T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
807.1 | Give it up...It's the reality of the business. | COMET::FRISBYA | Wake me when it's over | Mon Oct 07 1991 14:58 | 10 |
| Simple put:
Talent=Nothing
Unless you have record sales.
If you don't your not really worth marketing.
No record sales=No band.
Frizkid
|
807.2 | They are done forever!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! | COMET::FRISBYA | Wake me when it's over | Mon Oct 07 1991 15:05 | 11 |
| Chris:
IMNSHO------How good a bands name is,is judge by the certain
person.
DOWN THE IRONS!!!!
{Insert a picture of a dumb dinosaur galloping into a huge
tar pit and NEVER coming out!}
Frizkid
|
807.3 | | VCSESU::VCSESU::COOK | Stormtrooper of Death | Mon Oct 07 1991 15:34 | 4 |
|
Friz, go back to sucking your thumb. You have a better future in it.
Talent=Nothing indeed. We laugh at your very existance.
|
807.4 | Iron Maiden = generic metal to the hilt | CAVLRY::BUCK | ACE Regional Rep | Mon Oct 07 1991 15:46 | 19 |
| >Talent=Nothing indeed.
Friz has a point. While Jani Lame is a pretty good songwriter, Warrant
is a talentless band whos made a pretty solid career out of no talent.
I know killer Berklee musicians who are playing in no-where Jazz bars
for zero $$ denaro!
Morale of the story...if you can't market yourself to the masses...forget
it!
RE: Chris
"Are you trying to say..."
No. What I'm trying to say is that I thought it pretty lofty of you to
place such a judgement on a band's name and musical content when you
had just got done praising a band which fit your slam in another note.
Catch my drift?
|
807.5 | | MRVAX::CESCOBAR | Only the good die young | Mon Oct 07 1991 15:50 | 7 |
|
Alright, you made your point, you think Maiden is done for...I don't!
that's it...no more need for fuss.
Chris
|
807.6 | Blek. | GOES11::G_HOUSE | I wanna be sedated! | Mon Oct 07 1991 17:16 | 10 |
| Buck's right, marketing makes a band, not talant. Warrent is a good
example, so it Poision. They do ok at writing catchy tunes, but none
of them are wizards at playing their instruments. They got a record
company to publicize them to phenominal degrees and they are very
popular (and rich) for it.
I've never heard Kik Tracee's music, but I do have to agree with the
statement Chris made that the name sounds really stupid.
gh
|
807.7 | | VCSESU::MOSHER::COOK | Stormtrooper of Death | Mon Oct 07 1991 17:20 | 9 |
|
Both make a band. Buck is wrong.
You have to have good marketing, but once you have that you have to
have good talent to back it up. Whether that be talent playing
an instrument, or talent writing material, or even talent as far
as showmanship...
It takes both!
|
807.8 | Ack! | GOES11::G_HOUSE | I wanna be sedated! | Mon Oct 07 1991 17:23 | 5 |
| re: /prc
Perhaps you didn't see Poison on the MTV Video Music Awards...
gh
|
807.9 | | VCSESU::MOSHER::COOK | Stormtrooper of Death | Mon Oct 07 1991 17:25 | 4 |
|
Poison has the talent to back it up, they just don't use it right.
...who knows, they could have been wasted.
|
807.11 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | ACE Regional Rep | Mon Oct 07 1991 17:45 | 52 |
| >Both make a band. Buck is wrong.
Buck is not wrong...Buck has a degree in music business!
;^)
Remember that episode on the Brady Bunch where Greg got a record deal?
And he goes into the studio and records a vocal track with acoustic
guitar...this real folky thing, and then he comes back after the mix
and there is all this Hendrexesque distorted guitar and heavy drums
on the tape, and Greg's voice is all effected out... And the Record
Co. hired these 20 screaming teenage girls to run into the studio and
tear off all his clothes? Then they had this "groovy" image all
planned out for him in these Modded out fringe clothes and a wig?
THAT IS THE MUSIC BUSINESS!!!
You sound like Greg...going in there with good intentions about playing
HIS music and becoming a star...when in actuality it's the people with
the money who have the plan for how you will be come a star.
Bottom Line...there are people in this business who:
a) Don't write any music at all
b) Don't play on any of their music at all
c) are ugly, but have the best beauticians in the world make them over
and voila...a career is born!
Subsequently, if you (Pete or Friz) are going into the Music Biz with
the attitudes that...
a) I/my band have our own songs...we don't need/want people to write
for us
b) I/we have my/our own style...no one will ever change that
c) I/we have my/our own image...no one will ever change that
d) We write our songs the way we want them to sound...no one will ever
change them
THEN YOU ARE IN THE WRONG BUSINESS!!! Cuz the higher you get in the
ladder, the less control you have over anything. Those are just STD
corporation facts. When you joined Digital, you signed an agreement
which basically said "if I create anything cool while working here at
DEC, I hereby give all rights of said cool thing to Digital". The
same thing goes in the Music Biz. Your record deal sez "I am an
employee of X record company...i will do what they tell me...i will
wear what they tell me...i will go where they tell me...anything
I do for X company belongs to X comapny...X comapny gets *% of
everything I make, etc. etc. etc."
capice?
|
807.12 | No offense, really Buck | MRVAX::CESCOBAR | Only the good die young | Mon Oct 07 1991 17:53 | 23 |
|
If that was true than there wouldn't be such a thing as metal....
Now I can't say the bands were telling the truth but I'd like to think
so:
Metallica
Megadeth
Slayer*
Anthrax
Exodus*
Iron Maiden
These bands haven't coincided with the *POP* movement.... especially
the bands with a *, Exocus has never slowed down, not even for a
ballad, and Slayer, yeah they get a lot of radio play...
Buck, I'd like to think that the Music busi- NO, the METAL business is
exactly what you say it isn't. I think that the music should be
EVERYTHING, sure image helps, but that is far from # 1. I think maybe
you are in the wrong business, try DANCE MUSIC...
Chris.
|
807.13 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | ACE Regional Rep | Mon Oct 07 1991 18:06 | 1 |
| Taken offline...
|
807.14 | Making money is the business, not making music | GOES11::G_HOUSE | I wanna be sedated! | Mon Oct 07 1991 18:18 | 48 |
| re: Chris
If you believe that record companies didn't mandate how those bands
sound then you're dreamin. Maybe some of them had a sound that the
record companies liked without major changes, who knows?
> If that was true than there wouldn't be such a thing as metal....
Just because it's something promoted as being anti-establishment,
anti-social, or anti-dance_music, doesn't mean it's not something that
can be contrived and MARKETED!
> These bands haven't coincided with the *POP* movement.... especially
> the bands with a *, Exocus has never slowed down, not even for a
> ballad, and Slayer, yeah they get a lot of radio play...
Your logic is totally flawed. You seem to think Buck's saying the
record companies turn out ONLY dance music or music that appeals to
*everyone*, that's not it! If the record companies perceived a market
for something, it has nothing to do with asking them to play slower or
play something that will get them on the radio. They're looking for
total market saturation, not just radio market saturation. Their
business is MAKING MONEY, not pleasing people or making bands famous,
they have only ONE interest.
I'm not saying those bands *necessarily* had to make drastic changes,
but have you heard any of their stuff from before they got signed? How
much different did it sound?
Notice all the interviews with Lars Ulrich of Metallica where he
complained about the sampled drum sounds they MADE HIM USE on And
Justice For All. This is a perfect example. He says the band was
never happy with the sound of the album. If they had so much say in
it, then how did it get released? Notice also that THAT album was the
one they first got world wide fame and fortune with. Interesting
coincidence? Nope...
To a record company, a band is NOT in a position to bargain. The band
wants what the record company has to offer, not the other way around.
If a record company wants a thrash band that has a certain sort of
sound and band X refuses to change to sound like they want, they're out
the door and band Y's in the studio making that sound, 'cause there's a
he!! of a lot more bands out there that wanna get signed then there are
slots that companies have to sign them. They take EXACTLY what they
want and nothing else.
gh
|
807.15 | supply and demand | CAVLRY::BUCK | ACE Regional Rep | Mon Oct 07 1991 18:27 | 29 |
| As stated in -1...
>Just because it's something promoted as being anti-establishment,
>anti-social, or anti-dance_music, doesn't mean it's not something that
>can be contrived and MARKETED!
Read SEX PISTOLS.
Where do you thnk they got that name? Oh yeah...Johnny Rotten...Sid
Vicious...where did those names come from? Malcolm McClaron was the
marketing genious behind this band...marketed as a "f... the world"
band. They were loud, out of tune, snotty (literally), filthy, rude,
into self torture...all aspects that would make society flinch. They
sold millions...
Village People were the same way...a bunch a nobody's funded by a
marketer with a vision to satisfy a market niche. They sold millions
in the disco market.
New Kids...same thing...they are the brain child of Maruice Starr.
They don't write, they couldn't dance, they can't sing...but Maurice
wrote the songs...Maurice played or hired the band...Maurice recorded
and mixed the songs to his sound...he hired choreohgraphers to teach
them to dance and lip sync. They were given remedial vocal lessons.
In short, they had a look...everything else was worked over to make
a marketable product. New Kids are now the top grossing entertainers
in the world.
dats da facts...
|
807.16 | Not above scape-goating are we? | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Soaring on the wings of dawn | Tue Oct 08 1991 11:10 | 16 |
| re: .14 (G_HOUSE)
Amen and well said.
It's so cliche to slam record companies.
I think you have to be pragmatic about it. Record companies are
INVESTORS. They take LARGE sums of money and invest them into
bands. It does not strike me as unreasonable that they would
want the largest return and that they would also want a say in
how their money is being spent.
If you want someone to support "art" that's called "charity".
I tend to doubt that anyone in here would do things much differently
than record companies if it was THEIR money.
|
807.17 | Indies rule! | GOES11::G_HOUSE | I wanna be sedated! | Tue Oct 08 1991 14:39 | 20 |
| re: .16 (db)
I agree with you. I didn't say it was necessarily bad for record
companies to protect their investments. I certainly understand why
they do it. Yet on the other hand, as someone who enjoys making music,
it's rather depressing to think about things in this light. Reality,
yes. Pleasant, maybe not.
Somehow good music still manages to squeeze out sometimes. I've been
hearing some very creative things that *I* wouldn't personally thought
would have a large market, but they still got out. But I wonder
sometimes if we aren't missing out on some of the best music we could
hear simply because some record executive doesn't like it personally or
doesn't understand that there might be a market for it.
I guess that's why there are independant labels. It's just hard to
figure out what you'll like and not from the indies, or even what's
available sometimes.
gh
|
807.18 | Blame the "system", not the record companies | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Soaring on the wings of dawn | Tue Oct 08 1991 16:34 | 6 |
| We agree completely Greg.
To expand on what you're saying (I think), it just isn't reasonable
to expect record companies to act differently than they do.
At the risk of resorting to a cliche, "it's the system".
|
807.19 | .......exit, stage left........... | AD::FLATTERY | | Tue Oct 08 1991 16:52 | 13 |
| ....in many cases the A & R person that "discovers" the band acts
as a "champion" for the band to the big bad record execs....many of
them spend "years" believing in a band and fighting for them within
their own companies to get them recognized, established etc....they
provide example after example to the execs of the "market" that their
band reaches...as the A & R personn establishes their own track
records with "winning" bands they gain respect and a voice within the
record company and the next band they believe in may get in a little
easier...easiest measure of success...$$$$ brought into the company on
a first record....how many bands do you knwo that are dumped after one
record that didn't sell well because basically the company didn't put
their resources behind them.....many i'll bet....ok..don't shoot til
you see the whites of my eyes....../k
|
807.20 | Contract does not equal = fame/fortune...it equals debt/hard work! | CAVLRY::BUCK | ACE Regional Rep | Tue Oct 08 1991 17:11 | 33 |
| -1
Eggs-actly!
I know this dude...Art (not his real name...it's been changed to
protect the naive), whos been working his butt off for years and
years trying to obtain a record contract. Art spends lots of
time making flyers and cassette labels on his PC, spends lots of
$$$ on high-class demo recordings, spends lots of time hounding
club owners to book his band, etc. This is all well and fine
but what Art's main problem is is insight. Art thinks that once he
has a record contract in hand, he can sit back, throw his feet up,
crack open an ice cold Bud, and relax and watch the cash flow in.
W A K E U P A R T !!!
When you get a contract, that'\s when the work REALLY begins! Art
doesn't understand the concept of recoupables. You make you're first
album, and a video for the single. BAM -- You are now in debt to your
record company for 1.5 million dollars. You got 1.5M? Doubt it...hit
the road...tour...sell tix...sell t-shirts...all in an attempt to sell
albums. Once the record company is paid off, then the next person in
line for cash is the Producer, whos been waiting to receive his $$$ for
doing your album for the last 10 months, cuz that's how long it took
to pay the record company off! After the producer is paid off, then
you start getting rolaties on the lp ... oh yeah, provided you were
smart enough to get in on the publishing rights.
Anyone remember when Tom Petty pulled a fast one on his first record
company by filing Bankruptcy? Classic case of how to get out of a bad
deal, but he didn't get off without a fight! Also, see Boston for
addl record company lawsuits.
|
807.21 | more later, when I have some time.... | QRYCHE::STARR | We are hope, despite the times.... | Tue Oct 08 1991 17:49 | 23 |
| re: .20 (Buck)
> When you get a contract, that'\s when the work REALLY begins! Art
> doesn't understand the concept of recoupables. You make you're first
> album, and a video for the single.
True. But you forgot to mention that there's a decent chance the album will
never even get released! Labels sign and record lots of bands, and there
really are a lot of them they don't even bother to release to the public.
> BAM -- You are now in debt to your record company for 1.5 million dollars.
Well, more realistically, its about 10% of that amount. Rarely will the
recording budget for a new band go over 100K. And most beginning video
budgets are in the $30K region. But the parts about being in debt are
absolutely true (well, sorta - you owe it in royalties, but if the album
stiffs, you don't have to pay it back, the company just takes the loss and
drops you).
BTW, HM bands tend to make more money from merchandising than they do from
album sales.....
alan
|
807.22 | Even poseur in how they make money! | GOES11::G_HOUSE | I wanna be sedated! | Tue Oct 08 1991 17:56 | 5 |
| >BTW, HM bands tend to make more money from merchandising than they do from
>album sales.....
That would be POSEUR bands, right?
;^)
|
807.23 | ART WAKE UP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! | COMET::FRISBYA | Wake me when it's over | Tue Oct 08 1991 18:06 | 25 |
| Another reality:
Certain record companies will sign a band and then drop them
just for a tax right off.
Sad but true............
In this "Business"( and it IS a business) you have to work your
@ss off! Just because you have a contract doesn't mean sh*t to them.
Example: VAIN
They WERE a good hard rock band from L.A. doing pretty
decent...They releashed their first album. They think every thing is
peachy with the record company.....They go into the studio and make
their second LP and the record company hears it and say "Sorry!"
BAM...They're dropped.
Now they have to pay the record company back and pay for the
rights to the album back.
They didn't BEAT THE BULLET......(One of their songs).
Frizkid
|
807.24 | Things aren't as cut throat | VCSESU::MOSHER::COOK | DEC sells, but who's buying? | Wed Oct 09 1991 10:45 | 2 |
|
Yet another reason why I'm shopping in Europe.
|
807.25 | | CSC32::B_TURNBAUGH | | Wed Oct 09 1991 12:48 | 11 |
| re.4
Buck, How can you say Warrant is a talentless band!! I just
saw them and they played and sang really well!!! At the end of it
all Jani Lame said that they use no Sequencers, tape or drum
machines!! They are definitely posers but a good band!! IMHO.
skip/bob/bald
|
807.26 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | ACE Regional Rep | Wed Oct 09 1991 13:01 | 10 |
| RE: Skip
Because I know FOR A FACT that the DO use tapes and sequencers when
they play live!!
Also, I know for a fact that they have studio musicians come in to
do the guitar solos.
That's why
|
807.28 | I'd rather make it in the states first...IMHO. | COMET::FRISBYA | I said SCREW IT...MomAndDadUseToDoIt! | Wed Oct 09 1991 13:14 | 10 |
| I think your wrong about the tapes and sequencers......
But I know the guitar solos on the first album where done by a studio
guy.
Pete:(not to start an arguement but) The business is pretty
much the same all over the world. Record company still want money and
a marketing product. Show a company that doesn't and I'll show you a
a failing record company.
Frizkid
|
807.29 | | VCSESU::MOSHER::COOK | DEC sells, but who's buying? | Wed Oct 09 1991 13:17 | 13 |
|
re: .28
I know it's the same, I'm not clueless about the industry. I already
have an independent album with my name on it and used to know someone
very much on the inside of the industry.
In Europe there's not as much cut throat competition, and they are
much more willing to sign an American band, especially as heavy as
we are. I'm probably not going to even bother with American labels
until later, except maybe Combat, etc...
/prc
|
807.30 | Go for Geffen or Elektra. Say no to MCA!!!!! | COMET::FRISBYA | I said SCREW IT...MomAndDadUseToDoIt! | Wed Oct 09 1991 13:27 | 8 |
| I wasn't saying you were clueless.....
Combat?
That's a bad as saying the P word....8)!
Frizkid
|
807.31 | | VCSESU::MOSHER::COOK | DEC sells, but who's buying? | Wed Oct 09 1991 13:35 | 4 |
|
We need to go for the labels that sign heavier bands. The other
labels like Atlantic and Geffen are harder to get through with
the kind of stuff we do.
|
807.32 | | QRYCHE::STARR | We are hope, despite the times.... | Wed Oct 09 1991 15:02 | 7 |
| re: Friz
> Go for Geffen or Elektra. Say no to MCA!!!!!
You gotta keep up with the industry, dude! Geffen is now part of MCA!!!!
alan
|
807.33 | STAY AWAY FROM MCA!!!!!!!!! | COMET::FRISBYA | I said SCREW IT...MomAndDadUseToDoIt! | Wed Oct 09 1991 15:42 | 12 |
| Oh SH*T!!!!
Where did this happen?
That's a big 8(!!!!!
I guess we'll never sign to Geffen......
MCA is notrious for sign bands for one album and dropping
them!
Frizkid
|
807.34 | My Kinda Ghirl...neva neva looks outta time | CAVLRY::BUCK | Dancing with Timberwolf! | Wed Oct 09 1991 15:46 | 4 |
| >MCA is notrious for sign bands for one album and dropping them!
...or two, in the case of The Rings (My all-time favorite band!!)
|
807.35 | | SUBURB::COOKS | Symphonies Of Sickness | Wed Oct 16 1991 09:02 | 10 |
| I don`t care what anyone says....if someone offered me the chance to
record an album,do a major tour,press interviews,video`s,give up my
job,i`d jump at the chance.
You only live once,and if it means ending up with 50,000 quid (or
dollars) in debt 5 years later,so what? At least you`ll have the
satisfaction of knowing you had a real good shot at it.
Joe Strummer.
|
807.36 | FYI, rockers | CAVLRY::BUCK | Heartbreak Boulevard | Wed Apr 01 1992 11:45 | 60 |
| Here is some info FYI to anyone who curious as to the workings of the
music biz, record contracts, (percieved) band power, etc.
NOTE: This info is all true...and is currently being lived out on a
daily basis by a friend of a friend's band.
***********************************************************************
Band X (we'll call them for now), from Germany, was sign by EMI records
after a successful showcase, which some of EMI's A&R people happened to
be at. Band X, who are a 4-man hard rock act ala AC/DC / KIX, were
signed and re-located to LA to record their first album.
After re-locating to LA, the band began pre-production for the album
with some producers, selected and hired by the record company. During
pre-production, the drummer for the band developed tendonitis in one
of his hands. BOOM -- drummer is fired from band by record company and
flown back to Germany almost instantly. The record company (NOT the
band) went off and found a replacement. The guy they found was from
NYC. The company re-located him within days to LA. The rest of the
band did not even get to meet their new band member until the next
scheduled rehearsal.
Below are some orders issued to the band by the record company:
* lead guitarist was to dye his hair black (it was sort of red, record
company didn't like it)
* another member was given a month to lose 10lbs, or he was out
* the record company issued the band their working name...Mxx Sxxxx
(fwiw, the band does not like it, but when the people paying your
bills like it, not much you can do...I did not print it due to
legal implications, but believe me, it's a lousy name!!)
The record comapny then brought in a choreographer. Every song and
every move of their stage show was to be choreographed by this person.
And the band was expected to memorize each and every move. Also, all
the background vocals for the band were professionally recorded and
sampled, and would be played by via samples during their live show.
Part of the band's choreography was to learn to effectively lip sync
the vocal parts to the songs!!
In their spare time, the record company makes arrangements for Band X
(now called Mxx Sxxxx) to make appearances at various private parties
and functions in LA to meet and get acquianted with the area's top
rockers (Motley Crue, Guns n Roses, Ozzy, etc.).
**********************************************************************
Well, that's the basic gist of it. Again, this is just FYI to anyone
insterested. Earlier in this string of notes, it was percieved by
some people that a band had a lot more creative power over it's
destiny in the music business in terms of their contract. I very much
disagreed, taking the stance that when you sign a contract, you
basically sign away all creative elements to other people. I think the
above information provides a better perspective on the 'real world',
and puts the former discussion in this string into a clearer light.
B.
|
807.37 | who made who | OLTRIX::ZAPPIA | Pro-Escalator-Movement | Wed Apr 01 1992 11:51 | 7 |
|
Gee, and I thought my manager had some high demands. It is truly
amazing/ridiculous. I would imagine the number of bands that do
get complete (with nothing being absolute most likely) artistic
control contracts are small.
- Jim
|
807.39 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | Heartbreak Boulevard | Wed Apr 01 1992 12:18 | 19 |
| > I'll bet Combat records aren't as bad as that!
Don't kid yourself. Espicially these days, in hard financial times,
where every dollar means much more than it did years ago, companies, be
them small, large, or independent, are only going with 'sure bets'.
Also, they're keeping track of their money spent and making sure it is
going to be lucrative for them (aka, make them money back).
What -3 was trying to show was the current industry trends. Basically,
any band that thinks when they get a deal, all creative terms and
conditions are going to be decided by them (the band) had better wake
up and smell the coffee. That's just not a reality. Personally, I
think it should be a consideration on the part of the band when
shopping for a deal. Because you'll never find a deal if you keep
looking for one that will cater to your wants and needs.
As Garth Algar would say "Live in the NOW"
|
807.41 | Still picky, I'm sure | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Now I'm down in it | Wed Apr 01 1992 15:52 | 5 |
| I imagine that the Christian labels are demanding in different ways.
They certainly have standards to uphold, but in terms of beliefs and in
terms of the quality of the product which they must produce.
gh
|
807.43 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | Heartbreak Boulevard | Wed Apr 01 1992 17:22 | 2 |
| How would a Christian lable look upon something, say, like pierced
nipples and such 'odd' image things??
|
807.44 | soap on a rope | OLTRIX::ZAPPIA | Pro-Escalator-Movement | Wed Apr 01 1992 18:32 | 16 |
|
In some cases I like the idea of small independent labels working
to together with each other and more importantly retaining their
indie some what inherent traits namely enjoyment of the music while
being distributed by an appropriate major who can get the record in
the stores in timely manner as well as promotion which is usually nil
or very limited.
Even if your goal isn't mass appeal if you can't get your records
in stores or to the people who want them be it relatively small
numbers or droves then it's pretty poor as is often the case. Just
a short time back I recall hearing a radio station that were just now
getting their copy of a record that some predominately indie-stocked stores
have had for literally months now.
- Jim
|
807.45 | Is this where the TAR PIT thing came from? | POWDML::BUCKLEY | O Holy Night | Wed Jan 13 1993 11:19 | 26 |
| Let's return, shall we, to a LEGENDARY discussion in this note:
================================================================================
Note 807.2 Talent/Marketing/Music Biz discussion 2 of 44
COMET::FRISBYA "Wake me when it's over" 11 lines 7-OCT-1991 14:05
-< They are done forever!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Chris:
IMNSHO------How good a bands name is,is judge by the certain
person.
DOWN THE IRONS!!!!
{Insert a picture of a dumb dinosaur galloping into a huge
tar pit and NEVER coming out!}
Frizkid
================================================================================
Note 807.3 Talent/Marketing/Music Biz discussion 3 of 44
VCSESU::VCSESU::COOK "Stormtrooper of Death" 4 lines 7-OCT-1991 14:34
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Friz, go back to sucking your thumb. You have a better future in it.
Talent=Nothing indeed. We laugh at your very existance.
|
807.46 | Too funny, Buck | LACV01::MCCARTNEY | Like Paul, without the money | Wed Jan 13 1993 11:27 | 1 |
| we miss ya, friz!
|
807.47 | | BUSY::ESCOBAR | Another Day | Wed Jan 13 1993 11:28 | 4 |
|
Iron Maiden Rules!
|
807.48 | droolz or stoolz -- one of the two | POWDML::BUCKLEY | O Holy Night | Wed Jan 13 1993 11:31 | 1 |
| Iron Maiden = dinosaur bones in the tar pit
|
807.49 | | BUSY::ESCOBAR | Another Day | Wed Jan 13 1993 11:44 | 4 |
|
Sha... as if.
|
807.50 | Coolness! | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Big cheese, MAKE me! | Wed Jan 13 1993 11:59 | 6 |
| Woah, dude! CLASSIC Friz and Pete, in the same note!!! You really
know how to dredge 'em up!
Yeah, I think that was the origin of the "tar pit" reference...
gh
|
807.51 | | METALX::SWANSON | No Exit | Wed Jan 13 1993 12:00 | 11 |
| > Talent=Nothing indeed. We laugh at your very existance.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
aahhhhhh, another legenday expression we must use to the fullest
extent!
|KS|
(Who laughs at your very existence!)
|
807.52 | These guys make it to Europe yet... ;');');') | BUSY::ESCOBAR | Another Day | Wed Jan 13 1993 12:08 | 9 |
| <<< LANDO::ADMIND:[NOTES$LIBRARY]HEAVY_METAL.NOTE;2 >>>
-< HEAVY_METAL >-
================================================================================
Note 807.24 Talent/Marketing/Music Biz discussion 24 of 51
VCSESU::MOSHER::COOK "DEC sells, but who's buying?" 2 lines 9-OCT-1991 09:45
-< Things aren't as cut throat >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yet another reason why I'm shopping in Europe.
|
807.53 | 8^) | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Big cheese, MAKE me! | Wed Jan 13 1993 12:09 | 1 |
| Like I say, CLASSIC Pete!
|