Thanks,
Bill
"Bill Hoff" <amp...@i1.net> wrote in message
news:8dd05201.02092...@posting.google.com...
Brad
-W.
I've been wondering whose music this is, as well. Earlier in the week
I did some Googling but didn't find much, and the Nissandriven site
doesn't have the info on commercial music (that I could tell).
Whenever I see a commercial with cool music or cool anything, I can
usually find it on ads.com. The site has the 350Z "license plates"
commercial archived. You can play it in realmedia or winmedia to see
it and hear the guitar work:
http://www.ads.com/ads/adInfo.jsp?ad_id=4063&us=1302633&pt=0&sr=5
Alas there's no mention of the music source.
HTH,
Jennifer
--
Can't live without music...
RMMGA CD3 FAQ:
http://www.geocities.com/musicaddict47/rmmga/cd3faq.html
Just played it. I think it's the tonal quality which is catchy, not the
riff. It sounds very engineered - reverb etc - but the finger scratches
don't sound echoey. Reminded me of Ry Cooder's "Cold Was the Night" from
"Crossroads" for sound effects. I think maybe it has been slowed down to the
get the ethereal noises, but again the scratches don't sound too slowed
down.
Tony D
"Jennifer" <musica...@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:5g9cpu0ca6vkp4p24...@4ax.com...
After checking out the link that Jennifer (thanks!) provided, I
emailed the ad company. Got this reply:
"The music is original created by one of the production houses we work
with..."
If there's enough interest, happy to continue digging....
scott "gotta put that MLIS to use somehow" kiefer
Dear John,
Thank you for contacting Nissan North America, Inc. and allowing us the
opportunity to be of assistance.
The music was a piece scored specifically for the commercial "De javu" by
Elias Arts.
If you have any further questions or comments, please feel free to e-mail
us.
Sincerely,
Soni
National Consumer Affairs
"John Chamberlain" <jmcf...@msn.com> wrote in message
news:an9vck$ciha6$1...@ID-141180.news.dfncis.de...
Mark wrote:
> passable art created en masse by some commercial entity.
> Sort of where the world is going. It isn't about the
> individual artists anymore; it's all about the money and
> power of the corporation behind it. somewhere at Elias Arts
> is some gutarist that is pretty good, and he's pretty happy
> to have credit for his composition go to 'the house.' At
> least some guitarist somewhere got a paycheck
That used to be what I did for a living. I agree with you
in that "It isn't about the individual artists...".
They're selling cars, not Joe Blow the guitarist. I felt
no shame in playing or singing on commercials. Nor did
I feel any shame in cashing their paychecks.
When I play at a wedding, it's all about the bride,
not me the artist. When I play at a barmitzvah, it's
all about the 13 year old kid. When I side in with
a band or on a recording, it's all about THAT artist,
not me.
lumpy
--
www.digitalcartography.com
Tony D
"Tony Done" <tony...@bigpond.com> wrote in message
news:3EIl9.42634$g9.1...@newsfeeds.bigpond.com...
Precisely.
Loads of people do creative and productive things in their everyday
jobs...because they like doing their jobs well. Next time you see a product
that is well designed and does exactly what it's supposed to, next time you
call a customer service number and they seem to have anticipated what sort
of help you'll need, next time you see a contractor building a beautiful
deck on someone's home, remember that "artists" aren't the only creative
folks around.
Corporate labs fund research and development departments, paying salaries to
really smart folks that often produce patentable new ideas. The corporation
owns the patents...they fund the work, they own the output. The guys
working in the labs know that.
The unknown artist on the Nissan commercial signed on to do work for a
production company...they pay him a salary, and he does his job (and,
honestly, it doesn't sound like a bad one). Seems fair to me.
--
Michael Pugh
Just out of curiosity, what kind of income would someone in that position
probably receive?
Mitch
I don't have any clue (Lumpy?), but I'm guessing they make more than a
bar-band guitarist, doing original songs, and playing the club circuit.
--
Michael Pugh
My friends who don't work day jobs and only place music get by but
just barely ---- figure maybe only a little over $20k per year,
though. Some of 'em give private lessons too. If they had even a
modest salary with a production house and still gigged and taught some
they'd probably be doing ok.
Sherm
Pugh wrote:
> I don't have any clue (Lumpy?)...
Minimum would be whatever union scale
is in that locale, which differs from
place to place. Lowest union scale right
now is (I think) $40/hr. It's higher in
places like LA or NY. Depending on
what the medium and circulation is,
there could be royalties. Union dues,
insurance and other stuff is then
taken back out of that before you
get paid.
To work on radio/TV you have to belong
to the AFM (muso union) plus one of the
actor/technical unions like SAG (screen
actors guild).
lumpy
--
www.digitalcartography.com
lumpy
--
www.digitalcartography.com
>>
For TV & or Radio AFM for sure if you want to get paid but you don't have to
belong to SAG or anything else if you're "just" a musician.
My tunes at:
http://www.geocities.com/mondoslugness
Amostagain wrote:
> For TV & or Radio AFM for sure if you
> want to get paid but you don't have to
> belong to SAG or anything else if
> you're "just" a musician.
Maybe it's changed. That would make it
a little easier on the pocketbook,
not having to pay two union dues.
When I was there you weren't allowed
on a sound stage unless you showed
your SAG or AFTRA card to the steward.
Then, of course, you had to pay to park,
which cost more than either of the union
dues..:-)
lumpy
--
www.digitalcartography.com
>I sent an email to Nissan and this is their response...
>
>Dear John,
>
>Thank you for contacting Nissan North America, Inc. and allowing us the
>opportunity to be of assistance.
>
>The music was a piece scored specifically for the commercial "De javu" by
>Elias Arts.
>
I tried the same thing, but went first to the ad agency, and then to
the production house. Here's the production house reply:
"Thank you for the interest on the "Deja Vu" spot.
That piece was composed by the talented Jimmy Haun.
Jimmy was formerly in the bands Yes and Air Supply and now you can
sometimes catch him playing around town. (LA)"
scott
>"Thank you for the interest on the "Deja Vu" spot.
>That piece was composed by the talented Jimmy Haun.
>Jimmy was formerly in the bands Yes and Air Supply and now you can
>sometimes catch him playing around town. (LA)"
Of course, I had to Googleize the name, and found an
interesting interview with the guy.
Warning: Those of you who are Steve Howe fans (as I am) are
going to find this somewhat surprising, if not upsetting...
<http://www.bondegezou.demon.co.uk/iv/jhinterview.htm#p4>
I remember seeing an Air Supply concert on TV (I think it
was on HBO) years ago, and although I didn't much care for
the band or their music, there was this one guitar player
who really kicked ass (he definitely made an impression on
me). I'm wondering if that was he.
Anybody who can step into Steve Howe's shoes is a hell of a
guitar player.
Joe
--
Joe D. Jordan
Mobile, AL