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A test
by bennash - 05/26/26 07:18 AM
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Rob
by Rob B. - 05/25/26 11:14 PM
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Joined: May 2008
Posts: 4,195 Likes: 1
Top 100 Poster
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Top 100 Poster
Joined: May 2008
Posts: 4,195 Likes: 1 |
I used to belong to Taxi and have nothing bad to say about them. I appreciated the feedback and learned a lot.
Tom
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Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 5,608
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Top 50 Poster
Joined: Jun 2006
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Well, I missed this one the first time around JUST to clear up that Linda reference, that's regarding Polly saying I *look like* Katy Perry.... but I believe the resemblance stops there I can't imagine everything TAXI gets is terrific. It's called a "slush pile" for a reason, folks. I've worked as a freelance editor, and I can tell you from experience that my crankiest clients also happened to be the least talented, least capable of change or improvement, MOST sure they had the next hit novel in the bag, and couldn't have been MORE wrong. I believe Brian about the death threats. It's sad. But IMHO those writers/artists (of any variety) who are open to change, improvement, editing, listening to suggestion and implementing them --IE their ego is not in their own way-- are those more likely to succeed than those who just think they're the bee's knees from the get-go and that the world should be buying their art. And if the world doesn't, it's the world, not they, who are stupid. Ugh.
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Joined: Feb 2001
Posts: 2,448
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Top 200 Poster
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Below is the text from an article where she mentions Taxi Katy Perry on the July 2009 cover of Seventeen magazine.
On her worst job she ever had: “I worked at this place called Taxi, Taxi Music, where I would sit with headphones and a computer, and I would listen to music that people would send in from all around the country so they could get a critique on it and how to make it in the music industry. So you have to imagine how depressed I was after not making it in LA after five years, knowing everyone in the music industry couldn’t get a break, and sitting in this cubicle, listening to the worst music I’ve ever heard. I would tell these people ‘Well you have to change these chords’ or ‘This is how you contact a record label.’ And I was just like, I cannot give these people hope. I had no hope [myself.]”
Ande Rasmus sen Ande R a s m u s s e n@aol.com Ande R a s m u s s e n.com SongRamp.com/ande MySpace.com/anders
Texas Grammy Gov 06-08 grammy.com/Texas
Editor Of "Inspirations for Songwriters" SongWriterBlog.com Explore the message archive
To receive IFS SEND an EMPTY email to: difs-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
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Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 10,943 Likes: 3
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Posts: 10,943 Likes: 3 |
When you read the quote in that context (maybe not complete, but OK), you can see why parts of that job pained her. Kevin here's the text from an article Katy Perry on the July 2009 cover of Seventeen magazine.
On her worst job she ever had: “I worked at this place called Taxi, Taxi Music, where I would sit with headphones and a computer, and I would listen to music that people would send in from all around the country so they could get a critique on it and how to make it in the music industry. So you have to imagine how depressed I was after not making it in LA after five years, knowing everyone in the music industry couldn’t get a break, and sitting in this cubicle, listening to the worst music I’ve ever heard. I would tell these people ‘Well you have to change these chords’ or ‘This is how you contact a record label.’ And I was just like, I cannot give these people hope. I had no hope [myself.]”
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Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 135
Serious Contributor
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Serious Contributor
Joined: Aug 2010
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I think most of us have found ourselves in places that drove us crazy.Now if we couple this with a love/obsession with something like music, double whammy. Now add to this the friends that tell us we are great and "Idol" or Nashville is your destiny. triple whammy. So we get on some sites that might be the breakthrough we hoped for and reality slaps us down. If you never had to deal with the real world, things might snap or get severely bent out of shape. Out of the 42k songs that Brian talked about there were 60% or about 25000+ people that believed they were in the top 10% and knew it was there time. I think we all have to be there for our music and the grand canyon of rejection sucks. So I see both sides and both are valid and both suck. Maybe tomorrow won't, another song another rejection, maybe not From the publishers POV, they must ask themselves why people do this., put themselves through this hell. Isn't there a better way to find what they want, obviously not. Later Wyndham
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Joined: Apr 2001
Posts: 20,000 Likes: 32
Top 10 Poster
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Top 10 Poster
Joined: Apr 2001
Posts: 20,000 Likes: 32 |
Actually our last awards had 42K full albums and over 600,000 songs. = )
Brian Austin Whitney Founder Just Plain Folks jpfolkspro@gmail.com Skype: Brian Austin Whitney Facebook: www.facebook.com/justplainfolks"Don't sit around and wait for success to come to you... it doesn't know the way." -Brian Austin Whitney "It's easier to be the bigger man when you actually are..." -Brian Austin Whitney "Sometimes all you have to do to inspire humans to greatness is to give them a reason and opportunity to do something great." -Brian Austin Whitney
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Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 691
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Serious Contributor
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I note that Ms. Perry will be on the next Victoria's Secret fashion show. Have to wonder if she'll be singing . . . Got to give credit to whoever does her marketing. Ott
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Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 5,427 Likes: 16
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Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 5,427 Likes: 16 |
I have stayed away from this thread mostly because I am really unfamiliar with Katy Perry's work and I have no real personal relationship with TAXI. I think they are fine for what they do and they are a sponsor of this site, so they are fine with me. Michael Laskow is a very good guy.
I am seeing something in what she said that I haven't seen commented on here and I just kind of wanted to mention it because it is something I see all the time.
If I am not mistaken, hasn't Katy Perry become a pretty big star? Isn't she a singer? And the fact that she didn't have hope but has gone on to achieve a lot, doesn't that say something. The fact that she heard a lot of mediocre or downright crappy stuff AND she rose above it in her own career to me says a lot. By doing that she was conditioned to know what was good and what wasn't. And apparently worked out.
This is what I try to talk about all the time. There are a LOT OF SONGS, A LOT OF ARTISTS OUT THERE! getting and keeping attention from the public is a VERY Hard thing. They are conditoined to turn things off very quickly. The more you hear this and emmerse yourself in it, the more you see it, the better your songs get. The more you step outside of yourself, work with others, the more you understand. The more avenues you are in, the more chances you get.
I didn't see any of this as a comment on Katy Perry or Taxi. I saw it as a statement that most songs and songwriters simply don't stand up to much scrutiny. They don't. Even in the hit writer's catalogues, very few songs really get much attention.
I have sat in the round with hundreds of hit writers and almost to a person the song that became their HUGE hit was NEVER the one they thought would be a hit. and they always play one that they LOVE and thought would be HUGE, but just didn't make it. That is the nature of this business.
So I would try to learn from this interview and apply it to my own work. WRITE THE BEST SONGS YOU CAN. WRITE WITH OTHER PEOPLE. WRITE WITH ARTISTS WHEN YOU CAN. GET ON THE GROUND FLOOR WITH ARTISTS, NOT WITH COMPANIES. WORK HARD TO GET THEM OUT THERE. WRITE MORE SONGS. REPEAT THE PROCESS. EVERYDAY.
MAB
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Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 94
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Serious Contributor
Joined: Aug 2004
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Great points, MAB.  As to the Taxi critiquers themselves - I remembered reading this a while back and I'm so glad Taxi still had it archived on their site: http://www.taxi.com/transmitter/0705/taxi-music-screeners.htmlFolks can bitch and moan that they are not getting value from their Taxi critiques - but Taxi has checks and balances in place to keep the critiquers in line as well. Now THAT is refreshing. Just sayin'. ~Bubbles
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Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 5,427 Likes: 16
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Top 50 Poster
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Bubbles,
One of the things I admire about TAXI is that it instills the discipline and knowledge to keep moving forward, writing songs, getting demos, getting "outside of yourself" educating yourself on markets, studying song styles, structure,etc. There are goals in each segment. Getting forwards, having songs pitched.It is all about building catalogue.
And with events like the "Road Rally" it gives people a chance to meet face to face, share stories, music and interact, becoming friends for life. That is the key to the music business.
I would say TAXI presents a pretty good vehicle for that.
MAB
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Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 94
Serious Contributor
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Serious Contributor
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 94 |
I would say TAXI presents a pretty good vehicle for that.
MAB
No pun intended. LOL 
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Joined: Feb 2001
Posts: 2,448
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Top 200 Poster
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Posts: 2,448 |
I get Katy's frustration. She was asked what her worst job was and had to answer something. When she worked there it was a time in her life when she was trying to get her career going. She thought she had talent, She believed in herself, she'd had some success as a christian singer but her pop career hadn't gotten going so she had to do something. I imagine most of what Taxi screeners hear is pretty awful. Just as MAB has talked about going to open mics around Nashville, he's written very rarely does he hear a great song, most of the time it's the same stuff over and over. There are so many talented people in Nashville, LA & New York who's careers never get off the ground. Unless the wanna be star, their spouse or their parents are wealthy they have to get a job. Below is the text from an article where she mentions Taxi Katy Perry on the July 2009 cover of Seventeen magazine.
On her worst job she ever had: “I worked at this place called Taxi, Taxi Music, where I would sit with headphones and a computer, and I would listen to music that people would send in from all around the country so they could get a critique on it and how to make it in the music industry. So you have to imagine how depressed I was after not making it in LA after five years, knowing everyone in the music industry couldn’t get a break, and sitting in this cubicle, listening to the worst music I’ve ever heard. I would tell these people ‘Well you have to change these chords’ or ‘This is how you contact a record label.’ And I was just like, I cannot give these people hope. I had no hope [myself.]”
Ande Rasmus sen Ande R a s m u s s e n@aol.com Ande R a s m u s s e n.com SongRamp.com/ande MySpace.com/anders
Texas Grammy Gov 06-08 grammy.com/Texas
Editor Of "Inspirations for Songwriters" SongWriterBlog.com Explore the message archive
To receive IFS SEND an EMPTY email to: difs-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
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"The standard by which I now measure the things in my life is the following: If I was on my death bed, or if I knew I had a short time to live, would this issue be important? If the answer is no.. I don't sweat it at all. If the answer is Yes, you better believe it goes to the front of the order of today's business!" -Brian Austin Whitney
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