Gotta get through this

credit: clearingthevision.com

credit: clearingthevision.com

We need David Archuleta’s voice in this crazy world…

He brings out the best in us, joy, love, life, but most of all hope. Listening to his songs reminds me of all that is good in this world… and some days I need reminding more than others.

I know David isn’t magic … or superhuman… or powered by angel wings… but his music sure is. And boy do we ever need it now more than ever. At least I do.

And not just to sugarcoat the tough times or anesthetize us against the world’s ugliness… although that’s not such a bad thing sometimes… but to help us remember we’re not alone, that we’re only human and all trying to put one foot in front of the other on the up and down elevator of life (sorry, couldn’t resist 🙂 ).

Like all beautiful, life-affirming works of joy, his music needs to be shared, celebrated and embraced en masse… not that it will cure the world’s ills but it can certainly make them easier to bear. I’m convinced that every time he sings, someone somewhere feels healed in some way. That is a remarkable gift and I feel so grateful for it.

Peace be with you all … hug those you love, and maybe especially those you don’t.

Here’s what I felt like listening to today, how about you?

Posted in david archuleta, Fan experience | Tagged | 14 Comments

Joyeux Noël à tous

ohnopurpletumblr_metgakRkff1r9dhlfo1_500

“You can never have too much Christmas music” … I concur, David, I heartily concur. (source:Tumblr/ohnopurple)

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No words, only tears… of joy, of love … peace, love and all the blessings of Christmas to each and every one of you….

P.S. FYI from peppertara at the end of the last thread:

If anyone can tune to the station in B.C. (or elsewhere) CHNU JoyTV, they are showing David’s concert with the MoTab choir on Tuesday, Dec 18th at 9:30 pm. Love seeing all the TV advertising for it every day. I’ll be watching. :)

Posted in Fan experience | 15 Comments

Beebs vs. David: @DangItDavid’s concert comparison

DavidVeronaLast weekend, I had the opportunity to go see the one and only Justin Bieber live in Toronto.  Now, just to be clear, Justin is not high on my list of favorite singers….in fact he doesn’t even make my list but my daughter Taylor is his Number 1 fan (self-proclaimed btw) and since she attended David’s concert with me in Verona last December, I had promised her that I would go to a Justin concert. Plus, I really wanted to see what the all of the hype was about. 🙂

What exactly is it about this kid that makes him an international phenomenon?? I’m thinking surely he must sing better live than recorded because I obviously don’t hear what the rest of the world is hearing…..David can out-sing this kid by miles but where is David’s super stardom? Is it Justin’s personality? Is it his looks?  Is he really that great of a singer? Recently Oprah compared him to Elvis, The Beatles and Michael Jackson….HUH!?!?!!! 

I did a little comparison while I was there of a Justin concert vs. a David concert.  My daughter and I have two totally different ideas of what a concert should entail…..and there were many differences between the two!! I’m basing my information mostly on the one and only David concert I’ve been to which was at Turning Stone Casino in Verona, NY for the MKOC tour. So here goes!!

1)      The number 1 difference is the sheer number of people attending the concert!  The venue at Turning Stone holds 800 people….the Rogers Centre in Toronto holds 55,000.  Justin’s concert sold out all 55,000 seats within 10 minutes of going on sale!!  I know David has done many concerts with larger venues than Turning Stone but nothing close to 55,000 seats.

2)      With numbers like that, it changes the whole feel of the concert.  At Justin’s concert, you could feel the electricity in the air as soon as you walked in….fans were screaming constantly whether there was anyone on stage or not.  Even non-Bieber fans like me and my friend were finding ourselves getting pumped for the show.

3)      Another big difference I noticed was the age of the fans!  Justin’s fans consisted of kids from ages 5 to 18!!  Most adults were there to accompany younger children to the show!  My daughter actually commented on that when we were at David’s concert….she noticed that there were not too many kids her age (18) and said that most of David’s fans were…uhmmm….old!!  (Excuse me Missy….who are you calling old?!!!)

4)      Justin does not do his show alone….his opening acts were The Wanted, Cody Simpson and Carly Rae Jepson and Drake made an appearance during two of Justin’s songs.  He pulls some big names in with him. (Side note….I loved The Wanted!! I could have listened to them all night J)

5)      Justin does a major production!!  He had a DJ between songs to keep the crowd pumped! There were dance numbers with many dancers that were amazing! The lighting was awesome!! Now that being said, during the dance numbers, Justin does not sing live….he lip synched through the songs! I have huge issues with that….my daughter did not!! In her words…”how do expect him to sing and dance at the same time??”  My words….”I’m sorry but if I’m paying hard earned money to go to a concert, you better sing to me!!”.  Give me David bouncing around the stage any day….he can move and sing at the same time while still sounding amazing!!

6)      David talks to his fans between songs…..Justin screams to his….just to get them to scream louder for him!! And they do…very loudly!! I found this very annoying….and nope, it’s not because I’m “old”!!!  I got the impression that everything about Justin is just that…..about Justin!

7)      And the final difference, which was a MAJOR issue for me!  Justin Bieber cannot….I’m going to repeat that…CANNOT sing live!!!  OMG!! My mouth dropped to the floor when he started singing his first song….he sings very high, very pitchy and very off key….it was just awful!! But 55,000 fans (minus at least two because my friend was just as dumbfounded as I was) were screaming and cheering the whole time!! I found myself wanting him to lip synch!!  I can’t for the life of me figure it out….either they couldn’t hear how awful he sounded over their screaming or they just don’t care!!  I was counting the minutes until the show was over!  I just don’t get it?? I promised Taylor I would go to a Justin concert…..I did….and I will never go again!! Like never….EVER!!

I asked Taylor what her opinion was of the difference between the two concerts.  Like I said, she’s Justin’s #1 fan so she’s sticking with him but she does listen to David’s music a lot! She told me that she really enjoyed David’s concert because there was no-one pulling her hair or pulling at her trying to get in front of her to get closer to the stage.  She was in awe at how he sounded live…way better than she could have ever imagined!  She left the show with her heart pounding like everyone else there J  Oh and her face dropped when he came out on stage…..all I heard her say was…”Oh my God he’s gorgeous”! 

Disclaimer: This picture is only here for contrast sake... I repeat, don't expect to see it again. :)

Disclaimer: This picture is only here for contrast sake… i.e., don’t expect to see it again. Ever.:)

But….there was one difference that she pointed out….she thinks David wears too many clothes!! (See the top pic versus this one, on the right, lol.) So I guess that’s what it all comes down to for these teenagers lol.  Who cares if they can carry a tune!! I do have to admit though….when I was in Verona, I wanted to quietly slip up onto the stage when David was singing and take that scarf off of his neck…it was overload!!   LOL 

So I guess if David really wanted the super stardom that he deserves, then he would do what all the other young singers are doing….strip down, party in the right circles, throw his morals into the back seat for a while, etc, etc, etc.  But he doesn’t and I for one love him that way.  No way will I ever become a Belieber….I’m very happy with my Archie family and friends and will be devoted to this man as long as he is willing to share his life with us, scarves and all. 🙂

— by dangitdavid

Posted in Fan experience | Tagged | 51 Comments

My new favourite video…..

Credit: the lovely @rhiminee

Posted in Utter nonsense | Tagged | 12 Comments

Hey, wait a minute….

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P.S.

How have I missed this amazing vid?!?!? (thx. @rhiminee!)

Posted in Utter nonsense | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Thunder only happens when it’s raining

Okay, so this isn’t David-related at all (or is it? 🙂 isn’t everything these days? lol) … but back in the day I was a HUGE Fleetwood Mac fan (still am really), I even got to see them live once at a huge outdoor venue and they were incredible … so I found this interview with Stevie Nicks really interesting, especially her insights on the state of the music industry today… what do you guys think of what she has to say? Do you have a favourite Fleetwood Mac song?

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HuffPostLogoBetween producing and recording music with Fleetwood Mac and relentlessly touring her own albums, Stevie Nicks is pretty busy. So busy, in fact, that her bandmates publicly expressed their frustration when she told them she wasn’t going to tour as Fleetwood Mac last year. She had other priorities, namely supporting her latest and “favorite solo album,” “In Your Dreams.”

But this is Stevie Nicks, so even prickly bandmate and former lover Lindsey Buckingham agreed to wait. Nicks has kept her word: After a three-year break, Fleetwood Mac is heading on a 34-city tour that starts April 4th (tickets go on sale Dec. 14).

HuffPost Entertainment called Nicks to speak to her about the tour, but the genial singer was eager to chat about pretty much anything, up to and including: her advice for Rihanna, her concerns about the future of the music industry and a special letter to Kanye West she wrote but never sent.

FleetwoodMacAt what point did you decide to strike up the band again?
They wanted to go out last year and I still felt that my record “In Your Dreams,” because of the state of the music business, needed another year. So I put my foot down and said no. And I said no not just because of how I felt about my favorite solo record, but because I felt that, in my opinion, Fleetwood Mac should be off the road for three years because then when we come together it’s an event because you didn’t just see us last year or just see us the year before. So you know there’s all these big ticket bands that go out and who are you going to choose if you just saw us last year? Again, in my opinion, and what our managers have always felt was that staying out of the spotlight for three years is a good number. Three is a good number. So we finished in November 2009 and we are starting in January 2013. It’s perfect. I think it’s perfect, harmonic convergence of exactly when we should be doing this. I think that everybody was not really believing me last year. But I think that now that we’re here, I think that everybody is going like ‘right on Stevie, you were right.’

But you think at some point in the last year or so, they were doubting whether you would actually come back?
Oh no. I think they just wanted to do it last year. And I said no. I’m going to go out and tour all summer into the winter with “In Your Dreams” because I have to. I just feel that I have to. And if I didn’t, if I’d put that to bed before I thought that I had finished it, I would be very unhappy and very unworkable. So you don’t really want me to stop working on this album that I really really love so much and go out a year before I think we should go out. And you know, everybody, they listen. They hear me.

Is it a big transition for you to go from touring a solo album to 35 dates with the band?
It’s very different. You know, my solo career is more like an intimate party at your house. And Fleetwood Mac is like a big huge party at the Staple Center. It’s just different. It’s bigger. It’s grander. Like a seven-seater private jet and a 738, you know, it’s just what it is and what it always has been. So for me, its been great because, you know, starting in 1981 with Bella Donna, I was able to go back and forth. And both worlds are so different that it really does feel like you’re living two different lives. And it’s a lot of fun. And I’m one of those persons that gets bored anyway, so doing it this way, it’s never a boring moment in my life because I’m always involved in something that I love and then I’m getting ready to be involved with something else that I love when this thing that I love comes to an end.

So at this point there isn’t any sort of tension or awkwardness. Everyone’s all sort of on the same page?
Everybody is very good right now. I spent some time up at Lindsey’s house two weeks ago and we worked on some music. Most of the time we just spent talking about our many stories that we have to tell since 1968, really ’66 when we first met. So we spent like 80 percent of our time talking and 20 percent of our time working on some music. And it was really great and he’s in a really good place. And he and I are in a really good place, so it’s never about Mick and John being in a good place. They’re always in a good place. They’re happy guys. It’s always the drama queens, me and Lindsey. So the drama queens have really calmed down and let a little bit of that drama go and tried to walk down the road of how lucky we are. And how lucky we are to still be friends and how lucky we are to still be able to sing great together. And that what we started as Buckingham Nicks in 1971, when we moved to Los Angeles, has brought us all the way to this place. And that we should drop the drama and try to really enjoy this because we worked very hard to get here.

It’s interesting that you believe in space or limiting exposure, when, say, some artists like Rihanna put out an album every year and tour constantly. Do you think that may be because today’s pop music is more disposable?
Well, it’s very different. And I think that all of the new artists would love it if it was the way it used to be. Let’s use Rihanna as an example because I always say it is so wild that her name is Robyn and you know my best friend’s name was Robin. So I saw her on David Letterman many years ago, and she did a live performance of “Shut Up And Drive” and I said to several different people that this girl could start a rock band. She really could be a rock singer. She could front a really great rock-n-roll band and she should. And of course that didn’t happen, and she became a really big star, but she would probably be happier had she actually done something like that because then she could have had Rihanna with a great band. And then she could have been a rock star and she could have gone to her solo Rihanna and been a pop star. She could have done both like I do. And of course, since we’re not friends and I don’t know her, I wasn’t able to say that to her but I did say it to a lot of other people. It’s a heck of a lot more fun.

What other younger acts do you find interesting?
You know, I think of somebody like Beyonce and I think when she broke up Destiny’s Child I thought, “that’s not a good idea.” Because you should never break up your band. Because your band may come in very handy to you down the road. Because if you don’t verbally break it up, then you’re not making a comeback. You are just going back with your band. It’s like with Gwen Stefani and No Doubt, she never breaks up No Doubt, she just goes and does her crazy Gwen thing and then she comes back and becomes a real rock-n-roll singer with her real rock-n-roll band. So that was very very smart, I think. Because then you’re being able to change all the time. And really, if you spend three years doing your thing and then, you know, two years doing your rock thing, and then you have a baby and then you do two years of your thing — it’s like you’re always on the move doing something new which keeps you young, keeps you energized, keeps that youthful spark happening. And so in many ways I feel very, very sorry for this generation of kids because I think some of them are really really good. You know, I’m walking around and I can’t stop singing “Call Me Maybe” even though it’s actually like not even a single anymore. But I love it. And I’m hoping that that little girl, because she is really good and I think she wrote that song, she’s really good. So maybe she should get a band. And she should practice, you know. And she should play gigs. She should work on it. But the problem is today, you know, even if you do that and you have a huge song like that. And even if you come up with two or three more huge songs. It’ going to be very hard to follow that up. And you really do have to get out there and play. And if you don’t, you’re just going to be a recording artist and just recording artists never have staying power. You have to go do some shows at some point.

Is there something that was more difficult in the late ’60s and ’70s than it is now?
SN: Well I think now the problem is selling records. Internet piracy is taking it over. I mean it’s taking over books, it’s taking over movies, everybody is feeling everything. And the problem with that is, yes, it’s great to share things, sure. But there comes a point where if you’re a young artist, and you’re 22 years old, and you’ve been playing for three years like Lindsey and I did and doing gigs making fairly good money, considering. And then you get a record deal and put a record out, it does OK. Well, you make money from that record and you can support yourself. You can pay your rent, you can pay for your car and in the old days you would be signed to a record company and if you made another record and it kind of tanked, if they believed in you, their artist development people would hang onto you and they would help you. They’d give you $10,000 to live on for a year. So it’s wonderful to say go out there and play gigs and be determined. But if you’re not getting paid very much money, how can you support yourself? So you’re going to have to also, like I did, you’re going to have to be a waitress and you’re going to have to be a cleaning lady and you’re going to have to do anything you have to do to make enough money to support you and your band. And so you really can’t leave town then if you’ve got a job. Because when Lindsey and I were doing Buckingham Nicks,they dropped it a couple of months after it went out. And I had to go back to — I got to stop being a waitress for a few months — and then I had to go back to being a waitress because there was no money again. But, because we’d had that record, we had a little bit of clout. We were able to get a studio to get us some time for free and kind of like a spec album.

Do you think there has been or will be any turnaround?
It’s a conundrum and I wish that somebody could figure out what to do. I wish that albums would be wanted again because I wish people would want 12 songs and not just two. I wish that people could have the fun that we had when we would go and buy an album and lay on the floor and listen to it 50 times. And sing along with the words and just be so touched. Like I would get a Joni Mitchell album and just be like, “Don’t talk to me. Don’t even call me for three days because I am totally busy, and it’s a Godsend this record and I can’t even think about anything else right now.” And it would just be wonderful. It would be euphoric. And I’m sorry because I don’t see that now.

A really cohesive album seems like something that is almost erased from pop, though there is still a strong demand for classic-sounding albums in some areas of rap.
And it kind of erases rock all together. And so that’s a downward spiral.

Do you ever hear something on the radio and hear a little bit of yourself in that song? Taylor Swift and Florence Welch of Florence + the Machine cite you as influences.
I do. There’s this song that Taylor wrote called “Today Was A Fairy Tale.” And I hear that and I absolutely worked with her on the Grammys a couple of years ago and that song, I was actually going to sing a little of it with her, so I learned it. And then we ended up not doing it because she started out with that. But it stayed in my heart forever. And it just reminds me of me in a lot of ways. And with Florence Welch, I don’t really know much about her or her music but with that “Shake It Out” song I really like because I felt that song. I was feeling what she was saying when she wrote that. So yes, I do, I do hear the influence.

One of our editors spent some time with Courtney Love, who spent the day showering her Fleetwood Mac videos and talking about how amazing you guys are. And I was recently speaking with somebody who writes songs with Kanye West and he said that Kanye and all their whole group is obsessed with your solo stuff and Fleetwood Mac. And I was just wondering, what do you think explains the cross genre appeal of your work?
I pretty much started out as a songwriter. And I pretty much, from the day I was 15 and a half and my parents let me sign up for a month of classical guitar lessons and the guy decided to go to Spain so he sold my mom and dad his classic Goya guitar and they gave it to me for my sixteenth birthday which is May 26, like 1964, and that is all the lessons I took because he split. And I wrote a song a week later, and I went and said to my mom and dad, “You have to come into my bedroom and sit on my bed, and I’m going to sit and I’m going to play you this song.” And they did because my dad’s dad was a country singer and he worked his whole life to make it in the country business and never did, but tried. And so they’re sitting there and I played this song, and at the end of it I’m totally crying. My whole guitar is wet. And my mom and dad have little tears in their eyes and they said well, “You know what, that’s a good song.” And I said, “Well, I’m glad you like it, because I’m going to be a songwriter and that’s it. That’s what I’m doing.” And my mom said my dad and she would will support you in that completely as long as you go to school. So you know, if you go up to five years of college, we will support you all the way through that, your college, and we will support you to do your music. Because they saw it in my eyes. They never doubted me for a second. So I said to them, “I’m going to spend my life writing poems, turing them into music that will affect people and touch their hearts. I’m going to write the songs that people can’t write for themselves.” I’m going to write, “Thunder only happens when it’s raining, players only love you when they’re playing.” Isn’t that a weird line for a white girl from San Francisco to write? And I’m writing about “players only love you when they’re playing” because basically you’re only going to have your relationships with music people when you’re with them and as soon as you come off the road, they’re gone. It’s like I almost just had premonition after premonition about what was coming.

But what do you think gives your work a cross-genre appeal?
Why does my music touch artists like Kanye West? I would say, a) I didn’t know that but I like him very much and, b) I actually wrote him a letter once after his mom died. I wrote him a three-page letter that was about how I felt about losing his mother and what she must have meant to him and the way that he lost her in such a crazy way. And I never sent it to him because I thought “Oh, be’ll just think this is stupid and what does this girl want with me and what is she writing about my mother for.?” And so I never sent it. So I’m very interested and touched by the fact that you say that there is some love from him towards my music and I might just have to type that letter up and send it off now.

But that’s what I said at 15 and a half. That I would affect people. And it was going to be universal for me. I was going to reach out to all different kinds of music and I think that’s, when you write a poem and you make sure that poem is really what you want to say, then and only then do yo walk to the piano. And then you sit there and you stare at those words and you start to play. And what comes out has got nothing to do with Stevie’s solo career or Stevie’s Fleetwood Mac. It has everything to do with the feeling I get when my fingers touch those keys and I sing that first sentence. And when you hit that first line that just knocks you back, you know, where you actually go [singing] “women they will come and they will go.” You’re like, “I got it. And this is it.” And then you know. And it may not save the world but people are gonna love it. Because I love it.

Source.

Posted in Fan experience | Tagged , | 5 Comments

MKOCT full concert, thanks to @0o0bluedots0o0!!!

ohmyheck this is aMAZing! Incredible videographer Marcella (OoObluedotsOoO) has put together this video compilation of the entire MKOC Tour!!! I had mentioned to a few people that I wished someone would put together all the best bits of David with the kids when he did Fa La La La, and Marcella has done that (from 53:12 to 1:05:03) for not just that song but the ENTIRE concert! Incredible, thank you, Marcella!!! And thanks, Abrra for the mp3, download HERE.

More info from Marcella:

((WATCH IN HD FOR THE BEST CONCERT EXPERIENCE!!) I had a blast working on this project! I have decided to re-create David’s MKOC Tour as a holiday gift to all of his fans..so I hope that you enjoy watching it! Thanks to everyone whose video and audio appears in this video…credits are at the very end in case you are interested. Have a Happy Saturday and Happy Holidays everyone xD

Set List:

Sleigh Ride ((00:26))
Melodies Of Christmas ((3:30))
B-day & Costco Chatter ((7:37))
This Christmas ((8:30))
The Other Side of Down (12:33))
Wait Chatter ((15:53))
Wait ((16:25))
Chatter about Writing Wait ((19:50))
Zero Gravity ((20:21))
Crush ((23:52))
Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas ((27:46))
David Thanks Fans For Supporting Music and Shares A Gift With Audience ((31:10))
The Christmas Song ((32:30))
Childfund Talk ((36:20))
Climb Every Mountain ((39:23))

INTERMISSION

Ave Maria ((42:52))
Talks About Singing Ave Maria And Pat A Pan Intro ((48:34))
Pat A Pan ((49:42))
Brings Kids On Stage And Asks Them Their Names ((53:12))
What Christmas Is About ((55:38))
Pick A Hat From The Box ((58: 34))
MKOC Poem ((1:00:13))
Fa La La La La ((1:01:50))
Band Intro ((1:04:55))
Talks About Latino X-Mas on Mom’s Side and Intro To I Need A Silent Night ((1:05:53))
I Need A Silent Night ((1:07:10))
Mic Stand Humor ((1:10:20))
Oh Holy Night ((1:10:52))
The First Noel Intro ((1:16:33))
The First Noel ((1:17:09))
Riu Riu Chiu Intro ((1:21:41))
Riu Riu Chiu ((1:22:02))
Silent Night ((1:25:29))

ENCORE

Little Drummer Boy ((1:31:00))

***I OWN NOTHING BUT THE EDITING!

Posted in Special event | Tagged , | 15 Comments

Something wonderfully pitchy

This is one of my favourite David interviews ever but I had originally used VodPod to post it and they have disappeared into the ether. 😯 I have an iTunes podcast of it, but lameness prevented me from figuring out how to upload it… Then the lovely @betsyjane25 mentioned she’d watched it recently, which nudged me to try again.

And who do I find posted it conveniently on YouTube??? You guessed it, once again, the amazing JR4DA! 😆

It’s really interesting to watch this now, and I love the great questions they ask, how they give D. lots of time and space to answer, and well, just everything about it…. this is what I originally posted about it: 😆

Put down that coffee, turn off your phone, do NOT under any circumstances answer the door. You MUST watch this interview. THIS THIS THIS is how David Archuleta should always be interviewed. With the time, space and thoughtful, relevant questions that give him a chance to teach us all the meaning of life.

I don’t know if it was brilliance or simple ArchuStupor at work, but they let him ramble about happiness, success, music, what his new songs will be about, his relationship with his fans and the possibility of an audio book???????

I wish I could jump through that video screen and hug each one of those @somethingpitchy interviewers. I want to buy stock in AOL. I want to own a groovy white swivel chair and twirl to Zero Gravity.

But most of all I just want to watch this over and over again… I stopped caring about the so-called “haters” long ago, but I truly challenge anyone to watch this interview and not fall truly, madly deeply in love with one Mr. David Archuleta.

Part1:

Part 2:

Part 3:

P.S. Does it still bug anyone else that COS got better promo than TOSOD? grrrrr

Posted in Special event | Tagged | 6 Comments

Life is good, and God is good and you guys are great….

Was watching this old vlog … like we do 🙂 … and was curious about the writing session David mentions with Toby Gad and Lindy Robbins (both amazing songwriters who’ve had a long list of hits, including Skyscraper for Demi Lovato).

I also found that there’s a song listed at ASCAP with David listed as a writer: “Up in the Air by David Archuleta, Toby Gad, Lindy Robbins … and this song:

We need to find a way into that vault, folks. 🙂

Anywayyyyy, one thing led to another (sound familiar?) and I found myself reading this really interesting interview with Lindy Robbins … gives you an idea of how those song writing sessions David vlogged about come together:

Lindy Robbins has been a successful pop songwriter for the past 10 years, but this year she has emerged as one of the hottest, co-writing three Top 10 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 chart: “Tonight Tonight” for Hot Chelle Rae, “Skyscraper” for Demi Lovato, and “It Girl” for Jason Derulo. Based in Los Angeles, Robbins is known as one of the best “topline writers,” contributing melodies & lyrics to songs in collaboration with top writers/producers.

Robbins has become an in-demand writer who co-writes with not only top producers and other topliners, but many established and rising artists.She prolifically writes 125-150 songs per year which are either recorded as cuts or demos. She is based in Los Angeles, but she often travels to New York, London or Nashville, or wherever it’s necessary to work on hit projects.

In addition to her three recent Top 10 hits, Robbins has had additional singles with Selena Gomez (“A Year Without Rain”), Hot Chelle Rae (feat. New Boyz) (“I Like It Like That”), Javier Colon (“Stitch By Stitch”), Demi Lovato (“Here We Go Again”, “Breathe Carolina (“Hit and Run”), Big Time Rush (“If I Ruled The World”), Lemonade Mouth (“Somebody”) and Days Difference (“Down On Me”). She’s also had cuts with One Direction, David Cook, Lee DeWyze, Jason Mraz, Leona Lewis, Brandy, Jesse McCartney, David Archuleta, Jordin Sparks, Kris Allen, Westlife, Monica, Shaggy, Clay Aiken, Katharine McPhee, Faith Hill and Anastacia.

Prior to her recent success, Robbins was known for co-writing the hits “Incomplete” for the Backstreet Boys, “What’s Left Of Me” for Nick Lachey, and “Cinderella” for the Cheetah Girls.

We are pleased to present this Q&A interview with Lindy Robbins. She tells how she got started in the music business, she discusses her early cuts and publishing deals, and her gradual progression to her current hit activity. In this article, Robbins gives a good overview of what it takes for a topline writer to be successful.

DK: How did you get started as a songwriter?

Robbins: It was in 1997 that I decided to concentrate on being a fulltime songwriter. I’m originally from Los Angeles, but I had been living in New York City for six years. I was a performer in a vocal group, and I was writing art songs, cabaret songs and songs for the group. But I’ve always really wanted to write pop songs. So I decided to move back to Los Angeles and get into the music business there. At the time I had no money, lived in a small apartment, and had no writing partners yet.

I saw an ad for the Music Bridges (Unisong) international song contest hosted by Allan Roy Scott. I entered one song and it won the entire contest! The grand prize was a trip to Dublin, Ireland for a songwriting retreat which included writing with hit songwriters. I was able to do well at this retreat, which led to getting my first music publishing deal with Polygram Music. Roanna Gillespie signed me to Polygram.

Eman, Evan Bogart & Lindy Robbins
Pictured (l-r): Eman, Evan Bogart & Lindy Robbins.

DK: How did it go with Polygram Music?

Robbins: It went slowly at first, but I was pleased that (respected songwriter) Marsha Malamet co-wrote a few songs with me, and Roanna was setting me up with some up and coming producers which led to some holds and got me noticed. Eventually, my first big cut was “Cinderella” for the Cheetah Girls–it became a #1 song on Radio Disney. I also got cuts with Faith Hill, Anastacia, Monica and Clay Aiken.

My first, big hit single was co-writing “Incomplete” for the Backstreet Boys (in 2005). I originally pitched it to an A&R person at Jive Records who passed on the song. But I had a strong feeling about it, so when (A&R exec) Teresa LaBarbera Whites joined Jive Records, I asked Donna Caseine who was now my publisher at Universal to pitch it to her. She loved the song and placed it with the Backstreet Boys and it became their first single. Teresa also arranged the co-write with Nick Lachey , and I brought Emanuel Kiriakou who I had just started working with and longtime collaborator Jess Cates and we wrote  “What’s Left Of Me” on her artist Nick Lachey, which became his first single and a hit.

DK: Did having these hits lead to co-writing more with top producers and artists?

Robbins: Having singles was definitely a big game-changer.  It raised my cachet and made me more in-demand. I did get a lot of cuts in the next few years (2007-2011), with Jordin Sparks, Demi Lovato, several artists from American Idol and others. But these cuts didn’t become big singles.

DK: Did you stay with Polygram Music for a long period?

Robbins: Yes. Polygram Music merged with Universal Music Publishing, and I worked for many years with the terrific (creative exec) Donna Caseine there. I stayed at Universal until 2008, when I left to sign an administration deal with Kobalt Music.

DK: Who are the main writer/producers that you collaborate with?

Robbins: I work with several, amazing writer/producers, and my longtime regulars areToby Gad, Emanuel (Eman) Kiriakou and Evan Bogart. I met Toby at the ASCAP Pop Awards a few years ago, and I really pursued working with him. I kept emailing him, and said I’d love to work with him. At the time Toby was based in New York, and I would fly to New York to work with him. Now he’s based in L.A. and we work a lot together. We wrote “Skyscraper” (for Demi Lovato) and “A Year Without Rain” (for Selena Gomez) “Taken” and “Truly Madly Deeply” for One Direction and have had many cuts together. Toby began requesting (to labels) that I co-write with the artists, so that was big step to getting more cuts.

I’ve also worked for many years with Eman. We co-wrote with Evan Bogart the hits “Tonight Tonight” (with Hot Chelle Rae) and “It Girl” (with Jason Derulo) and songs for upcoming MKTO on Columbia. I also write with other writers and producers all over the world including Wayne Hector, Steve Robson, Steve Mac, Sandy Vee, Chris Braide, Chris DeStefano, Fraser T. Smith, David Hodges, Dave Bassett, and Jeff Cates.

Lindy Robbins & Toby Gad
Lindy Robbins with Toby Gad.

DK: How do you usually like to write? Do you come up with ideas before the writing session?

Robbins: I always bring in some title ideas. But the preferred way I like to write, is to be inspired by music. I always love a three-way co-write. The third writer would be the artist, or a writer who’s a great singer who would sing the demo.

I usually like it when the producer starts playing something, or someone starts playing a guitar or piano or track idea and we see what it inspires. Toby likes to start with titles. We talk to the artist, and we ask them what’s going on in their lives, so we can write a song together that is personal to the artist .

I like writing in a room with people–that’s how I write 90% of the time. I like getting the feedback and hearing what they say. If there are three great writers in the room, the chances of writing a great song are better.

DK: You are known as a “topline writer.” When did this phrase become common, and do you like this phrase?

Robbins: The word “topliner” was used first in the U.K. music business. It’s been about seven years I believe since topliner referred to people who can write melody and lyrics in the US. I love being called a topliner. I used to just be known a lyricist only because there wasn’t a word to describe what I and other topliners do, but now people know I write melodies just as well as lyrics.

DK: How did you co-write “Tonight Tonight” for Hot Chelle Rae?

Robbins: We wrote “Tonight Tonight” in 2010 and it came out in 2011. I wrote it with Eman and Evan Bogart–we have a great chemistry and it was fun writing this song. Then the label liked it and presented the song to Hot Chelle Rae and they liked it too. Two of the guys–Ryan Follese and Nash Overstreet–made some changes to make it better suit the group and contributed to writing the song.

I also wrote “It Girl” with Eman and Evan. This song just poured out of us one day. We sent it to Jeff Fenster (A&R exec at Warner Bros. Records) and he liked it, so he played it for Jason Derulo. Jason also contributed to the writing–he came in and really put his stamp on this song.

DK: How did you write “Skyscraper” for Demi Lovato?

Robbins: It was actually written four years earlier–Toby Gad and I wrote it with Kerli (Island Def Jam artist) for her record but then she left the label. Later it was also recorded by Jordin Sparks but didn’t fit her record. Then it sat on the shelf for a few years, but as it turned out, it fit perfectly for Demi Lovato. It’s as if the song had been written for her and was always waiting for her to record it.

The wonderful Benjamin Groff at Kobalt Music played it for Jon Lind (A&R exec at Hollywood Records). Jon then became a huge believer in this song–he recommended that “Skyscraper” become the first single for Demi’s album, even though it was a slower song. Jon, Jeff Fenster and Teresa LaBarbara Whites have meant the world to me and my career, always believing and talking chances on my songs.

DK: Do you like to write in several genres of music?

Robbins: I used to be known for just writing pop/rock ballads. But because I’ve recently written some quirky pop hits, I’m now known for being more versatile and for writing a wider range of styles. I like to write in every genre of pop and I also like writing country songs, and I go to Nashville to collaborate. It fun to keep changing things up.

DK: Besides working with your co-writers, do you have a manager or a business team?

Robbins: Yes. I’m managed by Andy Kipnis at AAM (Advanced Alternative Media). I also work with Beka Tischker at AAM who is the person I touch base with daily, and Chris Woo of AAM for the U.K. I like having a management team on my side who can help guide me. They’ve played a big part in networking and getting me in the door.

DK: Lastly, what advice would you give to young, topline songwriters who are trying to break into business?

Robbins: It’s important to be aggressive and persevere, because I believe that the cream always rises to the top. The ones that are good–they find a way. If your songs are great, people will hear it and people will want it. Word gets around, and there aren’t that many great people out there.

The producers that you work with are important–the demo needs to sound amazing. There are no rules. The big producers often sign young writers to work with. You could sign with a production team instead of with a publishing company.

P.S.

If you have a local station that plays Christmas music, it’s definitely worth requesting David! Check this out:

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Random blog is random

June 30, 2009,

Hello everyone. Just updating on how things have been. I’m watching kid shows with my little cousins right now haha. They’re quite interesting… lol. They get really random. Right now Yo Gabba Gabba! is on. We were watching Maggie and the Beast, and they just randomly walked by these sheep sitting on a cloud. anyway, I think you’d have to actually watch it to see what I mean. Otherwise it’s not funny I guess. It was to me though. well… it wasn’t funny to my little infant cousins haha. Ok I’m done.

So we had shows in Boston and Philly, and they were sooo much fun! Philly was an amphitheater show, and I think the sun really makes people happier. At least when it’s not beating down on you at 110 degrees. But the crowd was so cheerful and energetic,* and it was just a lot of fun. Woah… Sean Kingston is in Yo Gabba Gabba teaching a dance. That’s crazy. I like Sean Kingston. Wow I’m feeling really spacey today. But you guys have to watch this show if you’re bored it’s really interesting. Oh Sean Kingston just disappeared.. This is so weird!

We had our Georgia show yesterday. I had a day off Sunday, and also have a day off today! I have family here so I’m getting to spend time with them! It’s great hangin’ with the fam. My brother’s here too, but right now he’s sleeping. So I’m just hangin’ with the cousins right now. One of Demi’s guitarists, Mike, had a family reunion in Georgia so I met a bunch of his family last night at the show too. Anyway, I probably shouldn’t be writing a blog right now because I cannot focus whatsoever. You can’t blame me though because there’s a lot going on around here. But at least I’ll leave it short! Did you guys buy Regina Spektor’s album? Because I love it.

Well I best be off now to spend time with the family. But before I go I just wanted to mention how valuable I find writing in a journal is. Last year I didn’t really keep a journal, and I thought it took too much time out of my day. I’d do it every now and then over the last few years, but I’d get unmotivated and stop writing. I made it my New Year’s Resolution to write at least once a week in it though, and at first I thought there’s no way I’m going to keep this going lol. But surprisingly, I ‘ve been doing really well with it and I’m so glad that I have. It really helps you sort your thoughts out, and also gets your mind kicking into gear.

One of my favorite things is going back to a page and reading what was going on through my mind 6 months or 2 years ago. It’s a really neat thing to do actually. Especially the entries that were before I knew what all was going to happen with music in my life. Think of how cool it’d be for your grandkids and great-grandkids to read about your adventures and what you were like too. You may think, “Oh my life’s not interesting enough to waste my time writing about it in a journal.” But hey, you should go for it anyway and you might surprise yourself how cool it will be reading back sometime in the future.

So I’d like to challenge all of you to get a journal and start writing in it tonight! Let me know how you do, ok? If you don’t have a journal, then go out and by one this week. I’m really serious about it, and I’m a true believer in how much a journal is worth. Once you start writing in it, it really becomes priceless possession. Well I’ve gone off long enough about that, but really let me know how you guys do and keep it up! It’ll be sooo worth it in the long-run, even for whoever ends up with it later on. But with that, I leave and say until next time!

Song for the day: Why Georgia – John Mayer

P.S. Thanks everyone for the notes you’ve been sending on the charities you’ve been getting involved with! It’s been really neat to see what foundations you’ve been helping out, and I think it’s awesome! I love to see it!

*”cheerful and energetic” does describe Refnaf, Happy and I, who were in that amphitheatre audience and ended up on the Jumbotron rocking out to MH. 🙂

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