person:amanda palmer

  • Modern Time
    http://www.radiopanik.org/emissions/moacrealsloa/modern-time

    Tonight music that has just arrived......

    Playlist : (under consruction, follow it live)

    Astma / Meanza : Rhombohedral

    Yann Leguay : IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL

    Tod Dockstader : Traveling Music

    Asian Women on the Telephone : Raman Abkhishek

    Amanda Palmer & Edward Ka-Spel : Prithee / Liquidation Day

    Anahita : A Tapestry to Weave

    FM Einheit & Massimo Pupillo : #4 (Evol/ve)

    Zu : Jhator : A Sky Burial

    Birgit (Hoppy Kamiyama & Fujikake Massataka) : First Kiss

    Xylouris White : Pretty Kondilies

    Paddy Steer : Lament

    Astma / Meanza : Tetragonal

    http://www.radiopanik.org/media/sounds/moacrealsloa/modern-time_03728__1.mp3

  • Cory Doctorow : How to support a writer’s career

    Je pourrais dire la même chose pour le soutien aux éditeurs indépendants. Une série de règles d’usage qui sont essentiels dans le monde très concurrentiel du livre.

    Since the earliest days of my novel-writing career, readers have written
    to me to thank me for my books and to ask how they can best support me
    and other writers whose work they enjoy. Nearly 15 years later, I have a
    pretty comprehensive answer for them!

    Writers’ commercial and critical fortunes are intertwined: a writer
    whose books perform well is a writer whose publisher buys and promotes
    more books from them, creating a virtuous cycle, as promotions beget
    more sales and more promotions.

    The most important time to support a writer is just after their latest
    book comes out — my novel, Walkaway, is in its first week of
    publication — because that is the make-or-break moment for that book,
    and, conceivably, for its writer.

    Books that perform well in their first weeks become bestsellers.
    Bestsellers are more likely to be reviewed by major outlets, they are
    ordered in larger quantities by booksellers (a bookseller who takes five
    or more copies of a book will very likely place that book face-out in a
    new releases section and/or on a table at the front of the store). They
    are given close attention by collections-development staff in libraries,
    and are snapped up for translations by foreign publishers. They are read
    by production staffers for TV and movie studios. They renew interest in
    the author’s backlist, too.

    Contrariwise, books that flop go into a death-spiral. They are returned
    by booksellers, their sales-figures are used to justify a smaller
    advance for the next book (and less promotions budget), and booksellers
    order fewer copies of the author’s next book. In really dire situations,
    a badly performing book can kill a writer’s career.

    Thankfully, Walkaway looks to be on course to be a bestseller, judging
    from early numbers and indicators. You readers have helped me in
    innumerable ways to make this happen and I am very, very grateful to you
    for it. Here are ways that you can continue to support Walkaway, my
    career, and future books from me:

    1. Buy Walkaway or check it out of the library. Either one sends a
    strong signal to my publisher, to reviewers, to foreign publishers and
    to the industry. This is the most important thing you can do.

    2. Review the book and tell your friends. Put your recommendation in
    your social media, in an online bookseller’s page, on Goodreads. There
    is literally nothing that sells books better than personal
    recommendations. This is the second-most important thing you can do.

    3. Buy Walkaway from an indie bookseller. The independent booksellers
    are the best friends authors can have. They support our tours, hand-sell
    our books, write shelf-reviews and talk the book up to other bookish
    people. I am visiting 30+ indie bookstores on my tour and leaving signed
    copies in my wake — any of the stores I’ve visited will be glad to send
    you one by mail-order (and you can always call a store with an upcoming
    event to request a personalized, inscribed copy). Indie bookstores are
    experiencing a renaissance and your custom gives them the stability they
    need to continue.

    4. Come out for the tour! I’m in Chicago tonight at Volumes Bookcafe,
    with Max Temkin from Cards Against Humanity. Bring along your old books
    to sign, but buy the new one from the store that’s hosting the event, to
    help them recoup the cost of extra staff, promo, etc. Coming to a tour
    stop tells bookstores that you value their place in your community and
    encourages them to continue bringing authors in.

    5. Buy a fair-trade ebook. I just launched the first-ever fair-trade
    ebook store. I am a retailer for my own ebooks and audiobooks, selling
    on behalf of my publishers worldwide. Buying direct from me doubles my
    royalties, and the book you get not only has no DRM, but it also comes
    without any kind of license agreement, and it is the only way to buy
    ebooks from a major publisher without having to sign away your legal
    rights in the bargain. Buying a book this way tells publishers and the
    industry that fair compensation for authors and fair legal bargain
    matter to you.

    6. Buy the audiobook. The Walkaway audiobook is amazing, read by Wil
    Wheaton, Amber Benson (Buffy the Vampire Slayer), Amanda Palmer (The
    Dresden Dolls), Mirron Willis, Gabrielle de Cuir, Lisa Renee Pitts and
    Justine Eyre. I produced it independently and it is without question the
    best audio adaptation of any of my work, ever. Of course, it’s DRM-free,
    too.

    I’ve been on the road for a week now and I’m just hitting my stride.
    I’ve met thousands of readers so far on this tour and every meeting has
    been a pleasure and an honor. You readers are what make my writing
    possible. Thank you so much for your support, I literally would not have
    a career without you.

    Cory

    #édition

  • Cachez ces poils...
    http://tracks.arte.tv/fr/coups-de-hashtags-contre-la-pudibonderie

    En 2013, elle publie sur un réseau social une #photo d’elle en petite culotte, avec des poils pubiens qui dépassent, ce qui provoque un scandale et lui vaut la suppression de son compte. En même temps, cela renforce ses convictions et sa détermination.

    Bon, c’est un sujet #tracks, donc beaucoup à dire sur le traitement et le ton. Mais, c’est intéressant. Les fesses de Kardashian, ça va, une touffe de #poils #pubiens...

    #petra_collins

  • No, I Am Not Crowdfunding This Baby (an open letter to a worried fan) | Amanda Palmer Blog
    http://blog.amandapalmer.net/20150826

    Taylor Swift may disagree, but I’m still committed to the fact that neither Spotify nor iTunes is going to be the salvation of the modern musician. There’s just no proof that those giants are committed to the survival of the smaller artists. The way I see it, we’re better off using the new tools of the internet to exchange with each other, rather than rely on a different set of middlemen who are possibly even less committed to the true sustainability of artists’ careers than the major labels were.

    #musique #rétribution

  • Amanda Palmer: Playing the Hitler Card
    http://www.newstatesman.com/2015/05/playing-hitler-card

    Distinctions between empathy and jihad­ist leanings were quickly blurred; I was ­labelled a terrorist sympathiser. Some of my local friends told me that they couldn’t stand by “my support of the bombers”. But I wasn’t supporting their actions. I was imagining their feelings. I wasn’t totally alone, however. Most of my friends shook their heads in sadness about the misunderstanding. And slowly, over the next few days, I received a string of emails and voicemails from local Bostonians who wanted to tell me, in private, that they, too, had felt empathy and compassion and even concern for this 19-year-old kid. But they dared not say it aloud.

    #censure #autocensure

  • Support Amanda Palmer creating Art

    https://www.patreon.com/amandapalmer

    Signalé par Peter Sunde, ce bangbang" super zarbi :) mais marrant.

    well, here we are. the next frontier.

    if you’re a fan of mine, and really want to support me in the creation of new songs, film-clips/music-videos, long-form writing and more random, unpredictable art-things (comics? podcasts? who knows)....this is your chance.

    here i am again, asking.

    i’ve been struggling since i got off my label in 2008 to find the right platform for ongoing support, through which i can release constant material (and get paid). i think this is it.

    last year was eaten writing and putting out “the art of asking”, and this year i want to GET BACK TO MAKING ART.

  • Art (#music) is a #business – and, yes, artists have to make difficult, honest business decisions | Amanda Palmer | Comment is free | theguardian.com
    http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/dec/13/amanda-palmer-art-business-difficult-honest-decisions

    #Jack_Conte, one-half of the indie duo #Pomplamoose, is confronting this paradox the hard way in the wake of his recent post on Medium in which he lays bare the nuts, bolts, nets and grosses of his group’s 24-show American tour. Pomplamoose decided to pull out most of the stops and hire a full crew (sound, lights, tour manager, merch person), spare few expenses (buying new lights and road cases for their gear), and they freely admitted to considering the undertaking an investment in their future as a touring band. They lost about $12,000 after grossing a total of $136,000. I looked at that and barely blinked.

    Metaphorically, the band didn’t even fly first class, but that didn’t stop armchair critics from complaining that Pomplamoose didn’t deserve to get on the plane to begin with, those plane-taking wankers. And there are those angry at Pomplamoose’s abilty to absorb a #loss-leading #tour because they’re making enough #sustainable #income through their #pledge-per-song system on #Patreon (a platform Conte started 2 years ago, because no #online system existed for #YouTube-star bands to convert millions of views into actual revenue). But he could afford to the lose the money! some musicians complained. This isn’t a fair representation of middle class touring at all!, others wrote. The indie bands who’d toured in vans, slept on floors, and had nothing but chips and salsa on their riders said things like These guys spent their money like idiots!

    The critics are partially correct: Conte’s accounting is not how they’ve toured, or might tour if given the same budget. But it is how Pomplamoose chose to tour: at a loss, and as an investment. If there was any naiveté in Jack’s post, it wasn’t in how the band spent their money but rather in his assumption that a compassionate universe was ready to accept his transparency as an important contribution to the music information economy instead of a mercenary gimmick promoting his own cause.

    But losing money on a mid-level tour is more common than anyone apparently thinks – it’s just that there are few artists masochistic enough to put the information transparently into the public domain.

    When The Dresden Dolls were invited to open up for Nine Inch Nails’ summer tour in 2005, we were ecstatic. We were offered $500 per show to perform about six shows a week. We had to hire a tour bus and driver (no amount of sleeping-in-the-van or cheap flights could match the speed of the NIN caravan), and we had to hire our own sound guy. I have not, until now, written about the huge loss we took on that tour, nor would I ever criticize Trent Reznor for not offering us a “living wage”. He made the offer; we didn’t have to take it. To this day, I still meet people who discovered my music because of that tour: they became fans, they supported my Kickstarter, they come to my shows, they bought my book. We figured we’d make it back when we went back on our own tour as headliners. And …we did.

    Risk-based investing exists everywhere but the arts (and, one could argue, in the non-profit world), where it is considered absolutely déclassé. In the tech industry – and the restaurant industry, or any industry, really – it is considered necessary to spend, experiment, fail, struggle, borrow capital and ultimately find a healthy balance between expenditure and income. Wired’s Erika Hall recently even wrote of the tech world that “Somewhere along the way, it got to be uncool to reduce one’s risk of failure.”

    Perhaps the stickiest problem when comparing art and business is that the definition of “success” becomes muddied when you opt for a career in music. On the one hand, you’re told you haven’t “made it” until you’re a megastar – making a living at your art isn’t enough – and, on the other hand, musicians aren’t supposed to be concerned with profits if they’re “real” artists – Didn’t you get into this job just for the love of it?

    I launched my now-infamous #Kickstarter for my own album, tour and art book in 2012 and, while it grossed over $1.2m, it netted – when all was said and done – close to zero. I actually chose to run the Kickstarter as a loss leader: I wanted to impress my fans, and the critics of crowdfunding who I knew were going to judge and criticize me - and the project - no matter what. I deliberately used high-end, expensive packages when manufacturing the CD-books, the vinyl, the hand-painted record players and art-books I’d convinced 25,000 people to #pre-purchase. I even wound up chronicling my projected budget. Why? Because there was a bizarre impression that I’d somehow been handed a million-dollar check and was going to spend my year languishing in a swimming pool filled with hundred dollar bills. But I hadn’t: like a shoe store, or a restaurant, I was running a business with the obligatory expenses, like a full staff on payroll, a shop to rent, and a million dollars worth of pre-ordered shoes to design, inspect, manufacture and mail out to my customers.

    Meanwhile, even as I was only breaking even on the Kickstarter with an optimistic vision of future earnings (which did eventually manifest as a larger fanbase, more profitable tours, and a book advance), I got widely raked over the coals in the media for not paying fans who’d volunteered to come to my show and play with me and the band for two or three songs in exchange for tickets, backstage beers and hugs. This wasn’t my salaried band or crew we’re talking about – these were local sax and violin players showing up for an impromptu jam session that lasted one evening. I’d been doing these sorts of trades for years and they’d worked out just fine for everyone, until people got the sense that I was a millionaire (or, at least the wife of one) running a rock’n’roll sweat shop.

    The irony? Some of the exact same journalists and bloggers are now lambasting Jack Conte for paying the professional musicians he hired to toured with Pomplamoose (which is usually a two-person band that use loops to fill out their sound). Will Stevenson, a band manager himself, asked in the Alternative Press: “But why would the rest of you and your band need salaries? If you aren’t making the money, why would you pay it out to people?”

    The backlash (Amanda, pay your volunteers! Jack, don’t pay your band!) is laughable, but it speaks volumes about the double standards with which the world tackles the #music_industry: you’re damned if you play by the rules, and you’re damned if you find a creative way to thwart them. We – Taylor Swift, Trent Reznor, Zoe Keating, Pomplamoose, U2, Radiohead, me – are all just trying to find a way to create and monetize our creations at the same time.

    And if there are going to be a million new paths to sustainability for a million different artists, we’d best stop bickering amongst ourselves about the validity of each and every path these artists are stumbling down – or at least step out of the way if we can’t lend a hand.

    • This article was amended on 14 December 2014 to clarify that Mick Jagger attended, but did not graduate from, the London School Of Economics.