I was recently dropped by Capitol Records as part of the collateral damage swirling around the Virgin/Capitol merger. I was not surprised, as you need to be acutely aware of sharks when you decide to swim that far out in the ocean, and had been expecting this strange and fun experiment to end almost from the day I signed the dotted line. People like me aren't really supposed to flourish in environments like that, but it was worth a shot, and I definitely gained and learned much more than I lost over the course of my time with the label, and would like to thank the people I worked with there for treating me well and making my transition a surprisingly smooth and rewarding one, both at the outset and ultimately at the end...
...I hold no ill will and harbor no grudge against Capitol Records; I'm thankful I had the opportunity to make a record I love with a producer I've long respected and admired in studios I'd read about but never expected to track in. I'm thankful for the initial faith and realize the 'they' that brought me in and worked closely with me for the past year and a half were largely turned over, and so not the same 'they' that ushered me out.
I also see nothing but naivety and futility in being personally offended by business decisions that I see as symptomatic of not only an industrial but a global systemic illness: profit over people. It's a board meeting, about stock options and the bottom line, not a humanitarian awards dinner or a gallery opening. That's not exactly, or rather only, the fault of Capitol Records, or Virgin, or EMI; it's the rules we exist by in a system that encourages accumulation and high profit margins over, er, human dignity. I'm lucky to be in a line of 'work' from which I can relatively easily rebound and keep moving; I worry for some of the people I worked with at the label and, more broadly, for normal working people not in a glamorous field like rock n' roll marketing who have to figure out how to maintain a living wage in a minefield of layoffs and cutbacks and outsourcing and all other manner of shorthand for sitting handcuffed while your options get dwindled against your will so some dickhead blueblood can walk away with your benefits and pension plan folded into his healthy severance package. No wonder we're all so anxious all the fucking time.
As for me: I've sold 3,000 records in 4 months, roughly, with very little help, and nothing at all in terms of a proper 'label push.' I've gotten to tour consistently since June 2006 with a wide assortment of cool and interesting musicians across a broad range of genres and approaches. I've gotten some slight financial security (for the time being) and I got to pay my friends to come out and play and record, for the first time ever. The press has been kind, college radio has been kind, promoters have been kind, and the amazing and dedicated fans I'm lucky to have pre-date my flirting with the bright lights anyway, and I know they'll be around whether I put my records out myself or choose short-term selective amnesia and sign with J Records tomorrow (omg jk).
That's hugely successful to me; the most successful I've been to date, and I plan on continuing to work my ass off and tour and play these songs for as many people as are willing to hear them. So that's that. More to come as it develops, but for now, I'd rely on getting out to a show or iTunes and amazon.com if you want to order a record, because I don't think you're going to find them in a store.
I know the whole "I thot dis wuz PUNKnews, not LOOZARnews" thing is rather worn-out at this point, but seriously . . . who gives a shit about this guy?
The only mention of Punk on his Wikipedia page is that he played in some band named after the 86 Mets that no one's ever heard of (or cares about).
Or possibly that he's known to collaborate with members of and tour with Brand New ... now whether you classify Brand New as being "punk" or not is a different story, but no doubt they are of interest to a large portion of people who frequent this site and as such this story might interest them as well.
I saw Kevin live once and I liked it, but his albums are a bit much and Miracle of 86 is wayyyyy to sweet for me to handle. Although, I'm sure if I would have heard them 8 years ago when I was into Unsung Zeros, I would have loved it.
Wow spare the commentary on corporate america guy .... corporations exist to make money for shareholders not to make suffering artists feel good about themselves, get over it. "Profit over people" waaahhhh, you sold more records then you otherwise would've and will sell more in the future because of it.
Yeah, but that wasn't a joke. It took like five months for It's Crazy to soundscan 1,000 copies (now that's crazy). Once it did Virgil (I think it was Virgil) did a big write up about what happened, why it takes so long and how it all brakes down.
I thought it was an interesting article and when I saw Kevin Devine's sales it was the first thing I thought of. I was actually hoping to direct a few people to the article as it was really interesting: http://indiehq.com/2006/12/06/drag-the-river-its-cr azy-hits-1000-scans-a-breakdown/
There ya go.
-Dante
Now go make fun of one of my actual jokes.
fuck all you tools. this guy has more talent and emotion than most of the shit blabbered about on this website. btw, it didn't sell because capitol didn't promote it worth a shit. too bad, it's great. at least he isn't a whiny bitch about it.
p.s. the lawrence arms are very overrated. so are propaghandi
There's a lot of excessive hate for this guy here. His music may not sound like the "punk" you're looking for, but alls I know is I had no idea who he was before I saw him play the Monty Love farewell Christmas show this last December and he had a cool set, played enjoyable music, didn't come off as a douchebag, and worked in a tiny setting even amongst a crowd that was largely there to see faster and harder music.
that's because people on here have good taste and see through the kind of bile that this little homo tries to project. go away and post on emofaggotswhocryalot.com
why all the hate? the guy has got talent, writes good melodies, fairly clever lyrics. granted it's fairly well tread ground, but it isn't asking for respect on originality.
czech it: a guy who signed to a major label and got/want people(s) to lament on this curent state of music/major label(s).
.aka being a whiney white overproduced/prepackaged fucktard who can't figure out why he's in the same situation as everyone else
WELCOME TO THE MUSIC INDUSTRY!
GET A FUCKING CLUE AND REALIZE THIS SITE DOES NOT JUST POST ABOUT PUNK BANDS. THE LONGER YOU READ THIS SITE YOU WILL REALIZE THIS.
And for all you douches saying Kevin Devine sucks, apparently you're too "punx" to get into any other styles of music besides your precious punk rawk bands.
kevin devine
more like adolf hitler