Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Operation BAMMsterdam, Day 1




We're taking this show on the road, folks. A couple weeks ago, Jamie, Jeff, and I were in Chicago working with web.illish.us on a Pay-Per-View live stream concert for Erin McKeown. This week the three of us are in Amsterdam. Rough life, I know.

We're here to work with BAMM EU. They serve a bunch of roles for BAMM.tv, a lot of back end work, EU programming, some editing, and program development. Nick Hansen (Co-founder and brother of Chris Hansen) has been over in Amsterdam and London for the better part of a decade. BAMM.tv has been on the collective mind of the Brothers Hansen for as long as I've known them (six years), and even longer, so it only made sense for Nick to put together a team to keep watch on what's going on in the music world on this side of the Atlantic.

Jamie (business operations), Jeff (media), and I (music operations) are here to help unify the fronts in terms of production and program development. As is the case with any start-up hurdling towards its launch, there are a lot aspects--production, finance, promotion, platform development--that need constant attention, so transparency between the two offices is critical. BAMM.tv's platform launch will take place at South by Southwest in March. We are officially "on the clock."

BAMM.tv is a forward thinking media company that produces, edits, and distributes and video content entirely in the digital realm. New website and platform currently in development.

Miscellaneous:

- Had an open seat next to me on the flight (nine hours)...until a lady moved from her aisle seat to the middle seat next to me mid-flight. What? The dude next to her kept falling asleep on her shoulder. To the guy who kept falling asleep on this lady's shoulder, thank you very much for messing up a good thing for me. When is the next time I'll have an open seat next to me on a nine hour flight? Never, that's when.

- Checked out a taping of Amsterdam Acoustic last night. So cool. Check out their site--a bunch of killer bands in equally cool settings. The band, Shout Out Louds (Merge Records), was incredible. Shot entirely on film (16mm) in a frat house. Not what you think when you think frat house--this building is somewhere between 300 and 400 years old--yet the odor is universal.



- I thought the tram running throughout Amsterdam was free. It is not. IOU 2.60 Euros.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

BAMM.tv Presents: Jarrod Gorbel



BAMM.tv is happy to welcome Jarrod Gorbel, formerly of The Honorary Title, to the studio this afternoon for a live performance of five songs off of his brand new album, Devil's Made a New Friend. A short interview will follow. Gorbel has seen many sides of the music industry during the unprecedented transitional period of the last several years, both as a indie artist and as a major label artist.

However interesting his insights may be, we realize that it's his music you want. His music you shall have. Enjoy, folks.

Details:
Who: Jarrod Gorbel
What: Live stream performance of the new album Devil's Made a New Friend
Where: http://www.bamm.tv/live
When: Today (Wednesday, October 27) 12 PM (PST)

Monday, October 25, 2010

Live Blogging #FailCon 2010



Some of the most important lessons in the startup world come not from success, but from failures. Such is the premise of FailCon, a day-long event at San Francisco's Hotel Kabuki, that is a refreshing change of pace from the typical conference circuit. Founders, executives, investors, and industry experts share their fears in an uncertain marketplace and--yes--the dashing of their hopes and dreams.

Not surprising for the Bay Area, the eclectic lineup features some big names in the media and technology space, and the equally eclectic topics range from failed social media strategies and the best ways to lose all your customers, to bank busting venture capital deals and high-tech gadgets gone bad.

The conference is about to begin, and Executive Producer Cass Phillipps runs a tight ship, so check back throughout the day for updates.

9am - "Why Successful Startups Fail Better"

"Startups fail because they confuse the search for a business model with the execution of a business model," says keynote speaker Steve Blank. He argues that the metrics for evaluating success for early-stage entrepreneurs is radically different from those of established businesses. "A startup," he adds, "is a temporary organization used to search for a scalable and repeatable business model."

Blank's message to entrepreneurs is to not obsess about polishing the business plan because it won't survive first contact with customers anyway. Instead, managing the transition from scalable startup to a sustainable large company is the art of failing successfully. "The distinction between being a visionary and hallucinating is a very fine line and based on context."

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

BAMM.tv in Chicago: Erin McKeown




Somehow, someway, I am writing this post from the Presidential Suite at the Belden-Stratford Hotel in Chicago (great view, crappy continental breakfast...is there any other kind?). The weather has been picturesque and post-card autumnal. The city is no less than cinematic. It reminds me of when folks come to visit us in San Francisco this time of year. The weather is perfect and the city has its best foot forward. Our visitors remind us how lucky we are to live in such a beautiful city, which is true, but we know--oh, how we know--that SF soup fog is rolling in approximately three minutes after dropping our guests off at SFO. In other words, Chicago is about to get cold, and it's important to remember this simple fact when romanticizing to such extremes.

Allow me to get to the topic at hand--why is BAMM.tv in Chicago? We are here working with our friends at web.illish.us on a live stream concert by Erin McKeown. As some of you know, we've done our share of streams from our studios in San Francisco, but tonight we are streaming a live concert from the beautiful Lincoln Hall. If all goes well, you might be seeing a bit more of BAMM.tv on the road. We are also testing out a pay-per-view concert model.



Full disclosure--I hadn't heard of Erin McKeown until this project came up. It didn't take long to realize she's an immensely talented songwriter that challenges the very notion of categorizing. More impressive to me, she's been at this music thing for over ten years. Perhaps my appreciation for persistence and longevity serves as proof of my own aging, but it takes balls to commit to a music career for that long. It really does. Tonight marks the ten year anniversary of McKeown's first studio album Distillation (Signature Sound), and to celebrate she will play Distillation in full. The second set of the night will feature requests from the online audience. I know--a lot of variables in play tonight, but it should be interesting to see how the whole online audience impacts the show in the venue. Definitely worth checking out here.

Miscellaneous:
--Jeff, Jamie, and I got up close and personal with a tiger. Although lame to see in a zoo, still pretty cool to see.



--Went to the Alder Planetarium to see a 3D show. I know space is cool. I know. I just wish I cared.



--Unos deep dish pizza for lunch. Birthplace of deep dish pizza. The crust is where the magic happens.
--Lincoln Park is a really cool area of Chicago. Close to Wrigley, lots of cool bars and restaurants.
--Went to the Apple Store to grab a hard drive. Really cool store to go to when you get to snicker at the people waiting in line for their iPhone-related issues. I want to feel bad for them.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

5 things I've learned about musicians





Since last February, BAMM.tv has invited over 30 bands to our San Francisco studio to perform short sets. These performances are live-streamed over the old internet. Following the show the team at BAMM.tv mixes the audio and edits the video, and in a few weeks the entire performance is polished and adorned with some serious bells and whistles. Our basic belief is there are a ton of incredible bands and artists out there that you don't know about, that you ought to know about, and if we can help you find them then everybody wins.

In most cases, we include a short interview with the bands following their performance. I have conducted most of these interviews, for better or worse. Here are 5 things I've learned about musicians, based on my conversations over the past 8 months.

1. 98 percent of all the musicians that have come through BAMM.tv are polite, intelligent, regular folk. Granted, we aren't scheduling U2 here, but musicians--regardless of their status--oftentimes carry the following labels: prima donna, self-absorbed, melodramatic, unreliable, etc. I don't know about you, but I find it a lot easier to get behind a band that is made up of people who work hard and who aren't dicks.

2. Musicians are savvy, and the successful ones know how to hustle (I mean this in the best possible way). Most of the bands that come through BAMM.tv are on their own, and the ones that are signed to labels aren't exactly rolling up in a Porche with a model in the passenger seat (old Volvos, Subarus, and Econoline vans are more popular choices). The musicians we've worked with oftentimes approach their music as any founder of a start-up would. They are their own manager, their own booker, driver, guitar tech, roadie, website admin, album artist, and accountant. They are a study in multitasking, because they have to be if they want to play anywhere other than the corner bar.

It's impressive to be sure, but I often wonder when they find time to be creative. I was talking to Ben Morrison of The Brothers Comatose about this just the other night. He had spent the past 8 hours working on the website, updating Facebook, posting tweets (how I hate this term, but I need to get over it already), and so on. I thought, "That's awesome, Ben. But I like you in the songwriter role more than I like you for your social media skills." I worry that the folks that are really making a run at a music career don't spend enough time on what ultimately matters--writing better and better songs. It felt good to hear Matt Adams of The Blanks Tapes tell us that he usually writes anywhere from 30-50 songs for an album. He's managed to keep his focus on his most important asset. This isn't as common as you would hope.

3. Band back-stories are boring. In many of the earlier interviews I would start with the stock question--"How did you all come to be in this band?" Turns out--and I know this will come as a shocker--most bands are formed by...wait for it...a group of "friends." These "friends" usually "hang out" together, and oftentimes they share interests, like music. Sometimes they even meet at concerts, and, being fellow music-lovers, they bond over music. Bands come from all different places, like Oakland, Sacramento, Lodi, a small town called Los Angeles, or even places not in California. They spend some time "jamming," and perform for the first time at an open mic or a shitty bar. They stick with it, realize they really do get along, and then they get better at writing songs. I know there were a lot of mind-blowing realizations in that paragraph. Take a minute if need be.

4. Drummers are second-class citizens. I don't know how this started, but drummers get no love. If a band messes up during one of their songs, all looks go to the drummer. The tempo was all wrong. Too fast. Too slow. Wrong fill. I should know, because I'm guilty of this many times over. You might as well lump bassist in this category as well. Guitarists and singers better recognize. The best part is, the drummer and bassist are usually the most educated musicians in the band. They are the glue, and without them these bands would be just another folk duo in the coffee shop singing cringe-worthy knock offs of one of following three songwriters--Bob Dylan, Jeff Tweedy, or John Mayer/Dave Matthews.

5. I have a renewed faith in music. There really are so many incredible bands out there that stand up to just about anything we have on our iPods. Great songs--not good, but great songs--surround us and we don't know about them. We just need to look a little harder, look in different places, and most importantly go to local shows. Don't just show up for your friend's set, see the opener. My hope is that BAMM.tv can expose you to as much of this great music as possible. And with that in mind, I should probably get back to some booking.

Phil

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

BAMM.tv Presents: All Smiles




Jim Fairchild has seen views the rest of us can only imagine. Take, for instance, the view from the stage at The Greek Theater, or from the stage at Red Rocks, or from...well, you can fill in the blanks. Whether as the guitarist for Modest Mouse, or during his time with Grandaddy, Fairchild has seen a lot from the elevated stages of Rock & Roll. He's looked out onto the sea of people the rest of us can only occupy.

Today, Fairchild will have the view from the BAMM.tv stage when he streams a live performance as All Smiles. It doesn't get any more basic than this. Just Fairchild and a guitar. BAMM.tv's first introduction to All Smiles came about a year ago when we streamed an All Smiles performance from the offices of Topspin Media. We all walked away impressed, as I'm sure you will today if you tune in. Details are below. By the way, check out the All Smiles website for a free album download.

Who: All Smiles
What: Live video stream from BAMM.tv Studios
When: 3 PM (Pacific)
Where: http://www.bamm.tv/live

Friday, September 24, 2010

BAMM.tv Presents: Adam Haworth Stephens




Let’s just address the elephant in the room right off the bat: Adam Haworth Stephens is a part of Two Gallants, and Two Gallants is a part of Stephens, but neither are defined nor paint the entire picture of the other. Moreover, neither should limit the other. With that said, on September 28, 2010, Saddle Creek Records will release Stephens’ solo effort, We Live On Cliffs. Tonight (9/24), Stephens will give a preview of the new tunes as a part of a video stream and private performance from BAMM.tv studios.

It’s unknown whether the album marks a new direction for Stephens’ songwriting or just a sabbatical from the sparseness for which Two Gallants has gained critical acclaim. Either way, there is much to relish on We Live On Cliffs. Although full, warm, and even at times cozy, a sense of urgency remains at the heart of the songs.

Pre-order We Live On Cliffs, bundles and all, here.

Who: Adam Haworth Stephens
What: video stream performance of We Live On Cliffs
Where: BAMM.tv Studios (San Francisco), streamed on BAMM.tv/live
When: Friday, September 24, 8 PM (PST)

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

BAMM.tv presents: Ha Ha Tonka



Ha Ha Tonka (Springfield, MO) are road dogs that are anything but jaded, and their harmony-laden Southern Rock that brings out the foot-stomper in all of us. That said, don't bother looking for cliched songwriting. You won't find it here.

Ha Ha Tonka will take a few hours out of the West Coast leg of their latest tour to return to BAMM.tv this afternoon to perform for a live stream starting at 3 PM (PST). Tune in at BAMM.tv and head down to Elbo Room tonight at 9 PM to catch them in the flesh and blood.

Monday, August 16, 2010

The CD is Dead

For some in the music industry, the statement is blasphemy. For others, it’s a statement of the obvious. For BAMM.tv, it’s the starting point for a business plan.



by Chris Hansen
chris@bamm.tv


My wife tells me that I shouldn’t go around proclaiming that the CD is dead.

“It’s impolite,” she says. “The CD is definitely dying, but it isn’t dead yet. You wouldn’t say that about a person, would you?”

She cites as evidence the fact that she still archives her entire music collection on burned CD-R’s packed neatly in a trio of three-ring binders, tucked on a bookshelf in the basement. “They’re more reliable than hard drives,” she adds. And I have to admit she’s right. Amy is an attorney, you see, and at the breakfast table anyway I cede the point by way of technicality.

Afterwards, I go to work at BAMM.tv and try my hardest to kill those stupid little plastic disks once and for all. For one thing, they are unreasonably expensive to make. For the grassroots band, it takes a minimum investment of $1k to do a standard run, which, on top of studio costs, tracking, mixing, mastering, etc., quickly balloons to a $5k investment in static inventory. That’s a lot of money by any standard. And without a clear distribution plan, that inventory is doomed to sit on a bookshelf somewhere.

My advice to new and emerging musicians is: don’t record a demo. Not unless you know what you are getting into and you’re ready to dedicate a lot of time and energy into the project. Not unless you have a publicity and distribution plan in place. Not unless you are prepared to gig in half-empty bars and chip away at that inventory for the next several years to get your music in the hands of every single listener you can find.

If your band is just starting out, you will need a self-enforced, Olympics-style training regiment to get ready for the studio. For crying out loud, don’t pay someone to mix your songs unless you’re sure you know what tempo it’s supposed to be, or how that one bridge part is supposed to go. Don’t expect your drummer to play well to a click track if he hasn’t practiced for hours to keep a steady beat. And don’t ask your lead singer to find the same emotion in her voice while performing in a 3’x3’ padded box unless she’s really built the chops for it. In short, don’t break your songs into 100 pieces and try to put them back together again until you are truly ready for prime time. Because it won’t sound the same, and there’s an alternative.



Don’t kill the messenger

According to Nielsen Soundscan, in 2009 there were 98,000 albums that sold at least one copy. Of those, only 17% sold more than 100 copies. Yet, just to make the equivalent of the U.S. minimum wage, a solo artist must sell 143 self-pressed CDs per month. Multiply that number by four if you’re in an average-sized band. The same Nielsen study indicates that only 2.1% (approximately 2,000) of albums in 2009 sold more than 5,000 copies.

It’s one thing for industry insiders to talk about the Long Tail and DIY and the Musical Middle Class, but quite another to provide a mechanism for getting emerging artists to that promised land of financial sustainability—or, for that matter, break-even. The traditional way out of this quandary has been to get a label or distributor for your band, but here’s another fun fact: according to a study by The Root, for every $1k in label-supported music sold, the average musician makes $23.40.

In reality, most grassroots musicians don’t record a demo because they think they’re going to make tons of money. They do it because they can’t afford not to. They need something tangible to validate this musical “hobby” to friends and family and, indeed, to prove to themselves that all those rehearsals really do amount to something. Going into the recording studio starts off as a concrete, achievable goal for a band. It quickly turns into an odyssey and labor of love. And at the other end of the tunnel, you’ve got twenty boxes stuffed with fifty CDs to mark the accomplishment. But there is no obvious answer to the question—what now?

So let me propose an alternative to the five-song demo.

Step One: Come to San Francisco. If you already live in the Bay Area, you’re halfway there.

Step Two: Schedule a recording session at BAMM.tv Studios and play your five songs in front of our cameras to a live streaming audience. In fact, play your heart out. Put it all on the line for those five songs. And then we’ll do a brief interview, drink some beers, film some b-roll, and maybe even cook out on the grill if you’re so inclined.

There is no risk to the artist. It doesn’t cost anything to record in our studio. We don’t touch the copyright or publishing rights or any residual percentage of the underlying work—all that stays with the musicians, where it belongs. Instead, we enter into a licensing agreement for that five-song performance, and we split the profits 50/50. The whole process takes about three hours out of your life, and when you’re done you will have a live music video that can be embedded on any website to promote your band. The other four songs are included in the BAMM.tv library as part of a subscription-based video platform.

Using the voluntary collective licensing model supported by EFF, Creative Commons, and other forward-thinking technologists with an interest in the music industry, we are investing in the long-term future of promising young bands. If BAMM.tv makes $2 million in profit for a given quarter, $1 million of that will be deposited in the pool for musicians. If your band is played 5% of the time, you get $50,000 wired to your account. It’s that straightforward. Everyone’s incentives are in alignment. Increase the amount of your content in our library, and increase your chances to get plays. Help us sell subscriptions, and everybody wins.

The economics of this business model only work by abandoning the need for a physical product and offering music primarily as a service. It also helps to be a lean and mean Silicon Valley startup that can make a healthy profit off a few million in revenue, as opposed to a multinational conglomerate trying to control the entire distribution pipeline. From the moment the performances are captured at BAMM.tv Studios, they enter a tapeless workflow and never leave the digital domain. Everything is recorded in full 1080p high definition so the content is not only playable on existing web and mobile platforms, but is also optimized for future content delivery platforms like Google TV, Apple TV, and Boxee Box. None of this, mind you, has anything to do with CDs.



Rigor mortis juris prudens

It’s nothing personal. After all, Latin is a beautiful language; but it is still a dead language. As an undergrad, I remember being awed (and perplexed) by the system of declensions that allows a speaker to place the subject, verbs, pronouns, adjectives, etc., in any order at all in a sentence and have it still retain its meaning. It was the practical language of commerce that gave rise to the flourishing romance languages of today. It is still the language of science and law, philosophy and the Roman Catholic mass. But it’s dead. Because there is no more innovation left. Because it will not evolve with the changing times in the way that English does. Because the very utility of Latin in present-day usage comes precisely from its stubborn anachronism.

So goes the CD. There is no more innovation to be found in that format, either. There will be no Version 2.0 because—why bother? It doesn’t work in a DVD player. It’s another unnecessary petroleum product that has to be shipped in trucks. People are just going to load it on their iPhones and iPads and iPods anyway. And it doesn’t even make a very good frisbee. So let it be what it was destined to be—a promotional tool, a loss leader, one part of a bundled package of products and services, a giveaway.

Perhaps this year’s release of “Dark Night of the Soul,” by Danger Mouse and Sparklehorse, which they distributed as a blank CD-R and encouraged fans to “use it as you will,” was the last great innovation of this dying format. The only thing mildly provocative left to do with a CD is the physical destruction of the disk itself.

But the death of the CD need not herald the death of all things physical in music. Vinyl will not save the industry—it still accounts for less than 2% of all music sales—but industry data suggest that revenues for the format have grown an average of 50% per year since 2007. Clearly, the large-scale artwork, the liner notes, and the sheer pleasure of owning cool stuff is a motivating factor for this resurgence. And who can deny the pleasure of spending an hour at Amoeba thumbing through endless, haphazard stacks of disks? Or the thrill of finding that hidden gem you would never even think to look for? The more fine tuned a Google search engine gets, the farther it takes us from this delightful randomness of RL discovery. The challenge of making digital music more tangible, spontaneous, and accessible away from the computer screen is the next great hurdle for the industry.

So go ahead and put that CD in a bundle and sell it. Make it a collector’s item. Give it away at your next show. Send it to your mom. Stock it at the merch table next to the t-shirts. Give Letterman something to hold up to the cameras as he introduces your band. But don’t take it personally when people throw down $10 for a vodka tonic but won’t pay the same to buy your CD.

To an emerging band, the CD is still a unit of currency as they gig around town or start their own tours. Suppose twenty people show up at a bar in Duluth for some live music, and it turns out they really like a certain band. How are they going to remember the name of that band when they wake up the next day? An iPhone app? Maybe someday. But in the meantime a CD is a little more practical. It’s essentially the new business card for grassroots musicians.

Yet, even as a promotional tool, the CD alone is sloppy and inefficient. How many times did they listen to it? Did they like it, or throw it in the recycling bin? What is their email address? Would they pay $20 to see a show at a larger venue? Could they be incentivised to tell their friends about the band? The CD can answer none of these questions.

Perhaps the answer is as simple as a promo code that unlocks HD content online. Email for content is fair trade these days. But such a system requires back-end architecture, metadata, analytics and, most importantly, highest-quality content. Digital marketing and distribution partners are emerging to help bands take that crucial step. But what if you could also subscribe to the band itself?



Give me something I can buy

Last month, Amy and I went to an album preview party for the emerging San Francisco band Con Brio, a ridiculously talented group of musicians that we fully believe in and want to see blow up into the mainstream. When we got to the apartment Jonathan, the bass and trumpet player, handed me a CD. It was a tangible moment, for lack of a better word. We sat in the living room and listened to all 12 tracks in an attentive circle. I looked at the inside jacket and was surprised to see a shout out to BAMM.tv on the sparsely worded sleeve. And, yes, it meant a lot more to see the “thank you” printed on a physical product than posted on a webpage.

Con Brio also released a vinyl edition of their album in which they changed the order of the songs to account for the new format, with each side building to a shorter 6-song climax. If I had a record player, I would buy it. I still might, just to have them sign their names with a grey Sharpie across the cover so I can frame it and hang it on the wall. Hell, I might even buy a record player if Con Brio were selling it.

You see, we are what you might call “superfans.” So I say—please—give me something I can buy to support this band, and I’ll buy it. Give me merch. Give me VIP passes. Give me vinyl. And yes, even give me some CDs to buy and send to my friends and family. In short, give me any damn thing I can pay for, and I will do it. Seriously. Bundle it all together and sell it to me at a premium. Now, if only I could subscribe to Con Brio as an entity, that would be even better. If I could get an all-you-can-eat pass to their catalog of music, videos, merch, backstage passes, and other perks, I would enter my credit card info today and check the box for recurring billing. And I dare say we all have at least one band we’d do that for.

BAMM.tv is creating our own back-end architecture and content library to do just that, for an annual subscription fee of less than $25. You can’t buy a new release on blu-ray for that amount. You can barely get into Slim’s for that amount. I doubt it even covers the Ticketmaster service fees for a pair of Outside Lands tickets. People can afford it, and if they truly believe in supporting local and independent music they will be only too happy to see the money go directly into the pockets of the artists they listen to the most.

Whatever the eventual outcome of the current disruptive state, one thing is certain: the media and technology companies of Silicon Valley are leading the way to the music industry’s digital future. These thought leaders in the media/tech space are transforming music, entertainment, and information from a product to a service. It’s unclear to me whether my proclamation of the CD’s death will be met with controversy, or by a resounding “Duh!” from this community of entrepreneurs.

But if you’re as excited about the future of emerging artists and independent music as I am, I would love to talk to you more about BAMM.tv’s business model and hear your perspective on the state of the music industry. We’re here to do business. We’re here to try out whacky ideas. We’re here to cross-promote, co-license, syndicate, collaborate and generally get to know the leaders of the Bay Area’s cutting edge companies. Got a different opinion about the CD? I would love to hear about it.

Chris Hansen
Executive Director
chris@bamm.tv

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

BAMM.tv presents: Miho Wada




We’ve all been stuck. More specifically--more interestingly--we’ve all been stuck musically. We resort back to the same artists. The same songs. The same five minute guitar solo. We hear the same ideas, and they are comforting. An old t-shirt. We crap on radio stations for playing their same 100 songs, then we do the same thing with our iPod.

I’ve yet to meet Miho Wada, BAMM.tv’s artist featured on our live stream today at 3 PM (Pacific Time), but I am impressed with her for the simple fact that she’s not a stuck musician. She’s a severely talented, classically trained flutist. She’s traveled the world--Cuba, New Zealand, London, Japan--incorporating different theory into her playing and composition. She is what I want to think of when I hear the term “World Music” instead of Timothy Robbins’ character in the film High Fidelity.

Whether her music feels like an old t-shirt or not, I encourage you to try it on today. Your old music has pit stains anyway.

-Phil Lang

Details:
Who: Miho Wada
What: Live video stream (HD)
Whent: 3 PM (Pacific Time)
Where: BAMM.tv

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Recording in a studio vs. recording a live show



Recording: The process of capturing
data or translating information to a format saved on a storage medium. The environment in which you capture sound though, makes a big difference. Being in a recording studio is not the same as a stage. In the early days of recording, bands didn't have a choice. The only way of capturing an entire band was to do it all together, in one take, and that was it. As technology evolved, so did the recording process. Now we have all sorts of tools and techniques to capture and manipulate audio, which if used correctly and to good taste, can create a beautifully processed song and albums.

When you record in a studio you have the space and time to try things. By this I mean to do more than one take, so that you can later choose which you prefer or sounds best. You can experiment with micing techniques, record one instrument at a time, and built it up little by little. When you record a live performance you commit to whatever the set up is, and yes, there will always be bleed, no matter how hard you might try to isolate but you will be able to capture the band or artist doing what they do best, perform. So, why do people choose to recording in a studio so much more than recording a live show?

It has become the norm to record in a studio because it is the best possible way to get clean sounding audio. Also, because it provides the ability to treat the files pretty much how ever you'd like. The musician, engineer and/or producer can decide they don't like something, and go back and change it. Unfortunately though, because of the pressure of "being in the studio" and the discomfort of being without an audience or stage, many artists don't achieve the same performance in a studio as they can during a live performance.

This last statement is what made my personal preference, which is live audio. In my experience, it took a lot for the musicians to feel as confident in a studio as they did performing on a stage, and that is, if they got there at all. I realized that I'd much rather put the effort into recording a band in their element, then out of it. Recording live is not easy either, don't get me wrong. For the musicians, the pressure is on, and for an engineer, the quest for perfection is the biggest priority. The show will be grab as it received and processed with more factors embedded, but at the end, you can have a recording you will enjoy.

BAMM.tv does live recordings and it even gives you the opportunity to do two takes, just in case you felt the first one wasn't good enough, or it had a little something that you know you can do better. I think this format is pretty spectacular. We get the benefit of having a show and the ability to choose from takes.

Check it out!

Sonia

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Allofasudden in studio



Allofasudden
(San Francisco, CA) serves as a great reminder of the versatile power of the almighty guitar. There are a lot of elements to like in this slightly psychedelic band, but it's their refusal to be content with one sound that makes them a band to come back to. Although "Appear," their 2008 album, succeeds in capturing the signature of the band, they are indeed a band that must be seen live to fully appreciate their jam and improvisational prowess. BAMM.tv is excited to have them performing a live stream on Wednesday. Details below.

Who: Allofasudden
What: Live performance video stream
Where: justin.tv
When: Wednesday, June 9 at 8PM

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Leopold and His Fiction - Live on BAMM.tv



The 70's-influenced rock trio, Leopold and His Fiction, will stop by BAMM.tv studios tonight as they return to the Bay Area on their way to Live 105's BFD at Shoreline on 6/6/10. Even though their sound derives from a vintage rock backdrop, LHF are much more than a throwback band.

Singer/songwriter Daniel James maintains a modern sensibility and ironic delivery of his storyteller lyrics. Overall, the studio sound is polished and controlled, as seen with Jon Sortland's tight, rolling drums on "Be Still." But the live performances are energetic and exciting in a way that borders on completely off the hook, yet manages to hold it together. Take, for instance, Macayla Grace's bouncing/dancing bassplaying at SXSW 2010, which begins with full-on headbanging and ends in a beautiful solo/duet James on lead guitar.

Tune in here tonight at 8pm to see a live video stream of this dynamic band on the rise in the Bay area. The most recent album, Golden Friends, is available here as a digital download/7" vinyl release. And don't forget to check out LHF at BFD on 6/6/10.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Ash Reiter to Perform on BAMM.tv



Ash Reiter (San Francisco, CA) has been roundly praised for many elements of her songwriting and performing. Whether it's her crooning voice, her lyrics, or her vintage pop sensibility—the point is you want to hear more from her. Her songs have a wit and ease about them that can't be faked.

Reiter and her band will come by the Bricks and Mortar studio tomorrow (Wednesday, May 26) to perform for a live stream starting at 8 PM. Tune in here and be sure to check out tracks from her new album. You can see her live Thursday night (May 27) at Milk Bar.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

A great drum recording with 4 mics

Hi everybody, this is Jerad at BAMM.tv. I’m here to discuss our most used in-house microphone setup for drums, the Glyn Johns Technique.

Glyn Johns is a master recording engineer that has worked with such bands as The Who, Steve Miller, The Rolling Stones, Eric Clapton, The Eagles and many more. The technique is most widely heard on the Led Zeppelin recording of drummer John Bonham. In fact, Glyn’s younger brother Andy used this technique (with the aid of a Sennheiser 416 placed three stories above the drum set) to record the Zeppelin song “When the Levee Breaks,” which has been considered one of the best drum recordings of all time.

The Technique calls for 4 mics. Place a spot mic on the kick (Shure Beta 52, or AKG D112 are ideal), and a spot mic on the snare (SM57, Beyer dynamic M201). The other two mics will work as your overheads, and a tape measure is needed to get this part right. The first overhead (cardiod) is placed about 4"- 6" above Floor Tom facing Hi-Hat across Snare. The second overhead (cardiod) is placed about 2'-3' above the kit facing between the toms and snare. Room-mics, bottom snare mic, 2nd kick mic, etc. are all optional. The overheads work best if they are large diaphragm condensers, but any mic that isn’t too bright should work fine.



Panning the mix is what makes this small four-microphone technique sound so big. First you want your snare and kick in the center of the mix like usual. Now pan the mic above the snare halfway to the right to give the mix a little balance without taking it too far to the right (if you did this, it would create an illusion of snare sound coming heavily from the right). Next, pan the mic near the floor tom to the far left. This gives a depth and stereo image to the overall kit. This amazing technique allows you to use less mics to get a giant drum sound, but remember, a good drum mic technique must be complemented with a good tuned drum set, a good sounding room (like BAMM studios), and of course a good performance.

Monday, May 3, 2010

Put down the brush and pick up a guitar



I am happy to announce that our renovations to the studio are all but complete, and we are very lucky to have Lael Neale coming in on Wednesday for a live video stream. It will be our first production after the renovation, and to be honest, I’ve had enough painting for a few months.

A few words on Ms. Neale: I went to her show this past weekend at Velo Rogue. I had only heard myspace recordings of her up to that point, and I’m always interested to see how a quiet performer’s songs translate in a live setting. I’ve been to more than a few shows when the customers treat the performer as background music. The cafĂ© was full and busy with sound. Conversations and steamers bounced off the walls, and then all went silent when Neale started her set. What’s more, it stayed that way until she concluded. Much of her set consisted of songs she’s been recording over the past week, and much of her set on Wednesday will be this new material as well.

Be sure to tune to bamm.tv in on Wednesday at 3 PM. Lael will be accompanied by Trevor Garrod of Tea Leaf Green.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

It's in the Wind



BAMM Studios had its first outside performance when Ha Ha Tonka, straight out of the Ozarks, was kind enough to grace the stage. Brett Anderson, Lennon Bone, Lucas Long, and Brian Roberts are the distinguished southern gentlemen that played an amazing, broken down set on April 8 before their show at Slim's. This four-piece set consisted of acoustic guitar, mandolin, and acoustic bass all recorded through DIs. Lennon Bone, the drummer, played tambourine and stomped on a guitar case with a Beta 52 microphone inside warped with a t-shirt. Only two vocal mics were used to pickup the massive 4-part harmonies.

The recording was a constant battle against the wind, but the performance prevailed. The mix came out very clean and powerful. The wind is only heard at the beginning of “Pendergast Machine,” a song with nothing but mandolin and strong vocal harmonies highlighted by Lucas Long’s deep bass vocals. In the song “St. Nick On the Fourth in a Fervor,” Bone's idea to substitute a guitar case as a kick drum was turned into the giant, wall shaking sound that made it so much more than a normal live show mix. With a perfect balance of vocal patterns and instrumentation, it would be a smart idea to check tour dates and see when this great band will be playing next around you. Here's the link to their site.

Stay tuned for BAMM’s release of Ha Ha Tonka’s parking lot performance.

Jerad

Thursday, April 22, 2010

The A Team

The A Team

The A Team at BAMM consist of Phil Lang, Jerad Fox and me, Sonia D. Pina. Together we have successfully created a studio at our new location, recorded some great indie bands, and even created a fully functioning stage and studio at the conference center at SXSW. Of course all of this has come out of some crazy ideas and creative minds, the best example of that being our studio in San Francisco, California.

We knew that to feel confident in inviting any type of band into our studio that we would need at least 16 channels. Even though we had a lot of different equipment to start with (Mac Pro, Digidesign 003, Digidesign 002, Apogee Ensemble, Mackie 1604 VLZ3, Korg D888, Phonic Helix Board, M-Audio BX5a speakers), we were faced with the limitations of our hardware. In other words, we weren't about to spend 100k on a 24-channel Neve board. After a couple playing around with all of the ins and outs, limitations of pre-amps, specificities about Phantom power, and still keeping in mind we wanted 16 functioning channels, we made it work by utilizing 3 of those consoles mentioned before—the 003, Ensemble, and the Mackie. I would have never thought mixing those three pieces of hardware would make a cohesive workstation, but it sure does!

Now, when we a stage where bands can play, a snake that takes the inputs from the stage into the studio room, and sub-snakes to communicate between the three consoles. All those channels get recorded onto our computer. Then, last but definitely not least, we send a feed of our mix live to the TriCaster for live streaming. End product? A mixed audio feed during the live, multi-camera broadcast, and all channels recorded to be mixed later. Seems so easy writing it now, but believe me, this took all of our training and experience to put together.


The TriCaster allows us to shoot multi-camera productions live and take the audio feed straight from the Digi 003.


Keep tuned folks. There is a lot more awesome content on its way.

Chao!

Sonia

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Cross one off the bucket list



Most of us here at BAMM are musicians with an awesome day job, and I’m just another one of those musicians who can’t walk away from a good instrument. This past weekend I pulled the trigger on a 1975 Rhodes Mark 1. I have wanted one of these babies for quite some time, and I finally mustered up the nerve after a nice refund from Uncle Sam. Thanks, Barry Dunham.

I don’t have enough zeros in my bank account to collect old cars. Even if I did, I’d rather have this beast than a cheesey mid-seventies Corvette, complete with vanity plates. Now for the name. I was thinking Rhonda Rhodes, or just Fat Andy because it’s so freaking heavy (I learned the hard way that transporting one of these beasts in not a one-man job). Then again, you can never go wrong with LaFawnduh (Napoleon Dynamite spelling, of course).

Phil

Thursday, April 15, 2010

4/15/10

I trust everyone filed taxes today. Now that we have that out of the way, Here’s a brief BAMM update.

We continue to mix and edit the audio and video from our incredible week at South by Southwest. It’s relatively easy to shoot footage, but the work comes in the post-production (as if we needed a reminder). Jerad and Sonia have been mixing the audio from the RV performances and interviews downstairs, while Jeff and Jamie have been editing the video footage upstairs. The footage looks and a sounds great. You can see a few of the videos on our main page. This may sound lofty, but searching through the bands playing SXSW has made it abundantly clear that there is tons of great--great--music out there by people we've never heard of. That's my warm and fuzzy for the day.


Jerad rocking the Pro Tools.


Jeff won't edit film without his editing hat.


SXSW was such a large project that the preparations made the move into our new space fast and unceremonious. Now that we’ve had a chance to take a breath we’ve taken on the task of renovating the space. So far I estimate 12 gallons of paint, at least a dozen rollers, and we’re working on our fifth role of painter’s tape. The renovation has gone smoothly, despite Fernando's false claim that I lost the paint roller and a heated encounter with the manager from the hardware store. We have a contractor coming in to work on putting a lighting grid over the performance space and stage curtains are on the way. It feels good to do some manual labor. Here's a picture of where we are in the process. Call me crazy, but I think we should have gone with even more of a candy cane theme around the mezzanine.

More soon from various jackalopes at BAMM.

Phil

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Free Legal Downloadable Music

WELCOME our new and long time fans. Thank you for supporting BAMM by coming to our website. We find the best free legal music content on the web and bring it to you! The following songs are exclusive live performances from BAMM.tv at SXSW 2010. 

If you would like a free and legal music download of the newest greatest bands, please right click on the links provided and choose the Save Link As option. If you would like to hear the song before downloading it, simply click the link. 

Enjoy! 


Miz Metro featuring Crosby BG - Love is a Show



The Ferocious Few - Cryin Shame 


Terry Poison - Comme Ci Comme Ca


Uncle Lucius - Ain't it the Same

Stay tuned for more high quality content! 

Friday, March 12, 2010

The Griswold Arrives



From left to right: Rodeo Queen, Arabian Horses, Care Bear Look Alike, and Live-Like-You-Were-Dying.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

SXSW Travel Blog #2

Thursday, March 11, 2010

11:08 AM, 100 miles west of Las Cruces, NM on Interstate 10



We pulled the U.S.S. Griswold into Justin’s Diamond J RV Park parched and on empty stomachs. The slogan on their pamphlet reads “An adult RV Park.” I don’t know exactly what owners Doc and Christine Justin mean by that, and perhaps I don’t want to know. It was a park in every sense of the word, complete with mini-golf course, dog run, and a pickleball court. The lots were full. Judging by the stillness, most of the occupants were in bed by 8:30. Make of that what you will.

We were jokingly saying RVs are a lifestyle more than a vehicle, but one pass through the Diamond J proved our joke to be true. There were some serious rigs in the lots. Some of them bore a closer resemblance to tour buses than RVs. Jeff-the-intern, who spent 5 months on an RV in Vallejo, CA, gave us more insight on the subculture. Turns out there are daily, weekly, monthly, and even yearly rates. Doc and Christine must be making a mint on their plot of dirt on the far outskirts of Tucson.

After polishing off two pizzas in about five minutes (delivered to the RV!), we cracked open the brews and sat on the roof. The stars and silhouetted mountains were more than enough to keep us up there as the tempeture dipped.

Aside from the occasional steer and the snow-dusted boulders of Saguaro National Park, the landscape remains the same today. I assume that will hold true for the duration. Jamie rode shotgun for my morning turn at the wheel. The ever-sentimental Cat Stevens blared as Fernando and Jeff-the-intern slept in. We sang along. It’s what you when you’re 1,000 miles into a 4,000-mile road trip.

I don’t know what affects the other more—a song or your state-of-mind—or if it’s a matter of sequence, but it’s a complex relationship defined by psychological subtleties. I wasn’t feeling sentimental this morning, and initially we were laughing at the songs (the echo on the vocals in “Hard-headed Woman” is hilarious), but then I got into it, and beneath the sarcasm in our singing was a sincere effort to hit the notes and remember the words. We cursed when we screwed up.

But music doesn’t have to be taken seriously to be profound. Sometimes I think the real serious songs are a lay-up. Too easy. Most every musician wants to be taken seriously, and in an effort to be profound they write serious songs that are uninteresting. Dylan’s “All I Really Want To Do” is funny any way you look at it, but there’s an emotional truth to it, too (hell, if relationships aren’t funny, then nothing is). My life experiences make that song more profound song than, say “Blowing In The Wind.” Maybe that’s why Rolling Stone’s “Top 100” this or MTV’s “10 Best” that never interested me. The only top lists I care about are those of my friends’.
I’ve sunk into a tangent. Straight, unending roads have that effect.

-Phil, Captain of the S.S. Griswold

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

SXSW Travel Blog #1

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

3:01 PM, 20 miles east of Blythe, CA on Interstate 10



Jamie, Fernando, Jeff-the-intern, and I left San Francisco at 3:45 AM this morning to begin our drive to Austin, TX in the rented RV dubbed the U.S.S. Griswold. SXSW gets closer by the mile, but we’re still four hours out from Tucson, AZ, our stop for night one. Moral high. Body odor low. Supplies (lunch meat, wheat thins, Diet Coke, beer) fresh. Everyone is still buzzing with the excitement that comes at the onset of any epic journey. I’m guessing the buzz will subside sometime around 11:30 tomorrow when we cross into New Mexico.

I suppose I should explain just why we’ve rented an RV and are on our way to Austin. BAMM will be broadcasting from SXSW conference/festival on Justin.tv. Interviews, performances, daily recaps, and concerts. I think the SXSW slogan is “Where tomorrow happens today,” so it’s a pretty ideal place for a company just getting started (BAMM) to get a pulse on what’s about to break in the music industry. More on the conference once we get there.

I’ve never driven south or east of L.A. Telephone lines and skyscraping wind turbines have been the only break from what is now the Big Maria Mountains. The names of the mountain ranges change on the atlas every fifty miles or so. Little San Bernadino Mountains. Orocopia Moutains. Chocolate Mountains. Hell, there’s even a range called the Palen Mountains. All brown. All dramatic. All constantly just inside the horizon. The only piece missing is the tumbleweed rolling across the interstate. After months of preparation, it’s a relief to get on the road, leave the concrete behind, and shoot some content in unfamiliar settings.

We’ve prepared the best we could, but of course the unexpected waits for us. Let it wait; I’m enjoying the view and talking music with buddies.

-Phil, Captain of the S.S. Griswold

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

SXSW

Make sure to tune into our LIVE broadcasts from South by Southwest, March 11th - 21st!