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Wanduta at SxSW
Greetings folks!
We’ll be down in Austin for South by Southwest this Thurs, March 17th through Sunday the 21st.natutal viagra has no side effect of viagra We’ll be co-hosting a party with Faux Pas Productions on Saturday @5p at Lovejoys. Our very own Caitlin Krisko and The Broadcast will be performing, in addition to a few artists off Faux Pas’s roster.
If you’d like to schedule a meetup, hit us up at info@wanduta.com
Otherwise, keep up with us at twitter.com/wanduta
Wanduta Featured Artist: Martin Rivas

We recently had the opportunity to sit down with Martin Rivas, an NYC-based singer-songwriter. He is currently touring in support of his latest album “Sea of Clouds”, which is available now. We talked songwriting, influences, and of course, The Spinners:
1. You play a lot and you have a fantastic voice. What tips can you offer vocalists on the art of voice maintenance?
Thanks so much! Playing as often as I get to play, I definitely feel as though there are days that I don’t have as much voice as I’d like… so I pretty much go with what I’m given. Which on many days for me is nearly nothing! (laughs) Sometimes, a bit of rasp can be an advantage in a quiet environment. I love investigating and making use of the bits of squeal and snarl that I can get with varying degrees of raspy-voice-ness as opposed to being at 100%. It varies from day to day, and it’s like plugging your guitar into a different amp just to see what might come of it.
Luckily for me, I’m in the fortunate position of not having to speak much during the day, and rest is the greatest thing for me in terms of preserving my voice. Speak softly during the day, drink as much Yogi Throat Comfort Tea, or anything with some cardamom in it, and if you can, run the bathtub with really hot water, let the bathroom fill with steam, and just go and sit in there and read for 10 minutes at a clip. Those are the sort of things that work best for my voice.
2. When did you write the songs for Sea of Clouds?
The songs were written over a period of a few years. Of the tracks on the album, I think that “A New Word” was the first song that came around, and “I Need a Riff” and “Sorry to See You Go” were among the last. The discipline of taking the sonic and melodic ideas that are always floating around and fashioning them into something resembling a song is the part that seems to escape most easily from me, and it’s the hardest habit to get back into. A lot of these songs were floating around as half-completed sketches for the better part of a year before the discipline came back to complete them, which I don’t mind at all; I think it allows me to really understand the song and make it become what it wants to become. I only have a tiny handful of songs that have shown up at my doorstep completely finished, or that took 20 minutes to write; of those sort of songs, “Hide in Me” is one.
Writing songs is like therapy for me, except it doesn’t cost anything, and the sessions can last as long as I need them to. Taking a year-plus to write a song is comforting to me.
3. Who is the first person you share new songs with?
I’d have to say that my wife is the first to hear everything simply because she’s hearing every step of the process. She’ll always say, “that sounds ok” when I play her a finished demo, even if I’m totally stoked about it. She sure knows how to keep me in check. (laughs) I imagine it must be frustrating to hear the same melody six or seven hundred zillion times before it appears as part of a completed song, unless you’re the one writing it.
4. True or false. You went through a phase when you listened to The Spinners a lot.
That’s not a phase! I STILL listen to Philippe Wynne and the Spinners all the time. I’ve pretty much spent my entire adult life working backwards with music, finding older and older songs, singers, and melodies that make me melt, and 1940s, 50s and 60s rhythm and blues is the music that I have found most appeals to me. The Spinners are one of my absolute favorites, but I’m even more fond of Sam Cooke, Curtis Mayfield, Sam & Dave, Jerry Butler, Smokey Robinson, Otis Redding, Louis Jordan, and lesser known folks like Walter Jackson, Billy Butler, Bill Doggett, Bobby Bland, Wynonie Harris, Jimmy Ruffin, … man, I’ll go on for 20 minutes if you let me.
5. Is there a story behind “a name scratched on a desk?” Can you share it?
There really isn’t much of a story; I was visualizing the feelings of getting on with your life after a period of mourning. You know, after the shock, making arrangements, the wake, the funeral, and then coming back home and expecting, or being expected, to just get on with it. Those are the visuals that came to mind… someone being a memory now, a name scratched on a desk. It’s nothing new to folks who have been through it, and that’s why I wanted to say at the end, “this isn’t some sort of revelation, and it was never meant to be.”
6. Who taught you how to play music? Write music?
I remember singing along to 45s, and making the effort to be sure that I was singing in key, and even finding harmonies and counter-melodies, when I was 5 or 6. I think that was always around. My sister’s boyfriend kept a guitar at our house around the time I was 11, so I’d reach for that and goof around and search for things. Then my sister started taking piano lessons, so of course I’d hop on the bench and explore. It was my Uncle Joe who finally said, “enough goofing around, let’s show you some chords,” and he taught me the chorus to “Ride Captain Ride” by Blues Image, I guess because it only had a few, easy chords. I’m thankful that he took me a bit left-of-center from the get-go, rather than showing me “Michael Row the Boat Ashore” or “Kumbaya.” From there, I just started listening to my Police, Clash, and Beatles records and trying to play along.
7. What advice can you give Wanduta members who are just getting started with their music careers?
Play as often as you possibly can, to the point where there is no difference between being on stage or being at, say, a Dunkin’ Donuts. Put yourself in the position to be as comfortable as possible up there, and people will get who you are.
Listen to lots and lots and lots of music; listen to sounds; listen to conversations; listen to engines and squeaks and squeals; listen to short-wave; listen to everything. Find the comfort and melody within sounds.
Be to people the way you’d wish them to be to you, and if they’re not, be that way anyway.
You can catch Martin’s next show on Wednesday, December 16th 9p at The Bitter End NYC. He will be sharing the bill with Greg Mayo Band. Both Bands will combine with special guests to perform The Beatles “Abbey Road” full album.cialis Martin will have 2010 residences at NYC clubs The Red Lion, Prohibition, and Slane, along with regular appearances at Rockwood Music Hall.
A sample of Martin’s songs from his new album, “Sea of Clouds”:
How to get Free Healthcare with Wanduta: Configuration #1
You’ve seen a couple examples of how you can use the Wanduta Perkscard to save money. But did you know the savings are so substantial that they can actually finance a healthcare plan?
Take one of our health insurance options. $55 a month. $660 dollars a year.
Here’s just one of the many configurations of savings you can get with the Wanduta Perkscard that will SUBSIDIZE A YEAR OF HEALTH INSURANCE. For argument’s sake, we’ll do this example in quite possibly the most expensive city in the country: New York City.
1. AMC Movie Ticket Discounts. Normally $12.50, Wanduta gets them down to $8. Suppose you buy two movie tickets every month.
Savings: $9/month, $118/year saved
2. Dominos Pizza: Wanduta gets you a 30% discount at all NYC locations. Suppose you place 2 orders each month at $20 each.
Savings: $6/month, $72/year saved
3. Need some storage space? Wanduta Perkscard has a relationship with American Self-Storage, and can get you a full month of storage space free AND can get the initiation fee waived.
Approx monthly cost of a 5X10 space: $119. Initiation fee: $20. Total of $139 saved
4. Ramada Hotels. Wanduta has an exclusive discount for 10% off the best available rate for all Ramada hotels. In total, suppose you spend 5 nights a a year at a hotel, spending a total of $1000. Knock ten percent out of that, and Wanduta has saved you $100
5. A few weeks back, we already showed how you can save $130 on a rental car using Wanduta.
So we are at $559 saved so far, right? And the yearly health insurance charge was $660. Fear not. Hmm. I know what will put us over:
5. Wanduta has 30% discounts with food vendors ALL OVER NEW YORK CITY. Seriously. Sign up, and you’ll see that the network is too vast to even list here. But say you spend $100 a month just within out network of discounted merchants. That’s $1200/year. Knock thirty percent off, that’s $360 saved
Total Savings:
$118 on Movies
$72 on Pizza
$139 Storage
$100 on Hotel
$130 on Rental Car
$360 on Food
= $919 saved yearly. That’s a bigger number than the $660 yearly health insurance fee. Your coming out on top of this one.
In the pocket
As you may have noticed, we look a little different. Well, we certainly feel the same, if not a little better. New site, new functionality, better features for our users.
If you play music, you know what it feels like to be in the pocket. To feel the pulse somewhere deep and internal, from which everything flows and feels natural.
On the eve of the holiday, we’d like to share a groove that characterizes Wanduta pretty damn well at the moment. We hope you can lock into this with us.
In with the new Wanduta

We’ve been hard at work these last couple months improving both the look and usability of our website, and are proud to announce the launch of our new and greatly improved website
We worked painstakingly to ensure the best possible experience for our end-user and raison d’etre, the independent musician.
Stay tuned for a full overview of updates and improvements. We are very excited. You should be too.
There are a lot of…
talented musicians in the world making a lot of good music. We know that can seem like a discouraging fact when you are trying to find your place in the whole music scene, and trying to figure out if and when you will be able to make a living with your music. But, you can be heartened by the fact that there are way way way more fans of music in the world than there are talented musicians. That is an easy fact to forget, but a nice one to remember. Another nice fact is that as you read this there are millions of people with some song stuck in their head. They come from all walks of life and they are at this moment engaged in all sorts of activities. (pause think about it move on) But they all have one thing in common. At some point before the song that is now stuck in their head became stuck in their head, they each had to hear the song somewhere. A club, the internet, a friend’s car, a movie, a street corner, it really doesn’t matter where or how. What matters is that they heard it. They heard the song. It lodged into their brain. They need to hear it again. Do you see where this is going? It is a classic “It’s hard but there’s hope” pep-talk. It’s hard out there. But there’s hope. And there’s Wanduta.
Martin Sexton, "Hey Joe"
This clip has been around for a while, but it is worth coming back to again and again. What a great reminder of the pure joy of a good song being played well. Can you feel it? Have you been healed?
Wanduta Featured Artist: Deena Goodman

We recently had the pleasure of catching up with Deena Goodman. A fabulous singer-songwriter in her own right, Deena also heads up Rebel Spirit Music, an NYC-based organization assisting independent musicians. She wears several different hats, all of them quite impressively, and was kind enough to tell us more about both her creative and community endeavors:
Where are you from?
Raised in Teaneck NJ, live in Manhattan
How did you get started in music?
My dad played his favorite records on our road trips, including all artists listed above, plus a little jazz and standards for good measure, I have been singing every since. After graduating NYU’s Tisch School for the Arts I began to pursue a recording career, writing songs with big name songwriters and playing shows nationwide. I eventually realized the need for community involvement amongst independent artists, that the notion of doing this together was more savvy then the notion of doing it yourself, so I started Rebel Spirit Music, an effort to promote all artists music, hand in hand.
Speaking of promoting music, what’s the most creative/shameless way you’ve seen a musician publicize themselves?
Hate to say it, but the Naked Cowboy has it down to a science. I am also a big fan of artists who set up accounts devoted to producing records that fans donate money to, giving fans a hand in the making of their favorite artists’ record is a great way to maintain loyalty and camaraderie amongst musicians and fans alike.
Whats next?
Continued work towards bringing new musics to music lovers, through Rebel Spirit Music, live music at Canal Room and perhaps producing some more of my own.
Where can we catch the next Rebel Spirit showcase?
August 5th: The Rebel Spirit Music Series Presents: Garrison Starr, Abby Payne, Jon Solo and Jerzy Jung @ Rockwood Music Hall/196 Allen St (btwn houston and stanton), 8 pm, FREE.
Check out Deena performing “Follow You Down”:
Check out more of Deena’s tracks on Wanduta Radio
Tunecore-Universal Partnership

For those of you who didn’t see it, Tunecore and Universal announced a joint-venture that could mark a change in how the major labels interact with independent artists. It isn’t clear yet how the services will be priced by Universal, which could make a big difference on whether this has the impact the article suggests. What strikes us as significant is the possibility of independent artists getting big label support without any big label pressure to have a hit. One of the core concepts that drives Wanduta is the fact that musicians can sustain their careers, and have a quality and meaningful existence, without ever having a hit. We know that it takes a lot of hard work, but no real artist and especially not one whose art must cross the line into commerce has ever had success chasing what is easy. It takes a core fan base being fed with regular live performances combined with continued work on your craft and smart decisions off the stage along the way. That is the basic model for a more sustainable kind of success. And it is the kind of success that allows you to remain truly independent in all ways.
Eddie Vedder interviewed by David Lynch
We posted this two minute interview of Eddie Vedder by David Lynch, because in it Vedder talks about having given himself a time table with his music. We don’t know if he would have stopped pursuing his music if the time table actually ran out, but knowing what we know now it would have been a true loss if he had. Wanduta is based upon the concept of stretching the time tables of its members by enabling them to keep at it just a little bit longer. If you don’t need a job to get your health care and if the money you make can stretch a little further, then maybe you can extend whatever your time table is. It sounds hokey to say that we want to save music one musician at a time, but if Eddie Vedder had a time table maybe it’s not that hokey. Think about the loss of the entire Pearl Jam catalogue or just the loss of Vedder’s presence in the music scene. So, if we can help keep even one artist going long enough to make it, and prevent that musicians music from being lost in the pile, then this thing will have been worth it.
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