Radiohead delivered something rare at Pinkpop on May 20, 1996, a festival set that felt like a reckoning. Already reshaping alt-rock from the ground up, the British five-piece brought melancholy and raw power to Landgraaf, Netherlands, in equal measure. Thom Yorke’s voice moved from fragile to fierce within a single phrase, turning the open-air stage into something close and urgent. Jonny Greenwood and Ed O’Brien layered guitars that were equal parts tender and sharp, while Colin Greenwood’s bass and Phil Selway’s drumming locked everything into place with real conviction. The crowd swayed, sang along, and never looked away.
How to Write a Tour Rider (Without Looking Like a Diva or a Pushover)
If you’ve ever heard the story about Van Halen demanding a bowl of M&Ms with all the brown ones removed, you already know what a rider is, even if you didn’t know it had a name. But here’s the thing: that request wasn’t rock star nonsense. It was a clever way to check whether a venue had actually read the contract. If the brown M&Ms were gone, the technical requirements probably were read all the way through. That’s the spirit of a good rider. Not entitlement. Insurance.
Whether you’re playing your first run of 300-capacity rooms or you’re stepping up to theatres and festivals, a well-written rider protects you, sets professional expectations, and makes your show actually happen the way you planned it. Here’s how to write one.
First Things First: What Actually Is a Rider?
A rider is a document attached to your performance contract that lists your technical and hospitality requirements. It tells the venue what you need to perform, from the PA system to the number of sandwiches backstage. There are typically two parts: the Technical Rider, which covers everything the sound and lighting crew need to know, and the Hospitality Rider, which covers food, drink, and backstage conditions. Both matter. Neither should be ignored.
Who Needs a Rider?
Everyone who plays live, honestly, but the level of detail scales with where you’re at in your career. If you’re just starting out, a one-page rider is fine and will immediately mark you out as a professional. If you’re mid-level and touring regularly, a detailed rider can be the difference between a great show and a disaster. The venues you’re playing at this stage are bigger, the production is more complex, and there are more ways things can go wrong.
The Technical Rider
This is the important one. Get this wrong and your show suffers. Get it right and your sound engineer will love you. Start with your Stage Plot, a simple diagram showing where everyone stands on stage, where the monitors go, and where the amps and backline sit. You can draw this by hand, use a free tool like Stage Plot Pro, or even do it in PowerPoint. It doesn’t need to be beautiful, it needs to be clear. Next comes your Input List, a numbered list of every channel going into the mixing desk. Channel 1: kick drum. Channel 2: snare. Channel 3: bass DI. And so on. Include what microphone or DI box you prefer for each source if you have preferences, but don’t be precious about it if you’re at the smaller end of the scale.
Your PA Requirements should describe the size and quality of system you need. For smaller artists this might just be “a professional front-of-house system capable of filling the room.” As you grow, you’ll get more specific about brands and configurations. On monitors, list how many separate mixes you need and where. A basic band might need three or four, with the drummer hearing more kick and less vocals, the singer hearing less guitar and more of themselves. Write it out clearly so there’s no guesswork on the day.
On backline, be upfront about whether you’re carrying your own gear or need the venue to provide it. If you need a drum kit, specify the sizes. If you need a guitar amp, name the brand you prefer. If you’re happy to use what’s there, say so, because venues genuinely appreciate flexibility from emerging artists. Finally, always include an advance contact: the name, phone number, and email of whoever the venue’s technical team should call with questions. Don’t make them chase your booking agent for this.
The Hospitality Rider
This is where riders get their reputation, fairly or not. Yes, some artists go completely overboard. But a reasonable hospitality rider is just basic human decency. You’re asking for what you need to do your job. On catering, if the venue is providing a meal, say when you need it, usually before soundcheck or after doors. List any dietary requirements clearly, especially allergies, and be specific rather than vague. “Vegetarian option” is not the same as “no meat, no fish, no gelatine.” The more clearly you write it, the less likely you are to arrive hungry to a plate of something you can’t eat.
For drinks, keep it reasonable and keep it practical. Water on stage is non-negotiable, so list how many bottles you need and where you want them. Backstage, a few soft drinks, some juice, tea and coffee, and a modest amount of alcohol if that’s your thing, is entirely reasonable. What isn’t reasonable, unless you’re selling out arenas, is demanding specific craft beers, branded spirits, or enough food to feed a small village. The venue reads your rider before they agree to have you. An absurd hospitality list is a red flag that you’re going to be difficult.
Dressing Room Requirements
Keep this section functional. How many people are in your party? You need enough space and seating for all of them. Do you need a private bathroom? Mirrors for getting ready? A working lock on the door? Say so. If you have a support act, think about whether you need separate rooms or whether you’re happy to share. These are practical questions, not luxury demands.
Guest List and Passes
This isn’t always part of the rider but it’s worth including. How many guests does each band member get? Who handles the guest list, the tour manager or the booking agent? How many AAA passes, stage passes, and photo passes are you issuing? Getting this in writing saves arguments at the door every single night of the tour and means nobody is standing in the rain at the guest list desk while you’re trying to get ready for your set.
The Golden Rules
Keep it proportionate to where you’re at. A three-piece indie band on their first UK tour does not need four pages of requirements. Update it regularly as your production changes, because sending a rider with the wrong input list is worse than sending none at all. Write it clearly, in plain language, so a venue technician reading it at 9am on show day can understand it without calling anyone. And always, always send it in advance. Dropping a rider on a venue the morning of the show is not professional behaviour.
One Last Thing
A rider is a living document. The best ones get refined after every tour, updated when something goes wrong, and tightened when something turns out not to matter. Talk to your sound engineer, your tour manager, and your bandmates. Ask other artists at your level what they include. And if you’re ever unsure whether a request is reasonable, ask yourself honestly whether the venue is likely to read it and nod, or read it and roll their eyes. That’s usually all the guidance you need.
The Hidden Reasons Tenants Decide Not to Renew Their Lease
By Mitch Rice
Retaining good tenants isn’t hard, but many landlords don’t know how to get renters to renew their lease. For many tenants, the decision comes from small frustrations that build over time. Slow repairs and poorly maintained housing conditions are common reasons people don’t renew.
As a landlord, it’s critical to focus on tenant satisfaction. Tenants who no longer feel comfortable in their own home will start looking for a new place to live, and that means higher vacancy rates and lost rent for you. However, the reasons people move aren’t always clear.
Here are some of the top reasons tenants move and what you can do about it.
1. They don’t like the property manager
Customer service is a huge part of property management. Anytime your tenants have a problem, need repairs, or pay the rent, they’re interacting with your property manager. If your manager isn’t friendly and on top of tenant needs, things can go sour fast. This applies whether you manage your own properties or hire someone else for the job.
There are a variety of reasons tenants dislike property managers, and it’s not just because they enforce the rules. Some managers let repairs slip through the cracks and ignore landlord tenant laws. For instance, it’s common for self-managed landlords to enter units without permission outside of what the law permits. Even though you own the property, you still need to follow the law. Violations can get you sued. The solution is hiring a professional property management company to take care of your tenants.
When you outsource your landlord duties to a professional property manager, you don’t need to worry about violating landlord-tenant law. They’ll handle everything professionally and legally, from collecting rent to issuing official notices. That’s exactly what Sugar Land property managers from Green Residential do for their clients. Whether it’s a single-family home or a multi-family apartment complex, everything is handled professionally and according to the law.
2. The rent raises are too much
Most renters know they can’t avoid rent hikes completely, but sharp increases without strong justification can make even your best tenants start looking for a new place. It doesn’t matter if they’re financially stable – pricing that doesn’t match the experience is a deterrent.
When you raise the rent too much, tenants often feel resentful. That resentment compounds when the property hasn’t been maintained or there’s already tension between you and the tenant. Once you raise the rent, tenants become less forgiving about noise, parking problems, delayed repairs, and outdated features. They won’t hesitate to look for another property that offers better value, even if the rent is the same.
Use incremental rent increases to retain your best tenants. Your rent increases should fall within the legal limits if applicable in your state, but don’t automatically raise rent to the highest allowable amount if it’s not warranted.
3. Lease renewals don’t reflect tenant loyalty
Reliable renters who pay on time expect some kind of loyalty pricing or lease flexibility. When a landlord treats a solid five-year tenant the same as a high-risk applicant, it damages the relationship. If a renter has been paying rent on time and hasn’t racked up lease violations, they deserve some kind of deal or incentive to renew their lease. It can be as simple as offering a lower increase for signing a year-long lease or discounted parking.
4. Disruptive neighbors
Many tenants start looking for a new place to live when their neighbors become disruptive and there’s no enforcement. Landlords who don’t enforce lease agreements to control disturbances in multi-family dwellings are more likely to see frequent turnover.
The only way to prevent this is to enforce your lease terms equally for everyone. Set quiet hours and enforce them. Respond to complaints about loud music and yelling. Issue warnings and official notices for violations. And don’t be afraid to initiate eviction if a tenant won’t comply.
5. Poor maintenance
Renters understand that things break and it takes time to schedule repairs. What they don’t tolerate is being brushed off or having the same recurring issues every few months. That’s why it’s critical to implement full fixes, not just temporary solutions. Some surface-level fixes will save you money up front but will be more costly in the long run.
Tenant retention is a long-term game
Most tenants already know if they’re going to renew their lease before the time comes. The decision to renew is shaped by their experience during their first lease term. When management is good, repairs are handled fast, and the rent increases are fair, tenants are more likely to renew their lease.
Data and information are provided for informational purposes only, and are not intended for investment or other purposes.
AI Music Video Generator: A Practical Tool for Independent Creators
By Mitch Rice
Music videos used to require expensive cameras, editing software, actors, lighting setups, and enough patience to survive twelve rendering crashes at 3 AM. Humanity really built an art form around suffering through timelines and export errors. Now, independent creators are using AI tools to simplify the process and produce visual content faster.
An AI Music Video Generator helps artists turn songs into engaging videos using automation, visual templates, AI animation, lyric syncing, and scene generation. For musicians working without large budgets or production teams, these tools can reduce both cost and production time while still creating content suitable for platforms like YouTube, TikTok, Instagram Reels, and Spotify Canvas
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Why Independent Artists Are Using AI Music Video Tools
Independent musicians face a common problem: making good music is already difficult, but promoting it visually can be even harder. Audiences now expect artists to release visual content alongside every track. A simple audio upload is rarely enough to gain attention on social platforms.
AI-powered video tools help solve this by automating tasks such as:
- Scene generation
- Video editing
- Beat synchronization
- Lyric animation
- Background effects
- Visual transitions
Instead of spending weeks editing manually, creators can upload a song, choose a visual style, and generate a music video within minutes.
How an AI Music Video Generator Works
Most AI video platforms follow a similar process. Users upload audio, select visuals or prompts, and let the AI create scenes that match the mood, rhythm, or lyrics of the music.
Some platforms focus on animated visuals, while others create cinematic sequences, motion graphics, or AI avatars. A few even generate complete lyric videos automatically.
Common features include:
- AI-generated backgrounds
- Auto beat detection
- Text-to-video prompts
- Lip-sync animation
- Visual effects presets
- Social media export formats
For creators with limited editing experience, these tools reduce the technical barrier significantly. Which is useful because not everyone wants to spend six months learning software menus designed like aircraft control systems.
AI Tools Are Changing Music Promotion
Short-form video content has become essential for music discovery. Platforms like TikTok, YouTube Shorts, and Instagram prioritize engaging visuals, even for independent releases.
Artists now use AI-generated clips for:
- Song teasers
- Full music videos
- Visualizers
- Album promotions
- Lyric videos
- Behind-the-scenes style edits
In the middle of this shift, tools like Rotor Videos have gained attention among independent musicians because they combine automated editing with music-focused templates. Instead of treating videos like generic marketing content, they are designed specifically around songs and artist branding.
The important part is balance. AI should support creativity, not replace it entirely. The strongest music videos still come from artists with a clear visual identity and emotional direction.
Benefits of Using AI for Music Video Creation
Faster Production
Traditional editing workflows can take days or weeks. AI tools can reduce production time dramatically, allowing artists to publish content consistently.
Lower Costs
Hiring videographers, editors, and animators is expensive. AI platforms offer a more affordable alternative for creators with smaller budgets.
Accessibility
Many independent artists do not have advanced editing skills. AI video generators make visual content creation easier for beginners.
Content Variety
Creators can quickly produce multiple versions of a video for different platforms and audiences.
Limitations Creators Should Understand
AI-generated videos are improving rapidly, but they are not perfect.
Some tools still struggle with:
- Precise storytelling
- Emotional nuance
- Complex scene control
- Realistic character motion
Overusing automated visuals can also make content feel repetitive. Audiences notice when every video looks like glowing neon particles floating through space while a sad piano plays in the background. The internet has enough floating particles already.
The most effective approach is combining AI efficiency with human creativity. Artists who guide the visual direction carefully usually get stronger results than those relying entirely on automation.
The Future of AI Music Videos
AI video technology is evolving quickly. Future tools will likely offer more advanced customization, real-time editing, and improved synchronization with vocals and emotions.
For independent artists, this means fewer technical limitations and more opportunities to experiment creatively without massive budgets.
An AI Music Video Generator is not replacing musicians or visual artists. It is becoming another production tool, similar to digital audio workstations and online distribution platforms. Used thoughtfully, it allows creators to spend less time fighting software and more time focusing on music itself. A surprisingly rare victory in modern digital life.
Data and information are provided for informational purposes only, and are not intended for investment or other purposes.
Beyoncé, Taylor Swift, Weezer, The Go-Go’s and 21 More Recordings Enter the Library of Congress National Recording Registry
The Library of Congress has announced its 2026 class of National Recording Registry inductees, and the 25 selections span 70 years of American sound. From a 1944 novelty record to Taylor Swift’s blockbuster 2014 album ‘1989’, this year’s class is one of the most wide-ranging in the registry’s history.
The class marks the first recordings by both Swift and Beyoncé to enter the registry. Swift’s ‘1989’ joins Beyoncé’s 2008 anthem “Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)” as the newest additions chronologically. Weezer’s self-titled debut, known as ‘The Blue Album’, was among the most nominated recordings from the public, with fans submitting more than 3,000 nominations total this year.
Acting Librarian of Congress Robert R. Newlen made the final selections from a list compiled by the National Recording Preservation Board, describing the chosen recordings as “audio treasures worthy of preservation for all time.” NPRB chair Robbin Ahrold noted the class “beautifully captures the scope of the American experience” as the country approaches its 250th anniversary.
The Go-Go’s 1981 debut ‘Beauty and the Beat’ earned its place alongside a roster of genre-defining records. Belinda Carlisle called the induction a gift to music history. Bandmate Jane Wiedlin put it more directly: “There is literally no other all-female band that went No. 1 on the charts, play their own instruments and write their own songs. None.”
Chaka Khan reflected on the convergence that made her 1984 recording of “I Feel for You” something beyond a hit. “Prince’s genius, Stevie’s harmonica, Grandmaster Melle Mel’s rap, and whatever God put in me that day,” she said. “For the Library of Congress to say this recording belongs in the permanent collection of American sound heritage, that means it wasn’t just a hit, it was history.”
Vince Gill’s 1994 single “Go Rest High on That Mountain” also joins the registry, a song he wrote about the loss of his brother. “I’ve been writing songs for over 50 years, and if you asked me straight up what’s the one song you’d want to be remembered for, I would pick this one, hands down,” he said. The induction also marks a historic first: Johnny Cash’s ‘At Folsom Prison’ entered the registry in 2003, making this the first time a father and daughter have both been included.
The full class covers country, pop, jazz, Latin, folk, funk, R&B, classical crossover, video game composition, and a landmark sports broadcast. The sole non-musical selection is the 1971 radio broadcast of “The Fight of the Century” between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier at Madison Square Garden.
The National Recording Registry now holds 700 entries, representing roughly 0.01% of the Library’s 4 million collected recordings. Nominations for the 2027 class close October 1, 2026.
2026 National Recording Registry Inductees:
“Cocktails for Two” – Spike Jones and His City Slickers (1944)
“Mambo No. 5” – Pérez Prado (1950)
“Teardrops from My Eyes” – Ruth Brown (1950)
“Fly Me to the Moon (In Other Words)” – Kaye Ballard (1954)
“Put Your Head On My Shoulder” – Paul Anka (1959)
‘The Blues and the Abstract Truth’ – Oliver Nelson (1961)
‘Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music’ – Ray Charles (1962)
“Turn! Turn! Turn! (To Everything There Is a Season)” – The Byrds (1965)
“Amen, Brother” – The Winstons (1969)
“Feliz Navidad” – José Feliciano (1970)
“The Fight of the Century: Ali vs. Frazier” (March 8, 1971)
“Midnight Train to Georgia” – Gladys Knight and the Pips (1973)
‘Chicago’ Original Cast Album (1975)
“The Devil Went Down to Georgia” – The Charlie Daniels Band (1979)
‘Beauty and the Beat’ – The Go-Go’s (1981)
‘Texas Flood’ – Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble (1983)
“I Feel For You” – Chaka Khan (1984)
“Your Love” – Jamie Principle (1986) / Jamie Principle and Frankie Knuckles (1987)
‘Rumor Has It’ – Reba McEntire (1990)
‘The Wheel’ – Rosanne Cash (1993)
‘Doom’ Soundtrack – Bobby Prince, composer (1993)
“Go Rest High on That Mountain” – Vince Gill (1994)
‘Weezer (The Blue Album)’ – Weezer (1994)
“Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)” – Beyoncé (2008)
‘1989’ – Taylor Swift (2014)
Foo Fighters Close the Loop on The Late Show With a Medley 31 Years in the Making
Some performances carry more history than a single night can hold. When Foo Fighters took the Late Show stage on May 4 for a web-exclusive medley of “This Is a Call” and “Everlong,” they weren’t just playing two songs. They were closing a 31-year chapter.
The medley bookends one of the most storied relationships between a band and a late-night host in television history. “This Is a Call” marked Foo Fighters’ first-ever national TV performance when they played it on Late Show with David Letterman on August 14, 1995. “Everlong” was the last song the band played on that same stage, during Letterman’s final episode on May 20, 2015.
Stephen Colbert introduced the set directly: “Performing a medley of the first song they played on this stage on The Late Show 31 years ago, ‘This Is a Call,’ and the last one on Letterman in 2015, ‘Everlong,’ ladies and gentleman, Foo Fighters.”
The connection between Grohl and Letterman runs deep. After debuting “Everlong” on the show in 1997, the band famously paused their international Sonic Highways tour to perform it again when Letterman returned from open-heart surgery in 2000. Letterman had credited the song with helping him through his five-week recovery. “When we found out he actually liked our music, that he actually was a fan, I was really blown away,” Grohl recalled. “It felt like something we had to do.”
Letterman ultimately introduced Foo Fighters on his final episode as “my favorite band, playing my favorite song.” That moment, and this new medley, sit together as one of the more genuinely moving throughlines in late-night history.
The timing carries extra weight. The Late Show with Stephen Colbert airs its final episode on May 21, making this Foo Fighters performance almost certainly their last on that stage, closing the full arc of the show’s run across both hosts.
The band is fresh off the April release of ‘Your Favorite Toy’, which also produced “Caught in the Echo” and “Window,” performed during the televised portion of their May 4 appearance. A North American stadium tour launches in August, with support from Queens of the Stone Age.

