Friday 2 October 2020

Mailbag

Re: Paolo Nutini

Bob - I've had the pleasure of working with Paolo since he was 15. He is my son's godfather. Obviously I haven't done a great job of making it happen for him over here, but he is truly the real deal and whenever/if he decides to make another record you can bet that it will be special. Donny is a great guy and a great guitar player. Actually everyone who ever played with Paolo was pretty amazing.

Paolo was the last artist that Ahmet personally was somehow involved in signing before he passed away. A couple of hours before Paolo's first real gig at The Mercury Lounge here in NYC my cell phone rang and it was Ahmet calling to strongly suggest that Paolo didn't forget or choose not to play the song "New Shoes" because that was going to be the hit. I couldn't believe that it was actually Ahmet on my phone, so I said "fuck you Strasburg" and I hung up on him.

I have so many absurd/amazing stories about Paolo.

Charles Attal and I trying to teach him how to drive in Luke Wilson's beat up convertible.

Kirk Sommer and I carrying him back to a hotel after his first experience with a healthy sampling of Willie weed.

Lyor Cohen telling Paolo and I that he was going to slit both our throats at his home when we were inappropriately questioning at 3am if the label was really doing everything they could for us.

Paolo making a live record with The Pres Hall Jazz Band and watching the faces of the legends perk up when they heard Paolo really sing for the first time.

Listening in on a late night chat between Paolo and Ed Sheeran who loved each other. Ed could not believe that Paolo truly only did it for the music and had no real ambition to "make it" in the music biz. Paolo could not believe how focused and ambitious Ed was on his career.

Gregg Nadel and something about a hot tub.

Paolo and Amy Winehouse set up to tour America together and Amy passing away about a month before the tour was about to start. Marc Geiger stepping in to the breach and helping get a whole new tour booked in 3 days.

Paolo opening for the Rolling Stones at the Isle of Wight and Keith asking what song Paolo wanted to play with them. Paolo requested "Love in Vain" which led to a 15 minute argument between Keith, Mick and Ronnie about whether or not that was actually one of their tunes. Charlie finally settled it by whacking his snare and telling the guys that they were embarrassing themselves in front of a 17yr old. They proceeded to run thru the song a couple of times and it was amazing when they did it on stage….a side note to this is that Amy Winehouse was also on the bill and when the Stones asked her what song she wanted to rehearse with them she said that she didn't need to rehearse anything. I'm pretty sure The Stones fully tanked whatever song it was that she refused to rehearse with them when they got out on stage in front of 60,0000 people.

I could go on forever about him. I think that everyone who worked with Paolo believes that he is a one of a kind human being and artist. The whole team at Atlantic…Julie, Craig, Max Lousada who totally made the magic happen for him in the UK, Angus Baskerville who booked every show he has ever played outside of NA and is the guy who sent me a cd with the demos of what would ultimately turn out to be "These Streets". Brendan Moon and Mike Bawden who plucked Paolo out of a random talent show somewhere in Glascow that Paolo skipped school to check out.

I truly hope he makes more music because the world sure could use some Paolo magic right now.

Stay safe and healthy.

Luba

Mike Luba
Madison House Presents

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Hi Bob
RE: PAOLO NUTINI
Its Mike Bawden here - Paolo's manager
Thanks for picking up on Donny's note and thanks for digging into Paolo's story & music.
The way you talk about 'Caustic Love' is refreshing - thats exactly how Paolo made the record.
And interestingly, you picked up on exactly the songs close to Paolo's heart - Numpty, Diana, Cherry Blossom ...
Im excited for you to hear his new stuff … which is close to being finished.
Thanks again
Best
Mike

Mike Bawden
Wild Dog MGMT Ltd

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From: Mike Bawden
RE: PAOLO NUTINI

Paolo is the real deal but he does things his way … he follows his own compass!

You'll like this …

Paolo was Ahmet Ertegun's last brush with 'new' talent (in many ways) - he was blown away by Paolo - Ahmet was exec Chairman at the time - I guess, like a father figure?

Not long after we signed and we first went to New York (2006), Ahmet came to our show at The Mercury Lounge - on two walking sticks - we got to hang with Ahmet quite a few times around that time

In July 2006 - we got to play on the bill of a celebration of Ahmet's musical life at Montreux Jazz Festival - Robert Plant, Stevie Nicks, Ben E King, Les McCann, Stevie Winwood and, and, and - Nile Rodgers was the MD and house band - we were the only f**kers on the bill we'd never heard of!

And Ahmet appeared during sound check and started getting in behind the desk - he kicked the FOH guy out and started mixing Paolo's live sound! There's a photo below of the moment when Ahmet walked to the stage to tell everyone what to do! Politely, of course!

https://bit.ly/3l6cjsA

So inspiring and such special memories - and that night, we all stayed up to the small hours talking music - Paolo was putting Ahmet right about Ray Charles B sides!

Thanks again Bob …

Take care, lots of care

Mike x

PS - I could send you so many things to show you Paolo: Iron Sky at Glastonbury or No Other Way on Jools Holland's Hootenanny but you seem to dig Caustic Love, so here's SCREAM from a radio session we did in New Zealand in 2015 ….. its one of my favourites

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jh630lzFYo0

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From: David Sardy
Subject: Re: Chris Stapleton's "Cold"

Bob, I was a producer on funk my life up and some others for that Paolo album, what a voice on that's guy!
Was a crazy process
Glad you dig it!!
he has some gems written that haven't seen the light of day yet...
I had james Gadsden play on it
He killed!!!

Thanks for noticing what a rad track!

D

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From: Chris Frantz
Subject: Re: Judd

Hi Bob,
Greetings from Fairfield, CT. I'm so sorry to hear about your friend Judd.
He was too young to die and my heart goes out to his family and friends. As you know, I had an heart experience this summer but got to the doctor and then the hospital in time to be saved with three stents. As they wheeled me into the ER the ambulance driver said to me, "Next time don't wait so long."
But, I was lucky. They took good care of me at Bridgeport Hospital which is now part of the Yale New Haven healthcare system. I'm very grateful to the Cardiologists of Fairfield team. Thanks to them and my Dr. Tom Brunoski, I'm alive and and well today and feeling twenty years younger.
One love,
Chris Frantz

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From: John Boylan
Subject: RE: Spanish Moon

Hey Bob,

Thanks for calling attention to one of the most knock-down, drag-out, bad-ass tracks ever put on tape. If there's any justice, you will succeed in opening up a new and very large audience to Lowell George and Little Feat. The groove on "Spanish Moon" is just plain irrefutable - you cannot help but let it take you over. I have never been able to listen to that live version just once. Whenever I put it on, I listen at least three times in a row, usually more. I'd add one more note: the opening drum fill by Richie Hayward is a wonder of simplicity and energy, and the perfect kickoff for the entrance of Kenny and then Bill. Play it loud!!

Best,
John Boylan

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From: Marty Callner
Subject: Re: Re-MTV

Bob,
The first video I ever directed was We're Not Gonna Take It. The rest, as they say, is history. I love your writing and I adored Martha Quinn. In the history of MTV no one should underestimate what she meant to the success of the channel.
Marty Callner

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From: Matt Nathanson
Subject: Re: the haves and the have-nots

that was a fun doc!

i did interviews for it and then, a month or two later... they asked if i wanted to score it…and since i've adopted a "never say 'no' to cool shit even if i lack experience" policy, i said yes and immediately called patrick from fall out boy (he is a really talented music scorer) and we did the music for it. i also became friendly with nancy wilson and met mike nesmith at one of the premieres we did… so that was a real music-nerd thrill!

all in all, a great time… and the movie turned out so strong!... it was fun to watch the directors (both great humans) shape the story arc through their edits over the course of 1/2 a year…sadly, they cut out my impassionioned segment talking about how much i masturbated to the "cradle of love" video as a kid, but i should probably thank them for that.

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Subject: Re: An Artist

And Rupert would say:

Brilliant accidents and bumbling mistakes tend to make great music. Computers can't do either of those

Kind regards

Fay Hine MCIPR
www.oneworldonevoice.co.uk

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From: Victor Levine
Subject: Re: Star Star

Hey Bob

My best Stones story is about Nicky Hopkins. He was living in an apartment near our studio in the valley in the early eighties, ridiculously famous but broke. Unassuming and friendly like any hungry musician, he was available for overdubs at $25 per hour but you had to pick him up and bring him home because he didn't have a car.

Victor Levine

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From: Craig Anderton
Subject: Re: The Haves And The Have-Nots

Anyone who thought lots of artists made money from recordings back in the day wasn't there. I was, you made a living from gigging but if by some twist of fate your record sold a lot of copies, then you had the possibility of becoming well-off or even rich. However, that wasn't a given. It was an oft-quoted figure that less than 10% of the artists on a major label supported the other 90%, and only some of those 10% were making serious money.

I was lucky enough to have income streams from both angles, but concerts, gigging, and studio work were the bread and butter. Record sales were a crap shoot...like streaming.

Licensing is a whole other story; that's where the money is these days.

Craig

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From: Tracy Lipp
Subject: Mac Davis

Hi Bob,

We don't know each other, but you've used a few of my replies to you in your emails. I thought I'd take a moment to tell you about this. I'm sure you already know we lost Mac Davis today. I hope you had the good fortune to meet him. He was a gem.

My father played keyboards for Mac starting from about 1974 or 75 right up to when Mac retired. My dad has great stories about those days. The Vegas stuff was the stuff of band pranking legend. No one was immune, even the boss… "As the snow flies…" AND a huge box of soap flakes is dumped on Mac from up above. The song would stop because Mac was lagging so much he had to wait until he could gather himself again. And Mac would dish out, too.

During that time, his band members were his extended family. And the families of his musicians were part of that. I was 11 or 12 when I went to the first party at his house in Bel Air. It was amazing. I met Paul Lynde and DON KNOTTS! For me and my younger brother and sister it was completely amazing. As a 16 year old, just starting to play guitar…I got a guitar for Christmas from Mac! And not just any guitar. He gave me the Ovation he played on the Muppet Show! You see, he loved music for music's sake and wanted to give back to what he loved.

He really did believe in music and encouraged young players to believe with him. When I got my first publishing deal with Universal I called him up and told him the news. His answer: Congratulations! 'Ya'll come on over to the house. Let's have a beer and I'll show you how I write my songs. He was that kind of guy.

Mac retired from touring 30 years ago. He kept in touch with the people he worked with. He wasn't a typical Hollywood type. His Lubbock Texas roots stayed with him. We lost a great one today. He will be missed.

Tracy Lipp

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From: ROBERT RUSH
Subject: Re: Humble Pie 1970

Dear Bob,

Growing up in the suburbs of Philadelphia, I used to get to the original Electric Factory to watch the up and coming rock bands. One Saturday in 1969 my bandmates and I (I was the bass player/singer in a BS&T/Chicago-style rock band with a horn section) went to see Chicago (CTA) headline (they were incredible!)

The opening act were these four, cool, skinny, long-haired English guys (among them, Peter Frampton) with acoustic guitars, sitting on the edge of the stage. They were so good that I forgot about the huge Marshall amps lined up behind on the stage, figuring they were Chicago's. Wrong!

Once Humble Pie finished with their acoustic set, they strapped on guitars, a bass, sat behind drums, and slammed into "I Don't Need No Doctor"! Holy sh*t! They blew the walls off the place! (I had no idea that the drummer, Jerry Shirley, was only 17 years old – my age at the time!!! But, they apparently weren't brought up in suburban Jewish households where, to be a rock musician was a "shonda," (not to be confused with a Shondell) I say with love.

Long story short, I ended up interviewing Jerry about 20 years ago when I wrote a monthly column for the English rock magazine, "The Beat."

Jerry was a gentleman, and told me some fascinating stories, including the fact that (at least at that time) he no longer even owned a drum kit! By all means, do buy and read his incredible behind-the-scenes book, "Best Seat In the House."

Anyway, kudos to Humble Pie, and thanks for all the incredible and real rock and roll, and all the best to the surviving members. And best to you, Bob. Keep the great stuff coming.

Warm regards,
Bob Rush, DC

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From: Dan Navarro
Subject: Re: Jac Holzman-This Week's Podcast

He's a hero of mine. When I was in my 20's, I worked at Tower Records Westwood Village 1975-77, and was working the register one afternoon when he bought some LPs and plopped his credit card on the counter. I saw his name and got all fan-boy.

"You're Jac Holzman!" I told him how much I appreciated what his label did, particularly Judy Collins, The Doors, Tom Rush and much more. He said, "I'm actually much more proud of what I did with Nonesuch."

Well, slap my ass and call me shorty, I was the classical buyer for that store, so we got lost in a conversation about his deep and rich catalog, Early Music, Scott Joplin, World Music, amazing off-the-beaten-path stuff, all budget priced. I also mentioned in passing how I had just seen Joni Mitchell at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion a few weeks before.

He said, "I live in Hawaii, but I have a binaural recording of that show, give me your address and I'll send you a cassette." A couple of weeks, later, the tape arrived, and I was awestruck. Simply brilliant. The tape stayed in my car until it was lifted by some "friend", and his letter to me is still in my files, a real treasure. "I'll try to look you up when I'm back on the mainland."

I re-met him some 18 years later, at a Gavin Report Convention weekend in San Francisco, 1994. The night before, I had met his Discovery Records promotion person, Claudia Stewart, at an event, and went to the next day to hear her artist (cover story). And there he was. Claudia introduced us, and I reminded him of our Tower visit, which he said he recalled. I sure like thinking he was sincere. And eighteen months later, I married Claudia.

Flip forward to Folk Alliance International in 2011, and he was the keynote speaker, interviewed by Dave Marsh. I was finishing up as FAI board president then, and again made a connection. I reminded him of Tower in '77, and Gavin in '94, and how I ended up marrying and co-parenting with his old promo honcho. The picture of us chatting is another treasure.

Yeah I was a fan-boy alright. Still am, can't wait to hear your show. Three meetings, three watershed experiences, awash in the presence of a giant. Long may he run.

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From: C Darryl Mattison
Subject: Re: Joe Bonamassa-This Week's Podcast

Local boy makes good.

Joey's dad used to bring him out to sit in with our band, starting when he was about 12. He's an extraordinary talent, and a gentleman as well. We've had a few jams over the years, and whenever he comes back to town he makes it a point to touch base with his local mentors, even brought one of us up to sit in for two songs at his last Syracuse date.

Just in case there's any doubt about how well respected Joe is among the world's great guitarists...several years ago Eric Clapton invited Joe to play at his annual Crossroads show. When Joe walked in backstage, Eric started introducing him around, and Jeff Beck, who never talks to anyone, was first in line. Joe had never met him. Jeff sticks his hand out to Joe and says, "Hi, I'm Jeff Beck."

Best,
Darryl

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From: Barbara Zats
Subject: Re: Why BOOMERS Hate POP Music

?Bob—

So interesting and true. Wallace (Collins) and I have a 20 year old daughter named Chloe Collins who is a singer songwriter at Belmont University. She's had some exposure with her songs in TV shows, on indie stations, etc. and all of a sudden, she is moderately huge on tik tok right now-it happened within about 6 weeks. More than 3,000 followers in 6 weeks. (my math might be off) It's crazy! She took on the theme of the Criminal Minds TV show —I guess it's very popular with teenagers, and she wrote quite a few songs about the characters in the show (not that you need to know that to appreciate the songs), when she mentioned that on tik tok, BAM, she went from about 40 followers to over 3,000. The number keeps growing day to day. She does live shows on tik tok, plus shows on facebook, and radio interviews all by zoom. She used to play songwriter rounds In NY at the Bitter End, and then Nashville at the Cafe, Douglas Corner, Commodore Grill, etc—but so few people would be in the audience at these shows, and, due to covid, Chloe ain't goin' nowhere (Her decision-smart kid - taking a leave of absence from Belmont) However on tik tok, she's getting noticed all over the world, her fan base is getting bigger, plus, she writes tons of songs and has been recording and releasing one song every six weeks Etc etc....who knew? :)

bz

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From: Melbar Group
Subject: Re: The Emmy Ratings Drop

Brilliant piece. The fundamental problem from my perspective as someone that has produced my share of awards shows is the glutinous failure to recognize over 75 years that there is no one interested in watching three hours of entertainment that is hardly entertaining. If Scorsese can be slammed for The Irishman's length why would we consider watching these novocaine induced marathons. This has nothing to do with Covid, Netflix or changing viewing habits, it's just plain bad producing. These awards shows could easily be 90 minutes or less by focusing. On less categories and tighter producing.

Barry Avrich
Producer/Director

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From: Matt Nathanson
Subject: the haves and the have-nots

what you said in your letter yesterday is so fucking right on...you articulate it so clearly, it felt like oxygen.

as you know, perception is so far off from reality EVERYWHERE… hello, politics?! and we humans are so comfortable with creating that kind of suffering, that we are pigs in shit.

the problem is not tech. or the landscape shift... the problem is always humans giving into their wiring, instead of transcending it.

the problem is always the suffering we create around the one constant: change, instead of the freedom we could feel rolling with it.

that and the sleeping giant fact that we are always looking to fix externally the things that can only be fixed in the self.

...and then comes the blame. so much blame!

this said : racism, misogyny, brutal income inequality and a system that works for the few at the expense of the many… these are all VERY REAL... and need to be kicked back against HARD… these are actual external, systemic threats and illnesses...

but they all stem from us. from our fears. instead of finding power in ourselves and through our connected-ness to the whole… we create division, and hoarding… and a system that we think will keep us "safe" from a constant, imagined threat of "the other".

this is a forever, reptile brain problem.

and because humans are rarely taught or modeled that the real work HAS to be done inside the self… we repeat the cycle.

it's kinda woo-woo sounding, but it's truth…

the only way to have real love, empathy and deep appreciation for this ever changing, uncontrollable world… is to have real love, empathy and deep appreciation for your ever changing self.

and to recognize that we're all connected… coming from, and a part of, the same cosmic shit.

anyway, felt super inspired by your post… thank you for that!

matt

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From: Elisabetta di Cagno
Subject: Re: The Vow

Hi Bob,
I watched "The Vow" last evening, based on your recommendation.
And, thanks! It was scary as hell.
Several years ago my secretary and I, who became close friends after we stopped working together, had a falling out. ( I am a woman and he's a man-- who cares? A lot of people did at the time...)
He was my son's godfather... we were both born in Europe; me, Milan, Italy... he, somewhere in Hungary.
Radio silence for years. One day he phoned me and I was thrilled. We got together and he told me about Landmark and how he phoned because it was part of the program to contact those one had wronged.
He asked me to go to a meeting with him.
I was amazed that this very intelligent man was taken in by this crap, but remained polite.
At the end of the evening the recruiters came for me. I was still confused by this "friendship" outing and he was so enthusiastic that I remained polite. They demanded my credit card, very hard sell by not very sophisticated people (the Vow group were better, but the science stuff was hilarious). I asked for literature and said I'd think it over and call in a few days. Wham... the bars were closing. I had to sign up NOW.
Why? Well, that wasn't too clear. (If I'm making this sound as if I've never fallen for a scam before or since and that I'm so damned smart, my computer was hacked into with my assistance last month.) But these Landmark people became abusive and desperate. I walked out, and was shaken. Still happy to have reconnected with a close friend. We walked a while and then I asked him: "Would you have called me if it had not been for Landmark? " He made some noises about trying to help me. I said, "Answer a straight question." He said, "No."
Hope you are doing well and staying safe.
Sincerely,
Elisabetta di Cagno

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From: Matthew Dunn
Subject: RE: The Vow

Bob:

Great piece on The Vow. I'm 64, a lifelong Angeleno and I have watched the many cults sweep through LA and the edges of my life. JESUS fringe groups, EST and Werner Erhard's other seminars, Landmark, Scientology etc. etc. And then there were these gurus that would claim to be Buddhists but would demand that you tithe them 10% of your income in exchange for a mantra. Yep. Until I was 35 I was an actor that rarely worked. But it was though that vocation that I would be dragged (usually by a girlfriend) into some sort of opening sales pitch for these groups. I always saw immediately that these were cons run by charlatans. Part of this is my basic nature. But that I was drawn to it is the interesting bit to me. This world is so broken now and back then the cracks were widening. I now accept depression and unhappiness just as I accept happiness and all that is this very moment. Living life (to quote AA) on life's terms. Your point about narcissists and sociopaths is spot on. The idea and promise proffered by these carnival barkers that we can free from unhappiness and depression is the great lie. You may know the saying, "the good news is that in this moment you get to have all your emotions and the bad news is that you get to have all your emotions". To think that I can be almost heavenly exempt from the trials and tribulations of this "mortal coil" is to think indeed, that my shit just does not stink.

Thanks Bob.

Matthew Conway Dunn

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From: Schuyler Bishop
Subject: Re: How We Got Here

Hey Bob, I sent to all my brothers, and here's what one said:

He misses the most important change starting around 1970, promoted initially by republicans as 'cost saving' but soon followed by democrats and started the feeding at the trough which has led to all of the graft and corruption of today; how congress (and the rest of government) did business. In an effort to 'reduce costs', congress started using industry experts (lobbyists) to 'mark up' legislation, getting rid of all the expert congressional staffers that were hired into congress since the beginning of the democracy as experts in an area, and stayed no matter which party was in power. If they appeared biased toward either party they were fired. If they in any way worked with either party they were fired (hatch act). The congressional staffers were assigned to areas that congress was divided into, education, military, etc. However with lobbyists replacing congressional staffers, as congress changed, so changed the lobbyists. This created a situation that lobbyists were writing the legislation that would regulate their own industries. Whereas most regulation prior to this time was written to regulate industry for the benefit of people, now regulation was written to help the industry that paid the most for the lobbyists against competing industry (for example, cell phones vs. landline phones) and regulation that was good for people was largely thrown out because it was 'too expensive' for industry (things like OSHA) and other protections of workers and individuals. The lobbyists provide 'free' services to the government that reduces the expense of government, but as we now see, cost more than ever through graft, corruption and corporate greed.



From: Jarred Arfa
Subject: Re: The Debate

Amazing that mainstream media doesn't address it but thank You for bringing up the Pointless "vote campaign". If you don't say vote Biden then what exactly is the point ? These celebrities are stupidly expecting their fan bases to actually understand who to actually vote for instead of just coming out and saying it. Maybe I have missed it but with all the social justice messages on the back of NBA jerseys where are the ones with anti Trump or pro Biden messages. Change starts at the top and at the top is blatant racist (not to mention all of the lives that could have been saved if he didn't lie daily about the worst health crisis in 100 years) And with all due respect to the protesters but it's all for nothing if they don't actually show up and vote Trump out. And I know you are a Bernie supporter and that's fine but the same goes for the ridiculous Bernie or bust crowd. Do these people really think we would have been in this position if they would have come out and voted for Hillary instead of sitting on the sidelines and watching This generations Goebells destroy our country. It's all so infuriating.



From: Hank Linderman
Re: The Narrative

Hi Bob, hopefully you've been reading Thomas Frank? He's got it right - that until Democrats offer a credible alternative to the fake populism of the Republicans they won't have a chance - and the Republicans won't actually have to deliver on anything other than serving their wealthy donors.

https://thisishell.com/interviews/1009-thomas-frank

(That's from 2018 while he was promoting "Rendezvous With Oblivion. I've listened to it many times...)

Fwiw, the Kentucky Democratic Party just added 2 new advisory committees; the Black Caucus and the Rural Council. I'm the current chair of the Rural Council; we will be all about organizing rural counties that have been ignored by Democrats for 20 years. That's beyond the time frame of a single election, longer term thinking and investment are required.

I'm also running for Congress in KY2, a very safe Republican District. Again, I'm focused on organizing, winning is the last piece of the puzzle.

https://hank4ky.com/Contract-For-Rural-And-Working-America.pdf - goals more than policies. Policy is a trap they say. Once we agree on goals we can fuss over policies.

I say Trump loses the Presidency. He's losing the wives out here in rural Kentucky. That may not make enough of a difference here, but in the battleground states it will.

I guess I had been talking about running for a long time; in 2017 a friend told me I needed to run, wagged her finger in my face and told me she'd help. I was primarily motivated by my alarm at the actions of Trump. Prior to that my only political experience was in high school, marching to protest the Vietnam War. Our family landed in Louisville in 1970, the year I was a junior. By the end of that year I had gotten elected Student Council President at Atherton High. I gave up on politics when Nixon was pardoned, in retrospect a mistake. I should have stayed involved.

I grew up in Kentucky, got married here, started playing music and went as far as I could go. In 1983 Pam and I sold everything and came to California, ended up working for Joni Mitchell, America, Timothy B. Schmit, Robert Lamm, Eagles, Don Henley, Chicago - mostly as a recording engineer but also as a musician. I have recorded Keb' Mo', Carl Wilson, Mick Jagger and many others.

But we always were going back and forth between California and Kentucky. Our friends and family were there.

About 15 years ago we bought a house on Rough River Lake, 3 doors from where Pam's family had a place in the 60's. They had sold it, a huge mistake, so getting the new place brought some joy to her father.

My friend told me "you need to run in a purple District" which was the 6th, Lexington, but our house was in the 2nd, no one had run as a Democrat in 2016. So that seemed to be fair game. I met with former Congressman Mike Ward and he agreed to be my campaign manager. I knew NOTHING about what I was doing but I like challenges so I dove in, raised some money (excruciating) and started going for it.

Here's what my music background gave me: I knew how to show up early, I knew how to look good, I knew how to be entertaining, how to connect with people one on one, and I understood not to worry about food or sleep! My first event was with the Hardin County Woman's Club, and the chair of the group was very unusual, 6'3" maybe 225 lbs. It took a few minutes for me to realize she was a trans woman. She let me speak, which was like getting up on stage, so my music experience helped there as well. JoAnne and I are friends to this day and she's on the new Rural Council.

Lots and lots of meetings and campaigning later I ended up winning the 4 way primary. We went on to get almost 80k votes which is MUCH better than zero.

Right before the election I got a full contribution from a very well known mixer and his wife. There was no sense spending it, we knew there was no chance to win, so we kept it and I continued working throughout much of the year, helping during the Governor's race. No one filed to run against me in the primary, I think it's because I stayed active even though it wasn't an election year for me.

Campaigning in COVID means I've had to focus my efforts online. I started going live on FB in March, 7 days a week. That almost killed me, so after a month I went to 5 days a week, starting the half hour before Gov. Andy's daily briefing, 3:30 Eastern. It's very much a low production effort, although we bought some video gear and I learned how to "one man band" it. I spend a few hours prep each day, gathering screen shots and printing up copy to read. I also have guests by telephone, such as Congressman John Yarmuth, Dewey Bunnell from America, a surgeon / microbiologist from Santa Clara County who talks details about the virus. One of my friends who is a former Beach Boy made a jingle for "Dr. Gregg" that we use.

It's a volunteer campaign. Rich Campbell is America's bassist - he's done the website, videos, amazing how much he's doing. I told him I didn't want to burn him out, he was doing so much. Rich said, "Hank, this is the best part of my day during the pandemic. If I weren't working on the campaign I'd be throwing my shoes at the tv."

Today I will have Mark LaPalme as a phone in guest. Mark founded Isaiah House, a rehab organization. They are conservative, faith based, and they have 250 employees now. Pam and I went to their first annual banquet last year and it was powerful seeing the strung out faces on the screen, only to realize one of those faces was sitting across the dinner table from us with their family, they had come back from the dead. The room was filled with families that had been restored, hard to think about it now without tearing up.

So much more to tell, but the primary thing is that I believe coming to terms with Rural and Working America is they way forward, not just for the Democrats, but for Republicans as well, for the Nation, for the world.

And this will be a very slow process, but it's one that picks up bit by bit. Understand that the 1st, 2nd, 4th and 5th Districts were let go by the Democratic Party after the Al Gore election, and you can't repair that kind of neglect quickly. There are factors like Kentucky's 120 counties, more counties per capita than any other state, 21 of them in the 2nd. The counties are very aware and concerned about what's going on in their county, but they aren't aware or concerned about their neighbors, and certainly not counties at the other end of the District. I have become friends with activists in many of these counties and have been introducing them to each other, we now hold weekly Zoom meetings. Our first project is a yard sign that says, "Had Enough? Vote Democratic!", and so far 3 of the 6 Districts have ordered some. We are learning to think of ourselves as 1 big thing rather than 21 little things.

I have adopted a motto which comes from Larry Swartz, a farmer and friend, one of the most well-read people I have met. He's personal friends with Wendell Berry. He said to me, "Hank, I'm afraid we're gonna' have to get down in the dirt, grassroots." That's how and why this is starting to work. The new Rural Council will give Rural Kentucky a way to speak directly to the KDP, but it will also allow us to reach out to people on the ground. We are planning listening tours, organizing, helping to rebuild the Democratic Party.

It will need to be a different Democratic Party. That's what we are making, piece by piece.

Next weekend we will start doing online virtual rally / fundraisers with musical performances. I have friends from the Brian Wilson Band who will perform, Jerry Goodman of the Mahavishnu Orchestra, various others, including lots of local Kentuckians. It's just an idea at this point, but I expect us to do these every weekend until the election. The money will help to do online advertising, phone and text banking, and hopefully let us leave some money in reserve so I can continue working no matter the result on November 3rd.

I love Kentucky, I love America, and I want to help us all deal with the list of crises we face - health care, work, education, wages for working people, inequality, justice reform, and the big one - the damage we have done to the climate.

Thanks for listening.

Best…H
270-925-9498

Hank4ky.com


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Thursday 1 October 2020

"Lake Life" and "One By One"

"Lake Life": https://amzn.to/36pRELO

"One By One": https://amzn.to/2Sjyuzg

Highbrow or lowbrow, take your pick.

We are deep into this Korean show on Netflix, "Stranger." Felice says it can't be recommended, I'm on the fence. First and foremost, not only is it in Korean, it's the densest series I've ever watched, at some point you just have to let it flow, hope that plot points will resurface and you will figure them out. And, it's a commitment. Each episode is over an hour, and the first season has sixteen episodes. But foreignness appeals to me. The locations can be exotic. And within the first ten minutes of the first episode Felice said "So now you want to go to Seoul?" And that's exactly what I'd been thinking. Supposedly Jackie O. spoke six languages, that was part of the Kennedy hype. But checking on Wikipedia right now it says only four, English, French, Spanish and Italian. And in truth, those are all kind of close, at least the last three...but Korean?

So, if I learn Korean...it's completely separate from Japanese, never mind Chinese. And to tell you the truth I'm bad with languages, some people pick them up right away, that is not me. I always wonder if I moved somewhere whether I'd learn the language quickly or not, but it pains me to know there's no way I wouldn't have an accent, and locals would know and see me as the other.

And the truth is in so many locations today everybody speaks English, or at least enough people. I went skiing in France in 1971 and only the Americans spoke English. I went skiing in France in 2011 and seemingly everybody spoke English, there was no problem getting your message across, being understood. But to be able to speak in the native language? Then again, Korean's got a wholly different alphabet, there's a steep learning curve.

But, if you're going to watch TV, I reinforce you should begin with "Borgen." I'm a fan of Aaron Sorkin, but I never watched "West Wing"...if it's on network I'm hesitant. And U.S. TV is slick and too often compromised. But as good an actor as Martin Sheen might be, Sidse Babett Knudsen, who plays the lead character, Birgitte Nyborg, is better. She'll smile for the camera and then do a one-eighty and go straight to a frown. And what's great about foreign TV is the expected doesn't happen, it doesn't go the way you assume it will, both in the third season and in Nyborg's relationships, but... Denmark has multiple political parties, not just two, and the key is to build a coalition and try to govern, to make the sausage, and it's not so easy. Another thread is the media, they go inside TV and print news and you see how both have influence yet are compromised, how some outlets have agendas. And the spin doctors! If you watch "Borgen" that's who you'll want to be, Kasper Juul. Not that Birgitte is not savvy, but it's Juul who crafts the specifics of the agenda, decides what can and cannot work, it's fascinating to watch.

But bracketing streaming television shows I read books. And I was on another bad streak of mediocre books. If it's not worth your time, or if it's not the focus of media attention, why bother, just to show I watched/read it? But the two books linked to above, they're really good, in their own unique ways.

"Lake Life." It's the story of a family on vacation in their double-wide of two decades, on a big lake. My mind pictured it as "Ozark," but there's no issue of crime and the only local who figures in is not dangerous at all. So, you've got the parents and two sons and their wives. What is everybody's relationship? And you've been there. Not everybody gets along with the in-laws, certainly not in the same way.

And I'm loath to give away any plot points, because I read for plot, it's the twists and turns, the surprises that excite me. But let me just say the kids are not winners, they're not setting the world on fire. We always read about the winners and the losers, how about those in between?

You could compare "Lake Life" to Franzen. But without the overhanging heaviness. There's not really a cloud in "Lake Life." Nowhere is it said that BIG POINTS are being made. Yet, it's these family dramas that reach me, that I'm most interested in reading. And normally I plow right through books I love, but in this case I'd stop after every chapter or two, to savor what had happened, to think about it. And the truth is about two-thirds of the way through "Lake Life" I got inspired to write something about it, and it would have been great, but it was after midnight and I hadn't finished the book yet, what if the end didn't satisfy as much? This happened to me with a book I recommended about the tech world/Silicon Valley, "Chaos Monkeys." At first I was riveted, but then...you had to be interested in the subject to continue to read and enjoy, and that cut down the number of people who'd like it and I don't want to recommend something people won't like because it will affect my credibility, so, I don't write until I finish, if at all.

But maybe I should change that.

You see the same thing happened with "One by One." I was so excited but then...the person I thought did it was the one who did and the last quarter of the book just wasn't as riveting, but before then...every night I looked forward to reading "One by One," it's great to have such a book in the wings, on the nightstand.

So, the muckety-mucks would call "Lake Life" literature, not that it's hard to read, whereas "One by One" is genre, as in mystery/thriller/whodunit. People compare the author, Ruth Ware, to Agatha Christie, but I did not know that until after the fact, that's when I do my research, otherwise it affects the reading experience, especially reviews, which tend to tell two-thirds of the plot.

I stay away from genre. And non-fiction. Not that I never read them, but oftentimes when I do I end up disappointed, certainly when I read mystery/thriller stuff, and when I read non-fiction...I'm all excited, I buy the book and then it's a slog to finish it. Happens over and over again. Maybe I'll explain the details sometime, but not today.

Anyway, "One by One" centers around skiing and tech/music, what's not to like?

Not that I knew this going in. I'm just constantly trolling for stuff to read. And when I find something that is interesting, I download a sample chapter to my Kindle. And most stuff I chuck right away, the books are not readable enough, as a matter of fact, most of the vaunted literature I find unreadable, they're about style, they're overwritten, laden with metaphors, but that was not "One by One," I got hooked right away, so I bought it.

I did not know it revolved around skiing. I did not know the app centered around music, those were surprises. But I read and I pictured the landscape, I had it in my mind's eye. And that's one great thing about reading, you can divine your own pictures. And when they make the movie, it's almost never the same. Maybe the movie stands on its own, but it's rarely the book.

So, you've got everybody in a chalet and they're there on business and vacation and if I tell you any more, I'll ruin it.

I had a suspicion who the culprit was right up front, and like I told you, I was right. But it wasn't until two-thirds through the book that it truly came clear. Which had me, as well as the characters, constantly guessing.

And some of these genre books are nothing more than the plot. But in "One by One" the characters are fully defined, you think you know them and...if you're looking for a book to take you away, that cuts like butter in these quarantined Covid times, I highly recommend "One by One."

As for "Lake Life"...

"One by One" has 1,313 ratings on Amazon. That doesn't mean it's terrific, a lot of junk gets a lot of ratings, even good ones. And speaking of stars, if it has fewer than four I'm extremely hesitant, maybe I'll go for something with three and a half, but that's rare.

"One by One" has a solid four. As does "Lake Life. But, "Lake Life" only has 88 ratings, and it came out back in July.

This happens all the time, you read a great review and you go to Amazon and almost no one is reading the book. And almost always, that's a bad sign. That usually means the particular reviewer resonated, but most people did not. Of course it can mean that word hasn't spread about a book, but if you've gotten a review in the "New York Times"...the industry knows about it.

So I waited to finish "Lake Life" before I rendered a final judgment. And it's not five star best of the year, but it's really damn good. But there appears to be no word of mouth on it.

And, one of the reasons you read fiction is for the wisdom contained therein. So to close, I'm gonna quote a few lines from "Lake Life" that resonated. And as one must say in these blowback days, your mileage might vary. But it's funny how those who complain always ended up reading the whole damn book, finishing the whole damn series...if it was that bad why didn't they quit? Usually it turns out they didn't dislike the work that much, but they just wanted to show me they're equal to me and their opinion matters. Fine, but it's always given with attitude. Hell, what do I know, I'm just another person on the planet, if I find something I think the majority of my readers will like, I call their attention to it, it's an imperfect science.

Anyway...

"But this is the way of families - the inconsequential elevated to the imperative."

Ain't that the truth, especially on vacation, especially when the kids are out of the house and the only time you come back together is during vacation. When my father was alive, we always had a huge blowout during vacation, always!

"Except, that's the thing about death - it reminds you you're alive."

I'm still messed up about Judd's death. But as I normalize, I realize emotionally as well as intellectually I should try not to sweat the small stuff and if I've got something to prove, something I want to do, not to waste time but to go for it.

"...the kind of argument art school students have when all they have to show for all the work they've done, so far in life, are their opinions and inflexibility."

That's one of the problems with arts education. It makes you feel you know something, that you're better than the hoi polloi. But when it comes to creation, oftentimes schooling is unnecessary, at best it helps. And the uneducated start, but those with degrees are oftentimes too inhibited, yet because of that piece of paper they think they are better, and they'll let you know it.

"People at the funeral made things worse, the way well-meaning people tend to do."

Bingo! They're trying their best but what you really want is to be left alone, or to talk to one or two specific people. Yet, you carry on and listen to them, interact with them, because they mean well and you don't want to offend them yet you wonder why you're doing this, why you're worried about their feelings when you're the one who is hurting.


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Chris Stapleton's "Cold"

Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3l5N1e0
YouTube: https://bit.ly/2EVTZ68

What, is it 1969?

From: donald little
Re: Why BOOMERS Hate POP Music

I know you get hundreds of replies so I'll keep this brief. I'm a guitarist who has played professionally for about 20yrs here in the UK. I was the guitarist for Paolo Nutini for many years. This track (recorded live) was a massive hit here in the UK. It's had 55m views to date. I think you might like it. https://youtu.be/ELKbtFljucQ

Donny Little

So I clicked the link and played it. In the background. On the other screen. And then, about two-thirds through my brain woke up, I stopped reading my e-mail to watch. Whoa, this is good, this is what we used to call music, R&B with a heart, with a rhythm that locks into your body waves, that has you leaning back and forth in time and, and, when it was all over I had to hear it again.

Then I went to Wikipedia. "Iron Sky" didn't make it in the U.S. And Paolo Nutini hasn't put out an album since 2014.

So I decided to go deep, I needed to go deep, I was not Paolo proficient.

So I went to Amazon Music HD and played the top tracks, this is music that had to be heard in full fidelity.

And of course all the buzz was about 2006's "These Streets," that's when Nutini's arrival made waves on both sides of the pond. But "Iron Sky" is on the latest LP, 2014's "Caustic Love," and although I was enamored of the top tracks, "Caustic Love" knocked my socks off, from the opening track, "Scream (Funk My Life Up)." The greats can immediately grab you, and wasn't that the Stones's trick, to hit you between the eyes from the very start?

But that didn't turn out to be my favorite track. Nor was the aforementioned "Iron Sky." Rather, I was enamored of the "Mama Told Me Not To Come" groove of "Numpty," a cut that was not made for Top Forty, not even the Spotify Top 50, but takes you to away on a flight into the stratosphere and makes you feel better than all that dreck.

But even better was "Diana." And "Cherry Blossom." Both nearly at the end of this thirteen track album.

And none of these three tracks have their own Wikipedia page. They're hiding in plain sight. They were not hammered over the heads of the masses, you had to own the album to be aware of them, to uncover these jewels.

Now wait a second. This reminds me of the seventies. When you'd buy an album, maybe based on a track you heard on the radio, maybe on a review, and you dropped the needle and went on an adventure. Two or three tracks would jump out at you on the first play, and they'd make you play the whole thing all over again and then the rest of the album would start to make sense and as you continued to play it other cuts emerged from the morass, you got to the point where this was your favorite LP, what everybody else thought, what was on the radio was irrelevant. And when the act came to town, usually to play a club or theatre, you'd go, and tell everybody you'd been there from the beginning when they hit arenas.

This can't happen in the U.S., only in the U.K. In the U.S. there are very specific verticals, very specific tribes, and you don't cross genres. Sure, a country act might rap, but adult alternative ones don't suddenly put out a hip-hop track, and one thing's definitely for sure, the big business focuses on what is already selling, streaming, the Spotify Top 50 and hit radio, and if you don't fall into one of these lanes it's just too hard to break though, no one wants to put in the time and effort and money to push you into superstardom, even though Adele is so big, she's seen as an outlier.

So, I've been playing "Caustic Love" for days. Sure, sure, it's six years old, but welcome to the modern world where no one can know everything and what's old can be new to so many people. I've been dying to write about "Caustic Love" but I didn't know where to start, whether to be general or dig deep into each track, whether to do a post for each track, and then I heard Chris Stapleton's "Cold."

Although low key, you get it just like you get "Scream (Funk My Life Up)."

Actually, you've got to commit. This is not a hellzapoppin' race of a track made for TikTok. It starts off slow, you don't really get hooked until almost thirty seconds in. There's nothing magical about the piano intro, it's more than serviceable, that is until you've heard the whole track and go back to it, but then the drums solo, setting the beat and then those high piano notes sear your brain, telling you this is important, this is about pain, this is about human emotions, this is about human life.

And then Chris starts to sing.

This ain't no TV competition show, Chris Stapleton can both sing and WRITE! He's not trying to impress the judges, just himself, he believes if he gets it right it will resonate, and even if it doesn't he's been doing this so long that he knows he'll survive.

And Stapleton is seen as a country artist. But this ain't country, unless you retreat to the sixties and Muscle Shoals, this kind of stuff worked back then, before country music became a retread of the rock music of the seventies, in the twenty first century.

And "Cold" is anathema to radio. Slow and long. But it' a burner. It's the kind of music the audience actually wants to hear, when selling advertising isn't the primary component, when it's purely about what comes out of the speakers and goes into your ears.

And the track starts to build, the strings come in and then the solo guitar...this sounds similar to something Jerry Wexler or Tom Dowd might have cut in their heyday, something that Ahmet would understand, back when music was a calling about the sound as opposed to the money.

These extended blues tracks were a part of the landscape in the late sixties, they were embedded in all those LPs that built album rock, when it was about albums as opposed to hits, when you didn't even lead with the single, when if you got enough traction with a track the label might cross it over.

Not that "Cold" is a giant leap forward. But it is a giant leap back. To the past. When you didn't have to add computer sounds, computer drums to dense up the sound, when air allowed not only the track to breathe, but your mind. "Cold" is analog in a digital world.

Maybe you know all this, maybe I'm late to the party, but I'm not even sure I want to be a member of the club. I want to be an individual, that's the essence of the listening experience, alone, not smiling at your brethren, shooting selfies, but letting your mind go free, closing your eyes and reveling in the music, and only the music, it demands your attention, anything else will infringe upon the experience.


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Run The Jewels-This Week's Podcast

That's right, Killer Mike and El-P talking about hip-hop, muscle cars, politics, albums, how they got together and get along...dive deep with these raconteurs!

https://www.iheart.com/podcast/1119-the-bob-lefsetz-podcast-30806836/

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/run-the-jewels/id1316200737?i=1000493211518

https://open.spotify.com/episode/7bLilC03Rz0CkdOEgkBwwj?si=Wq2w7aMqQb2KaHeHRJRr8A

https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/tunein/the-bob-lefsetz-podcast

https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/9ff4fb19-54d4-41ae-ae7a-8a6f8d3dafa8/The-Bob-Lefsetz-Podcast


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Tuesday 29 September 2020

The Debate

That was scary.

Of course it was laughable. Of course Trump was out of control. Of course Biden could barely get a word in edgewise. But the content is irrelevant. Biden's performance is irrelevant. It's all about Trump.

Bill Maher has been saying for years that there's no way Trump is leaving. Tonight confirmed it.

Trump has redefined the game, and nobody in mainstream media has caught up with it. It's been four years already, what is wrong with these people. Democracy is dying and they're treating this like a student council election, as if the government, the country, were bigger than the president. But right now, they're not.

Trump has done everything he's said he was going to do. So why don't people listen to him and believe him? He's saying outright, even tonight, that the election results are a fraud. Do you really expect him to roll over come November 3rd?

And who is gonna stop him? The lame Democrats who can't even come up with a strategy to neuter Amy Coney Barrett?

The Democrats are afraid. Just like Biden tonight. They pussy-foot. Biden was best tonight when he got overheated, the rest of the time he looked anxious, a guy who was overprepared running through the mental rolodex to try and find the sound bite he'd been prepped with.

As for Trump's lies... No one was prepared for this, even though they should have seen it coming. No one was prepared for Trump to talk so much, interrupt so much, that the other side couldn't even make its case, that the other side couldn't even fight back.

Maybe you're thinking that Biden won because Trump alienated women. Maybe you're thinking that Biden's calm demeanor was his ace in the hole. Maybe you're thinking Biden scored a few points. THAT'S ALL IRRELEVANT! The debate was purely about style, and what we've got is a fascist doing his act on national television and no one calling him out on it.

Yes, that's what Umair Haque says day after day, that the Democrats should call Trump the f-word, but they won't! They're afraid of alienating some potential swing voter in the hinterlands, so they lay back. Did you see Trump laying back? Trump's act was a huge victory for his acolytes, they ate it all up, this was the guy they believe in.

The debates are supposed to inform and influence voters. That didn't happen tonight. Not only because there was little substance, but because everybody's already made up their mind!

So, you're college-educated. One of the elite, or the mini-elite, the six figure minions working with their brains as opposed to their hands. You're laughing. This guy would get blown out of college, would get blown out of high school, no one would put up with him. But the truth is learning institutions are run with an iron fist. But the world is not. What we've seen over and over, even in the case of Trump himself, is that there are two systems of justice in America. One for the rich and one for the poor. Most people could not even afford an hour with one of Trump's accountants, never mind not itemizing deductions, never mind their employers deducting their taxes right up front. Trump has run unfettered his entire life, why should he stop now, it's working for him!

As for more debates, why. If Biden's team was smart, and it's not, they'd cancel further debates, show some cojones. Because Biden can only lose, Trump controls the debates and nothing's gonna change that, even if his mic's turned off. By standing up to the bully Biden would score points. But his advisors are afraid, this is not how it's been done before. Don't they get that the past is no longer prologue?

And watching this screamfest, one recalled the Democratic debates of the past year. Where Biden got killed. I'm glad it's now known that he has a stutter, how about some more news on that please. But tonight Joe did look old and over the hill, and I'm gonna vote for him, because it's a vote for democracy, but how come Democrats can't admit this, that they've been screwed by their own party? This is the best they could come up with? Tonight I yearned for Warren or Sanders, almost anybody other than Biden, because they know how to fight, how to zing, and that was Warren and Sanders's message, they were gonna fight the bullies for the little people. Meanwhile, Biden couldn't even stand up to the bully in chief tonight!

If you attack the messenger it just demonstrates how ignorant you are. If you don't think the right is gonna make hay on Biden's performance tonight, you probably think that Trump's lies and interruptions this evening alienated his core...THEY DIDN'T! We've got no future until we start addressing the real issues of this country.

And it's not like the Republicans are gonna stop Trump, they've already proven that. Furthermore, it's the Republicans who got us into this mess, they refused to approve Obama's judges, meanwhile Trump says otherwise and twists the real story to his advantage. Sure, the newspaper will print the truth tomorrow, but Facebook rules and like every multinational business it and its social media brethren believe they're bigger than any government, and they'll change position to satisfy whomever is in power. If you're waiting for Zuckerberg to save the country, forget it.

And if you're waiting for the vote to save the country, you're delusional.

Right now, all these vote campaigns have to be restructured, they must be changed to VOTE BIDEN! Enough of this bipartisanship. The wink of the eye. Just come out and say it. You celebrities, you wonks, this is typical, you're afraid of offending someone when that's Trump's modus operandi, to offend.

As for the crucial contest, November 3rd, the Democrats still don't have a plan. And they're afraid if they verbalize one they'll lose votes. That's another thing that bugged me about Biden tonight, he was so afraid of offending some nonexistent swing voter that he wouldn't even bring up Merrick Garland's name when it came to Supreme Court nominees. The right is cheering Trump on, the left is wincing.

So, Trump isn't leaving. End of story. Enough with the horse race, the polling, the discussion of Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, et al. Who is gonna save the country, who is gonna save democracy?

And let's admit it, Hillary was much better than Biden in the debates AND SHE LOST THE ELECTION!

The Democrats need to start mobilizing NOW! They've got to line up their offense NOW! Trump surely is. The Democrats must call Trump a fascist and have a plan to get him out of the White House when he loses. And, AND, if Trump rigs the election itself, which he is wont to do, never mind throwing it to the Supreme Court or the House of Representatives, THEN WHAT? Are we wall gonna just wring our hands and accept it?

And when the chaos begins, who can we trust to make things right? Certainly not the military, and if the military comes out, it's all over.

The Democrats are ceding power every damn day. The game has been redefined and Trump is ensuring, just like Mitch McConnell, that it's his way or the highway.

Enough. Tell everybody Trump won't go. Tell everybody the votes probably won't be counted accurately. No one should be surprised on November 3rd, NOBODY!

Trump said as much tonight. He's been laying the ground for months. First with the Post Office and then with the "ballots"...so he can't lose, there's no way his people will accept it. And, AND if it goes to the House there are more red voters than blue. AND the tyranny of the minority has tilted the table for years. And now, we've got a fascist dictator in charge. CAN'T YOU SAY IT?

Umair did. Sarah Kendzior did. Bill Maher did. But they didn't spend years in the club of D.C. insider media so their cries were ignored. It's not only the government that has lost touch with the will of the people, but the media too.

This is it folks. If you think I'm being an alarmist you're sadly mistaken.

This is war. Fight for your future or...

Forget it.


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River Songs-Songs With "River" In The Title-This Week On SiriusXM

Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2HyS0W6

Pandora: https://bit.ly/30kTbiq

Tune in today, September 29th, to Volume 106, 7 PM East, 4 PM West.

Hear the episode live on SiriusXM VOLUME: siriusxm.us/HearLefsetzLive

If you miss the episode, you can hear it on demand on the SiriusXM app: siriusxm.us/LefsetzLive


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Monday 28 September 2020

Trump's Taxes

He's a rock star. And nothing he does will alienate his core fans. Sexual peccadilloes, financial improprieties, none of them make a difference, people need hope, they need to believe in something, and at least a third of this country believes in the Donald.

Maybe you read yesterday's "Times" article. I doubt it, but I did. And it was inside baseball, boring, there was no real smoking gun. Oh, there were Ivanka's "consulting fees" (the issue here being that Trump deducted them), the low or no payments in certain years and finally the argument over the $70 million plus refund. Which on the surface seems unjustified. Turns out the government just gives you the money, it doesn't ask any questions until AFTER it pays you, and we all know possession is nine-tenths of the law. Be rich enough to hire the best attorneys and you can fight the government endlessly.

But none of that truly resonates with the public, even though the headlines have been displayed everywhere in the past twenty four hours. But if you follow boxing, and it seems that it's only those interested in baseball who do, the youngsters are only interested in MMA, which is why Joe Rogan is such a star, you know it's called the one-two punch. And it's the TWO that does the damage.

Well, the "New York Times" just landed the two:

"How Reality-TV Fame Handed Trump A $427 Million Lifeline": https://nyti.ms/30gh5vr

No rock star makes it without a manager. And you need a great manager to sustain. We can talk about Irving Azoff, the Q-Prime twins, Bruce Allen...well in this case Trump's manager was Mark Burnett. Click on the link above, you'll see him right at the top, in a picture with Trump.

Furthermore, truly great managers can make almost anyone a star, especially if they can sing and are good-looking. Look at what Lou Pearlman did with Backstreet Boys and NSYNC. Yes, Lou did it more than once, he was a great manager, and also a liar and a thief. And Lou invested the money he stole, the same way rock managers invest the money they made dealing dope, to break his acts. It was all about the spend. Took years for Backstreet Boys to break in the U.S. But Lou Pearlman believed.

Mark Burnett may not be a crook, but he's got the best track record in reality television, one can argue he invented the genre with "Survivor" (oh, don't talk about MTV's "Real World" or PBS's show about the Louds, those were more cinéma vérité). And Burnett had a formula, he was just lacking a star.

Talk to any label head, they're not looking for talent so much as STARS! Charismatic people who sell themselves. And in the rock era of yore, if you alienated a bunch of people, if you played your game to excess, that was even better. Which is why Led Zeppelin and the mud sharks at the Edgewater Inn and Ozzy biting off the head of a bat burnished their image amongst acolytes. They were the OTHER and that's what used to sell music, alienation. The acts were not traditional winners, they were outsiders, who were emerging victorious, making bank in a game they devised, leaving in their wake abused hotel rooms and women.

And everybody wanted to be a rock star, they wanted the PERKS!

And as greed grew the economy, made the rich richer and minted new billionaires, the belief was that money could buy the rock star lifestyle, the dope, the girls...the trail of destruction in their wake. And that's exactly what Trump did, he made himself a local rock star in New York, and then Mark Burnett blew him up nationally, internationally!

It takes money to make it, and Trump had plenty, his father was rich. As for his son Donald being a bad businessman and blowing it, never forget Edgar Bronfman, Jr. sacrificed the entire Seagram empire. The next generation is not known for its business acumen. It was born with a silver spoon in its mouth, with a pedigree, and this second generation trades on it, oftentimes it's the only thing they've got, they're not educated and they never suffered, therefore not needing to succeed to leave their mark.

So, Trump took his dad's money to make it. And his dad was a crook too, that was the essence of the 2018 "New York Times" Trump tax story. It's got to do with middlemen and valuation and write-offs and I won't bore you, but if you're sophisticated, which most people are not, and that's exactly the point, you know how this game is played, and how it's abused and how oftentimes offenders emerge victorious, especially in an era where the IRS is continually gutted.

So, Trump uses his dad's money to make a mark. Saving Wollman Rink.

And then he goes on an all-out publicity campaign, FOR YEARS!

And he hoodwinks the press. He learned from Roy Cohn. And if you watched last night's "Vow" episode you know that with enough money you can sue your opponents to death, Barbara Bouchey spent 700k on her defense just to emerge intact. So, Trump was known as a fighter, and either you liked him for his outrageous antics, like Howard Stern, or you were afraid to go against him because he would sue you ad infinitum, and most people did not have the money to defend themselves and who wanted to bother with Trump anyway.

Yes, Trump had been around New York forever. There are always bands like this, and when they make it you scratch your head. THOSE GUYS? But it turns out they had the one element that truly makes you a star...THEY NEEDED IT! And Trump needed it.

Now Trump spent his own money until he signed with a label, in this case Burnett/NBC, yes, Burnett had a production deal just like so many managers have with their charges, so they can make extra dough.

And it takes real money to make it. You can get started on TikTok, but if you want to sustain, you need that big label cash. And now Trump had it. And he started making money hand over fist.

And like a modern rock star, not one of yore, Trump was not worried about his credibility, he'd whore himself out to anybody who paid. Come on, you'd see him in those ads hyping crap and you'd laugh.

And then, just like a traditional rock star, who knows how to be famous but has little business sense, Trump blew it all. But instead of buying quickly depreciating automobiles, Trump purchased golf resorts. Kinda like rock stars investing in restaurants. Some people make money serving food, but it's really difficult and there are slim margins. Same deal with golf clubs.

And now Trump is broke.

Now if you're a rock star, you write off the sins of the past, get a new manager and go on the endless road to pay for your lifestyle. After all, your fans still believe in you.

But there are many more zeros in Trump's investments. And he's personally liable for so much of the debt and...

It's all crashing down on him.

You wanted to believe Trump was smart, he's not.

You wanted to believe he's a good businessman, he's not.

You wanted to believe he was not compromised by foreign countries/investors, he is.

Don't bother to argue with me, those are the facts. Just vote for him anyway, like you plan to do, and we'll see you on November 3rd.

As for the horse race, as for tomorrow's debate, it's a complete waste of time. It's like VH1's "Behind the Music" or some crappy MTV fighting show. There's little reality involved. And, AND, the truth is there are almost no undecideds, it's a myth. But, if Biden does well, he might inspire people to come out and vote, but I doubt it.

Speaking of coming out to vote, did you see the "Hamilton" clip?

"Hamilton X When We All Vote": https://bit.ly/2S9V3Gy

It's not a hit. That's the modern music business. It doesn't matter who you are, if it's not a hit, it ain't gonna fly. Just ask Justin Bieber, who tried to hype himself and game the system with his last work and it fell flat. You smile at Lin-Manuel Miranda's concept, but you don't need to see it again.

A hit is really hard to create.

But if you have enough hits you can leverage them into a lifetime career. Which is what Trump has done. People have forgotten his stiffs, and like with Kanye, they like to watch the movie. Kanye's impact in the recording world has been fading, but when he's off on one of his bipolar rants/activities the press covers it like he's still number one. This is the world we live in, and now more than ever you need to light yourself on fire in order to gain widespread attention.

So, read the second "Times" piece linked above. It's not like the first piece, you don't have to know that the $70+ million Trump and the government are fighting over has to do with tax law that says in order to take the write-off you can't have any continuing interest in the corporation, and Trump maintained 5%, this second article is sheer show business. As for the bad business, isn't that what rock stars do?

So, this is like "Rolling Stone" and rock rags trumping up the Van Halen M&M's story. Or Alice Cooper's various stunts. No one fact-checks,, no one explains it, they just print it.

As for those who do yell and scream, the mainstream media is afraid of them. Bill Maher claiming over and over that Trump wouldn't leave. Sarah Kendzior saying Trump's government was an authoritarian kleptocracy. You see mainstream media is all about the institution, the gravitas, but we live in a world where gravitas and credibility are out the window.

So, you must read this "Times" article to find out how you were conned. How Donald Trump employed show business techniques to pull the wool over everybody's eyes and become president. It's akin to Milli Vanilli. Clive Davis was responsible for that, and he sustained, just like Mark Burnett, he blamed it on someone else, but both are responsible.

Burnett took a middling act and made it a superstar. And then Trump behaved like every other rock star and doubled-down until he burned it all to the ground.

And Trump won by being outrageous, by not observing the norms. Like the Beatles, smoking and doing dope and saying they were bigger than Jesus. Sure, there was blowback, but their fans loved them even more for it!

Not only had the media never seen the act, but neither had government, neither had D.C. Trump was like hip-hop coming along to kill rock. People still say rock is alive when hip-hop has been here for ages, and is flourishing.

You can't live in the past.

But the truth is America is dumb. And so are its institutions. It's not only Trump, but people like Lindsey Graham, begging for cash on Fox just like Macy Gray hyping her new album at the VMAs. If you're looking for someone to believe in, look in the mirror. Only you know your personal truth. Only you can decide if you want to rip people off or be honest and trustworthy. But it's hard to fly straight when all the winners do not. But in an era where the gap between winners and losers is greater than ever, the losers are desperate, to glom on to anything to try and make it, like Trump University, otherwise life is just too damn depressing.

And never forget, true fans are the last to let go. I still get e-mail and tweets from Taylor Swift defenders. As Taylor and her team manipulate the chart to say she's the biggest act of the summer when nothing could be further from the truth.

But hey, that's SHOW BUSINESS!


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Sunday 27 September 2020

Why BOOMERS Hate POP Music

Rick Beato: https://bit.ly/3cCkCcx

I had to watch this to see how Rick deals with the hate.

We live in a funny world, with so many marketing messages incoming, people are preaching to their choir, the usual suspects, it's not only politicians who do this.

So...if your income is dependent upon recording income, you say you love what's on the radio, in the Spotify Top 50. If you're a boomer, or even a Gen-X'er, you act like you're younger, you say that today's music is no different from what came before, it's just as good, and that the nature of music is it's made to offend parents.

I'm not down with that. Don't believe it. I think that's an easy explanation. Yes, are some parents offended by the new sounds? Of course! But the story is most millennials grew up with the music of their boomer parents, and they like it. Furthermore, many rappers know not only the history of hip-hop, but Led Zeppelin and Aerosmith too, so just because older people don't like the new sound that does not mean that older people are inherently wrong, that they just don't get it.

And then there's the touring side of the business. Where the most bucks are made by the boomer artists. Furthermore, it's not only old people going to the shows, talk to anybody on stage, they're stunned by the number of youngsters in the audience.

But the world revolves around the new. The fresh. Today we're crippled because there's so much of it, but inherently we want new experiences, that's what thrills us. Sure, it might be fun to watch one of your favorite old movies, but the thrill is when you see something new that is great.

So, Rick Beato references the blowback, and then he delineates what the dislike is about. And as you listen to what he has to say, as he plays the keyboard to illustrate the sounds, it's hard not to agree with the boomers, because it seems modern music has been chiseled down to the most basic elements. As Rick says, boomers are looking for changes, and a lot of today's music doesn't have any. But isn't it the Beatles who've lasted longer than anybody in the past fifty years? And their records were loaded with changes!

After watching the above video, you might want to listen to the video that inspired it:

"I just listened to the Top 10 on Spotify...WTF?": https://bit.ly/36dP4IH

Actually the title does not reflect the content of the clip. Beato is respectful of the new sounds. And in both clips he talks about the production... But that's like admiring the assembly line and at the end you get an Edsel, not a Tesla. It may be well-made, it may be interesting to see how it was made, but is the end product really interesting?

In today's L.A. "Times," there's a story on TikTok:

"TikTok has been saved. But for music, is that a good thing?": https://lat.ms/345roUs

Once again, I don't think the content truly serves the headline, at least not artistically, but the question is significant. What works on TikTok is bites. And some music can be distilled to this, but a lot of music cannot.

So, we might be seeing a great bifurcation. Between pop music and everything else. Everything else never enters the Spotify Top 50, never gets on Top Forty radio, the mainstream music business ignores it, the blockbuster mentality rules in a world where nothing is as big as before nor as successful. It's akin to the movie studios making high concept movies that can play around the world...now their thunder has been stolen by Netflix and other streaming outlets, making niche product, the kind of stuff that used to be Hollywood's bread and butter.

Maybe there no longer is a mainstream. Maybe it's not as simple as other genres superseding hip-hop and pop on the Spotify Top 50. Maybe it's more about other genres growing in mass, just like a lot of what is distributed by the majors is actually indie, they're claiming market share based on the indies utilizing their pipeline.

So, in this world if you're not questioning yourself, your opinion means little. But we're also in an era of groupthink, and if what you say is contrary to the accepted wisdom not only are you alone, but you're excoriated, hated, burned to the ground, and that doesn't feel good for anyone.

But music was always the land of individuality. It was always based on those undeniable hits, the one listen smashes, the innovative stuff in between not only the tripe, but the B's and B+'s. It's one thing to create for TikTok, it's quite another to push the envelope with something that is for your ears only.

Food for thought.


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Re-The Paterno Letter

Many years ago, Peter was on a panel at the dinner meeting of the California Copyright Conference (theCCC.org) at the Sportsman's Lodge. No one was thrilled with the food there and in Paterno style, he had a pizza delivered to the panelist's table on the stage. Hilarious.

Thanks for your emails.

Best,
Rhonda Bedikian
Heavy Harmony Music

__________________________________________

Good post Bob. Makes me wonder if Paterno would be the ideal guy to go after Trump for his unauthorized and widely reported use of popular songs by popular artists.

Certainly a different approach would be required....sans the wink and nod. Then again, what's the point?

Dave Dalzell

__________________________________________

Bill Murray? Are you kidding?
He can use any song of mine in
any way he wants for free.
The Doobs should be paying him.
Obviously they don't play golf.

Joe Walsh

__________________________________________

Apparently Bill Murray has changed his contract and IP lawyers.


Bill's 1983 Ghostbusters contract stated that on the home video packaging no one's head would be larger than his. The company I worked for did the 1985 duplication, packaging, and physical distribution of the videocassettes. When the packaging arrived a picture of Sigourney Weaver's head on the back of the box was larger than Bill Murray's head in another picture on the back of the box. Columbia Pictures received samples before we got the shipment, and a sharp Columbia lawyer spotted the contractual violation and they were obligated to recall all of the 400,000 boxes, which they did. Most importantly they had to re-print, die cut, fold, glue and ship new boxes to our location in Northbrook, Illinois and the deadline became so tight that we risked missing the release date which anyone in entertainment knows is unforgivable.

Our hourly workers made overtime based on the enforcement of Bill Murray's contract, and so did some people at FedEx. The release date was met.

I suppose Bill never knew about the boxes. We loved him like everyone does but always said, 'No one has a bigger head than Bill Murray.'

Tim Trummer

__________________________________________

In the 90s, I had an act ("Eleven") I was signing to Hollywood Records. Peter was running it, and when I got the draft of the record contract to review, I was floored. It was under 50 pages (when most were hundreds of pages long), and it was written in plain English! WTF??!! I asked, and it turns out Peter had taken the time to redraft the entire contract so that anyone could understand it. There was no benefit to Hollywood Records in this - Peter did it because it was the RIGHT thing to do, and it provided an unmatched level of transparency to the artists he was working with. Probably the best example of fairness ever seen at a label… No surprise that he would address the Bill Murray situation in the most creative of ways. Kudos, Peter!

Steve Stewart

__________________________________________

You gotta get people's attention and get them on your side. This letter does both. The kicker was that he cc'd Jerry Aldini at PolySutra Records. So inside & fantastic.

Bob Paris

__________________________________________

It's funny (to me) that you use the term "zetzing" when neither Bill Murray or Peter Paterno (or most of your readers) will know that "zetz" is "hit" in Yiddish. In this case, it's more like Paterno is really sticking it to Murray.

Btw - did you notice that the last person on the "cc" list was Jerry Aldini of Poly Sutra Records, a character played by Bill Murray in an SNL sketch from 1978, about people trying to get backstage at a KISS concert (other people trying to get backstage are the singer Stephen Bishop [as himself] and Art Garfunkel as Paul Stanley's brother Angus).

Take care,

Stuart Taubel
MC Mentholyptus Productions

__________________________________________

Of course it blew up your inbox and feed! Peter's letter had brains and humor in a time when our country is running on a lack of both! That letter was exactly what should be written by a guy who has seen it all in the business. I loved every word and wished more people in music were just as honest and to the point without spending any air of ego or trying to prove anything. The facts are there and, since it is Peter, so are some funny jabs. Loved it!

Cheers-
Jay Coyle

__________________________________________

Luv Peter hate his golf swing….lol

Val Garay

__________________________________________

So, the world finally got to find out a slice of what we've always known about Peter…the genius mensch.
You nailed it. Smartest, kindest loyal human ever.
Take care, Dave Kaplan

__________________________________________

Loved you note. You described Peter perfectly. He's the real deal - super creative and a genius attorney. Never heavy handed and by being nice gets the job done.

I think Peter should publish his email 'auto replies'. Maybe you could talk him into it?!

Jennifer Hawks

__________________________________________

Bob- thank you for writing this! I love Peter Paterno! ( Peter loves me too..... lol which is an amazing compliment because Peter does not like anyone!) hahaha

dina lapolt

__________________________________________

Good one Bob, and well deserved for Peter. Having him as your lawyer is like flying WITH a net. He affords one the luxury of aiming high, because no matter how far you fall, he won't let you hit the pavement. John Hartmann

__________________________________________

Exactly, Bob! He's real! He made his point but did it in a very cool way that I hope Murray appreciated. Calling out the hideous togs was a comedic hole in one.

Scott Soules

__________________________________________

That letter made my day. Hilarious. A letter from a lawyer. That's how bad it's gotten.

Randi Swindel

__________________________________________

Words are our tools and Peter is a master craftsman. Better than anything Murray ever wrote. (Shame on you Bill!) Stay safe.

Michael Reinert

__________________________________________

Hey Bob, I read your stuff all the time. I love your writing (I was a journalism major) and find it really fun and informative. I met you years ago at a party at Steve Rennie's house. I normally don't write stuff like this…but… .Love Peter –he's one of the lawyers in this industry who is very smart but doesn't take himself too seriously. I have known him for probably 40 years…Just wanted to clarify something..I have been in private practice, chiefly repping artists, for many years. . When Peter took the Disney job, I was rooting for him. Shortly after Peter left Disney, in 1994, I went to Capitol Records as a senior executive, and as part of my deal, I was able to keep some major clients (on other labels of course). Three years later, I left Capitol to resume private practice because I found I was an artist guy, not a company guy. Not only did I keep the clients I was representing during my tenure at Capitol, but also other clients whom I did not keep came back to me quickly. So while I admired Peter for leaving his clients behind when he went to Disney (and his getting them back when he left), I was lucky enough to get an education at Capitol for three years and then hit the ground running when I left….very unusual at the time…Best.

Gary L Gilbert
Senior Partner
Manatt, Phelps & Phillips, LLP
2049 Century Park East
Suite 1700
Los Angeles, CA 90067

__________________________________________

The biggest bummer here is that while it's fun to read the letter and retweet it, this should have been THE year for the Doobies. 50th anniversary tour with Michael McDonald, plus the Rock Hall induction to give those guys a well-deserved boost of publicity and adulation, and presumably a nice infusion of cash from the tour and the related revenue. I really feel for Tom, Pat, and all the guys -- obviously there are a ton of artists who have suffered from the pandemic, but the stars were supposed to align for them in 2020. Long live the Doobies - let's hope they'll be on the road and Takin' it to the Streets in 2021.

All best,

Greg Renoff

__________________________________________

I guess I should leave a tip on the nightstand. Thanks, Bob!

Peter Paterno, Esq.
King, Holmes, Paterno & Soriano, LLP
1900 Avenue of the Stars, 25th Floor
Los Angeles, CA 90067


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