Wednesday, September 22, 2010

ASCAPlus Awards

ASCAPlus Award

Each year ASCAP, The American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers, selects ASCAP Plus Award winners from its huge member database. Winners are chosen on merit; activity generated by the member’s catalog; and the song catalog’s unique prestige value.

Well that is how the program is described anyway :) I was awarded an ASCAPlus Award for 2010-2010-2011-2012-2013!

Pretty Cool :)



2 comments:

  1. Seriously, congratulations. I feel pretty stupid having never listened to anything you'd ever done. And in several short days, have tried to catch up. All I can say is it's great. And then finding the blog. Your writing is equally cool. Totally, love though, your videos. Well done. Please, consider me a fan.

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  2. It’s the funniest thing; I’ve been sitting here in my office with your song “More Than I Can” going through my head for an hour and I decided to go on a treasure hunt for your video on Google. Brought back cool memories.

    You see, back in 1997 I was the first employee of an EARLY Internet startup called Skunk technologies. We were BLEEDING edge, doing shit that wouldn’t be commonplace for over a decade. It was Internet World ’97 in Los Angeles and we decided to throw an after-party. We rented the Whiskey-a-GoGo on Sunset for the event, called all the hottest girls we knew from college (most of us were still in school) and went searching for a band.

    The party was a BLAST!!! The line was down the block. Hot chicks, important Internet players, booze flowing like water, cigars, it was our PEAK!!! We’d just raised $1.2 million in angel funding (un-heard of in those days) and were being courted by a VC for $20 million. Bill Gates was actually concerned about us and called his friends at Intel to help squash us like a bug (successfully). We were kings of all creation.

    Anyway, before the party I remember sitting on a bean bag in the conference room off Santa Monica blvd. reviewing videos from bands we were considering to play the show. It came down to you and Red Five. I didn’t like Red Five. Their music was just “whatever.” When I saw your video I was like “WHOA DUDES, we GOT to get those guys to play! WASSUP? Drop some coin and let’s make it happen.” Everybody agreed. We watched your video “More Than I Can” one more time just to sit and rock out to it.

    In the end, it wasn’t meant to be. Your manager (incorrectly) advised you that playing a party for a bunch of “geeks” after some irrelevant technology conference would only sour your career. I guess he wasn’t aware that the Internet was about to become the coolest thing since...well, ever! We were crushed. We signed up Red Five and they did a great job, but I’ve always wondered what it would have been like if we’d been able to wise your manager up to the tsunami that was coming. 

    Oh well; thirteen years later I’m between conference calls and “More Than I Can” is going through my head. Luckily I remembered enough of the lyrics to do a Google search. Found the song, the band, the YouTube video, your Facebook, your website, your email, and now I’ve wasted 20 minutes telling you how much I love that song and wish you could have been there to help us celebrate the birth of the interactive web. Skunk went down in flames a year later, but we live on in spirit. All the players are older now, more mature, kids, careers, etc. but whenever I think of those days, I remember your song.

    Cheers!

    Daryl Acumen
    Manager, Global Search Analytics
    Office of Digital Strategy
    Corporate Marketing
    Hewlett-Packard

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