Podcasts about Eumir Deodato

Brazilian musician

  • 56PODCASTS
  • 112EPISODES
  • 1h 8mAVG DURATION
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  • May 5, 2025LATEST
Eumir Deodato

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Best podcasts about Eumir Deodato

Latest podcast episodes about Eumir Deodato

El Jazzensor
El Jazzensor 212. Deodato.

El Jazzensor

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2025 62:23


Dedicamos el episodio al inigualable Eumir Deodato. Pianista, compositor y arreglista brasileño, Deodato es un maestro en múltiples diciplinas que supo fusionar el jazz, la música clásica, el funk y la bossa nova, creando un sonido único e inconfundible. Su talento para reinventar clásicos y su toque sofisticado lo convierten en un referente del jazz-fusión. Playlist: Astrud Gilberto, Stanley Turrentine - Vera Cruz; Eumir Deodato - Samba No Congo; Os Catedráticos - Tremendào; Os Catedráticos - Crickets Sing for Anamaria (Os Grilos); Deodato - Also Sprach Zarathustra; Deodato - Super Strut; Deodato - Havana Strut; Deodato - Funk Yourself; Deodato - Speak Low Deodato - Love Island; Deodato - Night Cruiser; Deodato feat. Al Jarreau - Double Face.

Cuando los elefantes sueñan con la música
Cuando los elefantes sueñan con la música - Astrud Gilberto - 01/04/25

Cuando los elefantes sueñan con la música

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2025 58:49


Hace 60 años que Astrud Gilberto -la voz en inglés de 'The girl from Ipanema' en el disco de Stan Getz y João Gilberto- publicó su primer LP 'The Astrud Gilberto album' con las jobinianas 'Once I loved', 'Agua de beber', 'Meditation', 'Dindi' o 'Photograph' y 'All that´s left is to say goodbye'; del disco de 1966 'Look to the rainbow', con arreglos de Gil Evans, la canción que le da título, 'Once upon a summertime', 'I will wait for you' y 'A felicidade'; de 'Beach samba', publicado en 1967, con arreglos de Don Sebesky y Eumir Deodato, 'Stay', 'Misty roses' y 'The face I love'; de 'A certain smile, a certain sadness', con el organista Walter Wanderley, también de 1967, 'Goodbye sadness', 'Call me', 'Here´s that rainy day' y 'Tú mi delirio'; y del disco de 1971 con el saxofonista Stanley Turrentine 'Braziilan tapestry'.Escuchar audio

The BVW Mixtape Music Vault Podcast
Episode 441: 5th Anniversary Lookback: My 100th Show (Part 2)

The BVW Mixtape Music Vault Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2025 74:03


It's a journey through my childhood record collection as we revisit my 100th show special! Artists include The Moody Blues, Eumir Deodato, Yes, The Surfaris and comedy from David Frye! (R)

Cloud Jazz Smooth Jazz
Cloud Jazz 2662 | Especial Hugh McCracken

Cloud Jazz Smooth Jazz

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2025 56:55


Edición de nuestro podcast dedicada al guitarrista Hugh McCracken: le escuchamos al lado de Steely Dan, Bob James, David Sanborn, Eumir Deodato, Kenny Loggins, Michael Franks, Roberta Flack, Stephen Bishop, Herbie Mann, Tom Scott y Donald Fagen. Hugh McCracken es un músico fallecido en 2013 que trabajó, de manera muy intensa, junto a estrellas como John Lennon, Paul McCartney, The Monkees, Paul Simon, Art Garfunkel, James Taylor, Van Morrison, BB King o Hall & Oates, entre muchos otros.

Curta Musical
Eumir Deodato - 1ª parte

Curta Musical

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2024 3:09


O músico Eumir Deodato começou tocando bossa nova e acabou se tornando um dos brasileiros mais prestigiados na música pop internacional, principalmente por ter trabalhado como produtor e arranjador para nomes como Kool and The Gang, Björk e a banda Earth, Wind and Fire. Mas, além disso, possui uma vasta discografia própria. Confira tudo isso e mais neste Curta Musical que termina ao som de Carly and Carole, música de Eumir Deodato presente em seu disco Prelude, de 1972.

whatishipradio's podcast
Episode 402: What is Hip Radio - SUNDAY NIGHT JAZZFIX - JULY 7 24

whatishipradio's podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2024 64:32


  |  Miles Davis  | Diner au Motel | Bill Evans  | Gary's Theme | Dexter Gordon  | Manha De Carnaval | Amanda Martinez  | Gitana | Cal Tjader  | Curacao | Poncho Sanchez  | Dulce Amor | Jvs Boogaloo Squad  | Slacktivision | Eumir Deodato  | Arranha Ceu | Lalo Schiffrin  | Towering Tocacata | Sisters Love  | Give me your love | Steely Dan  | Home at Last

I'd Buy That For A Dollar
Deodato - Deodato 2

I'd Buy That For A Dollar

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2024 51:08


Guest Bevan Bell brings us an album from Brazilian keyboardist, composer and arranger Eumir Deodato. As we listen to the jazz-funk instrumentals on this record, we talk about everything from Deodato's early bossa nova days to his production work with Kool & the Gang and his familial ties with Justin Bieber.   If you like us, please support us at patreon.com/idbuythatpodcast to get exclusive content, or tell a friend about us. Broke and have no friends? Leave us a review, it helps more people find us. Thanks!

Cuando los elefantes sueñan con la música
Cuando los elefantes sueñan con la música - Os Gatos - 03/04/24

Cuando los elefantes sueñan con la música

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2024 58:47


El grupo de Durval Ferreira y Eumir Deodato, fundado en Río de Janeiro a mediados de los años sesenta, ha pasado a la historia de la música brasileña con sólo dos discos. Del LP 'Os Gatos' suenan 'Canadian sunset', 'São Salvador', 'Tristeza de nós dois', 'Nuvens', 'Sambidú', 'Razão de viver', 'A chuva', 'Estamos aí' y 'Verdade em paz'; de 'Aquele som dos Gatos' escuchamos 'Bonita', 'Agua de beber', 'E nada mais', 'Days of wine and roses' y 'Feitinha pro poeta'. También de mediados de los sesenta es 'The gentle rain', de Luiz Bonfá ('The gentle rain'), que a principios de la década había grabado en Nueva York su disco 'Luiz Bonfá plays and sings bossa nova' ('Bossa nova cha cha', 'Manhã de carnaval').Escuchar audio

Cloud Jazz Smooth Jazz
Cloud Jazz 2509 | Especial Nelson Rangell

Cloud Jazz Smooth Jazz

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2024 59:10


El saxofonista y flautista Nelson Rangell es protagonista de esta edición especial. Recopilamos sus colaboraciones junto a grandes del Smooth Jazz: Chuck Loeb, The Rippingtons, Don Grusin, Freddie Fox, Eumir Deodato, Al Turner, Khani Cole, Bob Baldwin, Tom Browne y Patti Austin.

Cuando los elefantes sueñan con la música
Cuando los elefantes sueñan con la música - Deodato, Eumir Deodato - 26/02/24

Cuando los elefantes sueñan con la música

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2024 58:36


Grabaciones del pianista, arreglista, compositor y productor carioca: 'Double face' -con Al Jarreau- (de su disco de 2010 'The crossing'), 'Arranha-céu' y 'Flap' (del disco de 1973 'Os Catedráticos 73'), 'Rhapsody in blue' y 'Sabiá' (del disco 'Ao vivo no Rio' de 2007), 'Moonlight serenade' (del disco de los años setenta 'Whirlwind'), 'Insensatez', 'Samba do aviao' y 'Samba de uma nota só' (del disco de 1964 'Inútil paisagem'), 'Bonita' y 'Feitinha pro poeta' (del disco del grupo Os Gatos de 1966 'Aquele som dos Gatos'), 'Adam´s hotel' (del disco de 1975 'First cuckoo') y 'Super street' (de 'Deodato 2' de 1973). Escuchar audio

Música para Gatos
VINILOS PARA GATOS - Ep.: 87 - Michael Franks - Burchfield Nines (1978)

Música para Gatos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2024 40:16


Hoy os acercaremos el cuarto trabajo de un músico muy apreciado en el tejado, el vocalista y compositor de Los Ángeles, Michael Franks. El disco se llamó Burchfield Nines y fue editado en el año 1978 a través de Warner. Producido por Tommy Lipuma tras los maravillosos The Art of Tea y Sleeping Gips, Burchfield Nines es un disco muy característico de la música de Franks. Excelentes temas, suaves aunque complejas melodías, letras profundamente irónicas, músicos espectaculares y arreglos de primer nivel, en este caso realizados por el músico brasileño Eumir Deodato. Esperamos que lo disfrutéis. TRACKS (todos los temas compuestos por Michael Franks) 1 - When The Cookie Jar Is Empty 2 - A Robinsong 3 - Wrestle A Live Nude Girl 4 - Burchfield Nines 5 - Meet Me In The Deerpark 6 - Dear Little Nightingale 7 - In Search Of The Perfect Shampoo 8 - Vivaldi's Song CREDITS Written-By, Lead Vocals – Michael Franks Arranged By [Orchestra], Conductor [Orchestra] – Eumir Deodato Bass – Will Lee Concertmaster – Israel Baker Drums – Steve Gadd Guitar – John Tropea Percussion – Ralph MacDonald Piano – Leon Pendarvis Trumpet – Oscar Brashear Woodwind – Bud Shank, Ernie Watts Producer – Tommy LiPuma

Trax FM Wicked Music For Wicked People
Relax With Rendell Show Replay On Trax FM & Rendell Radio - 18th November 2023

Trax FM Wicked Music For Wicked People

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2023 120:01


**It's The Relax With Rendell Show Replay On Trax FM & Rendell Radio. Rendell Featured Soul & Boogie/Rare Groove/80's & 70's Grooves Cuts From Fantastics, Slave, Plaza, ORS, Laura Taylor, Kinsman Dazz, Kat Mandu, Flakes, Eumir Deodato, Dynasty, Crown Heights Affair & More. Catch Rendell Every Saturday From 8PM UK Time The Stations: Trax FM & Rendell Radio #traxfm #rendellradio #soul #funk #70ssoul #80ssoul #60s #boogie #disco #raregrooves #soulclassics #reggae #nusoul #relaxwithrendell Listen Live Here Via The Trax FM Player: chat.traxfm.org/player/index.html Mixcloud LIVE :mixcloud.com/live/traxfm Free Trax FM Android App: play.google.com/store/apps/det...mradio.ba.a6bcb The Trax FM Facebook Page : https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100092342916738 Trax FM Live On Hear This: hearthis.at/k8bdngt4/live Tunerr: tunerr.co/radio/Trax-FM Radio Garden: Trax FM Link: http://radio.garden/listen/trax-fm/IEnsCj55 OnLine Radio Box: onlineradiobox.com/uk/trax/?cs...cs=uk.traxRadio Radio Deck: radiodeck.com/radio/5a09e2de87...7e3370db06d44dc Radio.Net: traxfmlondon.radio.net Stream Radio : streema.com/radios/Trax_FM..The_Originals Live Online Radio: liveonlineradio.net/english/tr...ax-fm-103-3.htm**

NuDirections
Balance in Thinkin about Ivan Conti

NuDirections

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2023 76:09


Balance in Thinkin' about Ivan Conti 16 August 1946 - 17th April 2023 (age 76) Ivan Conti (aka Mamao) was regarded as one of the greatest drummers on earth. A true rhythmic innovator, Starting his music career as a session drummer with Odeon Records, Ivan collaborated with artists such as Gal Costa, Roberto Carlos and Jorge Ben Ivan gained standing as one of the founding members of Azymuth and is Brazil's answer to Tony Allen, Steve Gadd, Ginger Baker or Trilok Gurtu, Azymuth is a Brazilian jazz-funk group formed in 1973. The original lineup was a trio composed of José Roberto Bertrami, Alex Malheiros, and Ivan Conti, they gained international recognition in the 1970s and signed with Milestone Records in 1979, where they recorded a number of albums. I first saw Ivan in Manchester some 20 years ago when Azymuth came to town, Azymuth was not really on my radar but I was taken by a friend of mine, well, as the concert started I was an instant convert, amazing. Ivan Conti also explored solo ventures and electronic dance music collaborations throughout his career. Known for his unique drumming style blending jazz-funk with Brazilian rhythms, contributing to Azymuth's distinctive sound. Ivan's career has spanned far beyond half a century's worth of recordings with the likes of Milton Nascimento, Eumir Deodato, Marcos Valle, Hyldon, Gal Costa and Jorge Ben. More recently Mamao recorded an album with hip-hop giant Madlib under the AKA ‘Jackson Conti'.  Info website - www.raysroom.org cardpage - www.raysinfo.org email - raysroom@mail.com Please enjoy the music I love. Ray. Playlist Mamond. Ivan Conti - Preguicman Ivan Conti, grassmass, Stephan Feitsma, Andre Bruni, - Mexe Azymuth – Linha do Horizonte Mamond, Ivan Conti – O Surdo Ron Trent, Ivan Conti, Lars Bartkuhn, – Cool Water Azymuth – Jazz Carnival Azymuth – In My Treehouse Marcos Valle – Mentira (Chega De Mentira) Azamuth - Starchasers – 4 hero Remix Azymuth – Dear Limmertz Azymuth – Tudo Que Voce Podia Ser Azymuth – Villa Mariana – De Tarde Jackson Conti – Sao Paulo Nights

Cloud Jazz Smooth Jazz
Cloud Jazz 2425 | CTI Records - Episodio exclusivo para mecenas

Cloud Jazz Smooth Jazz

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2023 61:03


Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! Edición especial que dedicmos al sello discográfico CTI Records, fundado por el productor Creed Taylor a finales de los 60. Repasamos algunos de los álbumes publicados en dicho sello por artistas como Lalo Schifrin, Antonio Carlos Jobim, Eumir Deodato, Stanley Turrentine, Astrud Gilberto, Bob James, Patti Austin, George Benson, Hubert Laws, Gabor Szabo, Seawind, Freddie Hubbard y Chet Baker.Escucha este episodio completo y accede a todo el contenido exclusivo de Cloud Jazz Smooth Jazz. Descubre antes que nadie los nuevos episodios, y participa en la comunidad exclusiva de oyentes en https://go.ivoox.com/sq/27170

A Breath of Fresh Air
Kool & The Gang's Robert 'Kool' Bell on 60 years of creating hits

A Breath of Fresh Air

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2023 52:00


Formed as a jazz ensemble in the mid-'60s, Kool & the Gang became one of the most inspired and influential funk units during the '70s, and one of the most popular R&B groups of the '80s after their breakout hit "Celebration." Just as funky as James Brown or Parliament (and sampled almost as frequently), Kool & the Gang relied on their jazz backgrounds and long friendship to form a tightly knit group.  Their 21 Top 40 hits display a huge range, from the tough funk of "Jungle Boogie," to the smooth instrumental soul of "Summer Madness," to the lively pop of "Joanna." They hit the Top Ten of the R&B chart with several albums that include the gold Wild and Peaceful in 1973, the all platinum Ladies' Night in 79, Celebrate in 80, Something Special in 81 and Emergency in 84.   Since the '90s, Kool & The Gang have focused most on touring, but they've released several original albums during this time too - the latest of which is People Just Wanna Have Fun in 2023. Our guest today is ROBERT 'KOOL' BELL who with his brother Ronald, founded the group. The boys grew up in Jersey City and picked up the music bug from their father, who was a professional boxer. The duo formed the Jazziacs in 1964 with several neighbourhood friends: they soon renamed themselves the Soul Town Band and began playing clubs in Greenwich Village. After a mix-up with a club owner resulted in the group being billed Kool & the Flames, (and in order to not offend James Brown) they changed their name to Kool & the Gang and quickly became a success on the R&B charts. It was with their 6th album, Wild and Peaceful that Kool & the Gang hit the big time. "Funky Stuff" became their first Top 40 hit at the end of 1973. Then both "Jungle Boogie" and "Hollywood Swinging" reached the Top Ten. Over the next four years, Kool & the Gang delivered a Grammy-nominated recording and scored several Top 40 hits. Their hit "Open Sesame appeared on the Grammy-winning film soundtrack Saturday Night Fever.  However, after this, the rise of disco stalled their popularity. In 1979, the group added two new vocalists, Earl Toon Jr and former Jersey nightclub singer James J.T Taylor. Kool & the Gang also began working with Brazilian jazz fusion arranger/producer Eumir Deodato who produced them from 1979 to 1982. Their first album together, Ladies Night  was their biggest hit yet, the first of three consecutive platinum albums, with the Top Ten singles "Too Hot" and the title track. Celebrate was released in 1979 and spawned Kool & the Gang's only number one hit, "Celebration," an anthem favoured by thousands at ball games, wedding receptions and even astronauts in space. The group produced several more hits, including the single "Get Down on It." Between 1983 and 1985, the band had a pair of number two hits with "Joanna" and "Cherish.” Kool & The Gang remained a going concern throughout the 2000s, teaming up with many younger artists. Fellow co-founders Ronald Bell and Dennis D.T Thomas both passed away in 2020 and 2021, respectively. The album "Perfect Union" was completed with both musicians and was released during the latter year. It was promoted with extensive touring, including performances in 2022 with the German Philharmonic Orchestra. Just ahead of their 60thanniversary, Kool & the Gang quickly returned in 2023 with the album "People Just Wanna Have Fun" led by the single "Let's Party." Kool & The Gang remain the most sampled group in the world. Their longevity is a testament to their talents and Robert ‘Kool' Bell fills us in on all the ins and outs of their journey this week. For more information about Kool & The Gang head for their website https://www.koolandthegang.com/ Please feel free to send me your comments, feedback or any suggestions for future interviews you'd like to hear. You can reach me through the website https://abreathoffreshair.com.au/ I hope you enjoy this episode.

Balada musical
Mato e seu ensolarado remix de um clássico de Bobby Caldwell

Balada musical

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2023 9:11


Thomas Blanchot, mais conhecido como Mato, é o maior produtor de música dub na França. Em seu novo remix, ele faz uma original releitura do clássico “What you won't do for love”, do cantor e compositor americano Bobby Caldwell. “What you won't do for love” tem remix para todos os gostos - do rap de Tupac ao soul de Snoh Aalegra – além de uma infinidade de versões electro. Mas Mato resolveu ir ainda mais longe e deu a esse clássico de 1978 uma pegada dub.Em seu novo disco, “Jazz-Funk Dub Tribute”, pelo selo Stix Records, o produtor francês também traz releituras de faixas de Herbie Hancock, Weather Report, do brasileiro Eumir Deodato, Barry White, entre outros. Um trabalho ensolarado que encantou a programação musical da RFI. Aumente o som!Ouça o Balada Musical clicando no player acima ou acesse-o no Spotify ou no Deezer. 

Um Papo sobre Som
#20 | A música livre e encarnada de João Donato

Um Papo sobre Som

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2023 27:11


João Donato foi um dos maiores gênios da nossa música. Começou ainda no período formador da Bossa Nova e sendo um dos personagens da própria cena, mas mesmo assim nunca se pensou parte do movimento, desde o começo Donato misturava muitos estilos e ritmos regionais variados. Se tinha o samba, jazz, bossa, samba-canção, tinha também, choro, forró, baião. Não é por acaso que Donato primeiro de tudo foi um acordeonista, depois pianista e multi-intstrumentista. João viaja pros Eua nos anos 60 e entra em contato com o jazz latino de Mongo Santamria, Carl Tjader, Joohny Martines, Tito Puente, volta pro Brasil e grava dois discos de bossa com seu trio. Bossa, mas com esses ingredientes calientes caribenhos, “Muito à vontade” e “A bossa muito moderna de João Donato”. Depois volta pros Eua e toca com Bud Shank, Herbie Mann, Ron Carter, Eumir Deodato, Rosinha Valencia. Volta pro Brasil nos em 72, dois anos depois de gravar o disco fusion psicodélico “A bad Donato” nos EUA ainda, e grava “Quem é Quem” e “Lugar Comum”, e é principalmente desse disco que vamos falar. Nessa fase, principalmente em “Lugar Comum”, João entra forte em um universo afro brasileiro, de ancestralidade e ritmos africanos. Tudo isso junto com bossa, funk, baião e etc. Isso tudo se deve muito ao fato de Gilberto Gil ser parceiro da maioria das composições . Nessa época João se antenou com o pós-tropicalismo e foi tocar e arranjar, compor com os Baianos Caetano e Gil. O disco Cantar da Gal é arranjado inteiro por João, mas a gente fala principalmente aqui de“Lugar Comum”, de 1975. Bora lá, aperta o play!MúsicasBaião da GaroaSe Acaso Você ChegasseBluchangaThe FrogChorou ChorouBananeiraEmoriô A Bruxa de MentiraÊ meninaNaturalmenteTudo TemXangô é de BaêPatumbalacundêSegue a gente lá no insta: @umpaposobresom Produção: Baioque ConteúdoRoteiro e apresentação: Pedro SchwarczDireção: Newman CostaEdição: Felipe CaldoRedação: Luiz Fujita e Paulo BorgiaArte: CRIO.LAH

DiscoShow
DiscoShow_T3_Prg19

DiscoShow

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2023 63:45


En este episodio de DiscoShow bailaremos en nuestra pista con grandes temas Disco de artista como Aretha Franklin, Patti LaBelle, ABBA, Barry White, Dee Dee Sharp, Sister Sledge, Marlena Shaw, Carrie Lucas, Eumir Deodato y muchos más… Esta es la playList de la sesión Disco: 01 What A Fool Believes – Aretha Franklin 02 Fate (WSM Compilation Edit) – Chaka Khan 03 Save The Last Dance For Me – Patti LaBelle (1978's DiscoHIT) 04 Only The Strong Survive – Billy Paul (1977's DiscoHIT) 05 Summer Night City – ABBA 06 You're The One I Need – Barry White (1979's DiscoHIT) 07 I'm Not In Love – Dee Dee Sharp (1976's SensualHIT) 08 You´re A Friend To Me – Sister Sledge (1979's SensualHIT) 09 Touch Me In The Morning – Marlena Shaw (1977's DiscoHIT) 10 Live It Up – Inner Life (1981's DiscoHIT) 11 Dance With You – Carrie Lucas 12 Keep On Movin' – Eumir Deodato Ya lo sabes si quieres bailar con nosotros en la pista de DiscoShow, escúchanos en nuestro podcast, disponible en las plataformas iVoox, TuneIn, myTuner, Podimo Podcasts, Apple Podcasts y Google Podcasts. Ahora también puedes bailar con nosotros en la plataforma Mixcloud accede a nuestro canal: discoshow_podcast Síguenos en nuestro perfil: https://mixcloud.com/discoshow_podcast Escucha nuestros episodios y muy pronto nuevo contenido en Mixcloud!!....... --------------------------------------------- ÚNTE A DISCOSHOW EN LAS REDES SOCIALES: Instagram: @discoshow_podcast Facebook: https://facebook.com/discoshowpodcast/ Telegram: Canal DiscoShow: https://t.me/discoshow_podcast Suscríbete a nuestro canal DiscoShow en Telegram y recibirás información sobre nuestros próximos episodios, primicias y nuestros próximos directos en Mixcloud. Si te apetece también nos puedes escuchar en la emisora de radio ONDA SELECCIÓN DISCO en Madrid a través de la 89.4 FM, recuérdalo escucha DiscoShow todos los sábados a partir de las 10 de la noche y los martes y viernes a partir de las 4 de la tarde en la emisora ONDA SELECCIÓN DISCO. Conecta con nuestro e-mail para cualquier consulta que desees o si quieres solicitar algún éxito Disco en especial. discoshowpodcast@gmail.com --------------------------------------------- ÚNETE A NUESTROS DIRECTOS EN MIXCLOUD SÍGUENOS EN INSTAGRAM Y EN TELEGRAM ENTÉRATE DE LAS PRÓXIMAS FECHAS DE NUESTROS DIRECTOS!!! https://mixcloud.com/live/discoshow_podcast Lo mejor de la música DISCO en INTERNET!!!..

Retour de plage
Retour de plage ... Eumir Deodato, pianiste, compositeur & arrangeur

Retour de plage

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2023 115:08


durée : 01:55:08 - Retour de plage du mardi 04 juillet 2023 - par : Laurent Valero - "Retour de plage voyage dans l'univers musical foisonnant d'un des plus grands musiciens brésilien de notre temps : le pianiste, compositeur & arrangeur Eumir Deodato." Laurent Valero

Building Abundant Success!!© with Sabrina-Marie
Episode 2368: Robert "Kool" Bell of Kool & the Gang, GRAMMY® Honoree, ~ A Salute to Co- Founder Robert Bell

Building Abundant Success!!© with Sabrina-Marie

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2023 49:14


Grammy® Honoree, Hollywood Walk of FameLet's Celebrate a Golden Anniversary of Kool & The Gang! Founding Member Brother Ronald Nathan Bell (November 1, 1951 – September 9, 2020), Robert's NEW Brand is.  La Kool. lKool had always envisioned having his own brand out of Europe. For many years, he sought out Grand Cru Vineyards from owners that have been selling for generations and decided to work with Paul Berthelot, a Multi-Vintage Grand Cru Producer since 1884.A couple years ago marked the official launch of Le Kool Champagne, and Kool also recently added a new rosé champagne to keep the summer season going through the winter. Kool & the Gang, officially launched in 1969, after performing for five years under various band titles, has influenced the music of three generations and the band has become true recording industry legends. Thanks to iconic songs like Celebration, Cherish, Jungle Boogie, Summer Madness and Open Sesame, they've earned two Grammy Awards, seven American Music Awards, 25 Top Ten R&B hits, nine Top Ten Pop hits and 31 gold and platinum albums. From Nairobi to Newark, Kool & the Gang has performed continuously longer than any R&B group in history and their bulletproof funk and jazzy arrangements have also made them the most sampled R&B band of all time. A reviewer recently called their performance “a 24-karat show” and every year, even after a half-century on the road, yields a non-stop schedule of shows across the globe. The heavily-in-demand band has continued to tour the world, appearing most recently alongside Kid Rock, Dave Matthews Band, Elton John and The Roots and performing on a recent, 50-city tour with rock legends Van Halen. In 1964, Ronald Bell and his brother, Robert “Kool” Bell, joined Jersey City neighborhood friends Robert “Spike” Mickens, Dennis “Dee Tee” Thomas, Ricky Westfield, George Brown, and Charles Smith to create a unique musical blend of jazz, soul and funk. At first calling themselves the Jazziacs, the band went through various names – The New Dimensions, The Soul Town Band, Kool & the Flames – before settling on their famous moniker. Over the next several years they solidified their musical chemistry on the rough-and-tumble East Coast music scene supporting acts like Bill Cosby, Ritchie Havens and Richard Pryor. Their self-titled 1969 debut album introduced their signature instrumental sound and fierce horn arrangements and spawned their first Billboard R&B charted single, Kool & the Gang. In 1969, Kool & the Gang released their self-titled debut album/ It was the introduction to a theme, music is the message, that Kool & the Gang stands by today. The instrumental album was an expression of their deep love of music. It was also an introduction to their signature sound and the fierce horn arrangements created by Khalis, Dee Tee, and Spike. Their debut album spawned their first Billboard R&B charted single Kool & the Gang and later Let the Music Take Your Mind. In 1970, their audacious sophomore set Live at the Sex Machine peaked at #6 on Billboard's R&B chart and yielded three hit singles: Funky Man, Who's Gonna Take the Weight, and I Want to Take You Higher. Next came The Best Of Kool & the Gang Featuring The Penguin, Kool & the Gang Live at PJ'S, Music Is The Message, and Good Times, all of which helped solidify a sound that wowed not only fans but such contemporaries as James Brown and Nina Simone. The band's stellar reputation grew with each album, but 1973's gold disc Wild & Peaceful took Kool & the Gang to another level (#6 R&B, #33 Pop), spurred by the immortal party anthems Funky Stuff, Hollywood Swinging and the platinum smash Jungle Boogie. Hits like Higher Plane (#1 R&B), the classic Summer Madness (featured on the Grammy-winning movie soundtrack Rocky) and LPs Spirit of the Boogie, Love & Understanding and Open Sesame followed. The latter's title track was featured on the top-selling movie soundtrack of all time, Saturday Night Fever, earning the group their second Grammy. In 1979, Kool & the Gang unveiled a smooth new sound with Ladies Night. Produced by the legendary Pop/Jazz musician Eumir Deodato, it became their first platinum album. The #1 R&B title track reached #8 at Pop. It was followed by Too Hot (#3 R&B, #5 Pop). The 80's would see them dominate the mainstream, starting with the double platinum-selling album Celebrate (driven by the international monster hit Celebration, which spent six weeks atop the R&B chart and became a #1 Pop single). Celebration, which played as the American hostages returned from Iran, remains de rigueur at joyous occasions worldwide. The smashes Get Down On It, Take My Heart, Let's Go Dancing, Joanna, Tonight, Misled, the #1 R&B, #2 Pop giant Cherish and the #1 R&B anthem Fresh (these last three from the multi- platinum LP Emergency) solidified the group's international stardom. Kool & the Gang landed global commercial endorsements, supported countless charitable causes and were the only American group to participate in Band Aid's 1984 Do They Know It's Christmas project for famine victims in Africa. With the explosion of hip-hop in the 90's, Kool & the Gang's incredible catalog of grooves made them DJ favorites. They were second only to R&B icon James Brown as sources of rap music samples. Today, the group enjoys global fame and recognition and a following that spans generations due in part to the groups widely sampled catalogue. Kool & the Gang's drum beats, bass, guitar and signature horn lines lace the tracks of numerous artists including the Beastie Boys, Jay-Z, Madonna, Janet Jackson, Cypress Hill, and P. Diddy. Kool & the Gang is the most sampled band in hip-hop by far. Their music is also featured on the soundtracks for Rocky, Saturday Night Fever, Pulp Fiction, Wreck-It Ralph and countless others. In 2014, they were honored with a BET Soul Train Lifetime Achievement Award and in October 2015, in the town they sing about in one of their earliest hits, “Hollywood Swinging,” Kool & the Gang was honored to take their place as American musical icons with a star on The Hollywood Walk of Fame. In 2016, they released a single, "Sexy (Where'd You Get Yours),” which rose to #15 on the Billboard Adult R& B chart. The song signifies a modernization of Kool & the Gang's unmistakable sound, down to the dance floor-tailored bass grooves and the perfectly timed horns. It was their first airplay chart hit in a decade. © 2023 Building Abundant Success!!2023 All Rights ReservedJoin Me on ~ iHeart Media @ https://tinyurl.com/iHeartBASSpot Me on Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/yxuy23baAmazon Music ~ https://tinyurl.com/AmzBASAudacy:  https://tinyurl.com/BASAud

Jazz Transcription Clinic
Ep 21 - Dario Cecchini

Jazz Transcription Clinic

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2023 46:58


Hello everyone, This is Mirko Guerrini, and I welcome you to the Jazz Transcription Clinic, a monthly interviews podcast where we talk with accomplished jazz doctors about their lives, careers and personal transcription secrets.  On this episode of the Jazz Transcription Clinic Podcast, Mirko Guerrini interviews the guest jazz doctor: Dario Cecchini Listen to Dario's answers to the questions below:  00:00 Introduction 04:54 Why do you transcribe? 12:22 What do you expect to bring home with a transcription? 14:51 Do you recommend solos to be transcribed? 17:09 How do you choose solos? 18:47 What is your methodology? 38:54 Who was the most difficult player you transcribed? 44:40 Which transcription you've done is your favourite? Born on 10/17/1963, Cecchini began playing the drums very early on. At 14, he took up the saxophone and was initiated into the family rite of Jazz. At 22 he began playing baritone sax and flute. He entered the “Conservatorio Cherubini” in Florence, where he studied classical music and graduated in 1991. Personal Projects: ”FUNK OFF” “D.C. TRIOZONE” (Guido Zorn, Bernardo Guerra) "JAZZASONIC" Current Collaborations: “JELLY FACTORY” Leaded by Luca Gelli “RICCARDO FASSI FLORENCE POCKET ORCHESTRA” “MAX CALDERAI QUINTET” “VG BIG BAND” leaded by Vincenzo Genovese Previous Jazz Collaborations : "ITALIAN SECRET SERVICE" (Co-leader con L. Pieri) "EUMIR DEODATO EUROPE XPRESS" “REUNION BIG BAND” Leaded by Marco Tamburini “GIANLUCA RENZI ALL STAR Orchestra” NATALIE COLE BAND KENNY WHEELER HOT ELEVEN KENNY WHEELER ne “I giorni di un uomo”. Oratorio per coro e solisti Jazz. LEE KONITZ NONET MEGATONES Leaded by Maurizio Giammarco TURBULENCE" di Fabio Morgera G.O.N. Grande orchestra nazionale dell' ass. musicisti jazz diretta da B. Tommaso IF SIX WAS NINE LARES Cecchini has also accompanied various foreign and Italian Jazz artists: Paolo Fresu, Marco Tamburini, Fabrizio Bosso, Enrico Pieranunzi, Stefano Bollani, Pietro Tonolo,Glauco Venier, Massimo Urbani, Gianluca Petrella, Riccardo Fassi, Emanuele Cisi, Fred Wesley, Raul Midon, Avery* Sunshine,Dee Dee Bridgewater, Bob Mintzer, J. Surman, C.Batista, L. Agudo, D. Liebnman, R. Beirach, Dave “Fuze” Fiuczynski. Cecchini also has a notable experience outside Jazz, having collaborated and recorded with artists such as: Fred Wesley, Raul Midon, Avery Sunshine, Karima, Simone Cristicchi, Adriano Celentano, Eros Ramazzotti, Alessandra Amoroso, Jovanotti, Biagio Antonacci, Eumir Deodato, Irene Grandi, Gino Paoli, Zucchero, Giorgia, Alexia, Gege' Telesforo, Bengi Benati, Dirotta su Cuba, Riccardo Tesi, James Taylor, Louisiana Red, Mike Turk, Charlie Wood. He participated in television transmissions, recorded film soundtracks and composed music for TV spots. You can check Dario Cecchini and Funk Off music here: https://www.funkoff.it/

Live From Progzilla Towers
Live From Progzilla Towers - Edition 473

Live From Progzilla Towers

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2023 181:40


Welcome to Live From Progzilla Towers Edition 473. In this 1973 edition we heard music by Albert Hammond, Agitation Free, Babe Ruth, Greenslade, Eumir Deodato, Flash, Electric Light Orchestra, Alain Goraguer, Pink Floyd, Focus, Emerson, Lake & Palmer, Roxy Music, Genesis, Gong, Fantasy, Procol Harum, Stardrive, Samla Mammas Manna, Renaissance, Yes & Roger Powell.

Podcast de JAZZNOEND RADIO
Tom Jobim: Tres discos para una isla desierta

Podcast de JAZZNOEND RADIO

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2023 80:25


En el período comprendido entre Mayo de 1.967 y el mismo mes de 1.970, Tom Jobim graba para la discográfica de Creed Taylor CTI tres discos de extraordinaria calidad. Se trata de las grabaciones más jazzísticas de la carrera de Jobim; discos esencialmente instrumentales, todos ellos con la clara impronta de las grabaciones CTI: una sonoridad cálida, deliciosa, con sutiles arreglos orquestales y la participación de algunos de los mejores solistas de jazz y músicos de estudio del momento. Los arreglistas, Claus Ogerman y Eumir Deodato, fueron los seleccionados para los discos de Jobim. Por otra parte, la perfecta acústica de la grabación lograda por el mítico ingeniero de sonido Rudy Van Gelder, fue también una de las características esenciales de estos registros. Radio Jazznoend os invita a recorrer estos tres álbumes Wave, Tide y Stone Flower, a escuchar su música y conocer su historia. Unas grabaciones que marcaron, en la carrera de Jobim, una frontera entre una música basada esencialmente en el movimiento bossa nova del que el maestro carioca puede ser considerado como padre musical, y la exploración de otros parajes musicales más complejos y ambiciosos, encuentro de las aguas del clasicismo y el folclore y que vinieron a completar el vasto universo musical jobiniano.

Cuando los elefantes sueñan con la música
Cuando los elefantes sueñan con la música - Eumir Deodato - 03/01/23

Cuando los elefantes sueñan con la música

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2023 58:59


El pianista, compositor y arreglista brasileño Eumir Deodato, que ha trabajado para artistas como Sinatra, Aretha Franklin o Björk, en grabaciones de 'Double face' -con la voz de Al Jarreau-, 'Summertime', 'Pavana para una infanta difunta', 'Skyscrapers', 'Inútil paisagem', 'Samba de uma nota só', 'Meditação', 'Garota de Ipanema' e 'Insensatez' para discos propios y con el grupo Os Catedráticos de 'Tristeza', 'Os grilos' y 'Feitinha pro poeta'. Para la despedida, su famosa versión de 'Also sprach Zarathustra' de Richard Strauss. Escuchar audio

Cloud Jazz Smooth Jazz
Cloud Jazz 2296 (Discos 1973 1) - Episodio exclusivo para mecenas

Cloud Jazz Smooth Jazz

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2023 59:54


Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! En este especial repasamos unos cuantos discos publicados en 1973: cumplirán medio siglo de vida a lo largo de 2023. Entre ellos, grandes trabajos de artistas como Marvin Gaye, Stevie Wonder, Eumir Deodato, Average White Band, MFSB, The Three Degrees, Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes, Roy Ayers, Rufus, Grover Washington Jr. y Barry White.Escucha este episodio completo y accede a todo el contenido exclusivo de Cloud Jazz Smooth Jazz. Descubre antes que nadie los nuevos episodios, y participa en la comunidad exclusiva de oyentes en https://go.ivoox.com/sq/27170

Trópico utópico
Trópico Utópico - Carambola - 19/09/22

Trópico utópico

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2022 59:58


Anexos al abecé de la música popular de Brasil en forma de compilaciones. Intervienen: Joelho de Porco, Gilberto Gil, Azymuth, Viva Brasil, Dom Um Româo, Eumir Deodato, Guilherme Vergueiro, Bill Summers, Os Incríveis, Wanderléia y Sueli & Os Kanticus. Escuchar audio

Como lo oyes
Como lo oyes - Black Velvet - 08/07/22

Como lo oyes

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2022 58:50


Caprichos en clave de música negra, alentadora, veraniega, soleada. Eumir Deodato y la conquista del espacio más funky-disco. Bobby Brown y la ola “house”… Madonna con Nile Rodgers en el esplendor de Chic y Daft Punk reivindicando los riffs funkeros de Nile Rodgers y Paul Jackson. Y Angie Stone y los tejanos Robert Glasper y Erykah Badú relajando ánimos. DISCO 1 DEODATO Star Trek theme 1976 “Very Together” 4’44 DISCO 2 BOBBY BROWN That’s The Love Is 7’21 DISCO 3 ASHFORD & SIMPSON Found A Cure 10.30 DISCO 4 MADONNA Material Girl 4’27 DISCO 5 CHIC Chic Mystique 6’27 DISCO 6 DAFT PUNK Get Lucky 6’09 DISCO 7 ANGIE STONE Freedom (Intro) + No More Rain (In His Cloud) 6’12 DISCO 8 ROBERT GLASPER & ERYKAH BADÚ Maiysha (So Long) 7’21 Escuchar audio

Trópico utópico
Trópico Utópico - Dança louca - 23/06/22

Trópico utópico

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2022 60:12


Anexos al abecé de la música popular de Brasil en forma de compilaciones. Intervienen: Almir Ricardi, Edilza Aires, Emílio Santiago, Gerson King Combo, Hélio Matheus, Lady Zu, Marcos Valle, Roberto Carlos, Som Três, Tim Maia, Antônio Carlos e Jocafi, Eduardo Araújo y Eumir Deodato. Escuchar audio

Trópico utópico
Trópico utópico - Hora da uniâo - 20/06/22

Trópico utópico

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2022 59:49


Anexos al abecé de la música popular de Brasil en forma de compilaciones. Intervienen: Lady Zu & Tiago Mocotó, Luiz Camilo, Maurício Manieri, Patrícia Marx, Renato Jam, Sublimes, Toni Bizarro & B.Negâo, Zé Ricardo & Ed Motta, Almir Ricardi, Dudu França, Elis Regina y Eumir Deodato. Escuchar audio

Cloud Jazz Smooth Jazz
Cloud Jazz 2180 (Especial George Benson 3) - Episodio exclusivo para mecenas

Cloud Jazz Smooth Jazz

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2022 58:09


Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! Tercer especial que dedicamos a la figura del guitarrista George Benson. En esta ocasión volvemos a recopilar sus apariciones en álbumes de otros artistas como Lee Ritenour, Barnaby Finch, Hubert Laws, Van Morrison, Fuse One, Kenny G, Ornella Vanoni, Eumir Deodato, Ronnie Cuber y David Garfield. Este es un episodio exclusivo para los mecenas de Cloud Jazz. ¡Gracias por vuestro apoyo!!Escucha este episodio completo y accede a todo el contenido exclusivo de Cloud Jazz Smooth Jazz. Descubre antes que nadie los nuevos episodios, y participa en la comunidad exclusiva de oyentes en https://go.ivoox.com/sq/27170

NuDirections
Mestizo Sounds presents Música e Futebol

NuDirections

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2022 77:04


 THIS SHOW IS A SELECTION OF BRAZILIAN POPULAR MUSIC FROM 1964 TO 1973. A DECADE OF GREAT MUSIC IN A BACKGROUND OF POLITICAL TURMOIL AND WORLDWIDE FOOTBALL SUCCESS. The name for the show is taken from one of the most famous songs by Marcos Valle. This is “Paz e Futebol”. I replaced Paz (peace) for Música as this is the subject matter of the show. Peace was not a description of those years as the 10 years covered in the show were a time of intense internal social and political conflict in Brazil. Bossa Nova (New Wave), the Brazilian homegrown jazz version, was the music style that many young musicians followed and developed during these 10 years from 1964 to 1973. At the same time, foreign pop and rock infiltrated the music of some of these young musicians. This was not well accepted by everybody in Brazil. It was a time of division between the MPB (Brazilian Popular Music) and the Jovem Guarda. The latter was a music movement influenced by the American Rock & Roll and followers of Elvis Presley and Little Richard. Roberto Carlos and Tim Maia were some of the musicians that embraced the electrification of music to the chagrin of the most nationalistic and, at the same time, left-leaning musicians of the MPB that oppose the Americanisation of the Brazilian music. Then in the late sixties, the Tropicalistas (a hippie and psychedelic sixties movement in the Brazilian music) established a link between these two groups even though in a more avant-garde and dadaist outcome. MPB and Tropicalistas were both inspired by Samba and Bossa Nova's greatest artists and composers such as Tom Jobim, Joao Gilberto, Baden Powell and lyricist Vinicius de Moraes. In these ten years emerged an outstanding generation of talented musicians and performers. The list is immense. I highlight among them: Marcos Valle, Milton Nascimiento, Sergio Mendes, Caetano Veloso, Elis Regina, Chico Buarque, Jorge Ben Gal Costa, Arthur Verocai, Gilberto Gil, Tom Ze, Alceu Valença, Astrud Gilberto, Joyce, Edu Lobo Elza Soares, Tim Maia, Naná Vasconcelos, Eumir Deodato, Wilson Simonal, Flora Purim, Airto Moreira, Maria Bethania, MPB4, Os Novos Baianos and Os Mutantes. I can continue putting more names and I will still miss some of these great Brazilian artists of the 10-year-golden period. Only I hope this selection opens the curiosity for the extraordinary music of Brazil. One of the most musical countries in the world which have attracted music fans all over the world since the days of Bossa Nova. Music 1- Batucada - MARCOS VALLE (1968) 2- Os Grillos - CLAUDETE SOARES (1970) 3- Presente Greco - ARTHUR VEROCAI (1972) 4- Se Vice Quiser Mas Sem Bronquear - ELIZABETH VIANA (1969) 5- Tereza Sabe Sambar - ELIS REGINA (1966) 6- Que Pena - GAL COSTA E CAETANO VELOSO (1969) 7- Lalari Olara - JORGE BEN (1967) 8- Canto de Ossanha - BADEN POWELL E VINICIUS DE MORAES (1966) 9- A Viagem Das Horas - JOSE MAURO (1970) 10- Mister Misterio - ALCEU VALENÇA E GERALDO AZEVEDO (1972) 11- Cantiga de Procura - JOYCE (1968) 12- Mal de Amor - ELZA SOARES E MILTINHO (1967) 13- Feitinha P'ro Poeta - OS CATEDRATICOS (1965) 14- Gloria - TOM ZE (1968) 15- Garra - MARCOS VALLE (1971) 16- Gostava Tanto de Vocé - TIM MAIA (1973) 17- Rio Vermelho - MILTON NASCIMIENTO (1969) 18- Viola Fora de Moda - EDU LOBO (1973) 19- Samba de Verao 2 - MARCOS VALLE (1969) 20- Veleiro - ELIS REGINA (1966) 21- Vivo ou Morto - NELSON ANGELO E JOYCE (1972) 22- Arrastai - EDU LOBO (1964) 23- Dedicada a Ela - ARTHUR VEROCAI (1972) 24- Cravo e Canela - MPB4 (1971) 25- Figa de Guine - ANA MARIA E MAURICIO (1973) 26- Queremos Guerra - GILBERTO GIL (1968) 27- Minha Menina - OS MUTANTES (1968) 28- Goal by PELE (Final 1970 World Coup Final Brazil vs Italy) Brazilian radio broadcasting

Trapital
The Future Of Music Business With Economist Will Page

Trapital

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2022 56:12 Very Popular


One of the most unique insights into the state of the music business today doesn't come from a record label exec. Not from an agent. Not from an artist. No, it comes from Scottish economist Will Page, who served that role for Spotify from 2012 to 2019 — a period of explosive growth for the streaming giant. But if you ask Page about streaming's future, he's not nearly as optimistic as the rest of the industry. “The party has to come to an end,” as he told me on this episode of Trapital.Page believes the music industry is transitioning from a “herbivore market” to a “carnivore” one. In other words, future growth will not come from brand-new customers — it'll come from the streaming services eating into each other's market share. Not only has subscriber counts possibly tapped out in Page's opinion, but streaming services have also put a ceiling on revenues by charging only $9.99, a price that hasn't budged in 20 years despite giant leaps in technology and music catalog size.  That against-the-grain prediction was one of many Will shared with me during our in-depth interview. But he has plenty more research- and experience-backed thoughts on touring, vinyl records, Web 3.0, and everything in between. Believe me, this is an interview you don't want to miss. Here's everything we covered: [0:00] The 3 R's in the business of music[3:15] Will's experience being a DJ[7:10] Lopsided Growth Of Music Streaming In Global Markets[8:59] Vinyl Records $1.5 Billion Recovery [13:18] Will's Bearish View About The Future Of Streaming[15:22] Ongoing Price War Between Streaming Services[22:59] The Changing Economics Of Music Touring [26:16] Performing At Festivals Vs. Tours [30:50] The Evolution Of Music Publishing[34:32] How Music Revenue Gets Distributed To Publishers[37:35] What Does A “Post-Spotify Economy” Look Like? [40:00] Will's Biggest Issues With Web3 [47:01] The Current Business Landscape Of Hip-Hop Listen to Will's mix right here: https://www.mixcloud.com/willpagesnc/we-aint-done-with-2021/Check out Will's Podcast, Bubble Trouble, where he breaks down how financial markets really work.Read Will's book, Tarzan Economics: Eight Principles for Pivoting Through Disruption.Listen: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | SoundCloud | Stitcher | Overcast | Amazon | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | RSSHost: Dan Runcie, @RuncieDan, trapital.coGuests: Will Page, @willpageauthor  Trapital is home for the business of hip-hop. Gain the latest insights from hip-hop's biggest players by reading Trapital's free weekly memo. _____TRANSCRIPT Will Page  00:00The best way I could do this is, I just talk about ratios. There are three R's in this business, there's share of revenue, there's ratio, and as rates pool, they mean different things. Most experts get confused with the three R's.I'm gonna stick to ratios that is, if I give the label $1, how much do I give the publisher, the software, there's collective management organization? So we stick to the conventional streaming model today, I would say that you get the record label $1, you're giving the publishing side of the fence 24 cents, you know, a decent chunk of change, but still the poorer cousin of the record label. On YouTube, I think it could be as high as 35 cents, 40 cents even because there's a sink right involved in those deals.Dan Runcie  00:46Hey, welcome to the Trapital Podcast. I'm your host and the founder of Trapital, Dan Runcie. This podcast is your place to gain insights from executives in music, media, entertainment, and more, who are taking hip hop culture to the next level. Today's guest is Will Page. He is the author of a book I cannot recommend enough. It's called Tarzan Economics. It's a guide to pivoting through disruption. This is a must-read if you're working in music, media, or entertainment. He is also a Visiting Fellow at the London School of Economics. He is the former Chief Economist at Spotify. So if you are interested in where the music industry is heading, where trends are going, this is the person to talk to. I was first put onto Will's work, he had released this white paper called Rockonomics. And it was a breakdown on how artists were using Twitch. I wrote about the report in Trapital because I was fascinated by it. And then he and I started talking from there. So it was only a matter of time before he came on the podcast. Will and I covered a bunch in this episode, we talked about the growth of streaming, we also talked about the growth of vinyl, and how that impacts the economics for a lot of artists and songwriters and publishers. We also talked about the price of streaming services. Most services are still $9.99 per month in the US. So we talked about why that is for music compared to video streaming, where Netflix Hulu, and Amazon have been increasing their prices for their respective services. We also talked about music publishing and why Will thinks that that catalog will continue to grow. We talked about live music and some of the potential constraints where now the next 24 months everyone wants to go on tour. But there's only so many venues and so much money that consumers have unwillingness to see live shows. So we've talked about that we talked about trends in hip hop, we'll have a bunch of exclusive numbers to share in this. And it was great to talk to him. It's been great to also Jessica T to learn from him. I honestly do believe that he's one of the sharpest minds in the music industry. And it was a pleasure to have him on this podcast. And I hope you enjoy this conversation as much as I did. Here's my chat with Will Page. Alright, today we got the one and only Will Page with us. He is well known in the music and media space as an economist, but he also spent a lot of time as a DJ. And I feel like that could be a good place for us to start the conversation. Will, talk to me about your DJ experience and what you've been doing there recently.Will Page  03:22Well, I've been DJing since the age of puberty. And it was all inspired by one lyric by a rapper called Mike G from The Jungle Brothers from an album called done by the forces of nature, where he dropped his library. He said it's about getting the music across the message across getting it across without crossing over. And unlike a 14-year-old kid when I hear this, and I just thought about those words, getting the music across without crossing over, how do you get out to an audience without diluting its integrity. I'm only 14 at the time. But that just resonated with me so strongly, and I just kind of dedicated a huge chunk of my life to trying to get the music across to an audience that would otherwise not have heard it. And I'm not diluting how it's been presented. That's what a DJ can do. You can thread songs together in a way that gets music across without its dilution without crossing it over.Dan Runcie  04:11And I feel like, for you, you've been able to carry that through, you had we're not done we are done with 2021 I was able to do a quick drop for that as well. So I think what's likely inspiring for a lot of folks is that there's so many people that have music backgrounds and passions early on, but there's a pause if they're not able to continue that but you've been able to keep this as part of your charity, which I think makes so much of what you do with this space authentic because you yourself are someone who releases music.Will Page  04:40Yeah, I mean, the mix cloud allowed me to scale what I was doing anyway, if I go back to university in the late 90s early noughties you'd make mixtapes mix cassettes. There's a great way to date girls, but you could only do maybe like 50 100 at tops. Mix cloud allows you to take what you do and scale it scale what you love to do and the mixer UK only gave us a drop for weighing in dama 2021. That makes us no-hit 27,000 on Mixcloud meaning have overtaken Erykah Badu one of your former guests, I believe. So, you know, to get to 20,000 unique people with a mix that you care a year crafting together, that means the world to me.Dan Runcie  05:15It's a lot. And that's powerful, too. I imagined that you're always not just finding the sounds that make the most vibe for the year. But you're also thinking about, okay, what is the way that things are moving, especially at the pandemic? I feel like it's such an interesting year to have something like that. Because I think for some people, it's a year that they want to remember a year, they don't want to remember as well. But I feel like you probably already have a few things lined up for the mix you'll do at the end of 2022.Will Page  05:45Yeah, I mean, you're always looking for the bands that are not on Spotify, not an Apple Music, I think about half of my mix this year, you will not find in a streaming service. And I'm proud of that you're going to Discogs to find those rare white label bootleg vinyls, you're going to the source to the artists who are in the studio recording. And to you know, profile bands like Sault, or London-based bands, S-A-U-L-T, on that mix. That meant the world because I've been watching them rise over the past few years now. And, you know, to this day, nobody has any idea what the band look like, who the band are made up of, you know, this, like punk music, they're rejecting the system, they're doing it completely separately. And they're, you know, not hitting millions of people on Spotify with their music, they've let the music do the talking. So I often think about mixed culture as a break it down this way, the internet can scale just about anything, but it can't scale intimacy, and a playlist or as an intimate, that's just a bunch of songs straddle together and work them through the shuffle play feature, but a mix, a DJ mix of 60 minutes seamless mix, where you have vocal drops, you have beat mixing, you have layering, all those techniques that you've honed over the years, that's intimate. So what I'm able to do with mixtape culture is to scale intimacy, and that goes out for every other DJ you've had on your show. That's what we're trying to do right.Dan Runcie  07:05For sure. And I feel like that's a good segue to chat a little bit more about some of the work you've done for a company that is very heavily focused on playlists, which is Spotify. And I think more broadly, looking at the streaming ever we're in right now, this is a great time to chat because we just saw the IFP results. And streaming is continuing to grow, as we've seen, but I feel like you've probably spotted a few interesting trends about where things are heading. And I think that's a question of art for a lot of people streaming continues to grow, but how far can it grow? What are we seeing in terms of differences within genres or regions? What are some of the things that stuck out to you?Will Page  07:43I'll give you a couple. The first one is the global business. Well, last time I looked at the United Nations, I think there's 208 countries in the world, the global yearbook that we're discussing here, has I think, 58. So we have to be careful what we define as global. I think Africa's clubbed together as one continent with a need to work on that. But I think the global business is growing, but it's also becoming more American. So if you go back to when Spotify launched, Americans made up 20 to 23% of the business round, about just over a fifth today, it's 37%. So we have seen the business grow and become more American. And that raises questions, economic questions, like globalization questions, should poor countries catch up with rich ones, a theory says yes, the reality often says no, so we're seeing this kind of lopsided growth where the business is growing, but it's growing in favor of an American market, the biggest country is growing at the fastest rates. That's a positive problem, but I just want to flag it, which is that's not how it was supposed to play out. And then the second thing I'd want to point to as well as just vinyl, this vinyl recovery is just Well, I don't know how much my bank balance is responsible for this vinyl recovery. But I'm telling you, is defying the laws of gravity. Now we're now looking at Vinyl being worth one and a half-billion dollars, which is more than it's been worth in the past 30 years. It's worth more than CDs, cassettes, and downloads the three formats that were supposed to declare that vinyl is dead, but there's two things you can kind of cut out the vinyl recovery, which I think will be of real interest to your audience. Firstly, on the consumer side, I saw a survey which suggested that the majority just over half of all vinyl buyers today don't own a record player. I mean, something's cooking here. So why are we buying it for now I'll extend that as well. The cost of wall frames to frame vinyl on your wall often costs more than the record itself. So I'm willing to pay more for vinyl to be called New framed on my wall than I am for the record. And by the way, I don't have a record player that a lot of people will take those bizarre boxes, but on the creator side, something else is interesting. It'll take a little bit of working through but if we think about the streaming model is monetizing consumption, that's what it does. So there's an album A 10 songs, three killer and seven filler songs and an album Let's say Dan runs, he wrote the three killer tracks, and we'll page the seven Duff filler tracks. On streaming, Dan might walk away with all the money, and I'll walk away with none. Because we're only streaming the killer tracks and nobody's touching the filler. As the album model kicks out from vinyl, I would get 70% of the cache. That's crazy because nobody knows what's being consumed. And it's a lot of cash by just kind of do some rough math, you have a million fans streaming your hip hop record on Spotify. And let's say they're streaming it 200 times in the month when the album drops, you only need 20,000 of them of that million to make the same amount of money from vinyl than you would do from streams, which is entirely plausible. But then how do you pay the copyright owners from those songs on an album is very different from how you pay them on a stream. If you go back to the late 70s. The one most successful records of all time was Saturday Night Fever, the BGS, and a bunch of other people. It's crazy to think that Ralph McDonald's Calypso struck his record there, which nobody has listened to, but the same royalty as staying alive by the BGS. Because it was a vinyl record. So to reiterate, on the consumer side, I don't know how many of these vinyl records are being played. And on the creative side, it raises questions about how these creators are going to get paid.Dan Runcie  11:16That's a good point. But that I don't think is being talked about as much about the vinyl search, because there's so much like wow, about just how much has been purchased. I think I haven't saw the stat that Adele's 30 albums sold 8000 cassettes or there's a self-titled stat about that. And I think the similar thing that you said lines up, I think those people actually still own a Walkman or whatever type of cassette player that they have. So I do think that that is something that probably there could be a deeper analysis on. Because a lot of the people that write the filler songs, how do they feel whether you're a songwriter, whether you know what's behind it, especially when you know that there's so much clearer path to be able to determine, Okay, this is going to be the lead single that this is what we're going to push most from this album, it really shifts the exhibit more to where things are going in terms of a single market and like the way that people have talked about pop music for a while now. Right. And I guess that brings me back to the streaming trends that you mentioned, overall, we're in this area, as you mentioned, streaming itself that US penetration has grown from 22%, I believe you said is now 30 to 3537, somewhere around there. But where do we go from here because as you've written before, the price of music streaming, at least the monthly subscription hasn't necessarily been increasing. The average revenue per user overall, because of the international growth is decreased. And you have plenty of people that are still trying to get their fair share of what they can. It's streaming. So it's in like 510 years from now, if you could see into the future. Where do you think streaming distribution is I think the good thing is that people have smartphones, and there's more and more growth from that perspective. So streaming is going to grow. But on the other hand, the economics of these things do have some theoretical point where we've maximized the global penetration of this. What do you think about where that is going?Will Page  13:17Let me unpack it in two different lanes. Firstly, I'll deal with the saturation point question which is, you know, how long can this party keep going for it's three o'clock in the morning, who's going to call time on it? And then secondly, I want to deal with the pricing point on its own lien as well. But on saturation point, you're now in a situation where I'd put it as in America, we've had herbivores we've had Spotify growing Apple growing, Amazon growing, YouTube growing, everybody's reporting growth, Pandora even is growing. What we're gonna see at some point soon is carnivores, which is Apple will grow by eating into Spotify as growth or YouTube will grow by eating into Amazon's growth. So the key question we got to ask is, when do we go from the herbivore market we're in today to a carnivore market of tomorrow, and output Spotify as your subscriber number right about 45 million, Apple at 49 million, you dump on top YouTube, Amazon Pandora, you're well past 110, 120 million. Now that's important because I reckon there's around about 110 million qualifying households in America that has at least one person who could pay for a streaming service. This is crucial, because if you look at what Apple one's bundle is doing $30 a month for news, music, television, gaming, fitness, and two terabytes of storage per six accountholder is a household proposition. They're saying to the home, I got you convenience. Everyone under this roof is covered with Apple products. So when you have 110 million households, and you have more than 110 million subscribers in the United States, then we're in a race to the finishing line before herbivores turn into carnivores. In oil. We have this expression called Peak Oil, which is we know that we've extracted more oil in the world and has left to extract an oil All that's left is going to be even more costly to get out of the ground. I think we're in peak subscriber territory where at some point soon we're going to start seeing growth happen through stealing other customers as opposed to finding your own. So I just want to put that warning flag out there just now we're partying like it's 1989 Fine, but at some point, the party has to come to an end and growth is going to come at the expense of other players that then flips Neil from the east side to the B side of this record, we flip it over to price. And then pricing debate is interesting. I published this work called MelB economics, which we can cite on your wonderful website there, which was to look at the 20-year history of the 19 price point. And it's crazy story back in the third of December 2001. Over 20 years ago today, Rhapsody got its license for 999 offerings which had 15,000 songs first point, the origins of 999. Bizarrely deep back to the blockbuster rental card, some cooked-up label executive would have said that it cost 999 to rent videos from blockbuster. That's what it should cost to rent music. Secondly, there was only 15,000 songs with limited use case there was no smartphone back then no apps, no algorithms, that was all a weird world into the future. So you just had 999 for 15,000 songs we're now checking in early April 2022. And it's still 999 in dollar and euro and Sterling. But we're offering 100 million songs. That's the crazy thing. So in the article MelB economics what I do is I, strip inflation out in the case of the UK 999 has fallen down to six pounds 30 pence. Remember, you know family plan makes music cheaper to have 2.3 people are paying 4099, that's six pounds, 50. There's way too many numbers in this conversation for capital. But still, we'll stick with it. Student plan makes it cheaper to sew music in real terms has fallen to six pounds 30 which is less than a medium glass of Malbec wine. So 175 milliliters of Malbec wine costs more than 100 million songs, which is available offline on-demand without adverts that for me is certified bonkers. I don't understand what we've done. We're offering more and more, and we're charging less and less. And you only have to leave the ears to the eyes on the video streaming to see what they're doing on the other side of the fence. Netflix has got me from 799 to 899 to 1299, to now 1499 In the space of 15 months, and I haven't blinked Disney plus, the reason I'm paying for 99 and Disney plus is because I paid 1999 to get Cruella live on-demand. So they're charging more and more, but only offering part of the world's repertoire set for eyeball content. We're charging less and less and offering more and more of the wells, your whole content says like two ships passing each other in the night. It's a very interesting dilemma.Dan Runcie  17:49It's intriguing because when you look at the way that video is structured, as you mentioned, you have all these price increases. And I think Netflix for some plans is you know, at 99 It's approaching that level. But in music, it's this thing where yeah, there's some price differences where I think I saw today that Amazon music is increasing $1 But that's from 799 for Prime subscribers to that being 899. So, Ross thatWill Page  18:17I wonder if like what caused that?Dan Runcie  18:21I mean, honestly, I feel like there's something here because when I think about this, I think about a few things, right? Obviously, you do have this fight where the artists want to get more and the labels want to get more, you know, not just for the artist, but for themselves. And obviously, Spotify wants to earn more logically you would think, Okay, if you increase the price, and people just understated the economics of what's likely, if Spotify increased up to 1299 a month for the standard base rate, how many folks would blink. But to your point earlier, I have to imagine that the fear is looking at the trends and where that penetration is, if they jump up to 39 or 1299, then they're going to lose those customers to the other streaming services that have been shoved there yet, because of that thought of, you know, shifting to that carnivore mentality of competing with each other. So because for roughly 80% of the content that they do offer, it is roughly the same between each of the services, it's in when's it to be more of a price war, then in video streaming, where most of them do have some differentiated contentWill Page  19:26100% And two things to hold on to a very eloquent point there. And firstly, let's just remind ourselves that Apple launched superior sound quality, you may remember the commercial of lossless audio, you buy your air pods, which cost two years of Apple Music or Spotify to put in your years and you get superior sound quality, the subtext underneath it said at no extra cost. That was the actual marketing message. So there again, we're improving the offer. We're supplying more, but we're charging less in real terms. And that's a really interesting kind of point can occur. into it. The second thing and we should get balanced into this discussion, because it's delicate is we have to remind ourselves that, you know, there's 120 million subscribers in America, there's still another 100 and 20 million to go. But we know they're not they're interested in paying for music because they haven't paid yet, the best way to attract them is not necessarily to raise price. So we got to remember that there's still no oil to extract, it's not going to be easy oil to extract, the best way to get to it might not be to raise the price. But there's a catch to this. I can remember, in the early noughties, right up to 2010 piracy, ripping the asset out of this business. And concert promoters were saying, We love piracy because the kids are getting music for free so they can pay more on concert tickets. I wonder if now they're saying we love Spotify because they don't raise prices, which means we can raise hours, this is not a discussion of how to rip off the customer. This is a discussion about value exchange. And I just wonder whether recorded music is leaving value on the table. That's the key point to hammer home.Dan Runcie  20:57That's a good point. And I think that also made me think too, could there be some notion of maintaining the perception of Spotify as something that still has high pricing power is still as high consumer surplus because then that helps the stock price. And then seeing that the major labels are all invested in Spotify itself. It's about like having that perception of you know, the future growth and whatever it is. So what you've just said made me think about that being a factor, potentially to the 100%.Will Page  21:27And of course, you got to distinguish the Spotify, Apple Music cost structure from that of the video streaming companies, in that they have a kind of variable costs, you double your business, you double your cost base, whereas Netflix, you jump up costs, and you have you jumped up your revenue, you raised me from 799 to 1499, the cost of that content was fixed. And I'm still consuming the Fresh Prince of Bel-Air on Netflix to this day. That is a fixed-cost deal that he did to get that content. And that's margin to Netflix. So you know, the cost structure matters in this one as well.Dan Runcie  21:59Definitely. And you mentioned like music there. And I think there's a lot to think about from that perspective. I feel like we're in this post-pandemic. I mean, we're still not out of it. But we're in this post-quarantine era, art more artists than ever are trying to tour and get out there try to capture what's there. But also from an economic perspective, from that most people are only going to go to a certain number of live events per year. And we have this 18 to 24-month run coming up where everyone wants to make up for what they couldn't do in the past two years. How will that shift not just who that goes on tour together? And then how they may split those profits, what the availability looks like. And if they're not able to do what they may have done on tour in the late 2010s. How does that affect future touring? I think that's a piece of it that, you know, we still haven't necessarily seen the impact of but it just feels inevitable based on where things are heading.Will Page  22:58You did absolutely know on touring. I was lucky and I got to do some great work on the UK live industry. And I can only speak for the UK here. I know a lot of your audience knew us, but I think these points will carry across. The first one was to work out how much is spent on concert tickets in Britain during the normal year of 2019. And the answer was 1.7 billion pounds. That's more than was spent on recorded music a lot more than was spent recorded music which makes sense, you know, you pay 120 pounds on your Spotify account, you're paying 240 pounds to go to Reading Festival for two days in a muddy field and reading costs more than 365 days of all the world's music. But what I noticed there was the industry is changing in its growth. I showed that between 2012 The year of the London Olympics, and 2019 the live music industry in this country had exploded and grow but it was lopsided. All the growth came from stadiums, festivals, and to a lesser extent arenas, the theaters, the 2000 3000 capacity theaters like the Fillmore West over where you are, they were getting crushed. They were actually shrinking in size. So we have this lopsided live music industry which is going right in the direction of the head as opposed to the long tail. The stadiums or festivals The arena is as opposed to the theater as the club's the university venues. And that's interesting because that's going to change the dynamics of how you make money from live. Do you go from doing your tour of an album to doing a tour of your festivals for that record? And what does that mean for the cost structure for the insurance and all those things that bands have to consider when you're hitting the road? I mean, credit to trap tool. You've had some great podcasts recently on this topic. But as there's a big rethink coming along in this live music market is not the same as we had back in 2019. It's changed fundamentally and it is the breadwinner for most artists' income I think it makes up about 70% of what an artist has to live for comes from the road that vanished. How do we get it back?Dan Runcie  24:49I feel like Cardi B has been a good case study on this specific point here, right. It's been four years now since she released an album and she's yet to go on a true proper tour in that time, that said she's done plenty of festivals where she served more on those festival guarantees that she liked what on tour. She's also done many private events where she's likely earned that same amount, if not more. So, there's a whole economic argument to be made. And I think there's also some risk involved, too, right? I think that festivals do give you the opportunity to get that nature back, you get the high number, the revenue that comes through, but maybe your fans will be a little bit more forgiving if you're set-piece at your festival isn't the most extravagant thing, especially if you're not the headliner at it. But on a tour, I think it changes it's a little bit more pressure. Everyone wants to see that Instagrammable or tick talkable moment to then sell future tickets, and just the production costs and everything with traveling. It still is something that is very worthwhile, but I think we've just started to see some of that segmentation there, especially for someone like her I would have to go residencies to I know she's done a few different things in Vegas here and there. But yes, I still yet to do that. 30-city worldwide tour?Will Page  26:12Yeah, I think you got to think of your head and your heart. Your head says like you point out the economics fevers, festivals, your back lines are your insurances cover travels already covered. I have numerous Hip Hop bands perform at festivals in Europe. And that's one of the big advantages. The costs are all taken care of by the festival. But your heart says what does that do to intimate relationships with your fans, right? You're staring at 50,000 Strangers in the muddy field. That's different from staring at 2000 friends in the Fillmore West. So the heading the horror is going to come into play here. What I would add, though, is that there are rumors I would say here in the UK, at least that the promoters are saying I'll pay you a ton of money to film at the festival to make sure that you don't go on tour. And that's an interesting situation. If you build one too many houses, you collapse the property market. If you have one too many tours or one too many festivals, you collapse like the music industry. So there's ways in which people are trying to restrain the market to festivals at the expense of the theaters that certainly is coming through in the data. We're seeing the theater business, take a kick in well, festivals go on a roll.Dan Runcie  27:12Yeah. Because I think about you look at the artists that are touring stadiums now whether it's your Taylor Swift or Beyonce is they wouldn't be able to do that if they didn't have the individual tours, that smaller venues when they were starting out being able to build that intimate fan base, like you said, like you get to that point, right. And I do think that as good as festivals can be it is much more of a lucrative cash grab that is I don't want to say necessarily short-term thinking. But I think you ideally want to have some type of balance there, right? Get the big bag that you can get from something else. It's almost no different than I think running a business right? Okay, sure. You may be able to do a speaking fee or do some type of you know, the thing here or there. But you can't do that all the time, especially if it's not an audience are tapped into. You still need to do some of the things that could set you up for the long game.Will Page  28:05Yeah, and there's an infographic that I'll share with you to pass on to your audience here. I wrote an article in The Economist called smells like Middle East spirit, as opposed to teen spirit and ice play on words had to Dave Grohl and Kurt Cobain, but what I was looking at was the average age of festival headliners over time. This is a doer pessimistic Scottish economist, this is what you do is your spare time. Okay. So in 92, and Radiohead did Glastonbury, the average age of a festival headliner was 2526 years old. And all these hot bands were coming through the Britpop era. You know, there was so much development of new talent by 2012. I think it got up to 58. And I got a lot of criticism for that article, but then Glastonbury that year had the who and Lionel Richie headlining, which I think was 70 and 73 years old, apart, and then you can see the conveyor belt problem, which is okay, it's a quick cash grab, it makes sense. But that's not the conveyor belt of how we develop talent for tomorrow. That's just how we cash in our chips at the casino today. So it does raise questions. And I'm not saying it's like the doomsday scenario here. But we just need a healthy balance of, you know, a seedbed for future growth. And then the big stage of exploiting that moment today, which could be the permanent stage at Glastonbury, the headlights siege up on a roof and mistakes. So I just think we're getting a little bit lopsided here. We're a bit short term system, how this business needs to developDan Runcie  29:25Agreed on that. Switching gears a bit. One thing that you wrote recently that stuck out to me you did this deep dive on music publishing, and I think this is another area that kind of has some of that short term, long term perspective on it, because you look at the people who get the share of the copyright pie, at least today. And from a music streaming perspective, a lot of that has been much more in the favor of the recorded side and then the people getting compensated on the recording side. But with that the songwriters and the PA brochures. A lot of them necessarily in that timeframe didn't get a lot of that. But I think in this wave now where we're seeing more catalog deals, and we're seeing people understand the value of that things may be starting to shift and there's likely other things as well. But what do you think about the way that the publishing side has been seen and what the future opportunities are for that side of the business?Will Page  30:23Well, the way that labels and publishing were taught to me in terms of what makes them distinct from one another goes back to my Aunt Doreen Lauder, who worked in the music business from 1959 at Decca Records right the way through to 2012. She went enzyme records with Nigel Grange loosens half brother, they were responsible for Sinead O'Connor who sold 11 million albums based on the prints cover. And she once said to me, Will, this is how the music industry works, the record label piece of your drugs and the publishing pays for your pension, just kind of as a nice succinct way of summarizing how the business works. That was then this is now clearly times have changed, I think. But it reminds us about you know what makes the business different. And that piece of work that you cite is something called global value of copyright, where I'm really keen to educate this industry, regardless of whether you're coming from a label perspective, a manager or an artist or songwriter, there's a C with a circle on it called copyright. We get that and it involves record labels. It involves SoundExchange involves artists involves ASCAP, BMI, GMR says EQ involves publishers, David Israeli, and the great folks at the NMPA, and Wall Street, but the whole thing together for me all this spaghetti and straightened out. And what I was able to show was that in 2020, copyright was worth 32 and a half-billion dollars, way bigger than what you've just heard I FPI, way bigger than what CS EC would say, this is the entire thing. And the split was about 65% labels 35% to the publishers. Now if you go way back to 2001 when we used to sell CDs by way of pallet and cocaine capitalism, these have no record labels. Back then, the split was much more in favor of labels no more than three quarters labels less than a quarter to the publishers. And what we've seen happen in the years in between is quite an interesting story. Labels went from boom time with CDs to bust with piracy, and now they're booming again with streaming. And the inverse the opposite happened publishers as labels went bust, ASCAP, BMI, kept on recording record-breaking collections. So you ever hear the toys analogy here of labels going really fast and falling off a cliff publishes as trundled along with record-breaking, not massive record-breaking collections, but he kept on growing their base. So the question he threw up is, what type of industry are we moving towards? Are we going back to our business model which paid labels over three quarters of the pie and publishers less than a quarter? And is that a good or a bad thing? Or in this post-Spotify economy where we're seeing companies like peloton Twitch, TikTok comes to the business is that gonna have a completely different balance. Now, why this matters to your audiences, not just on the creator side. But also on the investment side, you pointed out catalog valuations we can dig into that if you want. But just a high-level point is let's say that in a few year's time, I go into my Batcave again, calculate the global value of copyright, and instead of 32 and a half billion is 40 billion, I'll come on traps or make an exclusive announcement cooperate today is worth 40,000,000,007 and a half billion new dollars have come into this business, I want the audience to start thinking about who gets what share of that marginal new dollar, is that going to split publishing side? Or is that going to split the label side. And if you're investing in catalogs, be the master rights be the author rights that really matters. There's a huge educational drive here to understand the balance of this business of copyright.Dan Runcie  33:45So there's a few things you said there that I wanted to dig into, of course, for streaming Spotify and its competitors around 75% is going to the recorded side a quarter to publishing but from a breakdown what does that look like for the Tiktoks? The Roblox and the peloton what is that share of revenue from those plays look like?Will Page  34:08So the best way I could do this is if I just talk about ratios, there's three R's in this business, there's share of revenue, there's ratio, and as rights pool, they mean different things. Most experts get confused with three R's. I'm gonna stick to ratios that is if I give the label $1, how much do I give the publisher, the software, there's collective management organization. So we stick to the conventional streaming model today, I would say that you get the record label $1. You're giving the publishing side of the fence 24 cents, you know, a decent chunk of change, but still the poorer cousin of the record label on YouTube, I think it could be as high as 35 cents 40 cents even because there's a sync right involved in those deals. And then when you take that observation of imposing the sink right into a deal and you expand it to peloton or tic tock potentially even more, and then you can flip it and say well what happens in the future of TiC tock Because karaoke not saying it's gonna happen, but it's not implausible if that was the case that favors publishers even more. There's all these weird ways the business could develop, which could favor one side of the fence, the labels, and the artists continue getting three-quarters of the cash. On the other side of the fence publishers and songwriters start enforcing their rights and getting a more balanced share. And that's what we need to look out for when we're investing in corporates. That's what we need to look out for. If you're a singer and a songwriter. And you're trying to understand your royalty statements.Dan Runcie  35:27Like how much higher Do you think I mean, if you had to put a percentage on it for the Tiktoks or the pelletize? And I guess as well, you made me think up sync deals, right? Like for the folks that are selling, or their saw gets placed on one of these Hulu series or one of these HBO Max series? Like what is that ratio look like, you know, from a ballpark for those?Will Page  35:50So I think a 50-50 split would be the upper end of the goal. If a song is placed in a Hulu TV show or you know, an artist I've worked with for many years Eumir Deodato, Brazilian composer, his songs now in this famous EasyJet commercial over here in Europe, the artists and the publisher would see around a 5050 split of those revenues. Now would that happen in a world of streaming? Unlikely, but I think if you can get to a stage where you're giving the record label $1 and the publisher 50 cents as a ratio, and I got to repeat the word ratio here, you know, that's potentially achievable, that listen, post-Spotify economy, I don't think it's going to happen with the business we're looking at today. But I think that's a potential scenario for the business developing tomorrow. That's the thing is, if I can quote Ralph Simon are a longtime mentor to me, he always says, this industry is always about what's happening next. And then he goes on to say, it always has been as a great reminder of just your will restless souls in this business, we've achieved this amazing thing in the past 10 years, we're streaming got that bank there. What's coming next, who would have thought peloton would have had a music licensing department 18 months ago now they're like a top 10 account for major labels.Dan Runcie  36:59It's impressive. It really is. And I think it's a good reminder. Because anytime that you get a little bit too bullish and excited about what the current thing is, we always got to be thinking about what's next. And you mentioned a few times about a post-Spotify economy. And what does that look like? From your perspective, I think there's likely a number of things that we've already talked about with more of these other b2b platforms or with these other platforms, in general, having licensing deals, but what do you say? Or what do you think about post-Spotify economy? What comes to mind for you?Will Page  37:32Let me throw my fist your words, your joy, and try and knock you out for a second. We talked about price for a minute. And we talked about streaming. We haven't talked about gaming, but you noticed that Epic Games just acquired Bandcamp, I learned a fascinating stat about Bandcamp, which relates to my book tours and economics. There's a chapter in the book called Mako by, where I sat down with the management of the band Radiohead, we went through the entire in rainbow story for the first time ever a real global exclusive to explain how that deal worked out what they were really achieving when they did their voluntary Tip Jar model. And by the way, can I just put a shout out to one of your listeners, and fly from the Ben-Zion I bet remix of Radiohead have ever heard in my life is live. We're fishies Hip Hop version of the entire album. But Radiohead tested voluntary Tip Jar pricing. Now check this out. If you put your album out on Bandcamp could be a vinyl record. Remember, it's the people who are paying to stream who are also buying vinyl. So if you put a band and album out on Bandcamp, and you say a name, your own price, no minimum, and there's a guidance of 10 bucks, the average paid is 14 People go about 40% asking, and that could be for a super-rich blockbuster artists who try something out on Bandcamp there could be for some band who's broken Brooklyn Robin and cons together trying to make them breed people go 40% above asking when you say name your own price. And that's interesting for me, and there's a great academic paper by Francesca Cornelli from Duke University, she asked how should you price a museum and intuition says top-down mindset, the museum should set the price adults 10 bucks kids, five bucks pensioners, some type of discount arrangement, but she said no, let the visitors set the price because that way rich people will give you even more and poorer people can attend. And you'll see more cash overall. And I would like to see a little bit more of that experimentation around pricing compared to the past 20 years where we've had a ceiling on price where if you really love a band, all you can give a platform is 999 and not a penny more. I think that's we're suffocating love. We're putting a ceiling on love. We need to take that ceiling smash through it and let people express love through different means. But I love that Bandcamp story whatever you suggest I'll give you 40% above because it's our we're not dealing with commodity we're dealing with culture and that's what we got to remind ourselves.Dan Runcie  39:43It's like the Met model right where at least the last time I went it was like $20 was the recommendation but to your point it at least at some variable threshold, but the people a lot of the people that go there that have a lot of money end up giving much more so I hear you on that I, I noticed though, when you're talking and thinking about the future of this, I didn't hear many of the typical buzzwords and things that you hear about the music industry. Now whether it is NFTs or Web 3.0 or Metaverse, well, maybe to some extent with the Epic Games comparison, but what is your take on that piece of the puzzle, Spotify era.Will Page  40:20I need $1 and a glass every time I hear these words. So I'm just back from Austin, Texas, South by Southwest, a vague recollection of what happened over there. But I'm telling you, those words were bouncing around more than anything else. Here's a way of capturing of your listeners. This is the first time I've been to South by Southwest where nobody asked me what band did I see last night? Everybody asked me what VR headset that, I try this morning. And that's a sign of the times there and that is a sign of the times. Hey, did you try the Amaze VR headset? You know the make the stallion booty tour? Yeah, I tried that this morning, what Band-Aid nobody wanted to know about bands with pulses. Everybody wants to know about VR headsets. So we live in interesting times. And I think we're in a bit of bubble trouble here. I really do. I don't think this whole thing has been thought out correctly. Firstly, I'll give you an example of where I think the problems gone wrong. And secondly, I want to give you an example from history to show that we've been here before. So with NF T's, it is not. It's not an example of a woman who is happy to spend 1000s 10s of 1000s of dollars on a handbag because they can walk up and down Sixth Avenue and people will see that woman carrying that handbag, the signaling value isn't there. You know, I can buy a token that says I've seen the Mona Lisa on this day and put it in my locker. And if I show you my locker, you can see that I've seen the Mona Lisa that day, and you could buy a token and put it in your locker and you could show your friends that you've seen the Mona Lisa that day, but nobody can buy the Mona Lisa, we can just buy this NFT adaption of the Mona Lisa, but we can't share it across platforms. And that's where I'm struggling. That's where I'm struggling as irrational as that might be to spend 20 $30,000 on a handbag that makes you feel good having the world see you were fine. Do what you got to do. But with NF T's is not a cross-platform token. I'm worried that that's a problem with the model with the price of NF t's just very quickly, there is a term I want to introduce to your show called wash trades, which will meet a legal of 1936 which is basically if you're selling your house, you might employ an estate agent on the buyer side as well as the sell-side to cook up the price. And you can see if you try to do this in the stock market, you spend a lot of time and the chokey six years in jail for manipulating prices. Wash trades have been illegal since 1936. I think there's a problem with wash trades, manipulating the price of NF T's because they're unregulated. So I don't want to be the doer pessimistic, Scottish economist, in the room here pour cold water on this hype machine. But I have some issues with the product. And I have some issues with the price the product is docked to your locker and your locker only the price can be manipulated by ways which be declared illegal in financial markets. Conventional financial markets by wrapping that up. Here's my lesson from history. No Dan, in your record collection. Do you remember a rock band called kiss? Oh yeah. Were you a member of Kiss Army by any chance?Dan Runcie  43:08I was on the show.Will Page  43:11Right so if we go back to before I was born 1975, Kiss one of the biggest rock bands in America had something called Kiss Army for their super fans. So you could have kiss wallpaper because models. You could even have Kiss toilet paper. That was one of their top sellers. You could wipe your butt who key with Gene Simmons. That was one of their biggest sellers. And in 1975 They ran a competition on the competition was to say Hey fans, if you want to see a picture of the band with the makeup off there does famous black and white makeup. And we're going to have this competition you pay to enter and five lucky winners will be sent a photograph of the band for the makeup off. Now you're thinking NF TS kiss 1975 Where's he going? Follow me. Hysteria breaks out all these kiss fans in the kiss army want to see Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley with a makeup off. So crazy hyperemic competition the winners are announced the envelopes are sent out. There was five lucky winners get the envelope. They need scissors to open the envelope a pill it is black and white photograph of Kiss with makeup off. And after five seconds of exposure to natural light. The picture feeds genius, genius marketing incredible. But I'm struggling to see the difference between that and 1975 Kiss. You're competing for photographs, which feed in natural light and NFTs today so something I stress my big tours and economics is when you stare into disruption. It's really important to remind yourself that you've been here before and I think Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley have been here before.Dan Runcie  44:37It's an interesting take. And I do think about the first piece of what you're saying just in terms of something that stays in your wallet. And how do you share that elsewhere? I have seen some of the social platforms making it easier to be like oh hey, you could connect your Coinbase wallet to this whether it's Instagram or I think they're working on it now or to Twitter and you could make that your profile Make sure or you know the people that of course, you know will right click copy paste and save it put that as their profile pictures in different places. So I guess in their minds that's their version of being able to walk down fit that with the duty at Birkbeck, right. Will Page  45:15That's interesting. That to your point, that takes you back into handbag territory that corrects for the problem. Let's see if it goes but equally does the NFT lose its exclusivity when we do that as well. So it might work in the short term and might lead to the demise of NF T's over the long term because they're not that special. After all, they're just an icon for your profile picture. So is great to hear that there's that type of thinking going on that justifies my,  justifies my view.Dan Runcie  45:41Who knows? I mean, we're still early right but I do think that if I see your profile on social media, you turned into a board ape, we may have to have another podcast conversation I did.Will Page  45:55But I tell you asked him was obsessed with these topics. Even Austin, Texas Music conferences, get obsessed with the next big thing but this year, it was just bizarre how many references I heard to web three NF Ts, but if they can just give a quick shout out to the company amaze VR who are doing the mega stallion tour I watched make the stallion four times in Austin, Texas, I saw more VR of Nicholas Deleon and I saw of any live bear. But you know, they had the longest queues of the entire conference. If you judge success by queues demand exceeding supply, they won South by Southwest for the longest queues.Dan Runcie  46:27That's impressive. And of course, it makes a big star she's been doing a lot. I've heard a lot of good things from base VR too. I think that though, it'd be a great point to pivot and talk a little bit more about hip hop, the as we know, hip hop has been able to see a lot of its potential even more so. In the streaming era with us, given the popularity that's there. We've seen the numbers, we've seen the growth as well. And I know that you've studied this a lot, especially on the international perspective, just seeing how hip hop is growing in other countries. But I think some of that growth is looking different than what we may be used to seeing in the US. So what is your perspective right now on the state of hip hop with regards to streaming,Will Page  47:09you speaking about something that's close to my heart, but if I can start by saying, one thing that your podcast has done for me over the years, that reminds us of that famous quote, which has been reiterated by many rappers, which is rap is something you do hip hop is something you live, and we can forget that from time to time can drink a bit too much Kool-Aid and forget those golden words. Rap is something that you do. Hip hop is something that you live, you don't have a choice with hip hop, you live it, rap, I mean, you could play a jazz track, then you could do a rap track, you have a choice there, but hip hop is an eighth. And I want to pull those words up. Because when we talk about the genre of hip hop, I wonder whether it's really a bit of a square peg in a round hole here to take words, which means describe a lifestyle and their attitude or mentality, and then say that it's now a genre. Maybe rap should be the genre and hip hop should be the culture. So I just want to throw that out there for your listeners. And I'd love future guests to come on and pose them that question. If we're discussing the genre of hip hop, are we missing a trick that aside, some stuff which has been popping with hip hop mean, firstly, just the size of the audience in America, just north of 90 million people, there's 90 million regular listeners of hip hop that is phenomenal. If you think about how far the genre has come, the culture has come in 30-plus years. And secondly, who's out there in front. I mean, I would put YouTube as the number one venue for hip hop in the United States, Spotify, Apple, Amazon, they're all doing their things. But I think it's worth just reminding ourselves how important YouTube is to our culture. As opposed to Amazon Spotify. Apple is depressing your thumb on a piece of glass during a track. Repeat. Rap is something you do hip hop is something you live and you've had to Mercer, one of my longtime mentors on your show, just we'll back to that past podcast to get to where I'm coming from on that point. I think the interesting thing for me speaking as a non-American on a podcast with a large American audience to watch how it's growing out of the countries and one of the most interesting things for me was non-English speaking hip hop. Now, my sister who's a French translator, Annie, she introduced me to a rapper called MC solo way, way back in the day, back in the 90s. Even and I don't speak French, but the rap was just incredible, like the way that the French language flowed over a beat. He certainly won't recall any tempo. That was incredible. So, you know, I've always had an appreciation for how hip hop travels beyond its borders, playlists. Without Borders. Hip hop is without borders. So I just wanted to introduce your audience to a very interesting backstory in Holland and the Netherlands, where Spotify the first country, we scaled him outside of Norway and Sweden was the Netherlands. We got big there really quickly 2011, 2012 era and because we got big we could put some local foot soldiers on the ground to help with curation. And for the first time ever in the company's history. We started taking Hip Hop curation seriously outside of our core markets and because we're supplying curation that was met with demand and all of a sudden, we started seeing these Dutch language hip hop artists explode in Holland, Ronnie flex being a great example. I think around 2018, we ran the data. And we learned that Drake was the number one artist in the world on Spotify. Yet in Holland, he was an eighth biggest hip-hop artist. And the seven above him were Dutch rapping in a local language of Dutch. And that was just jaw-dropping to think about globalization, culture, back to the Jungle Brothers the lesson they taught me in 1989, getting the message across without crossing over how you can have local language, hip hop travel, like no other genre there is across the world. And you're seeing that happen in Germany, France, you're seeing it happen in Asia. And so it's important to apply a global lens to hip hop and ask what is it about this culture, which is leading it to travel in a way that other cultures are not traveling is that the expression is that the belief is that the conviction that comes through hip hop, and that's that there's a book on that topic, and then you'd be a perfect person to try and write it, I can get you an agent. And I'd be out of my depth, but just so really important see to so which is why is this culture traveling, like no other culture, I can see on a music platform.Dan Runcie  51:12It's fascinating. It's something I've thought about a lot. I'm glad you mentioned that, because I think about a rapper, like Devine from India, or I think about some of the artists from the Middle East as well. And I think there's similar trends there where hip hop is still the most dominant thing, but they're artists that are from their regions are the ones that are the most popular. And I think it stems back to thinking about the origins of hip hop and looking at where a lot of those other countries may be. Now you look at what the public enemy had done, or even look a bit earlier, like Grandmaster Flash and have done their share of realities of the environments that they're in their storytelling in a way that isn't being done by the mass media. And we're in an era now, you know, more than ever, we see everything happening in the world where, what a lot of the heads of states, or what a lot of the governments or main distribution, communication platforms in these countries are sharing isn't necessarily reflecting what's happening in those places. So because of that, you have people wanting to speak out on that. And I think that because people realizing what the public enemy was able to do in some of those other groups here by them saying, you know, we are the black CNN, we are the voice communicating that I think you saw a lot of that in these other countries. So even if it's different artists, you're seeing them share their version of what's happening on the ground. And I think, like anything else, the evolution of that continues to grow over time. It's been, it's been really fascinating to see that. And I think that is what, at least for me always makes it feel like this is the global language that keeps everyone connected in this space. Even if people are speaking clearly different languages from artists you don't know there's that common theme that you can tell even if you're watching a music video or getting a vibe of what they're doing. There's so many through lights there.Will Page  53:02Those comments are deeper than Loch Ness, so they can quickly top it up with two thoughts, just thinking aloud here. This is why I love about your podcast is with the way you take the conversation with just firstly, just a historical point. And as I mentioned with my book tours and economics, when you're staring at the disruption to remind yourself that you've been here before, when I hear stories about suppression by governments leading to a rise of hip hop as a culture rap as an art form. You just got to go back to 1877 New Orleans and remind yourselves how jazz came into being your Creole people. You know, when Jim Crow laws were reintroduced through the backdoor before since the African American community overnight, so you took classically trained middle-class Creole people brought into a culture which had the blues and African drumming, and out of that suppression came the creation that was jazz. And it's just I love when you alluded to government suppression resulting in creativity. It's just interesting to think how we keep on you know, history doesn't repeat itself, it rhymes. And it's rhyming here when you start to think about the origins of jazz to what we're seeing happen with hip hop. And then the second thing I mentioned earlier that, you know, the internet can scale just about anything you want, but it can't scale intimacy. I wonder whether that's what hip hop is doing because it's, it's a postcard its storytelling is beginning with the word imagine and asking you to imagine the picture these words are creating, you know, that's doing something which I don't think your conventional verse-chorus, verse, chorus, rock or pop song is going to deliver. So the message getting the message across without coordinate crossing over. The message that we're getting across with hip hop is different from other forms of music. And that might explain a little bit about success at home and overseas that we've seen on streaming.Dan Runcie  54:43Definitely. Well, well, this is great. Thanks again for coming on. If you're listening, definitely make sure that you check out Tarzan economics. I can't recommend this book enough. I think that will is extremely sharp. And he's a thought leader in this space and it's been great to learn from him. So well. Thanks for coming on. And before we let you go, is there anything else that you want to plug in or let the travel audience know about?Will Page  55:07I have gotten no more travel plans to the States this year. But if they can just ask the audience to check out the mix on Mixcloud we ain't done with 2021 with a shout-out from Dan Runcie, himself, and many others, Mike G is on that mix Lord is on that mix. But I just hope that your audience because the show trapped will mean so much to me. I just hope the audience sees me as a DJ first and an economist a distant second that I can just land that point at the end of this podcast, I'd be happy.Dan Runcie  55:33That's a great note to end on. Well, thanks again.Will Page  55:36Thank you

Cloud Jazz Smooth Jazz
Cloud Jazz 2163 (Especial Hugh McCracken)

Cloud Jazz Smooth Jazz

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2022 56:55


Edición dedicada al guitarrista Hugh McCracken, un músico fallecido en 2013 que trabajó, de manera muy intensa, junto a estrellas como John Lennon, Paul McCartney, The Monkees, Paul Simon, Art Garfunkel, James Taylor, Van Morrison, BB King o Hall & Oates, entre muchos otros. En este especial escuchamos su guitarra al lado de Steely Dan, Bob James, David Sanborn, Eumir Deodato, Kenny Loggins, Michael Franks, Roberta Flack, Stephen Bishop, Herbie Mann, Tom Scott y Donald Fagen.

Brazuca Sounds
Brazuca Sounds #24 - Donato, Deodato, Egberto & Hermeto

Brazuca Sounds

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2022 33:33


In episode #24, we talk about the life and music of João Donato, Eumir Deodato, Egberto Gismonti, and Hermeto Paschoal. Each one of them achieved greatness beyond the Brazilian frontier and, in fact, they're all likely more successful worldwide rather than in their own country. These four artists blend Brazilian rhythm with psychedelia, funk, jazz, and experimentalism. As they all have a long and vast record catalog under their names, we have selected a few of their albums that should not be missed. Follow our playlist on Spotify "Soundtrack: Brazuca Sounds".--- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/brazucasounds/message Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

DiscoShow
DiscoShow_T3_Prg9

DiscoShow

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2022 59:05


En este noveno episodio de la tercera temporada de DiscoShow, queremos seguir bailando al son de grandes temas Disco de los 70's y los 80's, vibraremos juntos con grandes éxitos de artistas como The Real Thing, Frantique, Luther Vandross, Barbara Streisand, Bee Gees, The Salsoul Orchestra, Eumir Deodato y muchos más… Esta es la playList de nuestra sesión Disco: 01 Lost In Music (1984 Bernard Edwards & Nile Rodgers REMIX) – Sister Sledge 02 Can You Feel The Force – The Real Thing (1979's DiscoHIT) 03 You Know How To Love Me – Phyllis Hyman 04 Strut Your Funky Stuff (12” Version) – Frantique 05 She's A Super Lady – Luther Vandross 06 Angel – Anita Baker (SensualHIT) 07 What Kind Of Fool (feat. Barry Gibb) – Barbara Streisand (SensualHIT) 08 You Win Again – Bee Gees 09 Just For You – Spargo (DiscoHIT) 10 Heat It Up/Columbia Space Shuttle – The Salsoul Orchestra (1982's DiscoHIT) 11 Happy Hour – Eumir Deodato 12 Saturday Night – T-Connection Ya lo sabes si quieres bailar con nosotros en la pista de DiscoShow, escúchanos en nuestro podcast, disponible en las plataformas iVoox, TuneIn, myTuner, Apple Podcasts y Google Podcasts. Ahora también puedes bailar con nosotros en la plataforma Mixcloud accede a nuestro canal: discoshow_podcast Síguenos en nuestro perfil: https://mixcloud.com/discoshow_podcast Escucha nuestros episodios y muy pronto nuevo contenido en Mixcloud!!....... ÚNTE A DISCOSHOW EN LAS REDES SOCIALES: Twitter: @discoshow_djgan Instagram: @discoshow_podcast Facebook: https://facebook.com/discoshowpodcast/ Telegram: Canal DiscoShow: https://t.me/discoshow_podcast Suscríbete a nuestro canal DiscoShow en Telegram y recibirás información sobre nuestros próximos episodios, primicias y nuestros próximos directos en Mixcloud. Si te apetece también nos puedes escuchar en la emisora de radio FORMULA DISCO en Madrid a través de la 89.4 FM, recuérdalo escucha DiscoShow todos los sábados a partir de las 10 de la noche y los martes y viernes a partir de las 4 de la tarde en la emisora FORMULA DISCO. Conecta con nuestro e-mail para cualquier consulta que desees o si quieres solicitar algún éxito Disco en especial. discoshowpodcast@gmail.com Súbete y baila en la pista de DiscoShow!!!... ÚNETE A NUESTROS DIRECTOS EN: https://mixcloud.com/live/discoshow_podcast Lo mejor de la música Disco en Internet!!!..

Cuando los elefantes sueñan con la música
Cuando los elefantes sueñan con la música - Más clásicos para iniciar el año - 03/01/22

Cuando los elefantes sueñan con la música

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2022 58:37


Yo-Yo Ma & Bobby McFerrin ('Andante' del 'Concierto en re menor para dos mandolinas' de Vivaldi y 'Vocalise' de Rachmaninov), Yo-Yo Ma & Kathryn Stott ('Ave Maria' de Schubert, 'El cisne' del 'Carnaval de los animales' de Saint-Saëns y 'Après un rêve' de Gabriel Fauré), The L.A. Four ('Pavane' de Fauré), Arielle Besson , Edouard Ferlet & Stéphane Kerecki ('Pavane' de Fauré y 'Pavane pour une infante défunte' de Maurice Ravel), Michel Camilo & Tomatito ('Gnossienne nº1' de Erik Satie), Eumir Deodato ('Prélude à l´après-midi d´un faune' de Claude Debussy) y Richard Galliano ('Adagio' del 'Concierto en la mayor' de Mozart). Escuchar audio

Vozes do Brasil
Vozes em Drops - Ep 09

Vozes do Brasil

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2021 10:39


No Vozes em Drops da semana a proposta é ouvir Tom Jobim pra matar as saudades do Brasil. Quatro discos fundamentais gravados entre os anos 60 e 70 com faixas instrumentais, arranjos de Eumir Deodato, Dori Caymmi e Claus Ogerman. Jobim para além dos clássicos da Bossa Nova.

Trópico utópico
Trópico utópico - O sal da terra - 19/10/21

Trópico utópico

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2021 60:17


Anexos al abecé de la música popular de Brasil en forma de compilaciones. Intervienen: Cláudia, Cláudio Nucci, Gal Costa, Beto Guedes, Raimundo Sodré, Evinha, Cláudio Nucci & Zé Renato, Clara Nunes, Eumir Deodato, Joyce & Jon Hendricks, Biguli, Lápide y B Negâo. Escuchar audio

Cuando los elefantes sueñan con la música
Cuando los elefantes sueñan con la música - Os Gatos + Luiz Eça - 06/10/21

Cuando los elefantes sueñan con la música

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2021 59:04


En el Río de Janeiro, de mediados de los 60, un grupo instrumental llamado Os Gatos, organizado en torno a Durval Ferreira y Eumir Deodato, grabó dos discos: 'Os Gatos' ('São Salvador', 'Tristeza de nós dois', 'Nuvens', 'Razão de viver', 'Sambidú', 'A chuva', 'Estamos aí', 'Canadian sunset') y 'Aquele som dos Gatos' ('Bonita', 'Agua de beber', 'E nada mais', Clichet'). También recuperamos dos discos del pianista Luiz Eça: 'Luiz Eça e cordas', de 1965, con piezas como 'Imagem', 'Canção da terra', 'O velho pescador', 'Primavera' y 'Consolação', y 'Um piano na madrugada', de 1956, con temas como 'Secret love' o 'Eu preciso de você'. Escuchar audio

Podcast de Sonido sin Fronteras
SSF Eumir Deodato 1ª parte 10 septiembre 2021

Podcast de Sonido sin Fronteras

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2021 26:59


¡En este mes del año nos encanta seguirte sorprendiendo! Por lo que te dejamos la primera parte de SSF Eumir Deodato. Disfruta esta selección que hicimos pensando en ti, destapa tus oídos y sumérgete en este bello género. ¡Acompáñanos en este viaje!

Podcast de Sonido sin Fronteras
SSF Eumir Deodato 2ª parte 10 de septiembre 2021

Podcast de Sonido sin Fronteras

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2021 26:55


¡En este mes del año nos encanta seguirte sorprendiendo! Por lo que te dejamos la segunda parte de SSF Eumir Deodato. Disfruta esta selección que hicimos pensando en ti, destapa tus oídos y sumérgete en este bello género. ¡Acompáñanos en este viaje!

El Jazzensor
EL Jazzensor 116. Marcos Valle, Summer Samba

El Jazzensor

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2021 66:13


Para cerrar la temporada y el verano de 2021, nos encontramos con el Samba de Verano de Marcos Valle, uno de los grandes de la Bossa Nova. Escucharemos a Marcos pero, sobretodo, escucharemos sus composiciones en las versiones de otros artistas, signo inequívoco de que sus composiciones son clásicos modernos de la music popular. Estos son nuestros invitados: - Eumir Deodato y Os Catedráticos: Amor De Nada; Maria's Dream (Sonho de Maria); Crickets Sing for Anamaria (Os Grilos); Even More Beautiful (Ainda Mais Lindo). - Wilson Simonal: Tudo de voce. - Sylvia Telles: If You Went Away. - Astrud Gilberto: Chup, Chup, I Got Away. - Marcos Valle: Pepino Beach; Pigmalião 70. - Sergio Mendes y Brasil '66: Viola - Sabrina Malheiros: Terra de Ninguém - Marcos Valle y Leon Ware: A Vantage de Rever Você (Rocking You) - Kate Reid: The Face I Love (Seu Encanto). - Marcos Valle y Stacey Kent: The Answer (A Resposta): Batucada. - Marcos Valle y Celso Fonseca: Página Central

CITY LIGHTS (division)
HFDO EUMIR DEODATO

CITY LIGHTS (division)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2021 9:59


Les hommes et femmes cachés derrière les hits ! Eumir Deodato.

Pontapé
Pontapé #112

Pontapé

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2021 75:39


Abrimos o programa ouvindo a clássica narração do segundo gol de Maradona contra a Inglaterra, imortalizado pelo uruguaio Victor Hugo Morales, que completa 35 anos nesta terça-feira (22/06).Dezesseis anos antes no mesmo Estádio Azteca, o Brasil sagrava-se tricampeão mundial.Também recordamos de grandes nomes do futebol, música e política que nasceram no começo do inverno como Dalto, Eduardo Suplicy, Eumir Deodato, Evaristo de Macedo, Hermeto Pascoal, Luis Pereira e Nelson Gonçalves.

All that Jazz
Eumir Deodato_Botti_YellowJakets.

All that Jazz

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2021 56:46


Radio Clásica presenta su más amplia de Jazz, piezas inéditas, grabaciones íntimas de Europa.

Música para Gatos
Música para Gatos - Ep. 89 - Pequeña historia del Jazz brasileño.

Música para Gatos

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2021 60:28


A principios del siglo XX en Brasil el jazz era considerado una música de baile que se concretaba a través de las big bands y que estaba centrado mayoritariamente en los grande núcleos de población como Rio do Janeiro, Bahia o Sao Paulo. Eso seguiría así hasta la década de los 30s momento en el cual el jazz comenzó a diseminarse por todo el país. Pero sería a partir de la segunda mitad de los años 40s cuando los géneros extranjeros comenzaron realmente a interactuar de forma evidente con la música local, especialmente el bolero, la rumba, el cha cha cha y el cool jazz. El programa de radio The Voice of America, transmitido a partir de 1942, llegó prácticamente a todo el mundo. En Brasil, la radio era el único medio masivo para escuchar el jazz, y durante ese periodo aparecieron en algunas capitales brasileñas, clubes y espacios para shows, al estilo de los clubes norteamericanos, cosa que elevó considerablemente el número de músicos brasileños influenciados y, por tanto, dedicados a ese estilo. Ya en los 50s el jazz fue reconocido por el gobierno norteamericano como un agente de propaganda del american way of life durante la Guerra Fría, usándolo para penetrar la barrera Este-Oeste, divulgando el estilo y enviando músicos de proyección al exterior como embajadores culturales siendo dichos músicos financiados directamente por el departamento de estado norteamericano. Hasta ese momento era el jazz la música que había influenciado a las corrientes musicales locales de Brasil pero eso empezaría a cambiar hacía el año 58 coincidiendo con el enorme estallido de la bossanova. La bossa se introdujo intensamente en la cultura norteamericana y toda una generación de instrumentistas influenciados por el jazz se involucró con este género en Brasil. Uno de los preludios de esta fusión ocurrió en Los Angeles en 1953, cuando Laurindo de Almeida (guitarra) y Bud Shank (saxofón) grabaron el álbum Brazilliance. El disco sembró la semilla de lo que sería el samba-jazz. El impacto de aquel larga duración fue extraordinario y el solito fue capaz de abrir las puertas a un estilo hasta entonces inimaginable. Braziliance fue editado en Brasil y conquistó inmediatamente a una nueva generación de músicos que serían a la postre las figuras relevantes de la bossa nova. Todo lo comentado comenzó a concretarse en noviembre de 1962, después del concierto inaugural de la bossanova en el Carnegie Hall en Nueva York. Ese mismo año Joao Gilberto grabaría junto a Stan Getz y Tom Jobim una auténtica obra maestra que se llamó Getz/Gilberto que consiguió un éxito enorme a nivel planetario y fue capaz de desplazar a los Beatles del primer puesto de las listas de ventas. A partir de entonces músicos como Luiz Bonfá, João Gilberto, Tom Jobim, Sérgio Mendes, Carlos Lyra, João Donato, Eumir Deodato, Moacyr Santos, Don Salvador, Marcos Valle, Oscar Castro Neves, Baden Powell, Sivuca y Raul de Souza y algo más tarde Flora Purim, Hermeto Pascoal, Egberto Gismonti, Airto Moreira, Eliane Elias, Joyce, Milton Nascimento, Ivan Lins o Djavan comenzaron a ser invitados habituales en conciertos celebrados en locales de todos los rincones de Europa, Japón y Norteamérica, con grupos liderados por ellos o como parte integrante de bandas de bossanova, jazz latino o del recién creado jazz fusion que se acababa de cocinar en ciudades como Los Ángeles, New York, Chicago, San Francisco o Philadelphia, Hoy os vamos a hablar de todo lo que sucedió a partir de ese momento. Y para demostrar la excepcional mescolanza que se produjo entre el jazz y la música de Brasil hemos decidido iniciar el programa de hoy con una prueba incontestable.

Viatge Electrònic
Viatge Electrònic - Ràdio Caldes Cap.27

Viatge Electrònic

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2021 57:28


En aquest capítol parlarem de Luke Vibert, Eumir Deodato, Mike Dunn, Ciudad Feliz, la Laura i la seva secció "Dones Electròniques" ens punxara a Charlotte Adigégry, en Raul Manzano ene explicarà qui eren The Postal Service i finalment explicarem qui era Lou Ottens...entre molts d'altres.

Radio Circuito Radiola's Podcast
Radio Circuito Radiola 47 - Folia de bolso

Radio Circuito Radiola's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2021 30:44


Pra balançar onde você estiver. Folia de Bolso com:A cor do som, Beck, Bezerra da Silva, Bob Marley, kool & Gang, Eumir Deodato, Tim Maia e Chico César.Diversidade sonora pra diversidade de pessoas. É a tatuagem sonora da nossa solidária RÁDIO CIRCUITO RADIOLA.Faça a festa. Dá play e viaja.Entre nesta ciranda de tantos sons e compartilhe músicas com pessoas queridas. Gratidão a quem chega junto e contribui financeiramente, ou com boas vibes, compartilhamentos e sugestões.Contribuições no CHAPÉU VIRTUAL:ItaúAg. 3873.Cc. 45225-8.Paulo Costa.Criação e apresentação: @paulinho_vintageVinhetas: Edinho Magalhães @vozedinho e Marina Duarte @devimandir_terapiasDesigner da marca RÁDIO CIRCUITO RADIOLA: Jorge Verdi @jorgehverdi

The Neil Haley Show
LEGENDARY DRUMMER/WINGS FOUNDING MEMBER DENNY SEIWELL

The Neil Haley Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2018 11:00


Today on The Neil Haley Show, The Total Tutor Neil Haley will interview LEGENDARY DRUMMER/WINGS FOUNDING MEMBER DENNY SEIWELL. Though best known for his work with Paul McCartney and other elite rock, pop, and funk acts such as James Brown, Billy Joel, Art Garfunkel, Joe Cocker, Donovan and John Denver among others, Seiwell is a legend in the jazz genre as well. His first recording was a 1968 jazz record with JJ Johnson and Kai Winding that still exists today. He's also recorded with Astrud Gilberto, Stanley Turrentine, Eumir Deodato, Gary McFarland during this period. When Paul McCartney came to NY looking for session players to record his "RAM" album, Seiwell was selected and his jazz career was put on hold. The 50 year veteran of recording studios worldwide, can also be heard on numerous film scores for films such as Waterworld, The Postman, Atlantis, Dinosaurs, Trading Places and Bobby, among others, in addition to many TV shows of the day. He also worked with the London Symphony Orchestra on their groundbreaking version of The Who's rock opera "Tommy."