Sunday, November 25, 2012

Posted by CanadianBill








http://www.amazon.com/Standing-Ovation-Greatest-Songs-Stage/product-reviews/B009G7ZYPY/ref=cm_cr_pr_top_helpful?ie=UTF8&showViewpoints=0




Posted by CanadianBill

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Saturday, November 24, 2012

I will be happy to go to Susan's album party.  Please invite me.




Thank you Canadian Bill. 
Great poster, even greater accomplishment by Ms. Susan Boyle!

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Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Poster on Twitter

Wonderful creation by Canadian Bill.  
Four CDs and a show all in three years.  Not bad for one wee Scottish lassie, who everyone wrote off for 47 years. Keep going Susan, you are doing really, really well.  Your latest CD "Standing Ovation" is a masterpiece of songs from the musicals. What a voice and what a great personality! Thank you, Susan.

Friday, November 16, 2012

On Susan Official Site

New feature on Susan's Official site: there is a hover feature that allows you to hover over interactive album cover to access content - Click on link below:

http://www.facebook.com/susanboyle?sk=app_122951281158671#tl-4df1138b

Thursday, November 15, 2012


Posters below all done by Canadian Bill.
Thank you CBill for the marvelous posters.
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Thank you Canadian Bill. 
Great poster, even greater accomplishment by Ms. Susan Boyle!

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A NOTE TO ALL RADIO STATION WHO LOOK HERE

Canadian Bill has produced this marvelous poster:  

Susan Boyle's 4th  CD "Standing Ovation" came out November 13, 2012.  The CD is magnificent!  Simply outstanding and should be played on the radio stations world-wide.  I urge all stations to give it a spin.  Your listeners will love it.

Friday, November 2, 2012

For full article click on link below:


http://msl1.mit.edu/furdlog/docs/2011-11_rolling_stone_music_economics.pdf



In the old days, it was much easier for pop stars to keep up with how much they were getting paid. Somebody
would buy a CD at a Tower Records for $15 and a few dollars would appear months later on the star's royalty
sheet. Then iTunes took over the record business, and it was even easier (if not more profitable) – every time
somebody bought a 99-cent track, a few pennies went into the artist's bank account.
Those were such simple times. Today, music fans play free music videos on YouTube, stream songs for free
on Spotify, MOG or Rdio, customize Internet radio stations on Pandora or Slacker and consume music a
zillion different ways. The fractions of pennies artists make for each of these services are nearly impossible to
track – at least for now. "People like to simplify this and say, 'There's no money in it,'" says Jeff Price,
founder of TuneCore, which charges artists to place songs directly into iTunes, Spotify and others. "But it's
complex, it's complicated and it's still being worked out."
So you're Adele, the year's biggest pop star. Your songs stream on Spotify – or MOG, Rdio, Pandora orYouTube. You still sell downloads through iTunes and Amazon, and you still sell old-fashioned CDs in oldfashioned record stores. How much do you get paid?
Rolling Stone talked to several sources in the music business and got several different answers.