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Post by adamrocks on Feb 3, 2016 22:47:12 GMT -5
Keepsnaps @keepsnaps 24m24 minutes ago Hello Hobart! ???? Welcoming in the new radio station #hithobart to Tasmania with Adam Lambert! ???? @… http://instagr.am/p/BBWVtlijA6B
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Post by adamrocks on Feb 3, 2016 22:48:33 GMT -5
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Post by Deleted on Feb 3, 2016 22:54:00 GMT -5
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Post by adamrocks on Feb 3, 2016 23:03:47 GMT -5
I heard one girl ask Adam to take off his glasses when he was performing. To which he said it was really bright out. LOL! If you tell Adam what you want him to do...it's not gonna happen!lol
Got to go. BBL.
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Post by cassie on Feb 3, 2016 23:08:14 GMT -5
I heard one girl ask Adam to take off his glasses when he was performing. To which he said it was really bright out. LOL! If you tell Adam what you want him to do...it's not gonna happen!lol Got to go. BBL. He also teasingly ragged on a girl in front for talking more loudly than he was singing, and asked if she wanted his mic. Feisty today!
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Post by Deleted on Feb 3, 2016 23:20:02 GMT -5
I heard one girl ask Adam to take off his glasses when he was performing. To which he said it was really bright out. LOL! If you tell Adam what you want him to do...it's not gonna happen!lol Got to go. BBL. Noticed some of the band was in shades as well, mid day event in a venue that has a wall of windows. </img> Looks like they may have been in this room, if so he would be facing the windows
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Post by bridgeymah on Feb 3, 2016 23:29:51 GMT -5
I know we have quite a few part-time students of music industry here so thought this book might be of interest. Was on a reading list recommendations that I get monthly... is about Max Martin but also more broadly about the industry. From the email: The Hit Machine: Inside the Hit Factory by John SeabrookI've been meaning to read this book for a while, and after I did I bought copies for everyone at my company (since we produce books and other kinds of content). In the book, Seabrook explains how just a few men and women are responsible for producing nearly every hit song you hear on the radio, see on YouTube or listen to on Spotify. He explains the economics of the music industry in a way that allows you to understand why music is the way that is today (the good parts and the bad parts). As someone who tends to listen to songs on repeat while I write--usually bad songs--it was interesting to hear how many of them were made. My only gripe: He neglects a couple people I would have liked to hear more about like Sia and Linda Perry who are just as prolific as Dr. Luke and Max Martin. www.amazon.com/Song-Machine-Inside-Hit-Factory/dp/0393241920/?tag=ryanholnet-20
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Post by Deleted on Feb 3, 2016 23:38:42 GMT -5
I know we have quite a few part-time students of music industry here so thought this book might be of interest. Was on a reading list recommendations that I get monthly... is about Max Martin but also more broadly about the industry. From the email: The Hit Machine: Inside the Hit Factory by John SeabrookI've been meaning to read this book for a while, and after I did I bought copies for everyone at my company (since we produce books and other kinds of content). In the book, Seabrook explains how just a few men and women are responsible for producing nearly every hit song you hear on the radio, see on YouTube or listen to on Spotify. He explains the economics of the music industry in a way that allows you to understand why music is the way that is today (the good parts and the bad parts). As someone who tends to listen to songs on repeat while I write--usually bad songs--it was interesting to hear how many of them were made. My only gripe: He neglects a couple people I would have liked to hear more about like Sia and Linda Perry who are just as prolific as Dr. Luke and Max Martin. www.amazon.com/Song-Machine-Inside-Hit-Factory/dp/0393241920/?tag=ryanholnet-20I've got that on hold at the library! Another music industry book y'all might want to check out is 'How Music Got Free: The End of an Industry, the Turn of the Century, and the Patient Zero of Piracy' by Stephen Witt. I read it last year & it's very interesting.
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Post by wal on Feb 4, 2016 0:13:21 GMT -5
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Post by wal on Feb 4, 2016 0:15:08 GMT -5
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