Tuesday, August 27, 2024

RIP: Finale Notation Software

MAKEMusic doing this to Finale Users is like getting a divorce out of nowhere. Thirty years of integrity & unwavering support and your spouse announces she's leaving with the moving truck already in the driveway. This is hard for us engravers. All my friends know my livelihood is in Finale. I'll overcome this somehow but this is grief and borderline depressing. I'm not good right now. Terrell Jones you predicted this and Warren PsifonianPsientist Shaw, you won. I hope they'll make Finale open source. 

With all of this, 

1) I think Finale can be open sourced like Google Docs is to Microsoft Word. I will buy both as I hold on to Finale. I have NOT seen anyone make scores like Armando Bayolo and Shawn E. Okpebholo on either platform. They make the art of engraving legendary. I love just looking at their scores. So clean and sleek. I have used Sean’s and Armando’s scores to teach my students proper engraving. I haven’t seen ANYONE use Dorico, MuseScore, or Sibelius make scores like the aforementioned.  Perhaps it is possible. When I meet said person, I shall study with said person to learn. I take engraving very seriously (as I know you do so so well!)


2) I will purchase Dorico.  It seems their video function is amazing.  I do look forward to that. Finale's video handling was terrible, let's be honest.  The BIT RATE was always going wonkers also. 
.

3) I will buy Sibelius also.  This will be another backup since Sibelius automatically opens Finale files (.mus, musx.). Don't get it twisted, I shall not be a Sibelius user at this time.  The only Sibelius I recognize is Jean!


4). I'm still going to compose on Finale.  It's not quite necessary to give up the ghost yet.  Too many things to do.  Like my brother Shawn suggested, I'll probably start saving XMLs concurrently.  I will also keep a legacy machine also.  Also, I'm way way waaaaay to fluent to change right now.


Musically Yours,
Chad "Sir Wick" Hughes

A soon to be Divorcee of MakeMusic.  I need an Arnold Palmer right now. MakeMusic also needs to pay alimony!

Saturday, June 1, 2024

Teacher Shortage in ATL

There are about 1,500 Teacher vacancies, in the METRO ATLANTA AREA.
Some districts are using the lure of MONEY to entice teachers to work for them, which is cool.
But we must analyze the under lying factor of WHY there are so many teacher job shortages.
1. Teachers who started in the 90s, are reaching their 30 yr mark and are high tailing it out of education.
2. When I started, in 94, in APS, it was challenging, but i stuck with it...due to the encouragement and coaching of the "old guard"
3. NOW, the under 35 yr old are NOT staying, in education long...they have too many available options, that are not as stressful and taxing. I have had many of the "young teachers" say I made 45k selling items on EBAY, at my own leisure, without the stress of disruptive students or parents or admins...or they have YOUTUBE PAGES or podcasts, that bring in revenue.
4. This generation are NOT saddled with mortgages or car notes, they stay at home, with their parents, so they don't have to ENDURE the challenges of being a teacher.
5. Teaching is not as simple as closing your classroom door and TEACHING YOUR CLASS...there are layers and layers of paperwork, that takes away from the ho of teaching. There are testing mandates, that wear teachers and students out. There are professional development meetings that happen about 3 to 4 times a week.
Soooo...if you add the teachers that are RETIRING to the number of young teachers (less than 5 years) who are leaving the profession... 💥 💥 💥 boom, you have a teacher shortage.
UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES...
Then you will have folks looking at the PAYSCALES AND SUMMERS OFF and think "hey, I can teach" but don't have the PASSION TO DEVELOP YOUNG KIDS...you don't just teach and go home...EVERY DAY, I am a referee, a counselor, a motivator, a coach, a "parent", in addition to teaching.
IF YOU LACK THE PASSION, YOU MESSING UP KIDS LIVES, WHILE PICKING UP A CHECK AND ENJOYING SUMMERS OFF...
ITS REAL IN THESE CLASSROOMS AND HALLWAYS. _Tee LOTT

Monday, May 13, 2024

Michael Dinetz's word on Why Independent Films fail financially!



Most common mistakes in producing center around money. Quite often it's green lighting, a project with an insufficient budget as measured against the screenplay. Why do people do that? There's really only one reason, which you could text certain varied sub-reasons onto. Most producers and directors treat their relationship with film kind of like a heroin addiction. There's this constant itch to get on set and be making a movie. This is coupled with the fear that this amazing movie that they have crafted in the form of a screenplay or acquired may never see the light of day. Too many, this is terrifying. I would say to me, if I was going to go out and do that, I would rather wait 20 years if that's how long it took to raise enough money to deliver the screenplay at a sufficient level of quality that I don't feel that I did a disservice to the screenplay. Because at the end of the day if you make the movie and you ruin the greatness that the screenplay contained, what was the point other than temporarily scratching an itch? Few filmmakers want to face this reality. They would rather sweep it under the rug or make a bunch of excuses. And I've heard them all. Well. It's timely so we have to make it now. If we don't make it now, it'll never get made. I'm not independently wealthy. I don't know any rich people. The list goes on. They're all just excuses. You either want to make a great movie or you want to make "a movie" now. Not every movie is going to be Citizen Kane or The Godfather, but that doesn't mean that you can't make an entertaining film. You're going to pour your heart and soul into writing a screenplay that you think is really good, or you're going to cut a deal to acquire a screenplay that you think is really good, then I feel like you owe it to yourself and the audience, and certainly to the investor, to deliver a quality representation of that screenplay.

Not every movie needs a $100 million budget, but some do. It really comes down to the needs dictated by the screenplay and the relevant expenses that go along with those needs. If your budget climbs high enough, you're going to need Union crew, unless you're shooting in a part of the world where that's not a concern. If your budget climbs high enough, your name talent budget is going to have to climb steadily with it. That name talent is the backbone of the marketing of the movie. It's the pillars that hold up the house. You could make the greatest movie on Earth, but if you don't give marketing enough to work with, not too many people are going to see it and your return is going to be dismal at best.

Some other financially related mistakes. Sometimes people have enough money to do things right and they simply don't manage it well. So it gets misspent and thus you run out of money. Obviously that's not good. The people in charge of the money need to make sure they're starting out with a sufficient amount to do things right, but they also need to make sure that they stick to that plan.

Sometimes, this doesn't happen a ton, you end up securing more money than you need and that will dig into your return on investment for your investor. There's this idea that more money is always better. My feeling is that there's kind of a line that you cross at a certain point where all you're doing is hurting the return. Like if you're making a $5 million movie and each of the producers is making a million dollar producer fee, you could probably reduce the budget of the movie and drop yourself down and SAG tier which would reduce your actor scale rates. It might also put you in a position where you don't necessarily need a union crew. All of these things are going to allow you to make the very same movie that you would have otherwise made and do so at a lower cost and thereby increase your return on investment

One thing that people have a tendency to do with strangling budgets is you lose something that you need, and that's visual quality. Great dialogue and great acting are important, but if all you have is great dialogue and great acting, you might as well be producing theater. Poor visual quality is a massive distraction when watching a movie. We can debate things like plot holes and story structure and a whole bunch of other bullshit, and even quality of acting, on giant Hollywood movies, but the one thing you can almost never say about a big budget studio film is that it looks bad from the standpoint of the work of the various departments working on it. It's pretty rare that you're going to poke holes in the job of the art department or the makeup department or the costume department or various other visual representative departments. Nine times out of 10. You're not going to be able to complain about the quality of the sound recording or the cinematography. 

They may not be 10 out of tens, but they're usually at least an eight or nine. You're never going to watch a big budget Western and be like Wow, those costumes look to crisp or people don't look dirty enough. But these are the things that totally go wrong on smaller budget movies. And that's because the people in charge of the various departments just aren't good at their jobs or they were foolish enough to agree to a film where they weren't given the time and/or money to do their jobs correctly.

So now we get to the mitigation of risk. We've identified what people screw up. So your job as a producer, and to a certain extent the director's job, is to make sure that these mistakes are addressed and avoided. Good department heads are hired, you secured enough money to be able to hire them and give them the expense money and prep time to do their jobs effectively. You've spent the time casting quality actors for your scale roles. You've spent enough to secure named talent that is commensurate with the size of your budget, thus giving the distribution company the tools they need to generate that return. You've taken the time to put this through all the proper paces in post-production and make sure that work is up to par. You haven't rushed necessary process. You've chosen quality locations that represent what the screenplay needs. You've done all the same stuff that the big budget movies do and thus you haven't fallen short in those regards.

In order to do all of this, you have to really really focus on not scratching that itch and doing what is best for the film. You have to treat the film like a good parent treats their child. You have to take your own desires, set them aside, and do what's best for the child. And the reality is not enough. Producers do that. If producers really did that on a broader scale, we wouldn't have that horrible statistic to compete with. It would be far easier to find equity investment for film. The reason it's so hard is because film is deemed the most dangerous type of investment you can make. The only thing riskier is going to a casino. It doesn't have to be that way. Foolish filmmakers, in large quantities, have made it that way. The people that came before you have shot you in the foot. The sooner you recognize that, and the sooner you do something about it, the better off you and your project will be.

Making a profit on a movie isn't complicated, it isn't a mystery, it's sheer understanding of statistics and methodology and addressing those statistics and methodology responsibly. Yes, there's always going to be the occasional curveball, like a global pandemic or something along those lines, or a massive shift in the distribution market, but other than major force majeur situations, the reason movies fail is irresponsibility of the producers.

-Michael Dinetz, May 11, 2024

Wednesday, February 21, 2024

JayZ and Beyonce bought a house "all cash."






JayZ and Beyonce bought a house "all cash."

  Pinned by FinanceVaults

@everyneed3959 explained it here:

For those who don’t understand let me explain: 

1.) Jay Z and Beyoncé have $200 million dollars worth of assets. This can be stocks, bonds, etc. the assets have to be something the banks are interested in and I’m sure those 2 have strong relationships with their banks. I also wouldn’t be surprised if they put up their music masters as collateral as that’s something that could be very valuable to banks (tho I highly doubt this but it’s something to think about lol) 

2.) jay Z and Beyoncé asks the bank for a $200 million dollar cash loan and uses their assists as collateral. So if they don’t pay back the loan then the bank gets to sell off their assets to pay off the loan for them. Jay z and Beyoncé are basically saying “hey if I don’t pay back this $200 mill you can have all these assets to cover the loan” and the banks are like “bet say less” 

3.) Jay Z and Beyoncé now have $200 million dollars in cash but keep in mind it’s a loan still. They use the cash to pay for a $200 million dollar house IN FULL! They own 100% equity in the property. Equity is the value of the property vs. how much you owe. If you pay off the full value of the property then you don’t owe anything and that means you have 100% equity. 

4.) Jay Z and Beyoncé now refinance the property, or get a mortgage. This is just a fancy way of saying they got a loan AGAIN and used the house they now 100% own as collateral. They did the same thing twice, only difference is the type of assets. When you use a house as collateral they call it a mortgage/refinancing. The only main difference is the terminology. So now they got another $200 million dollars cash 

5.) Jay Z and Beyoncé now uses the refinance money, or new loan, to pay off the first loan fully. And now they are making payments towards the new property since they refinanced the house. This new refinance term, or new mortgage, has wayyy better rates and i am willing to bet their interest rate is 1% or even lower if that’s possible. And they can write off the interest payments on their taxes, lowering their taxable income. The main reason why they would do this is so that they have cash in hand without selling their assets. If all your “money” is in investments it might not be a good idea to pull your money out of them to then use them to buy stuff. It would be wiser to get a loan against your investments and use your investments as collateral instead. That way your money KEEPS GROWING in investments and you have cash ready to then buy more investments. If you have any questions lmk below. Thumbs up so ppl see.

Friday, February 2, 2024

 This Composer/Producer/Arranger/Pianist and Emmy-Award Winner is a native of Detroit, Michigan graduating from our own Mackenzie High School. He received a Bachelor’s of Science Degree in Instrumental Music Education from Southern University A&M College, and a Master’s of Music Education Degree from the University of Louisville and . This awesome musican also studied orchestration and arranging with jazz composer/arranger John LaBarbera. He was also a trumpeter, student arranger and Band Captain of the Southern University “Human Jukebox” Marching Band.


He has toured professionally as a pianist with jazz guitarist Mark Whitfield and the late jazz clarinetist Alvin Batiste. He is multi-talented and has composed, produced, performed and arranged music for recording artist such as: gospel great, Yolanda Adams, Howard Hewitt, Keith Washington, and L.J. Reynolds. His remarkable musicianship landed him studio time and work with Detroit’s legendary Music Producer Michael J. Powell. and was the understudy for the most sought-after string arranger and composer, Motown Arranger Paul Riser. He also served as Co-Director of Music for the nationally televised funeral of Rosa Parks, Mother of the Modern Civil Rights Movement, while serving as Director of Music for Oak Grove AME Church.

He currently teaches music with Southfield Public Schools, while serving as the President/CEO of the Michigan Fine Arts Institute, (Beverly Thomas Fine Arts Institute.) He is an active member of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity Incorporated, Phi Mu Alpha Professional Music Fraternity, The American Federation of Musicians (AFM) and the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP). I present to you during Black History Month, Detroit's Own: LaShawn Gary.