Author: Tony Zeoli

Tony Zeoli is Founder and CEO of Netmix.com and Radio Station by netmix.® Originally launched in 1995, Netmix was was considered by Billboard Magazine to be the "innovation and advancement of dance music on the Internet." Tony had launched the world's first Internet mix show website featuring the most influential DJs from around the globe. After two-and-a-half decades, Netmix has since evolved into an online station directory and powerful WordPress plugin, Radio Station, for broadcasters and webcasters to manage their statioon's show schedule in WordPress. Tony has been an innovator at the intersection of music and the Internet for the past thirty years in project management, product development, and digital strategy,. He is also the founder and CEO of Digital Strategy Works, a WordPress web design and digital marketing agency. And, Executive Producer of the Asheville House Music Society, an online House Music mix show. Tony is located in Asheville, NC where he loves to mountain bike, hike, and play golf with his son.

Less words, more music

Ah, is it more about the music? I hope so. It’s 9:38 and we’ve seen Kanye, Adam Levine, the Foo Fighters, Fall Out Boy and Britney. Lower thirds appear during every performance, shamelessly plugging MTV’s new deal with Real Rhapsody music service. What happened to Alisha? The director seems to be cutting between music, parties and awards. At first, it was a little awkward, but I think they are quickly adapting and cutting out the idiotic interludes while just getting straight to the songs people want to hear.

Let’s see what’s next.

MTV VMA Open

Okay, so I’m watching the MTV VMA show open. A logistical quagmire that got off to very rocky start. Unfortunately, I missed the Britney episode, but am already getting Twitter posts saying she lip synced her performance. Sara Sliverman…not funny. The jokes bombed. Alisha Keyes as hostess–not sure what to do when Pete Wence’s mic conked out during a segment in one of the four private rooms. Kanye’s performance underwhelming without studio lights to brighten the room..

Stay tuned for more commentary.

Everyone is talking about Rick Rubin

Over Labor Day weekend, my girlfriend Missy and I were spending the Labor Day weekend on Martha's Vineyard. The weather was gorgeous, the food tremendous and the laid back atmosphere mixed with sea salt from the ocean air was a welcome respite from our busy New York City lives.

On Saturday, we rented bikes and rode over to Oak Bluffs for lunch, ice cream and a little window shopping. Later that evening, upon our return to the quaint and homey Crocker House Inn, a quiet and well kept bed & breakfast in Vineyard Haven, I found our hosts had set out the early edition of the Sunday New York Times. Keeping with my normal traditions, I dug out my favorite section, The New York Times Sunday Magazine and was surprised to find legendary producer and record man, Rick Rubin, cross-legged on the cover, looking much like the guru his peers consider him to be.

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Get the look of Paul Van Dyk on StarStyle.com

StarStyle.com, a web site that provides music fans with a way to purchase the items seen in music videos launched its first dance music video: Paul Van Dyk's "White Lies" featuring the vocals of Pussycat Doll, Jessica Sutta."

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UMG to drop DRM until January

The New York Times reported today that–in a incredible reversal of position–the world’s largest record company, Universal Music Group, has made the decision to sell music tracks DRM-free until January. DRM-free music will be available through Real Networks, Walmart, Amazon, and a few web sites of artists under the UMG umbrella.

An interesting twist to this story is that DRM-free music will not be available through Apple’s iTunes download music service. UMG, in trying to break iTunes stranglehold on the digital download market, would like to see users migrate to other services to purchase music from artists on their affiliated labels. By taking this step, UMG are playing their trump card, and it’s certainly a big card to play.

Just a few months ago, UMG refused to renew the iTunes license to sell UMG music when Apple founder Steve Jobs refused to pay UMG a per unit revenue share for every iPod sold. Last year, Microsoft agreed to pay $1 per unit to UMG for every Zune player sold, but the company has yet to see any real traction in user adoption of their product.

This game of cat and mouse could potentially hurt UMG if Apple pulls their catalog from the service before the Christmas shopping season. In fact, it could cripple UMG’s bottom line in the 4th quarter. I’m willing to guess that the other services have been working on solutions to launch in September or October and are going to roll out marketing campaigns to try to drive users to their services to get certain albums DRM-free.

This is a gamble. At this point, there are so many iPods in the marketplace connecting directly to the iTunes store that users may not really care if the music is DRM-free. They have something that works, is high quality and they can connect once and take away.

Does UMG think consumers are going to go out and purchase players that play only their music DRM-free, but not be able to connect to iTunes for the rest? Has EMI licensed their catalogs to all the new services, so users can get both UMG and EMI music? If so, could there be some collusion on the labels parts to work with these services to the disadvantage of Apple? That might spur an anti-trust law suit if Apple were to learn that the labels discussed this with each other and then with the various services they were willing to license. It’s a tricky situation.

As Times reporter, Jeff Leeds noted, UMG will keep their music DRM-free on these services until January in order to test the marketplace and see what the rate of user adoption is. If things go well, you could see Warner Brothers and Sony/BMG drop DRM soon thereafter, or maybe earlier as they feel the pressure to submit to what consumers have been demanding.

I didn’t expect to see this story in the headlines tonight. It’s quite shocking actually and is going to make for some interesting commentary in the blog-o-sphere. I’d keep my eye on http://www.paidcontent.org, who I’m sure will have posted something about this turnabout very soon.

Beatport's New Affiliate Program Falls Short

For the past year, I've been trying to contact both Beatport's founder and Biz Dev rep with little success. I guess they feel they're too self-important to respond to phone messages or emails. While they're DJing in Denver or out skiing on the slopes, let's not rest on our laurel's fellas, because what happened to Friendster (MySpace ring a bell?) or the record industry (does p2p sound familiar?) can happen to you too.

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StarStyle Music Widgets!

Here's something cool for my friends who have been following my work as VP of Music at StarStyle.com. We've been working hard and have introduced StarStyle widgets to take what we're doing on StarStyle viral.

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Politics: Keith Olbermann commentary on Bush commutation of Libby sentence

I usually don't comment on politics here on this blog, but I thought the recent commentary by MSNBC's Keith Olbermann was a clear, powerful, accurate and compelling viewpoint on the current political firestorm our President, George Bush, has created by commuting the sentence of Vice President Dick Cheney's advisor, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, who had committed one of the most egregious crimes against his country--the United States--by outing CIA agent, Valerie Plame, after her husband, the former ambassador Joe Wilson, criticized the Bush administration for the use of faulty intelligence to justify the war in Iraq. Today, over 70% of Americans want this war ended now. Despite what Fox News, Rush Limbaugh and other right wing media outlets report, the war has gone horribly wrong and the recent troop surge is making little impact. The United States needs leadership to solve this war, to curtail Wall Street profiteering at the expense of the average American, and to solve the health care crisis in this country that sees some 40 million of its people without basic coverage.

Our government is beholden to corporate interests, graft and corruption and its time for change.

In this MSNBC segment, Olbermann makes an extraordinary statement about the Bush administration's willful manipulation and disregard for the American public, our law, due process and any sense of reason. As a United States citizen, I am sharing this so you too can be equally as outraged as I am about what George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and the Republican party are doing to this country. They have complete and utter disregard for the wishes of the American public. The same American public who recently elected a Democratic House and Senate in a sweeping mandate for reform and a change in the direction of the United States of America. At no time in my 40-years of life have I ever lived through such an era, where an administration came to power only to enrich their cronies and party members while destroying the political capital and good the United States had built up coming into the 21st century.

Despite what people say about Bill Clinton, he put this country on the track to grow into a new world order. People believed in Clinton, and he left office with one of the highest approval ratings of any two term President. Today, that vision has been severely impaired. What Bush, Cheney and the Republican party have done to the United States is shameful. If you speak out, they call you "un-American" and accuse you of "siding with the terrorists." As Rosie O'Donneel pointed out, "who are the terrorists? Are they the Islamic fundamentalists who have set out to harm us, or could they be politicians who use a policy of fear to emotionally freeze a nation that is lulled into a false sense of security and believes its being protected? But, are we?

Now, I don't necessarily agree with everything Rosie says, but she does do one thing. Her speaking out makes you think about the issues. At the very least, it makes you question what you're being told by the right-controlled media. Is what they're telling us correct, or are they using disinformation to lull us into a false sense of security for their own political purposes? How do we, as collective nation, rise up and make our voice heard. Whether it be a general strike, a work slowdown or writing your Senators and Congress men and women, Americans need to do something, and they need to do something now. Calling for the resignation of George W. Bush is certainly a good start.

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Under pressure, BurnLounge drops MLM…finally!

n another "I told you so" moment, Grant Johnson, the new CEO and Chairman of BurnLounge announced in a press release through the Mi2n.com music network the company will abandon its MLM model for a more traditional affiliate model. BurnLounge affiliates will be able to participate directly in the revenue upside from the sales of music, movies, tickets and other online transactional services without having to invest high fees to use the companies software tools.

This is a 180 degree turnaround since the company dumped Alex Arnold (a former executive of another bankrupt MLM, Excel Communications) in the face of criticism about its MLM structure and the Federal Trade Commission building its case against the company.

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More upheaval at BurnLounge

BurnLounge has announced that CEO, Alex Arnold, will step down from his post effective immediately. Grant D. Johnson, one of the company's Board of Directors and founding investor will take the helm. Johnson is also founding managing partner of Benevolent Capital, a hedge fund investing in private and public companies.

The Federal Trade Commission went to court this week to ask for an immediate shutdown of the controversial music service, but the court granted the company a stay. Although it still remains operational, the damage has been done. I think you'll see a number of members canceling their memberships.

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