Found this art via this post on the Dungeonlust Instagram feed, but it turns out it’s just half of the original artwork (which you see at the top of this post).

More here.
Writer, musician, wizardly guide to platform independence
Found this art via this post on the Dungeonlust Instagram feed, but it turns out it’s just half of the original artwork (which you see at the top of this post).

More here.
I’ve gotten super into watching DJ sets over the past few years. Yes, I still love my metal, but man… there is just so much music out there to explore. How many 1000s of songs have I still not heard? How exciting!
Love this nugget I found about these DJ sets:
“All of the gear you see in this and the upcoming episodes, from turntables to pre-amps & speakers – new and used, are available in @audiogold store.”
Just look at this amazing shop:

You can hear more from GUiNNY here on Mixcloud:
This looks absolutely amazing:
Producers show up to the venue, a folder of samples culled from old jazz and soul records to use as source material is passed around and each producer gets to work transforming the sample into a brand new piece of music. From there, each producer will play their new track, receiving encouragement and feedback from their peers onsite and around the world as the sessions are broadcast via zoom each month.
Yes, online communities have their place – the Discords and email lists, but in-person is where it’s at, even if I’m still hesitant to get out there (I’ve been to three shows since 2019).
The magic is isn’t just in people, but finding the right other people.
Read more of this article about Philadelphia’s Flip A Beat Club here.
Throw it a prompt, get a result, and tweak it. Edit it. Ask it to reword a sentence, or a concept. Have it summarize the last two lines, reword the intro.
Since you’re leading the writer room, you now hack it together with tape and glue.
You’re not just copy and pasting the results into an email to your client, or a pitch to your boss – you’re using your years of experience and wisdom to pull out the best parts, get your mind moving, and hopefully get to a few “light bulb” moments during the whole process.
I’ve been writing online since 2001, and chatGPT is a great automated computerized writing partner, and I’ve used it for my newsletters, small bits of client work, and some emails here and there.
For me, my biggest obstacle in starting any written project is the EMPTY PAGE.
So even if you just use chatGPT to start a written project, it can be huge.
– Write five social media captions about my new music video
– Write how this new video “hit me in the face like a ton of bricks”
– List some keywords I can use on YouTube for my project
– What big technology thing happened in 2007 (see attached image)?
Now, for anything factual (like big technological things in 2007), make sure you fact check! It’s not perfect, BUT, it’s a starting point.
Just like when things get thrown out in a writer room, you’re not going to put everything on paper and publish it the next day.
So yeah… try it out, at least to just get past the “staring at a blank page” problem. Edit. Rework things. Have fun!
The local university has a radio station, and I finally looked it up and of course found HEAVIER in their Mixcloud archive.
Letting a radio show just play can be hard, as DSPs and social media has made me so impatient. But I let it play, and to my pure delight Kublai Khan TX came on, which is one of my client’s bands, and a band I saw a bit ago on tour.
Over the past few years I’ve danced with the magic of the radio, mixes, and DJ sets, watching chemists mix together tracks like potions. I’ve watched hours of ambient drone made in real time using equipment I’ve never heard of.
All this stuff is harder to find, harder to “consume” while on a bus or whatever. But I grew up in a home with a music room.
There was a stereo, shelves of records, and that’s where you listened to music. I have memories of mom dancing to the Rolling Stones, Abba, Kris Kristofferson, and Dire Straits.
Some nights I just never want to go to bed. Hopping from one YouTube video to the next, looking up something on Wikipedia, then digging for a track on Bandcamp. On Spotify. Whatever.
A whole world of music is out there, still waiting to be discovered, and it’s so fun to just dig through so much of when you discover it from other people.
I keep advertising in the newspaper yet I’m just not getting customers!
I keep buying banner ads but not getting sales!
I keep paying to BOOST my social media posts but nothing happens.
I keep spending time on social media platforms but not getting any reach!
When do we get the fucking clue? Take the hint.
Social media did not exist to send you free traffic in 2015, and it sure as fuck ain’t gonna make it any easier in 2023 – that’s EIGHT YEARS of beating our heads against the collective desk.
You saying you didn’t see this coming? Please.
Facebook pivoting to video in 2015 fucked everyone. Then oops, “Facebook Overestimated Key Video Metric for Two Years.”
So you think that same company that runs Instagram has your best interest in mind?
Think Elon Musk gives a flying fuck about your upcoming tour or EP release?
Bands and businesses flourished before social media, and they’ll survive without them.
This from Codie Sanchez:
Each day the average person gets:
• 41 texts
• 100 emails
• 5 calls
If responding to each takes an average of 3 minutes…
That’s 7 hours a day.
Yeah yeah yeah, give or take the three minutes number, but still – each one of those things is a distraction from what you’re doing.
So while it might not take 3 minutes to answer one text, I bet having that phone in your hand leads to checking out Instagram, or scrolling through Google News for 10 minutes.
We’re all too available, too often, and much time is given to being distracted instead of doing work.
Partly why I’m so glad I’m a freelancer and have nearly zero meetings every week.
I got into heavy music because a good friend hauled my ass to a sketchy venue in NJ back in 1994 or so. Into Another, Life of Agony, Biohazard.
If our parents knew where we were at, they’d be furious. That was an experience. A life changing event when I was just 17 years old or so.
And 30 years later I just went to a show with that same friend.
So yes, we’re making videos and writing newsletters and putting out vinyl and tapes, and that’s all well and good.
But there’s only so far that online marketing can take you.
Those social media posts are stacked up against long drives, truck stops, and scary venues as a teenager.
It’s not about the product, it’s the experience.
Saw this on Farrah Storr’s newsletter, an interview with Emma Gannon:
What’s one thing you wished you’d never done?
A Ted Talk. I was nervous for three months in the lead up to it and then came crashing down afterwards post-adrenaline. I’ve come to terms with the fact I don’t enjoy public speaking in that way.
What I love about this is the permission to just not do something.
Hustle / freelance / self employment cutlure would have us do everything as a means to promote and market ourselves.
But using the example above, at what cost?
Three months of being nervous? Being distracted with the worry of the upcoming event? Then the crash afterwards, once it’s all over?
No thanks.
Don’t want to start a TikTok? DON’T.
Don’t want to post on Instagram anymore? DON’T.
Don’t want to start an email list? DON’T.
Do what works for you.

Love love love this quote:
“What you need is a strategy to grow your fanbase. And as you’re growing your fanbase, you keep making music and improving your craft.”
If you write shit songs and get on stage and notice that no one is interested in what you’re playing, you’re going to make adjustments.
You work on your craft, develop your skills, and learn how to put on a show. This can take years, but that’s how it’s done.
This goes for writers, photographers, artists, whatever!
Goals are great, but what’s the plan?