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When I was a kid…

Music and musicians were a more rarefied group, or so it seemed to me. Not only did one have to practice on their own while everyone else was out playing, but it also required a certain expertise with esoteric information in order to learn and get better. It all felt like we were reinventing the wheel each time as we tried to figure out how come we didn’t sound as good as professionals on records. I still am trying to figure that out! But the production of the art, and the audience at gigs that consumed the art were able to share something cool in the same room. And that magical “live” feeling in a room where this is going on is important, and I believe it is the core of what has kept musicians in the game while the music business continues to crumble all around. Continue Reading

Every tool is a weapon – if you hold it right

I’ll start my first BrokeDownVan.com blog with this statement that I think most readers would agree with: Musicians are fucked.

OK, maybe I should qualify that a little. Up until recently at least, all but a random few musicians were totally fucked. These days, musicians are for the most part still fucked but with a small glimmer of hope. A hope nicknamed the Internet.

A good number of musicians are surviving by using tools already available on the web, from MySpace to iTunes to Rhapsody to homegrown websites. This site intends to help share that information through blogs, website reviews, resource guides and more.

We often ask ourselves, Of what use is today’s music industry? Continue Reading

Indie-Pendence Day!

I’ve been thinking a lot about the way that the craft of music has been done in the past and the way that it is going to be done in the future. With every technological push forward, independent artists and musicians seem to find it harder to make money creating their art. There is a lot of good that comes from the distribution of songs and music more accessible through the Internet, but there is something lost in the process. As the means of producing music becomes cheaper and cheaper, the ways in which audiences consume music is also changing, making it difficult to pursue the craft of music. Will new media kill and old art? Continue Reading