Sunday, December 25, 2022

The Delta Snake Review: A Music And Arts Blog By Al Handa



Note: The following content is for entertainment purposes only and some parts are works of satire.

IN THIS ENTRY:

- New! Did 70s Disco Really Suck?
- New! Some Thoughts On AI Art
- Gear Talk From The Archive: Review Of 2004 Fender MIM Nashville Telecaster
- Archive Review From 2014: Classic 60s Album Review - Paul Butterfield Blues Band “East-West”
- New! Short Takes on Rap, Blues, and African Music
- The Boogie Underground Think-Tank: How To Find The Perfect Expert For All Occasions!



DID ‘70s DISCO REALLY SUCK?

In every era, great thinkers add to The Pantheon of Slogans that provide hope and inspiration to aid humanity's never-ending quest to combine intelligent thought with the ability to walk on two legs. But, as the Internet has proven, this melancholy crusade is a work in progress.

In Ancient times, a Carpenter from Gallalee said, "Love your brother and don't interfere with Caesar's business."

In the Renaissance, a poor son of a peasant became the first artist to feature nude scenes in art, saying, "The leaf covers the brain of man."

In the Victorian Age, a great Monarch instructed all women who distressed their male masters by secretly imagining adulterous love with Jaime in the Outlander Series to "Just close your eyes and think of England."

In World War II, General MacArthur established the day-after-Christmas ritual with his pungent exhortation, "I Shall Return!"

In the tumultuous 60s, forward-thinking minds who tried to increase brain activity by growing long hair and pondering the meaning of album liner notes cried, "Revolution Now!"

The March Of Civilization reached its apex in the 70s when humankind yearned for a return to the salubrious days of Satan-worshipping song lyrics and sticking one's head into P.A. columns during concerts with the battle cry, "Disco Sucks!"

The Disco Sucks Movement was a reaction against the woosy decadence of silk shirts with Chinese Dragon designs, platform shoes, and guys with gell in their hair getting all the beautiful women instead of rockers with boots, spandex, and cheap hairspray in their hair getting all the beautiful women.

As you can see, the battle line was a stark contrast in style, fashion, and male prerogative.

However, the issues of this bitterly fought war became blurred as even the standard bearers of rock and roll took short vacations from the demands of artistic integrity to push out a quickie four beats to the bar anthems for the platform shoe crowd for a quick buck. 

The question that all of you are probably asking, besides the subject's relevance to anyone under the age of 30, is, "What was Disco?"

The long answer one can look up on Google and hash out the mean in the various contradictory theories, which could provide a pleasant break from killing people in RPG video games and still being butthurt over the Game Of Thrones ending (I feel your pain my brothers and sisters).

I'll provide a short answer for the purposes of this essay.

Assume it's the definitive explanation until you reach the end of this penetrating meditation and have formed the opinion that I'm too old to write about music.

Disco didn't appear out of the blue; it'd been around since D.J.s and dance clubs came into being and has never gone away. It's still alive and well in various permutations, which escapes the notice of old farts because the audience is in the 20-30 age range, and nobody ever really knows what their kids are doing or listening to.

The 70s version of Disco came out of the New York Gay Dance Club Scene and featured the traditional pounding 4/4 beat with whatever was in style on top.

The Disco movement became supercharged by the surprise success of the movie Saturday Night Fever which, like with Elvis in the 50s, the Industry managed to get everyone to adore a straight white male hero, and that got the cash registers ringing like church bells on Sunday.

That led to the rise of bands and artists such as the Bee Gees, K.C. and The Sunshine Band, Donna Summer, Tramps, Ohio Players, and Rick Dees with his infamous "Disco Duck" song.

That's an oversimplification, but accurate enough for my sacred mission to illuminate hard-hitting truths without wasting time on actual research.

There are two reasons why rock and roll audiences reacted with such hostility to Disco. Of course, there are more than two, but let's not test your patience.

The most important was that these immaculately coifed and dressed artists began to suck up all the P.R. oxygen and profit from sensitive singer-song writers and heavy metal studs; thus driving up the price of cocaine to unsustainable levels and forcing them to play music with a simple dance beat with even less than three chords to compete.

Needless to say, the spandex rockers resented being out dumb downed by the silk shirt upstarts who often didn't even feature guitars, much less an actual band, in the music.

Plus, the sophisticated clothes and Gay origins of 70s Disco may not have played well to the mullet-haired males that made up a large percentage of the audience in a typical metal concert.

That's admittedly an unscientific observation, but strict stickling to details doesn't belong in an article about rock music anyway.

The Disco Sucks Movement reached its zenith when protestors began burning huge piles of disco records or destroying said discs in public displays of righteous indignation, which was OK with major Labels as long as the stuff was paid for. They didn't care what anyone did with the product once they got their money. 

The Disco Sucks movement suffered a setback when major Rock and Punk groups started coming out with Disco crossover singles. However, rage soon turned to reassurance and approval once fans realized that their heroes made lots of money on the hits. Americans are generous and quick to forgive selling out as long as it's successful, which is the bedrock of Democracy and The American Way.

Rock artists who recorded these thumping anthems for the glitter ball set helped the healing process by instructing their publicists to issue sincere statements of regret about the regrettable lapse of artistic integrity and commitment to that old-time rock and roll.

Indeed, the protectors of the sweaty standard of stadium rock returned to basics and staunchly held the line of uncompromising purity until the 80s, when it became necessary to wear even more eye makeup and add cheap synthesizers to the music.

- Al Handa 
  Dec. 2022



SOME THOUGHTS ON AI ART

The hype surrounding A.I. Art obscures the fact that historically the effect of new tech innovations creates a wide range of results, from outright failures, a significant middle ground of mediocrity, and about the same percentage of genius, which is maybe one in a million or less.

The development of AI Art won't kill human beings like self-driving cars or create processes like autocorrect, which makes writing as easy as putting on makeup or cooking from scratch. Still, it's good to remember that the real-world effect will be as good or bad as humans allow, and it isn't inevitable that AI will take over the world on its own.

There will always be apocalyptic types (and artists are among the most enthusiastic) who assert that the end of the world is coming and AI will find a way if an asteroid doesn't do it.

...back on track...

That being said, I'll return to the subject at hand and resist the temptation to add my thoughts about the End Of Days. Instead, I refer you, good readers, to my Vella series, "The Boogie Underground Think-Tank: How To Survive The End Of Civilization," for the definitive word on our impending doom.

... it's tough being an artist...

What makes it more challenging for artists is that AI software is kinda sorta protected from liability (that is, the Internet sites that control distribution like YouTube, etc.) because of the fear that intrusive regulation stifles innovation.

...the primary issue...

What appears to be the primary issue with this new tech, besides its theoretical ability to kill us or turn us into enslaved people, is that it must "scrape" the Internet to educate itself enough to crank out the requestor's desired product.

It's already legally established what would happen to a human being who does the same thing; they'll probably get sued if any attempt to make a profit out of an overly derivative work without permission or license.

...not perfect ..

It's not a perfect process. For example, it's almost impossible to prevent merchandise sales with unauthorized images completely, and products often get copied using reverse engineering to evade patents.

These days, one can create an illustration in the "Warhol" or "Modern Art" style in most graphic editors, and genre writing like SciFi or Romance can have similar elements in books by different authors.

On the one hand, there are only so many ways to describe a spaceship or sex scene, but historically, there'll be rare geniuses who find a new, unique way (who, in turn, will be imitated).

...derivatives...

The use of derivative elements is more evident in the visual arts. If you're copying Mickey Mouse, people will know it's Mickey Mouse. Copying the famous rodent is legal as long as you don't try to sell it. AI Art software won't change that; even if it can replicate on a scale no human can, none of it can be sold (legally).

Where it can harm is if it copies elements like style and other unique aspects of art created by humans.

...window of opportunity...

The important thing for an artist who creates an original work is that there's a finite window of opportunity to profit from it. After that, the work is created, builds an audience, and hopefully is a financial success. 

That's a process that AI can disrupt. A new artist who begins to find an identity can discover that the scraping process can assimilate and co-opt those unique elements into a current commercial project.

That's why the US Copyright office is wise not to allow registration of AI-created artwork. There would inevitably be people who'd game the system (like with patent farming and domain squatting) and scour the Internet to collect unique artistic elements and combine those into copyrighted art (one step ahead of artists who don't have the resources to protect their work). 

...scraping...

Scraping isn't going to hurt Stephen King or Taylor Swift, and AI Art software will undoubtedly benefit a lot of art departments and artists producing functional or commissioned works.

There's also no doubt that AI software will and does give millions of people pleasure with the ability to edit their photos and art in an almost unlimited number of ways. So it's a capability that's here to stay.

However, suppose you are an artist who works to create a unique new vision that no one's ever seen. In that case, there might come a time when it's best to complete the work offline and keep it that way even when marketing it because there'll be AI software beating the Internet bushes for the inspiration it'll never have on its own. 

The need to give those developing AI the room to innovate may stifle human genius and creativity that makes new art possible and limit it to technically amazing feats of mediocrity.



GEAR REVIEW: 2004 FENDER MIM NASHVILLE TELECASTER

Archive From September 2014

The 2004 Fender MIM Nashville Telecaster ended up in my collection the same way more than one guitar has ended up in someone's collection; I was using the Nashville to test out amplifiers and bought it instead.

It wasn't so much an impulse buy as it was fate. I had been in the market for a second tele, and the Mexican-made Nashville was one of the models I was watching. The most familiar is the one with the semi-hollow body, but when I was looking for a guitar to check out some amplifiers, I saw the solid body version on the rack.

As you can see from the picture, it looks like a standard, except it has a Stratocaster pickup in the middle. The selling point is that you have a telecaster and Stratocaster combined in one guitar.

That is only technically true.

Putting a strat pickup in the middle does give you some Strat-like tones, but as a general rule, most strat players rarely use the middle pickup (by itself). Of course, the fact that most don't could be a good reason for you to go ahead and do that. Why follow the crowd?

One legendary telecaster player, Clarence White, who was most famous as a member of the late 60s Byrds, put a strat pickup in the front neck position. It was an effective mod that produced a very useful tone, and the "twisted pair" pickups in some recent Standards give the player a similar sound.

The MIM Nashville is one of the more admired Mexican-made teles from Fender. From what I can see on the Internet, most of those who own one love it.

To a small extent, the main point of controversy is the Tex-Mex pickups. Those are like the ones used for the telecaster and strat standards, except that the wire coils around the magnet have extra winds to create a "hotter" sound. Though in guitar terms, that doesn't necessarily mean more fierce sounding. Just a little fuller.

I bought it based on how it sounded in the store instead of researching it first on the Internet and ordering it. It was a good reminder of the basic rule of guitar buying: to trust your ears and not what people say.

I didn't know there were "Tex-Mex" pickups on that guitar. I wouldn't have even taken the guitar off the rack if I had known that. One of the strats I once owned (and didn't keep) had the Tex-Mex. I hated the sound and returned it to the store within a week.

Add to that the small but vocal chorus of bad-mouthing that goes on about those pickups on the Internet, and you have a guitar that I would generally avoid. Actually, I should've known better. My first telecaster was a '73 Standard that I played for 25 years. It had a rewound front pick up, in other words, what they now call a Tex-Mex.

That was the first thing I realized while playing the guitar at the store. The front pickup sounded like the one on my old telecaster. I generally used it because my old CBS-era telecaster had a crappy bridge pickup, and I preferred the sound of it with the treble turned up.

If you listen to those few songs where I played the solo or lead guitar in the Handa-McGraw & The Internationals recordings, that's the sound of the rewound front pickup (on an old small amp with gain and volume high). In the previous Delta Snake Review, I provided a list of those links on YouTube.

The general word on the Nashville deluxe is that it has a hotter or "darker" sound and won't give you the "traditional" twang. By traditional sound, I mean that thinner 50s sound on old country records. By the same token, the term has lost its meaning. Fender's been making telecasters for over 60 years, most of which have certain things in common regarding tone, but there's no longer any such thing as a single classic sound.

The Fender Nashville Deluxe is Mexican-made, though most parts were manufactured in the United States and sent down to Mexico for assembly. In the case of my candy apple red version, it has an alder wood body and a maple fretboard.

The neck profile is a "modern C" or "fast neck," meaning it's a little slimmer. I have small hands, so that's a desirable feature. The basic hardware, like the bridge and pegs, is good enough. I've heard some criticism about those metal parts, but these tuners are better than the ones I had on my old '73.

The heart of the electronics is the three-pickup configuration, with the middle pickup being a strat type. The two Tex-Mex's sound like standard telecaster pickups except a bit fuller, basically as advertised. If you want to sound a little sharper and thinner like a standard, I'm sure you can adjust the tone on any decent amp.

While electric guitars haven't changed much due to the conservatism of most guitar buyers, amplifier technology has always advanced quickly. In fact, it would be moving even faster if it wasn't for the fact that most of the older guitar players want amplifiers that duplicate the old vintage sounds. How amplifier makers responded to that demand is a story in itself.

I can say that these telecaster pickups will give you the old twangy sound, the classic front pickup jazz sound, and a great blues tone. If you have a decent amp, it can produce pretty much any tone. The middle Strat pickup on the Nashville works very well. It sounds like a strat pickup that's closer to the neck (your ears might hear it differently).

Another thing about this telecaster is that it has a five-position switch instead of the traditional three. So you can combine the bridge and middle, and middle and neck, but to the anguish of many traditionalists, you can't combine the bridge and neck pickups.

That neck and bridge combination isn't one that I used very much, but plenty of telecaster players do. In the early 70s, you would've been SOL, but we live in an era where you can easily have the front and back setting installed or even do it yourself.

Suppose you want the "standard" telecaster tone. In that case, you'd probably be better off buying one of the standards, if for no other reason that you won't have musicians looking at your Nashville and psychologically not being able to hear a standard-type tone.

When I was in the store, there was a standard American Tele on the rack next to this one for only $300 more, but after trying it, I felt that it didn't sound $300 better. I've owned a couple of other American standards, one I would say sounded better than this Nashville, the other nowhere near as good. That may sound strange to those who don't play guitar, but most musicians know what I'm talking about.

The Fender Nashville deluxe telecaster has been one of its more successful Mexican models, and given what I've seen of it, it's probably one of the best values in the midprice range. So if you can find a used one at a good price, it'll be both a bargain and a keeper.

Note: The used price in 2014 was 350.00. 

In my case, I've found a telecaster with a front pick up that sounds like my old '73, which is priceless.


Note 2022: This review was written in the 90s and was part of the Delta Snake "Classic 60's Blues Album" series of reviews. It was republished online in 2014 and now, in 2022, edited down from its original length.


It's a special piece to me, as one of the founding members of the Butterfield Blues Band, Mark Naftalin, took an interest in the review and looked over early drafts. He gave me a great deal of feedback and backstories, which increased my insight into the album, and my conversations with him about the album are some of my fondest memories from that time. Mark was a generous person with his time and insights.


For that reason, I've made very few edits, only where there were obvious grammar mistakes. I wanted to leave the review basically as Naftalin saw it published.


CLASSIC 60'S BLUES ALBUM REVIEW: EAST-WEST by The Butterfield Blues Band


Note: You'll notice that many songs are discussed out of order as the review unfolds. The reason is that I wanted the review to follow the flow of my discussion and because the most influential changes often come from particular songs, not entire albums.


I owe a lot of thanks to one of the founding members, Mark Naftalin. He looked at the early drafts and offered many critical and helpful comments about the text. But, of course, the final opinions are my own and don't necessarily reflect Mark's view of this classic recording.


The Paul Butterfield Blues Band's "East-West" recording is one of the most important 60's era records, particularly in its effect on other musicians.


Given Mike Bloomfield's charisma at the time, particularly after their work with Dylan, they could have become rock stars. As it was, many later guitar greats like Carlos Santana (who stated it in an interview) admired Bloomfield, who was probably the first of the 60s American "Guitar Heroes," and as a side note, one of the guitarists who popularized the use of the Gibson Les Paul in rock.


Instead, the Band moved into more intricate jazz and modal territory, with at least one step into popular rock. It wasn't a sound that evolved in the often insular blues world. Instead, it was as much a part of The Times as the San Francisco psychedelic bands and, in many ways, predated and anticipated what happened later in the 60s.


Their awareness of the outside world differentiated them from all of the young blues bands of the day. Instead, the Butterfield Blues Band took the blues and related to the music as younger musicians aware of rock and jazz would have. The East-West record clearly shows a band aware of modal scales, jazz of all types, New Orleans R&B, and rock.


One change was Sam Lay's replacement on drums, a genius of a drummer named Billy Davenport. While Sam's work on the first album was superb, Davenport had a flexibility that could only come from a drummer who understood rhythm as a "pulse," providing propulsion as opposed to a beat, very much in the jazz sense.


It may be a digression, but it's interesting to briefly look over what happened in 1966 when East-West came out. Folk-rock was becoming big, the Jefferson Airplane was a harmony folk-rock band, the Beach Boys and the Byrds were beginning their periods of adventuresome work, and Miles Davis was Exploring modal-based jazz that seemed more straightforward on the surface but had a concept of space and time that became highly influential. The Beatles and Stones were turning everyone's idea of what a rock group was upside down.


The English Blues scene was splitting into a traditional faction exemplified by early Fleetwood Mac and John Mayall and an experimental one typified by the Yardbirds. By the late '60s, many of the above trends and ideas had merged...long improvisational jams based on interpretations of Coltrane, Miles, Sitar music, and other influences could be heard everywhere. Music seemed more "serious" but freer.


But back in 1966, there was "East-West." As you listen to the title cut, "East-West," and follow the changes in dynamics over its 13-minute length, one realizes that this work was visionary. One can see the entire gamut of jazz, modalisms, and even San Francisco psychedelic.


I've begun discussing what was the album closer first, but we do have the advantage of hindsight, and that cut did become the most famous and influential. The title cut was also a microcosm of the changes in the Band's sound. Gone was the straight-ahead attack of the first release. In its place was a complexity that wasn't always apparent on the surface. A careful listen will reveal a complex jazz-like undercurrent. It had a rhythm track that could have accommodated a multitude of ideas and tonalities. Instead, it made the various improvisations that followed work like a seamless flow of related ideas.


Elvin Bishop took the first solo and opened with the fieriest of the improvisations. Although not as technically adept as Bloomfield, his solo was more aggressive. His ideas and riffs were more straightforward, with a lot of attack, and on the surface, could strike the listener as showing less understanding of the modal concepts being explored. One thing is obvious...his solo works well as pure sound. The distorted riffs had tonal ideas that wouldn't have been out of place on an early 70's jazz-rock album. Although Bishop's solo is rooted in rock and blues, it still sounds fresh, and more so today.


At the time, Bloomfield's work tended to get the most attention, but to these ears, Bishop's work was just as integral to the arrangement's success. It is hard to quantify and put into words, but the best way to say it is that it is his energy that draws you into the song.


Butterfield's harp solo comes next, and he amplifies the sonic attack with which Bishop opened the song. The harp tone is aggressive, and as it unfolds, it comes across as a series of sharp, rapid ideas. At times, the music would seem to call for a fast flurry of notes (as in a traditional blues solo). Still, he would reverse practice and follow a trail upwards, then explore the tonal microtones and subtleties of a particular note or chord.


One could imagine that Butterfield may have shared a closer bond with Bishop than with Bloomfield (Bishop being the original guitarist in the Band). It shows in the music. The two solos sound as if they were built from the same mindset.


Bloomfield comes in next, and his cleaner tone and rapid-fire ideas are an ideal change in dynamics. His solo builds impressively, and the modal explorations show us a guitarist who seems exhilarated at discovering and exploring new and freer territory. Bishop's guitar comes back in, and the two build up to a peak that once again becomes almost pure tone and sound. One would be hard-pressed to find a better example of such pure sonic beauty, all the more remarkable for being created in 1966 by what was known as a blues band.The peak then subsides, and the rest of the song builds from a series of ideas that, at least on record, anticipate the "spacy jams" of the San Francisco bands.


One other significant departure in the group sound was not of the intellectual or theoretical variety. For whatever reason, the Band also covered a song by Mike Nesmith was, at the time, a member of the famous pop group the Monkees. The Band wasn't aware of this as the song was submitted to them by the publisher in the usual way songs are looked at and evaluated for a new album in demo form. 


Anyway...the song was "Mary, Mary," which many rock critics considered a good one. It is a remarkable and successful rock-blues experiment that still sounds as good as any modern blues artist has done since. The arrangement, originally a riff-song in its pop form, is done here as a darker piece, using a heavier guitar opening with harp and piano counterpoint. It was an arrangement that owes much of its success to Naftalin, an excellent keyboardist.


The other extended number on the record is "Work Song," which shows a jazz sensibility in the sound. It covers a wide range of approaches, which include the theme played in stop time, a succession of solos with ever more intricate and wild overlaps, and rhythm breaks on the downbeat of the final theme. It flows a lot better than I describe it. Bloomfield's use of the telecaster as a jazzy guitar in this song is something I wish other musicians would do more often. His solo builds and climaxes with octave runs, which in 1966 was a rare technical effect in the blues. If you love Albert Collin's "Highway is Like A Woman," you'll understand what I'm talking about.


Naftalin contributes organ work that is both adept and beautifully conceived. One interesting aspect is that he uses a lighter, cooler tone than the funkier Hammond sound of the day. It may not have come across as powerful as a Jimmy Smith number on the Hammond organ, but the more relaxed tone sounds more modern and hasn't dated.


Bishop's solo is the final one. It's interesting to hear him here and in later cuts, as it contrasts strongly with the Southern and Goodtime rock and roll he later did in the 70s (with considerable success, I might add).


One of the most robust jazz-flavored songs, yet firmly rooted in blues, is "Two Trains Running." It opens with a unison riff, hard bop style, and the shuffle rhythm that follows moves forward with an energy that reminds me of Art Blakey or Cannonball Adderly (who did some pretty fine blues also when he was in the mood).




PAUL BUTTERFIELD BLUES BAND (FIRST ALBUM)

The record opens with the Robert Johnson classic "Walkin' Blues" and features the arrangement that became one of the definitive versions. Nowadays, most rock and blue bands use that same march rhythm that drives the cut along. Perhaps this version isn't as well known as Elmore's "Dust My Broom arrangement," but Johnson was rarely covered better.


Next comes "Get Out Of My Life, Woman," performed about as flawlessly as you can. Most versions go hard on the rhythm and use a hard funk approach. In this case, the Band decided to lay back a touch, and the result is dramatic for such a small change. Davenport and Arnold's work is superb. Laying back on the rhythm made it an ideal keyboard song, and Naftalin's work here is the backbone of the arrangement. His right-hand work interacts with the rhythm section perfectly, and his fills and melody give the music a sophistication that will appeal to a modern listener even today.


"I've Got A Mind To Give Up Living" is a slow blues, done ballad style. Paul sings with great power and a natural sense of emotion that makes it classic. A cut that still sounds great now. Also, the way the piano and guitars interact and combine to create a single chord at some points is impressive. "All These Blues" turns the tempo up and is a chugging style of blues. Like the song before, the keyboards and guitars are used as an ad-hoc horn section. Butterfield's harp solo cuts through and combines with vocals in a call-and-response manner. Each musical phrase sounds perfect and focused.


"Work Song," Mary, Mary," and "Two Trains Running" follow and have already been discussed in detail. 


Next up is "Never Say No." It's called (by its author Percy Mayfield) "Never Say Naw." It's a quiet number in the "Tin Pan Alley" mold, but done like, say, Mose Allison would have done it. The general mood is atmospheric, and the Band's playing is understated. It should also be noted that this was Elvin's first recorded vocal and a fine debut.


The set ends with "East-West," and its placement is ideal. It's as if all the changes and subtle touches throughout the work led to this point. It's one of the greatest album-closers of all time. As time passes, I think there has been and will be an awareness that the blues underwent many changes during the '60s that were as momentous as any that occurred in the 50s. At the forefront of that change was the Butterfield Blues Band. What they did with the blues makes the Band's music so great. They chose exploration, change, and, most of all, the idea that the blues was an expression of the times.


In this, they were akin to the great explorers in the jazz scene.


- Al Handa

  May 2014




BLUES AND RAP MUSIC

I planned to include a 2014 essay on Rap and Blues from the archives but realized that it would be better to write a new piece which should run later this month or in February.

Rap and Blues are very different genres on the surface, but from a musical standpoint, the two, during their early stages, are very similar in structure. Both started as improvised street poetry/lyrics sung over a beat or "vamp."

The main reason that old blues records from the 20s-30s seem like short songs with set arrangements was due to the limitations of the recording technology at the time. In reality, most blues songs were performed live as longer improvisational pieces with lyrics that covered a wide range of subjects and were made up on the spot for a particular audience.

Blues artists in that era were as heavily criticized as modern Rap artists were, and the mainstream church openly characterized the blues as "Devil's Music" played by musicians on a fast track to Hell.

The history of Blues was bowdlerized in the 60s, and the audience became predominantly white for various reasons. As a result, the subject matter of the lyrics narrowed. Still, in the 20s, nothing was out of bounds and included hundreds of topics, including Gay and lesbian themes, politics, and historical events.

The bluesmen lived tumultuous lives that paralleled Gangsta Culture and would be viewed similarly now.

The subject will be covered in a series, as it's a complex subject worth examining in detail.

AFRICAN MUSIC

Americans can be provincial about their Music and assume it's the only big thing in the world, but there are stars in other countries that can fill a stadium and create Music that even influences artists here.

The rest of the world does love rock and roll and welcomes those acts, but it can inadvertently come off as America spreading its modern culture and not what it is, which is that people in other countries are often more open-minded about Music.

For example, one of my favorite genres is African Music, and my group, Handa-McGraw International, does some. In fact, one of our numbers that get the most streams is "Madagascar Summer," a guitar and percussion piece that stems from my admiration for D'Gary, a singer and guitarist from Madagascar.

One of the essays coming up in the future is a survey of African Music that focuses on guitar. I might do that one in parts, as there are many regional differences.


- Al HANDA



SAMPLE EPISODE: HOW TO FIND THE PERFECT EXPERT FOR ALL OCCASIONS!

One of the critical decisions that we all must make to survive the end of civilization is choosing the right experts to guide us in such dark times, and indeed, for many, to be told how and what to think!

To the savvy doomsday shopper, the best expert is the one who will validate your cherished prejudices and ego at a fair price.

The right sage will express your sentiments in the best and most persuasive way, like finding the perfect greeting card or flipping someone off while in a moving vehicle.

The right expert opinion, backed by impressive credentials, will add lots of power and credibility to even the most fallacious or silly assertions, amaze the gullible, or pique the interest of those who'd otherwise ignore your banal statements.

That isn’t the same thing as hiring a publicist. No matter how smooth or adroit the prepared statement, people will still know it’s still you talking. You’re renting the expert’s credibility, not merely dressing up your ignorance or self-interest.

It's not wise to promiscuously trust any old expert. In past eras, such esteemed final arbiters in the search for wisdom have asserted that the world is flat, that sicknesses can be healed by the application blood-sucking leeches, bathing more than once a year causes colds, garlic repels vampire attacks, and that men are more intelligent than women.

In fairness, it should be noted that for the right sum of money, one can still engage the services of a distinguished advocate, lawyer, or politician who'll verify with a straight face that the previously listed assertions hold the fragrant force of truth even in the face of widespread skepticism or derision by the general public.

It's never been easy to know if an expert is competent or not, but thanks to the advent of that vigorous organ of truth, the Internet, the innovation of having no actual standards for the profession of expert opinion has produced a safe free market environment for those shopping for an expert.

Requiring a valid email address from a free account weeds out 99.999% of fraudulent and incompetent experts, leaving only 1,345,000 fakes, which is a very manageable number.

Freed from the tyranny of having to provide documentation of qualifications and allowing free market forces to police the supply of pundits, the Internet has fostered an abundance of professional opinion makers to fit any need or buttress even the weakest argument.

After all, nobody hires an expert to prove them wrong, and that creates downward pressure on rates. The free market is your friend.

One of the most popular reasons to hire an unassailable crackerjack of data is, of course, to cancel out the prosecution's expert in a murder trial. Since you could very well find yourself in such a situation when society breaks down, it's handy to know how the process works.

In a nutshell, two experts with an opposite opinion will generally cancel each other out in the eyes of a jury unless there's overwhelming physical evidence that makes the defendant look guilty as hell.

Before you think that we at the Boogie Underground are saying that as if it were a bad thing, remember that the silver lining in such a case is that in the chaotic, lawless atmosphere of dystopian anarchy, there'll be no need for courts, and stuff like that.

One might think that in a world without Cable TV News, Sports Talk Radio, or even nutrition when everyone is fighting over the last cans of beans, but in such dark times, The Boogie Underground assures you that the need will be greater, not less.

There are two things that'll still be necessary in a world without food, water, or electricity, and those are knowing who to blame for the mess and what religion promises the best comfort in the afterlife after you starve to death.

A cynic might suggest that a first-rate religion can provide both, but we at the Think-tank know that nuclear mushroom clouds and food riots won't covert atheists, who, of course, will be blaming God.

In spite of past errors in judgment and belief in nonsense labeled as science, experts have led us out of the stone age and, for the right price, will do so again.

Don't hesitate to contact the Boogie Underground Think Tank for our list of affordable services ranging from expert testimony to making outrageously false statements at rates cheaper than any lawyer.





Here's an update on each of my Vella books:




The Quitters


https://www.amazon.com/kindle-vella/story/B09PC3L6PC


It's the first book, and after ten months, it's finally developing an audience, and the stats are trending upward this month. I think it's due to the blog and the new book/music video short format I'm using for its promotion. I’ve moved the plot lines away from potentially over technical descriptions of playing live to more emphasis on the personalities and in particular, the main character Nym. Also, some of the romance elements are now coming into play.


It's at 31 episodes, though as an ebook, we're talking maybe 15 traditional-length chapters. I'm keeping the format episodic and short, kind of like a weekly TV show, which works for Vella but will need to be restructured for the ebook.




I, Ivy


 https://www.amazon.com/kindle-vella/story/B0B3RCBT4D


The story got off to a decent start, but I didn't notice that as it's obvious now that the daily totals on the Vella dashboard can differ or not jibe with the monthly or overall total, which have to be accurate as those numbers determine the royalty and bonus payouts. I'll be paying more attention to this one in November, as it’s being read more than I thought. The latest chapter, Ivy’s view of the efforts by a human to give her a pill should strike a familiar chord.




The Forbidden Lost Gospels Of Murgatroyde


 https://www.amazon.com/kindle-vella/story/B0BJ2TW4P1


This is a new one, though it'll be the most familiar to blog readers. I'll be changing the format of the blog in November, and putting the Lost Gospels here will allow me to fully expand that line of humor and satire in a way that simply being a blog feature doesn't permit.




The Boogie Underground Think Tank: How To Survive The End Of Civilization


 https://www.amazon.com/kindle-vella/story/B0BG6LNXTG


This one is a revival of an old humor column I ran in my old "Delta Snake Blues News" publication in the 90s and 2000s. The slant is about survival in the upcoming hard times, but it really will be topical and cover subjects that are offbeat but relevant. The next one coming in a few days will be "How To Shop For The Perfect Expert," which obviously will be a humorous commentary on the use of experts in general.



The Adventures Of Queen Khleopahtra: Ruler Of Egypt, Time Traveler, and Literary Detective


 https://www.amazon.com/kindle-vella/story/B0BJC122G7


This is another new one and will be a fun fusion of the old "Peabody and Sherman" cartoon, which was about a time-traveling dog and boy, Robert Graves' often satirical take on history, and the old "Fractured Fairy Tales" cartoon that used to be featured on the "Rocky And Bullwinkle Show." 


I chose Khleopahtra as the main character because it will offer the widest range of literary situations to explore, and I happened to have a cool drawing of her and liked the idea of expanding the character. After reading the first episode, you'll agree that the possibilities are endless.


In the latest episodes, we meet Achilles and the poet Homer, who will become recurring characters!



- Al Handa
   October 2022


The ebook “On The Road With Al & Ivy: The Anthology Volume 1 2016-2018 is now on Kindle Unlimited!

I’ll run free promotions later this month, but members can read it for free now.

I Can Make It To Christmas by Mark McGraw (of Handa-McGraw International). F IPlease check out and listen to Mark McGraw’s Christmas single from his album on Bandcamp,Can
Make It To Christmas by Mark McGraw (of Handa-McGraw Intern



Please check out and listen to my music on Spotify, YouTube, Apple Music and other music sites. Please add any cuts you like to your playlists!










Wednesday, December 14, 2022

The Delta Snake Review: A Music And Arts Blog



NEW REVIEW FOR THE WASHBURN BA-6 SIX STRING BANJO

PLUS ARTICLES FROM THE DELTA SNAKE REVIEW ARCHIVES (REVISED IN 2022):

- VINYL RECORDS-HOW SWEET THE SOUND? (JUNE 2011)
- THE 60s JAPANESE GOLD FOIL PICKUP - A NEW LEGEND OR THE NEXT BEANY BABY? (MAY 2014)
- WILL STREAMING DESTROY THE MUSIC INDUSTRY? THE FAIRY GODMOTHER FANTASY (JUNE 2014)



Note on picture: I have the truss rod cover off to do some adjustments to the neck.

GEAR REVIEW: THE WASHBURN BA-6 SIX STRING BANJO

Six-string banjos have been around since the 19th Century. One of the most popular bluesmen of the 1920s, Papa Charlie Jackson, played one. 

The older name for a six-string banjo was "banjitar" or "ganjo" The closest modern equivalent is the four-string type mainly used in old-style jazz or Celtic folk.

The four-string was a familiar rhythm instrument in 20s jazz because it could play chords, and most importantly, it was loud enough to be heard in an age without electric amplifiers.

The banjo, along with the fiddle, was once the primary African-American instrument and used in "string bands," which were the early precursor to what is now called bluegrass or old-timey music.

The six-string version has become more popular in the last few years and there's now a wide range of models in every price range, but in the 70s and 80s, an inexpensive one made by Dean was the most commonly used.

I played five strings back then, so it seemed like a way to add more range to my sound, but the main problem with the Dean was that it was considered a banjo for guitar players who wanted to add that sound to their palette, so to speak, and built cheaply to be cheap.

In other words, it was inexpensive and did the job, but it didn't sound very good to a banjo player.



If you want a decent banjo sound, it's best to invest the time to learn the five-string, or if you want that "plectrum sound," an inexpensive vintage four-string can be easily found on the used market. 

The main advantage of the Washburn six is that guitar players don't need to relearn anything. They can use the same chords and get a banjo-like sound. The Dean was good as an extra instrument that could add some range to a guitarist's sound and if bought used, an inexpensive alternative. 

Higher-grade models were available from other companies, but none were big sellers.

The six-string banjo made a comeback in the last few years due to a couple of factors. One was that musical celebrities like Keith Urban, Taylor Swift, John Fogerty, and Taj Mahal started playing the type. People do buy what celebrities use (see yellow foil pickups and cheap Silverstone guitars).

Also, the banjo market became competitive as almost every known manufacturer entered the market. Like guitars, they entered a Golden Age where decent quality could be available at every price range.

In other words, no one is letting anyone else control the market; if six-string banjos become relatively popular, other manufacturers will jump in and offer their own models (or rebranded units made to spec from overseas factories).

All this hasn't changed the primary use of the model; it's still basically an auxiliary instrument to add range to repertoires, and it's generally played with a pick (plectrum style).

I got a Washburn BA-6 for Christmas a couple of years back and was surprised at the price and quality. My only other experience was with the Dean back in the 80s, which was competent but not outstanding.

The first thing I noticed was the BA-6 had a mahogany rim and neck, which tends to have a warmer sound than maple. That's better for someone using a guitar pick, and that's my preferred wood for a five-string.

I've previously owned Washburn guitars and banjos and have always liked the brand. It's a company that's made acoustic instruments for a long time, and the quality shows even in their import models.



There are two sets of players who'd be curious about this model; banjo and guitar players. As a rule, both have different views because the two instruments are played differently. For example, even the four-string banjo has different fingering for the basic chords.

The BA-6 is around 460.00 without a case, which is a fairly significant investment for an extra instrument that may not be used much.

For a banjo player, that fifth-string drone isn't there; you'll be playing bass strings instead with your thumb; without a thumb pick, the sound can get muddy. Also, the stock guitar strings aren't very suitable for fingerstyle, and in my case, I restrung it with a mixed set to create a very light group that works well for fingerstyle (on a banjo).

For guitar players, the modern profile neck will make them feel right at home. It's well made, and after setup will play as well as a guitar.



Note: The double coordinator rods attach the neck to the rim

Uh, the setup. That's where a guitar player will have to take a little time to learn about their new banjo because, after all is said and done, it's still a banjo.

Of course, you can adjust the neck with the truss rod, but the neck angle is adjusted by the coordinator rods under the head. That sets the basic string height along with the wood bridge, and after that, the sound is fine-tuned by adjusting the 24 brackets (it's tuned like a snare drum) to get the desired tension on the head.

Also, ensure the bridge is in the correct position, height, and angle for intonation and that the tailpiece is adjusted correctly.

If that paragraph sounds confusing, then make sure the banjo is set up by a tech that understands banjos.

There's another important decision; the string height affects tone; the lower the action, the less volume and tone. If you're used to an electric guitar, the action on a banjo can feel higher than on an acoustic guitar. However, using a pick adds volume, so adjust to what you want and work on the tone.

My point isn't to confuse or throw out a lot of jargon. Just understand that a banjo is a pro-level instrument that takes an investment of time to learn.

The plus side; all that means you have great control over the sound of even the cheapest banjo. I haven't even mentioned the types of heads you can use on the rim, tone rings, bridge woods, tailpiece types, etc.

In the case of the BA-6, you have a Remo Weatherking head optimized for bluegrass, which is good for country-type music on a six-string. In simple terms, it's a brighter-sounding head. You might consider adding a metal pick or finger picks to your collection to get even more twang.

Since I wanted more of a traditional banjo sound, I used the four main strings from a .009 banjo set and added a light .024 and .036. First, start with the stock guitar string set, see what you think, and then make changes.

When I first got it, I went ahead and restrung it like a 5 string and it sounded fine. So that told me that this was a fundamentally good banjo, but I found that it has better potential as a six.

I like the neck. It's very playable, and guitar players will have no problem transitioning. In addition, it compares well to any guitar in that price range.

This Washburn BA-6 isn't a casual instrument. It's priced too high for that. Instead, it's a serious instrument; it doesn't have the faults of the inexpensive ones of the 80s and will respond to the care and preparation put into it. 

Don't buy it out of curiosity; research it, and if your aims are casual, consider buying a used, inexpensive five-string and learning the basic chords.

I've played the banjo all my life and found that this one gets as much playing time as any of my other instruments. I had to learn to respect it, but once I did, it's adding a lot to my sound and there's still a lot of potential there. 

- Al Handa
  December 2022

If you're interested, I have some banjo numbers on my Electric Fog Factory YouTube channel.






Note: The last three numbers are live on music sites like Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon, etc.



- VINYL RECORDS-HOW SWEET THE SOUND? (JUNE 2011, REVISED 2022)

There are some good reasons to prefer vinyl records, but let's face it, it's also become a marketing gimmick by labels desperate for new income streams in an age where people buy less high-profit items like CDs.


I've been an avid music collector all my life. Like many of you who owned vinyl back in the day, my record collection often took up most of a room. The thin record covers gave us the illusion that the things were as easy to store as books until you filed enough away to go from a few items on your shelf to a large square or rectangle of records as heavy as a bowling ball collection. Which then ended up in milk cartons, crates, or just on the floor.


But that's another subject...what I find interesting is the notion that the vinyl LP is the best way to listen to music in the digital age. There are geeky technical reasons, generally centered around the concept that sound can have "warmth" and so on.


Labels ushered in the era of expensive CDs with promises those would become cheaper but kept prices high by adding extra content beyond the ability of most artists to provide it. 


As a result, the CD age inadvertently reverted to the 60s rock era, where artists would get a decent amount of time and resources to produce singles and less to fill out the rest of the album. In this case, it was enough time to fill an album, but extra takes, live cuts, and demos were added to fill out the CD. 


In the case of reissues, the music was often dubbed indifferently or in haste and often sounded worse than vinyl.


…in the old days…


When I think of vinyl, a story comes to mind...back in the mid-70s, a friend bought a 2,000-dollar (in mid-70 dollars!) stereo system and proudly showed it off. He went on about balancing the turntable arm and the cartridge needle to bring the best out of an LP. It was also so sensitive that the tone arm bounced around if anyone walked within 6 feet of the turntable.


Then he explained that vinyl needed to be virgin, not recycled (not very green) and that pressings for the general public were of poor quality and didn't fully capture the fidelity of the original master tape.


The sound of that master tape, which contained the music we all later listened to, had to be transferred to a mold that produced the vinyl record. 


Depending on a myriad of conditions, the record might or might not indeed transfer the sound successfully. That led to a sub-market of audiophile-level records that properly took the sound from the original master tape, was remixed from this or that tape, or whatever.


Then you had the actual process of putting a needle on the record grooves, which then began the process of wearing out the tracks, which made the sound deteriorate, and of course, scratches on the vinyl that often made a popping sound as loud as the music and so forth.


If you read record reviews from that era, those are full of comments like "lousy pressing," and once you got more than 15 minutes of music on each side, the volume (and clarity) started to drop as the grooves had to be made smaller, thus producing less sound...and leave a record in the sun? Forget it; it became as valuable as a DOS software disc in 2000.


…vinyl…


The whole thing about the vinyl debate isn't really about how good it sounds. A good pressing combined with well-recorded music does create a beautiful product...the point is that a record is a mix that makes the music sound a certain way. That warmth is really distortion and how the sound is transmitted and projected. The appeal of old records is really about how it sounds, not how good it is.


Classical music, for example, depends on warmth. Many acoustic instruments are playing music that, in most cases, was intended to produce blended sounds and textures—that type of music benefits from the lack of separation. Modern Rock, on the other hand, thrives on it. That's how most rock is recorded, with each instrument recorded separately so each element can be manipulated in isolation first, then in combination. Metal music wouldn't sound as powerful unless you took the drums and guitar and made each sound like thunder.


If a digital CD sounds sterile and cold, and it isn't due to the artist lacking soul (or talent), then it's really a technical problem. It all started as a digital tape signal, then transferred to vinyl. That process "warmed up" the sound. 


In guitar amps, reproducing that warm sound is standard, even on cheaper amps. If you hear music live, that's probably as accurate as it will ever sound, and any warmth is due to what is used to amplify that sound.


If you like vinyl, it's probably because you like how it sounds on your system. It's a matter of taste.


Are today's CDs better sounding? Sometimes yes, sometimes no. It depends on how the music was composed, how good the mikes used to record was, how well the session was produced and engineered, and if the artist can function in a recording studio.


The fairest thing to say is that vinyl is making a comeback because digital hasn't been an obviously superior product. The labels who moved to digital had a massive advantage in that they could have put the entire digital signal of the original master tape or file onto a CD and do more than even the best vinyl could achieve. 


…current wave…


The current wave of "remastered" music reflects some technological improvements but also shows that the industry will only put out as much effort as it takes to get your money.


Like every era of music before it, digital music has been produced by people with genius, incompetence, greed, carelessness, and blatant disregard for the consumer (I mean, does a refrigerator company try to keep anyone else besides the buyer from using the product), or some combination of the above?


Like a sports team full of high-priced talent that doesn't win the championship, digital music is only as good as those who make it. So far, they've only been good enough to make most people prefer it to vinyl.


Finally, vinyl and CD are superior in sound to the mp3s streaming on your device. The mp3 is a "compressed" file that removes a lot of the signal (or sound), and that was because, in the early digital age, storage space was expensive. Mp3s we're a good way to save space.


Nowadays, a smartphone has more storage and power than a workstation in the 90s, so that's why "lossless" or larger digital files are becoming popular.


So, does a $100.00 vinyl box set sound better than a digital stream of that music? Sure it does, if you have a good turntable and sound system and mainly listen at home.


Plus, do you want to pay that kind of money for a set of music with a bunch of songs that are just practice takes, live cuts, outtakes, and demos?


The definitive answer: It's your money and time; do what you like, and don't listen to critics like me.


- Al Handa




- THE 60s JAPANESE GOLD FOIL PICKUP - A NEW LEGEND OR THE NEXT BEANY BABY? (MAY 2014)


One of the latest crazes in vintage guitar pickups is the "gold foil" type, which was standard on many cheap guitars primarily made by Japanese companies in the 60s.


Information on the pickup is both plentiful and contradictory. In other words, most of what you can learn about it is from Internet sources.


There is one indisputable fact; if you're selling the right one (there are many different variations), you can get up to $300 for it. It's a valuable piece of gear.


Most are just simple magnet pickups with a textured gold foil-like covering with a thin metal casing placed on the top (with the gold foil showing through).


The story about the rising popularity of the gold foil begins like many other guitar fads; the right celebrity used one. As a result, it became fashionable to have one. That type had already been used in a modern guitar, like with the guitarist for the Cure, but it didn't have much effect on guitar fashion at the time.


That fashionable guitar player was Ry Cooder, who's as respected a guitarist, at least among other guitar players, as one can get.


The story begins when David Lindley, another respected slide guitar player, gives Cooder a gold foil pickup. He had it mounted in the middle position on a Stratocaster (which has three pickups), but here's an important point, the third pickup was taken from an old lap steel guitar. That's the one you probably hear more often on his records than the gold foil.


That version of the Stratocaster is now nicknamed the "Cooder Caster."


In a past interview, and I'm afraid I can't recall the publication, Ry liked the gold foil because of what guitarists call its "clean sound," or undistorted tone. He felt that the sound had a sort of open, transparent quality to it.


That's the primary reason he had put in, and that's the main way it's used. 


Around the same time, after all, nothing happens in a vacuum; the prices of regular Fender guitars and Gibsons were going up drastically due to collectors.


One of the results was that older Japanese guitars made in the 60s started to become popular as collector items that were both unique and still, at the time, affordable.


I think these two factors combined to make the gold foil pickup popular. That plus the fact that some of the gold foils were made by the Dearmond company, who were esteemed for their pickups on vintage Gretsch guitars (and their own branded models).


The fact that a bigger company like Dearmond made some cheaper pickups for the Japanese models wasn't an unusual practice.


The now famous Buck Owen guitars, which were made cheap at the request of Owens himself, who felt that most of his fans wouldn't afford an expensive custom version, turned out to be very valuable guitars.


The reason?


It turns out that Gibson wanted the contract badly, if for no other reason than to keep the production lines going in its factories, so they became the subcontractor that produced them. So those cheap Buck Owens guitars with the US flag coloring are now expensive collector's items because it's now known that Gibson made those.


Yet another cheap guitar I bought cheap and sold cheap...


So a cheap Harmony brand guitar could have Dearmond-made pickups on it.


In any case, gold foil pickups became very popular. In fact, some people would buy an old Japanese guitar, take off the pickups, and toss the rest of it away. 


Since the guitars were cheaply made, that may have been the best fate for some, but there are Japanese-made higher-end guitars that are still in good shape today. It's hard to estimate how many of those were destroyed in the quest to get those gold foil pickups.


You would think that this craze would've died after a few years. After all, not all of those players will use that gold pickup like Ry Cooder did.


In fact, the opposite happened. The gold foil pickup became even more popular, as the things had a distinct sound even at rock 'n roll volume levels.


Guitar players kept the original Teiscos, Kay's, Harmony, and other cheapies and put the pickup in other guitars like Fender telecasters.


If you look at the numerous videos on YouTube of guitarists demonstrating their guitars with the gold foil pickups, very few of them use those like Ry Cooder does.


Most use them like cranked-up Gretsch guitars. This makes sense to me. Most of the gold foils have a bright, crunchy Dearmond sound, and that company made pickups for Gretsch for years.


There is an irony to that because there are plenty of modern Dearmond gold foil pickups on the market that are much cheaper and, I think, have more output and sound better.


Now that's what I think. But, unfortunately, on the discussion boards, it sometimes degenerates into cork-sniffing debates with all sorts of reasons why the older ones are better than the new and vice versa. In truth, both sides are right and wrong.


Like probably more than a few guitar players, I got a hold of an old Japanese guitar myself with the gold foil pickup. I guess I just had to know.


I compared it to an old Crown Kawai-Tiesco, a mahogany body telecaster with a 70s-era Demarzio distortion humbucker in the bridge, and an Eric Clapton signature model Stratocaster.



I immediately put the two Fenders away; the gold foil to my ears wasn't even close. However, it did have more output and brightness than the Crown, and the gold foil had beautiful clarity and power at rock 'n roll volume.



However, the Crown had a cleaner, more crystal-like clean tone, similar to a Fender Jazzmaster, and at high volume, had more of the late 60s and early 70s Stones sound.


The gold foil, to my ears (and for accuracy, I should note that I was using the "slim Jim" version most popular for mounting into telecasters), seemed more suitable for roots rock and rockabilly and trash guitar like Link Wray. Not bad at all, either.


I didn't bother to do much on the slide since on the few occasions I use one, my approach and technique are nowhere similar to Ry Cooder's. However, I did do some light single-string slide riffs, and I would have to say, I think it does have that glassy transparent sound he liked so much.


I should add that a Dearmond guitar with the more modern gold foil pickups can get the same sound if you set the amp correctly.


So, on the one hand, some have criticized the use of the pickups as simply a fashion due to Ry Cooder. It certainly has made the pickup a lot more expensive than it should be.


On the other hand, I lean towards the opinion that while Cooder may have made it popular to use one again, the tangible result is that an old classic pickup has found new life again. Some of the more famous boutique pickup makers are now making their versions of gold foils.


It may have started as a fad, but it's now become one of the standard options for guitarists to shape their sound. 


Note: If you're interested in hearing how that old Japanese-made Crown guitar sounded, here's a cut called "Juke Joint Medley" on my YouTube channel that features it.


- Al Handa




- WILL STREAMING DESTROY THE MUSIC INDUSTRY? THE FAIRY GODMOTHER FANTASY (JUNE 2014)


Note: It's evident that in 2022, streaming didn't destroy the music industry though it has cut profit margins, which is probably the same thing for the artists and labels. But this reprint is a good look at attitudes in 2014.


One of the biggest trends in digital music is streaming, and it's had such a noticeable effect on digital download sales that even Apple has bought a streaming service to incorporate into iTunes.


I've read a few editorials about it being "free" music, a few famous musicians complaining about the low royalty rate, and statements that it will destroy digital sales (which destroyed CDs which destroyed vinyl LPs which destroyed 45s which destroyed 78s, etc.).


I doubt it will destroy the music industry, which always makes apocalyptic claims about any change in music trends that it can't control.


Streaming is really just a new form of radio, but one where listeners can choose songs, and probably just like old-time radio, it will never make many musicians wealthy by airplay alone.


I've read statements by musicians who were very critical of streaming, but the views are similar to those made anytime a musical era is beginning to change.


One thing to keep in mind about streaming; It's not a big business yet, the royalty rate isn't very high, and one big streaming service doesn't bother with royalties. It's an industry that needs to grow up.


Like I said in earlier blogs, we're probably back to the age of singles, where airplay simply publicized a song, and musicians made most of their living from live performances.


Some artists become rich in every era, and whether they're conscious of it or not, that's still the fantasy of quite a few musicians in this present age.


…make a wish…


It's the fairy godmother fantasy, but in industry terms, it's called "being discovered."


In it, you play your music, some A&R guy finds you, the record company signs you and gives you a massive amount of money, promotes you, then comes stardom, and then the drugs, women, mansions, and the means to hire bodyguards to keep the public that made you a star away from you.


Not to mention the full power of a wealthy record company behind you, dishing out payola to make sure your song becomes a hit, money for publicists, and legal protection from your mistakes.


And if the record company was honest, you got regular royalties from your sales and airplay. In some ways, it's a unique system. 


No guitar company takes a piece of your action once you buy their product. Unfortunately, the music industry has been like the newer software industry as it restricts the use by the buyer, and in the case of music, wants a fee for any public use every single time its product is played, even by kids in a school musical.


Kind of like a laundromat; to use the washer and dryer, you have to keep popping in the quarters, but in this case, you own the appliances, and no one else is supposed to use them.


That was the success fantasy, and to a large degree, it was true for a lucky few.


The reality was that the record labels were, in fact, choke points or gatekeepers. Thousands of artists spent their own money making demos, sent them to A&R departments who would listen to maybe the first three cuts, pick a few from that group for development and sign them to contracts.


Most would receive a large sum of money. Still, virtually all of it was an advance against future royalties, and the group was expected to cover the expenses of making the record from that money.


If the record became a hit and made the advance back, the artist would get more money. However, if the record flopped, the artist still owed that advance, and it became an enormous debt instead.


At that point, if you were lucky, the record company would write the debt off and own your music. If it was a less wealthy label, you could find yourself playing disco, or whatever was popular at the time so the record company could try to recoup its investment.


The philosophy behind this was that even if there were hundreds of failures, a few would become massive hits, and that subsidized the losses.


I don't think there's any solid evidence that this was a superior system of getting new music to the public. 


Suppose an artist disappointed the company, which could mean getting only a gold record instead of platinum. In that case, a music catalog could quickly sink into obscurity from the label's apathy (and stay the property of the record company). The music would stay in the vaults because it wasn't profitable to release it.


Some of the 60s artists, like Tom Rush, figured it out early and began releasing independently. Without all the overhead, they found they could make a comfortable living releasing their music even without the benefit of massive sales.


The web and digital age changed that to a large extent. An artist could bypass the demo stage, which could cost the artist a lot of money, leave them obscured, and instead take their music directly to the public.


The trade-off was that you were on your own. There isn't a company investing considerable money in promoting you.


...distribution...


What transformed the digital age wasn't the MP3s. It was the change in distribution. No matter how big the record company was, it was always at the mercy of the distributors, who always held the real power in the industry. 


Walmart, for example, accounts for a massive percentage of national record sales and can dictate to the record company how it released a CD and even make them change the lyrical content. That's truer now since so many other record stores have closed.


Once distribution companies formed that could take an indie artist's music and get it on digital sites for a small fee, the old industry model began to break down.


Digital distribution is a viable model; most of those companies don't take a considerable cut of an MP3 sale like a record company would. If an indie artist sells a .99 song, they get most of it.


...streaming is another matter...


Streaming is different; it works like radio. The artist gets paid a minimal royalty every time song is played, and only if it's played. Of course, if you have a publishing deal, that royalty rate can be higher.


There's no record company dishing out payola, perks, and sometimes even women to ensure the DJ plays your song. For one thing, there aren't many DJs left in the radio industry, and most are talk show hosts.


So it goes without saying that you're not going to get rich through streaming. However, if streaming gets as pervasive as radio, then the amount of money an artist will get might go up.


...new...


The whole thing is still very new. At some point, famous artists or record labels will probably get the streaming industry to put in a different model, perhaps an on-demand system for certain songs.


The traditional record industry didn't benefit most musicians, so any changes in the streaming industry will probably not help the indie artist either.


One thing that does seem inevitable is that we won't see as many rich stars, and it'll be harder for the average musician or artist to make a living off recordings alone, even if the odds of their music being heard improve (if they promote themselves).


...troubles...


The music industry's troubles aren't happening in a vacuum. Some changes are affecting other industries. That affects the payout too.


In the last few decades, entire categories of jobs have disappeared or gone overseas. As a result, people are making less money everywhere, and the money that sustains a rock star's lifestyle comes from that pool of people.


When times are tough, everybody makes less, and musicians who forget that their income depends on spending by ordinary people can think some new industry is ripping them off, like streaming.


They forget that being a musician isn't a service sector or regular hourly wage job. In the real world, it's a sales job. Music is created, and the artist has to convince the consumer to buy it.


...golden age...


The last few decades were a golden age for music, it made many people rich, but it just might be that we're no longer in an era where lots of rockstars can make several times more than a doctor (with a lot less work and liability).


Technology moves very fast, which means in an industry like music, which is very technology-driven, there will be periods of upheaval. So it won't be clear what streaming means to the music scene for a year or two or if it's simply a transition to another more sustainable model.


The MP3 download era eventually stabilized into the iTunes model, for example.


The streaming era has only just now begun in earnest. So judging it on what's happening now is shortsighted. The royalty rate is low because the industry is new and only starting to get established; what it pays out if it becomes the dominant form of music distribution remains to be seen. The traditional music industry paid as little as it could get away with, and streamers may not act differently.


Imaginative indie artists have always been the ones who studied the trend and adapted to it. That's a model that's never changed. Also, many artists and labels gamed the system (which is happening in streaming too).


Looking at it positively, the opportunity to hear your music has never been better. Significant changes bring big opportunities, and it's wiser to look for those than sitting around waiting for the fairy godmother.


- Al HANDA






Here's an update on each of my Vella books:




The Quitters


https://www.amazon.com/kindle-vella/story/B09PC3L6PC


It's the first book, and after ten months, it's finally developing an audience, and the stats are trending upward this month. I think it's due to the blog and the new book/music video short format I'm using for its promotion. I’ve moved the plot lines away from potentially over technical descriptions of playing live to more emphasis on the personalities and in particular, the main character Nym. Also, some of the romance elements are now coming into play.


It's at 31 episodes, though as an ebook, we're talking maybe 15 traditional-length chapters. I'm keeping the format episodic and short, kind of like a weekly TV show, which works for Vella but will need to be restructured for the ebook.




I, Ivy


 https://www.amazon.com/kindle-vella/story/B0B3RCBT4D


The story got off to a decent start, but I didn't notice that as it's obvious now that the daily totals on the Vella dashboard can differ or not jibe with the monthly or overall total, which have to be accurate as those numbers determine the royalty and bonus payouts. I'll be paying more attention to this one in November, as it’s being read more than I thought. The latest chapter, Ivy’s view of the efforts by a human to give her a pill should strike a familiar chord.




The Forbidden Lost Gospels Of Murgatroyde


 https://www.amazon.com/kindle-vella/story/B0BJ2TW4P1


This is a new one, though it'll be the most familiar to blog readers. I'll be changing the format of the blog in November, and putting the Lost Gospels here will allow me to fully expand that line of humor and satire in a way that simply being a blog feature doesn't permit.




The Boogie Underground Think Tank: How To Survive The End Of Civilization


 https://www.amazon.com/kindle-vella/story/B0BG6LNXTG


This one is a revival of an old humor column I ran in my old "Delta Snake Blues News" publication in the 90s and 2000s. The slant is about survival in the upcoming hard times, but it really will be topical and cover subjects that are offbeat but relevant. The next one coming in a few days will be "How To Shop For The Perfect Expert," which obviously will be a humorous commentary on the use of experts in general.



The Adventures Of Queen Khleopahtra: Ruler Of Egypt, Time Traveler, and Literary Detective


 https://www.amazon.com/kindle-vella/story/B0BJC122G7


This is another new one and will be a fun fusion of the old "Peabody and Sherman" cartoon, which was about a time-traveling dog and boy, Robert Graves' often satirical take on history, and the old "Fractured Fairy Tales" cartoon that used to be featured on the "Rocky And Bullwinkle Show." 


I chose Khleopahtra as the main character because it will offer the widest range of literary situations to explore, and I happened to have a cool drawing of her and liked the idea of expanding the character. After reading the first episode, you'll agree that the possibilities are endless.


In the latest episodes, we meet Achilles and the poet Homer, who will become recurring characters!



- Al Handa
   October 2022


The ebook “On The Road With Al & Ivy: The Anthology Volume 1 2016-2018 is now on Kindle Unlimited!

I’ll run free promotions later this month, but members can read it for free now.

I Can Make It To Christmas by Mark McGraw (of Handa-McGraw International). F IPlease check out and listen to Mark McGraw’s Christmas single from his album on Bandcamp,Can
Make It To Christmas by Mark McGraw (of Handa-McGraw Intern



Please check out and listen to my music on Spotify, YouTube, Apple Music and other music sites. Please add any cuts you like to your playlists!