
Sixto Rodriguez made an unlikely late-career resurgence through bootlegs, reissues, and an Oscar-winning documentary

Wasn't sure I'd listen to this whole thing but half way threw it starts to really get weird. Damn, kind of feel bad for her...it most be hell working for Elon.
She's even sighted in the wikipedia article "In 2023, Linda Yaccarino was appointed as the CEO of Twitter while the company was facing an uncertain future and a number of challenges, including outages, user discontent and advertiser skepticism. The company lost more than half of its value since its acquisition by Elon Musk six months prior."
A lot of the pay and benefit increases come with an expectation that the worker will increase their productivity. US workers have been conditioned to blame themselves if they don't meet these expectations and it has become baked into the work culture. We can not maintain the current imbalance in pay disparity and 1% wealth without structural changes but it's culturally forbidden to even talk about this without being accused of being a communist. This paradigm has been created after decades of messaging from the system that supports the existing oligarchy - IMO.
It's not as refined as reddit but the content is better and the community can improve the UI/UX over time... At first it was a little awkward for me coming from reddit but it didn't take long for me to adjust and the diversity of people and ideas I've found on here is well worth it.
re-builder in Emacs works really good for this because I'll usually have the text in a buffer already that I want to match or replace or adjust or select - I'm constantly using it.
I'm interested in finding ways to use it but when if I'm writing code I really like the spectrum of different answers on stack overflow with comment's on WHY they did it that way. Might use it for boring emails though.
Rodriguez what an awesome human being...just watched this interview with him.
"And what about all the those years of back breaking labor, was that hard on you? ... well physically it was hard but there is no shame in hard work...There is no shame in being poor. Poor doesn't mean dirty. Poor doesn't mean stupid and poor doesn't mean, mean"
I think that also happened...and maybe the royalties issue wasn't as black and white as I thought.
What Likely Happened to the Royalties for “Sugar Man”?
It's a tuff biz. I don't think you were wrong, luck has a lot to do with it and the bootlegging certainly helped.
It was good...might have been 2012 or 2015...Jeff had a lot of musicians helping him out on stage to reproduce the sound. Got the feeling he really wanted to give the fans a good show. I think i remember the guy from elf power getting out the saw even... Just read on his wiki that "Slate described Mangum as the "Salinger of Indie Rock."" So kind of cool that he gets out there and does it at all, I was grateful.
1973 - I Pity the Country · Willie Dunn
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I Pity the Country · Willie Dunn
Native North America (Vol. 1) : Aboriginal Folk, Rock, And Country 1966-1985
Saw a version of NMH at the Moore theater in Seattle... I think several people from Elf Power were helping out. Such a classic album!!! Never thought I'd get a chance to see them.
Hopefully music is still happening like this somewhere in American
👍 Nice work...
Interestingly an other band that went to insane length to get around the US music system was a band that found an audience in Germany. :-) Dead Moon LIVE at Stuttgart (Germany) 23 08 1990
BUT, the "record deals" often were so bad that they didn't have to hide anything they just structured them in a way that wasn't very advantageous to the artist and Pay to Play and access to distribution channels meant you you didn't have a lot of other options. Some tried to work around the system but you probably have never heard of them. A good example that comes to mind is Greg Sage of the Wipers. Youth Of America - The Wipers (1981)
Based on my memory, like a lot of musicians in the "good old days", the record label cut him out of everything and actively hid royalties from him. The documentary "Searching for Sugar Man" goes into more details. As i recall they find the producer but can't find the money. Great Doc check it out. Also found this " One of the dramatic highlights of the film is when the interviewer confronts Clarence Avant, the label’s owner. “What happened to all of the royalties?” the interviewer asks. Avant becomes visibly agitated and is unable to offer a satisfactory answer to the question. "
Classic tail of an great artist who got fucked by the music industry...
Rodriguez, Detroit Singer Behind “Sugar Man,” Dies at 81
Sixto Rodriguez made an unlikely late-career resurgence through bootlegs, reissues, and an Oscar-winning documentary