*goes back to sleep*
- Original Message -
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "seek" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: "313 Detroit" <313@hyperreal.org>
Sent: Thursday, March 30, 2006 4:20 PM
Subject: Re: (313) Looking For The Perfect VISA commercial? :)
>I doubt that Afrika Bambaataa had anything to do with
>making that decision.
What makes you think this? Because it's an advert and you don't like
adverts therefore Bam shouldn't like adverts?
MEK
cc
Subject
Re: (313) Looking For The Perfect
On 3/30/06, seek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The OP mentioned how the VISA ad was "refreshing".
> Interesting choice of words to describe a ~pop~ tv ad:
> soda *pop* ads on tv proliferate the use of the word, "refreshing".
believe it or not, the word "refeshing" was not invented by soda companies
- Original Message -
From: "Matt Kane's Brain"
What bearing does any of this have on whether licensing your tracks
for use in advertising is good or bad?
Afrika Bambaataa's been tagged as willfully profiting
from the licensing of '...Perfect Beat' for some trash ad.
I doubt that Afri
What bearing does any of this have on whether licensing your tracks
for use in advertising is good or bad?
Don't bring up Moby. He targets advertising. It's different.
On Mar 30, 2006, at 15:40, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I think you misunderstand how the publishing & licensing business
works
cc
Subject
Re: (313) Looking For The Perfect
- Original Message -
From:
Uh, time for you to catch up on history. Silverman sold the entire back
catalogue of Tommy Boy to Warner-Chappell for less than $10 million. That
included all the publishing. T-Girl and T-Boy Music LLC are both owned by
Warner-Chappell. Silverman had to re
cc
Subject
Re: (313) Looking For The Perfect
T GIRL MUSIC LLC
===
Tommy Boy Records = T Girl Music:
that's who licensed the track and is making the most money from it.
The others will collect, but Tom Silverman's responsible.
seek
"IDM List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject
Re: (313) Looking For The Perf
"IDM List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
cc
Subject
:)
>Refreshing?! Because some crappy songs are used in most
>shite advertising, it legitimizes this ad because they sacrilegiously
>chose to use a classic to push their Sh!ttybanking?!
>Fnck that concept and fnck tv advertising. VISA should be
>applauded for this lameness?! No way.
>
>Turn off
>Refreshing?! Because some crappy songs are used in most
>shite advertising, it legitimizes this ad because they sacrilegiously
>chose to use a classic to push their Sh!ttybanking?!
>Fnck that concept and fnck tv advertising. VISA should be
>applauded for this lameness?! No way.
>
>Turn off, tur
- Original Message -
From: "Andrew Duke Cognition Audioworks"
the commercial uses Afrika Bambaataa & The
Soul Sonic Force's "Looking For The Perfect Beat" (produced by Arthur "I'm
still makin' music" Baker and John Robie).
Refreshing.
Refreshing?! Because some crappy songs are used
Yeah, that commercial was tight.
--- Andrew Duke Cognition Audioworks
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Just saw the new VISA commercial on TV with a
> cartoon worm doing "the
> worm" and
> something about recycling. Instead of another damn
> commercial using Jesus
> Jones' "Right Here Right Now" o
Just saw the new VISA commercial on TV with a cartoon worm doing "the
worm" and
something about recycling. Instead of another damn commercial using Jesus
Jones' "Right Here Right Now" or EMF's "Unbelievable" or something else that
has been done to death, the commercial uses Afrika Bambaataa & Th
17 matches
Mail list logo