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Dave LaRue is an international businessman and entrepreneur who
owns and leads more than a dozen thriving companies. He also spends
a great deal of time coaching entrepreneurs on how to achieve the
same level of success that he is enjoying in life. Experience has
taught Dave that life is about decisions. Deciding what your values
are, what habits work best for you, and what your true talents are
make it possible to ask the right questions, set the right goals,
and make the best decisions possible to chart the path to your own
success. But while you're on that path, some of the lessons life
has to teach us come from encounters and situations we hadn't
sought out or anticipated, and Dave believes that the stories that
come to each individual this way can offer each person an
invaluable chance to learn who they truly are-and what action must
be taken to live their life accordingly. In this book Dave shares
the stories that provided him with lessons and inspiration on his
way to becoming a successful leader and entrepreneur, and he
encourages the reader to look at their own life as a collection of
stories full of priceless lessons and powerful inspiration.
The Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of Popular Music Volume 7 is one of
five volumes within the 'Locations' strand of the series. This
volume discusses the popular music of Europe in a historical,
geographical, demographical, political, economic, and cultural
context. It also examines the genres associated with the region,
significant venues such as theatres, dance halls, clubs and bars,
and notable performers and other practitioners such as producers,
engineers, and technological innovators. The volume consists of
over 100 entries written by more than 60 leading popular music
scholars and practitioners, including Paolo Prato on Italy and Alf
Bjoernberg on Sweden. This and all other volumes of the
Encyclopedia are now available through an online version of the
Encyclopedia:
https://www.bloomsburypopularmusic.com/encyclopedia-work?docid=BPM_reference_EPMOW.
A general search function for the whole Encyclopedia is also
available on this site. A subscription is required to access
individual entries. Please see:
https://www.bloomsburypopularmusic.com/for-librarians.
The Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of Popular Music Volume 6 is one of
five volumes within the 'Locations' strand of the series. This
volume discusses the popular music of African and the Middle East
in a historical, geographical, demographical, political, economic,
and cultural context. It also examines the genres associated with
the region, significant venues such as theatres, dance halls, clubs
and bars, and notable performers and other practitioners such as
producers, engineers, and technological innovators. The volume
consists of over 100 entries written by more than 60 leading
popular music scholars and practitioners, including John Collins on
Ghana, Moya Aliya Malamusi on Malawi, and, Motti Regev on Israel.
This and all other volumes of the Encyclopedia are now available
through an online version of the Encyclopedia:
https://www.bloomsburypopularmusic.com/encyclopedia-work?docid=BPM_reference_EPMOW.
A general search function for the whole Encyclopedia is also
available on this site. A subscription is required to access
individual entries. Please see:
https://www.bloomsburypopularmusic.com/for-librarians.
The Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of Popular Music Volume 5 is one of
five volumes within the 'Locations' strand of the series. This
volume discusses the popular music of Asia and Oceania in a
historical, geographical, demographical, political, economic, and
cultural context. It also examines the genres associated with the
region, significant venues such as theatres, dance halls, clubs and
bars, and notable performers and other practitioners such as
producers, engineers, and technological innovators. The volume
consists of over 100 entries written by more than 60 leading
popular music scholars and practitioners, including Toru Mitsui on
Japan and Bruce Johnson on Australia. This and all other volumes of
the Encyclopedia are now available through an online version of the
Encyclopedia:
https://www.bloomsburypopularmusic.com/encyclopedia-work?docid=BPM_reference_EPMOW.
A general search function for the whole Encyclopedia is also
available on this site. A subscription is required to access
individual entries. Please see:
https://www.bloomsburypopularmusic.com/for-librarians.
The Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of Popular Music Volume 4 is one of
five volumes within the 'Locations' strand of the series. This
volume discusses the popular music of North America in a
historical, geographical, demographical, political, economic, and
cultural context. It also examines the genres associated with the
region, significant venues such as theatres, dance halls, clubs and
bars, and notable performers and other practitioners such as
producers, engineers, and technological innovators. The volume
consists of over 90 entries written by more than 60 leading popular
music scholars and practitioners, including Richard Peterson on
Nashville, Amy Ku'uleialoha Stillman on Hawai'I, and David Laing on
Los Angeles. This and all other volumes of the Encyclopedia are now
available through an online version of the Encyclopedia:
https://www.bloomsburypopularmusic.com/encyclopedia-work?docid=BPM_reference_EPMOW.
A general search function for the whole Encyclopedia is also
available on this site. A subscription is required to access
individual entries. Please see:
https://www.bloomsburypopularmusic.com/for-librarians.
The Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of Popular Music Volume 3 is one of
five volumes within the 'Locations' strand of the series. This
volume discusses popular music of the Caribbean and Latin America
in a historical, geographical, demographical, political, economic,
and cultural context. It also examines the genres associated with
the region, significant venues such as theatres, dance halls, clubs
and bars, and notable performers and other practitioners such as
producers, engineers, and technological innovators. The volume
consists of over 90 entries written by more than 60 leading popular
music scholars and practitioners, including Jose de Menezes Bastos
on Brazil and Peter Manuel on India and the Caribbean Islands. This
and all other volumes of the Encyclopedia are now available through
an online version of the Encyclopedia:
https://www.bloomsburypopularmusic.com/encyclopedia-work?docid=BPM_reference_EPMOW.
A general search function for the whole Encyclopedia is also
available on this site. A subscription is required to access
individual entries. Please see:
https://www.bloomsburypopularmusic.com/for-librarians.
The first comprehensive reference work on popular music of the
world Contributors are the world's leading popular music scholars
Includes extensive bibliographies, discographies, sheet music
listings and filmographies This second volume consists of some 460
entries by 130 contributors from around the world. Entries range
between 250 and 5000 words, and are arranged in four parts: Part I:
Performers and Performing; Part II: Musical Production and
Transmission; Part III: Musical Instruments; Part IV: Musical Forms
and Practice. Entries include musical examples, bibliographies,
discographies and filmographies. An extensive index is also
provided. Contents: Preface Part I: Performers and Performing
Groups Individuals Performance Techniques Part II: Musical
Production and Transmission Personnel Processes:
Interpretative/Technological Technologies Part III: Musical
Instruments Found Instruments Guitars Keyboard Instruments
Mechanical Instruments Percussion Instruments Stringed Instruments
Voice Wind Instruments Part IV: Musical Form and Practice Form
Harmony Melody Rhythm The Piece Timbre Words, Images and Movement
Index
The music industries are fuelled by statistics: sales targets,
breakeven points, success ratios, royalty splits, website hits,
ticket revenues, listener figures, piracy abuses and big data.
Statistics are of consequence. They influence the music that
consumers get to hear, they determine the revenues of music makers,
and they shape the policies of governments and legislators. Yet
many of these statistics are generated by the music industries
themselves, and their accuracy can be questioned. This original new
book sets out to explore this shadowy terrain. While there are
books that offer guidelines about how the music industries work, as
well as critiques from academics about the policies of music
companies, this is the first book that takes a sustained look at
these subjects from a statistical angle. This is particularly
significant as statistics have not just been used to explain the
music industries, they are also essential to the ways that the
industries work: they drive signing policy, contractual policy,
copyright policy, economic policy and understandings of consumer
behaviour. This edited collection provides the first
in-depth examination of the use and abuse of statistics in the
music industries. The international group of contributors are noted
music business scholars and practitioners in the field. The book
addresses five key areas in which numbers are employed: sales and
awards; royalties and distribution; music piracy; music policy; and
audiences and their uses of music. The authors address these
subjects from a range of perspectives. Some of them test the
veracity of this data and explore its tactical use by music
businesses. Others are helping to generate these numbers: they are
developing surveys and online projects and offer candid
self-observations in this volume. There are also authors who have
been subject to statistics; they deliver first-hand accounts of
music industry reporting. The digital age is inherently
numerical. Within the music industries this has prompted new ways
of tracking the usage and recompense of music. In addition, it has
generated new means of monitoring and engaging audience behaviour.
It has also led to increased documentation of the trade. There is
more reporting of the overall revenues of music industry sectors.
There is also more engagement between industry and academia when it
comes to conducting analyses and offering numerical recommendations
to politicians.  The aim of this collection is to
expose the culture and politics of data. Music industry statistics
are all-pervasive, yet because of this ubiquity they have been
under-explored. This book provides new ways by which to learn music
by numbers. A timely examination of how data and statistics are key
to the music industries. Widely held industry assumptions
are challenged with data from a variety of sources and in an
engaging, lucid manner. Highly recommended for anyone with an
interest in how the music business uses and manipulates the data
that digital technologies have made available. Primary readership
will be among popular music academics, undergraduate and
postgraduate students working in the fields of popular music
studies, music business, media studies, cultural studies, sociology
and creative industries. The book will also be of interest to
people working within the music industries and to those whose work
encounters industry statistics.
Simon Frith has been one of the most important figures in the
emergence and subsequent development of popular music studies. From
his earliest academic publication, The Sociology of Rock (1978),
through to his recent work on the live music industry in the UK, in
his desire to 'take popular music seriously' he has probably been
cited more than any other author in the field. Uniquely, he has
combined this work with a lengthy career as a music critic for
leading publications on both sides of the Atlantic. The
contributions to this volume of essays and memoirs seek to honour
Frith's achievements, but they are not merely 'about Frith'.
Rather, they are important interventions by leading scholars in the
field, including Robert Christgau, Antoine Hennion, Peter J. Martin
and Philip Tagg. The focus on 'sociology and industry' and
'aesthetics and values' reflect major themes in Frith's own work,
which can also be found within popular music studies more
generally. As such the volume will become an essential resource for
those working in popular music studies, as well as in musicology,
sociology and cultural and media studies.
This book is intended as a structured presentation of the major
ideas of the most important trends of thought in the Marxist theory
of art and is constructed as a map of the field of Marxist
aesthetics.
The first comprehensive reference work on popular music of the
world Contributors are the world's leading popular music scholars
Includes extensive bibliographies, discographies, sheet music
listings and filmographies This is the first volume in a series of
encyclopedic works covering popular music of the world. Consisting
of some 500 entries by 130 contributors from around the world.
Entries range between 250 and 5000 words, and is arranged in two
Parts: Part 1: SOcial and Cultural Dimensions, covering the social
phenomena of relevance to the practice of popular music. Part II:
The Industry, covers all aspects of the popular music industry,
such as copyright, instrumental manufacture, management and
marketing, record corporations, studios, companies, and labels.
Entries include bibliographies, discographies and filmographies,
and an extensive index is provided. Contents: Preface List of
contributors List of abbreviations Arrangement of the Material Part
I: Social and Cultural Dimensions Documentation Popular Music
Studies Social Phenomena Stylistic and Textual Dimensions Venues
Part II: The Industry General Terms Audio Technical Terms
Broadcasting Copyright Deals and Contracts The Film Industry and
Popular Music Instrument Manufacture Management and Marketing
Publishing Recording: Record Corporations: Recording Studios;
Record Labels/Companies Unions Index
Buddy Holly occupies an enigmatic position in pop and rock music
history, partly because of his premature death at the age of 22 in
a plane crash in February 1959. Designated in Don MacLean's hit
"American Pie" as 'the day the music died', this enabled him to be
included in the trope 'the death of rock 'n roll', alongside the
less drastic musical demises of Elvis Presley (joined army), Chuck
Berry (imprisoned), Jerry Lee Lewis (disgraced) and Little Richard
(joined priesthood). The view that Holly belongs only to the 1950s
has often obscured the originality of his music. In an era when the
music world was divided into hard rockers, soft pop balladeers and
hardcore Nashville country & western singers, his songs
transcended the boundaries. Equally innovatory was his use of the
recording studio as a laboratory, a place to experiment with
sounds. In addition, the two guitars, bass and drums line-up of his
group the Crickets was the major contributor to the small group
template for generations of rock musicians down to the present day.
As well as becoming an influence on other musicians in a
conventional sense, Buddy Holly has had his own lengthy musical and
cultural afterlife.From the vantage point of 2009, a half century
after 'the day the music died', Holly has been the longest-serving
member of the rock immortals club, those singers and musicians for
whom death seemed to inaugurate a new phase of their career. He has
been re-embodied in a biopic, a stage show, in iconic images and
numerous reissues of his recordings. While he cannot rival Elvis
Presley in terms of sightings (nobody, I think, believes Buddy is
still alive) or in terms of 'virtual' performance with his old
band, he has been re-embodied in a biopic, a stage show, in iconic
images and numerous reissues of his recordings. This book is partly
based on the author's 1970 study in the "Rockbooks" series. But it
aims to provide a new perspective on Buddy Holly by discussing his
career and art in the context of his unique contribution to the
swiftly-evolving music scene of the late 1950s and his posthumous
50 year multi-media career through films, stage-shows and copious
reissues of his oeuvre.
The music industries are fuelled by statistics: sales targets,
breakeven points, success ratios, royalty splits, website hits,
ticket revenues, listener figures, piracy abuses and big data.
Statistics are of consequence. They influence the music that
consumers get to hear, they determine the revenues of music makers,
and they shape the policies of governments and legislators. Yet
many of these statistics are generated by the music industries
themselves, and their accuracy can be questioned. This original new
book sets out to explore this shadowy terrain. While there are
books that offer guidelines about how the music industries work, as
well as critiques from academics about the policies of music
companies, this is the first book that takes a sustained look at
these subjects from a statistical angle. This is particularly
significant as statistics have not just been used to explain the
music industries, they are also essential to the ways that the
industries work: they drive signing policy, contractual policy,
copyright policy, economic policy and understandings of consumer
behaviour. This edited collection provides the first in-depth
examination of the use and abuse of statistics in the music
industries. The international group of contributors are noted music
business scholars and practitioners in the field. The book
addresses five key areas in which numbers are employed: sales and
awards; royalties and distribution; music piracy; music policy; and
audiences and their uses of music. The authors address these
subjects from a range of perspectives. Some of them test the
veracity of this data and explore its tactical use by music
businesses. Others are helping to generate these numbers: they are
developing surveys and online projects and offer candid
self-observations in this volume. There are also authors who have
been subject to statistics; they deliver first-hand accounts of
music industry reporting. The digital age is inherently numerical.
Within the music industries this has prompted new ways of tracking
the usage and recompense of music. In addition, it has generated
new means of monitoring and engaging audience behaviour. It has
also led to increased documentation of the trade. There is more
reporting of the overall revenues of music industry sectors. There
is also more engagement between industry and academia when it comes
to conducting analyses and offering numerical recommendations to
politicians. The aim of this collection is to expose the culture
and politics of data. Music industry statistics are all-pervasive,
yet because of this ubiquity they have been under-explored. This
book provides new ways by which to learn music by numbers. A timely
examination of how data and statistics are key to the music
industries. Widely held industry assumptions are challenged with
data from a variety of sources and in an engaging, lucid manner.
Highly recommended for anyone with an interest in how the music
business uses and manipulates the data that digital technologies
have made available. Primary readership will be among popular music
academics, undergraduate and postgraduate students working in the
fields of popular music studies, music business, media studies,
cultural studies, sociology and creative industries. The book will
also be of interest to people working within the music industries
and to those whose work encounters industry statistics.
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Tarmac Tales
Wendy Laing, Dave Laing
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R339
Discovery Miles 3 390
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Dave LaRue is an international businessman and entrepreneur who
owns and leads more than a dozen thriving companies. He also spends
a great deal of time coaching entrepreneurs on how to achieve the
same level of success that he is enjoying in life. Experience has
taught Dave that life is about decisions. Deciding what your values
are, what habits work best for you, and what your true talents are
make it possible to ask the right questions, set the right goals,
and make the best decisions possible to chart the path to your own
success. But while you're on that path, some of the lessons life
has to teach us come from encounters and situations we hadn't
sought out or anticipated, and Dave believes that the stories that
come to each individual this way can offer each person an
invaluable chance to learn who they truly are-and what action must
be taken to live their life accordingly. In this book Dave shares
the stories that provided him with lessons and inspiration on his
way to becoming a successful leader and entrepreneur, and he
encourages the reader to look at their own life as a collection of
stories full of priceless lessons and powerful inspiration.
I came up with this idea upon noticing the Scrabble dictionaries
did not have the pronunciations so I thought of making it into a
fun book and at the same time helping the reader/player recall
certain words such as blagging, cwm, mux, offal, stonking, and
woopie, including my attempt at using them in the same sentence.
With over 2,000 sets of homonyms and more than 5,000 words, I also
have bonuses at the end of the book to add some more fun.
"The Guerilla Guide to the Music Business" is chatty and informal,
and it's full of useful, hard-earned advice telling you how to get
ahead in the music business. Through interviews with industry
experts in the US and the UK, "The Guerilla Guide" gives priceless
tips on every aspect of gigging - from rehearsals to foreign tours.
It takes you through the process of recording, from home-made demos
to releasing your own finished product and radio promotion. "The
Guerilla Guide to the Music Business" also explains what managers,
publishers, PR people, accountants, and lawyers can do for you, and
when and why you will need their services. It's a book that will
help you enjoy what you do, avoid too many pitfalls, and maybe even
help you have a hit or two along the way.
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