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Infographic: The Value of a Single Music Stream

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This infographic shows the reality of today’s music business: billions of streams, each one requiring precise metadata and tracking, that pay fractions of a cent to rights holders and even less to creators. We’re not in a transition of dollars to pennies. Today’s digital music business is collecting as many fractions of pennies as possible.

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Via Billboard

The sailors who brought back records from the US to the UK

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One solitary record changed Bill Harrison’s life. He was a 15-year-old lad from Liverpool, walking down to his local sports centre, when he heard a bewitching sound coming from someone’s window.

“I sat on the wall to listen,” he says, “and this chap came out in a beautiful midnight blue suit and a pair of oxblood slip-on shoes with a brass bull’s head on the top. I thought, ‘This fellow’s a film star!’”

He wasn’t a film star, though. He was a seaman – one of the famed Cunard Yanks, whose journeys took them around the world, giving them access to the records and clothes you could only buy in the US. The song that had transfixed Harrison was Settin’ the Woods on Fire by Hank Williams, which the mystery seaman explained he had found in Texas. He promised Harrison that such treasures awaited him, too, should he choose to join the merchant navy.

And so began a long career at sea in which Harrison and his colleagues performed dual roles: their day jobs (in Harrison’s case, working his way up the ship’s kitchens); and the arguably more vital role of bringing back American imports with which to wow the locals. These imports included everything from fridge freezers to Wrangler jeans, but it was the early rock’n’roll, soul and blues records that would really go on to change the course of history. Sam Cooke, Fats Domino, Buddy Holly, Roy Hamilton, Billy Eckstine: all these sounds were soaked up by the local musicians who would go on to form Merseybeat bands such as the Searchers, Gerry and the Pacemakers and – of course – the Beatles.

Via The Guardian

Reporter Is Grace Under Pressure When A Lamb Urinates On Him

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A reporter found himself being upstaged when a lamb decided to relieve itself while he was filming a piece to camera. BBC News NI’s Agriculture and Environment Correspondent Conor Macauley was reporting on how Button had been adopted by a couple from Moira, when the lamb urinated. Keep a stiff upper lip, and all…

https://youtu.be/-Jwcg6ln8Gw

Having A Bad Day? The Tiny Tunes Band Will Cheer You Up

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Meet the Tiny Tunes band. They perform songs about the important things in life. Serious subjects like eating steaks, robot legs, seeing a doctor, haircuts and sharing.

This flowchart from 1957 shows Disney’s strategy for corporate growth

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Made to cash in on the groundbreaking films of Disney, the company issued a flowchart that is likely still used to this day. Actually, because it reinvented the brand completely in entertainment, it provides a roadmap for every business in film, television, books and music.

Robert Plant shows his comedic side in indie film

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An short clip from Doreen The Movie, an indie comedy screening in The Black Country released on October 17th. Robert Plant has a cameo as a Plant Hire, your ‘Driveway To Heaven’.

You’re Going To Want This Black Metal Taylor Swift T-Shirt

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I’ll have to add it to my Phil Collins metal shirt…

Award-Winning Short Animation About A Lost Soul Meeting Death

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A lost soul stumbles drunken through the city. In a park, Death finds him and shows him many things.

Coda from and maps and plans on Vimeo.

The sound of Beethoven’s Fifth at 160 BPM

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Here’s Alan Pierson and a brave quartet of Brooklyn Philharmonic musicians playing a warp-speed snippet of Beethoven’s Fifth.