Geddes
19 August 2009 13:45:56
Geddes
Geddes has been making party people across London mulletover and over for 5 years and counting. The party has set the precedent for underground clubbing with its understated-cool crowd and aural-driven atmosphere.  With the release of his latest track, Paperweight with Alex Jones, his label Murmur plotting releases like electronic landfill and his events success spilling into the festival circuit and abroad, Geddes is far from toeing the line. We cornered Geddes to find out a little bit of this and that ahead of Mulletovers 2nd affair at the Eastern Electrics festival this bank holiday weekend.

Pulse: mulletover stands strong as one of London’s best underground event brands - how did it come about?

Geddes: I wanted to do a night and originally started mulletover with a guy called Jafar. We were due to do our first party but the venue we were using got closed down and Jafar knew Rob who coincidently was doing a party on the same night, he had a spare room upstairs and the party went ahead.  We did another party together after that and decided we’d work under the same banner and here we are five years down the line.

The event has stretched its legs to festivals and one-off parties abroad. Tell us about mulletovers journey...

We first started doing parties in Ibiza, then Croatia.  Festival wise we were part of TDK Festival in London, Lovebox in Victoria Park last year and now Eastern Electrics with Resident Advisor.  This year is the first time we’ve been invited to do Glade Festival, which was wicked.

Glade Festival is said to be the subversive alternative to the other hyped UK festivals, how was it to have mulletover being part of it?

The thing about Glade is, it spurned from grassroots and they hardly have any sponsorship to help them along, it makes the difference to the festival and the people who go- it’s definitely special. We had Mr C, Adultnapper and Jamie Jones play for mulletover in the club tent and it rocked from start to finish, we had a great time!

You’ve apparently managed to miss a few of the Mulletover parties- how does that happen- do you get lost trying to find the secret location?

I missed three parties and all of them being in Ibiza. Moral of the story is not to put you passport through the washing machine.

How did you find yourself in the music industry and what initially guided your organic sound?

I was surrounded by music at an early age, it was quite an important part of my family’s socializing, and we’d spend hours dancing in the living room to Frank Sinatra, Grace Jones and Barry White. Then my sister got a job with Universal Records and was product manager for Twisted Records, which was home to Danny Tenaglia and Murk, from then on I knew what I wanted to do.

You’ve played witness to the London scene over the last decade- what have you seen and learnt from it?

Trends move quickly, one minute minimal is the in thing then house is back. Be true to your school!

You also produce under the guise Rekleiner with Anthony Middleton and Luca Saporito- how do you three come together to create this intricate and melodic sound?

I knew Luca from West London and he was hassling me to play at mulletover, through his persistence we became friends and started working in the studio together. The rest is history though however the guys are now in Barcelona so it’s hard for us to get together and make music.

What has been one of your favourite gig experiences to date?

Robert Johnson in Frankfurt is the most amazing place to play, good sound system, small room and nothing else is needed.

 

Your track Paper Weight with Alex Jones is your first EP on Murmur and was released in July- what is the response so far?

Yeah it had a really good response from the promo we did, both Alex and I are very happy!

Murmur launched in 2008 and is cutting the edge with great track releases from great artists- what can we look forward to next?

We have a great EP from Tom Demac we’re very excited about, something else from BLM who’s a London-based artist, M.in from Frankfurt, Mic Newmann from Australia and hopefully something from Meat. Release schedule is full now till next year.

If there was one sound you could remove from the earth and never have to hear it again- what would it be?

The noise of buses going past my window late at night, they are so noisy I can’t open my window and in this hot weather that’s not ideal.

Eastern Electrics Bank Holiday takes place on August 31st 2009, with Anja Schneider, Damian Lazarus, Glimpse and Geddes playing the Mulletover room. Tickets available from Resident Advisor.

murmur presents… No Fit State
Saturday 10th October
Wolf + Lamb [NYC]
Geddes
Mic Newman 
 
10pm – 6am ~ £10 advance from
www.residentadvisor.net / more on the door
Bar A Bar, 135 Stoke Newington Road, London, N16 8BT 
For more info contact: info@murmurrecords.com /
www.murmurrecords.com

Holly Jade

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08.02.10 Australian Recordings Post First Gain Since 2003...
Perhaps this is just a numbers game, but Australian record sales actually managed to improve in 2009.  According to figures shared by the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA), wholesale recording revenues gained 4.8 percent last year.  That represents the first improvement since 2003, and offers a glimmer of hope for another troubled market.

But was 2008 a bottom?  Both a-la-carte and digital album sales remain high-growth, and digital as a category gained 46 percent to $79.2 million Australian ($68.4 million US) last year.   More hopeful projections - for Australia and other countries - call for digital to eventually reverse broader declines.  Of course, the majors would like nothing better, though a healthy bit of caution is being applied.

And, like other countries, the Australian recording business is stumping for ISP-level monitoring and enforcement.  "We remain hopeful that the ISPs will work with us to address this pressing problem and help the growth of the legitimate market, something that will, of course, also be to their benefit," said ARIA chairman and president Ed St. John.
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The recent telecast scored an audience of 26.6 million, up 35 percent from 2009.  In 2006, that total was 15.1 million, an audience eclipsed by American Idol.

A number of factors probably contributed to the recent upswing, including a collection of younger winners.  But the Recording Academy also triggered a number of online initiatives to coincide with the showcase.  That includes everything from an iPhone app to a Twitter account to a YouTube channel, a serious shift that makes year-to-year comparisons more difficult.

Indeed, many of these categories hardly existed in previous years.  The online stats for 2010, according to the Recording Academy:

*125,760 Facebook fans.

*48,776 Twitter followers, and a top-trending topic for more than four days.

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Just like the iPhone, users can flip the iPad up, down, or sideways, and buyers will be sure to impress their friends.  Indeed, this thing looks like a giant iPhone in some ways, and buttons are sparse. Underneath, the iPad employs the iPhone OS, and that means that apps translate.

Beyond email, photos, ebooks, Google maps, YouTube, an address book, a calendar, and apps, Jobs also displayed music-related functionality.  That essentially boils down to iTunes, and the audio and video content that comes with it.

The presence of the complete iTunes application opens more possibilities for iTunes LP, a more comprehensive, album-like format.  Whether that stirs a broader album renaissance remains unclear, though the first chapters are just being written on the next-gen bundle.

What else?  The iPad also has built-in WiFi, a 3G mobile option, and ten hours of battery life.  And the price?  At 'just' $499 to start, Apple could shift a lot of units, and Wall Street is expecting sales of between 4 and 5 million in the first year alone.  Other models are more expensive, depending on storage and 3G capabilities.  The highest-storage, 3G-capable model is $829.
26.01.10 Spotify Who? Vodafone Boasts 450,000 Mobile Music Subscribers...
Spotify has 250,000 premium subscribers, potentially the start of a meaningful monetization.  But Vodafone is now boasting 450,000 subscribers at Midem, a number that is growing fast.  The tally covers a few different offerings across a number of European countries, including one that delivers a 10-pack of MP3s for €5 per month.  Another offers unlimited access to the broader Vodafone collection, though access is understandably more limited.

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The growth arc looks positive.  In December of last year, Vodafone added an additional 100,000 subs, and smartphone growth could boost things further.  "We expect to see continued growth in our music service subscriptions driven by the increase in smartphone use, with their worry-free data tariffs and great value add-ons such as music bundles," explained Lee Epting, Director of Content at Vodafone Internet Services.
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Great idea, though the takeaways were mixed.  Kodak CMO Jeffrey Hayzlett offered plenty of turnaround gusto and cowboy irreverence, though the reality is that Kodak is seriously struggling in a post-film world.  Getty Images CEO Jonathan Klein outlined success strategies in the easily-pirated images environment, and digital guru Gerd Leonhard offered lucrative examples from virtual worlds and book publishing.

Other examples flowed.  YouTube executive Patrick Walker announced that more than one billion videos - per week - are now being monetized by the video giant.  On the music side, Daniel Ek of Spotify announced a paid subscriber total of 250,000, though American label executives remain unconvinced.  Elsewhere, Shazam pointed to 300,000 paid downloads per day, according to a Music Ally report.

But the broader question is whether a serious and substantial recording and music industry can exist in the 2000s.  One perspective is that attempts to monetize the recording - at least in the wild B2C context - are mostly impossible.  The reason is that music and media assets are now abundant and infinitely replicated, a complete shift from the relatively high scarcity of the 90s.  Indeed, over the past ten years, most attempts to create scarcity in the digital context have faltered.

That is a difficult interpretation for anyone whose fate is tied to the recording.  But this business is bigger than the recording, and attendees talked of more controlled channels like B2B licensing, merchandising, touring, publishing, and gaming.  Dialing back decades, Midem was built as a music licensing exchange, and the trade floor remains a musical UN today.  But even that component is facing disruption, thanks to a global licensing marketplace that is increasingly moving online.

In the meantime, this is an industry still searching for solutions, breakthroughs and viable business models.  Right now, Midem is the forum for that discussion, a traditionally huge, over-the-top event.  But this is an industry that may need to shrink before it can grow again, and Midem may need to shift accordingly.