The Peter Grant Book-2
Happy weekend Bob,
Not a fan of the business model set up by Peter and others like Don Arden whom I came up against at the age of 24 years old, however in the early 80's I became friends with Boz Burrell (bass player in Bad Co) and eventually ended up being neighbors in Chiswick, West London. He could not speak more highly of Peter and told me that he would never have to worry about working or money again however badly he behaved, as Peter had stashed money away for Boz so that he got a dribble but was unable to blow it all. There is no doubt that if Peter was on your side you were a winner, if you weren't watch out.
Kindest,
Sir Harry
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Subject: Re: Ringo, et al, At The Greek
Hi Bob -
Hope you're great.
I do a few Ringo shows every other year or so. He is truly a professional in every sense of the word. He loves to perform and always give his fans the best he has.
In Lincoln a few years back, I thanked him for the show.
His response was, "Thank you. I'm a working musician and I need places to play. Thank YOU."
Have you ever heard a more humble response from a member of one of the world's greatest bands?
Wow -what a legend and a great guy as well.
Cheers -
Mike Krebs
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Subject: Re: Zhu
Hi Bob!
Zhu was in FIFA 17 (released in Sept of 2016). Ask Marc (he is a
believer)?. that?s a great way to get millions and millions of kids to
discover your music.
Zhu joined the list of many artists who all got their start through a
placement in FIFA.
Hope this finds you well!
Steve
One more thing:
Aside from a song in FIFA 17, we also included a Zhu downloadable kit
(custom soccer uniforms) for FIFA 18 (released in Sept of 2017).
https://www.youredm.com/2017/09/30/zhus-clothing-line-featured-fifa-18/
Steve Schnur
Worldwide Executive, President Music
Electronic Arts
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From: Andrew Keller
Subject: Re: Zhu
Bob,
I've gotten your emails for years but never responded, but I have to keep the ZHU lovefest going.
I signed ZHU when I was at Columbia Records after "Faded" started taking off internationally and worked with him on his second EP and first full length album. We've not worked together in years, but I believe him to be one of the most talented individuals I have the pleasure to know, and am constantly amazed by his clarity of vision and his absolute perfectionism.
His vision, executed by David Dann from his management/label Mind of a Genius, and by his team at WME, as well as others, has grown and guided him from an artist who literally hid behind a curtain and could have been considered a flash in the pan at the tail-end of the EDM bubble, to one who now comes out from behind the booth at his shows, sings front and center on stage, performs truly unique songs, has a high end fashion/merch line, and is likely still just getting started.
As you pointed out, he does what he does quietly. While some artists pose for pictures in front of any step-and-repeat to post on their socials, he was nominated for a Grammy but didn't want to walk red carpets. His fans weren't waiting for posts, they were waiting for music and tickets. His first NY show was two nights at an unmarked warehouse in Brooklyn and the only way to get tickets was to line up for them at a physical location at which time the location of the late night show was revealed. I saw him play Brooklyn again a few weeks ago on this tour, and while the venues and production are massively stepped up, the devotion of his fans remains the same.
His is a true artist development story, and one of patience, belief, and perseverance from him and everyone on his team from day one.
Best,
Keller
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Subject: RE: Audience & Impact
Bob:
Great post. Spot on.
And if it's the money that matters, know this: The financial value of music is directly related to the quantity and quality of the crowd it draws.
If you know you're drawing a substantial crowd and aren't getting paid, you need a new manager.
If you aren't drawing a substantial crowd, no manager can save you.
Jim Griffin
P.S. Re: MMA -- Meet the world halfway: Register the music you write (including splits) and the sound recordings you make along with all the information you have about them and keep your whereabouts updated. If you aren't properly registered in the databases of the world, you aren't getting paid properly and never will -- which is a favor to everyone else because they are splitting your unclaimed money by market share.
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From: Joe Schuld
Subject: Re: What Is A Hit
A hit is song women love and men will tolerate.
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Subject: Re: More Prep School
Hi Bob,
I went to Guilford High. Lots of prep boys on weekends, holidays, summers. A few times, Yes, aggressive behavior. One young man locked me in his car and insisted he lick my tits while he masterbated. I fought my way out and told my dad, who immediately went to his house, talked to his father and they confronted the young man. The next year he was out of prep and into Military school. My dad did that a couple more times - he had my back.
Kate Fagan
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From: Sonny Rock
Subject: Sling TV
Hey Bob,
You have a huge audience and you point out when whatever the case may be, does not make sense?
In June, we cut the chord to COX Cable. I decided to see if we could save a few bucks by streaming only VS my $300 a month COX bill (includes broadband)
So far, so good, until Saturday night. Saturday night my daughters were watching channel 'Free Form' "the 25th Anniversary of movie, "Hocus Pocus". I went upstairs to watch college football game, Arizona VS UCLA on ESPN2.
I kept getting logged out? For some reason, only 1 TV were being allowed to watch 'SlingTV'? I was pissed!!! I called Sling's 800#, but, they stop taking customer service calls & chats at 1:00 a.m. It was now 10:10 p.m. Pacific time. Fair enough.
Yesterday morning I called the 800# and was told that even though I pay for the top tier package (saving us $45 monthly VS COX) Disney Corp, who owns ESPN,ABC,Free Form, and Disney channel, of course, will only allow "streaming" to 1 device at a time?
This idiotic policy is an encumbrance towards the exact target market they continually seek : THE FAMILY. Dad upstairs watching Disney owned channel, kids downstairs watching Disney owned channel. Isn't that their "goal"?
Is this Disney's stranglehold for setting the stage of their own platform soon to break free from Netflix,etc.?
Considering the millions invested in market research and innovation, doesn't mean a damn thing if the company cannot relate to their core customer.
For now, stay with COX. The participating content providers are not ready for the early adopters.
*Feel free to modify, rearrange,etc., if you see fit.
Thanks, Bob
Sonny
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Subject: Re: Dublin Day One, Two and Three
Thanks for the travel guide and rock music historical reflections for Dublin Bob. Always love Phil and Gary. Diane and I will be there just before Halloween for 3 days off after our shows with Fogerty. We didn't have any plans made for tourist activities and you have seeded our prospects. I haven't been there since the Abracadabra Tour in 82 and all I can remember is Air Lingus stewardesses and wine bars.
Speaking of Bono and the boys, they were our warm up act on that tour and I got to know them pretty well. "I Will Follow" was their break out hit and I remember thinking how The Edge was pulling off a two note guitar solo (still not besting Neil Young's one note solo on Cinnamon Girl haha!) and wondering even then where hero guitar leads where heading.
We were number #1 with Abracadabra in Ireland and Bono was livid about these fat, ugly Americans who were dominating the airwaves and soiling the sanctity of his fair green nation. So much so that when myself and several other band mates where being entertained by the stewardesses I just mentioned at a wine bar one night, Bono shows up with his meager posse and has us thrown out of the table we were occupying because he wanted for himself. Apparently he grew up with the establishment's owner and had some street muscle to flex. Little sawed off prick that he was.
Fast forward two years to Rockpalast in Germany 1984 where we went back to milk the last drops of Abra residue and we were still the headliner over U2 who coming on strong. Miller was kind enough to let them use our cushy backstage hang complete with fake palm trees and oasis fountain so they could look cool for a television interview. He also suggested to Bono that he join us for the encore at the end of the show and sing Midnight Hour with us. Bono got a glint in his eye that I noticed and agreed to be a part of the starlight intermingling. But alas at the end of their set just before ours, Bono goes into the Wilson Pickett hit with his band and brings the house down and then splits! He finally got his revenge with Miller and went on to become the little sawed off prick megastar he became that we all know today. The guys in the rest of the band are cool and Adam and I drank a couple stove stack whiskies that night after the show and bonded. But Bono? He never hung with us and has been on my shit list for decades. Here me Paul? I'm coming to soil the Erin sanctity once again in three weeks. Bam!
Kenny Lee Lewis-Steve Miller Band
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From: Timothy J Collins
Subject: Good morning
Hey Bob so happy to see the accurate and kind words you had for Dorothy's book. Thank you for the accolade, good man. Perhaps the only thing we disagree with is I loved the second half of the book. But that again I knew all the players so well. We all lived it with her didn't we?
Just for the record I self exiled for my mental, emotional and spiritual health,. I love playing whatever small role I can in others and my own healing through 12 step recovery, spirituality, therapy and physical transformation. That's what I'm involved in now. I was offered so many top Artists to manage and or work with and I did consulting for a while. I kept it on the QT. But we share the same view on the music industry. As my dear old Aunt Weese Who was vice president of a bank before many women had that role used to say "my key to success was knowing when to leave the party"
Redefining success perhaps I should be writing that book.
How do we help Dorothy get her book out there?
I hope you're well my friend and I miss reading you. I'll check out your website and see if I can sign up. Take good care
Tim
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From: Rob Falk
Subject: Re: The Ticketmaster Nightmare
Hi Bob,
Damn, this bums me out.
Back in the mid-1990s I was part of the management team that created the Aerosmith fan club ticketing program. For $18 a year, in addition to all the typical fan club chozzerai, a member could purchase 2 tickets in the first 30 rows to every show on the tour, at face value. Tickets were picked up at will call with club and photo ID. No bots, no scalping… just die hard fans with great seats at every show.
Did we give away money? Yeah, I guess. A couple years ago I ran into a scalper - I mean ticket agent - who had always wondered about "what the hell" we were doing. He just couldn't believe there was no inside scheme. He yelled at me for giving away his money!
The idea, perhaps naive, was to make sure that the real fans… kids who truly loved the band, would be in, up front, and feel appreciated. The longer you were in the club, the closer you got to the front. No merch purchase or album purchase requirements. No markups. We thought it was good for everyone. We also ran affordable travel packages so fans could see a string of shows, meet each other, and meet the band.
I wonder if something has been lost all around. Isn't it hard for a kid to be loyal to a band when it costs a couple grand to be near them, and hundreds more for a photo or autograph?
How does it feel to play every night to a front of house made up of investment bankers, trust fund babies and other elites who don't really give a shit about the band or even know the album cuts… it's just another party night on the town?
Yeah, yeah… supply and demand, maximize profits, returns to shareholders, bigger private jets, bigger boats and more houses on more private islands.
I think I liked it all better when it was about rebellion and meeting chicks.
I hope you're feeling well.
Rob
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From: justin gray
Subject: Re: Festival Observations
Hi Bob,
My wife & I we're in San Diego last weekend and had free passes to the Kaaboo Festival in Del Mar. I loathe festivals for many of the reasons you point out, but free parking & entry, what the hell.
It's definitely not about music. You don't actually see much music at a festival. If you're lucky you might be near some music, but if an act is appearing that you really care about, you watch the performance later on video, when you won't be distracted by the meatheads misbehaving and the wastoids who think THEY'RE the show. Or worrying about your sunburn.
The art galleries were our favorite aspect of the event, and the food & booze were great ($21 for a margarita, whatever) and after walking around in the heat all afternoon we decided to skip the legacy acts appearing later, worn down from repeated failed attempts to discover new music or be surprised by unknown performers - it just wasn't there. The areas directly in front of the big stages were bisected by fences keeping one half exclusive & reserved for VIP package ticket holders.
As we were walking out towards the shuttle stop my wife asks me what's the point of a music festival (apart from a cash cow for the promoters, an easy gig for the artists, etc.) and off the cuff I answered that festivals reinforce class distinctions. That seems to be the point. One huge event with several primary facets that only inspire you to want to spend more, do more, have more.
Think about it, you wear a wristband showing your status all weekend whether you're at the event or not. you can be a general-admission peon or you can choose from about 5 different VIP packages that are not private at all - they're openly advertised and coveted by the peons (who wouldn't want private bars & restrooms, covered seats with prime views of the stages and air conditioned lounges?) it's all about giving people FOMO - fear of missing out. Creating a mania for the better experience just out of reach. Never mind that the event itself is a hollow expression of art and culture. It's about making you want to pony up the bucks for the ultimate experience. Which is clouding the waters in live music in a very real, visceral way for me.
I think it's contaminating our whole culture, and I revere music and so I'm particularly annoyed when a festival supposedly about music perverts the message. Take several of my favorite things in life (music, food, drink, style & comfort) and put them into the context of a festival and it sucks all the goodness out of them.
Who is it good for?
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Subject: Re: On Demand
Bob,
It's interesting that Dylan's camp has only allowed a ten-song sampler from his new More Blood, More Tracks collection while the Beatles have posted to Spotify more than 100 tracks, along with videos, from their new White Album release. I love Dylan but it seems like the Beatles "get it," at least in this case.
Ken Shane
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From: Vince Bannon
Subject: Re: On Demand
Everything on Demand!
Best was 4 years ago, my oldest son and I were following The World Cup – when my son only 8 at the time comes in and tells me he wants to see Brazil play right now! I had to explain that the Teams need to play a "schedule" then as they won they moved in to better qualified brackets.
Music/ Movies/TV is all on demand and their preference today is to watch it on an iPad. Netflix is both my 5 + 12 year old preference – Spotify + Apple for music ( we had to unplug Alexa after Gabe -5 ordered a $300.00+ robot from Amazon
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From: Vince Bannon
Subject: Re: The Election
Bob – we won! We won the popular vote – we won congress – really only fucking stupid people vote for trump – that I'm serious – those are the ones that somehow believe he will deliver than from evil , when really they are not only stupid – however stupidly evil.
The only good thing about trump is when either my 5 year old or 12 year old are not behaving – I can say "You're acting like trump" they immediately stop the bad behavior.
Best quote from the election in my home – my 5 year old says whilst I'm watching the returns "Did we get King trump out?"
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Subject: Re: Sheryl Sandberg
This is what everyone has missed, Bob. If there is an "enemy of the people," it's Facebook. And Google. The media is flawed, but it's intent - with the exception of Fox News and a handful of others of that ilk - is not to mislead. These two internet behemoths have intentionally misled everyone - the public, the government, the media. And they've been allowed to destroy the entire business model for news, specifically locally news, through theft/financial co-opting of intellectual property. Those who defend this as good old capitalistic market disruption are either dense or disingenuous.
Craigslist gets blamed for killing newspapers because they "stole" classified ads. But that's utter bullshit. They created a better product and platform for classified ads, and profited from that. The newspaper industry couldn't compete. Fair and square. That's basic capitalism. Facebook and Google arguably created new, better platforms for disseminating news content, but news companies were left to foot the entire bill for the content while the two behemoths pocketed 80% of all digital ad revenue. Meanwhile, newsrooms across the country adjust their decimated news gathering operations in ways that destroy the main mission of journalism - to inform the public and hold the powerful to account - all in the increasingly fruitless hope of realizing the promised bonanza of these two digital platforms.
It's a Ponzi scheme and always has been. For two decades now, newsrooms have been the frog in the pot of boiling water, never realizing that they were being burned. Sandberg is merely one of the many hucksters responsible for selling this shell game. We've all been suckers. The thing is, now that we realize we've been had, what do we do about it? How do we fix it and hold them to account? That's the moment of truth for America as a democracy, in my opinion. Nothing about the mess we are in as a country gets made right until we do.
Jim Rich
Angry old man shaking his cane at the clouds
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Subject: Lefsetz vs. Flom - "Super Sold Out" in NYC!
Hey Bob-
Great show in NYC - thanks so much to you and Jason for sharing your stories and insights.
Quick funny story about entering the venue. There was a guy in front of us without a ticket (looking for a "miracle" in Grateful Dead parlance) and the hostess told him the show was "super sold out."
I thought that term was hilarious and asked her "What is the difference between 'sold out' and 'super sold out?' Doesn't sold out mean there are no tickets left?"
She replied "Well, 'sold out' means that we officially call it sold out, but we hold spots for VIPs or friends of the performer. But tonight we are 'super sold out' so we don't even have those seats available. At this point no one else can get in."
Then ten seconds later she gets a call and quickly tells someone "We need to set up an extra table for one of Michael's investors." (Presumably Michael Dorf, founder of City Winery.) Sure enough, in the blink of an eye an extra table magically appeared! The place was packed - the only empty seats were a pair of no-shows at our four top! So that was great - except that we were right next to that screaming kid. Who the hell brings a screaming kid to Lefsetz vs. Flom????
Anyway - I thought in a way this was a microcosm of concert ticketing. There is 'sold out,' 'SUPER sold out," and "Michael's investors need a table!!" Congrats on being super sold out!!
Rich Madow
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Subject: Brandi & Paul
Bob,
I'm also a huge fan of Brandi Clark. Here's a funny story:
This past summer I found myself waiting patiently at Henson Studios for a meeting with ?Paul McCartney, one of my musical heroes (of course). I was nervous and excited to say the least. I made sure to get there early and was sitting at a table outdoors by the studio entrance talking with a co-worker when the front gates opened and a purple Corvette with a white top drove through.
I knew this was Paul's car, I had spied it before when I worked at Capitol and he was recording in the studio there. As he pulled up to the door, someone from his team came out to the car to greet him. The car door opened and I smiled to myself… he was listening to one of my favorite songs of the year, The Joke by ?Brandi Carlile. For months I'd been playing this song for all of my friends and I had played and replayed her perfect (!) performance with her band from Stephen Colbert's show. I couldn't believe I was hearing it blasting out of ?Paul McCartney's 'vette right in front of me.
Paul walked past me into the building. When it was time for me and my co-worker to go in, Paul was standing by the inside studio door with ?Greg Kurstin to welcome us, what a guy. Greg graciously introduced me personally to Paul and I just had to mention how much I loved that he was listening to The Joke. I confessed to my obsession with the song, and we instantly connected (for the moment at least). We talked about the beautiful lyrics and just how undeniably powerful it is. What an unforgettable moment for me to be able to talk to one of the greatest living artists about a special piece of music (not his) and to learn that we had the same strong feelings about it.
After listening to Paul's new record we all stood around shooting the shit for a little while. We talked about drums and I got to tell him how much I liked his playing on the record. We went deep and even got into it about the old bass drum pedal he was using, he said: if it was good enough for Ringo, it was good enough for him! I was in heaven.
When it was time to go and we had said goodbyes, Paul turned to me and said that he had something to tell me. He proceeded to share with me a great, personal story about how he had discovered Brandi. Just a small-world story that you wouldn't expect from one of the most famous people in the world.
I live for music and I'm always in search of real connections in this life... and I will never forget that day. Had to tell you this after seeing what you had written about Brandi!
Thanks
Dan McCarroll
Amazon Music.
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