Friday, 9 February 2018

Mailbag

From: Hilary Rosen

Re: Resnikoff/DigitalMusicNews and Tristan Coopersmith

I don't want to leave Walk's lawyer with the impression that Tristan does not have legal support as Resnikoff's piece implies.
The way the Time's Up Legal Defense Fund works is when support is needed, it is given. At the outset, she needed PR counsel, that is SKDK. If Walk's team is reckless enough to take action against her, she will have all the legal support she needs. Truth is always the best defense in defamation cases.

So you can feel free to print this.

Regards,
Hilary

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Most humiliating story....

I take a meeting with _______________ at _______________ with Grammy Award winning, multi-hit all male veteran act I as working with at the time. I was there as their management rep.. we were there to discuss their next project. I had never met _______________ but had sent him many a demo tape from various bands I worked with trying to break through. He was always cool and responsive and I admired him due to his connection with _______________, one of my favorite bands of all time. I looked forward to finally meeting this titan in person. Unfortunately, it didn't turn out to be so cool. Within 15 minutes of sitting in his office _______________ and the band began to joke about the reasons they all got into the business, to get pussy of course. Then, _______________ ever so slowly turns his head, and staring directly at me, says "and there's NOTHING like fresh pussy." Staring. The band starts to chuckle uncomfortably, he laughs, they all laugh. I sit there trying to laugh it off too. Meanwhile I just want to crawl under a rock because I'm sure my face was beet red as _______________ continued to stare me down. It was a blatant abuse of his power, meant to assert his position and diminish mine to a mere sexualized being. Keep in mind also that I am at least 10 years younger than the youngest guy in the room. Needless to say, it was hard to conduct a businesslike meeting after that and feel like you're being taken seriously. This is the kind of shit women deal with daily that men never do. I'd bet my last buck none of the band, all of whom I love dearly, even remembers that incident. For them, par for the course, no big deal. Me? I never forgot it.

Please withhold my name...

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Thank you will all my heart.
I was a professor at an Ivy League Uni.
In two separate cases men, with whom I'd worked for years, abruptly assaulted me; shoving tongues down my throat and trying to undress me.
More than anything else I felt insulted that either would think 1. I would be unfaithful to my husband; 2. Go for such a creep (each in his own way)... moi? 3. Be that unprofessional... at work? I was silent.
In one case, the man's wife was on my staff; in the other, I knew the man's wife. It took years for it for me to get it: I ceased to be a person. I was just a skirt/ a hole, something to grab when others were not around.
This goes on in academia... and it goes on in factories and convenience stores where women who have a couple of kids to feed can't afford a lawyer or to lose their jobs. With all the degrees I'd worked so hard to obtain-- born in another country-- all of a sudden I was third-world and disposable. And they knew their mark: they knew I would not have told their wives, something I truly regret. I hurt these women by not telling them with whom they were married. Thanks for your work.

Elisabetta di Cagno

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There is a huge area that also impacts women that is not being touched upon at well. That is the psychological, emotional distress and overall lowering of self-worth that women experience all the time in and out of this industry that has to do with how men speak to women, discredit their views, dismissive attitudes and of course the biggest offense no equal pay. This impacts women on so many levels that in the end it creates a different kind of abuse. Emotional, psychic and feeling of low self-esteem.

We haven't even scratched the surface around how men talk about women, how they speak to women and disregard women. I can give you plenty of examples. It impacts executives down to assistants, as well as day to day dealings in life in general with men.

Leyla Turkkan

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I have a story not related to sexual harassment but to emotional abuse and humiliation in my workplace. Since I was young I wanted to work in music and I graduated college with 5 internships under my belt. It took me a while to find a job but I landed a Coordinator role at a label in NYC. My direct boss spent the first three months publically joking about firing me. When I would ask for feedback, he told me I needed to learn to take a joke and that I was doing just fine. As I learned to ignore his comments they got worst. I showed up in the morning to threatening notes from him, but with the CEOs name on it instead. He loved to humiliate me in front of my coworkers and his contacts. A highlight was when he called me useless. At that point, I definitely felt worthless. I was put on projects purposely set up to fail and when I pointed out the flaws, I just got humiliated again. I went to HR on three different occasions to ask for help or clarity. There was nothing they could do, apparently. My last attempt ended with me writing a written note explaining in detail the words and actions said by my boss. Just statements, not accusations. The next day I was fired with a very generous severance package. I am the third person let go after making a complaint against this person. They broke my spirit, made each workday hell and made my job harder than it needed to be. Why? Laughs. Human Resources did a great job at protect their employees, but when it came to me, my boss was more important. I'm left with no job and no explanations.

Please keep me anonymous, but know there are so many like me.

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A clever and persecuted Irish man once wrote: "Everything in the world is about sex except sex. Sex is about power". Never a truer word has been said.

I got my start in the music industry in the late 80's during the heady days of the "Madchester" music scene in the UK, it was the closest we Gen-Xers ever got to the Summer of Love of the previous generation and great music and good times were in abundance.

At 19 I was working songs to radio and clubs and dragging around bags of white labels to independent record stores and radio stations around the country. Working records for a variety of labels such as New Order's manager, Rob Gretton's Robs Records (he was a lovely guy) and Pete Waterman Entertainment (never met him). By the age of 20 I was very used to ducking, diving, avoiding groping hands, unwelcome invitations and attention from guys in and around the industry. The same way I had when I was 15 and 16 working at summer jobs, nothing had really changed. By the time I arrived at Polygram Records in 1995 in New York I was a tough, street-smart chick who had come to accept that sexual harassment was just part of the working world; we women put up with it, kept our mouth shut and kept going.

The music industry back then was basically a continuation of high school, there was some seriously juvenile behavior but a lot of great times, wonderful people and the occasional hit record. Work life blended seamlessly into social life, it was all consuming.

My boss at the time was the wonderful and fatherly Peter Koepke whose boss was the stellar Roger Ames. Along with Johnny Barbis, who we worked closely with, I feel very lucky to have had these men leading the charge with love and respect for the teams under them. But there was plenty of bad behavior elsewhere (not by them) and too many instances to name.

Assistants not surprisingly were the most vulnerable, there was one exec that I recall who was repeatedly trying to get his 23 year old assistant to have a threesome with he and his wife, (his wife was in on it too), another exec who would get drunk and leave notes on his assistants desk threatening to kill them, and plenty of grabby producers, artists and managers, I even had one female executive call me to her office, push me up against the wall and try and kiss me so it wasn't just the guys.

All of this was seemingly par for the course but there were definitely more sinister instances. One time a well know artist whom I didn't actually know, literally came up to me outside a restaurant where I was standing with my friends and grabbed me in between the legs (no, grabbing by the pussy it isn't just locker room talk). He stood there laughing with his friends, it was humiliating and degrading. Another incident which I consider myself lucky to have made an escape from involved a well know music exec (who has recently been ousted by many women). He pounced on me in the hallway of a building and tried to pull my jeans off with such force that he ripped the button off the denim. I managed to get the hell out of there but it definitely rattled me and I had to see him from time to time in the lobby of our offices.

These days I am an old fart working in the tech industry, an industry that is currently going through it's own reckoning with sexual harassment cases. Companies need to do better, better than the b.s yearly sexual harassment training that basically just covers their asses and checks a box. They need to get out ahead, lead, stick a stake in the ground and let their workers know that there is a zero-tolerance policy for harassment and discrimination and more importantly let them know how to report it, who to go to and what they can expect once a complaint is made. Lay it out, make it transparent, remove the fear.

Millenials get a lot of flak but they have a strong sense of justice and expect a certain level of fairness and respect, I am hopeful that we as managers can help empower this next generation of the workforce to simply do better.

Stay safe out there...

Karen Hampson

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Bob:

On November 9th everyone who works at High Road received the email from Kari Godsill that you published.

In the 17 years that High Road has existed, we had never experienced anything like this.

While Ms. Godsill is not an employee or client of High Road, and is in no way affiliated with High Road, we took these allegations very seriously. High Road takes all allegations of misconduct seriously.

We swiftly engaged help and began our own third party investigation. This is a singular incident that happened 15 years ago and there is not much information out there. That said, we continue to pursue the facts.

I have known Matt for 25 years now. I have never seen him demonstrate any behavior that would indicate anything consistent with these accusations.

We do understand that there is a lot of inequality in the workplace, in the world. We know and understand that there are abusive people who take advantage of their power, and use people for their own ends. That's something that cannot be denied. We have empathy and take great concern for situations of this nature.

High Road's reputation has been built on fair dealing, trust and integrity and we are firmly dedicated to a safer world free of any inequality and harassment. We do not take for granted our role in this music community and we all serve with utmost respect, truth and compassion.

We will continue to be forthright and honest. We will do our very best.

Frank Riley
High Road Touring
Sausalito, CA

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_____________________________________


Flom is the man. Only person I ever met in the biz that I respected so much that he made me nervous.

When you told people your band was signed by Jason it carried enormous weght. People were compelled to listen to the single and check out your show just because he signed it. True music legend. And his old acts would show up and support you if you were in their town. It was like being in a select brotherhood.

Landon Hendricks

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Having been at Jason's side for over 25 years now, I will just say that the accolades you rightly bestowed on him are both far more than he would want to hear and far less than he deserves. Rarely have such great heart, ears, and soul ever been combined in one human.

He is also occasionally funny.

P.S. Would just add, as Jason would, that his great eye for talent and natural skill at building teams played a huge role...Kevin Weaver, Lee Trink, Geli Cobb, Dom Pandiscia, Andy Karp...the list goes on.

Be well,

Jeff Kempler

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The first band I ever signed as a manager, was a band called Hericane Alice, on Atlantic Records. Jason was head of A&R for Atlantic Records, when I first was introduced to him, through Doug Morris (then president of Atlantic). Doug told me, I needed to talk to Jason because he was the rock guy at the label. Jason had just signed Twisted Sister, Skid Row and White Lion, and was on a roll. The funny thing about this story is that, Dorothy Carvello (A&R), who worked for Jason at the time, was also looking at the band as well. A friend of Dorothy's, Victoria Seeger, who was Keith Olson's assistant, had taken the band to Dorothy as well. Hence, slight turmoil out of the gate!

So, Jason and Dorothy flew to Minneapolis in the dead of winter in a snow storm They met me and the band, at a local sold out club the band was playing that night. The band was great, and that night and Jason said, let's do this. Jason told the band after the show, they were going to be on Atlantic records. We were ecstatic to say the least. Problem was, Victoria felt she should get a piece of the band because she brought them to Dorothy at the same time I brought them to Doug. Lucky for me, I happened to be co-managing Stevie Nicks with HK, and was partners with him on anything I signed. So, Jason saw the benefit of me being the manger with HK of course…. and Jason being the mensch that he is… told Dorothy, that I should be the manger and asked me to give Victoria a point on the record and make everyone happy.

Thank you, Jason, for having my back!! You rock buddy!!

Glen Parrish

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Great stories and interview from a great guy and great music.
Man. Another person who graduated from the Atlantic Berkeley School of the record biz.

Jerry Greenberg

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He's also a genuinely nice guy. I taught his daughter in early childhood on the upper west side, wow, 20 years ago! Years later I read about him and his peanut allergy in the New Yorker. It's good to see that Jason is still going well.

Rachel Loonin

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JFlo and I became friends a few years back and I was blown away by the man I was getting to know versus the man I heard tale about- he was brash and insensitive and had an ego- that's what I heard. What I found was he was to the point, brutally honest and has an ego for good fucking reason!!! While most A&R are stumbling in the dark, he has a hand on the light switch!

He was my first rejection letter a hundred years ago and then last year I played him an artist I was writing and producing and, even though he was staying at my house, he didn't bullshit. It was "good stuff, doesn't have 'it'" and we moved on. You have to love that directness.

Now this guy has me being a part in the Innocence Project. He has me saving rhino's and I'm better for it.

He's the right kind of asshole, that Flom.

Love love him!

Don Miggs

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Thank you for your incredible and well deserved tribute to Jason Flom and for forwarding the podcast to your subscribers.

In the context of your praise: I had been helping a colleague in Virginia through several painful, though thus far unsuccessful, years in seeking legal relief for a boy who was 15 when he was conscripted by two older boys to accompany them in committing a $60 robbery. No one was hurt but the two older adults plead out and each were sentenced to 14 years in prison (One is out a few years early and the other will be soon.)

The minor, Travion Blount, took a chance and went to trial against my friend's advice. This was Virginia after all. Sadly, he was convicted at trial and sentenced to SIX life terms plus 118 years! True.

The years-long efforts to reduce the sentence through appellate courts, both state and Federal, is a long and very disturbing and troublesome tale.

One day not many months ago, I secured Jason's help as part of The Innocence Project to make a case for a pardon for Travion. Jason immediately made an earnest and eventually convincing effort directly with Virginia's governor to seek a pardon for Travion, who by then had been incarcerated with no real hope of being freed until, that is, he could apply for geriatric release at 65. He is still only 25. Three weeks ago, on the final day of his term, in the final hour in fact, Governor Terry McAuliffe pardoned Travion and two other (almost) similarly deserving clients of my colleague (who incidentally was a hard working musician/composer until he became a lawyer quite late in life.).

There is nothing more noble than to save the life of another and to give him a meaningful chance at a productive life. Who does this? Who has time? Who has the drive to put other important matters aside to serve the needs of a poor inmate with no chance for a life in freedom? Who dedicates himself to the cause of strangers in return for nothing for himself? Who is so unselfish that he would move mountains for a tragic and impossible case such as that of Travion?

You said it. There is no one in our world like Jason. Talk about knowing how to close! If you are reading this, we are very lucky and proud to know you Jason. I know you will keep up the great work you do for others in all of the areas of your philanthropy even as you, not incidentally, continue to bring great music into our lives.

Peter Thall

P.S. Further to my last e-mail, I heard from John Coggeshall, the musician/composer turned defense lawyer who carried this case through multiple years of appeals. John tells me that

"You can't say Jason Flom is imperfect down heah (yes, heah) in the South. That dude walks on water. He has even acquired a nickname: 'The Closer'. No one in modern United States history has ever been responsible for 50% of an outgoing Governor's pardons (3 of 6 altogether). Beyond belief. It's true that I gave Jason seven innings of quality work, but now you know why he's called 'The Closer."

PS While he was juggling these three, he also convinced the governor to commute an inmate's death sentence to life imprisonment. That was between puffs on his cigar.

Keep giving credit to those to whom credit is due.

Peter Thall

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I was lucky enough to have met Q a few years back. He was gracious, kind, and so sweet. He held my hand as I spoke about my appreciation for his incredible contribution to the musical landscape we see today. I was holding the mans hand and I felt like a little kid holding his fathers hand. He has that affect on people. I felt like he was my grandfather or something. I can't explain it. Just that he took me from being incredibly nervous to speak to one of the most important people in the history of music, to being so comfortable and relaxed. He listened to what I had to say, and smiled. He appreciated my endless compliments, and didn't shrug me off, regardless of the fact that he has been hearing the same compliments from countless strangers for most of his life. He made me feel like I was the first person to thank him for the countless music gifts he gave us over the years. Even if the only record he gave us was Thriller, it would still make him a legend, but he did so much more than that. He is a living legend. The GOAT.

Amir Epstein LLB

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Thanks for this! First saw Jones in 1955, when he was an 18-year-old trumpet player in Lionel Hampton's band, the first American big band jazz group to tour Britain after the war. Years later I accidentally met him at the bar in the Carlton Hotel in Cannes during MIDEM - and he recalled his days with Hampton with perfect clarity; it was the first time he had traveled to Europe. I'm glad he still gives a shit!

Richard Flohil

PS: He also produced the first English-language album by the Greek singer Nana Mouskouri - and it's terrific!

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I was blessed two years ago to have a run in with Quincy at a charity event. I was there supporting an artist I was working with who was performing that night to a VIP crowd. New artist, so he was a bit nervous considering who was going to be in the crowd. We got there early, so did Quincy. The artist was already backstage doing "artist" things.. not sure what that is...anyway, I saw Quincy from across the room and thought F it.. I'm gonna go over there and talk to him. We have a common friend who mentored me as a producer and this friend won a grammy with Quincy. He worked on the Back On The Block record with Q. My ice breaker. When I said his name Quincy didn't miss a beat.. he said, "How the fuck is he?" Smiled and continued.. "Is he still living up in Canada and married to that hot Canadian girl?" I told him yes to Canada and no to the marriage and that Ian had mentored me.. Quincy says.. "You must be a talented mother fucker then." I laughed and we continued to have an in depth conversation about the state of music... SORT OF LIKE THE ARTICLE. We talked for a good 45 minutes. I'm Canadian, and sooo stereo typically polite, so I kept looking at his handler to make sure I wasn't overstaying my welcome and she gave me the look that Quincy was enjoying himself. His views were very consistent with the article. I was in heaven listening to his brutally honest critique of the music biz.. wait, he said there was NO business. He told me all the money is in China!! He was intelligent, warm, and truly with me in the moment. That's hard to find in this industry. EVERYONE has an ulterior motive.. I have been out of L.A. for 6 years now, looking after my aging parents in Florida so I can spot the LA bullshit a mile away... He was fucking cool. I guess I got to my "no filter life" early... we sat there and tore a new asshole into a bunch of the new artists out there.. one after another... hack, wannabe, okay, to at least she's hot... Then it came time for him to hear this artist I produced and wrote the songs with. I was nervous now. Quincy was about to hear my shit in front of me... I died.
The music starts and Quincy starts in on me.. "Is that your arrangement?" "Did you write this?" I said yes, the artist and I did all of this stuff together. Quincy loved the music and I could of died on the spot. Now, I'm not telling you this to boost my ego.. there's a pay off. So, the set ends and Quincy says, bring the kid (artist) over here. I bring him over and Quincy says... "You know your a bad ass motherfucker?" The artist says "I try" in a truly humble tone.. Quincy looked annoyed and said, say it... say your a bad ass motherfucker! He tried half heartedly and Q made him say it till he meant it... It was an awesome moment. He saw real talent, recognized it and built a young kids self confidence up.. pretty cool.. We exchanged info and I only tried once to get a hold of him when I was in L.A. producing a record. It's probably best that I never see him again.. It's like a super amazing one night stand that swirls around your head for the rest of your life and you compare every other experience to it... WHAT A GUY.. thought I'd share... Sorry for being so long winded! (Canadian Politeness) I LOVE what you write Bob... keep it up!

Jason Pennock

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Met him last year in LA. In a room with Diane Warren Desmond Child and a Who's Who of music people. And a real crew. Some club next to Diane's building which she earned. Everyone swarming for pictures to tweet twit twat and Facebook and I got the serious intro from a real player. He asked about my name and I said I m half Greek and half Armenian....and he proceeded for 5 minutes to talk about the Greek isles and his time there.No music no questions about music Just his experiences in the Greek Isles. .Meanwhile I m being the ass that wants the picture and I said no to myself. The picture is forever in my brain and it was so cool. I didn't want to be that guy BUT 7-8 minutes with Quincy ...I can cross that off my Bucket List.

Chris Apostle

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Re: Recorded Versus Live

I toured a fair amount around the US, some in Canada, some in Europe, 300+ shows a year, never anything big, but big enough to live it. What I gathered from that, which I do my best to impress upon the young, hungry musicians I'm around these days(I do booking and sound engineering in a small town in East Texas and help push for growth in our music scene) is that merchandise at a show, albums included, are souvenirs. The purpose they serve is to be a reminder of the experience you gave them.
The first concern, before recording, before image, before anything else, is putting on a fucking killer live show. Shed. Become too good to ignore.
Do that, and people will help you with the rest because you converted them to believers. They'll want others to share what they've seen. It's akin to a religious experience when done right. I've seen it and been a part of it on both sides.

Thanks for writing,

Douglas Jay Boyd

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From: Kevin Spencer
Subject: Re: How To Make A Hit Record

Hi Bob! Some of your letters are good, some are great, some don't hit and some explode my heart.

This one is great. I appreciate your honesty about the people and the situations. Tony may not fully appreciate your honesty for holding court with his own rep and ego... but that's another story.

I just wanted to say that I don't normally go to things like NAMM. However, this year my touring was off this week, so I went. I came home feeling strangely much better about our industry knowing that there are so many passionate people out there about making great recordings, whether they are heard or not, they are all a stepping stone towards the one that might get heard.

My fave part about NAMM was not meeting Lee Sklar or Tony Levin... two of my bass heroes, but rather walking along and seeing some guy sitting at the Apogee booth and no one is talking to him. Everyone is busy hustling their conversations and this man is sitting all alone. 'is that Bob Clearmountain!?' It was. We spoke and he said... sit down. 'What do you do in music?' 'Do you record?' 'What do you want to know Kevin?' 'How can I help' A complete open book... so we started at Exile on Main Street and we talked for 60 minutes plus. No one bothered him... just the two of us chatting. Blew my mind. We too spoke about Avalon. I swear I could build a house and mow a lawn inside his mixes there's so much space!

Side note: Not sure if you remember but a few years ago I spoke up about the sham that is reality TV competitions, namely Rockstar INXS. You asked if you could quote me and I stupidly didn't ask the right question, 'What part do you want to quote?' So you published the email in it's entirety. The funny/Not funny part... the producer of that show was pissed. To the tune that... well, in an old school approach, sent some men to my doorstep. I learned my lesson.

Thanks for being you and not stopping.

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Subject: Re: How To Make A Hit Record

In your decidedly fan-boy fawning over my friend Tony Brown, you gave short shrift and missed an opportunity to acknowledge a 'legendary" great. "Elvis's piano player who moved on" was my friend Glen D Hardin, one of the most talented, personable and funny(!) musicians who ever set his hands on a piano keyboard. His list of credits is long and deep. He (and James Burton) played with Elvis, Emmylou Harris (he was the center of her original "Hot Band") and John Denver. Prior to that he was in a later version of The Crickets.

Back in the sixties he wrote "Count Me In", "Where Will The Words Come From" and "My Heart's Symphony" -all recorded by Gary Lewis & The Playboys"

He too lives in Nashville. Last month I saw and heard him back Emmylou's performance celebrating Brian Ahern's induction into the Musicians' Hall of Fame.

Credit (and names) where credit and names are due.

Bob Hunka

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From: Peter Asher
Subject: Re: Peter Asher-This Week's Podcast

Thanks so much for forwarding the responses. Your skilled questioning and broad knowledge made it effortless and I really enjoyed myself. And it seems to have gone down well.

This is in no sense a criticism (what you wrote below is wonderful), but I confess i am glad that someone pointed out that my sister Jane is of course so much more than just someone who was Paul's girlfriend a very long time ago. Both then and now a very successful actress, entrepreneur, writer and philanthropist - not to mention being married for decades (and still) to the brilliant Gerald Scarfe (political cartoonist for the London Sunday Times et al and creator of all the animation for Pink Floyd's "The Wall" and more.)

And my daughter Victoria is continuing in the family (show) business as well it seems having been in the successful band Cobra Starship for many years until their recent breakup and now making remarkable music on her own and cowriting all over the place etc.

And you are right - I have no thoughts of stopping. Just finishing the upcoming Elton/Bernie tribute album and got to work in the studio with my friend Ed Sheeran (on one track) and with the amazing Alessia Cara (coproducing with Oak, who is brlliant!) on another. Both unbelievably talented artists and I am as excited about them as I was about James and Linda back in the day. I love it. Having the time of my life and shall not stop till I am deaf or dead (or out of workl)

Anyway I cannot thank you enough and the reaction has been thoroughly delightful.

Peter


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Thursday, 8 February 2018

Re-Charlie Walk Demand Letter

VIA E-MAIL AND FIRST CLASS MAIL

Thomas A. Clare, Esq.
Clare Locke LLP
10 Prince Street
Alexandria, VA 22314

Re: Bob Lefsetz / Charlie Walk

Dear Mr. Clare:

We are legal counsel to Bob Lefsetz and are responding to your surprising letter of February 6, 2018, which was clearly designed to threaten, intimidate, and stifle Mr. Lefsetz's rights and obligations to continue distributing his industry newsletter. Your letter also demonstrates little understanding of or appreciation for the First Amendment.

Put simply, Mr. Lefsetz will not succumb to the threats of litigation intended to chill his rights to distribute his column.

Mr. Lefsetz has a long and well-respected history of commenting on the entertainment business, among other topics, and operating as a clearing house for any third party comments directed to him. It is not Mr. Lefsetz's practice to investigate the truth or veracity of third party comments, nor does he purport to do so. "Harte-Hanks Communications, Inc. v. Connaughton," 491 U.S. 657, 688 (1989)("failure to investigate before publishing, even when a reasonably prudent person would have done so, is not sufficient to establish reckless disregard"); "Khawar v. Globe Intern., Inc.," 19 Cal. 4th 254, 275-76 (1998)("(w)hen ... a finding of actual malice is based on the republication of a third party's defamatory falsehoods, 'failure to investigate before publishing, even when a reasonably prudent person would have done so, is not sufficient'")(citing "Harte-Hanks," 491 U.S. at 688).

To the extent interested parties object to third party posts, Mr. Lefsetz's practice is to post those responses. "The marketplace of ideas, not the tort system, is the means by which our society evaluates those opinions." "Grillo v. Smith," 144 Cal.App.3d 868, 872 (1983)(citing "Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc.," 418 U.S., 323, 339-040 (1974)). Accordingly, Mr. Lefsetz will be posting your letter as an expression of your objection to other posts.

The First Amendment and the cases interpreting same have consistently held that journalist's expressions of opinion are not only protected, but are encouraged. "Opinions that present only an individual's personal conclusions and do not imply a provably false assertion of fact are nonactionable; indeed, such opinions are the lifeblood of public discussion promoted by the First Amendment, under which speakers remain free to offer competing opinions based upon their independent evaluations of the facts." "Paterno v. Superior Court," 163 Cal.App.4th 1342, 1356 (2008)(citing cases). It is certainly true that Mr. Lefsetz does not shy away from giving his opinions, which is probably why his newsletter is the most read publication in the entertainment business.

Notably, you have not identified any purported statement of fact regarding Mr. Walk that you contend is provably false and should be corrected. In fact, Mr. Lefsetz's piece was essentially a series of questions. Maybe your client answered them and didn't like the answers. But that's not defamation - that's a guilty conscience. The most salient question Mr. Lefsetz posed was "Does Charlie Walk get bounced from (the) television singing show 'The Four'? One would think definitely, right?" Well, yes.

Frankly, there was no intent to harm Mr. Walk. He seems very capable of doing that on his own. Mr. Lefsetz was merely going about his business. However, Mr. Lefsetz accepts no obligation to censor third party postings or his own opinions, including his opinion that, under the circumstances, Mr. Walk should resign (which opinion, as noted, does not even appear in the post.) (Hyperlinking to a third party post is not actionable republication even assuming it contains any defamatory material. "A mere reference does not directly publish the defamatory material to a new audience. Instead, it tells the new audience where the defamatory material can be found. A URL is not qualitatively different. It tells the reader the address where she can find the material on the Web." "U.S. ex rel. Klein v. Omeros Corp.," 897 F.Supp.2d 1058, 1074 (W.D. Wash. 2012). Should you identify any statement of material fact that was attributed to Mr. Lefsetz and which you contend arises to the level of libel, your remedy is to identify that statement and demand a correction. Cal. Civ. Code § 48(a). We're waiting.

Speaking of opinions, you're certainly entitled to propound your convoluted theory about Tom Gilligan's drunk texting leading to Ms. Coopersmith's post. After all, there are people who believe that Hillary Clinton was running a child sex ring out of a DC pizzeria (not smart people, but people). And Mr. Lefsetz will publish Mr. Gilligan's e-mail to him in his letters post, as he customarily does no matter how crackpot the theory.

Since your letter clearly contemplates litigation where the truth of Ms. Coopersmith's statements about Mr. Walk are the core issue, your demand that Mr. Lefsetz preserve all records applies equally to Mr. Walk. Please make sure that Mr. Walk preserves all of his records and communications, including emails, text messages, and digital records, relating to Ms. Coopersmith, including relating to his relationship, sexual or otherwise, with her, the events and his conduct alleged in her post, and Mr. Walk's contention that there are "material inconsistencies" in her account. Mr. Walk similarly should preserve any records of any communications with any other women who worked with or for him that are of a sexual nature or that in any way relate to sexual relations between Mr. Walk and those women, and any other claims made against Mr. Walk relating to sexual harassment or impropriety in the workplace.

Nothing contained herein shall be deemed an admission of any fact or a waiver of any rights.

Very truly yours,



Howard E. King
of King, Holmes, Paterno & Soriano, LLP


and


Peter T. Paterno
of King, Holmes, Paterno & Soriano, LLP


HEK:dw

cc: Bob Lefsetz

_______________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________

Re: Charlie Walk/Tom Gilligan

Hi Bob,

I'm Tom Gilligan the guy being falsely accused of "extortion" against Charlie Walk which is 100% BS. The accusations against me are a ploy/deflection by his defense team to take the focus off Charlie's alleged sexual misconduct. There is no conspiracy that I know of against Walk. I am not and have no intention of extorting or creating problems for Charlie. When I made the phone call and wrote the texts, which I don't remember doing, I was struggling with the anniversary of my mother's death and had been drinking. This has nothing to do with Jon BonJovi. My voicemail was simply a guy drunk dialing and rambling as I'm sure you've heard. I'm embarrassed and ashamed. I apologize for the distraction to the women and supporters of #metoo which I totally support. I have no association with #metoo, do not know and have never met the woman who wrote the open letter accusing Charlie of sexual harassment and have no problem with Charlie other than he's always been a smug asshole who in my opinion always treated everyone like dirt (unless he wanted something from you…)

A mutual friend suggested that I reach out to you so that you know how to contact me.

Regards,
Tom Gilligan

_______________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________

CLARE LOCKE LLP

10 Prince Street
Alexandria, Virginia 22314

(202) 628-7400

www.clarelocke.com

THOMAS A. CLARE, P.C.
tom@clarelocke.com
(202) 628-7401

February 6, 2018

VIA PRIORITY MAIL

Robert "Bob" Lefsetz

Re: Blog Post Concerning Charlie Walk

Dear Mr. Lefsetz:

I write on behalf of my client, Charlie Walk.

On January 28, 2018, you published a blog post on "The Lefsetz Letter" and sent a mass email regarding Mr. Walk entitled "The Charlie Walk Letter." (The post is still available at http://lefsetz.com/wordpress/2018/01/29/the-charlie-walk-letter/) The blog post included a link to an "Open Letter to Charlie Walk" published by Tristan Coopersmith on a commercial website that promotes her business.

Your blog post also surprisingly contained specific content authored by you that plainly sought to affirm the truth and validity of Ms. Coopersmith's claims, which are false. You expressly asserted that you think Mr. Walk should be fired from his job and more. Additionally, you solicited and sent to your subscribers worldwide additional uncorroborated, and false, claims about Mr. Walk that were republished widely in the media - including in publications such as "Variety."

These published statements are demonstrably false and were published with a reckless disregard for the truth. It was especially reckless that, contrary to well-established journalistic standards and basic considerations of fairness, you did not even bother to contact Mr. Walk before publishing these false and damaging allegations and validating them with your own imprimatur. If you had bothered to contact Mr. Walk for comment prior to publication of your blog post, he would have provided you with important facts and information material to any responsible decision-making about the wisdom and consequences of publishing and validating Ms. Coopersmith's false and unsubstantiated claims.

First, with respect to Ms. Coopersmith's allegations of misconduct by Mr. Walk, he absolutely denies that any of those incidents ever took place, and would have said so if you bothered to contact him. Mr. Walk would also have told you that he and his wife never had dinner with Ms. Coopersmith, so her claim that he groped Ms. Coopersmith on "multiple occasions" during dinners at which Mrs. Walk was present is provably false. Moreover, Mr. Walk would have alerted you to material inconsistencies in the accounts that Ms. Coopersmith has told in leveling these false allegations.

Second, As "The New York Post" reported yesterday (https://pagesix.com/2018/02/05/charlie-walk-claims-he-was-being-extorted-before-allegations/), Mr. Walk has been the target of a several-months-long unlawful extortion scheme perpetrated by an individual named Tom Gilligan who has sent dozens of menacing text messages and voicemails to Mr. Walk threatening to weaponize the #MeToo movement to make sexual harassment claims about Mr. Walk - and threatening to use these allegations to cause Mr. Walk to lose his job at UMG and his position on "The Four" - if Mr. Walk did not accede to his bizarre demands. The scheme involved increasingly erratic text messages and voicemails accusing Mr. Walk of somehow affecting Gilligan's relationship with Jon Bon Jovi. Mr. Walk promptly reported this bizarre and unlawful extortion scheme to the New York City District Attorney's Office. Ms. Coopersmith published false allegations against Mr. Walk immediately after this failed extortion attempt. Mr. Walk has updated his report to the New York District Attorney's Office to include Ms. Coopersmith's suspiciously time "Open Letter" and requested that law enforcement explore the connection between this failed extortion attempt, Mr. Gilligan and Ms. Coopersmith's allegations.

You would have known all this if you had simply contacted Mr. Walk and allowed him the chance not only to deny the false allegations, but also to provide you with this critical additional context about what has been occurring. Surely your readers would have been glad to know what has really been taking place, including a criminal report to the authorities.

I am sure you understand the seriousness of these issues. In order to mitigate the substantial harm that you have already caused to his reputation, Mr. Walk demands that you immediately retract and remove all posts referring or relating to these allegations against Mr. Walk, including without limitation your blog post entitled "The Charlie Walk Letter," all references to Ms. Coopersmith's "Open Letter," and all comments and submissions posted in response to these posts. Failure to take these remedial steps will be viewed by Mr. Walk as additional evidence of actual malice and an intent to harm Mr. Walk.

Until these issues are resolved, we require that you retain - and direct all of your agents, contractors, and vendors to retain - all documents, communications, and electronically-stored information regarding the posts and submissions referenced in this letter. For avoidance of doubt, this requirement includes, without limitation, emails, text messages, chat transcripts, social media direct messages, social media post, and internet browser histories - and includes all communications with or relating to Ms. Coopersmith, all communications with or relating to Ms. Coopersmith's publicists (at BLND Public Relations or otherwise), all unpublished drafts of your posts referencing Mr. Walk, all research undertaken prior to publishing posts referencing Mr. Walk, and all submissions and comments regarding Mr. Walk submitted by your readers that you elected, for whatever reason, not to publish.

This letter is sent without waiver of or prejudice to Mr. Walk's rights, claims and remedies, at law and in equity, all of which are expressly reserved. Please contact me if the requirements set forth in this letter are in any way unclear.

Very truly yours,

Thomas A. Clare, P.C.


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Wednesday, 7 February 2018

The Quincy Jones Interview

http://www.vulture.com/2018/02/quincy-jones-in-conversation.html

I don't give a fuck.

That's what musicians used to say, they gave the man the middle finger, their fans kept them alive, and if they struggled they had the wine, the women, the dope and the song.

Q argues there's no song anymore.

This is a train-wreck you can't take your eyes off of. Want to know what it was like reading "Rolling Stone" in the sixties and seventies? Read this. Pure, unadulterated honesty, leavened with a bit of craziness. We wanted to get closer to the artists, we needed to get closer to the artists, we'd put on headphones, sidle up to the speakers, because they were God.

There once was a note pure and easy...

That's what Pete Townshend wrote, and that's why he's still remembered. History remembers artists first and then politicians, businessmen fade away, don't you ever forget it. But in our monied culture artistry takes a backseat and everybody wants the bread and music has suffered for it.

But you can't say that.

But Q just did!

The funny thing about Quincy Jones is he has no airs. If you can get close to him, he'll talk to anybody. And he knows EVERYBODY! Take that you redneck crackers living in the hinterlands. You're jealous, because life is about access, we're a country of people, and knowing others is what it's all about. If you're satisfied with friends and family, so be it. But the reason TMZ and the "Housewives" series exist, never mind the Kardashians, is because we want more.

Q has been there.

So you get old enough and you know the jig is up. That life is a farce. A construct with inane rules. My dad told my friend Ronnie that when he turned fifty he started to live for himself, he stopped worrying about what other people thought, he ceased giving a fuck.

It's the way of the world... AND IT'S SO FREEING!

So much b.s. I have no time for, so much fighting for attention that's not worth it. I mean arts coverage is the worst, all the hype. If the film's any good I'll find out when it's released, I don't need to read the actor drone on about how it's the best flick he's ever done and his personal life.

Furthermore, actors are vessels.

Musicians are truth.

That's why hip-hop triumphs, eviscerates other forms, there's more truth and honesty there. Whether it be the actual words spoken or the emotion behind it, which is oftentimes I've been screwed my whole life and now I've got the mic and I'm not gonna let it go!

We also admire those who triumph against the odds. Only nitwits believe racism is eviscerated. Hell, if you were in an elevator and didn't know who Q was you'd probably keep your distance. Imagine being black 24/7, that's the game we're playing here.

So Quincy is gonna be 85. And somehow, he decided to stop worrying what others thought, he decided to tell his truth.

And it's all laid out in this interview.

It's a breath of fresh air in this duplicitous nation. Where the true string-pullers stay quiet and the bloviators obfuscate. We depend upon artists for truth, but we've got too little of that.

Can you lay it on the line? Can you tell us how you feel? Can you reach down deep and puke it all up without giving a fuck?

That's what we're looking for.

That's what's been done here.

And no matter if you're black or white, young or old, catch the references or not, you'll be riveted by this interview, you'll forward it to your friends, unlike the cotton candy movies you'll continue to think about it, it will challenge your preconceptions.

That's the power of art.

That's the power of the individual.

That's the power of Quincy Jones.


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Tuesday, 6 February 2018

More Sexual Harassment/No One Is Lisetning To These Women

Very fine and compassionate thoughts, Bob, and wonderfully written, too. I'm reminded of many women I've known in the Arts and Music and the unfair difficulties they've faced in spite of their very important contributions. I especially think of someone very close to me. Tina Weymouth was repeatedly demeaned, humiliated and marginalized by the same person she faithfully made look good night after night, record after record. It was not easy for her but she remained loyal to the band in spite of everything. Sadly, he did not.

Keep up the good work.

Chris Frantz

_____________________________________

Thanks for sharing these stories Bob. As a woman I've seen my share and have kept quiet. It was a price to pay to play in a man's world. It can be life altering to speak up and in most cases it's not for the best. I stood my ground and didn't let it happen to me but having to deal with it to keep climbing, to pretend it didn't bother me so that I could hang with the big boys was not in our culture's best interest. Thank you for being the channel to let these people be heard. Just knowing someone is listening or cares can make the biggest difference in helping to heal.

Jacklyn Agor

_____________________________________

I was a senior executive at 4 different labels and a partner at a major entertainment law firm. In my career I was all too familiar with 1 egregious case
of sexual abuse. But other than that one case I was never aware of any other instance of abuse at any of the places I worked at. Now I am NOT saying other abuses
didn't occur at the companies I was at; nor am I saying that some people in the company were aware but silent of abuses. But I am saying that many executives who honestly
did not know would have not tolerated that behavior had they known. This is not a criticism of victims who felt they couldn't voice at the time; of course I get that. I just wish
more could identify themselves now so they could identify the culprits who deserve to be outed.

David Berman

_____________________________________

Bob, thank you for compiling these letters and putting them out there. We as men need to be the allies that we can be to women. I appreciate your allowing women to share their stories through you.

My wife was raped twice before she was 15 by so called friends of hers. I don't know both of their names but I do know one. _______________ in __________. I can't see actual justice done for her. But maybe I can save some other people from him or potentially cause him some public shame.

Joel Price

_____________________________________

I am a psychologist. As you know now (if you didn't know before), there is a tsunami of stories like these.
I have heard them for almost 4 decades.
I hope you know how VALUABLE it is that you are sharing these stories with your list.
I appreciate you and I'm sure THOUSANDS of other women and men do too.
Thank you.
Dr. Julie Helmrich
Milwaukee, WI

_____________________________________

Your retelling of these stories through your platform is the single most important work that you've ever done. It's everything you're saying that was missing about JT's Super Bowl performance...every artist and influencer has a responsibility to say something with their platform that matters. Entertainment and good feels are not enough.

As a white male in the industry who is devastated and embarrassed by every single story, I'm grateful for what you're doing. We have a responsibility to these women. My gender, specifically white men, are a part of the problem and I'm trying to determine for myself what more I can do as a manager who has male and female clients and a female staff member that I would be lost in this business without. Thank you again for giving each of these women a place to tell their stories so they can be heard.

Josh Lujan Loveless

_____________________________________

This might be the most important work you've done. Keep it up.

JK
John Kendle
Winnipeg, Canada

_____________________________________

Bob, I think that regardless of what the black-and-white truth is in these cases, it's absolutely awesome that you're providing the sounding board for all the affected. Write on!

Yuri Mamchur

_____________________________________

Thank you!

Karla DeVito

_____________________________________

Keep doing what you're doing. I completely agree with and support your efforts.

Thank you.

Kevin Thomas

_____________________________________

THANK YOU FOR SAYING THIS, NO MEN ARE LISTENING!!!!

Scarlett Rabe

_____________________________________

Thank you.

Julie Helmrich

_____________________________________

Good work.

Michael A. Becker

_____________________________________

Thank you.

Rosemary Carroll

_____________________________________

Fantastic post, Bob! Yes, yes, yes!!!!

Sarah Friedrich

_____________________________________

Way to go! Love it

David Stern

_____________________________________

thank you for listening and speaking up.

Colleen Kenny

_____________________________________

Bravo

Lisa Battista

_____________________________________

Wow !
Yay Bob !

Barbara Rounds

_____________________________________

Damn Lefsetz PREACH PREACH PREACH PREACH.

CAPITAL LLC

_____________________________________

Fantastic Bob. You are the Sir Lancelot of the music "industry"!
The "ancient men" pretty much sums it up.
Michael Des Barres

_____________________________________

I think these conversations are righteous, and these bent fuckers need to suffer repercussions...

Young Hutchinson

_____________________________________

Right on, Bob! Thank you from an old white male geezer who agrees with everything you said. "There must be some way out of here" and women are leading us there.

David Hutchison (age 65, gulp)
Roseburg Oregon

_____________________________________

Wow! Holy shit this is good writing! Thank you.
Nicole Paradiso

_____________________________________

Wow. Don't stop writing, Bob. This country, this world, needs to acknowledge, change it up & evolve. We can do so much better for ourselves & those inheriting what we've started.
Thank you- Joel in SF

Joel Messerer

_____________________________________

This moment could be why you were put on earth, Bob. I'm proud of you.

Paula Fraceschi

_____________________________________

YES! Thank you, thank you, thank you for being a decent human being and an amplifier.
Critical messages.

kind regards,
Sarah Beatty

_____________________________________

Thank you for this, Bob. You're a beacon of hope for this new upcoming generation of music execs. Hopefully, this thought leadership has some staying power.

Sincerely,
Grace Chang
Live Nation '07 - '12

_____________________________________

Every man on the planet can take this as an incredible opportunity for healing and self-awareness, as many have done, by looking profoundly inside and confronting and being totally aware of what each of them has done. This can lead first- to forgiving themselves, and then - seeking forgiveness from others.
Thanks,
David Rubinson

_____________________________________

Thank you for writing this. Your observations and a call for cultural change are really important to the women who have endured demoralizing sexism throughout their entire careers as well as to the young women just starting out in the business. The irony is that if a woman had written these exact thoughts, her words would have been quickly dismissed by many readers. She would likely have been perceived as someone that was bitter about a failed career, or a woman that had some sort of agenda we should all be suspicious of.

We need more men to "step it up" if we're going to fix this. Men should be: calling out sexism when they encounter it, even if it means making a man uncomfortable, mentoring young women with no sexual ulterior motives, and listening to what women say in meetings and acknowledging their thoughts publicly.

Fawn Goodman

_____________________________________

Would you forward a "thank you" from me to the woman who wrote about her PR company and how her male contemporaries are on their second homes while she struggles? I really needed to just hear another woman say this to validate my fears today.

This is what #MeToo is about ultimatley- the sexual harassment and assault is the terrifying bi-product of power culture. One larger issue here is that women still cannot pay for a lives as easily as our male counterparts, and it's not just a little struggle, its a major financial difference.

Additionally race plays a role as well. I'm white and am keenly aware that my race makes it even easier for me than my female non-white counterparts. I can only name two non-white female promoters!

Thanks Bob -
Jen Lyon

_____________________________________

Bob, most off my friends are women.
Mostly because most men are complete dickheads. I have been telling my women friends for years of how they are at a distinct disadvantage. The good ole boy mentality is ancient and handed down and women are the only ones who stand a chance of changing this. Men aren't going to do this on their own. When a man goes out into the world he feels in competition with other men. They don't even look at women as competition. For the most part they're not even a consideration. So women not only have to go up against all the men out there but they also have to go up against all the other women as well.
Kudos for making an attempt.

Peppyc

_____________________________________

I wear my #Metoo label with a mixture of pride and self loathing. I have always considered myself to be a bad ass, tough as nails, crazy Scottish Redhead born under the sign of Aries. I was a topless dancer in NYC when I was 16 years old. I partied with the rockstars at Mercer Arts and Max's Kansas City. My friends were all male, I hung with the boys, because I preferred their raucous behavior and sense of humor. I worked in the music industry later on, culminating in 40 some odd years in one capacity or the other. But when I read these stories from women who are survivors too, I'm slammed with shame and guilt that I didn't fight back...that must mean I wanted it, right? I mean, I didn't get punched, or stabbed or shot. It was just a simple forced intercourse in the middle of the night, in the dark. No biggie.

But I was a young, stupid girl back then. So how, years later, as a 50 year old woman, did I wind up in an apartment, fighting off a fairly well known artist's advances? And how did I wind up finally giving up and giving in? And how did I feel that awful shame again? Shame on me! And I still speak to him. In fact, when I was living in LA a few years ago, I ran in to him. He asked me to "come over" to his house that night. I declined, but I found myself making stupid excuses, actually feeling BAD that I was declining! Jesus…how totally fucked up is that? Fortunately, I don't interact with him that often, and no, I haven't told anyone about the attack, except for one friend, who rode my ass about not reporting it, and I wasn't ready then and I'm not ready now…I can't say why..because I really don't know...

But then...there was THIS -

I read a comment in your newsletter from someone I've known since 8th grade. Jack Ponti. Now there's a piece of work. Obnoxious? check. Rude? check, Sexual predator? check. I'm not sure if he's ever actually attacked anyone, but I know he likes to touch, and he certainly has a way with words. He likes to brag about conquests he's never made (as well as music endeavors he was never involved in) all the while putting others down for what he perceives as their shortcomings, or, "lack of success" in the industry.

Awww, hell, I'm just venting...seeing his name in print attempting to be relevant again after trashing others (myself included, after I always had his back growing up) just opened up those rotten cesspools of annoyance.

Unfortunately the damage has been done. Some of these perpetrators are dead, or dying. Most may not even remember the shit they did. And those who do will either deny or throw out the over used "Well, that's how it was back in the day. Everyone did it"....I would ask those same guys, "What would you do if it was your daughter, or granddaughter?"...but that question has been asked...and there really isn't anything that can be said to wash away the stench of all the dirty laundry that keeps getting added to this pile.

Warm regards,
Sher Bach

_____________________________________

Subject: Salacious? No, Insidious.

My second attempt at an email today - the fact is so many women who have had experiences worth sharing here are too busy building our businesses, taking care of our families and defending our essential freedoms (like net neutrality) to write. I'm no different, and I could tell you a salacious story. But I haven't told my mother yet, who deserves to hear it from me first. Since she's well into her 70s now, don't hold your breath.

Instead contemplate the possibility that the powerful truth of what holds women back every day isn't necessarily the gruesome stories you've published over the last 48 hours. It's the many insidious indignities that over time pile up, wear away at you, exhaust you, leaving you feeling like - what's the use? I'm just going to keep putting my shoulder to the wheel here. Until finally you're mad as hell -- someone like Hillary loses to a pussy-grabber like Trump-- and you find yourself yelling, "I'M MAD AS HELL AND I'M NOT GOING TO TAKE IT ANYMORE."

If you're looking for something salacious scroll on, but your stories sparked the memory of the reason I left the music business in the first place. It's a night in a club somewhere in Florida in the late 90s - Orlando, Gainesville, Tampa, Tallahassee - who can remember. My band headlined for kids who had been lined up for hours outside to get into the venue, which was magical. They'd had a drag show in there the night before, and we left all the decorations up. Sparkly silver streamers, blinking lights. At the time, there weren't many bands like ours that made it to towns like those, and any kid that listened to college radio was there. We were passing through the long way home from LA back to Atlanta.

I conducted almost all the business for the band. I negotiated with the local label to fund our first record. I brokered our dream producer into a deal with a major indie - Too Pure, who was backed by American and Warner. Every night I also buttered up the narcissistic sound guys who wanted to explain to me how my amp worked during sound check, and every night I made sure we got paid.

That night in no-name night-club in Florida, we played a beautiful show to a fire-marshal capacity crowd. At the end of the night, like so many nights before - I settled up with the promoter. He tried to explain to me what the take was, but I had done the math. While pretending to sing in rapturous bliss, I was really counting the heads, because I had done these numbers before. At about 3 in the morning, I stood at the bar with him counting cash, and it was short. Way short. I looked down at the paltry sum. I looked up at the back-lit bottles. "Sweetie," he said," let me explain to you how this works. . ." as he placed his hand in the small of my back.

I didn't hear another word he said after that, because I could only hear my inner voice saying to me loud and clear, "you're too fucking smart for this."

I decided to leave the music business that night, and that's been my mantra ever since. I've only ever worked with smarter and smarter men since then - like the first one to whom I told this story (Geoff Cottrill), like the one who founded Sonos (John Macfarlane) and the men who are my colleagues today. Name the names of the good men sisters, as well as the bad. You, Bob Lefsetz, thanks for listening.

The sad thing about this story is the band I left behind. Our friends in the scene went on to great success: Catpower, Prefuse 73, Mastodon. Who will ever know what we could have done if I hadn't gotten so fed up? And that's the ultimate lesson for men and women alike: you depend on the talents of others for your success. No one. No one does it alone. Are you creating a scene where those whom you need the most will be a part of your success? Or are they standing around you thinking to themselves, "I'm too fucking smart for this?"

In solidarity,
Joy Howard
Sonos



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Jason Flom-This Week's Podcast

When Jason got booted by Lyor, I asked Roger Ames whether Flom was done.

Ames said no, that the ability to spot and sign talent was rare, and once you developed it, you never lost it.

Which is why Jason went on to sign Katy Perry at Capitol and Lorde and Greta Van Fleet at the reactivated Lava.

Jason not only signs talent, he markets it. Kid Rock was dead in the water until he took Lewis Largent out on the golf course and got him to listen to "Devil Without A Cause." Then MTV added it, and the album went diamond. That's ten million in sales, for those not conscious before the turn of the century.

Not that everything Jason has signed has broken, but his batting average is stratospheric, he's a Hall of Fame hitter by music industry standards. There was Matchbox Twenty, the Corrs, Trans-Siberian Orchestra, Tori Amos, Simple Plan, even Thirty Seconds To Mars, whom everybody else wanted to drop, but when Jason met with Jared and found out he was turning down acting gigs to break his band, he invested in him.

Now Jason's father was a legendary New York attorney. But his dad came from nothing, and ended up giving money over and over again to Harvard, because its law school gave him a chance. This philanthropic gene was inherited by Jason, he puts his money and his time where his mouth is, most notably with the Innocence Project, which specializes in getting the wrongly accused out of jail. Listen to his podcast, "Wrongful Conviction," for further details: https://apple.co/2nsOcJy

Now unlike so many of the fat cats, Jason doesn't lie. He's never told me an untruth, that's not who he is.

And he also admits what he doesn't know. Which is stunning. You'll bring something up and he'll say he knows nothing about it and he'll ask you to explain it.

I really don't know any other music exec like Jason. Sure, he's an imperfect human being, but we all are.

But he knows how to close, he knows how to strategize, he knows how to break.

This his story from the beginning until now. From playing in a band in high school, from taking a break from college to try and make it, from putting up posters in record stores to ultimately signing hit acts.

You'll learn something.

Listen to The Bob Lefsetz Podcast on:

TuneIn
http://tun.in/piL6c

Apple Podcasts:
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/jason-flom/id1316200737?i=1000401585284&mt=2

Google Play: https://play.google.com/music/m/Dlwexh2or4fz2s2niuigc27ykn4?t=Jason_Flom-The_Bob_Lefsetz_Podcast

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

Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/bob-lefsetz/jason-flom-9

Overcast: https://overcast.fm/+LBr_ixvMg



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No One Is Listening To These Women

I spoke at a conference in the Marina today, after I was done an old friend I hadn't seen in nearly two decades came up to speak to me.

She is a woman.

That's not that common in the music business. It's a male-dominated construct, where there's little upward mobility for women, they inhabit the lower ranks, but only a few make it to the top, and the business can't stop championing those who do.

But that's not enough.

It occurred to me during this conversation that men don't really listen to women, certainly not in the music business. We've played our sports, we have our codes, and we exclude women. And most of us don't even know it. We keep saying we're not the problem, but we are.

You see there's little opportunity.

Whether it be country radio programmers saying the audience doesn't want women or the Grammys not offering Lorde a performance slot, but finding time for multiple appearances by Bono and Sting. Where were the three time female appearances? And although I am not a fan of the Lorde album, there was plenty of great work by women, let's start with Miranda Lambert, but she doesn't get any respect either, because country artists are redneck hicks and the coastal elites look down upon them. It's true, have an accent and you're dismissed. Isn't that how we got into this mess, by leaving out others?

I don't want to hear that they didn't nominate any women producers because there aren't any, that's no excuse.

And one thing's for sure, we're not providing on-ramps for women, no way, we just say none play at the man's level, that the opportunities for reward are not there.

That's the crime of Neil Portnow, his bias, he doesn't know any better, but that does not mean he should get a pass. Everyone can make a mistake, everyone can misspeak. But if you do it about race, you're bumped, remember Al Campanis, DECADES AGO, but Neil gets another chance? I don't think so. Meanwhile, the women are organizing against him and the men? Crickets. That shows how much support women are getting in this business.

Never mind the constant cries of "I never saw it," "I'm not one of the bad guys."

I guess you believe since you're not racist no one else is, that African-Americans haven't been shafted and don't need a leg up.

We're living in changed times folks. You're so busy protecting the man's interests. There's a great opinion piece in Monday's "New York Times." It's entitled "#MeToo Has Done What the Law Could Not": http://nyti.ms/2BLdpY6 You need to read it, but right now I need to quote some salient points.

"This mass mobilization against sexual abuse, through an unprecedented wave of speaking out in conventional and social media, is eroding the two biggest barriers to ending sexual harassment in law and in life: the disbelief and trivializing dehumanization of its victims."

When a man says it, he's believed. When a woman says it, she's "hysterical" or "crazy" or "on her period."

"Even when she was believed, nothing he did to her mattered as much as what would be done to him if his actions against her were taken seriously. His value outweighed her sexualized worthlessness. His career, reputation, mental and emotional serenity and assets counted. Hers didn't. In some ways, it was even worse to be believed and not have what he did matter. It meant she didn't matter either."

We've got to protect men and their careers at all costs. After all, women are breeders, housewives, it's the males who are the breadwinners.

Not.

I'm not saying there aren't false accusers out there, but I am saying that men have almost all of the control and power and the burden of proof on women is often insurmountable.

There's a theory that this was all instigated by the election of the Pussy Grabber In Chief.

All I know is we can't turn back the clock, we have to deal with the world we live in now, one where sexual harassment has been given light and airtime, and men take a backseat as the women lead.

The Wall fell, democracy reigned, and then strongmen appeared.

Whites felt powerless and elected Trump.

Women felt powerless and came out of the woodwork and accused men.

There's pent-up anger about being left behind.

I'm sorry if it makes you feel uncomfortable, you need to feel more uncomfortable, then maybe you'll put yourself in women's shoes, know how they feel, instead of being silent, protecting the corporation and the bosses who don't care about you anyway.

That's right, the government eviscerated whistleblower protections but the people... They're protesting.

And you can get on the bandwagon or not, you can come down off your high horse or live in that ancient world where you wink at your bro and let them get away with it.

If you're a male and you don't know a male who has mistreated women...

You're lying.

You are the problem, you let them get away with it. Because you believe in some team ethos, a silent code.

But that's for the Mafia, and in America it's been eradicated.

Furthermore, just because you're sexualized, that does not mean you're giving license to be taken advantage of. We keep hearing from old men "she was asking for it."

Come on, have you got no self-control, can you not hear the word NO, can you just for a second believe these women are right?

We've heard rumors for decades about some of the fallen. No one believed their victims back then, but now they do.

Maybe you should too.

Not only the famous are abusers.

Wherever there's money and power there are liberties taken.

Like in the music business.

As for Neil Portnow forming a task force...

Sometimes you need new blood.

It's not about investigation, it's not about a new code so much as pushing aside the ancient men with their out-of-date values and replacing them with young thinkers who will do the right thing. Hell, that's one of the inherent problems in today's music business, the ruling class of old white men who missed the internet and think they know better.

They don't.

And they need to be held accountable.

And we all must pay for their sins.

That's what living in a society is all about.


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Monday, 5 February 2018

From Matt Hickey

Bob,

I am writing to respond to the email you posted on your newsletter, and the allegations Kari Godsill made against me.

I did not respond to Kari's email, that is true.

Kari simultaneously sent her email to everyone I work with, my clients, managers, representatives, my brothers and sister, my Mom, our friends, relatives, even my daughter's school.

I had a one night consensual encounter with Kari 15 years ago, we have not spoken since that night.

The day after our encounter I received a call from the police, which really freaked me out, saying Kari could not remember the end of the night, and what happened.

I hired a lawyer, willing cooperated in every way, and this matter was dismissed.

I'm sorry if her recollection of our encounter still causes her pain after all these years, but this does give her the right to make very serious and untrue allegations against me, with absolutely no proof or evidence, or her continued attempt to ruin my reputation, both personally and professionally.

Sincerely,

-Matt Hickey

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Re-Matt Hickey

Bob:

The reason that Kari Godsill has not heard a word back from anyone at High Road Touring or any of the multiple bands my brother works with is pretty straight forward, honest and simple.

At the time my brother Matt was accused of this alleged incident he went to the San Francisco Police Dept and submitted to all tests to prove his innocence.

When Ms. Godsill started the attack on my brothers character last November, my brother proactively called all of his clients and discussed the exact specifics of the incident and answered all of their questions. In addition- he met with his entire team at High Road Touring and answered all of their questions as well. Matt has been as transparent and open about this incident since it happened over 15 years ago.

The #metoo movement is super important and there are plenty of people who need to have their stories told and heard.

My brother Matt has never "roofied" anyone and while it might be important for Ms. Godsill to have you as her voice- Matt Hickey is innocent of the alleged charge.

I'm ashamed as a daily reader of yours to see you simply print something so damaging about someone without any due diligence other than the forward button.

We as your readers, especially those in the business, expect more from you.

Graham


J. Graham Hickey

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Today's Sexual Harassment Stories

From: Kari Godsill
Subject: Sexual assault after a Wilco show - by their booking manager Matt Hickey

Hi Bob, a friend forwarded me your emails. I was roofied after a Wilco show 14 years ago and confronted my attacker Matt Hickey (high road touring) and bcc'd his whole team. Nothing didn't hear one word back. I would love to get this email out. Thank you, Kari

Begin forwarded message:

From: Kari Godsill Connor
Date: November 9, 2017 at 5:34:32 PM EST
To: Matt Hickey
Subject: Wilco

Hey Matt -

Not sure if you remember me.. but you invited me about 15 years ago to
a private Wilco show over at ruby skye.

You then took me over to Hemlock Tavern where you roofied me. You then
took me home and assaulted me in my downstairs bathroom on Hayes
Street. Maybe you remember my dog Lucy whining behind the door you
locked? I woke up fully clothed at 1pm with your semen all over my
sweater and skirt. I then went to planned parenthood and had a rape
kit done.

I tried to hire a lawyer, but you hired a better one and my lawyer
advised me to drop the case. I then had to retrieve my clothing from
police custody where I dry cleaned your semen off my wool sweater.

I think about this all the time, especially since I'm a mother to a
tween daughter. I knew I wasn't the first of your victims, and I'm
sure I wasn't the last.

So here's my #metoo you fucking piece of shit.

Kari

_______________________________________

It was the mid-2000s and I was 26 and a full-time student completing a music business degree, a production assistant with the biggest promoter in my town, and a single mother with a 2 year old. The venue manager I completed my internship with was also the manager of a local, but nationally rising artist/band and he asked if i could sell merch at one of their popular, yearly local shows. I enthusiastically said yes and the show went off without a hitch and I had the time of my life! That night a few of the band/crew went back to the managers house to hang out and I was invited to join them. So I did. I do not really drink, but I may have sipped on something, I do smoke marijuana and I believe I did partake more in that. Well it was getting late and people were doing whatever they were doing, leaving or taking an extra bedroom, so the manager asked if I would like to stay and since my house was at least an hour away...I said yes, again. I chose a couch but was asked if I'd like to share his bed. I politely declined and he retrieved a blanket and pillow for me while I got situated and laid down. It was dark and quiet minus the random creeks in the house but after a few minutes and as I was dozing off, I heard footsteps and felt a hand on my shoulder...it was the manager checking on me again to see if I was sure I didn't want to join him in his bed. I politely declined again and he said something like "well alright" like he didn't understand why I wouldn't want to. I listened to his footsteps as they led him away but now I was a little uncomfortable and wondered if I had put myself somewhere I shouldn't have been. Luckily, that night ended and the next day I went home.

Fast forward a month...my PA work has me in the same venue where I interned so one day at work the same manager asked if I would like to sell merch again but this time on a short two-week west coast bus tour. I was ecstatic to say the least. My mom agreed to help with my daughter and I was about to complete that semester in school so it was all working out. He was not going to be on the tour, it was just the four band members, TM, audio guy, a friend of the band and myself. Everyone except the TM was 10-15 years older than me with families or beginning them, but I'm not a party-er and I take everything probably too seriously at times so I felt like it was perfect for me. The first week was great, just the routine of arriving, setting up, selling, tearing down and settling everyday and maybe, if I was lucky, I was able to explore the city as far as the coffee or record shop that was hopefully next door. If I remember correctly, almost all of our shows were sold out with the biggest ones being at the Showbox in Seattle, the Fillmore SF, and the Avalon in LA. As we arrived into San Fransisco I hear that the manager was coming to the show with a few other big wigs..okay, that's normal. I did not have to sell that night since the Fillmore SF had their own in-house merch person so I got my first night off in a week and I was able to hang out and watch the show...with the manager and company...I have a picture from that night of him and the TM and I with a few others which is now just a reminder of what's to come...So I may have had a couple beers, it was exciting and I felt like I mattered!! but I never get to the point where I can't handle myself or make decisions. Either way...the night came to a close eventually and we all ended up back on the bus, even the manager, and now I'm hearing that he is riding the bus with us to our big LA show then leaving from there... okay, whatever's clever. By the way, I had taken over the back lounge after the first night of tour because I was super claustrophobic in a bunk at first and no one seemed to mind or at least they never said anything, maybe since there were always a couple open bunks. Anywho...I head to the back lounge of the bus and put on a movie...I guess I assumed the manager would stay in the front or grab an open bunk...but no...he found his was to the back lounge and laid down on a separate fold out bench/seat thing. I don't really remember exactly how or why anything started besides I was watching the movie and the next thing I knew he was straddling me, lifting my shirt and placing his "manhood" between my breasts and gyrating until he finished. I don't remember any words spoken or intentions uttered or permissions asked and there was definitely no kissing or foreplay. He did his thing and laid back down. I feel like it happened pretty fast and I didn't know how to handle the situation but after I remember laying there, and I can't even remember how it was cleaned up because I was frozen. I just kept thinking and wondering if anyone else had heard anything? What would they think? What have I done? I was just the merch girl. He was the manager and fifteen years older than me. People would think I'm trying to sleep my way to the top. I didn't know what to do so I just pretended like it didn't happen and finished up the last week of tour and went home.

I was never asked back to sell their merch and I'm still a fucking production assistant in the same town while he is now the head-regional-honcho for a major nationwide promoter and I still wonder if in some way I have stagnated myself in this business because of it. Whether subconsciously or because someone is making it that way. Yuck. I don't even know how to end this story besides what the fuck. Excuse my french, twice.

Wow. That was a lot longer than I expected it to be...and I'm shaking. I've only told one person, an ex, about this years ago who used it against me during a break-up AFTER I got them a job in the business, so I've never talked about it again for fear of not being taken seriously. And even if someone took me seriously, what then? Doesn't change anything, really. But thanks for listening!!

_______________________________________

Subject: My tenure as artist mgr/Miss-Used Help

I am reading these and thinking about my parents (divorced for many years) and myself, who have all worked, for a significant portion of our adult lives, in music. In positions of power.

My mom was undoubtedly harrassed and abused, AND was also an habitual pursuer of affairs. She pursued married men of higher perceived status. She just did. She would say so. She has said so. And if she or I named names, you'd know some. She has never played the victim about it...but she could if she were of a mind to do so. In fact, I think she rather likes these men to this day...even those that mistreated her a bit.

My father, to my knowledge, is EXTREMELY respectful of women below his station (and above). They are not married (my parents). My father is in a position, and has been for many years, to take advantage of his standing but has not to my knowledge, and I know him pretty well. He's a good guy. They exist.

This brings us to me. I was an artist manager and also a Stage Manager... for about 15 years... before I burned out. I never dreamed of taking advantage of my station, and I was also in a monogamous relationship through most of those years. During my tenure, I had occasion to hire interns for summer and sometimes longer. The vast majority of the applicants (for pay and college credit) were young women, mostly attractive. I told all three women my ground rules which were only 2. If they couldn't commit to them, they should walk. No booze or drugs at gigs, band meetings, studio sessions, etc. No sleeping with the guys in the band. I told these same rules to the guys in the band. One particularly brilliant young woman did a very nice job for most of a summer, and asked to stay on for the school year. Same rules, but now Grades also. Anyway, it broke my heart to search for her one day prior to a gig, only to find her on a tour bus giving a blow-job to a very well-known artist who doesn't go by his real first name. We were playing a bill with him ....and when I told the guys in the band what happened, eyes up in the sky and down at toes. Oh shit! No way! You guys too!? She had slept with TWO at least and one was the straightest arrow in the band. I was heartbroken. I had met with her father, and assured him she was in good hands and learning the business. I wrote letters to her teachers about what good care I was taking of her, and what a great job she was doing. And in the end, I had to fire her on the spot. And you know what? She didn't care about the job. She got the access. And she kept it. She showed up at every gig, just as before. The band even overruled me and brought her back on in an unofficial capacity, for NO college credit and NO pay. And she stayed. And she slept with those guys. I wonder.... Is she "me too-ing" now? Because I'm gonna tell you Bob, there were plenty of young, beautiful women that would have paid me to essentially be...let's use the word "Miss-Used" rather than abused....by the guys I managed. And I know that story isn't uncommon. (Great name for an album "Miss-Used.")

I'm only withholding my name because it would relate to the people in the story. I could care less personally.

_______________________________________

I came to Los Angeles to 'make it in the music biz' in 1991. In 1994 I founded a PR company. We've handled a huge array of labels, artists and other clients (books, film, non-profits)

My male 'best friends' who basically started at the same time as me in the biz are all on their second homes, second wives in many cases, doing very well for themselves, have climbed the rungs, give each other business all the time, take each other to networking events, etc. In all these years they have rarely given me the types of opportunities they gave each other or even taken me seriously as an industry colleague in the way they do each other. And these guys are my FRIENDS! I know their kids, go to their homes, etc.

And I won't even begin to recount all the experiences I've had that have been sexual harassment, date rape, leering and inappropriate behavior, language and so on - for that just see below and see all the other women that have written to you. I have experienced about 90% of all of that as well.

And at least once a month I want to 'quit the music biz' because of some chauvinist squeezing me out of a deal, or stealing my clients or demoralizing me and making me feel I am still at entry level. This never happens with my non-music clients. Nope. This really is something deeply connected to the music business where no one wants to be an adult or take responsibility for how their behavior will affect people working on their team.

So nearly 25 years into my music biz career I am still struggling for financial security when I see these male colleagues landing a lifestyle that I feel I have worked equally hard for and should also be mine.

Until as many women are in positions of power this won't change. People keep acting baffled about what the solution could be. The solution is so simple - hire equal amounts of women, stop damaging them with male predatory behavior/molestation, let them earn the top jobs and you'll see this crap become a trend of the past.

Unfortunately I also feel I need to say: please withhold my name, the other names, etc.

Thank you Bob.

P.S.

One other thing I want to add. I was a hard partying rocker chick from the jump. I had come to L.A. after hitch hiking solo through Europe for months. I was and am tough. And here is what I think people are not saying as much as the should: only men who are PREDATORS act like pigs. I have tons of guy friends (some that were attracted to me) that never, ever made a move or tried to lay a hand on me. They got me home safe and sound after wild nights seeing bands, going backstage, doing tons of drugs, drinking to near black-out levels, etc. But these guys are simply not predators. Some asked if they could kiss me or come upstairs or whatever, and when I said no, or indicated 'no' that was it. No 'date rape,' no additional pushiness, nothing. So I want that to be said. A predator is a predator, not all men are.

P.P.S.

Another thing that people are overlooking -- in some of these molestation cases women have reported -- is that you never know what the girl's background may be. Girls and women that have been molested by family or friends have a VERY HIGH tolerance to molest-y kind of behavior. They have probably already become accustomed to men pushing themselves onto them inappropriately, touching them, 'joking' with them. Maybe this all even happened at family functions, in front of their parents and so on. So if you've already 'broken' these girls at a young age it is going to make it hard for them to stand up to men and become leaders of tomorrow.

_______________________________________

Your readers might start to feel tired of all these #metoo accounts. I don't. I can't stop thinking though how incredible it is that the mouths are starting to unlock their truths but they are still afraid of the consequences. I think the #metoo movement must take things to the next level, which is not be afraid of speaking out and to lose one's job. So I will put my name to it because I believe that living truthfully is very important. Also I want to salute men who remain decent in this industry and that know how to stop as soon as someone says no.

There are always many sides to a story and this is only my take. I work both in the music industry and as a singer/songwriter. I remember the HR manager at BMG inviting me over lunch to spend the week-end with him back in 2004. I was an intern by then and he hinted he might be able to hire me afterwards. Needless to say I was already with someone and didn't want that. So I spent the next 4 months feeling nervous when he was around because I knew he was attracted to me but this man was very decent and never pursued me afterwards and I want to salute that. Due to the merge of Sony and BMG at the time there were no jobs anyway at the end of the 4 months.

Flash forward to 2016: I want to do a 3rd album of rock'n'roll, a dance I've been practising since I was 12. A friend introduces me to a boogie-woogie pianist who performs (still to this day) every Monday night at le caveau de la Huchette (of the La La Land fame) in Paris. It's his birthday, I talk to him and give him my 2 first CDs saying It would be interesting to do my 3rd album together. He gives me his card. I resume dancing and do not hear about him. 2 weeks later I put my best dress on and heels to go dancing. He's there as a guest at la Peniche le Marcounet to perform. He sees me and keeps telling me how beautiful, natural at dancing I am. I tell him I saw him 2 weeks ago, which he doesn't seem to remember but when I say my artist name, he says he has listened to my albums. And he starts caressing my back up and down which I find very strange given he was at the time 73. I say are you free tomorrow morning to discuss about the album and he says yes. So I invite him over to my place.

There he tells me all about his life and how women were giving him blow jobs while he was performing in an echangist place in the 70's. I don't really understand why he tells me about all that when I want to discuss musicians, budget and how we're going to do my album but he's an old man and out of respect I listen to him tell the tales of how it was back in the days. Then he tells me all about the 7 women he loved and that they all left him and how he never put money aside and has no place to live now and a fan of his has offered him to live with him. He tells me his last girlfriend was 20. At the time I'm 35 and he's 73, the age of my father.

We spend 2 hours together talking about his life and 10mn talking about my songs. He asks me to send them to him each time I craft a demo and that he'll be busy booking his Boogie-Woogie festival at La Rocquebrou. I ask naively if I would be able to perform there and he tells me: you're not black, baby. For Boogie I only hire American Black women. Which made me utterly "laugh" coming from a French white Boogie-Woogie pianist.

Anyway I send him the tracks that he marvels at, see him at La Huchette from time to time when I go dancing. He tells me I would have to do a crowdfunding to do the album as he has no money whatsoever. It should cost me around 1000€. And every time I see him his hands are all over my back caressing it and I hate this promiscuity and all the allusions to how beautiful and sexy I am. I flee every time he does that and I always put the conversation back to business.

Anyway this goes on for about 2 months. My sister invites me to go skiing and on a Monday night when he performs he asks why I'm not there by text. I answer I'm in the Alps skiing. And he says: "Oh to muscle your thighs?". I reply that my thighs don't need muscling as I dance all the time. He replies: "I don't know, you never let me touch them". I'm shocked beyond measure at this point and reply: "Well I will never have you touch them."

The reply comes instantly (and I'm still surprised at this point that he didn't pick up the phone to leave no written account of that): "Well then there will be no album." And then carries on telling me how Jane Birkin was the muse of Serge Gainsbourg and he wanted that relationship with me. Well needless to say I stopped right away talking to this man and never talked to him anymore when I saw him at other gigs. La Huchette lost a dancer to entertain the tourists flocking in hordes since La La Land. Last year he asked me by text if I wanted to come to his birthday party and make peace. I said not until you excuse yourself for your terrible behaviour. He did by text again. I couldn't make it that night tontje party anyway. Haven't seen him since. Will soon as I plan to go to la Huchette to dance one of these Mondays with a friend and see if the man knows how to behave now.

The reason I write this is because the limit is very thin between requited and unrequited love. But asking someone to sleep with you to do an album is definitely crossing the line when that person doesn't manifest any interest in you outside of having an artistic relationship.

Just wanted to share because when that happened to me I was just left with no words and a feeling of injustice and no one to complain to! Even though I could have sued him with the texts as evidence, I didn't see the point. Justice is too long and I decided to move on. I did my album "Boogie-Woogie Style" with my long time collaborator Fred Scamps. Because I want to underline it, most of the men I work with are very decent and I never had such an incident to deplore. And I find it important to also state that. For one deviant man how many decent ones...

Musically yours,

June Caravel

_______________________________________

In the late 90's I started my music industry career at EMI Music Canada in Vancouver. After a couple weeks I became good friends with one of our branch's female sales rep who told me a shocking story. A few weeks earlier, she returned to the office and checked her voicemail. She was horrified to discover that her boss, the Western Canada Sales Manager, had left her a shocking voicemail. You see, after the initial "work related" message that he left, he mistakenly thought the recording had ended. But it was still recording. What followed was a 'play by play' of all the sexual things he would love to do to said female sales rep if he ever had the chance. He was "shooting the shit" with a fellow regional sales manager who happened to be in the room with him. Both men were married. The female sales rep sent the message to EMI's Head of HR, who was female. Did either of the sales managers lose their jobs? Nope. At the time EMI Canada endorsed a culture of frat boy loyalty over integrity, and it started at the very top - from the President on down. Both sales manager had to apologize to the female sales rep. That was it. From that point on, the female sales rep could pretty much do whatever she wanted at work because her recording of the voicemail gave her leverage over her slimy bosses (male and female) all of whom were complicit in sweeping this type of crude sexual behaviour under the rug.

P.S. That same year, I went to the EMI Canada "Christmas Party" in Toronto which involved half naked strippers walking around serving appetizers to a roomful of men as we watched the Toronto Maple leafs playoff game on a big screen TV.

Name withheld for fear of retribution.

_______________________________________

From: Phil Tripp

About 25 years ago, my wife and I were at a Christmas party at the offices of Warner Chappell Music, with the top brass of the biz milling about. Lisa was the highly successful head of Music Staff, an industry specific employment service who had placed many women in top level jobs and she was my partner in IMMEDIA! and the Music Industry Directory.

10 metres away, a grossly drunk David Snell--then Chairman of EMI Records and the Chairman of the Australian Record Industry Association (ARIA)--started to stagger with his toadie in tow to lurch in front of me in a threatening manner, but my hands were firmly clenched behind my back anticipating trouble. He had just met Lisa 10 minutes earlier who was gracious and polite and noted they lived on the same street back in NZ where they both hailed from.

But now, arguably the most powerful man in the industry ( with a lurid reputation for sexual harassment) shocked everyone standing within earshot by saying to me in a soused roar "I just met your wife. She's a whore. Uglier than a Merino's arse. Too ugly to f&%#. Why don't you put a paperbag over her head and take her home?"

Standing right behind me were the heads of Warner Music Australia and UK, the CEO of Alberts, and we were surrounded by stunned execs, wives and industry workers.

And to make it even worse, when I didn't unfold myself to slug him as a good Aussie would and as Lisa came over having heard her name but not the epithets, he replayed his grotesque content word for word adding "And your husband is too much of a coward to defend your honour." at which point he stumbled forward to take a fruitless punch.

He was restrained by the Warner CEO mid swing before he could connect who said, "David, don't he'll sue you." I cooly replied, "Let him go Brian, he's already done more with his mouth than his fists ever could.

At which point, a shocked Lisa asked to be taken home. We called our lawyer Randall Harper from the car, explained the situation and in the course of two days had rounded up statements from witnesses there and by Monday, the then CEO and GM of ARIA called and implored me not to sue him, that he was contrite, regretful and would do what we wanted to settle this. I let them know that I wasn't suing him, hell, he'd never connected nor defamed me. To their horror, they were told that any legal action would be taken by Lisa for criminal defamation and sexual harassment and we were planning to serve him on the steps of EMI with a media scrum as the UK accounting firm that was auditing EMI were to arrive. And since he was at the party as a representative of EMI and of ARIA, it was up to our lawyer (who was previously the in-house counsel of EMI under Snell but never acted for him personally) as to whether to take the two acronyms along to court as parties to the crimes.

Lisa did not want to pursue a messy and highly visible action but we did want retribution. By Monday EVERYBODY had heard the story and was awaiting some outcome. In my office in Chippendale, Randall on one line, Snell on the other (he'd opted not to use a lawyer) hammered out an agreement accompanied by a non disclosure agreement.

Three weeks later, Lisa and I were written up in the Sydney Morning Herald's Property Deeds section as having bought a half million dollar property in Newtown, which tripled in value in a few short years.

David was humiliated and left EMI and the industry shortly thereafter. He passed away and I am only free to tell this story due to dead men can't sue for defamation.

_______________________________________

Let me preface this by saying anyone who has been a victim of sexual assault, my heart goes out to you.
Anyone who perpetrated such a heinous act is vile at best, repulsive as well.
I am not dismissing anyone's claims, however.

This pile on here is pretty disturbing.
Not from the women but from the men who are suddenly innocent puritans, outraged by purported offenses.
What music business were you living in?
Better yet, how would you fare taking a lie detector test about your own similar infractions and miscues?

Sometimes our crass, even vulgar humor is nothing more than that.
But we're far past that in today's paradigm.
We now cancel daddy/daughter dances as not to offend.

Again, not taking aim at victims and surely not defending.
I hate that I even have to reiterate that.
I will defend a victim faster than anyone you know.

I'm not sure anyone should be tried, convicted, and crucified in any public forum.
But that's 2018, isn't it?

But back to that pile on.

Things must have really changed since I left the business.
But it's nice to see the Amish, and every other strict religion, now gainfully employed.
All these fine young men.

I also see sour grapes churning a bitter whine (pun intended) and decades old hard feelings now turned into lashing out.
Yeah, I'm talking about you ex-promo guy, now a D rate manager, with an ax to grind and a bitterness streak.
You got fired? It happens.

I'm not here to defend Charlie, I'm here looking at the hypocrisy.
Transference anyone?

I wasn't there and yes, if Charlie is guilty, then not good at all.
But.......

I know Charlie, he's a lot like me.
Brash, ballsy, edgy, crude, rude, and obnoxious.
But we come from a different place and time.

And sometimes we talk out of our asses and you can't decipher between a crude joke and truth.
We offend sometimes and don't mean to.
We cross the line far too often.

But the interior is far different than what you perceive it to be.

Please don't take that as defending him.
I'm just explaining guys like us.

I'm still transfixed on the hypocritical men who have joined in the party here.

I like Charlie, so crucify me for that.
But like I said, if guilty that may change.

But I won't stomp on anyone in a pile on.
Well, some I might.
I still have my hard drives......
That makes me a hypocrite too, I guess.

Jack Ponti


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