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Vote!! Tune Your World = Music + Microfinance

Posted on Apr 23rd, 2008 by Microfundo : Tune Your World Microfundo
Help us change the way the world finances music

Want a break from the Democratic Primaries but still want to vote for something you believe in?

A different kind of election is happening this week in support of musicians from around the world.
Calabash Music is a finalist in the business idea contest at Ideablob.com's. The prize is $10,000 and the votes will be counted on April 30th.

Anyone can go to Ideablob.com and cast their vote for:
Tune Your World = Music + Microfinance!!

Make A Difference for Working Musicians Around the World.

Here's our Idea as posted on Ideablob.com: Every artist has the same problem of obtaining capital for their next recording. Tune Your World provides the solution of applying the principles of micro-financing to the music industry. Our groundbreaking approach is the creation of peer-to-peer micro-financing of new music projects - enabling fans to deliver start-up capital to aspiring musicians from developing countries around the world. Tune Your World operates on a people-to-people model. Musicians obtain funding for new recordings directly from their fans without giving up ownership or control. Our mission is to revitalize the music industry in places where the music industry has never worked very well. learn more at www.tuneyourworld.com

Here's what we'll do if we win $10k: This prize would help change the way the world finances music. Tune Your World is an Open Source music project that enables artists and fans to co-produce new works of art and share in the creative process. We need to complete development and support work to ensure that the first artists who use our micro-financing tools are successful. Our international music network already includes over 3,000 international musicians and more than 75,000 registered users. Early success will help spread the word about this radical new approach to music production-ultimately supporting all of the artists we work with around the world.

With your help we will win this prize!! every vote counts!!

Change the way the world finances music: Cast Your Vote Today!!


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Soulfege Band Leader, Derrick Ashong, shows support for Obama

Posted on Apr 1st, 2008 by Microfundo : Tune Your World Microfundo

On Jan. 31, Derrick Ashong, a 32-year-old musician and leader of the band Soulfege,  was carrying a sign for Barak Obama outside the Hollywood theater at the Democratic primary debate taking place that day.

Derrick's sign said “¡Sí, se puede!” (Yes, we can!), and he joined a crowd milling around in the street. Then a guy carrying a video camera came by and began asking Derrick a series of very pointed questions about why he supported Barak Obama.

“So why are you for Obama?” he asked. It was clear from his approach that he expected a shallow answer.

Soulfege Musician, Derrick Ashong, Supports Barak Obama

As it turned out, Derrick was glad to be asked, and held forth for almost six minutes — which is a very long time for regular broadcast television. — on universal health care, single-payer approaches and public-private partnerships.

Now this may seem like what could have been rather dull fare but here’s the cool part: On Feb. 2, the video interview was posted on a YouTube channel called “The Latest Controversy,” where supporters of both Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton and Senator Obama are asked very aggressively to justify their choice of candidates.

The video blew up, drawing more than 850,000 views. And after getting such a large response Derrick decided to post his own follow-up video that was posted Feb. 11 and received  300,000 views.

Soulfege Musician, Derrik Ashong, video response to Obama

So here is an independent musician, who was looking to (anonymously) show support for a candidate, drawing more than a million views with an impassioned but reasoned pitch.

Derrick clearly appealed to the youth movement that is shaking up the 2008 campaign. While his video could have been lost among the YouTube clutter, an editor at The New York Times heard about it and a Youtube hit was made.

Part of what happened is that the original video was contrary in format to the 'regular' sound bite news format. Neither the camera guy nor Derrick played by the rules. The journalist is never seen and is extremely aggressive in asking questions, while Derrick, does not so much take the bait as reel in the guy setting it out there. It is a classic viral moment. Derrick was quoted by the New York Times, saying: 

“Certain types of discourse are better suited to the Web. There has been so much talk about how this campaign is all about style and no substance, and this video contradicts that. There are reasons that we support Obama, and it has to do with the issues. You can’t get that on CNN right now, you can’t get that on MSNBC right now, and young people saw it on YouTube and they took it.”

It turns out that three of the dozen most popular videos on YouTube this month are about Barack Obama, not Paris or Lindsay or Britney. As noted in the NY Times:

"Many long-held beliefs are taking a beating during this election, chief among them the idea that if you want to connect with young people, you’d best keep it short, funny and stupid."

Thanks to Derrick and the Soulfege crew for exploding this myth...

Learn more about Derrick & Soulfege
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Tagged with: soulfege, obama

Find friends on Zaadz who are fans of your favorite musicians!

Posted on Aug 4th, 2007 by Microfundo : Tune Your World Microfundo
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Click on any artist name on this list and find out who else on Zaadz is a fan. Add any of these artist names in your 'favorite music' box on your Zaadz profile -- and join the crowd.

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Tagged with: world, music

National Geographic - Hip Hop Planet

Posted on Apr 27th, 2007 by Microfundo : Tune Your World Microfundo


"
Whether you trace it to New York's South Bronx or the villages of West Africa, hip-hop has become the voice of a generation demanding to be heard."

-- James McBride "Hip Hop Planet", National Geographic, April, 2007

Listen To Hip Hop Planet

Many older Americans remember learning about the world through the pages of the National Geographic. The magazine has changed a lot over the decades. Witness an article in this month's issue. It's about hip-hop. PRI's and BBC's 'The World' produced this 'Global Hit' segment which says the article ties into a bigger National Geographic musical initiative. (in partnership with Calabash Music)

This month the society's flagship magazine featured an article called "Hip Hop Planet."  And their website, National Geographic World Music, (whose entire music catalog is provided by Calabash) has produced 'Geo Remixed: Big Beats for a Small Planet' an exclusive new album of international pop music -- remixed by other global artists.

X PlastazTry sampling this track by the Tanzanian group X Plastaz which  is from the geo remixed project and combines Masai vocalizing and western hip-hop. With their music initiative National Geographic has begun to shed its reputation as covering the world from a middle-aged armchair. The article "Hip Hop Planet" is further proof of that and is destined to be the start of a series of music features highlighting emerging music talents from around the world.

Pato The Senegalese band Pato is also featured on the new National Geographic CD, "GeoRemixed." The band recently played a key role in raising political consciousness among young voters in Senegal, and getting them out to the polls.

The World's Global Hit producer, Marco Werman says, "It would be ironic if National Geographic makes more Americans realize this. After all, many in this country will recall when the glossy pages of the magazine used to depict Africans as naked savages beating drums. Now the magazine shows just how plugged in to global culture many Africans really are."

Listen to The World's 'Global Hit' segment

Get the new GeoRemixed Album: Big Beats for a Small Planet

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Fair Trade Music

Posted on Apr 25th, 2007 by Microfundo : Tune Your World Microfundo

We’re here to help artists maintain control of their art: to own their music, to self-produce and self-promote their careers, and to engage directly with you, their community. By purchasing music via our Fair Trade model, you are transforming the way music is traded across the globe.

Want to help make the Music Industry a place for Fair Trade?

As the market leader in Fair Trade Music, it has been important for us to help define the meaning of Fair Trade as it applies to the music industry. Fair Trade is not limited to the amount of money earned by the artist, but depends on a range of contributing factors that provide for a thriving and sustainable music economy.

1. Fair Share
We use a 'Fair Trade' and 'Equal Exchange' agreement giving our artists an equal share of revenue from their music sales: whenever we work directly with an independent artist they earn 50% from every sale. When you buy music downloads from an independent artist on our site, they get half of your money. This is a far greater share than the typical 8% - 12% that they can earn from standard music industry contracts.

2. Pro-Artist
By working with Calabash Music, artists retain control over their music and their careers. Artists continue to own the copyright (author's rights) to their music. Our agreements are non-exclusive. Artists are given a range of marketing tools allowing them to self-market and self-promote.
Each artist is given:

    - Their own artist page with their own domain
    - RSS feeds of their blog for posting news
    - Streaming audio and video hosting
    - Embedded player that allows artists to sell music on their own site
    - Featured placement on our network of media partners.

Learn how to submit your music to us on our musicians' page.

3. Pro-Consumer
Calabash Music has become the leading global music download service by providing easy access to all the great, but hard-to-find, music from around the world. We’ve created the most unique and broadest based international music catalog with a social conscience – served the way you like it, via the Internet. You own the music – there are no digital rights management restrictions placed on the music files you buy – and we’ve made it easy to share your music passions with others. 

4. Supporting the Independent Producer
It is just as important to apply fair trade practices to support other music industry players such as small independent producers who continue to play vital roles in the digital music age. We are working with independent producers to create digital-only releases which are bringing new projects to market at a fraction of the cost, and at far less risk, than producing a CD. Some of these same producers also sign up new artists to our catalog and are able to share in their earnings similar to traditional A&R agents.

5. Supporting Public Media
Calabash Music has partnered with non-profit public media who are often the only outlet for diverse international music. Our partners include:

When you purchase music downloads through any of our partner stores, they receive a percentage of your money. This gives our public media partners an opportunity of earning a significant new revenue stream from their audiences.

6. Transparency
Music industry agreements should be clear and open. We want to bring an end to hidden fees and costs that have been borne by artists and placed them in situations where they ended up owing labels money after tours. Calabash Music displays our artist agreements online and we've worked hard to simplify these agreements so that a lawyer is not needed to understand the basic terms. Calabash Music has built our business on a platform of open-source software (the ultimate in transparency), which allows us to easily scale and create collaborative partnerships with other like-minded companies.

7. Sustainable Development
In Fair Trade arrangements, artists and producers no longer need large amounts of capital to access a global market. Calabash Music is working directly with self-produced music from around the globe, giving artists the opportunity to take advantage of our global platform for online promotion, marketing and distribution. Under our direct-to-artist licensing, musicians in developing countries are earning revenue from their download sales that significantly increases their standard of living. For example, in Mali, West Africa, where 80% of the population lives on less than $1 per day, an annual income from download sales of even as little as $250 can provide rice for a family of 10 for a full year.

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Refugee All Stars - Living Like a Refugee

Posted on Jan 3rd, 2007 by Microfundo : Tune Your World Microfundo
Refuge All Stars - Movie Trailer


The Refugee All Stars owes its international career to a documentary film. In 2002, Americans Zach Niles and Banker White were moving through the refugee camps of Guinea looking for musicians to help them dramatize the plight of Liberians and Sierra Leoneans who had fled civil wars back home. Niles and White hit pay dirt when they came upon singer Reuben Koroma and guitarist Francis "Franco" Langba working out a plaintive reggae number called "Living Like a Refugee." In The Refugge All Stars, the resulting and deeply moving film, Reuben and Francis build their collaboration into a punchy, electric band that tours the camps to entertain fellow refugees, returns anxiously to Freetown to test the peace and record an album, and then goes back to the camps to encourage refugees to return home. Fast forward to 2006, and the Refugee All Stars are touring the United States.


Reuben's and Franco's collaboration actually goes back to 1998 in Kalia camp. "I had nothing to do," recalled Reuben. "In the morning, I would go to the center were all the refugees would just be talking. I saw that many people were not happy. I thought: If I start to play music here, people will really feel well." Precisely so, and soon a Canadian NGO provided the band with PA gear so they could tour to other camps and raise spirits there. "Me and Franco," said Reuben, "we were very serious over the matter. At first, my wife was not happy. She didn't want me to go sing in remote places. But I was so stubborn." His wife, Grace, eventually joined the band once she saw how the music was helping to build community in the camps, drawing people to meetings where they could discuss their circumstances and options.


The arrival of the American filmmakers must have seemed a miracle of sorts. "Something strange was happening into our lives," said Reuben, adding that this was their "big chance." The musicians' trust in the filmmakers was instrumental in giving them courage to go back to Freetown, where they might encounter the very torturers and assailants who had driven them out a few years before. "We were so much reluctant to go back," said Reuben, "owing to the kinds of things we saw." Think killings, maimings, and amputations. When the band did return, Reuben reconnected with guitarist/singer Ashade Pearce and other musicians he had worked with before the war, and the Refugee All Stars we see today was complete.


The album Living Like a Refugee compiles 17 songs from the earliest acoustic recordings Niles and White made in the camps to more polished studio productions the band made in Freetown in 2003 and 2004. Warm, tuneful, male vocal harmonies are the strong point here. It's hard not to flash on early tracks by Bob Marley and the Wailers when you hear "Compliments for the Peace" or "Monkey Work," both songs that celebrate the end of hostilities, while observing that the same "greed and immorality" that helped cause the war persist today. "I'm Not a Fool" highlights the rough soulfulness of Ashade Pearce's guitar work and sharp, haunted vocals. But it's a mistake to call this a reggae band. For starters, Reuben pointed out that Sierra Leone's baskeda folk music is close to reggae in sound and spirit. "This music is kind of playful," he told me. "Anytime there is something that is not good for the community, people will make a song of it, and when they are playing the baskeda, they will sing it. If the chief is very bad, they will sing against him, but the chief will not do anything because this is a social time. So people have the chance to speak, to express their grief during that time."


Beyond reggae and baskeda, there is palm wine, the freestyle, celebratory songs associated with the local alcoholic beverage, poyo. Sierra Leone was home to the legendary palm wine troubadour S.E. Rogie, and his signature lilt pervades a number of songs here. We also get gumbe, music brought back from the Americas by slaves who returned to Sierra Leone after slavery ended. "Kele Mani (War is Not Good)" is lively gumbe, animated by bottle and hand drum percussion, a funky-sounding acoustic guitar and a perky bass line, and sung in Mandingo. Among the English vocals are some in Kriol, like "Let We Do We Own," a plea for Sierra Leoneans to play their own music and sing in their own languages. "Pat Malonthone" has a brooding, ritualistic feel and chant vocals. This is an example of gbute vange, a music of the Mende people. "Ya N'Digba," Reuben's tribute to his late and long-suffering mother provides a warmer, 6/8 example of gbute vange.


Among the most simply recorded acoustic numbers is "Garbage to the Showglass," which tells this band's story in stark terms: "They found us in the garbage and put us in a glass case." The band's youngest member, an orphan named Black Nature, delivers a snappy, Krio rap to bring the point home for local listeners. In Freetown toady, the musicians feel safe, though they struggle with poverty, scarcity, and a dire lack of services. The music scene is peopled with local rappers, and a few other bands, although most of them play covers and don't create their own songs. That's one reason these bands languish in obscurity while the Refugee All Stars haunt the freeways of America. "Today you settle, tomorrow you pack," a line from "Refugee Rolling," was the band's mantra during the refugee camp days. Ironically, it's also an apt description of international touring. A change for the better, no doubt, but with so many troubles remaining back home, The Refugee All Stars's musical mission is far from over. Get the Music


Contributed by Banning Eyre for Afropop Worldwide


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Tagged with: sierra, leone, refugee, all, stars, calabash