24 04 22

outside



2024/02/12

Music from the Faircamps

Guest: Simon Repp (Faircamp)



02/01/2024

woods and strings

woods and strings



2024/01/25

this morning. grab my guitar. play a piece called "souffle" from an upcoming album. enjoy the moment. peace.



2024/01/16

I've recorded a lot. No less than 30 albums in a 30-year career. I've played too little. Of course, there have been the bands with small successes, the memorable opening acts, the insignificant venues transformed into auditory paradises in the interludes of an evening, the derisory pay slips. The life of a little artist eternally in the making, unable to let go of his moorings in the ocean of music because he's so busy exploring all kinds of paths in all directions (love, travel, children, writing, cinema). I'm one of those people whose passions explode in all directions. An attitude not much appreciated by my contemporaries, who are obsessed with success, domination and excessive specialization, and for whom not doing something "thoroughly" is tantamount to wasting their time. Yet music has always been the common thread that binds everything together and gives coherence to research on all fronts. And recording, sometimes obsessively, is a method of fixing time and preventing it from eating away at everything too quickly. But a testimony, however accurate and honest, is never worth the experience.

Let's take the example of this one-year trip to the South American continent. Everything has been said, written and filmed about this corner of the world since man first spoke, wrote and filmed. We could spend a lifetime poring over these archives. Nothing can replace the biting cold of an evening bivouac on the altiplano, the taste of burnt corn or the vertigo felt on these roads suspended in the void. It's the same with music. Recording, mixing, producing, distributing, collecting, listening to again and again over the years are all guarantees of an activity that will never produce the pleasure and realism of an activity practised for its own sake.

Is it the effect of age, of weariness, of this world heading for disaster (in the sense of losing the star that illuminates it), I can't easily identify the causes that now lead me to play (great verb) music for myself and those with ears passing nearby. But if time now passes between two deliveries of "works compiled according to an agreed format", we must resolve to consider it as excellent news in the digital noise that surrounds us. So I'm going to do a lot of playing and too little recording in 2024.



2023/11/10

With the help of the excellent Faircamp, I've set up an online microlabel as an alternative way to show and sell my music. You can stream the whole catalogue for free and download high quality files for a fair price. It's still in beta and there are albums missing. It's a work in progress and I hope to have it ready in a few weeks.



2023/09/23

stats

A few years ago, I gave my distributor permission to distribute the 7 Tempus Fugit albums on streaming platforms. Last month he informed me that one of my tracks had been played 5,485,633 times on facebook and that my royalties for these broadcasts amounted to 56.51€. Two things amaze me about this information: that one of my tracks was streamed by over 5 million unique listeners in one month, and that Facebook only owes me €56.51 for these streams.

The track lasts 3min53s, and considering that it has to be listened to more than 80% to be counted (and therefore royalties paid), we're talking about more than 32 years of continuous music!

I remember a time, before streaming, when a radio broadcast of a song brought in €160 and the mechanical reproduction rights were €5 per CD...

Need we remind facebook that the creation of music, like all intellectual activities is time-consuming and requires a certain amount of material resources? It's worrying to see that the streaming platforms so popular with the younger generation barely pay the artists behind their huge profits.

There's still one place on the internet where you can listen to and buy music with the guarantee that the musicians who created it are paid a fair wage: bandcamp. So take a look at what I'm proposing on this excellent platform and stop using the streaming platforms that are massacring creation all over the world.



02/07/23

New presence on the web.




objet — updated 04/22/24

this site does not track you