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Flamekeeper

James Ison


Last Updated: 11/17/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: Married
Age: 58
Sign: Gemini

City: FREELAND
State: Michigan
Country: US
Signup Date: 3/11/2005

Blog Archive
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Saturday, September 13, 2008 

I kept losing Kitty's song until I saved this C-SPAN search result. I hope this is stable enough to share. It's a list of edits that have her song "There are no words" that she sang at the Pentigon 9-11-08

http://www.c-spanarchives.org/library/includes/templates/library/flash_popup.php?pID=281042-1&searchphrase=There%20are%20no%20words

Thursday, September 11, 2008 

Category: Writing and Poetry
  OK Folks, here's the deal, I've been threatened contusions unless I post or publish some of my writing. So here we go.
 
Have you ever had something hatch and grow in your mind in the darkness of night that won't allow you rest until you give it birth? Oddly enough this started out to be a bird, which would have been more pretty, but it ended up an insect. That's the nature of dreams.

The magic entomologic seasons of Summer life,

The June bugs are a long gone memory that go unmissed. The fireflies that came and went after are missed much. The seventeen year cicadas' brief appearance out of the earth and into the air are as short a memory as yesterday's. The monarch butterfly, always changing, but always beautiful has departed as well. Now of the ones that are left, my constant companion, that unwelcome houseguest the mosquito, stays longest of all, oh how I wish that she would follow!

Friday, July 04, 2008 

Category: Music
 Are you a fan or part of the Michigan acoustic music community? Would you like to see some of the hundreds of music related concerts and events that happen each year be broadcast on Public TV or Cable?
 
  They've got shows for fishing, sewing, snowmobiling, and scrap booking, why can't we have one for Michigan Music? Please take a look at Michigan Folk Music Federation, and if it's something you think you'd like to see happen consider joining. Every new member brings us that much closer to making it a reality.
 
  "Michigan Folk Music Federation" is a place where we can all share ideas and work on projects. Here's a link  http://groups.google.com/group/michigan-folk-music-federation?hl=en 
 
You can e-mail me for your invitation to join at MiFolkFed@aol.com
 
Best wishes,
Flamekeeper
(Jim Ison) 
Thursday, April 10, 2008 

Category: Music
 Keeping and updating your events on calendars can be a pain, the one you have on your website is a given, but there's a good reason to use other ones as well, (most can take the place of your regular website calendar and offer additional benefits.)
  The list of three I give here are not meant to be all inclusive or as endorsements. I do want to bring them to your attention to let you know there are more ways to get things done, (hopefully more efficiently.) 
 
The first one I want to talk about is Syndicateus.org. It was developed by Warren Armstrong who's the secretary for the Ten Pound Fiddle Music Organization. The Ten Pound Fiddle puts on "Coffee House" concerts in the Lansing area of Michigan. It's a free service without advertising, and is ran as a public service. The stripped down, no frills approach while seeming to be a liability is really it's greatest asset. Syndicateus was designed to be picked up and used by the media, but it can be used in many different ways.
At the first level it can be used to support or replace your calendar. You can setup your Syndicateus calendar or "feed" and link to it in your emails and websites. There's a provision to use a header to hide the Syndicateus logo so the calendar looks like it's a part of your site.. "OK, I can do that with my current calendar." you may be thinking, but that's not the point. Here's where things get more exciting. 
  I'll use my own case as an example, I put out a newsletter of acoustic events in Michigan. I also have a MySpace webpage. I can subscribe to your calendar/feed and anyone else's  that fit with what I'm doing and  the combined data is put into a super calendar or combined feed. For my newsletter all I have to do is cut and paste the part I want to use (the next two weeks) and my work is halved for my newsletter. For those people that aren't on my newsletter's mailing list, or for people wanting to see the latest information or further into the future, they can see the combined calendar from a link I've posted on my MySpace page.
   Getting back to the media, they can use it to fill in local event information and community calendars in their TV, Radio and Newspapers. Not a bad way to extend the coverage from your efforts!
  You can find Syndicateus on the web at http://syndicateus.net/events/Page0.php
 
  The next network I want to bring to your attention is Eventful.com. Eventful seems to be just the opposite of what Syndicateus is. It's big and flashy and provides all kinds of bells and whistles. I first found out about it when a musician contacted me to be a "Friend" in MySpace. He'd spent a great deal of time sitting up MySpace websites all across the country with an Eventful "Demand It" box on each one of them. The Idea was that he'd use those sites to see where his biggest audiences were, and to establish contacts in advance of sitting up his tour. It was a good idea, and who knows how things would have gone if he hadn't taken the top off his tour bus while going under an overpass that was too low a couple of days into his tour.
  What I like about Eventful is that it's big (as in International), all the bigger more prestigious venues here locally use it. It just plain looks good when you've finished posting something. 
 
You can Find Eventful on the web at http://eventful.com/
 
  The last network I want to showcase is Reverbnation.com. It has the most bells and whistles of the three. It isn't as public as Eventful, or as pliable as Syndicateus, but for those of you that can post events on multiple websites in different networks, it's King. By using the site you set up with them, you can manage everything from one calendar and the short pieces of code or "Widgets" they provide you. Update the main calendar and every one of the sites where you have a widget will be updated as well. Reverbnation can stand alone as an "Electronic Press Kit" and gives Sonic Bids a run for their (your) money. Reverbnation is free to you, (there is advertising ) whereas Sonic costs and keeps on costing as you add features.
 
You can check out Reverbnation at http://www.reverbnation.com/
 
  Which one's best for you? That's for you to decide, I would and do use all three. 
 
Best wishes,
Flamekeeper
(Jim Ison) 
Monday, February 04, 2008 

Category: Music

Soupy Gato does acoustic.


 Dan's offered to lend a hand big time in getting my first podcast off the ground. Listen to this show he's done on the side.



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Monday, February 04, 2008 

Category: Music
  I've been working with Warren Armstrong, (more of a critic really) in the development of a new tool for promotions, it's called Syndicateus . It's like a wire service that you can use however you choose. Part of my news letter (the organized part) comes from that. I also have a link to my combined calendar on my MySpace page.
  Warren developed it to make everyone's life a little easier (save perhaps his own), it's free with no commercial adds, and so far it's deliberately weighted in favor of the acoustic/roots/folk/Celtic/etc... music community.
  You could link to your calendar from any website you have, put a link in an e-mail or whatever. When you change the main calendar, everything attached to it will be updated as well.
  The event calendar you set up for your own use will be available to whoever else subscribes to it, (Warren's hoping the folks in the media will use it for news story's and to fill in community calendars.)
  The point is that once you put in the information, it will go out to as many places as choose to use it. Which would be two outlets for myself alone. In short you'd multiply the results without much more effort. Please consider sitting up an account.
 Go to the site for more information.
Monday, October 22, 2007 

Category: Music

OK so not all of Mike's podcasts are from the White Crow!

But enough of them will be that for a good part of the time you'll be listening to podcasts made at the Crow. If not, the music represented on The Open Mick Cafe' is very similar to what I listen to.


Caution my computer hangs up while the show downloads, yours may too. If you have the time to listen to most of the podcast without navigating the web it shouldn't be a problem, but if you're working on something, you may want to listen another time.



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Thursday, September 20, 2007 

Category: Music
  I once spent more than 8 months trying to compile a venue list in preparation to becoming a booking agent.
It was a monotonous and unrewarding exercise. Since then I've discovered some websites that are pretty complete, and I haven't had to do that for some time.
  I'm not one to hoard information, and though I can't take credit for these sites, I do recognize the tremendous amount of time and effort involved in compiling these lists. Please treat the folks that build these lists with care and respect, the music community owes them a great deal.
  The one site I share most is the one for Mid-West Venues,
also very useful.
http://www.michiganfolklive.com/page/page/4304557.htm 
  Want to pick up some quick gigs where you might be able to sell some CDs?

 
  You have to get your music samples and press kits in early (about 6-8 months), to be considered to play fairs and festivals. Usually the money's good, you get exposure, and you can move product.
  Here's a list.
  I hope these lists may save someone somewhere time and effort better spent perfecting their craft, or at least in negotiation.
  If you find yourself playing in Michigan and need some additional help, contact me at Flamekeep@aol.com.
Friday, September 07, 2007 

Category: Music
Hello Everyone,
  Sometimes someone asks me a question and after I think about it I say
"Oh Yea!", and then "Duuuh!"
  One of my musician friends asked for information on the newspaper and other lists to send event information to. I started getting the information together and after I'd sent it, it was "Oh Yea" not only musicians but venue owners could use this information too. Then "Duuuh!" why hadn't I thought of this before?
  It's no secret that a good part of my e-mail list is musicians and venues.
  In my view the one failing that the folk and roots movement has is in promotion (self and group) and networking, slowly that's happening here in Michigan, and I'm not talking about what I'm doing, because many of these things were in place or in the works long before I came on the scene. As an example Matt Watroba's "Folks Like Us" event list.
 
or FARM's links page
or the Midwest Venues listings
 
A new one that shows great promise is Michigan Folk Live
 
Though I don't have a subscription myself, anyone involved in folk music should consider having one.
 
I don't know how effective this one is, but it does send me weekly reports, and I don't see any of your events (yet.)
 
 This one's likely to be of more interest to musicians, but if you have someone coming in to play for you and they ask about media connections, you'll have it.
Currently listening:
Minor League Deities
By Rachael Davis
Release date: 05 August, 2003
Sunday, June 17, 2007 

Category: Music
 Over the last year I've probably heard thirty Lamb songs. Not songs written about lambs, or more ridiculously, by lambs.
  The Lamb songs I refer to are songs written at "John Lamb's Songwriter's Retreats." 
  Last night (Saturday June 17, 2007), Keith Parmentier & Judy Insley played the White Crow in Saginaw for the second time.
 To the best of my memory,( a fragile, unreliable commodity at best)  theirs were likely the first of these songs that I'd heard.
  I wish I'd kept score as one by one I watched and heard musicians proudly present songs written in John's workshops and retreats. What struck me most is the pride they display while they talk about and play the music. It's like these songs are some secret treasure that are kept hidden in their guitar cases, only to be brought out and shown to the trusted few. 
  Anyway since I can't remember all the songwriters and songs, I thought that the next best thing would be to ask people with such treasured possessions to step forward and be counted. I don't have this thing organized yet (I just decided to do it last night,) so for now I'm only asking for the songwriter's name and the title of the song and possibly when and where it was written. Later on I may be looking for lyrics and recordings depending on how much time I can give this project and how much help I'm offered.
   Wouldn't it be great to gather all this into some song books or a few compilations albums? Perhaps set up Lamb reunions and produce year books, organizing an alumni, dedicate a library, erect a monument. (Sorry, I got carried away.)
   If you have such information, please leave it here as a comment to this blog post.