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Look for our Events
Update in your e-mail at the start
of each month!
 
--Beginning of the
End For Old-Time Record Store Fan
 
--SGA's Tersini Collaborates with
Top-10 Songwriters
 
--SGA Welcomes
Grand Ole Opry and
Canjun Star to Its Ranks
 
--SGA Member Kylie Edmond Signs with
Missing Link Music
 
--What Is A Publishing Deal? Do I Really
Need One?
 

--SGA Foundation
Co-Sponsors WannaBeatles'
Reenactment

 
--Tax TimeTips and Deductions for
Songwriters and Musicians
 
 
 

SGA News

This newsletter best viewed in FireFox or online, here.


Ready for tax time?
Tips and Deductions for Songwriters and Musicians

This is that dreaded time of year for pulling things together for filing taxes and a good time for considering things you may not have thought of in the past. One of the most common questions taxpayers ask their tax advisors is, what can I deduct? The answer to that question depends upon the industry of the taxpayer. The Internal Revenue Code (Code) doesn't provide a comprehensive list. Rather, the Code simply states that you may deduct what is ordinary and necessary for your business. It is up to you to determine what is ordinary and necessary; and...

--Read more



SGA Foundation Co-Sponsors WannaBeatles'
Reenactment of Beatles' Legendary Rooftop Performance

WannaBeatles Arrested by Bobbies

On Jan. 30, 2009, the Songwriters Guild of America Foundation co-sponsored a special 40th Anniversary celebration of the Beatles' legendary rooftop performance in London.

A portion of the proceeds from donations and the sale of WannaBeatles merchandise benefited the MENC: National Association for Music Education, an organization that advances education by encouraging the study and making of music.

--Read more


 

What Is a Publishing Deal?
And Do I Really Need One?

The term "publishing," most simply, means the business of copyrights. As a songwriter you own 100 percent of your song copyright and all the related publishing rights until you sign those rights away.

--Read more


 

SGA Member Kylie Edmond Signs with Missing Link Music

Kylie Edmond

SGA member Kylie Edmond started her new year off right, signing with Missing Link Music in January.

Missing Link is one of the music industry's leading music publishing and copyright administration companies. They cover all genres of music from R&B and rock to hip-hop to jazz.

Missing Link will pitch Kylie's songs for TV/Film and for other artists' projects.

--Read more

 

SGA Welcomes Grand Ole Opry and Cajun Star to Its Ranks

Jimmy Newman

The Songwriters Guild of America recently welcomed Grand Ole Opry star and Cajun music icon Jimmy C. Newman to its roster of all-star songwriters.

Newman is a native of High Point, La. and is known for his song, "A Fallen Star," a hit that crossed into the Pop Top 25 and remained there for weeks.

Newman joined the Cajun group Chuck Guillory's Rhythm Boys as a teenager. After several years, he was signed to Dot Records and achieved his first hit "Cry, Cry, Darling."

--Read more


 

Tersini Collaborates with Top-10 Songwriters

Danielle Tersini

Up and coming singer-songwriter and SGA member Danielle Tersini sat down, recently, with East Coast Project Manager Mark Saxon to discuss her songwriting and networking efforts. Danielle performs, regularly, at the 'Girl’s Rock The Night' event in New York City and has gained collaborative opportunities with hit songwriters through her SGA association.

--Read more


 

Beginning of the End for the Old-Time Record Store Fan

By Mark Saxon, East Coast Project Manager

Virgin Records in NYC

The Times Square Virgin Megastore in New York, which is the highest volume music store in the U.S., will shut down in April, according to a story in a recent Billboard article.

The article cites real-estate problems as the cause, stating that Virgin is paying far less per square foot than the real estate is worth.

The closure would leave the Virgin chain with just five stores, and the status of another of its' stores, also in New York, may also be in jeopardy.

--Read more

©2004, Further Communications

Date: July 14th 2009

SGA Logo
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
--Songwriting:
Appreciating
The Journey
 
--One on One
with Paul Allen:
MTSU Professor,
Author,
Industry Pro
 
--Put Your Song
In My Shoes"
(Internal vs.
External Lyrics)c
 
--Songwriters Guild
Amateur Songwriter
Makes The Jump
To Professional
In Dramatic Fashion
 

--Breath For
Singing - Ways
to Sense When
It's Right

 
--The Differences
Between Songwriting
In NYC & Nashville
 
 
 

SGA News

This newsletter best viewed in FireFox or online, here.


The Differences Between Songwriting In NYC & Nashville
Written by: Cliff Goldmacher

As a recently transplanted songwriter from Nashville to New York City, I’ve had the chance to observe, up close, the approaches to songwriting and the songwriting communities in both cities. While there are of course many similarities, there are also quite a few differences. By the way, I feel I should mention that the following observations are really more my impressions than hard facts.

--Read more



Breath For Singing - Ways to Sense When It's Right
By Judy Rodman

When taking vocal lessons, it's not enough to train the intellect. Sometimes the mind understands but the body feels spastic! Here are some suggestion to help your physical body identify the sensation of correct vocal technique.

--Read more


 

Songwriters Guild Amateur Songwriter Makes The Jump
To Professional In Dramatic Fashion

For aspiring songwriters, the task of breaking into the music business can be as daunting as breaking into Fort Knox. But after years of trying, longtime Guild member Ed Silver has finally gotten through to the gold. Silver recently learned that one of his songs was used on multiple episodes of the ABC daytime drama “All My Children” as the musical centerpiece for the breakup of its two main characters. The news arrived as a complete surprise.

--Read more


 

"Put Your Song In My Shoes"
(Internal vs. External Lyrics)
By Denny Sarokin

There’s an old expression, “The Devil is in the details”. You might spend hours, days, or months slaving over a legal pad trying to replicate your deepest thoughts and feelings, but if you want to communicate effectively, you’ve got to PUT YOUR SONG IN MY SHOES! Make me feel like I’m going through the same or a parallel experience.

--Read more

 

One on One with Paul Allen:
MTSU Professor, Author, Industry Pro

Stephen Smith, a graduate from Middle Tennessee State University and a recent intern at the Songwriters Guild of America, sat down with his former professor Paul Allen to pick his brain on state of the music industry and how the current changes are affecting songwriters and the future of the business.

--Read more


 

Songwriting: Appreciating The Journey
by Mark Saxon

Most songwriters aspire to something greater than they are, no matter what “level” they are on.

For the “beginning” and “intermediate” songwriter, it’s to get to the level where you have the respect of your peers, and to create something as worthy as what they are writing. So you go about the business of songwriting. You go to critique sessions, take classes in songwriting, learn how to write and then produce your song, whether it be in your own studio or in a “demo” studio.

--Read more

©2004, Further Communications

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