Guest Information

Welcome to the Innovating Music Podcast!  The show has moved from UCLA Music to become part of Rethink Next, along with Creative Innovators, Amplify Music Conversations, and other new adventures.

Basics

Format: 30-40 minute interview. We record for up to 90 minutes with about 10 minutes of pre-air conversation about how the show runs and to get approvals for recording on the recording itself.

Host: Dr. Gigi Johnson, past director of UCLA’s Center for Music Innovation and Managing Partner of Rethink Next. 

Narrative Path

The conversation moves from the guest’s personal history in music and innovation — sometimes back into childhood and first creative directions — and explores different routes and rabbit holes. We often discuss blockages, creative team choices, the benefits of bad decisions, and non-linear directions in a non-linear life.

Toward the end, Gigi will ask the guest if there is anything else that we have not yet discussed that they would like to talk about. Usually, there are 1-2 thoughts that the guest would like to include, though that is not required.

We end at around 30-45 minutes of recorded content. We then spend about 5-10 minutes reviewing any questions.

 

Planning Needs

 

Media: Audio and Video – recorded on Riverside.fm via a Chrome Browser on a computer

Lead Time: We tend to run 2-6 weeks to distribution, depending on past episode batching. We can aim for specific dates upon request.

Preproduction Info — Needs to be shared here or by email with contact@rethinknext.com:

  • High-resolution photo, optimally with space on each side of the guest (horizontal)
  • Bio; optimal additional list of past jobs/roles
  • Social media links for sharing/tagging
  • Backup cell phone number in case of tech challenges.

Target Tech: 90 minutes at a computer with a good internet connection, external mike or headset, and headphones (not a laptop mike and optimally not earbuds). 

Tech Needs

 

  • We are recording via Riverside.fm via a web call using Chrome. (See more details below.)
  • We ask that you use a decent webcam, microphone, and headphones. We have found that a cellphone or laptop microphone provides less-than-optimal sound recordings, as well as its own audio edits and cuts off the beginnings and endings of phrases.
  • Please have some space on your hard drive, as Riverside.fm saves the 1080p video on your computer and uploads it progressively onto the system.  
  • At the end, please wait until the system shows that the video is 100% uploaded to “disconnect.” It may take a minute or two at the end.
  • We also ask that the guest looks at their own images in their camera to center themselves, have decent lighting on their face, avoid backlight from a light or window behind them, etc.
  • We also ask that you record your side of the audio locally so that we can bring in the best quality sound for the podcast. You can find ideas on how to record locally at your computer at this link for either Mac or PC…or iPhone.
  • Please send contact@rethinknext.com the recording as soon as the interview is over in either in either .WAV or .mp3 format.

Guest Link for Recording

Click on the link provided separately in Chrome to go to the recording studio:

If you would like to have a guest in attendance, ask us via contact@rethinknext.com ahead of time for a guest/producer link that would stay “off-camera.”

We recommend that you try audio recording yourself before the interview — in part, you’ll be able to hear what your microphone picks up and how wonderful you can sound. 🙂

Episodes

Music 3.0 with Vickie Nauman and Andrea Young

Vickie Nauman and Andrea Young joined us to talk about Music 3.0. Vickie had written an article for Rethink Music, a blog by the Berklee College of Music, about Music 3.0. Music 1.0 in this discussion was music sold as physical goods and Music 2.0 was the...

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Changing Mindsets in Music Innovation with Michele Tharp

To marketer Michele Tharp, innovation is creating a better way to do something, and working with an inner desire to make a change. She focuses - as we do - on changing mindsets -- new ways to work with technology, development, and platforms. She shares with us two...

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Reporting from the Leading Edge of Music and Tech

Cherie Hu has grabbed a front-row seat to tech and music change. Forbes grabbed her after graduation from Harvard, bringing her interests in music and tech to their own digital pages. She also brings that magic to both Billboard, Variety, Pitchfork, and Music Business...

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2019 — Future of Music in Los Angeles

Gigi Johnson invites listeners of this Innovating Music podcast to join in research, events, and conversations in 2019 on the possible Future(s) of Music in Los Angeles.  She discusses the Center's research so far in looking at tech's impact on live performance.  She...

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Music Beyond the Speakers

Gigi interviewed Adam Moseley, a long-time producer/mixer/engineer who is exploring new adventures in spatial audio, mixed reality, and sound technologies.  Adam also teaches at UCLA's Music Industry Program at the Herb Alpert School of Music. Adam shares the...

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SF Nurturing Music By the Bay

We were joined by Maggie Weiland and Dylan Rice from the SF Entertainment Commission to talk about how they work to nurture music in San Francisco.   Gigi had met them at an event hosted by Jocelyn Kane, who created many of the public policy rules and...

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New Songs for Global Singers

Jonathan Stone shares the adventures of Rocket Songs, which connects songs with singers from around the world to discover and perform. He talked about the past century or so of relationships between singers and songwriters, and the challenge of connecting those dots...

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Bridging Cultures — Translating Music Lyrics

Robert has been on a 14-year quest: to translate music legally between languages and cultures. Lyrics are the #1 search term on the internet and Robert shares the story of LyricFind's path to creating a legal marketplace in the US for song lyrics, up to nearly a...

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