Delson speaking at UCLA

June 7, 2009

Looks like Art Center isn’t the only college with impeccable taste in commencement speakers. Our own Brad Delson has been chosen as UCLA’s keynote speaker at the Letters and Science commencement ceremony. An excellent choice; we’ll be looking forward to seeing what Mr. Delson has to say to the young graduates.

On a related note, the information got picked up by celebrity blogger Perez Hilton, whose comment was short and, of course, ssssassy. He said, “We’re sure the kids in this year’s graduating class are thinking, ‘Wait, what’s Linkin Park?’” LOL. I wasn’t surprised that Perez made a snarky comment about it…I was surprised he was so out of good celeb news that he had to resort to posting about Linkin Park. Or so out of good celeb news that he had to make a joke that UCLA was so out of good celebs…wait, what?

This post reminds of this SNL clip:

Anyway, congrats to Brad, and to UCLA’s graduating class!
mike

PS: Googlefight knows what’s up http://googlefight.com/index.php?lang=en_GB&word1=james%2Bfranco&word2=linkin%2Bpark

mike

Freshnerd Interview

March 30, 2009

A new interview here…this one was fun.

http://freshnerd.com/2009/03/fresh-art21-questions-mike-shinoda-of-linkin-park/

mike

mike

Estevan Oriol at Joe Hahn's SURU

February 1, 2009

yo1

Check it out:
http://www.suru-la.com/blog/281/estevan-oriol-opening-live-blog

mike

mike

BLACKRIMGLASSES.COM

January 7, 2009

Got a nice shout-out from Ethan Kaplan who runs blackrimglasses.com. Although Ethan works at Warner Bros., I’ve never met him in person (I guess that says something about how big WB is, even the LA office). Anyway, here’s the link. Feel free to keep up with Ethan’s blog–it’s a good one.

http://blackrimglasses.com/archives/2009/01/07/why-artists-should-be-transparent/

I hope to meet Ethan in person soon ;)

-m

mike

Late to Glorious Excess

January 4, 2009

Current TV’s piece on Glorious Excess “Born”…Current was a little late on this (ironic, no?), but feel free to jump over to their site and vote this piece up if you like it: http://current.com/items/89326561/mike_shinoda_art_exhibit.htm

mike

mike

Sneaker Freaker x M.S.

January 3, 2009

yo1

I got a mention in Sneaker Freaker’s best of the best list this year. I’ve gotten a lot of love for my DC Remix, but I didn’t feel right saying “my shoe was great” hahaha (Thanks to Kim and Pam for understanding!). So I picked my other favorite sneaker for this year.

Check it out here: http://www.sneakerfreaker.com/feature/2008-best-sneakers/5/

Happy New Year
mike

mike

MS Myspace Mixtape

December 20, 2008

GO HERE TO LISTEN TO MY MYSPACE PLAYLIST: http://music.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=music.celebritypromo&artistid=21591889&playlistid=508888

Here are the tracks they didn’t put up:

if you like these songs, go buy them.
mike

mike

Using Advertising to Break Your Band

November 28, 2008

I just posted here:

http://www.boingboing.net/2008/11/26/record-labels-are-b0.html

regarding this:

http://www.miller-mccune.com/article/rock-star-brought-to-you-by-huge-advertiser

Taking my own experiences with my band out of the equation, let me just address this as a fan. There have been artists who use their music as a means to another end for a long time :) From 80′s glam rock stars who used their band as a way to get chicks and live the “rock star life,” to today’s rapper with a yacht-load of endorsements, there is always an “artist” who is eager to sell their art to get what they really want. On the other hand, there are those who are only concerned with the artistic process and don’t sell it out for anything. The music career is the goal, and the journey is the destination.

Most artists sit somewhere in between.

In general, the way an artist rides the line between best-seller and credibility depends upon their cultural understanding of what’s appropriate. They’re informed by the music outlets they hear locally and online, the music cultures they choose to be a part of, and what their social/cultural group’s feeling about “selling out” is. It goes without saying that if you live in Hong Kong (where super-pop music rules the charts) and your favorite artists are Black Eyed Peas and 50 Cent, your idea of “sell out” is going to be drastically different than someone who lives in Los Angeles and listens to Pearl Jam or Minor Threat.

The culture defines the threshold. The fans and the artists, together, declare their opinion about when the line is crossed.

My concern is in the motivation. In addition to the difficult business of “getting noticed” by the fans, some musicians have extra pressure to pay the bills. The music industry is locking new artists into oppressive 360-deal enslavement, and trying to gradually hack away at the rights they initially promised their older acts, in order to protect their bottom line. And as long as the bands allow the labels to take their rights, the artists will have more pressure to look for money elsewhere.

Although I agree with a good deal of what Klein says in this piece, it is immediately evident that there is no one set of rules that works for everybody…but there are guidelines to help you set up your set of rules, such as:

  • If you license your music, do it with partners who get you, treat you fairly, and whose product is consistent with your message.

  • Do your homework, and know what your rights are worth, so when you trade them for something, you know you’re getting a fair deal.

  • Put your brand identity, your credibility, first.

I’ll leave you with a thought from Klein’s interview:

“One of the advertising creatives that I spoke to talked about doing away with the middlemen of record labels, that ultimately music could be released straight through advertisers. And I just thought, “God, that’s so curious that he would see that as doing away with the middleman when it’s clearly replacing the middleman.” And I can’t say for sure whether advertising executives are worse than record executives, but I don’t think they’re better. So, yeah, I think there is a gap here. And what the Internet offers is some possibility of — if not completely removing a middleman — creating a more transparent middleman and one that doesn’t take away so much of the money.”

mike

mike

Gay Marriage / LGBT rights

November 12, 2008

I’m going to go out on a limb on this one. Opinions of the commentator aside, let’s talk about the issue of gay rights in the following piece. The following was an opinion piece on Keith Olbermann’s show:

I am pretty sure this conversation is not going to fit in the comments section here on MS.com, so: to the first commenter, please start a new thread on linkinpark.com for discussion on this topic. As a reminder: flaming, slurs (including ones directed at sexual orientation and race), and intimidation will result in a ban of your account, so be respectful.

Thoughtful, intelligent contribution to the topic is the only kind I want to see. Think carefully before you post.

mike

EDIT: based on the comments after this post, I thought some of you might want to see this calendar showing the peaceful protests that are going on in CA.
http://www.eqca.org/site/apps/cd/month.asp?c=kuLRJ9MRKrH&b=4028667

EDIT 2: some of you who posted here may be interested in this as well: A large group is planning and organizing a nationwide (and somewhat worldwide) effort. Their website, with information on the protest near you, is here:
http://jointheimpact.wetpaint.com/

mike

Random Notes

October 29, 2008

Here a couple random notes I’m paying attention to right now:

AXIS at SURU – British-American graffiti artist AXIS is holding his first art show at SURU in Los Angeles. The show goes up on Nov. 15th. more info at http://suru-la.com/

Funny “Aside” from http://blackrimglasses.com/: “How to manage a startup in a downturn… How about stop going to so many fucking conferences and stop putting on parties. How about investing in actually starting up a company rather than seeing the same people in different locations every two weeks talking about the same things. Just saying.”

Viva La Hova – just released online; a mixtape by Mick Boogie featuring mashups of Jay-Z and Coldplay songs. Like the Grey Album, but without the Beatles (or like Collision Course, but…). No disrespect though–there are some cool tracks.

MTV Videos – Albeit about 5 years too late, MTV has put their video database online. Now you can search for any video in their collection. Might as well do it online, you’re not going to see any of this stuff on their channel, if you haven’t already watched it on youtube. http://www.mtvmusic.com/

Shouts out to Charlie Bravo and Mr. Hahn for the heads-up.
mike

mike