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Tag: Neil Young

  • David Crosby Calls Spotify ‘Scummy People’ As Music Pulled

    David Crosby Calls Spotify ‘Scummy People’ As Music Pulled

    Spotify’s troubles continue to mount with music legend David Crosby calling the people who work there “scummy people.”

    Spotify found itself in hot water over its relationship with Joe Rogan. Rogan’s show has been criticized repeatedly for spreading misinformation about the COVID pandemic, as well as for language Rogan himself has used over the years.

    Neil Young became one of the biggest names to call the platform out and pull his entire catalog of music, but Crosby is being even more blunt, saying he doesn’t believe the company will suddenly develop morals.

    “I don’t see them growing a conscience,” Crosby told Stereogum. “I don’t believe there are good people working there. If they were good people, they wouldn’t work there. They’re not going to suddenly grow some balls and stand against the trend. They’re not going to feel the need to do the right thing. They’re going to keep on collecting money and being shitty to the world. That’s what we have to deal with. “

    Crosby had already sold his catalog of music to Irving Azoff, but Azoff was willing to accomodate him when Crosby told him he wanted his music off the platform.

    “Of course I had to ask Irving [Azoff],” Crosby continued. “He holds my publishing. The amazing and really wonderful thing is both [Azoff’s company] Iconic and BMG went along with it. They said, ‘If that’s what you feel you have to do, we’ll go along with it.’ I was stunned. That is not normal corporate behavior. Normally they go for the dollar and the quickest possible answer. They don’t go for that, they don’t do that. They don’t support a moral stand.”

    So far, Spotify has continued to stand by Rogan. But as the the losses mount, one can’t help but wonder if the company will eventually cut him loose.

  • Spotify Chooses Joe Rogan Over Neil Young

    Spotify Chooses Joe Rogan Over Neil Young

    Neil Young gave Spotify an ultimatum: Him or Joe Rogan — and Spotify chose Joe Rogan.

    Despite Spotify accounting for 60% of Young’s streaming music worldwide, the artist took the platform to task for hosting Joe Rogan. Rogan — and by extension Spotify — has come under fire for spreading misinformation regarding the COVID pandemic and various medical treatments, including vaccines.

    Young decided he could no longer stand by and do nothing, telling Spotify to remove his music from their service.

    “Spotify has recently become a very damaging force via its public misinformation and lies about COVID,” Young wrote. “I first learned of this problem by reading that 200 plus doctors had joined forces, taking on the dangerous life-threatening COVID falsehoods found in Spotify programming.”

    “I realized I could not continue to support Spotify’s life threatening misinformation to the music loving public,” Young continued. 

    The artist also took the opportunity to promote other platforms, highlighting the fact that other platforms have high-fidelity auto, something Spotify has promised but failed to deliver.

    “Many other platforms, Amazon, Apple, and Qobuz, to name a few, present my music today in all its High-Resolution glory — the way it is intended to be heard, while unfortunately Spotify continues to peddle the lowest quality in music reproduction. So much for art,” Young wrote.

    The artist thanked Warner Bros for standing with him, despite the hit their business will take from Young’s music leaving the platform.

  • Def Leppard Will Share a Stage With Donald Trump in Iowa

    Def Leppard Will Share a Stage With Donald Trump in Iowa

    When Def Leppard takes the stage at the Iowa State Fair next month, they will be introduced and welcomed by none other than Donald Trump.

    Def Leppard is touring with classic rock acts Styx and Tesla, who will also be on the bill at the State Fair Grandstand on the fairgrounds in Des Moines on August 15. Def Leppard has had a rough way to go recently. Guitarist Vivian Campbell has fought cancer off and on over the past few years. It was feared that he would not be able to tour with Def Leppard this summer, but his doctor has cleared him to go.

    As for Donald Trump, Def Leppard will not be his first brush with rock and roll. On his Celebrity Apprentice program, Trump rubbed elbows with the likes of Gene Simmons, Bret Michaels, famous band manager Sharon Osbourne, Meat Loaf, and Dee Snider.

    There is no clue yet as to how the guys in Def Leppard might respond to Trump’s introduction. If the fans that show up that night don’t boo him off the stage, it may be best to smile and nod and get on with the rock.

    Not all rock stars are enamored of Trump. The Donald ran afoul of Neil Young when he announced his candidacy. The music piped in to the event included Neil Young’s “Rockin’ in the Free World.” Young, a politically active artist, too offense and called the campaign out on it.

    “Donald Trump was not authorized to use ‘Rockin’ in the Free World’ in his presidential candidacy announcement,” Neil Young agent Elliot Roberts said. “Neil Young, a Canadian citizen, is a supporter of Bernie Sanders for president of the United States of America.”

    Trump’s campaign insisted they had paid the appropriate rights’ organizations to license the song, but were informed that an artist still has recourse to stop their music from being used to represent someone they disagree with.

    “We won’t be using it again,” Trump’s campaign manager announced. “There are plenty of other songs to choose from, despite the fact that Mr. Trump is a big fan and likes Neil very much. We will respect his wish and not use it because it’s the right thing to do.”

    No word on whether Donald Trump likes Def Leppard, or even knows who they are. One thing is for sure:

    If he calls them “Death Leopard” on that stage, he can kiss his campaign good-bye.

  • Neil Young Says He’s Done with Streaming, Citing Sound Quality

    Neil Young says he’s pulling his music from streaming services.

    No, Young’s issue isn’t money, like Taylor Swift or Prince – Young’s problem is with sound quality, which he calls the worst “in the history of broadcasting or any other form of distribution.”

    Here’s what Young had to say on Facebook:

    Streaming has ended for me. I hope this is ok for my fans.

     

    It’s not because of the money, although my share (like all the other artists) was dramatically reduced by bad deals made without my consent.

     

    It’s about sound quality. I don’t need my music to be devalued by the worst quality in the history of broadcasting or any other form of distribution. I don’t feel right allowing this to be sold to my fans. It’s bad for my music.

     

    For me, It’s about making and distributing music people can really hear and feel. I stand for that.

     

    When the quality is back, I’ll give it another look. Never say never.

    You may recall that Neil Young is the guy behind Pono – the supposedly higher quality music player and service that launched back in January after a successful Kickstarter campaign. It’s been called a “tall refreshing drink of snake oil” and the general consensus is that it’s something that only a very select group of audiophiles can appreciate. Kind of like TIDAL.

  • Neil Young Calls for Starbucks Boycott Over GMO Lawsuit

    Neil Young Calls for Starbucks Boycott Over GMO Lawsuit

    Neil Young is protesting Starbucks. And when Neil Young protests something, people notice — for better or for worse.

    When the National Guard rolled in to Kent State back in the 60s and left four students dead in their wake, the country was shocked. Crosby, Still, Nash, and Young had just completed an album and it was in pressings. But something had to be said. Neil Young was the man to bang that song out. The band recorded it hastily, put it on 45s, and got it to radio stations ahead of their album.

    “Ten soldiers and Nixon’s comin’
    We’re finally on our own
    This summer I hear the drummin’
    Four dead in Ohio”

    (from “Ohio” by CSNY)

    Neil Young, who had already done “For What It’s Worth,” a classic Vietnam protest song with Buffalo Springfield, has a hallowed place in protest music.

    Young is Canadian by birth, but now lives in San Mateo, California, so some Americans take issue with him commenting on their … issues. Ronnie Van Zant of Lynyrd Skynyrd was probably the biggest. When Neil Young released tracks like “Alabama” and “Southern Man”, both of which were aimed at the intolerance and racism in the American South, Van Zant told Young to stick it.

    “I hear Mr. Young sing about her
    I heard ol’ Neil put her down
    I hope Neil Young will remember
    A Southern Man don’t need him around, anyhow”

    (from “Sweet Home Alabama”)

    Now Neil Young is taking on something a little closer to Canada: Starbucks.

    “I used to line up and get my latte everyday,” Young wrote on his website, “but yesterday was my last one.”

    What has miffed Young at Starbucks? Starbucks is part of the Grocery Manufacturers Association, which is joining with Monsanto to sue the state of Vermont to prevent a requirement for genetically-modified ingredients in food to be identified on the label.

    Young’s statement continued.

    “Tell Starbucks to withdraw support for the lawsuit — we have a right to know what we put in our mouths. Starbucks doesn’t think you have the right to know what’s in your coffee. So it’s teamed up with Monsanto to sue the small U.S. state of Vermont to stop you from finding out.

    Hiding behind the shadowy “Grocery Manufacturers Association,” Starbucks is supporting a lawsuit that’s aiming to block a landmark law that requires genetically-modified ingredients be labeled. Amazingly, it claims that the law is an assault on corporations’ right to free speech.

    Monsanto might not care what we think — but as a public-facing company, Starbucks does. If we can generate enough attention, we can push Starbucks to withdraw its support for the lawsuit, and then pressure other companies to do the same.”

    Young believes that bringing a company like Starbucks to heel can eventually wear down the support for stopping the GMO law in Vermont. And if that happens, the possibility that such a labeling revolution could catch on is well worth losing lattes.

    “There’s much more at stake here than just whether GMO foods will be labeled in a single U.S. state. Vermont is the very first state in the U.S. to require labeling. Dozens of other states have said that they will follow this path — in order to encourage this, we need to ensure that Vermont’s law stands strong.”

    The Grocery Manufacturers Association is clear about their support of GMOs.

    “The use of genetically modified (GM) ingredients is not only safe for people and our planet, but also has a number of important benefits… GM technology adds desirable traits from nature, without introducing anything unnatural or using chemicals, so that food is more plentiful.”

    The group insists that people already eat lots of genetically-modified foods every day, and that these are proven to be safe by “the U.S. Food & Drug Administration, the American Medical Association, the World Health Organization, Health Canada, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the National Academy of Sciences.”

    But other groups insist that there are many health risks to GMOs that government agencies like the ones the GMA listed ignore. They say that these GMO foods may not cause acute poisoning, which would bring them under suspicion from the FDA and other agencies, but that they cause systemic damage over time, making people sick and weak.

    People like Neil Young realize that they cannot stop GMOs from being used in food. They just want them to be required to be named on the label so consumers can make their own choices about what they put in their bodies.

    But the GMA and Starbucks don’t want that. So Neil Young is calling on everyone to put a dent in Starbucks’ bottom line to make then see the error of their ways.

    Now let’s see if any Starbucks swilling Southerners want to step up and tell Young to step off.

  • Daryl Hannah and Neil Young: Dating?

    Daryl Hannah and Neil Young: Dating?

    Daryl Hannah is rumored to be dating newly-single rocker Neil Young. Could there be any truth behind the rumor? The Daily Mail recently posted shots of the two dining in southern California. The actress was spotted kissing Young’s cheek in one of the shots.

    Us Weekly says the two are definitely an item. Daryl Hannah’s admiration of Neil Young apparently began as a fan.

    “She’s a huge Neil fan,” a source told them of the Kill Bill star. “They’ve known each other for years.”

    People reports that the two have been dating ‘for months.’

    “They’ve been dating for months,” a source told them. “They’ve taken no effort to even hide it. He recorded a new album a few weeks ago, and she was on Skype the entire time, giving him feedback on every take. He even told people in the studio she was his ‘girlfriend.’ ”

    Neil Young just filed for divorce from his wife–Pegi Young–on July 29th. The two have been married for 36 years. Might his new relationship with Daryl Hannah have anything to do with the split? Pegi Young was said to be the inspiration behind several of Neil Young’s hit songs, including “Such a Woman,” “Once an Angel,” and “Unknown Legend.”

    Daryl Hannah was once linked to the late John F. Kennedy, Jr., and is no novice when it comes to dating rock stars either. She was involved in a relationship with Jackson Browne from 1983 to 1992.

    Neil Young founded the band Buffalo Springfield back in 1966, and in 1969 became known for his role in Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for his music with Buffalo Springfield and as a solo artist as well.

    In addition to Kill Bill, Daryl Hannah is known for roles in films like Splash, Wall Street, and Steel Magnolias.

    So what’s your take on the relationship between Daryl Hannah and Neil Young? Is it a rumor? Are the two simply involved in a purely platonic friendship? Or is this the beginning of a romance between a 1960s rocker and an actress with a most eclectic style?

  • Chrissie Hynde, of The Pretenders Fame, Goes Solo

    Next Tuesday, Chrissie Hynde, formerly of The Pretenders, will release her first solo album of her career, entitled “Stockholm”. And while Hynde’s name may be the only one on the front cover, this album was definitely not composed solo.

    “It’s a goddam awful phrase [solo album]. I never wanted to be solo, and I said a thousand times I never would, so it gives me a cold chill to see my name out there on its own,” opined Hynde.

    Despite her personal opinion on going solo, that is exactly what Hynde has decided to do after nearly 30 years of work with The Pretenders.

    Hynde’s musical journey first started in 1973 after she decided to move to England to work for the weekly music magazine, NME. While working her supposed dream job, Hynde began playing with all sorts of rock bands across London, the most notable being The Clash and The Damned. It wasn’t long before one of Hynde’s albums caught the attention of a music producer, and thus The Pretenders were formed.

    The success of the initial band was in question almost immediately, though, as two of the band’s original members succumbed to drug overdoses in the early ’80’s. Not letting anything prevent her from achieving her dreams, Hynde continued The Pretenders by populating the band with multiple different members and pieces over the years, constantly adapting to her changing circumstances.

    “Stockholm” is a continuation of this evolving and adapting model.

    To produce said album, Hynde partnered with Bjorn Yttling, formerly of the band Peter, Bjorn, and John. Surprisingly, Hynde had no idea who Bjorn was before she decided to work with him on this album.

    “I didn’t know the guy. I didn’t know what band he was in. My attitude is: You never know until you try it. But I’m never going to go through someone’s back catalog. I met him for a coffee and when I had some time I went to Stockholm.”

    Hynde took the same blank-slate approach toward composing the songs for her new album: “I had made a conscious decision to go in empty. I’ve never written a song out of a notebook. I’ve filled hundreds and I’ve never used any of them.” Hynde went on to explain that Bjorn “played me a few bars or a riff or a top-line melody and then I went crazy.”

    Part of Hynde’s going crazy involved inviting two of her more famous friends to collaborate on the album with her – tennis great John McEnroe and music legend Neil Young.

    “By the time we were recording it, I’d grown to really like messing with Bjorn, so I thought I’d just ring Neil and ask if he’d play on it. I know him, but it’s not something I’d normally do. You know, you don’t call God and ask him for a favour.”

    While Hynde would love to do a tour to support her new album release, she has enough experience to realize her limitations: “Who’s going to want to see a vintage artist play 45 minutes of new material?”

    Considering the mixed reviews Hynde’s album is receiving, she is perhaps more wise than she knows.

    One can purchase one’s own copy of “Stockholm” when it hits shelves next Tuesday, June 9th.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qo-M48rEDEs

    Image via YouTube

  • Neil Young Set to Unveil Pono, a New Music Player

    With the advent of the smartphone, the world was introduced to another way to degrade the quality of music by attempting to stuff all media into one, singular device with extremely limited storage and processing capabilities. Unfortunately, this trend of ultra-music compression has only increased as listeners seek to cram more and more music into smaller and smaller devices responsible for a seemingly infinite amount of purposes. Luckily, the music world has a new savior – Neil Young.

    For quite some time now, Neil Young has been bemoaning the inherent loss of music quality that is derived whenever one compresses music files into MP3 and other ultra-small formats: “It’s not that digital is bad or inferior, it’s that the way it’s being used isn’t doing justice to the art . . . The convenience of the digital age has forced people to choose between quality and convenience, but they shouldn’t have to make that choice.”

    Young was so vehement about his feelings about the loss of music quality in today’s day and age that he went one step beyond bitching and moaning; Tomorrow at South by Southwest, Young will officially unveil his solution to this music crisis, the PonoPlayer.

    “It’s about the music, real music. We want to move digital music into the 21st century and PonoMusic does that. We couldn’t be more excited about bringing PonoMusic to the market,” stated Young.

    So what does the PonoMusic do that is so revolutionary to the music industry? Well, for Young it all starts with less compression and a more full-bodied sound: “The simplest way to describe what we’ve accomplished is that we’ve liberated the music of the artist from the digital file and restored it to its original artistic quality – as it was in the studio. So it has primal power.”

    In other words, PonoMusic has created its own digital file format different from mp3 or flac or wma. These new music files will be compressed at 192 kHz and have a 24-bit sound (A format that some people believe will still not solve the music quality crisis.) Perhaps most important of all, however, is that these files attempt to capture the pure essence of the music as it is recorded, mainly by preserving the natural echoes that occur in studio.

    Young has been as bold as to state that “Hearing Pono for the first time is like that first blast of daylight when you leave a movie theater on a sun-filled day.”

    While the before-mentioned statement may be true, there are already a few drawbacks to the PonoPlayer. All reports indicate that the PonoPlayer will be priced at $399 at its launch, an extremely steep price when one compares it to other devices which also play music exclusively. Unfortunately, that $399 price tag also comes with less overall music storage; while the PonoPlayer comes with a 128 GB hard drive, its file compression is much larger, resulting in being able to store less music. And last, but definitely not least, is the design of the PonoPlayer. Its triangular, Toblerone-esque appearance is sure to deter people from purchasing the product. (How would one fit it in a pocket?)

    Ultimate judgment will have to be reserved until the product hits the shelves. Until then, keep on rockin’ to your poorly-compressed and digitally-compromised music files.

    Image via Facebook

  • Neil Young Performs Carnegie Hall, Keeps His Fans In Check

    Neil Young started a four-night run at Carnegie Hall on Monday, and stunned his fans when he corrected them for incorrect clapping. He is a veteran, and a musical icon, certainly having the authority to correct his fans on something such as the beat.

    Neil Young has made a wildly successful career for himself over the years as a solo artist, along with his bands Neil Young and Crazy Horse, Buffalo Springfield and Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young. He started the run of shows with an acoustic show.

    Being told off by the performer that one goes to see is clearly not what they plan on when attending a concert, but perhaps in some cases it is necessary in order to teach that crowd a lesson on how the song actually goes.

    During the performance, he was stopped when the crowd was incorrectly clapping along to the Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young hit “Ohio,” and he proceeded to silence the fans. “Ohio” was written by the group in response to the shootings at Kent State in 1970.

    Part of the crowd was clapping along, but according to Neil Young, they were not on beat, which really frustrated him as a performer.

    He immediately turned on the emergency brake during the performance and yelled to his crowd “Wrong! It’s something that you probably don’t know, but there’s a hell of a distance between you and me.”

    Neil Young is now 68-years-old, and when making a return to Carnegie Hall, he decided to play more of his social and political songs than the big chart-topping hits, which may also have been disappointing for some people.

    He also recently released an album called “Live At The Cellar Door,” which is an album from the archives, and was recorded in 1970, just days before his solo debut at Carnegie Hall.

    On another occasion during the night when hearing people talking in the audience, Neil Young told the crowd “No, you paid real good money to get in here, so you should be able to listen to each other.”

    While most musicians would not take the time to stand up to their fans in the way that Neil Young did, he may just have that power to do so, and will be continued to be viewed as a musical icon.

    He finished Monday’s show with his hit songs “Heart Of Gold” and “After The Gold Rush.”

    Image via Facebook

  • Neil Young Does Carnegie Hall

    Neil Young, one-quarter of the famous folk rock group Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, began a four night gig at Carnegie Hall this week. Playing a solo acoustic show on both nights one and two, Young used a variety of guitars set up on stage. He also performed some numbers while accompanying himself on the piano.

    Tried and true hits like Harvest Moon, Southern Man, Heart of Gold, Old Man and After the Gold Rush rounded out the set list–just four of many songs performed both evenings thus far.

    Neil Young joined Crosby, Stills & Nash back in 1969 and fast became known for his harmony and his high tenor singing voice. A former member of the band Buffalo Springfield, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice–once as a solo artist in 1995 and again as part of Buffalo Springfield just two years later.

    Young’s fans range in age from old hippies and even some rather conservative types to teenagers. His music is legendary and his persona is right up there with the music. Sporting long locks even at 68 years old, he has never given up on the 1970s, and still looks like a part of its culture.

    Neil Young pens a online newspaper called the Neil Young Times that keeps fans apprised of his thoughts, beliefs and concert dates.

    New Yorkers are no doubt rocking out for a third night in a row to Neil Young at Carnegie Hall. What a perfect place for this rock legend to perform.

    Image via Wikimedia

  • Neil Young & Red Hot Chili Peppers Play Benefit

    67-year-old Neil Young is set to perform with at a benefit concert for the Silverlake Conservatory of Music that Flea and Anthony Kiedis of the Red Hot Chili Peppers will host.

    The exciting event will take place Wednesday, Oct. 30 in Silverlake, CA. Not only will the celebrated Young perform, the Red Hot Chili Peppers will also grace the stage.

    The Silverlake Conservatory of Music was founded by Flea in 2001. It facilitates music education as well as offers music lessons and scholarships.

    A silent auction will take place and will feature donations from Pearl Jam, Gucci and others. The event costs $2,000 per guest, and a 10-seat table is $25,000.

    Very pricey, yes, but it seems that it will be an evening you can’t miss. Plus, it’s for a good cause!

    Watch the Chili Peppers’ “Californication” below.

    Check out Neil Young’s “Harvest Moon” here.

    Photo Credit: YouTube

  • Neil Young Fights for Better Quality Sound

    If you think the sound quality of MP3’s are terrible, then you’re not alone. Music enthusiasts who switched their CD collections over to modern MP3 formats will notice a huge loss in the sound quality. People who say digital is better are missing the picture. It’s only better if everything is still there and with MP3’s and even CD’s, it’s not all there.

    This is the subject of Neil Young’s latest project. He’s upset by the current trends in digital music and he obviously has gotten tired of waiting for things to change. It all got started back in January when he attended the D: Dive into Media and presented his case for sound quality.

    Here’s what Young Had to say about the degrading sound quality of music:

    “We live in the digital age and, unfortunately, it’s degrading our music, not improving it.”

    “My goal is to try and rescue the art form that I’ve been practicing for the past 50 years,”

    “It’s not that digital is bad or inferior, it’s that the way it’s being used isn’t doing justice to the art,”

    “The MP3 only has 5 percent of the data present in the original recording. … The convenience of the digital age has forced people to choose between quality and convenience, but they shouldn’t have to make that choice.”

    “Steve Jobs as a pioneer of digital music, and his legacy is tremendous,”

    “But when he went home, he listened to vinyl. And you’ve got to believe that if he’d lived long enough, he would have done what I’m trying to do.”

    What we have found out today is that Young has applied for several patents that are believed to be for a new high definition download service and music management system that would allow for true lossless sound quality.

    Rolling Stones Magazine suggests that the six patents are all ideas for the same music system. Ivanhoe, 21st Century Record Player, Earth Storage, Storage Shed, Thanks for Listening and SQS (Studio Quality Sound) are all the names listed on the patent document.

    A new memoir about Young’s life published by Penguin Group will reveal his intent to continue pioneering this ‘save the sound’ movement. So there’s no mistaking Young is serious about getting a project moving that would work to these ends. He’s not made an official comment about this, but evidence definitely suggests he’s involved in more than just spirit, in some way.

  • Neil Young Equates Piracy To Radio

    Neil Young Equates Piracy To Radio

    Rovio boss Mikael Hed said that piracy equals exposure. Music legend Neil Young couldn’t agree more.

    At the Dive Into Media conference today, Neil Young spoke on music piracy and music quality. He detailed his solution to audio quality and his relationship with Steve Jobs.

    Speaking first on the MP3 format, Young said that digital formats are convenient, but they sound lousy. He said that his goal is to “rescue the art form that I’ve been practicing for the past 50 years.” He blames the digital age for the degradation of music quality.

    Modern digital formats sound great on my phone and I have no problem with it. Young, however, rightly points out that the digital encoding only captures a small percent of the musical data in a master recording.

    Young doesn’t hate digital formats, far from it. He just feels that the “digital age” has caused people to choose between quality and convenience. “They shouldn’t have to make that choice,” Young said.

    The solution is hardware that can play audio files that preserve more of the data present in the original recordings according to Young. He isn’t making that solution though. He’s leaving the heavy lifting to “some rich guy” like Steve Jobs.

    Speaking of Jobs, Young says that he was a “pioneer of digital music, and his legacy is tremendous.” He says that Jobs listened to vinyl at home after a day’s work. If Jobs were to live long enough as Young has, he’s sure that Jobs would have found a solution.

    He then moved onto record companies and whether or not they’re obsolete:

    “What I like about record companies is that they present and nurture artists. That doesn’t exist on iTunes, it doesn’t exist on Amazon. That’s what a record company does, and that’s why I like my record company. People look at record companies like they’re obsolete, but there’s a lot of soul in there — a lot of people who care about music, and that’s very important.”

    He then said that artists that complain about record companies should go it alone and become indie artists.

    At the end of the talk, he tackled the sensitive issue of piracy:

    “Piracy is new radio. That’s how music gets around.”