Showing posts with label music business. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music business. Show all posts

Sunday, August 16, 2015

James Harrison rejects sons' participation trophies http://t.co/0aUaibSBCx

James Harrison rejects sons' participation trophies http://t.co/0aUaibSBCx Source:
August 16, 2015 at 10:09AM

Friday, November 01, 2013

The Business Side of Music Youtube Channel

The Business Side of Music Youtube Channel




Keeping Your Music Business Legal Part 1
Gregg Seneff, Sr., Esq.

Gregg Talks About:

Trade Marks
Name and Likeness
Rights to Property
Copyrights
Contracts
And Much More.......

Part 2 is avalilbe as permium content. Go To Page2management.com and click on premium content

Monday, September 30, 2013

Being a music industry professional


Being a Music Industry Professional

There is no doubt about it, music is fun- and it should be. For many, however, music is work. For these people music pays the bills, supports their livelihood, and puts food on their table. For these individuals who work in the music industry whether it be as performers, technicians, music teachers, managers, journalists, or marketers maintaining a level of professionalism is essential.
Debunking the Music Industry Myth
Music is often seen by the uninitiated as little more than entertainment. To the outsider or even amateur touring musician the level of hard work needed to succed is often not apparent which leads to an inaccurate view of the discipline involved with being successful in such a competitive field. Because of this many romanticize about having a career in the music industry and are unequipped to engage in the hard work and apply the determination needed to be successful.
With this in mind, if you are an inspiring professional musician or music industry professional you may want to keep a few simple things in mind to increase your chance of being successful by establishing yourself as a dedicated professional:
Shake the “Rock Star” Ego
This may have worked for Jim Morrison and Johnny Rotten, but the truth is that this is good way to shorten your career and lessen the number of people wanting to work with you. Just remember that you are an artist but you are also part of business, and that your business is dependent on others who can help you get ahead. Keep a Regular Schedule Working in the music industry means the potential to be exposed in a lot of late night activities. Of course this is obvious for performers but it applies to any other professionals in the industry as well. Be sure to keep a regular schedule and don’t partake in every late night party. When you do attend industry events remember to always remain professional.
Make Friends, Not Enemies
This may seem obvious but it is quite important and cannot be emphasized enough. Like many industries, the music industry can seem quite small and word gets out quick. If you are a music writer and publish inaccurate information, plagiarize, or don’t follow through with assignments word will spread quick throughout the blogosphere. Similarly, if you are a venue with a reputation for shorting your performers when it comes time to pay up at the end of the night or a music teacher that cancels too many lessons you will find that you will have a hard time being successful.

Saturday, September 14, 2013

Conversations: Duane Allen/ Duane Tells it like it is........


Conversations: Duane Allen


Duane AllenThis installment of Conversations finds us speaking with Duane Allen.
Duane is no stranger to gospel music. He is  a classically-trained vocalist, accomplished songwriter, respected business man, and patriarch to a very musical family. Oh yeah, he’s also a 47-year member of one of the most well-respected musical acts in both country and gospel music, The Oak Ridge Boys.
When the Conversations feature was first conceived for Musicscribe, I knew that the very first person I wanted to talk to was Duane. I have always appreciated his willingness to discuss nearly any topic with openness and honesty. Even at 70 years old, he remains very active in touring, running the business aspect of the group, and also taking the time to interact with fans via social media.
I want to thank “the Ace” (as he’s known within the group and among fans) for taking the time for this interview.
KYLE BOREING: As the 1970′s dawned, and The Oak Ridge Boys were among the top gospel acts, gospel music was going through some major changes. You seemed to embrace these changes, rather than fight them. What do you think were among the biggest changes that you witnessed during this time?
DUANE ALLEN: In the ‘70′s, the Oaks were riding high on the success of “Jesus Is Coming Soon.” We were having a great run of success. I embraced the message of that song, as I embraced the messages in all of our songs prior to that. I saw the top level of gospel music at that point, however, I also saw the top level of jealousies beginning to raise their ugly heads, too. We were totally in favor of growing gospel music. As we got stronger and stronger, we were put into another grouping of people who did not like what we were doing, how we were growing, or how we looked. This started in the early 70′s and grew stronger each year until it eventually ran us off from the gospel music business.
However, do you would like to know “in what direction” The Oak Ridge Boys wanted to “grow” gospel music? Then, listen to Light, and in that album you will find your answer. We worked all across Canada, practicing every day, then down the west coast, where we found out that all of our California dates had been canceled. So, we asked Nelson Parkinson to book us at the last minute in as many churches as he could. The dates were appreciated by the Oaks, but they were not very good dates, money-wise. Only one of the week of church fill-in dates was good. I remember well, because I decided that I would wear the same shirt until we finally had a good date. I wore it for a week, and it was ready to stand in the corner by itself. On the last day, we had a good date, and I wore a clean shirt…..
We were rehearsing every day, and on the week before we recorded Light, we were rehearsing every day with our band. We had some new songs,that show where we wanted to take gospel music. Andre Crouche had given us some of his new songs, and we had an album full of great songs, all practiced, and ready to be recorded. We got a room in the world famous Whitney Recording Complex, and for five days, we fine-tuned all of the songs with our band in a rehearsal room. We were ready. Then came the best part, recording at Whitney, where so many huge hit records were cut…..Whitney Studio is built around the largest pipe organ in any recording studio, and we loved having that organ on our Light album.
We added two musicians from LA, and with our four musicians we recorded my dream album in gospel music – Light. That album was recorded with our band, and that is how I always wanted to record. It won either four or five Doves, so that album shows where I wanted our music to go….but, that just made it harder for us to grow because the “holier than thou” crowd that wanted to take the business in another direction was just more critical of everything we were doing. The people loved us, but the “self-righteous” people in the business world did not like us not adhering to their direction. So, the struggle for doing our kind of gospel music began in the early 70′s.
We rode the popularity of “Jesus Is Coming Soon” and followed it with two more major gospel hits, “I Know”, and “King Jesus”. Both of these songs were huge hits on radio and for us, but only made the jealousies, and trashing from the other element of the business get more and more intense. We wound up our gospel music career with 35 top charted singles on the Singing News magazine charts. I will always be grateful to those who supported our gospel career.
I have always looked at gospel music business as entertainment, but there was this element that was determined to turn it into what they perceived it to be, and if we did not do it the way they wanted it done, we got trashed, criticized, and eventually black-balled from the gospel music business. When we were black-balled, we eventually got the message. We left the gospel music business because the gospel music promoters quit booking us. When we left, we never looked back at the business of gospel music.
KYLE: Was your transition to country music an over-night decision, so to speak, or was it something that was a long-time in progress? Was there ever a time where you said, “Wait, let’s give gospel music one more shot”?
DUANE: The transition started when we had so much success with trying to “grow” gospel music that the criticism and trashing just grew and grew more and more intense. The promoters stopped booking us, so we had to book most of our dates on our own, and many of the promoters we used were not experienced, so most of those dates were not great, just survival dates. The change started for us after we had released several songs as singles that we felt were good enough to be played on country radio…but, the country DJ’s did not take us seriously, until we cut a country song, “Y’all Come Back Saloon,” and an entire album of “country” songs. They took us seriously then, and for almost two decades, we enjoyed country music hits, with over 50 charted singles in 5 different decades, according to Billboard magazine.
We never turned our back on gospel music – in fact, you can find gospel songs on almost all of our country albums – but, we did leave gospel music “business” because they black-balled our group. We got the message and we went to country music, where we were welcomed with open arms. I never looked back. I still haven’t. We don’t do business with the gospel music “business”, but, I have always loved gospel music…..that part never changed.
When our country contracts were up [in the late 1990’s], the first person I called was Bill Gaither’s company, Spring Hill. I wanted to record a gospel music album, and that was around 2000. We were inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame that year, [and] lots of the older people who had trashed us were no longer living or in charge, so we were finally treated with respect, and we will always be grateful for that. We have never “returned to gospel music;” we never left gospel music. We left the gospel music business because they rejected the direction we were going. We never quit singing gospel music; we just quit doing business with those who stopped doing business with us. We had to leave the gospel music business because we had to make a living to support our group, our families, our band & their families, our staff & their families, and our crew & their families. We found a welcome mat for The Oak Ridge Boys from some of the most wonderful people on earth, in country music. They never told us we could “not” sing gospel music, and we never did “quit” singing gospel music.
KYLE: You have stated on multiple occasions that you did not keep up with gospel music for a number of years. Once you started to “get back into it,” so to speak, did anything surprise you about gospel music after so many years of being out of the loop?
DUANE: I quit listening to gospel music because I had to get our career on track in country music, and some of the gospel music people were so nasty to us that I did not want to let anything they said have any value, so I blocked the negative “holier than thou” people and let them live in their own negative world. I paid no attention to how they kept trashing us. It meant nothing to me. When some person would come up to me and say, “What do you think about what this gospel artist said about you????” I would just say, “It’s ‘not’ what I think about what they said; I don’t think about them at all. What they say about me has no value and I pay no attention to their words of hate.” So, I blocked them out of my mind, for over two decades. Many gospel artists came and went during that time, and I did not have a clue who they were. It made no difference to me because God was richly blessing The Oak Ridge Boys in country music, and we were making so much money that we were having to find places to spend it. I had over 10,000 cattle somewhere in Texas that I never saw, oil wells all over Indiana that I never saw. Our career was exploding, and I had no time for the negative people who were now trying to claim us and calling our office asking for free tickets and backstage passes. We honored every one of them, and I looked right into their eyes and told them it was good to have them at our show. I never once mentioned to them that I knew all about the negative garbage that they said about us. Instead, I did not treat them like they treated us – I treated them as special guests.
I called Gov. Jimmie Davis when we were trying to get a country hit. I asked him if he could give me any advice. He said, “Cut a country song.” I said, “We have been cutting songs for country radio but the DJ’s will not play them…” He said, “You are not cutting country songs! If you want country airplay, cut country songs.” I said, “But Gov. Davis, what will the gospel music people think about this? They are the only support we have…” He said, “When you have your first hit, they will be the first to claim you as friends” I said, “What if the song doesn’t hit?” He said, “You know how that feels now!” and he laughed really big. Well, he was 100% right. When our country songs started hitting, the “holier than thou” gospel people wanted to come to our shows and show us off to their friends. I just smiled, and comp’d all of their tickets. I knew exactly what some of them had said to us and to our backs, but you see, I had already forgiven them. I just smiled and welcomed them to our show.
KYLE: Likewise, was there anything you saw in today’s gospel music that made you say, “Yep, that’s exactly how I remember it,” even after so many years?
DUANE: I don’t need anyone to “shake” my memory bank. I experienced the good and bad of gospel music business, first hand. I just learned to deal with it in a spiritual way, something that was entirely different than the way some of these “holier than thou” gospel artists treated us. I learned my “forgiveness theory”. It is in three steps:
1. I asked God to forgive me for anything I may have ever done that caused the gospel music people to trash me.
2. I asked God to forgive those who trashed me, and to give me the ability to forgive them, too. Even if those gospel “holier than thou” people did not ask for or seek to be forgiven, I forgave them anyhow. I had already blocked them out, but it still hurt when I heard the awful things they were saying about us. I needed God to help me look at it in a completely different way. I studied the Bible and I realized that God had the answer. You may have heard someone say, “I forgive you, but, I’ll never forget”. Well, that is not what God told us to do. The Bible tells us that we “must forgive, and we ‘must’ forget, because that will make a place where love can bloom again. So, from that Bible teaching, I developed my forgiveness “three’s;” now, here is the final third step……
3. We forgive our self, and those who may have caused us harm, then God will “free” us of all of those negative things and give us “freedom” from them. So, I now live in total freedom.
There is no hurt left, there is no anger, and there is no desire to “get back or get even” with anyone. I harbor no ill will towards any human being in the gospel music business. I desire nothing that they may or may not possess. I live in freedom from their negative way of thinking. I want nothing that they have. It is not how I look at life or God’s teachings. God is my source of forgiveness, and it covers all those who trashed The Oak Ridge Boys, or me, personally.
KYLE: Looking at today’s gospel music industry, we have so many different styles (contemporary, pop, rock, rap, P&W, inspirational, southern gospel….). Do you feel like you played a part in the acceptance of these various styles?
DUANE: I don’t spend any time wondering how I will be accepted by anyone but God. I am very humbled and honored at how many of the young gospel artists come up to me and tell me that I am the reason that they are in gospel music.
I was humbled when Glen Payne told other people that I was the best singer in gospel music….that pretty much floored me! Recently, I was at the funeral of Jim Foglesong, the man who signed us to our first country contract, we sang “Farther Along” at his funeral at his family’s request. Just before the funeral began, our manager, Jim Halsey, called me over to the side of the church and told me that Mr. Foglesong told him that I was the best singer in country music. I almost fell over. Tears filled my eyes and I really had to fight back tears to sing for Mr. Foglesong….
So, I have had my share of applause. That always feels good. We have been inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame, the Vocal Group Hall of Fame. I have been inducted into the Texas Gospel Music Hall of Fame, and just this week, I learned that I will be the new inductee into the Texas Country Music Hall of Fame in August of 2014……so, I have been honored many times, and I humbled to the core any time someone chooses to honor me, but, I am most humbled and honored every single day that God keeps blessing me with good health so that I can continue doing what I feel I was put on earth to do, and that is sing to people to bring some measure of happiness into their lives, if only for that period of time that they are listening to our music. I believe all gifts and all forms of music are gifts from God, so, it is up to us to use it as God, through His divine direction, leads us to do. I have never doubted that God is in control of The Oak Ridge Boys for our entire career. It took all of our experiences in gospel music business, good and bad, to pave the way to what God had in store for us. I give all the thanks to God, first, to my partners, to our families, and our employees. I also thank God for all of the fans who have supported us in all of our musical directions, and still do. We are very blessed men.
KYLE: Who among today’s gospel music artists would you say are among your favorite to listen to?
DUANE: The only kind of artist, no matter the field of music, that I enjoy listening to is the artist that “gets to me”. I have seen so many fake artists in my life that many of them just fall off me like water on a duck’s back. Many years ago, I realized that God gave me the gift of discernment, to go along with my musical gifts, and business ethics, so I can see a fake artist a mile off, and I can feel an artist that is “for real” as soon as I see or hear them. I give my ear to those who touch my heart. I listen to them, and I communicate with their gift. I have no time for the “pretend” artists. I have heard enough of that to last for the rest of my lifetime, and since they will probably not make heaven, I have heard enough of them for eternity…..HAHA!

Sunday, September 08, 2013

To my Dad. I miss You. Sundays will never be the same!


Tribute to Joel Sabella   8-30-13
-Guy BonGiovanni, D. Min.

Thank you, Nancy, Tommy, Randy, Mark, James & Pastor Dennis for this opportunity –and honor - to pay tribute to my friend.  This also is “the day the Lord hath made. We will rejoice & be glad in it.”

Joel Sabella epitomized three words: he was an icon of stabilitystrength, & spirituality, from which the first two virtues derived their energy.

He was a man’s man, a one-of-a-kind, a musician, a manager of managers, & a mentor of leaders and laity.

He was not a reed tossed about by every wind of doctrine; nor was he a rockinsensitive to the feelings of people’s infirmities. 

He was never off- the- wall; nor the wall, itself.

Joel was a unique amalgam – a blend of the sacred & the spiritual, ofstrength and sensitivity - who knew how to “be all things to all men with apassion focused always on their Redemption through Christ.  When the issues of life dealt him or his friends a bad hand, with spiritual perception and secular savvy h“knew how to hold them, when to fold them &when to throw them” in order that he “might win some.”

We never hunted together; never golfed; never attended ball gamestogether. Yetour bond deepened and our confidence & respect for each other strengthened over more that 50 years of a meaningful relationship. Our deepest concern was the Kingdom of God. Whether in a worship serviceor during the start-up of Christianity, a magazine of applied Biblical Truth, in which he served as our Business Manager; or later when he served in the same role while I served as Chairman of the Sharpsville Camp, or at significant moments during our General Conventions – bothamong the people and at the conference table, Joel’s contributions always were sensiblesignificant & spiritually oriented.

Joel lived by a dualism of leadership that simultaneously often mystifiedthe saints because of his”get’r done!” activism and mesmerized the sinnerbecause he was sensible man of Faithbut his stance always magnifiedour Lord.  He was comfortable in either a secular or religiousenvironment.  

When challenges unexpectedly arose, he neither panicked nor found italways necessary to call an emergency prayer meetingHe was there already –by lifestyle.  You see, Joel cultivated an inner relationship with the Lord that kept him in touch with the Lord subliminally –beneath the line.  You couldn’t see it and wouldn’t know itexcept that hfacedchallenges always with solid Faith and strong assurance that God would prevail. It gave him the uncanny ability to interact easily with people with or without Faith.  And this was the underpinning of his multiple successesin both the religious and secular worlds.  He was the consummate Christian business-professional man, living in the world, but not of this world.

Over the years. we met our share of religious extremism and ideas that threatened the churchWhen something rolled down the religious pike, Joel neither ran after the fads; nor rejected the nuances of Faith. He listened carefullydid his research diligentlymade his decisions factually– and it was done!  Period!
Scripture is clear that “a double minded man is unstable in all his ways.”  Joel would have none of that!  The Word of God not only flowed through his mouth during years of teaching the Word, it more importantly coursed incessantly through his mental processes, dominated and coalesced  his thoughtsand created attitudinal and relational positionsthat were solid, unbreakable and dependable. He stuck with the Word,stood by the stuff and stabilized the wavering, in times of uncertainty.

Through more than 50 years his Eldership in this Assembly was one of those unmistakable facts, whether or not he was titled or it was told.  He just was!  It was there – a stablepervasive strength & stability thatserved as a rock during those painful years of decline, months without pastoral leadership,   & seasons of economic uncertainty.  Joel sat there, a quiet but visiblestabilizing reminder that victory would come – in both the church and Kiddie Kollege   And I’m pleased to declareit has!

Joel preached no great crusadeswrote no best sellers, constructed no magnificent structures, and erected no monuments to himself.  Yet, his legacy is unusualunmistakable, and unmitigated. Like his father before him, who with his beloved wife, Rita, gave two sons to God’s service, Joel and his sweet, soft-spoken, sociable and strong wife, Nancy, are progenitors of 4 sons whose lives already & significantly have made their marks for Jesus as they carry on their Dad’s tradition of devotion to Jesus & dedication to His Service.

Today, we salute the memory and the mission of this man of God & my dear friend.  

If we are listeninghis life yet calls out to us family & friends -as did the Apostle Paul when he wrote: “ Be ye followers of me even as I follow Christ.” If we willhis legacy of stability, strength & spirituality will live on.  Our Lord will be honored and His people will be blest.
May it be so!

Good bye, dear Friend.  You have done well.
We will see you in the morning.
2 | Page

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Keep Your Music Business Legal Part 1


Gregg Seneff, Sr., Esq.
Part 1
Gregg Talks About:
  • Trade Marks
  • Name and Likeness
  • Rights to Property
  • Copyrights
  • Contracts
And Much More.......
Part 2 is avalilbe as permium content. Go To Page2managment.com and click on premium content
The Seneff Law Office focuses on select practice areas in entertainment and media law; real estate broker and agent representation; collection matters; and litigation. Our office represents clients in music, film/video production, book publishing, illustration, and residential real estate.  Our clients include recording artists, musicians, songwriters, publishing companies, record labels, record producers, music arrangers, music ministries, personal managers, music business consultants, film/video producers, film/video directors, animators, scriptwriters, periodical publishers, and book authors.  Gregory E. Seneff, Sr. is in demand nationwide for presentations at music conferences, seminars and panels.  Mr. Seneff is an adjunct professor for music business and law classes at the Delta Music Institute at Delta State University located in Cleveland, Mississippi, and the producer of the educational product MusicLawBizTM.
Contact Gregg:     www.senefflaw.com/

Check out this episode!

Friday, May 03, 2013

Vote for Traci Snowe

  Hey there Fans
   Okay, so short and sweet, a promoter friend of mine contacted me about an opportunity to open for Brandy at         War Memorial Auditorium on June 8th here in Nashville.  So, I entered myself and my acoustic duo Snowe v. Wade into a contest that begins with getting lots of support on FaceBook and Twitter.  So very simply, if you've ever wanted to do something so badly, but needed other people's support to make it happen then you know how we are feelin right now!  Pretty please with caramel on top, take literally 60 seconds right now to click on these links and hit the little Facebook AND Twitter Like buttons to vote for us to get a chance to perform in front of industry judges to get the opening slot.  Stace and I are about feel good music and bringing something real and positive back to this industry and we are going to do it, but we need your support:

If you are feeling lots of love and generosity...take another 5 minutes to forward this e-mail to your friends and post the links on all of your social networks.  If you are like me, you get hit up for stuff like this every day, so please if you are going to do it do from the heart.

Love your sis, friend, fave artist, daughter, cuz, homey...

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Indie Connect Christian Music

Hello Friends and Fellow Indie Connectors!

I thought you might be interested in knowing that Bob Bender, who runs our Hendersonville TN. just returned from the Rauch Christian Music Ministry Conference. So, at his luncheon today (Tuesday, Oct. 27), he will be re-capping what was discussed at the conference last week (very informative) with regards to the future of the Christian Music Industry. The meeting is at 11:30 at the Black Eyed Pea, 164 E. Main St. in Hendersonville,TN and the cost is $5 plus the cost of your meal.

You might also be interested in knowing that we have a new Christian Musicians' club starting up. It will be meeting the 2nd Thursday of every month at Corky's BBQ, 100 Franklin Rd. in Brentwood TN, beginning November 12. The meeting starts at 7. However, you are more than welcome to join the Club President, Tom Sabella, and his 1st guest.speaker, Royce Taylor, a former member of the world-renowned Gospel Quartet, The Stamps, for dinner at 6 PM! Again, the cost is only $5 for the meeting, but you're on your own for dinner.

I hope you can make it. The networking and the training will be tremendously helpful in moving your career in Christian music forward! Have a brilliantly creative day!

Vinny Ribas
CEO
Indie Connect, Inc.
615-882-9496 - o
615-568-4736 - c
vinny@indieconnect.net
www.indieconnect.net

Thursday, March 19, 2009

The Business Side of Music Podcast

Michael Moore Interview
The Business Side of Music
With Tom Sabella and Traci Root
Recorded at Records on The Wall Studios Nashville, TN
Music by Mike Pachelli
Producer Bradley Raines
This podcast is part of Page2 Radio Network

Michael Moore Bio Summary
Michael Moore has topped the charts with 70 Gold and Platinum albums and 140 number one singles. His work has contributed directly to the sale of over $1 billion worth of recorded music. Now he offers the secrets to quickly developing a mass audience in his new book “Brilliant

To get a free copy of Michaels "A Plan For Your Music" go to www.volummonster.com code michaelmoore

For a free autographed pictures of Traci and the Guru go to www.volummonster.com code picture

www.moorehits.com
www.traciroot.com
www.page2radio.com

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Time To Vote

Time To Vote - No Not For President, but for The Business Side of Music Podcast.
Please take a minute, click on the link and vote for Business Side of Music under the Business category.
Tom Sabella and Traci Root
page2radio.com

Monday, October 20, 2008

Podcast Awards

The Business Side of Music receives Nomination for Podcast Awards!

BIG NEWS!
The Business Side of Music Podcast has made it to the top 10 business nominated shows for the Podcast Awards!

A big thanks to all of you who participated!

It's not over yet! Now the voting begins!
Here's the details from the Podcast Awards site:

  • Voting starts October 23, 2008 until November 6th, 2008.
  • Each Person / IP address will be allowed to vote once a day in each category.
  • 100% e-mail verification of all votes will take place, failure to click on a vote will result in no vote being placed. A verification e-mail with clickable link will be e-mailed to you so that you will have to verify the vote.
In case you were wondering, nominated podcasts were selected by the review committee on the basis of:
  • Number of Nominations 40%
  • Quality of Website Design 15%
  • Quality of Sound 15%
  • Quality of Podcast Delivery and Show Format 10%
  • Relevance of Content 20%

The top 10 nominees in each category are posted on the Podcast Awards site, where the voting will be done.

Please, let others know about the Podcast Awards site. There are a lot of great shows out there that were nominated and deserve a listen!

Thanks again for your support!
Tom and Traci

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Get Connected Presented by Page2 Management

Get Connected
Presented by Page2 Management

Hi folks, just wanted to remind you about the Get Connected coming up June 25th. It's going to a great evening. The door prizes have been secured and you are going to like them.

There has been a change in the venue and Date. We are now meeting at River Plantation III Club House in Bellevue TN, June 25th 6:30-9p Mark your calenders.

Get Connected
Club House
River Plantation Section III
8300 Sawyer Brown Road
Bellevue, TN 37221
June 25th
6:30-9m

For more information and directions email page2management@gmail.com
Check out the last show on The Business Side of Music podcast
page2radio.com

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Billy Graham Movie

On The Set of the New Billy Graham Movie

Coming this fall is a great movie that should be on everyone's list to see and support. I'll go so far to say that it will become a classic film that will be one you'll want to own on DVD for your private collection to see over and over again. The pre-release working title, should you wish to research this on the internet is: "Billy; The Early Years," the early life, calling and conversion of Dr. Billy Graham.

The film is set in the time frame of 1934 to the large revival of 1949. It presents the young Billy Graham that is not well known. Most know his life following his meteroic rise to world prominence. This movie shows the truly humble beginning of a lad who struggled with a "calling."

Long time friend David Zanotti of the American Policy Roundtable, invited me to interview for their radio show, "The Public Square." What a very special opportunity I had to offer comment on the impact of music in American Culture and tie it together with this marvelous film. Page2 artist and associate, Royce Taylor, was with me that day and offered his own insight as a working, touring Gospel Music artist.

Visit: http://www.aproundtable.org/ and click on the link "Inside the Billy Graham Movie - Part II" for my portion, but please listen to Part I to get the full connection to the topic of discussion.

Let me encourage you to also take time to explore the AP Roundtable website and see what can and is being done to make your voice heard in American Politics. You may feel that your opinion goes unnoticed. Learn how the APR can be a link to educate, enlighten, and share your concerns with those who make decisions about our nations policies.

Tom Sabella
blog.tomsabella.com
page2radio.com

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Page2 Artist Getting National Radio Play


A note From Rick Alan King

I need to ask a favor of you. My single, “The Royal Telephone,” was played today on Solid Gospel Radio on their “Make It or Break It” segment. This was not just internet or local but to all the Solid Gospel stations. They are the premier Southern Gospel stations.

Please go to www.solidgospel.com, click on “Make It or Break It,” then click on The Royal Telephone to vote for the song. This is only for this week. I have been promoting this song for the last two months on radio and need your help to continue.

Thank you,

Rick Alan King

Friday, March 21, 2008

March Podcast/Goal Setting

March Podcast/Goal Setting
The Business Side of Music Podcast is up and ready for you to download. Go to thebusinesssideofmusic.libsyn.com and check out the special offer. Amanda and I are very excited about the podcast and everyone that has written to us. We are receiving e-mail from all over the world.


Coming Soon!!!!
Podcast Network
In our continuing effort to help musicians make it in the music business we are working on a podcast network called Page2radio.com.(the link is not working yet) This will be a place that all podcasts from Page2 will be accessible from one web page.

Also coming very soon is our latest podcast called The Gina Galardo Show-Your Inside Music Connection. Gina and her co-host will give you information on the inside of the music business. Gina is an up and coming artist and a regular visitor of the Nashville music scene. We are very excited to have her with us at Page2.
Our network consists of three podcast already. The other two are The Mike Pachelli Show and The Phil Keaggy Show. You can check them out at podguitar.com

Sending Multiple E-mails
I found this article and thought it was worth passing on.
So you've received this great joke that you want to pass onto your family and friends. Fair enough. I love to pass on a discriminating selection of good stuff occasionally too, and sometimes it's not a joke. It could be a particularly insightful opinion piece, some important security information, or... whatever. The important thing is that you are about to use the great medium that email is to mass distribute something quickly and easily. (I'm not even going to go into chain letters and various hoaxes here. There's just one simple rule for those: Do not forward them; delete them.)

Before you hit that send button, there's something you should know. Please don't put all of the email addresses of your family and friends in the "To" or "Cc" fields of your message; put them in the "Bcc" field! By putting the addresses in the "Bcc" field, they do not show up at the top of the messages that each of your contacts receives. We've all received those kinds of messages -- you know, where you have to page through reams and reams of email addresses before you can actually get to the message that the person wants you to read? Yes, those ones. This is a "bad thing"TM for the reasons explained below.
Viruses:
Privacy:
Spam:
Copyright © 1996-2008 Craig Hartnett


Karitos Christian Arts Conference
Tom will be one of the featured speakers at Karitos Festival 2008.
If you are in the Chicago area make plans to attend.
Karitos Festival 2008
July 31st. thru August 1st. & 2nd.
Living Waters Community Church - Bolingbrook, IL

For more information call (847)749-1284 or email bob@karitos.com

Friday, February 15, 2008

Feburary Podcast

The Business Side of Music
With Tom Sabella and Amanda Keane

Recorded at Records on The Wall Studios Nashville, TN

Our quest this week is Traci Root

Born in Indiana, but raised in multiple ethnic communities – diversity has always found its way into Traci’s musical style, which has developed into an R&B Fusion sound. She landed in Cincinnati, OH in 1995 and began actively pursuing her passion as a singer/songwriter in 1999.

Traci explains her passion and drive as an indie artist. And how understanding who you are helps her focus on being a musician as well as a business person.

Tuesday February 26th Traci is at the Rutledge, 410 4th Nashville, TN
Show starts at 8:30p Ages 18&up $5.00 Cover

For more information: traciroot.com
Direct download: DoItYourSelf.mp3
Category: podcasts -- posted at: 5:08 PM

Monday, February 11, 2008

Newsletter

Page2 Newsletter
Rick Alan King

We are proud to announce that Rick Alan King is getting some great air play. The song “The Royal Telephone” is at # 76 for February in the Christian Voice Southern Gospel charts. Rick records for Church House Music, a division of The Sonshine Group, of Sharps Chapel, Tennessee. The song is from Rick's latest CD "What Do They Do," produced by Shane Roark. The Royal Telephone is also being played on 90 Solid Gospel stations across the country.
If you have a Solid Gospel Station in your area, give them a call and request The Royal Telephone.
To purchase the CD go to rickalanking.com

Seminar Success
On January 29, 7:00-9:00 pm, at River Plantation in Nashville,TN a hugely successful seminar was held by Tom Sabella, author, music biz guru, and podcaster. Taking beginning musicians to the next level, and excerpts from his recent book, "Don't Get Taken, Take Control,' were enthusiastically discussed with the crowd involved with every genre of the music industry. Guest speakers included Collin Peterson, of Books for Bands, printing sheet music and books; and Bradley Raines, of Records on the Wall music publishing. Royce Taylor, singer for The Toney Brothers, acted as the jovial master of ceremonies.
The next seminar will take place in Chicago on July 31, Aug 1. If you are in the Chicago area and would like to attend, e-mail us at page2management@gmail.com for more information.
Listen to The Business Side of Music Podcast click on the link below.



Podcamp Nashville
Saturday Bradley Raines and I attended Podcamp Nashville, An all day seminar for podcasters. There were many great speakers. Some of the information was new and exciting. The one thing that I learned about was twitter.com. Twitter is a free social networking and mico-blogging service that allows users to send "updates" (or "tweets"; text-based posts, up to 140 characters long) to the Twitter website, via short message service, instant messaging , or a third-party application such as Twitterific. When my friend Kelly Poe told me he was on it I gave it a try and now I am hooked. (thanks Kelly)
This is a great way to build a following and network with folks that you would not ordinarily meet. Check it out, if you get on give me a nudge and I will follow you. @tsabella


Mark Your Calenders
Get Connected March 18th Nashville, TN
CIA Summit Conference March 28-29 Franklin, TN

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Page2 Management

The Business Side of Music Internet radio show

The show is really growing. The last show has already tripled the listeners of all other shows.
We have so many good people working on the show to make it a success. Amanda Keane is my co-host and Bradley Raines is our producer and engineer. The shows are recorded at our new Records on the Wall Studio. Which is also the name of our publishing company.

To listen to the Show click on http://thebusinesssideofmusic.libsyn.com/rss

If there is a topic you would like us to cover please e-mail your suggestions t0 podcast@page2management.com

Get Connected
Our first Get Connected was a huge success. This was a night of just meeting and talking. We felt that there needed to be some thing other that a writers night for people in the business to meet. The Sync@nettwerk was very gracious to let us use there space to hang out. There were 30 in attendance and from all the e-mail we received everyone had a great time. The comment heard most was that there was no competition everyone just got connected with someone new. Plans are in the works for our next Get Connected.

Get Your Music to the next Level

Have you been asking yourself that that question. We have the plan to help you get to the next level of your music career. Everyone is looking for the manager to help them make it in the music business our plan works and it is affordable. Contact page2managment@gmail for information on getting to the next level.

GMA Hall of Fame Awards
I was honored to be at the 2007 GMA Gospel Music Hall of Fame induction ceremony. Where my long time friend from Ohio Phil Keaggy was inducted into the hall of fame. Also inducted that evening was Joe Moscheo who has help me so much since i have moved to Nashville. Both of these men are a huge inspiration to me. Congratulation Phil and Joe.

Book Tour
I will be doing some traveling starting in 2008. I am going to start speaking and touring my book. I have been ask about going to different cities to put on seminars about The Music Business. More and more musicians are learning that they need to know the business. And that is what it do best. If you are interested in a seminar in your town contact me at tom@page2management.com