Category Archives: Uncategorized

US House Judiciary Subcommittee Hearing on Section 512 of Title 17

The US House’s Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, and the Internet convened on Thursday 03.13.14 to discuss Section 512 of Title 17 of the Copyright Code. The hearing dealt with piracy, takedown notices, and online copyright infringement.

I watched the entire hearing with interest and I recommend that you do the same, especially if you’re a musician or any other “content creator.” While many of the lawmakers offered uninformed comments or questions, there were some insightful kernels, and the panel – lawyers, law professors, legal counsel for Google and Automattic Inc. (i.e., WordPress), and composer/bandleader Maria Schneider – was particularly noteworthy.

WATCH THE FULL HEARING HERE

This is a topic that I’m passionate about, and paying for what you like is one of this blog’s long-running tropes. If I have the time, I’d like to provide a more longform commentary on the hearing, but a few brief thoughts in the meantime:
• I intentionally don’t get politically partisan on this blog – that’s not this site’s purpose, nor do I want it to be. Having said that, I find it particularly illuminating that a majority of the lawmakers implicitly siding with big business and piracy seemingly going against the artists and content creators are the same folks trumpeting entrepreneurship to anyone with eyes and ears. Freedom? Curious.
• Thank you Rep. Ted Poe (R-TX), a former judge, for calling freeloaders what they are: THIEVES. He also acutely defined the conundrum: In typical theft/crime, we expect the state (i.e. police) to intervene. With piracy and intellectual property, we expect the private sector to settle it amongst themselves.
• Google’s lawyer, Katherine Oyama, seemed at times to be evasive, happily taking questions about search term autocomplete and answering with information about manually entered searches.
Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI), Rep. Judy Chu (D-CA), Rep. Tom Marino (R-PA), Rep. Ted Deutch (D-FL), Rep. Cedric Richmond (D-LA), Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA), and the aforementioned Rep. Ted Poe (R-TX) stood out to be as being the most genuinely interested and/or informed of this topic.
Rep. Blake Farenthold (R-TX). Wow; I didn’t know he was on this panel. I’ve seen this dunce in various interviews before. His questions are perfectly representative soundbites. People voted for him. Hm…
Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA) did his usual grandstanding, on this occasion in support of thievery. Curious, given the allegations of car theft in his past…
• I think Ms. Schneider did well in representing “content creators.” Well done on the visual aids to discuss the steps and verbiage surrounding YouTube uploading and takedowns.
• It’s odd that we can continue to reference YouTube, Google, Facebook, etc., as having been started by the proverbial “two guys in a garage.” What about four guys/gals in a garage (i.e., a band)? Why aren’t musicians being represented in the same entrepreneurial light? Are these not small business (and occasional big businesses) also?
• Topic aside, I found it almost disturbing at how quick each lawmaker was to compliment and massage Google as a whole. Even many of their criticisms were sandwiched with praise.  (And no, this isn’t an Apple vs. Google statement.)

WATCH THE FULL HEARING HERE

LeRoi Moore: 5 Years On

LeRoi Moore, Dave Matthews Band saxophonist and founding member, died five years ago today. He succumbed to complications from an ATV accident a few weeks shy of his 47th birthday. I’m sure there’ll be various remembrances throughout the DMB-centric corner of the internet, but I’d like to chip in my $0.02. It seems cliché but, although I never met the man, he and his music are with me each day.

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Regular reader of this blog know my deep love of DMB’s music. (See below.) Not only does he play a large role in a favorite band, but I count him among one of my favorite saxophonists. I always include his name if someone asks who my biggest saxophonic influences are. Roi can’t be written off just as “the sax player” a la Dick Parry. It’d be presumptuous to say that Roi single-handedly changed how a saxophone was perceived in rock and pop music, but it’s notable that he served as the band’s co-lead soloist (along with violinist Boyd Tinsley). Sure, he was no Trane or Liebman, but he didn’t set out to be, at least not with DMB. (And, conversely, I don’t see either of them playing in Roi’s style the way he did.) For me, his playing is a near perfect blend of jazz-influenced, soulful rock and pop. It’s not to be compared to strictly jazz saxophonists because it’s not jazz. It’s a different aesthetic. And although he was a working jazz musician before DMB, he grew into something much more. In fact, looking back, while I’ve often gone through spells in which I aspired to be the next young jazz lion, the truth is that my aim has often been more in Roi’s direction – to be a high quality, stylistically flexible musician.

Though I knew of the band beforehand, it all really began with my purchasing Crash soon after its April 1996 release. As a young adolescent playing the saxophone, I was floored to hear a pop/rock band featuring the saxophone so prominently, and not just in the radio singles. At the time I was only tangentially interested in jazz, and most saxophonic pop references were of the “guest feature” variety, generally in a honky R&B style: Pink Floyd’s various sax cameos, 50s and 60s rock, etc. (I touch upon this continuing trend here.) Without this becoming a Crash-centric post, that album proved to be a real turning point for me. Roi’s solo on the studio recording of #41 is perhaps the first instrumental solo I committed to memory. And not because I made a conscious effort to do so; rather, I just listened to it all of the time. (Imagine my delight when I attended my first DMB concert and the band opened with “#41.”)

I remember the shock of learning the news the night he died. I was with my girlfriend (now wife) and she put up with my impromptu memorial service which included moping on my couch, teary-eyed, watching the Listener Supported DVD with a picture of Roi on my laptop screen. We fans knew that he’d been in critical condition, as he’d not been on the tour since late June (with Jeff Coffin – another of my favorite saxophonists, completely separate from his DMB association – filling in, later to be his permanent replacement). I’d spent every summer – and occasional winters – seeing him and his bandmates in concert since 2000, and I’ve missed him at every show since that night. Sure, I still have my hundreds of hours of recordings, but it’s just not the same. The band has taken a slightly different direction with Coffin now playing full time. It’s not worse or better, just different. I absolutely love what they’re doing now, but I miss Roi.

I made my annual pilgrimage to the band’s three-night stint at The Gorge Ampitheatre ten days after his death and it was an emotional weekend. After canceling a couple of concerts for the funeral, the summer tour resumed as normal that weekend in Washington. Watching the band, particularly Carter, play through “Bartender,” the weekend’s opener, in tears was moving. (There were many tears throughout that weekend.) On that first night, the crowd launched into an impromptu tribute of cheers and glow sticks for Roi between songs partway through the set. The crew flashed a picture of Roi on the screens and Dave told the band and crew to hold off until the crowd had finished. It was a memorable six minutes before the band launched into a special “#41.” I’ll never forget it. For those that may have been there, and other fans who weren’t, here it is in two parts:

And the tribute video shown before the encore each night brought a tear every time:

I still listen to Roi all the time, but he’s been getting some extra attention over the last week as the five year mark approached. It really does seem like just the other day I was enjoying his playing on the first part of the 2008 tour in Chicago, Detroit, and Buffalo. But at least I can still enjoy the wealth of great music he left behind. And to cap off this humble tribute, here is perhaps my single favorite solo of his from an official release: the flute and saxophone solos from “#41” on 1999’s Listener Supported:

For previous DMB-centric posts, see here, here, here, here, here, and here.

SOTB & Thanks

I’d like to thank all readers, regular and occasional, for continuing to visit this site and keep it alive. After various stops and starts a few years ago, I rebooted it and turned it into a regular “thing” after moving to Houston in Fall 2010, albeit quietly and more for myself than anything. However, much to my surprise, traffic beyond myself, “paid staffers, and blood relatives” picked up, bringing it to the attention of PRISM Quartet (for this), Dave Liebman (for this), and recently Etymotic Research, Inc. (for this) among others. Those initial spikes inspired me to make more of an effort, and readership has since steadily grown. Again, thank you so much.

And now for a brief State of the Blog:

I hope it is by now clear that this blog is not intended to advertise my playing schedule, etc. While I advertise both my gigs and the blog on Twitter and Facebook (and occasionally my main music site), this site is more about ideas and information than gigs and marketing. That was the purpose from the start, and the reason I’ve kept this and separate from the “main site.” (Even though, oddly enough, this has become far more popular than the other. Ha!) In a rare moment of self-promotion, allow me to remind you that if you’re curious about Mike the musician, all relevant information – news, gigs, lore – is found at michaelteager.com. And if RSS is your thing, make sure you’ve subscribed to this site. 🙂

The weekly video series has given me both deadlines and diverse topics, which has helped. Now that the hellishly-busy-but-nonetheless-amazing year of 2011 is behind me, I can spend more time on content. I have neither the time nor the resources to be The Dish, one of my favorite blogs, but I aim to continue frequently posting. I’ve made a conscious effort to set aside time for the site, as I tend to think of each post – especially non-MTH-Vs as more of an article than a tweet or Tumblr entry. (I hope to be more than just a bibliography.) And speaking of content, this site has been and will continue to be focused solely on music (directly or indirectly). While I have many strong opinions and certitudes on a variety of topics, I don’t want to muddy the waters here by spreading topics too thin.”Music” is a wide enough net.

Yadda, yadda, yadda.

Enough “official business.” Thank you for supporting the site. Truly.

Update: In Transit

I didn’t originally intend to take the blog on hiatus these last couple weeks, but work and travel got the best of me.  I had to trek to Michigan State University for meetings and recruiting for next summer’s study abroad course.  Also, with Thanksgiving approaching, I’ve also been trying to squeeze many things in while working on the road.  At any rate, I have number of new albums I’d love to review soon, as well as quite a few ideas to extrapolate.  Everything should be “back to normal” after getting back to TX at the end of the week.

Reboot. 2.0? 3.0?

Mid-May turned into mid-September (see my previous post), but, alas, this site is finally being updated! A lot has happened in the interim, with much having to do with my recent move from Michigan to Texas. However I’ve settled into some semblance of a routine and have been able to somewhat prioritize this site.

Without a premature guarantee of frequency, I intend to post both musical “reviews” as well as the standard rambling fare. I’ve had quite a bit of “time off” the last couple months, and it’s afforded me a great deal of reflection, which I hope to somehow gradually define here.