Central Michigan musician uses country music to process difficulty


BIG RAPIDS — Geoff Elias is a country musician with quite the story to tell.

Originally from Lake Isabella, Elias graduated from Chippewa Hills. Now living in Mecosta, he has taken to staying home with his kids and spending a lot of time on music.

After losing his house and wife, Elias’ mental state began to decline before being involved in a high-speed chase and spending time in jail. He also was a heavy drinker. 

Elias now spends his time putting his heart and soul into his songs, and uses them to process his breakup, trouble with the law, and other difficult situations he’s been through.

“I bonded out of jail and just started writing. Had to have a way to express myself, you know,” Elias said.

He now plays at open mic nights at places like the Sawmill Saloon and The Thirsty Llama with his girlfriend and kids and also loves seeing people react to his original songs.

According to Elias, people recognized his talent for music before he began to take it seriously and use it as an outlet.

“Everybody that ever saw me touch a guitar before and just play other people’s songs, they were just like, ‘dude, that’s you, that’s what you need to do,’” he said.

Now 10 months clean, he said he has 12 original songs he’s confident in, and has been playing 30-minute sets at open mics around Mecosta County to get his name out there.

He said he played an original song, called “Forget It All,” which is like a ballad, and someone asked him if he was playing a song by Bob Dylan.

“And I was like, ‘No, that was original,’ the whole place just went up. I about started crying,” he said.

According to his girlfriend, Teresa Hoover, Elias’ mood will shift when he’s sad at home, and starts to play guitar.

“If things are bothering him or he’s having a bad day, that’s his go-to. He picks up his guitar and he just jams and it just shifts,” she said.

Hoover also noted how comfortable and happy Elias seems to be on stage.

“I’ve seen him thrive on stage. He gets up there and he is in his moment. I don’t know how else to explain it,” she said.

Elias loves making people dance with his music, and Hoover recalled her favorite time watching this happen at The Thirsty Llama.

“He was doing a cover, and these little old ladies got out there and just started dancing. And he just lit up. Forever that will be ingrained in my head because it was just amazing to watch,” she said.

Despite music being his calling, Elias still gets nerves leading up to his performances.

“Don’t get me wrong, it’s nerve-wracking. Usually the whole ride, my stomach’s in knots and I want to turn around and I’m like, no, just get up there and do it,” he said.

Elias hopes to use music to live up to his potential and live a happy life, leaving his checkered past behind.

“Stopping progression is all I’ve ever done to myself and I’m ready to progress and just move forward. Get past all this, live a happy life and use music as a tool if nothing else,” he said.

Looking forward, Elias is looking to meet other musicians, put together his album, and get his music out there more so people like him, who have been through something similar, will be able to relate to it.

Catch Elias playing at the Sawmill Saloon open mic and others around West Michigan.

 

Justin Bieber reportedly close to selling music rights for $200M







© Joseph Okpako—WireImage
A shirtless Justin Bieber sings into a microphone in front of a green background

Singer Justin Bieber may be joining the ranks of musicians selling their song rights for hundreds of millions of dollars. 

The Canadian pop star is close to selling the rights to his recorded music for $200 million to Hipgnosis Songs Capital, a firm that invests in music rights, reports the Wall Street Journal. Hipgnosis Songs Capital is backed by asset manager Blackstone, which committed $1 billion to the company to help acquire music rights. 

The Bieber deal would be Hipgnosis’s largest, according to the Wall Street Journal. The firm also acquired the rights to Justin Timberlake’s music for $100 million earlier this year. 

Blackstone did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Hipgnosis declined to comment.

Several other prominent musicians have also sold their music rights for hundreds of millions of dollars. Bob Dylan sold the rights to his songwriting and recorded music catalogs to Universal Music and Sony Music respectively, netting the Nobel Laureate somewhere between $450 million and $500 million in total. 

In November 2021, Sony Music acquired Bruce Springsteen’s music rights in an estimated $550 million deal. And in January, Warner Chappell Music bought the rights to David Bowie’s catalog for $250 million. 

Why are people paying top dollar for music rights?

Those acquiring music rights believe that the rights, especially for works from beloved artists, can generate long-term income from licensing deals and royalty payments. 

The growth in blockbuster deals for back catalogs comes as older music takes over streaming. 

“Catalog music,” defined as music released over 18 months prior, made up 72.4% of the U.S. music market in the middle of 2022, according to analytics company Luminate. New music made up the 27.6% remaining.

And streaming users are listening to old music as well. The 200 most popular songs of 2021 were only streamed 5% of the time last year, according to Luminate (formerly called MRC Data). That’s half as often as 2018, when users streamed that year’s most popular songs 10% of the time. 

Other forms of pop culture can have a hand in streaming success. TikTok trends can send a classic song back into the charts: in 2020, a TikTok trend featuring the Fleetwood Mac song “Dreams” sent the song to second place in Billboard’s song charts. 

More recently, Kate Bush’s song “Running Up That Hill” became the most-streamed song in the world in June when it was featured in the opening to Netflix’s latest season of Stranger Things. The streaming boom could have earned Bush an estimated $2.3 million in royalties. 

Bieber may have gotten lucky with his music rights deal, as the market for back catalogs could be cooling. Higher interest rates are making it more difficult for potential buyers to get financing, and a looming economic slowdown is dampening income projections from song rights, according to the Wall Street Journal

Not all of Bieber’s business deals turn out well. On Monday, the singer accused clothing retailer H&M of selling merchandise with his name and likeness without his consent. H&M, which disputes Bieber’s claim that it made the clothes without the singer’s approval, pulled the products on Wednesday.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

More from Fortune: 

People who skipped their COVID vaccine are at higher risk of traffic incidents

Elon Musk says getting booed by Dave Chapelle fans ‘was a first for me in real life’ suggesting he’s aware of building backlash

Gen Z and young millennials have found a new way to afford luxury handbags and watches—living with mom and dad

Meghan Markle’s real sin that the British public can’t forgive–and Americans can’t understand

Zeeshan Khan Announces His First Composition “Khoya Hai Dil” Licensed by OTT for brother Zakir Khan’s Special ‘Tathastu’


Zakir Khan’s latest comedy special “Tathastu” on OTT has garnered all praises from fans as it stays true to the comic’s unique andaaz and promises bouts of laughter. What’s also special is that this marks the first collaboration of debutant singer-songwriter Zeeshan Khan whose composition “Khoya Hai Dil”was licensed by the streaming platform as the end-credit soundtrack.

In memory of their late grandfather, UstadMoinudien Khan Sahab, a Padma Shree awardee and magnificent Sarangi player, Zeeshan’s soulful rendition has managed to touch the right chords among listeners. The Pune-based artist, who released the track earlier this year, is popularly known in the city circuits as the lead vocalist for Pune’s most beloved band, ‘Malang the Band.’ With the legacy of music maestros in the family, Zeeshan is an Indian singer-songwriter with a flair to strike the tunes of a Ghazal, a Bandish, or even a Bollywood chartbuster with great ease.

The show’s familiarity as well as Zakir Khan’s connection with his audience have undoubtedly influenced the song’s trajectory and served as a bridge for Zeeshan. In yet another feat for the young artist, the track recently surpassed the 1 Million-Stream mark on Instagramwhile alsoreflecting a similar responses across channels such as DSPs, YouTube, Social Mediaamong others.

Speaking about the inspiration behind his first composition, Zeeshan shares, “Khoya Hai Dil happened to me at a point when I was at the crossroads of life trying to navigate through a stable corporate job versus a career in music. The lyrics of the song truly come from a place of heart as it represents the emotional state I was in while trying to find my true purpose in life. I think this is an emotion that truly resonates with the youth today who are caught in the hustle in their own ways to discovering their calling in life.For any young music artist, it’s such a milestone achievement to have your first composition licensed by an entertainment powerhouse like Amazon Prime Video and what makes it a bigger highlight is that it’s a part of my brother’s special, Tathastu that’s an ode to our memories with our late grandfather who I consider as my mentor.”

The coming year will see Zeeshan releasing a bunch of soulful songs as part of his journey in music.

Timothy and the Apocalypse set up a new installation of downtempo disenchanted catharsis with his latest trip-hop single, Shadows of the Lost – Independent Music – New Music


Watching the Sydney, Australia producer Timothy and the Apocalypse as he becomes a rare 21st-century success story with his cinematic indie beats that are shifting him ever closer to the million streams mark with his discography has been a sense of contentment in itself.

With soundscapes crafted for the end of the world, which effortlessly gel with your own despondence, the tranquillity within his downtempo trip-hop tracks offers a breeze of disenchanted catharsis. His latest single, Shadows of the Lost, is no exception. The wavy psychedelic aesthetic of Shadows of the Lost touches on the phenomenon of disconnection which is as steady as the beats in severing connections in our isolated age.

As the synthetic vocals drift in at the mid-point mark, as though they have appeared from a black-and-white film, they remind us that the control we believe we have over our lives is nothing but an illusion. Tony Robins may not agree, but given that he’s probably responsible for the clinical burnout and appeal of pyramid schemes for his fans, we’d like to hear him argue with this compellingly chilling exposition of the end days.

Shadows of the Lost will officially release on December 22nd. Hear it on Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast



GMB viewers baffled by ‘ambient music’ technical glitch







© GMB
Screenshot 2022-12-19 at 12.36.32 PM.png

Good Morning Britain viewers are confused after ambient music played over the NHS strike debate this morning.

The music was played during a panel discussion that included Daily Mail editor Andrew Pierce and Dr Vivek Trivedi, who were speaking about the junior doctor’s strike ballot.

Soon after the interruption, GMBs official Twitter page ended up posting original clips of the debate where Dr Trivedi, who is the BMA junior doctors committee co-chair, said: “Poor pay and working conditions are causing doctors to leave the profession or move abroad.”

GMB hosts Adil Ray and Charlotte Hawkins have also issued an apology for the glitch.

Many nurses throughout England, Wales and Northern Ireland are striking as they demand a pay rise of 5 per cent above the RPI inflation rate.

The first strike was conducted on 15 December and the second one is set to be held on Tuesday (20 December).

An Ipsos poll shows that 52 per cent of voters support the nurse strikes, with only 27 per cent against.

Nurses on the picket lines said low salaries mean some colleagues have had to turn to food banks to feed their children, while have said staff shortages mean patients are being neglected.

On social media, viewers were confused by what appeared to be a technical glitch, with some joking the GMB discussion was being “censored”.

“Can the doctor REPEAT his whole speech? We didn’t hear it!” one viewer tweeted.

“I thought it was just me,” another wrote. “Bless them they had no idea.”

One person wrote: “Someone at @GMB doesn’t want us to hear what the Junior Doctor is saying. Pictures ok but sound is being replaced by what can only be described as whale music.”

The Independent has contacted ITV for comment.

From news to politics, travel to sport, culture to climate – The Independent has a host of free newsletters to suit your interests. To find the stories you want to read, and more, in your inbox, click here.

“Two Grand Slam titles are not easily won every year”


Rafael Nadal is satisfied with his on-court results in 2022, given that he won two Grand Slams — a feat he considers to be a difficult ask in tennis.

The Spaniard won his 21st and 22nd Majors this year by emerging as champion at the Australian Open and the French Open. He now holds the record for most Grand Slam singles titles won by a male player.

In a recent interview with Esquire, the 36-year-old was asked to name the best and worst parts of his life this year. He expressed satisfaction with his professional life, highlighting how he has won Majors in a year in which he has been plagued with injuries.

“I think the year in general has been very good at a professional level. Two Grand Slam titles are not easily won every year and that has made me satisfied in terms of results. It is true that I have had some injuries at the beginning of the year and in the middle of the year that have prevented me from competing in other tournaments and kept me at home longer than desired,” Nadal said.

Interestingly though, Nadal himself has won multiple Majors in a calendar year on six occasions, last achieving the feat in 2019. Novak Djokovic, too, has pulled off this feat six times, and surprisingly enough, so has Roger Federer.

While this might make it seem like the said feat is easy, it is pertinent to note that no other male player, besides the Big 3, has won two Majors or more in a calendar year in the 21st century.

Nadal then reflected on a major personal milestone in his life this year, namely the birth of his son, which happened under stressful circumstances. His wife Maria endured a complicated pregnancy which kept the former World No. 1 on tenterhooks throughout the American hardcourt tour.

“On a personal level, moments of immense joy have also been combined with the birth of our son with others in which we went through complicated situations that kept us on our toes and prevented a normal development of what we were doing, in my case competing in the open USA. But in the end everything turned out well and I have the sweet taste of the year that is about to end,” he stated.


“Water is what I like the least, but what I drink the most” – Rafael Nadal

Rafael Nadal opening a bottle of water at the 2019 Australian Open

During the interview, Rafael Nadal was asked to pick his drink of preference amongst wine, water, and soft drinks. Unsurprisingly, he revealed that water is what he drinks the most even though it is his least favorite drink.

“To tell you the truth, maybe water is what I like the least, but what I drink the most. I like wine, but lately they have it more limited, almost forbidden, just like a soft drink that I always had with some olives and which lately I’ve had to give up,” he said.

The 22-time Grand Slam winner was also asked to name his preferred choice between rock, pop, and classical music. He divulged that he has had a soft spot for classical music from a young age given his grandfather was a conductor in an orchestra. However, the 14-time Roland Garros champion also admitted that pop singer Julio Iglesias is his favorite vocalist, and further revealed his love for reggaeton.

“Well, here I tell you that I am one of the three. My grandfather was a conductor in Manacor and he instilled in me a love for classical music as a child. Nor am I deceiving anyone by saying that my favorite singer is Julio Iglesias and that I also listen to reggaeton. I leave it there,” he expressed.

Quick Links

More from Sportskeeda




Country music highlights quiet Waco-area weekend


Christmas weekend finds a quieter local music scene than previous December weekends, with a Nashville singer-songwriter, a Texas bluegrass trio and a multi-performer night the highlights for country music fans.

The weekend offers local followers of Nashville country singer-songwriter Kristen Kelly another chance to see the Lorena native perform for the home folks.

Kelly, whose sister Kimberly also is a country singer-songwriter, will play a solo show at 8 p.m. Friday at Bull Hide Creek Sports Tavern, 7589 Golinda Drive in Golinda. In addition to the live music, the evening will feature a catered taco bar and full bar service.

“It’s my last hometown show of the year. It’s always fun to come back and play for the hometown,” she said in a phone interview earlier this week.

Kelly returns to Central Texas a month after her latest single release, “Smoke,” which had a double tribute to her parents: Its release date of Nov. 10 fell on her mother Cindy Laughlin’s birthday and the image of a cigarette-filled ashtray that accompanied “Smoke” was the ashtray of her father Danny Kelly, who died last January.

People are also reading…

“Both parents were super, super supportive, encouraging my sister and I both to keep writing and playing shows,” she said.

These days, Kelly finds herself drawing from her early days as a performer with local rock cover band Big Dave and the Freaks and, working with co-writer Bridgette Tatum (“She’s Country”), has been blending rootsy rock with country.

Kelly’s most recent release, her first project in six years, is a two-part EP, “Something Worth Saying,” whose second part arrived early last year. Kelly, tabbed as one of CMT’s Next Women of Country, also has opened for such Nashville stars as Brad Paisley, Montgomery Gentry, Rascal Flatts and Gary Allan.

The year ahead will find Kelly releasing more new music, playing solo gigs and moving into podcasting with “Something Worth Saying,” adapted from the monthly songwriters’ round she’s hosted in Nashville. She’ll take that podcast on the road, in a “Nashville writers’ round-style show coming to a city near you,” she said.

Bluegrass band

Cold may send the music inside at the debut of the McGregor Country Christmas festival Thursday and Friday when bluegrass band the Purple Hulls is scheduled to play.

The Hulls, anchored by twins Katy Lou Clark and Penny Lea Clark Gimble, with bassist Sarah Birkeland rounding out the trio will perform at 6 p.m. Thursday and 7:15 p.m. Friday on the festival’s outdoor stage.

The Clarks grew up in a musical farming family near Kilgore — yes, their name comes from the purple hull peas the family grew — and took their talents to Nashville after graduating from South Plains College in Levelland, where they studied music and played basketball. For five years, they did studio recordings, worked for the Grand Ole Opry and wrote songs for the Sony/ATV music publishing company. They returned to their family farm in Texas about 12 years ago and continue to perform. Penny Lea Clark married McLennan County District Clerk Jon Gimble earlier this year.

Not goodbye

It’s not a goodbye that Axtell country musician Michael Saldana will make with six friends at The Backyard on Friday, but more like a — well, the informal title says it best: “Slow Down Saldana.”

Saldana, a frequent performer at area bars, clubs and other live music venues, is cutting back on performing next year to try and heal his vocal nodes.

“Singing five nights a week, sometimes four hours a night — I pushed it too hard,” he admitted recently. Told by a doctor to slow down or risk permanent damage to his voice, he’s opting for the former after 16 years as a performer.







Waco country performer Michael Saldana will have a half dozen local players join him Friday in a “Slow Down Saldana” show Friday at The Backyard.




He’s got six musical friends lined up to perform at Friday’s “Slow Down” show. In light of the low temperatures forecast for Friday night, the event will be inside rather than on The Backyard’s outdoor stage. “I’m not going to torture my friends,” he laughed.

Planning to play are Chris Low, Larissa Boyd, Lauren January, J.C. Pringle, Towne Adams and Lucas Jones.

Doors open at 6 p.m. with the music starting at around 7 p.m. Each of those performing will have solo time onstage, but it’s more like an open jam, and other musicians are encouraged to show up with their guitars.

“It’s one big blowout with all my friends,” Saldana said. “We’re playing for fun.”

Justin Bieber Is Reportedly Selling The Rights To His Music


Justin Bieber has a lot going on. The “Peaches” singer just called out H&M for copyright infringement over an unauthorized merch collection; he’s also amongst The Weeknd, Snoop Dogg, Post Malone, and more celebrities serving as defendants in the lawsuit against Bored Ape Yacht Club’s NFT creators.

Luckily, it looks like the most recent news is exciting. The star is reportedly approaching a deal to sell his music rights to Blackstone-backed Hipgnosis Songs Capital for about $200 million, according to sources who told Variety.

Justin Timberlake sold his entire catalog to Hipgnosis in May.

This follows the postponement of Bieber’s Justice World Tour this year. In June, he revealed his Ramsay Hunt syndrome diagnosis, which causes partial facial paralysis. He resumed his tour in Europe and performed six shows from July 31 to August 12, but he announced another postponement following his record-breaking set at Rock In Rio in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on September 4.

“After resting and consulting with my doctors, family and team, I went to Europe in an effort to continue with the tour. I performed six live shows, but it took a real toll on me. This past weekend I performed at Rock in Rio and I gave everything I have to the people in Brazil,” his statement read in September. “After getting off stage, the exhaustion overtook me and I realized that I need to make my health the priority right now. So I’m going to take a break from touring for the time being. I’m going to be ok, but I need time to rest and get better.”

The tour has been postponed through at least March 25, 2023.

Justin Bieber nears $200 million deal to sell music rights: report


Justin Bieber is reportedly close to finalizing a $200 million deal to sell his music rights.

According to The Wall Street Journal, Bieber is in negotiations with Hipgnosis Songs Capital, a Blackstone-backed investment and song management company, in a deal that would value his rights at “around” $200 million.

The potential deal includes both Bieber’s publishing and recorded music catalog, the Journal noted, and represents the largest to-date acquisition for Hipgnosis, which purchased Justin Timberlake’s song catalog rights for a reported $100 million earlier this year.

Music publishing encompasses the copyrights for songwriting and composition, such as lyrics and melodies. Although publishing rights are often not worth as much as actual recordings, they can still lead to a significant amount of revenue over time with radio play, advertising, movie licensing, and more.

Justin Bieber performs onstage during the 64th Annual GRAMMY Awards at MGM Grand Garden Arena on April 03, 2022 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Rich Fury/Getty Images for The Recording Academy)

The news serves as the latest in what has been a series of similar deals done by artists over the years, as streaming services like Spotify (SPOT), Apple (AAPL) and Amazon (AMZN) increase the value of back catalogs.

In December 2021, Bruce Springsteen sold both his master recordings and publishing rights to Sony Music in a deal worth north of $500 million, according to multiple outlets. The Red Hot Chili Peppers sold the rights to its song catalog for a reported $150 million that same year.

In 2020, Bob Dylan sold over 600 copyrights to Universal Music Group in a deal reportedly valued at over $300 million. Prior to that, Stevie Nicks sold a majority stake in her songwriting for a reported $100 million.

“It gets to the point where there’s money coming from so many different places that you can’t go wrong on any type of deal like this,” Guillermo Page, a former record label executive who worked for Sony and Universal, previously told Yahoo Finance.

Page, who now teaches in the music program at the University of Miami, noted “streaming has provided stability.”

“The key is that the business has become predictable,” Page explained, adding: “[Investors] can trust in the future of the business because it’s growing. When you eliminate the uncertainty, it opens up a new door for investors to come in and snap those assets.”

Bieber’s reported deal signals how younger artists are beginning to cash in on the growing trend; although buyers are having more difficulty financing deals within the current interest rate environment — something the pandemic-era avoided amid ultra-low rates.

“You’re seeing all major acts from the 70s, 80s, and 90s that are riding the wave of streaming,” Page said, explaining artists can now “capture a ton of money” in ways they were not able to do in the past.

“It’s the perfect storm for artists who can now maximize their return on the sale of those assets.”

Alexandra is a Senior Entertainment and Media Reporter at Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter @alliecanal8193 and email her at alexandra.canal@yahoofinance.com

Read the latest financial and business news from Yahoo Finance

Download the Yahoo Finance app for Apple or Android

Follow Yahoo Finance on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Flipboard, LinkedIn, and YouTube



Lil Baby Drops “The World Is Yours To Take” Video


Lil Baby, arguably, currently is at the top of the South’s rap food chain. So, naturally, some of the spoils that come with it are interesting-yet-very-lucrative endorsement endeavors.

The 4PF musician teamed with both Budweiser and FIFA to craft the song “The World Is Yours To Take.” Sampling the classic song “Everybody Wants to Rule the World” by Tears For Fears, the track served Budweiser’s official anthem of the FIFA World Cup 2022, which ended with a rather exciting final between France and ultimate winner Argentina.

“My track with Budweiser is a special one for me. It’s about the journey we’ve all been on over the last few years and celebrating what’s next,” Baby said. “When I started in music in 2017, I went all in on a dream that brought me to where I am now, and that’s what I want fans to feel when they hear the song. I hope it makes you feel like you’re walking out onto the pitch at the World Cup making moves toward your own dreams, whatever that means to you.”

Baby would also head to Qatar to shoot a matching visual for the song. “I’m excited to make history with Budweiser and close out the 2022 FIFA World Cup with this unforgettable video,” he said. “Working with Director X and the amazing people from around the globe, we’re celebrating what it means to bring the world together and inspire people to chase those dreams.” 

Lil Baby Drops “The World Is Yours To Take” Video was last modified: December 19th, 2022 by Meka