Thanks for the kind words. And Motus I saw you both times and thank you (even for being a drummer - if you want to sit in on one of mine...)
orthodox wrote: ↑05 Jan 2020
Benedict wrote: ↑05 Jan 2020
What if: we said yes to opportunities provided when someone said here, let me help?
I don't know how it's done in music, I'm rather a developer, but wouldn't it create a problem of joint authorship? For example, I run a sole business entity and intend to keep it that way. I have already declined a couple of offers of assistance on this forum because of that, not because they questioned my excellence. I know that I suck at some things, but I still prefer to rely on my own abilities when it comes to business.
Good Q
I have met versions of this a few times and been confused. Thanks for putting it clearer. There is sadly a lot of confusion about copyright esp right now with it finally being enacted on places like YouTube (if not a tiny bit heavy-handed sometimes). A lot of people are saying, and therefore encouraging thinking, really horribly messed up things about copyright what it is and what it means in action. A quick overview (please again let's not have this thread turn into pedantics about copyright - start your own threads please the Forum is limitless).
1. Copyright is essentially automatic. The moment you take an idea and put it into action in a new & unique way or form it is your Intellectual Property (I.P.). You have the right over how that idea or work is used. If many people work on a piece it is generally divided either automatically based on who provided the most important or pivotal parts or in a pre-defined agreement. Sting only provided a stray line to Dire Straits "Money For Nothing" but that "I want my MTV" line was pivotal. If you wrote the melody then you get more than the person who added a chord here & there. However, to make it easy, most projects start with an agreement on who is what. With Adrian & I (Vid above) he mostly wrote the core ideas and I fleshed them out. We decided that was easy: 50-50 split. We both worked hard in our own skillsets (his "time" in notes was less than mine + I Mixed, he made the Videos and got us on a Radio Show).
2. If someone stiffs you - if you start with a positive relationship then it is rare, you will smell the red flags - then move on. If they make nothing off stealing from you then you have lost nothing (but some anger and I get you on that as is it scuzzy). Vanilla Ice couldn't grow his career more because he had not enough talent. If you have the talent to do something worth stealing then you can do it again, they cannot. If they make real money then you can probably prove that you were at least a contributor to that success and they have something worth suing over - or at least making a YouTube video about to get some eyes on what you are doing now. In an attention economy that is a win right there that you probably wouldn't have had otherwise.
Don't let ownership fears be an excuse not to do it.
It is very tempting to have that
I must do it alone thing. We seem to encourage it even. "I" this and "I" that. But as Neil Young says above he is only a small part of his success. Without all the other people adding their bits of amazing it would be Neil who? Don't be a Silo of one. Be part of something larger. Feels too New Age? Then look at the numbers: How many acts are there out there doing a good business who do it 110% themselves, no one else to lick the stamps or let the fans through the doors at 7:30PM? I bet you will come up with about 0 people.
Even I who have largely worked alone (not entirely by choice) rely on Bandcamp, YouTube, Wordpress... even Reason Talk, Microsoft & ReasonStudios to do my thing. We are not alone ever - even if we never publish anything.
- - -
Yes, I am a character. I do speak my mind. As an Aspie (Autistic person) it very hard not to so. I deliberately don't hide that. If you haven't realized: I respect people who do great things (even if I don't like em personally). Pink I can't listen to but she is a hard worker. EDM I rag on not because I am an EDM hater but because I hate the laziness of most who do it badly without caring to try to do something great - see the advert for the Deadmau5 Masterclass

. Many of you are characters too. Some try to minimize it but the ones I like the most are those who don't. Some hide under meanness. I feel for those people's pain but don't see why it should be encouraged as this not a person being authentic rather simply manipulative.
Oh and let me go on record: I LOATHE BEING CALLED "DUDE". I didn't mind back in the "Don't Call Me Dude" days because the only people who really did it were Hard Core guys who looked scary but were generally really respectful of anyone who did things. These days "Dude" seems to be the way a certain type of person uses of pretending to be nice to someone whilst pulling down their pants and dropping a big steamer on their face - that putting in the word "dude" makes them unassailable in some way. N.O. It is passive-aggressive and just plain unmannered and ungentlemanly. No one should have to tolerate that. No one should tolerate seeing it done to another when it is so easy to say
"Woah, hold up there guy, this is not the way to go about things...".
Not expecting a Thank You is a little like being pleased when someone doesn't shoot you for your parking spot down at the shops. Sure, it manages a problem but it doesn't solve it. Matter of fact it makes it worse. When people don't get pulled up for their poor manners they do it again, and again. Only next time they go a little further. people who go unthanked, just stop trying to make the world a better place. Then they start to behave badly themselves as that is what gets rewarded.
https://benedictroffmarsh.com/2019/05/0 ... mmunities/
I would love people to go from this conversation and have conversations of their own about this very mindset of Yes over No. Conversations of working Together rather than in a Silo. Conversations of guiding people who have lost their manners back to the path that Builds over Destroys.
