"FUTURE OF MUSIC" MEETING
Specifics to come. I have to look like I'm listening now.
For now, how much do you really care what this panel thinks you need to do or not do regarding music piracy?
Had shark for dinner last night. $10 a pound and totally worth it. Really fresh and delicious.
The fisherman, of course, was lucky to make a buck a pound. And all those middlemen added little in terms of value (they cut it, of course, and kept it cool, and allowed me to buy it midday, but they also added several days to the process of getting it from the dock to me).
What if the fisherman had my preferences and just let me know when he had a good haul? I could meet his truck at Union Square and buy direct, fresh, for $5.
Twice as efficient, twice as fresh.
No, of course it's not going to happen soon, because fishermen like being fishermen and don't want to deal with all of these hassles.
But the new middlemen are going to be a lot more efficient than the old ones!
{Read his whole post here.)
And stores, labels and distributors won't go away anytime soon and shouldn't but still I'm thinking: How many people would be willing to just meet me seaside and pay $10 or less for the same catch going for $16 in stores?  Better yet, how many want to ride on the boat and watch the fish get reeled in?
As you can see we're missing a couple.  And with my travel habits slowing down these days I'm feeling the pressure to fill in the holes in my gig alphabet before demand dies - or I do.  So if you or someone you know lives in Xai Xai,Mozambique or Xieng Khouang, Laos  or in Yap, Micronesia or Yellowknife, Canada please have them get in touch with Brian soon.
1CORINTHIANS 5:1-5 It is actually reported that there is sexual immorality among you, and of a kind that does not occur even among pagans: A man has his father's wife. And you are proud! Shouldn't you rather have been filled with grief and have put out of your fellowship the man who did this? Even though I am not physically present, I am with you in spirit. And I have already passed judgment on the one who did this, just as if I were present. When you are assembled in the name of our Lord Jesus and I am with you in spirit, and the power of our Lord Jesus is present, hand this man over to Satan, so that the sinful nature may be destroyed and his spirit saved on the day of the Lord.
FROM REBEKAH'S PAGE:


The smell of age rushed up my nostrils and filled my mind's eye with fuzzy images from the past: sitting in her plump lap with her wrinkled hands clasped across mine, the humid hum of "Rock of Ages" whispered against my cheek, the creaking of a wooden rocker on a linoleum kitchen floor.
She'd read from her newspaper, the reason for our early rise, to see how busy we'd both be that day.  She was a florist and I was her helper, her delivery boy and ribbon braider: I made red and white braids three feet long for about two weeks in her shop in the Summer, helping her get a jump on Homecoming season, at which time boys would inevitably shell out more than $100 for two mums strung together with my braids and other inexpensive trinkets designed to extricate cash from adolescents and serve as proof of one's love for the unfortunate date who would wear such a monstrosity pinned to her chest for an entire evening of football.
In the Summer, before mums and corsages, she lived on weddings and funerals.  Weddings could be seen from months away.  They sat on her calendar, planned for, no surprises.  Funerals, on the other hand, hit her at 4AM every morning over preserves and biscuits.  They were printed daily in the "obits" as she called them.
We found out after Geemommy died that she didn't charge a lot of bereaved families for her art.  And it was art.  Sacred art.  Prayed over.  With Jesus sitting beside her, listening to her sing and watching her work, his pants unbuttoned at the top to make room after breakfast.
I plugged my guitar into the puny sound system of the First Baptist Church in Barnesville, Georgia last Thursday night, my lungs and my heart filled with this smell and made my contribution to it.  I added a verse to the song that's been playing there and around the world from every branch of God's family tree for six thousand years at least.  Mine was strummed and rhyming and sung.  But I know it was no better than those that were read and stilted and conducted in that place over the years.  And that place is no better than the slave-worked fields nearby made blessed by negro spirituals.  It's no better than the alleys of Dublin where saints sang door to door or the houses of Rome where the fathers of my faith broke bread and celebrated friends who died at the hands of the Caesar for the speaking the name "Jesus."
It was just a room, no better than any other where two or more have gathered over the centuries with not much more than faith in common.  But it smelled like the room where my faith was born, where I first heard the songs and felt the love and compassion and saw the giving that faith inspires.  It smelled like Jesus to me.  Like he was sitting beside me with jelly on his cheek and coffee on his breath whispering our story into me.
James Blunt, unlike most singer-songwriters who shlep through anonymity as waiters or bar singers, spent his four pre-fame years in Britain's army.  Not the usual training grounds for creativity: no tour bus, no screaming fans, no Sharpie markers or hair products.
But somehow this ex-warrior became a current phenom, even toppling Coldplay from his homeland's album chart with his debut album, Back to Bedlam, which steers clear of war and warriors until the album closer "No Bravery" about his experiences in Kosovo - written while stationed there in fact.  Paste Magazine (recently named Best Independent Magazine of 2005, by the way) prints which lessons Blunt learned while carrying a gun in the army have made him successful at carrying a guitar and creating an army of fans:1.Don’t get nervous
“People always ask if I get nervous performing, but I don’t find it nerve-wracking at all,” Blunt says. “It’s just singing. No one’s in danger if I forget the words, so what’s to worry about?”
2.Always act like you’re in charge
“When I was in the army, I used to stand up on a platform and convince soldiers I knew what the hell was going on,” he says. “Now, I do that onstage.”
3.Keep your space clean
“For years, I traveled around in a tank with all of my life possessions; now that tank is called a tour bus,” Blunt says with a laugh. “But in either one you have to keep things neat, so I have daily morning inspections. If any band member fails, they give me 50 push-ups.”
4. Think clearly at all times
“People think the army is very regimented, but you actually have a lot of freedom as to how you get a mission done, so you have to be self- motivated,” he says. “In that sense, it’s not that different from being a musician. You have to always keep pushing yourself to reach your goals.”
5. Learn how to escape
“I used to work in reconnaissance, so I got very good at hiding in bushes,” Blunt says. “That can be very useful when dealing with overzealous fans. The Army also teaches you discretion, which comes in handy on the road.”

FROM LEADERSHIP JOURNAL'S BLOG - REPORTING FROM THE NATIONAL PASTOR'S CONVENNTION ATTENDED BY 1700 CHURCH LEADERS:
That paragraph was in a book called "Knights Templar Revelations", a book espousing many of the same ideas as the popular book and forthcoming movie starring Tom Hanks "The Da Vinci Code."  The one paragraph I read referred heavily to author Acharya S's theories/beliefs penned in her books "Suns of God: Krishna, Buddha and Christ Unveiled" and "The Christ Conspiracy."  In her work Acharya S (no known last name) lists the similarities and connections between the ancient god Mithra (as well as other related deities) and the Jesus of Christianity:
Bono, who Mark Driscoll refers to as "the coolest guy on our team" preached the best sermon I've honestly ever heard on the subjects of justice, equality and charity at The National Prayer Breakfast on February 2nd in Washington, DC.  
They gave up a weekend and untallied hours year round to feed the poor, medicate the sick, pray with the hopeless.  I played for them, in tribute to them and the God they proved to be real.  It is not natural for humans, college aged humans perhaps especially, to be drawn outside themselves, their own daily dramas and aspirations, to sacrifice for the good of strangers on the other side of the world.  This was proof.