Murder on Music Row
Moderators: Dave Mudgett, Janice Brooks
- Bob Hoffnar
- Posts: 9244
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Austin, Tx
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In NYC I heard "Murder on Music row" tonight on the way into town. The blathering idiot DJ said it was a satire about the music scene before it played. When the tune was over she was backtracking like crazy. Saying all this stuff about George Strait feeling that tradition is important and all. Somebody must have gotten on her case during the tune.
One thing is for sure the "radio personalities" that are DJs on the new country stations around here have absolutly no knowlege or interest in music. Its pathetic.
Bob
One thing is for sure the "radio personalities" that are DJs on the new country stations around here have absolutly no knowlege or interest in music. Its pathetic.
Bob
Bob - Its sad that in the radio industry the Billy Parkers (Tulsa), Larry Scotts (Shreveport), and Eddie Stubbs (Nashville) of the world aren't running their industry. Today the consultants from Boston are deciding what's to be played in Pine Bluff, AR because they think they know what's best for that marketplace. And in many cases the few program directors who do have authority to cater country music to their marketplace were, until the week before, programming Boyz to Men, Brittany Spears, etc. at some pop music station. Ask many of them today who Wynn Stewart or Skeets McDonald is and they would look at you like they smelled something the dog did and couldn't locate it. A sad state of affairs indeed. Best, Boomer
It finally aired in Cincy this morning. I’d read the words, but it was great hearing it and relating to each line. The DJ initially introduced it as a song criticizing how the fans like a lot of that “wimpy pop sounding stuff”.
We had such a long conversation. Of course he acknowledged that the song is NOT about the fans but about the powers that be on Music Row.
He acknowledged that some of the stuff he has to play makes him want to barf at passing it off as “country”. Incidentally, the singer he used as an example started off at as real traditional sounding act. He’s young and good looking enough that they’ve transformed him – as part of the murder conspiracy.
We shared mutual frustrations over the somewhat fraudulent and manipulative practice of overdubbing to convert a country tune into a pop tune—e.g. dubbing synth over steel.
No matter! I’m heading home and I’ve got “Down Every Road” disk #1 in the car. That would be Mooney and Hamlet on Steel, Haggard on vocals.
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HagFan
We had such a long conversation. Of course he acknowledged that the song is NOT about the fans but about the powers that be on Music Row.
He acknowledged that some of the stuff he has to play makes him want to barf at passing it off as “country”. Incidentally, the singer he used as an example started off at as real traditional sounding act. He’s young and good looking enough that they’ve transformed him – as part of the murder conspiracy.
We shared mutual frustrations over the somewhat fraudulent and manipulative practice of overdubbing to convert a country tune into a pop tune—e.g. dubbing synth over steel.
No matter! I’m heading home and I’ve got “Down Every Road” disk #1 in the car. That would be Mooney and Hamlet on Steel, Haggard on vocals.
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HagFan
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- Janice Brooks
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- Location: Hendersonville, TN USA
Money is always the bully and the driving force behind most corporate decisions. A few years ago I was listening to a DJ and a noted country artist here in Nashville. They were discussing a big counry hit in the life of the artist. The DJ asked how many it sold, well the artist replied he wasn't sure. The DJ was relentless and kept asking, "Don't you have a guess as to how many it sold?" The poor artist was backed in to a corner and finally gave a figure of 60,000. I couldn't believe it. I would have thought at least 250,00. There are indications that in the very near future marketing may change that will make a spot for those 60,000 record sales but not now.
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Go to www.billboard.com/charts/country.asp and learn which album's at no. 1 its first week.
- Ron Whitworth
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- Johnny Cox
- Posts: 2985
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- Location: Williamsom WVA, raised in Nashville TN, Lives in Hallettsville Texas
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Take a minute and look again at Jenee Keener's post. This is coming from a 17 year old. We gotta do something. Maybe it's time for real country artist to do what bluegrass artist did when they got $!&% canned. Tell em we will do it ourselves our way. The market is there for real country music.
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"Play from your heart"
"Music 1st, Money 2nd"
Johnny "Dumplin" Cox
Zumsteel D10/11
E9th, E13th, C6th
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"Play from your heart"
"Music 1st, Money 2nd"
Johnny "Dumplin" Cox
Zumsteel D10/11
E9th, E13th, C6th
- Ray Jenkins
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