WordPress Powering a Sweet Songwriting Blog

Posted by webalong | blogging, creativity, music | Monday 16 February 2009 2:39 am

Invariably I will search for pointers on songwriting.  Google Reader even knows this.  Figures.  The Reader recommended “Career Songwriting“.  It naturally caught my eye, piqued my interest.  No choice–I clicked.

I was pleasantly surprised by the clean look.  There was no shouting “Hey, I’m a Web 2.x site,” or anything of the sort.  The colors seem relatively neutral, allowing Andrea’s words to do the shining.  And shine they do; there’s terrific content here.  I’ve got something in common with Andrea; I have studied with Pat Pattison.  Some of his books are in my library as well.  Andrea’s recent discussion of rhyme reminded me of how pertinent Pattison’s approach was.  We rhymers so often settle on the perfect, obvious rhyme.  Andrea supplements his approach, shares it, brings it into the context of the everyday.

For many months this extended look at rhyming has been nagging me.  So many other projects and techniques get in the way; however, looking at these on virtual paper is refreshing.  I will put in conscious effort to employ these techniques.  My writing will be better for it.  It will come off more current, more natural.

I was pleasantly surprised to see that WordPress was powering the blog.  Frequently I check out which blogging platform is being used.  I wonder whether it will reinforce my WordPress loyalty overall.  This site did.  Thanks again, WP.  You did it.  I’m stickin’ with it.  It clicks.  And I rhyme, with your friendly backend magic.  Woohoo!

In Actuality, MusicTheory.net Excels

Posted by webalong | creativity, music | Saturday 19 July 2008 10:44 am

MusicTheory.net is a flat-out terrific site (oh, no pun intended : )). A winner. Clean, ad-free, and very informative. There’s an electronic keyboard and interactive lessons aplenty. You’ll get tools to help in ear training, scale spelling, chord construction, and if you so desire, a tone row generator. You can even download the entire site and run it without an internet connection.

Y2KOTIC

Posted by webalong | music | Saturday 12 April 2008 2:06 am

Way back when, when the Year2000 was going to kill us all, I wrote a song about it. Here it is:

[display_podcast]


Hunter S. Thompson quote, where it applies on the web

Posted by webalong | marketing, music | Friday 11 April 2008 5:11 pm

I re-encountered one of my favorite quotes recently.  The quote was on the back of a business card:

“The music business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free, and good men die like dogs.  There’s also a negative side.”

Might this apply to the internet?  And with the largest music companies striking deals with myspace, might this not now be seeping into cyberspace?  I think it’s a myth that big music is not fully aware of the necessity of playing on the web.  With the ever-shrinking market for music, and cd sales tanking even further, there’s no other choice.

There’s hope for indies out here, the “good people” if you will, to find their niche and work within what appear to be well-established paths to success.  Any way to connect with fans is the way to go, however, web or no web!

NanoIndependents

Posted by Rob Schieber | marketing, music, technology | Thursday 4 October 2007 2:15 am

I’m one of the nanoindependents. Trying nanomarketing. Let’s bring it all to the subatomic particle level, okay?

The power of small. Coming to a pinhead near you.

RadioHead, MP3’s, Music Is Dead

Posted by Rob Schieber | music | Tuesday 2 October 2007 4:50 pm

At the top left in my IGoogle is the SEOBook blog. Search Engine Optimization interests me. How we are in this electronic jungle, and the primates have to come up with the tool to end all tools, to gain some form of dominance.

It entertains, it frustrates, it challenges. What can we do technically to build the advantage and keep it?

So in my looking at this top blog, I discover these potent comments on our musical world: Aaron Wall spoke of RadioHead’s offering of a free download–it looks like the entire album. I also saw a great take on it in the Lefsetz letter. Not sure why it has to be news, but it is. Members vying for attention, position. TIME writes, people react, servers get overloaded, and the name gets memed. Stickiness achieved.

Round here, it seems like music is dead, or dying, or just flat out being victimized. But what’s new? I hope my own music will be listened to at some point without my having to pay people to listen to it. All this woogydeedoo is inspiring me.