• 30Jun
    image from www.universalmusic.comUniversal Music Group has promoted three senior international executives:
    • George Ash to President, Australasia.
    • Sandy Monteiro to President, South East Asia.
    • Vico Antippas to add responsibility for South Africa, sub-Saharan Africa, India.
    The promotions are announced today by Max Hole, who becomes Chief Operating Officer, Universal Music Group International (UMGI). All three executives report to him.

    Mr. Ash is currently Managing Director of Universal Music's Australian company. Mr. Monteiro is Senior Vice President, South East Asia. Mr. Antippas is President, Nordic, Benelux, Central & Eastern Europe.


  • 30Jun
    • image from images.digitalspy.co.uk Eminem scores the highest debut of 2010 with and impressive 741,400 albums sold. (FMQB)
    • Richard Mollet - who currently serves as public affairs director at the UK recorded music business group BPI - has been picked as the new CEO of the UK's Publishers Association. (MediaBistro)
    • Randy Malinoff has been appointed to VP, Direct-to-Consumer eCommerce for Universal Music Group Distribution.
    • Universal Music Publishing Group has promoted Cyndi Forman  to Senior Creative Director, Nashville. She was Creative Director.
    • HMV results sound good – but what about the VAT? The company's web sales exploit a controversial tax loophole that costs the Treasury more than £110m a year. (Guardian)
    • c/o pop 2010 is over. Organizers expressed satisfaction with 1,400 industry attendees at the C’n’B Convention and 30,000 fans at the festival.
    • SNEP, which represents the recording industry in France, has elected Denis Ladegaillerie, founder and president of the firm Digital Believe, as its president for the next two years. Olivier Montfort, president of EMI Music France, was elected vice president.
    • R.I.P. - Tom Ruffino who headed the International Department at Warner Bros. Records for thirty years died at Los Robles Hospital in Thousand Oaks, CA on June 25 at the age of 70.


  • 30Jun
    Just over the Hudson River stands a world that used to thrive on the sales of recorded music.
  • 30Jun

    image from www.hypebot.com

    (#mashsmday #smday) "Today we acknowledge and celebrate the revolution of media becoming social," writes Vadim Lavrusik at Mashable. "A day that honors the technological and societal advancements that have allowed us to have a dialogue, to connect and to engage not only the creators of media, but perhaps more importantly, one another."

    He writes, "It’s a day to celebrate the changes in media that have empowered us to stay connected to information in real time, the tools that have enabled us to communicate from miles apart, and the platforms that have given a voice to the voiceless and victims of protest injustice. It’s a revolution worth celebrating."

    Today, Bruce and I at Hypebot, along with Mashable and many others, celebrate Social Media Day and we hope you’ll join us.  Here's an overview:

    Refe Tuma: Cold Pitching & Social Media
    Greg Rollett: Leverage Other People's Audiences
    Mike Volpe: How To Improve Your Online Presence
    Dan Schawbel: The Social Media Basics
    Justin Boland: "We're All Just Numbers..."
    Mike King: 5 Social Media and Online Marketing Tip
    Ryan Van Etten: "Social Media Is An Epic Win."
    Voyno: Is Social Media Killing Your Band?

    A big thanks to all who contributed!


  • 30Jun
    (# mashsmday #smday)

    image from www.hypebot.com


    image from newrockstarphilosophy.files.wordpress.comIn the few short years since Social Media has invaded our lives many artists have been steamrolled into picking up the technology, but few have been trained in how to use SM.  Not that there is a huge difference between how an individual uses Twitter vs the way a band uses Twitter, but there is a difference.

    Band SM means you must know how to interact on 2 levels. You must have an idea of what is appropriate for your social group (your fans) and what media (twitter, fbook, YouTube) will work for you. Blasting away on Twitter about anything and everything may work for you IF you're a singer songwriter whose already revealed much in your music.

    But some (read: many) artists benefit from mystery. Bowie would not have become Bowie if he video blogged his entire career. He had a mystery that intrigued the world. Taking away the mystery may have revealed things that would turn off fans, that would hurt his career.

    Of course this is all hypothesis but in today's world of RSS everything there is such a thing as overexposure (Lindsay Lohan anyone). Early on in the NewRockstarPhilosophy book we ask you to make sure you know yourself as an artists. When you have a solid idea of the artist that you are, you can choose the type of SM that works for you. You can keep your fans engaged and still leave them wanting more. So spend some time and figure out what kind of Social being your band is, figure out what SM you are comfortable with, and figure out what part of your artistry/personality you will reveal to your fan base. That way you will be using SM to add to your band rather than simply adding to the noise of your band.

    --Voyno, author of NewRockstarPhilosophy



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