Ron Paul: Hemp is a Good Product

By Eric W. Dolan

Texas Rep. Ron Paul praised the industrial crop hemp during a campaign stop in North Dakota on Monday.

“There is no reason, in a free society, that farmers shouldn’t be allowed to raise hemp,” Paul said, according to the Associated Press. “Hemp is a good product.”

Hemp, a crop related to marijuana, is grown in Canada and other countries to make textiles and numerous other goods. But in the United States the cultivation of hemp is prohibited by federal law, even though it has little to no psychoactive effects.

Paul and Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA) introduced legislation in 2009 that would have legalized the cultivation of hemp. But the bill never made it out of the House Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security.

“It is unfortunate that the federal government has stood in the way of American farmers, including many who are struggling to make ends meet, from competing in the global industrial hemp market,” Paul said in 2009.

“The founders of our nation, some of whom grew hemp, would surely find that federal restrictions on farmers growing a safe and profitable crop on their own land are inconsistent with the constitutional guarantee of a limited, restrained federal government.”

“PAKALOLO” FREE DOWNLOAD & LYRICS

CLICK the PLAY Button below & while listening click the download arrow at the right end of the music player.

Please help us by reposting this and sharing it with your friends & family. -ALOHA-MikeD;

PAKALOLO written by M.Dayao & Lansky
Recorded at Tone Freq Recording Studio, San Jose, CA
Performed by My Peoples formerly Kapakahi

Get my mojo, puffin’ Pakalolo (x4)

Chorus:
If you got the herb come and pass it over
No be shy, we roll it up undercover
Do what we do, smoke it up here together
Pakalolo, hit I forever

Verse 1:
I see them girls passin’ it around
Gettin’ down to the sound, puff puff, here them over this cut
‘Cause this beat won’t stop, can’t stop
Everyone in here is lookin’ so damn hot
Now everyone knows what to do now, get with this groove now
Take a rip or two to get high now
‘Cause it’s alright now, fuck them who don’t know how
Burn all day, burn all night, no matter hour
No matter hour, yeah yeah

Chorus

Verse 2:
I get my mojo puffin’ pakalolo,
sweeter than cinnabon, sativa and indica
my peoples smokin’ plenty, it’s always 4:20
two of my favorite things, pussy and the sensi
If money is my bitch, then weed is my side chick
Wake up in the mornin’ first thing, gotta light it
Puff, puff, pass, pack a bowl or zig-zag
Sprinkle in the hash, we higher than first class
Livin’ life half baked on a fast pace
Get high is my lifestyle, no catch phrase
Roll up a fatty, call it Louisville Slugger
I call her Miss Irie, she call me lover, lover

Pakalolo, Pakalolo, Pakalolo, Pakalolo

Verse 3:
If you got the herb, pass it over
No be shy we roll, undercover
Do what we do we smoke
We say PA-KA-LO-LO
If you got the herb, pass it over
No be shy we roll, undercover
Do what we do we smoke
We say PA-KA-LO-LO

Chorus

LIVE Friday March 16th @ the ELBO Room

After much time off, My Peoples is back and ready to rock some faces this coming March 16th at the Elbo Room, San Francisco. We’ll be opening for our long time friends, Native Elements, who always play the best Bay area reggae music. Come early to catch our set and be ready to get up and skank. We can’t wait to see all of you and rock out.

And because we want you to sing along with us at this show, here’s a FREE DOWNLOAD of “PAKALOLO”

Whitney Houston Tribute

There’s no doubt in our minds that Whitney Houston will forever be remembered as one of the greatest voices of our time. We are truly blessed to have been able to experience the beauty of her unmatchable voice. In honor of her, I thought sharing a couple videos a will show how her voice can make any moment shine. The review below from 1993 says it best about Whitney, “the voice suffices.” And for that we thank you Whitney. Your voice will always live on.

Review/Pop; For Whitney Houston, Showy Doesn’t Count: The Show Is the Voice

By STEPHEN HOLDEN
Published: July 22, 1993

Whitney Houston is one of the few contemporary pop stars of whom it might be said: the voice suffices. While almost every performer whose albums sell in the millions calls upon an entertainer’s bag of tricks, from telling jokes to dancing to circus pyrotechnics, Ms. Houston would rather just stand there and sing. When not standing still, she either paces back and forth across the stage or sits on a stool. She doesn’t tell jokes. When she talks, her patter has the clunky ring of predigested interview responses.

What largely makes up for the dearth of entertainment values in Ms. Houston’s shows is a voice made of steel and smoke that can send chills through an audience. And at Tuesday’s opening-night performance of a Radio City Music Hall engagement that extends through Monday, that voice rang magnificently through the auditorium.

For the last eight years, Ms. Houston has reigned as the foremost interpreter of the sort of stentorian pop ballad that paints romantic love in grandiose, semi-religious terms. The song titles of her hits speak for themselves: “You Give Good Love,” “Saving All My Love for You,” “The Greatest Love of All,” “Didn’t We Almost Have It All,” “All the Man That I Need.”

Marley Official Trailer – Documentary – Bob Marley Movie (2012) HD

Bob Marley’s universal appeal, impact on music history and role as a social and political prophet is both unique and unparalleled. MARLEY is the definitive life story of the musician, revolutionary, and legend, from his early days to his rise to international superstardom. Made with the support of the Marley family, the film features rare footage, incredible performances and revelatory interviews with the people that knew him best. From Academy Award-winning director Kevin Macdonald (One Day In September, The Last King of Scotland) comes the story of a towering figure of musical history, whose music and message has transcended different cultures, languages and creeds to resonate around the world today as powerfully as when he was alive.

Official Site
http://www.facebook.com/bobmarleymovie

Why Music Venues Are Totally Lost: An Open Letter from a Professional Musician

By Chris R. at CD Baby  |  February 13, 2012
Jazz musician Dave Goldberg wrote a pointed and darkly humorous open letter to LA club owners that I thought was worth sharing. In it, he argues that it’s actually a counterproductive practice for venues to book bands who are willing to work for free.And when I say “counterproductive,” I mean it’s bad for the venue’s business.To read the whole letter, click HERE. But below are a few of the highlights:

Just the other day I was told by someone who owned a wine bar that they really liked our music and would love for us to play at their place. She then told me the gig paid $75 for a trio. Now $75 used to be bad money per person, let alone $75 for the whole band. It had to be a joke, right? No, she was serious.But it didn’t end there. She then informed us we had to bring 25 people minimum. Didn’t even offer us extra money if we brought 25 people. I would have laughed other than it’s not the first time I’ve gotten this proposal from club owners. But are there musicians really doing this? Yes. They are so desperate to play, they will do anything.

But lets think about this for a second and turn this around a little bit.What if I told the wine bar owner that I have a great band and we are going to play at my house. I need someone to provide and pour wine while we play. I can’t pay much, just $75 and you must bring at least 25 people who are willing to pay a $10 cover charge at the door. Now wouldn’t they look at you like you are crazy?

“Why would I do that,” they would ask? Well, because it’s great exposure for you and your wine bar. The people there would see how well you pour wine and see how good your wine is. Then they would come out to your wine bar sometime. ”But I brought all the people myself, I already know them,” they would say. Well maybe you could make up some professional looking flyers, pass them out, and get people you don’t know to come on out. ”But you are only paying me $75, How can I afford to make up flyers?”

You see how absurd this sounds, but musicians do this all the time. If they didn’t, then the club owners wouldn’t even think of asking us to do it. So this sounds like a great deal for the club owners, doesn’t it? They get a band and customers for that night, and have to pay very little if anything. But what they don’t realize is that this is NOT in their best interest. Running a restaurant, a club, a bar, is really hard. There is a lot at stake for the owner. You are trying to get loyal customers that will return because you are offering them something special. If you want great food, you hire a great chef. If you want great décor,you hire a great interior decorator. You expect these professionals to do their best at what you are hiring them to do. It needs to be the same with the band.You hire a great band and should expect great music.That should be the end of your expectations for the musicians. The music is another product for the venue to offer, no different from food or beverages.

When a venue opens it’s doors, it has to market itself. The club owner can’t expect people to just walk in the door. This has to be handled in aprofessional way. Do you really want to leave something so important up to a musician?

This is where the club owner needs to take over. It is their success or their failure on the line, not the musician.The musician can just move on to another venue. I’ve played places where for whatever reason only a few people have walked in the door on a Saturday night. The club owner got mad at me, asking where are the people? I turned it around on him asking the same thing? Where are all the people? It’s Saturday night and your venue is empty. Doesn’t that concern you? What are you going to do about it? Usually their answer is to find another band with a larger following. This means the professional bands get run out of the joint in favor of whoever can bring in the most people.

He then makes the point that professional bands will have a somewhat harder time playing the “friend and family” card because, well… they’re pros! They play every night.

But here’s where the club owner doesn’t get it. The crowd is following the band, not the venue. The next night you will have to start all over again. And the people that were starting to follow your venue are now turned off because you just made them listen to a bad band. The goal should be to build a fan base of the venue. To get people that will trust that you will have good music in there every night. Instead, you’ve soiled your reputation for a quick fix.

If you asked a club owner, ”who is your target demographic?” I doubt they would answer ”the band’s friends and family.” But yet clubs operate likeit is.

… would you expect the chef’s friends and family to eat at your restaurant every night? How about the dishwasher, the waitresses, the hostess? Or how about the club owner’s friends and family? You see,when you start turning this argument around, it becomes silly.

So what does Dave suggest? Start fighting back, with calm, reasoned arguments. He explains:

I’ve started arguing with club owners about this. It happened after I played a great night of music in LA. We were playing for a % of the bar. There were about 50 people there in this small venue, so it was a good turnout. At the end of the night, I go to get paid, and hope to book another gig. The club owner was angry.

“Where are your people?” he asked. ”All these people, I brought in. We had a speed dating event  and they are all left over from that.”

I pointed out they all stayed and listened to the music for 2 hours after their event ended. That was 2 more hours of bar sales, because without us, you have an empty room with nothing going on. He just couldn’t get over the fact that we didn’t walk in with our own entourage of fans. Wasn’t happy that we kept a full room spending money. Right when we were talking, a group of people interrupted us and said ”you guys sound  great, when is the next time you’re playing here again?” The club owner, said ”they aren’t, they didn’t  bring anyone.”

I went home that night bummed out and sent him an email. Telling him most of what you are reading here and how his business model and thinking is flawed. After a lot of swearing back and forth, because I’m guessing that musicians never talk to him as a business equal, he eventually admitted that what I was saying made sense. BUT, that’s not how LA clubs and restaurants work. And he has bands answering his craigslist ads willing to do whatever it takes to get the gig. It’s been a couple of years now since that conversation. I called his bar, and the number is disconnected.

So what do you think? Can this battle be won by reasoning with one venue at a time? Or have the economics of the live music world shifted forever beyond our influence? We’d love to hear about your experiences as a live musician. Please feel free to comment in the section below.

Chris R. at CD Baby

[editor's note: Most talent-buyers, venue owners, show promoters, and club bookers do not resemble the sleazy pay-to-play club booker pictured above. Most of the time it's best to view them as partners or allies in your event's success. Treat these industry professionals with courtesy and respect. If they give you cause for argument-- stay calm, state your points, and be ready to walk away! You can choose to never use a certain bridge again. It doesn't have to burned down entirely.]