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Garbage Picking

I go out for a walk evenings when the temperature has dropped, and in this part of Vegas trash day is Friday. I occassionaly find goodies left out as trash to use in my found art creations. But last Thursday night I came across a different kind of find, somebody had tossed a Yamaha Clavinova. a CVP-50 to be exact. So I got my handtruck and proceeded to haul it home. Damn, it weights a ton. I guess Yamaha finally learned how to cut the weight in later models, but I’m guessing its 125-150 pounds. My back still hurts from lifting and hauling it around.

Then I dug up a copy of the manual on the internet to see what was state-of-the-art Clavinova in 1989. Turns out this model is roughly as powerful as Yamaha’s cheapo models now, with one gent basically telling people to spend no more than $200 for one. It does have features that newer models don’t have, like a 30 watt per channel sound system. But basically its a 16 voice polyphony, with a selection of 22 voices and a drum section “synthesizer”.

It also has a rhythm section with 31 selections and a variation button. On top of these 31 selections of popular rhythms, you can also record a maximum of 10 rhythms of your own choosing. I think you store these 10 rhythms to the floppy drive (remember, this is 1989 tech), though it may store them in memory because there’s a warning if you store stuff in the Clavinova, turn it on every couple of days as that’s how long the memory persists without power.

Now for the negatives. Every E key makes no sound, as well as all the A# keys. And one of the black keys sticks, so if I want a fully functioning instrument, it apparently means a teardown.

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More on Music

More on Music; been fooling around with the Nervous Keys preset on my Arturia Microfreak lately. I kinda like the sounds it makes and I’m trying to find a drone sound to use with it. The gear that I’m experimenting with includes the Moog Mother-32 and the Moog Mavis. We’ll see how things go.

The new music that I’m working on I’m planning to upload to platforms I haven’t used before, Mirlo and bandwagon.fm. They’re platforms built to enable artists to keep more of the money generated from customer purchases. And as an extra benefit, no AI training from your music. The plan is to emulate SoundCloud and Bandcamp.

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Poll

Well since WordPress doesn’t have a poll feature, enter your responses in the comments.

Do I:

1) Post too much

2) Post not enough

3) Your posting schedule is just right

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Electronica #1

My latest album, Electronica , has been out almost a month and it’s getting a good reception. It’s a mixture of electronic music and ambient. The album took quite a while to mix, as I have been trying to use different platforms to do my music making. The album was mixed and mastered on iOS, using an iPhone and iPad. It was an interesting learning curve. Check out the new album at https://linktr.ee/jaypeach53

And check out my Patreon page at https://www.patreon.com/jaypeach?utm_campaign=creatorshare_creator

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Google Site Kit

Well, Google Site Kit strikes out again. I haven’t done anything to my settings, but now a whole bunch of data is now not available. Site Kit is a Google product which feeds off of Google Analytics to give you an idea about how users interact with your web site. But using Site Kit is a pain which has become even more of a pain. Ugh.

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Getting Stuck

If I feel I’m getting stuck in producing my art, I fall back on two sources to get unstuck. The first is the book The War of Art. The second is the app Oblique Strategies.

The War of Art is a relatively short book which outlines the author’s experiences in writer’s block, but I feel it also reflects the experiences of any creative person.

The second resource I use is the app on my phone called Oblique Strategies. It displays various things to mull over if the creative juices aren’t flowing. Here’s an example:

I find the items displayed sometimes fit the moment and sometimes they don’t. If they don’t just shake the phone to get another suggestion. I especially like this one for my art and music. New and different, not the same old formula, that suits me just fine.

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Bailing on Spotify

Glad to see that there’s a growing number of artists that are bailing on Spotify. Here’s a article by one such artist: https://kaukolampi.space/spotify-2017-2025.

For me, the last straw was Spotify’s further foray into AI ‘artists’. And their reworking of the TOS to further shaft artists. Their ‘new’ product is like Discovery, basically making Spotify a pay to play platform. It might not be so bad if they weren’t the dominant streaming platform, with about 30% of the market, but Ek, like all techbros, isn’t satisfied with his dominant position. The only good news is that the other 70% of the industry isn’t as rapacious, at least yet.

I virtually stopped all promotion of my music on Spotify over a year ago, when they decided that 1,000 streams was the threashold that your music had to garner in a year before Spotify begain to pay artists. And Spotify’s payout is 1/3 less than the next worse platform, Apple Music. These are the numbers I get from my distributor, DistroKid.

And the payout that Spotify does deign to give has dropped precipitantly, falling from $.0043 in 2020 to the last numbers I got in 2024 of $.0027. These numbers include both paid and non-paid subscribers. And for non-paid subscribers, the four to five ads you have to put up with between songs garners what I’m guessing is making Spotify between $0.075 and $0.105 per song. This guess is figuring that Spotify charges about the same CPM as other social media companies charge.

1,000 streams doesn’t seem like a large number, but non-mainstream music isn’t promoted at all on Spotify, and Spotify’s threat to delist you if you use third-party promotion services, some of which use the same bots that big artists use to inflate their streaming numbers, is disengenuous to say the least. The 1,000 stream threashold is difficult to meet for non-major electronic musicians like myself. I know, some trolls will say you should create music that the great unwashed wants to listen to, but most artists are musicians first, businessmen second. And I create music that suits me, not some schmuck bean counter.

And the alternative, using Spotify’s promotion services, is obscenely uncompetitive. Promotion on Spotify, with no guarantee of payback, starts at $100 per promotion. At ridiculous amount to spend, considering that you would need to get almost 44,000 streams to break even. I’ve only had a dozen or so of the almost 100 releases reach or exceed that number. And the $100 spend doesn’t even guarantee you plays.

By the way, this article has undergone a number of revisions. You might like to check back to see if I’ve added more content or subscribe to my WordPress blog, if you like my content.