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Our music this go round is provided by these wonderful artists: Thelonious Monk, Mark G. Meadows, Jelly Roll Morton, Branford Marsalis and Terence Blanchard. Commercial Free, Small Batch Radio Crafted in the West Mountains of Northeastern Pennsylvania... Heard All Over The World. Tell Your Friends and Neighbors.
TEM196: Why Starbucks isn't overpriced Why I don't think Starbucks is overpriced even though I'm not a fan of their coffee. On Today's Episode of The Entrepreneurial Musician: How Starbucks sells more than just coffee Why artists must think about the entire experience we are offering rather than just the art in a vacuum A reminder that not everyone will sign up for the experience you are offering What we as artists can learn from a world-class restaurant Links: TEM Extra: Episode 10 - A bonus episode with Mark G. Meadows discussing the vital need to outsource aspects of your business, the advice he would give to his college-aged self if he could go back in time, and the importance of creating a network early because you will need people along the way Want to help the show? Here's a couple of ways you can do that! 1. Hear an extra TEM episode every single week while helping me get to my next goal of $100 per episode on Patreon by becoming a patron today: https://www.patreon.com/tempodcast 2. My next Apple Podcasts goal is 150 ratings and 75 reviews. Take just a minute to leave a rating and review on Apple Podcasts to help me get there. Thank you! And finally, a huge thank you to Parker Mouthpieces for providing the hosting for TEM. Produced by Andrew Hitz Show notes for all episodes of TEM including topics discussed, links to all books and websites referenced can be found at: http://www.andrewhitz.com/shownotes
TEM193: Finding your five adjectives and the power of outsourcing - A conversation with acclaimed artist Mark G. Meadows Mark G. Meadows is a musician, actor and teacher based in the Washington DC area and my colleague at Shenandoah Conservatory. ----- Did you know there are two episodes of TEM every single week? TEM Extra is a weekly episode available exclusively to patrons of the show. On Last Week's TEM Extra: Why most people will be against you whenever you try to change the culture somewhere One hell of a quote from Les Brown about aiming high and dreaming big The importance of consistently shipping your art when it comes to converting people into true fans (and serving the true fans you already have!) Listen to last week's TEM Extra here. ----- On Today's Episode of The Entrepreneurial Musician: Why being a good person comes out in your music and in your relationships The universe will tell you what your passion is if you listen to it The crazy story about Mark landing a lead role in a musical when he wasn't an actor! Mark's remarkable bio (it includes a mission statement!) and how being an outsider growing up informs that mission statement and his art to this day Finding your five adjectives Why the best feedback can sometimes come from people you don't know Outsourcing and why anything you can teach someone else to do is something you shouldn't be doing yourself A reminder that everything (from delegating tasks to making your art) is a practice Links: Mark's website Mark's latest album on Bandcamp Want to help the show? Here's a couple of ways you can do that! 1. Help me get to my next goal of $100 per episode on Patreon by pledging as little as $1 per episode to support the show: https://www.patreon.com/tempodcast. 2. My next Apple Podcasts goal is 150 ratings and 75 reviews. Take just a minute to leave a rating and review on Apple Podcasts to help me get there. Thank you! And finally, a huge thank you to Parker Mouthpieces for providing the hosting for TEM. Produced by Andrew Hitz Show notes for all episodes of TEM including topics discussed, links to all books and websites referenced can be found at: http://www.andrewhitz.com/shownotes
In this episode of Front of The Line with Jack Kilby, Jack speaks with pianist Mark G. Meadows and highlights his contributions to Jack Kilby and The Front Line's debut release"Love Is A Song Anyone Can Sing".All music heard in this podcast is taken from "Love Is A Song Anyone Can Sing - Volume 1" which is available on CDBaby, Bandcamp, ITunes, Amazon, Google Play, Spotify, Tidal and many more.Love Is A Song Anyone Can Singhttps://fanlink.to/LIASACS3Mark G Meadowshttps://www.instagram.com/markgmeadows/https://twitter.com/markgmeadowshttps://www.facebook.com/MarkGMeadows/https://soundcloud.com/markgmeadowsJack Kilbyhttp://jackkilbymusic.com/https://www.instagram.com/jackkilbymusic/https://www.instagram.com/jackkilbyfrontline/https://www.facebook.com/JKFrontLine/
Tony hacks his summer with swimming, while Paul resists the human wheelbarrow pic. Tracklisting: Tony Porreco – Without Your Taste [single] Stranger in the Alps – Old Fears [single] Mark G. Meadows – Be The Change [Be The Change] Forgetter – Maple Seeds [Parts of Anything] Cigarette – Mood [Light Blues] LOOOP – Communal Space […]
This season, More Perfect is taking its camera lens off the Supreme Court and zooming in on the words of the people: the 27 amendments that We The People have made to our Constitution. We're taking on these 27 amendments both in song and in story. This episode is best listened to alongside 27: The Most Perfect Album, an entire album (an ALBUM!) and digital experience of original music and art inspired by the 27 Amendments. Think of these episodes as the audio liner notes. In More Perfect's final episode of the season, listen to liner notes for two amendments that contemplate the still-unfinished status of our Constitution. "27" is an album that marks a particular point in our history: this moment when we have 27 Amendments to our Constitution. What will be the 28th? Maybe it will address our nation's capital. The capital has been a bit of a Constitutional anomaly for much of our nation's history — it's at the heart of the democracy, but because it's not a state, people in Washington D.C. have been disenfranchised almost by accident. The 23rd Amendment solved some of the problem — it gave D.C. the right to vote for president. But it left much of D.C.'s representation questions unanswered. D.C. still does not have voting representation in Congress. Instead, D.C. sends a "non-voting delegate" to Congress. For this liner note, More Perfect profiles that delegate, Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton, and her unique approach to fighting for power in a virtually powerless role. The song for the 23rd Amendment is by The Mellow Tones, a group of students from D.C. high school Duke Ellington School of the Arts, along with their teacher Mark G. Meadows. The chorus, "Why won't you count on me?" reflects on the continued disenfranchisement of our nation's capital. The final amendment of the album, the 27th Amendment, put limits on Senators' ability to give themselves a pay raise, and it has arguably the most unusual path to ratification of all 27. The first draft for the amendment was written by none other than James Madison in 1789, but back then, it didn't get enough votes from the states for ratification. It wasn't until a college student named Gregory Watson awakened the dormant amendment centuries later that it was finally ratified. The 27th Amendment song is by Kevin Devine and tells Watson's story.
Learn more about Mark: https://markgmeadows.com