Friday, November 24, 2006

Trade-Marks and Copyright


November 24, 2006
 
Mr. Nate Edwards, CEO/FOUNDER
D-TOWN RECORDS
14001 Dallas Parkway, Suite 1200
Dallas, Texas 75240
Company # 972-934-6592
Fax # 469-519-2423
www.dtownrecords.com

email: info@dtownrecords.com                                                                                          Ref: 
Trade-Marks and Copyright

Dear Mr. Edwards: The trade-marks, logos and service marks as well as certain words, titles, icons, graphics and designs (collectively, the “Trade-marks”) displayed on the Web site are registered and unregistered trade-marks of Smith Data Communications OmniMedia Group, hereinafter known as SDC OmniMedia Group, its affiliates and other third parties. Nothing on the Web site should be construed as granting a license or right to use any Trade-mark without the express permission of SDC OmniMedia Group or the third party who owns the Trade-mark. Any unauthorized downloading, transmission, or other copying or modification of any Trade-mark is strictly prohibited and may be a violation of provincial, federal or international law or may subject the infringing party to legal action.All information and content on the Web site and in print, imprints, magazines, radio, television, films, any advertisement using D-TOWN is protected by copyright and may not be used or reproduced except in accordance with the terms and conditions of this Legal Notice or with the express consent of the copyright holder. SDC OmniMedia Group does not warrant that your use of information or content on the Web site or any multimedia imprints using our logos will not infringe the rights of third parties not affiliated with SDC OmniMedia.We realize how far you have come with your projects and wish that you could join our franchise family.  If you feel that that this is a benefit to you, please send us your resume and discography of your company.  Our fees are a one time joining fee of $25,000.  Yearly dues are $5,000.00.If you feel this is unfair, then we request that you remove D-TOWN from your company letterhead and websites immediately.Sincerely, /s/

KENNETH HOWARD SMITH, CEO

Enclosures:  D-Town Records Logos from 1957 to 2006

Posted by InterNetics eMagazine at 20:40:36 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Thursday, November 23, 2006

Bernadette Bascom - The Best Of Bernadette Bascom CD Released

Bernadette Bascom - The Best Of Bernadette Bascom (DCD-7488202) PENGUIN/D-TOWN RECORDS

For More Pictures of Bernadette - Click Here!

The William R. Miller Sessions between the years 1980 and 1993 when Bascom recorded her last songs for Miller in Las Vegas. Bascom toured with the Platters for several years, and continues to record with Sir Mix-A-lot these days.

  • Seattle Sunshine
  • Don’t Want To Loose Your Love
  • I Got To Get Paid
  • It Gets Me Through The Night
  • Body Freaks
  • Baby Shake Your Shaker
  • I Got Fire
  • Only Take me Back (Duet Featuring Bill Miller)
  • Sweet Thang
  • Desire
  • Desire - Club Mix
  • Beat Box
  • Beat Box - Club Mix
  • If You Could Only Take me Back (Duet Featuring Lenny Williams)

What do you say about one of the greatest singers in the world? Not much. As a DJ in Baltimore, Maryland, Bernadette’s career started in reverse. From the radio to the stage with the Five Stair Steps on Curtom Records. Two Gold records and then to the MFSB of Philadelphia International Records and another Gold record award. Not to be out done, Stevie Wonder hired Bernadette to replace Denice Williams as the lead singer of Wonderlove. As a member and leader of the hot 1980’s group Epicenter. Bernadette continued to dazzle the crowds worldwide.

A credit to the City of Seattle, she recorded Seattle Sunshine that was adopted by the City council as the official song. Bernadette Bascom moved Las Vegas, where she had her own stage show with forty dancers and a 26 piece band .for over three years. Still in great demand, we honor our first lady of D-Town. Packing up the label, I moved to Seattle, Washington to start again and anew. In Seattle, I happened to go to a concert on New Year’s Eve in the downtown area.

I met a young man who was working the show, and mixing the sound on stage. The artist was Bernadette Bascom. I remembered Bernadette from the days with Stevie Wonder’s Wonderlove group. She had replaced Denice Williams as the lead singer.

However, the young man who later turned out to be her husband was named Bill Miller. As fate would have it again, I began to talk about my experiences at Motown Records. Billy had been at Motown too. In fact, he had written the hit single “I Feel Sanctified” for the Commodores. They placed it on their second album. A white disco group from Cleveland, Ohio who was called Wild Cherry recorded their rendition of “Sanctified” on the backside of their single which was called “Play That Funky Music White Boy”. The single sold over six millions records.

After awhile in Los Angeles, Bill was producing for Barbara Streisand, and he could not get her a hit. Taking his money, Bill returned to Detroit. After a couple of months back at home, he was feeling restless, and decided to hit the road, where of all things, ended up in Seattle. On the other hand, Bernadette was with People’s Choice who had the big hit “Do It Anyway You Wanna” for Philadelphia International Records. They were ending their tour in the Pacific Northwest.

Bernadette fell in love with Seattle and left the group to stay there. It was not long before, she was recording with Thom Bell, and did a solo with Elton John on “The Thom Bell Sessions” album for MCA Records. Joining a local band by the name of Epicenter, the group was assured success, when Stevie Wonder happen to make an unexpected visit to Seattle and play a gig with Bernadette and the band.

Posted by InterNetics eMagazine at 03:18:32 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

THE MAGIC OF DETROIT – VARIOUS ARTISTS –A COLLECTION OF MEGA-RARE SIXTIES SOUL - CD

THE MAGIC OF DETROIT – VARIOUS ARTISTS –

A COLLECTION OF MEGA-RARE SIXTIES SOUL - CD

 

On November 8, 1980, against all odds and all the bad advice, Platinum Sound Productions announced to the world that it was re-activating D-Town Records and Billboard Magazine did let everyone know what was going on.  The only reason that Rogers and Smith decided to re-activate D-Town, was Rogers’ recordings were being ‘bootlegged’ with brand new copies of  his records from a company that had closed it’s doors in 1969.  After several attorneys and state-to-state inquiries, it was decided to bring D-Town back to the national music scene.

Michael Anthony Hanks’ legacy as one of Detroit’s most productive songwriters and music publishers that rivaled that of Motown’s Jobete Music Publishing arm.  The Board of Directors decided to vote Hanks out of D-Town Records and he left with the Fabulous Peps and his Soul Records label to Motown.  Technically Hanks left all of the mechanicals to his songs as property of D-Town Records.   He was still entitled to all of his royalties for mechanical  imprints and manufacturing. 

As Lee Rogers Craton was the first artist and a vice president of D-Town Records, it was obvious to us, that by reactivating the label and re-signing Rogers back to D-Town, we never broke the change of ownership.

Rogers did arrange with Ms. Stephanie Hanks-Smith, the executive of The Michael Anthony Hanks- MAH’s Music Publishing Trust, did insist that The Hanks family could retain all of the rights to the D-Town Records Catalog, as long as they did not include any of Lee Rogers’ recordings, likeness or imprints with his name; that this property belonged to his son, Anthony (Tony) Craton of Jantony Productions in Detroit.

The MAH’s Music Publishing Trust granted rights to two (2) with possibly six (6) released CD’s worldwide; including “The Magic Of Detroit” and “Dancin’ In D-Town” that contained several performances of Lee Rogers on each CD, and going against the agreement made by the Hanks organization in 1979.  Because of the breach of contract, SDC OmniMedia Group, the parent company of Platinum Sound Productions and D-Town Records and the remaining partner, Kenneth Howard Smith, announces the release of three CD’s entitled:  “The Magic Of Detroit Volume One”, “The Magic Of Detroit Volume Two” and “Boss Love: The United Kingdom Collection” by Lee Rogers for D-Town Records 26 years re-activation party.

The long awaited lost tracks from the Russell George Ingersoll Sessions, includes a couple of songs from “The Hollywood Motown Sessions” CD.  Ingersoll a native of Detroit was also an active songwriter with Motown Records in the 1970’s and 1980’s, and Gwendolyn Gordy would let Ingersoll come to the Platinum Sound Studios to help them out.

Kenneth Howard Smith has penned a filming manuscript for his “Vinyl Knights: The Other Side of The Motor City Tracks”, the stories of two different music kingdoms that came from the same seed of one Carmen C. Murphy.  However, the gateway to the hits was between four musicians that played on every recording in the city.  With the right amount of money, you could get that “magic sound” and Jamie Jameson was one of the main leaders for the Sound of Young America.

The CD contains performances by Roosevelt Grier, Connie Van Dyke, Melvin Davis, Lee Rogers, Fabulous Peps (Undisputed Truth), Precisions and many more.  As the white hot smoking Motown Record machine smashed its way across the radio charts, these precious gems with the same musicians, fell still born from the presses with the exceptions of a few artists that managed to hit the trade papers top 100 list.

Digital downloads are available from cdbaby.com.

Posted by InterNetics eMagazine at 02:31:47 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

LEE ROGERS: BOSS LOVE: The United Kingdom Collection

D-TOWN RECORDS IMPRINT DIVISION

P R E S S   R E L E A S E

 

Date:  November 20, 2006
Kenneth Howard Smith


LEE ROGERS:  BOSS LOVE: The United Kingdom Collection

A COLLECTION OF MEGA-RARE SIXTIES SOUL FROM DETROIT’S

“VINYL KNIGHTS: THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MOTOR CITY TRACKS”

 

In the 1960’s as the white hot smoking Motown Record machine smashed its way across the radio charts, many records were recorded in Detroit during this time with many of these precious gems with the same musicians, fell still born from the presses with the exception of a few artists that managed to hit the trade papers top 100 list. 

One artist failed at fitting the Motown Records mold, was the Prince of Detroit, Lee Rogers (Craton).  Kenneth Howard Smith has penned a filming manuscript about Lee Rogers entitled; “Vinyl Knights: The Other Side of The Motor City Tracks”, the stories of two different music kingdoms that came from the same seed of one Carmen C. Murphy.  However, the gateway to the hits was between a core of musicians that played on every recording in the city.  With the right amount of money, you could get that “magic sound” and Jamie Jameson was one of the main leaders for the Sound of Young America.  Digital downloads are available from cdbaby.com.

On November 8, 1980, Platinum Sound Productions announced to the world that it was re-activating D-Town Records and Billboard Magazine did let everyone know what was going on.  The only reason that Lee Rogers Craton and Kenneth Howard Smith decided to re-activate D-Town, was because, Rogers’ recordings were being ‘bootlegged’ with brand new copies of his records from a company that had closed it’s doors in 1969.  After several attorneys and state-to-state inquiries, it was decided to bring D-Town back to the national music scene.  “It Must Be Love” b/w “Rockin’ Skates” by Lee Rogers on D-Town Records; penned by Linda Lou Kestin pushed its way into the history books.

Michael Anthony Hanks’ legacy as one of Detroit’s most productive songwriters and music publishers that  charted many times; rivaled that of Motown’s Jobete Music Publishing arm.   Sometime back in 1966, the Board of Directors of D-Town Records; consisting of Roosevelt Grier, Roger Brown, Pete Hall and Martha Jean LaQueen; decided to vote Hanks out of D-Town Records and he left with the Fabulous Peps (Undisputed Truth) and his Soul Records label to Motown. 

Legally and Technically, Hanks left all of his works (the manufactured records; as property and legacy to D-Town Records).  He was still entitled to all of his royalties for mechanical manufacturing and any media transfer in the future as the publisher of the most popular songs that drove the company.  As Lee Rogers Craton was the first artist and had a hand in creating one of Detroit’s Icons; and a vice president of D-Town Records, it was obvious to us, that by reactivating the label and re-signing Rogers back to D-Town thus taking control of re-manufacturing rights.

Rogers did arrange with Ms. Stephanie Hanks-Smith, San Diego, CA.  and daughter of Mike Hanks and the executive of The Michael Anthony Hanks- MAH’s Music Publishing Trust, did insist that The Hanks Family could retain all of the rights to the D-Town Records Catalog, as long as they did not include any of Lee Rogers Craton recordings, likeness or imprints with his name; that this property belonged to his son, Anthony (Tony) Craton of Jantony Productions in Detroit.

The MAH’s Music Publishing Trust granted rights to two (2) with possibly six (6) released CD’s worldwide; including “The Magic Of Detroit” and “Dancin’ In D-Town” that contained several performances of Lee Rogers on each CD, and has breached the agreement made by the Hanks Organization in 1979, at the Motown Records Hollywood Offices. 

Because of the breach of contract, SDC OmniMedia Group, the parent company of Platinum Sound Productions, D-Town Records and Keristene Music (BMI), and the remaining partner, Kenneth Howard Smith, announces the release  “Boss Love: The United Kingdom Collection” by Lee Rogers for D-Town Records 26 years re-activation party and for Lee’s Birthday.

-End-

Posted by InterNetics eMagazine at 02:23:41 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

PURPLE OLIVE - GARAGE NOISE FROM ROSAMOND CALIFORNIA (1964-1984) Compilation CD Release

PRESS RELEASE

 

PURPLE OLIVE BAND FROM ROSAMOND, CALIFORNIA (1964-1984) Compilation CD Release.  The real start of the garage band movement.  These guys wrote songs, played on many recording sessions, produced a lot of styles of music, and the first ones to play with a synthesizer.  A lot of music came out of Rosamond including hit records with Rod Stewart, Etta James to producing Rosebud Rischar’s country music single for the Smithsonian Institute. . .”

                                                                                                                                                                                    – ReWind/InterNetics Magazine (1986)

 

 

VINYL KNIGHTS: PURPLE OLIVE

 

FROM ‘VINYL KNIGHTS’: The Other Side Of the Motor City Tracks

Copyright 1996 -2003 Kenneth Howard Smith

Published by Coleman, Kestin & Smith Publications

 

In the summers of 1967, 1968 and 1969, I got a chance to play at the Hollywood Teen Fair with my band Purple Olive. 

 

I was hell bend on taking Purple Olive to the big time.

 

Mary Beth Broderson was our photographer.  We wanted to document that we actually played at the fair.  We were scheduled to play at the Kustom Amplifier Booth just out side of the main stage, but our time had come and gone.   There were five bands still in front of us waiting to play.  The people who came to audition us had left hours ago and we were just standing around – waiting.

Several other bands were standing in line with us to play in the Kustom’s Electronics booth.  Kustom was the leading manufacturer of electronic equipment for musicians.    We had to wait for about three hours before we got a chance to go on stage.

Talking to the band director, I had enough of the waiting, and I was getting tired of this.  Lynn and I confronted the director, and we told him that we had traveled along way to get here and play, and as it was stated in our contract, we were several hours overdue and what was he going to do about it.

He promised to get back to us within a couple of minutes.  It must have been over an hour. What was happening to us was also happening to the other groups.  On the same waiting list with us were groups with names like Steppenwolf, Turquoise, Genesis, and Earth Wind & Fire.  Lynn and I just happen to protest more greatly then the other groups.

The only stage available to play on was the main stage in the Palladium itself.  The featured artist was Johnny Rivers, who was late getting back from San Francisco, and the music director ask if we wanted to play on this stage until Johnny got to the fair.

We were asked to just keep the audience company.  The stage was set up very differently then what we were use to.  All we did when we played was just to set up and get a general sound check and start playing.

The drums were pre-miked.  Every drum, all of the toms, the hi-hat, all of the guitars, everything.  It all feed into a studio mixing board in a room overlooking the audience and main stage.

The volume of the stage monitors was just enough to hear yourself and an overall mix of the total band and the vocals.

We plugged into the system, and with 10,000 people milling around on the floor looking at different wares the vendors had on display.  All we had to do was keep the audience at bay until the real star of the show got there.

Terry, Lynn, Ricky and myself just looked at each other, and we decided to pull the hammer down.  We started out with a song from this new group Buffalo Springfield who we had heard on Pacific Radio, entitled “Pretty Girl, Why”.  Very slow and easy.  It was just the kind of song that the crowd would recognize from the radio show, and it was away to get a sound check.  As we played, we kept signaling to the engineer to bring  up on the drums and bass.  Eventually, we had the mix we were use too.  Bass and drums up high and out front.

We didn’t knock the house down, and we barely even got notice.  The crowd was still looking at the vendors products and we just stared at each other on stage.

It was very obvious that we were not going to move these people in the least, and we just decided that we were going to play for ourselves, and to heck with everyone else.  Lynntook one look at me, and I in turn looked around at Ricky and we decided to go for broke.  Our second song was the rocker “Stove Gas” written by Lynn.  It was a crazy and wild tune.  Lynnhad this Mosrite Wah Wah pedal that had a build-in siren, and boy, that got the crowd’s attention really fast. The old saying of never scream fire in a crowded theater would probably be true here.

We kept up the heat, and finally everyone realize that we were the one’s on stage with the siren, they started to get into the music. But for a second there, I thought they were going to tear the exits downs trying to get out of there.

We didn’t give the music a break, we immediately transcended in the next song, and keep the heat up.  By the time we had finished with our fifth song, we had the audience going crazy at the foot of the stage, and we were not ready to stop.

By this time, Johnny Rivers and his band had gathered at the sides of the stage entrances and were just looking at us.  It was about that time we started to end our set and give up the stage to Rivers. 

But the crowd had something else in mind.  They begin to chant “more, more, more” and we just stood there basking in the glory that the audience  had chanted upon us.

I looked to the side of the stage and I saw Rivers, giving us the one more sign.  It was very genius of him and we decided to take full advantage of it.  We ended the night with Jimi Hendrix’s Stone Free.

When we got off the stage that evening, we new that we had accomplished something, but we didn’t know what.  The girls were screaming and that was different.  We came home that night, and decided it was time for us to record a record.

Back in Rosamond at the first practice, we just could not believe what was going on.  It was just too much.  We were very high on life.  It was like we had won the first Super Bowl game.  After a couple of days, we had come down from our first taste of Hollywood.

The band had $500 in its treasurer chest which was under the protection of Mister Rocky Perrine.  We asked him if we could record and press the group a record.  Thus was born the label Heavy Rock Records named for Mister Perrine. 

Down at Cherokee Recording Studios in Hollywood, we recorded our first commercial record, Love, What A Bring Down andTerry’s Song.  I believe that everyone hated that record.  We should have recorded one of Lynn’s songs instead.  To this day, a copy of that record  still surfaces from time to time.

The beginning of football was here, and I was not eligible to play anymore.  Lynnwent off to play football and Terry left the band to go back east for college.  The band was down to just the original players, Ricky and myself. 

As Purple Olive, we never played the Hollywood Teen Fair again. 

We decided to bring in Mark Montijo to replace Terry and then we decided on something radical, we wanted a new group and a new name.

Robert Mandolph, Jr., had a great voice.  On his commercial recordings, for Vault Records and Columbia Records, he used the name “Bobby Mandolph”.  Bobby was going to Antelope Valley Collegewith the rest of us. 

Upon our next practice, the group had a meeting and we wanted to bring Bobby into the group as the lead vocalist.  Bobby wanted to bring into the band two other new members.  I guess Lynn and Bobby really didn’t get along, and Lynnwanted to play football and forget the business.  Lynnleft after the first practice and never returned.

Bobby came from a very talented family.  Everyone in the Mandolph family played the piano and sing.  The Mandolphs arrived in Californiasometime around 1955, with Robert “Bumps” Blackwell.  They came straight to Los Angeles, where Mister Robert Mandolph Sr., played the keyboards for Sam Cooke, Bobby Womack, Lou Rawls and many others as a studio musician.

Bobby’s two brothers, Harold and Melvin were two handsome young men on a fast track with the ladies and partying  for their own good.   Hollywood had pushed the two brothers way off the tracks, and their greatest talent went into pushing needles into their arms.

But on the other hand, were their talented sister Margaret Mandolph who was the real ticket to Hollywood.

With his wife, two children and $200 in cash, a young songwriter and arranger by the name of David Gates hit Los Angeles in late 1961. Within weeks he was playing weekly at a club in the San Fernando Valley called The Crossroads where Robert Mandolph, Sr., often played in the local jam sessions there which included a young Glen Campbell, fresh from Arkansas, Louisiana transplant James Burton, high school classmate Leon Russell, and such future session stars as Hal Blaine, Larry Knechtel, Steve Douglas and Jim Horn.

By late 1963, Gates as a songwriter had these songs for a girls type group.  Mister Mandolph told the young Gates about his 14 year old daughter Margaret.  With a couple of rehearsals at the club, Gates placed her in this girls group to record a couple of these demonstration songs.  He had written this charming little song entitled Popsicles and Icicles.  The record company loved the song so much that they wanted to release as it was.  So was born The Murmaids and a national top ten record. 

Gates was one of a kind.   He knew rock ‘n’ roll, country and rhythm & blues and classical music. By the end of the 1970’s Gates would arrange songs for Bobby Darin, Elvis Presley, Ann-Margaret, Duane Eddy, The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Merle Haggard, Hoyt Axton, Bobby Vee, Buck Owens and Captain Beefheart.

For Steve McQueen’s movie theme Baby the Rain Must Fall, Gates came up with the captivating sound that became a Grammy nominated top-10 hit for Glenn Yarborough in 1965.

Gates would write and produce and record three single releases for Margaret on Dot Records as a solo artist.

By the end of the 1960’s, rock groups were the rage. Gates knew that the best way to get his songs recorded was to sing them himself. He formed Bread in 1968 with Jimmy Griffin and Robb Royer, with most of the hits coming from Gates. Beginning with his Make It With You, If, Baby, I’m-a Want You  and It Don’t Matter to Me in 1970.

Margaret Mandolph continued to write and record with her brother Bobby, but soon lost interest in the recording business, and by the end of 1969, Margaret moved to Oakland to finish her college degree.  She never really attempted to record again after her father passed away.

Bobby Mandolph recorded a cover of David Crosby’s “Long Time Gone” and “Assassination” for Purple Olive on Kenny Smith’s new label – KHS/Futura Records in Rosamond.

Lynn Henson’s two songs were recorded by Kenny Smith in late 1970’s, “Lizard Lover” and “Lady On Zanzibar” released on D-Town with Kenny Smith’s “Kenny Baby” compilation CD in 1994.

The late Bobby Mandolph’s son’s band; “The Robert Mandolph & The Family Band”  has won two Grammies.
-End of Chapter 6 -

Posted by InterNetics eMagazine at 02:15:44 | Permalink | Comments (2)

Monday, November 20, 2006

Songwriters set to get big tax break on sale of life’s work

Songwriters set to get big tax break on sale of life’s work
Rate up to 35% would drop to 15%

A Nashville songwriters group is singing the praises of Congress, which moved closer on Tuesday to giving artists who make a profit when they sell their compositions a tax break of 50 percent or more.

House and Senate negotiators agreed as part of a larger tax cut bill to reduce the top rate on the sale of songwriters’ music catalogs, or collected works, from a top personal income tax rate of 35 percent to the lower capital gains rate of 15%.

That means people such as Liz Hengber, who penned a string of hits for Reba McEntire and sold the catalog of songs in 2000, would no longer have such windfalls treated as personal income, but rather as capital gains taxed at the lower rate.

“Here I am, little ol’ Liz Hengber, all of 5-foot-2, 110 pounds, paying 40 percent in taxes when I sold my catalog,” she said, “while my co-publisher, Warner Chappell, part of Time Warner, or whoever it is, a huge corporation, is paying just 15 (percent) or 16 percent.”

It was cases such as Hengber’s that prompted Nashville Songwriters Association International, or NSAI, to examine an anomaly in the law that prevented tunesmiths from selling “self-created” work under the more favorable capital gains rate.

Bart Herbison, NSAI’s executive director, said his organization has spent the past five years and paid more than 500 visits to Washington in an effort to change the law.

“Now when songwriters sell their life’s work, it will be treated like the sale of any other business,” Herbison said. “For us, this is historic.”

Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn…, who helped move the provision through a House-Senate conference committee, said Tuesday that this is a fair deal for songwriters.

“Songwriters deserve fair compensation for their work. This change in the tax code will reduce songwriters’ taxes by up to 35 percent. It’s a simple matter of fairness for artists who fuel a multibillion-dollar industry but often see a very small percentage of the revenues they help generate.”

The provision will only apply to catalog sales — bodies of collected works that songwriters typically sell to music publishers for prices ranging from $300,000 to $3 million. Royalty income and advances for songwriters will still be taxed as personal income.

Still, Herbison said he expects critics to take a few potshots at his organization and at the lawmakers who supported the songwriters’ tax break.

“We’re going to take some heat on this. Everybody will think this is something that will make rich songwriters even richer,” he said, adding that the typical songwriter brings in only about $5,000 a year, and that they deserve a chance to enjoy the fruits of their labor if they do get lucky with a string of hits.

Bob Regan, president of the NSAI board of directors and an active songwriter himself, said while he sold a catalog in recent years for a six-figure sum, it had taken him more than 20 years to get well-enough established to even be able to sell a body of work.

“When I sold that catalog, I had to make up for all the years of missed pension and retirement savings,” said Regan, who has written hits for Keith Urban and Billy Ray Cyrus.

Hengber, whose catalog sold for under $500,000, said professional songwriters — people who don’t sing or tour for a living — have to adopt a “squirrel” mentality and spread lump sums over several years.

“I’m never going to get money for merchandise or concerts. My story is very different from someone like Garth Brooks. As a songwriter, you have no guarantees.”

Posted by InterNetics eMagazine at 00:57:12 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Kestin-Meier Named Co-Partner and Officer in Keristene Music Publishing

Santa Ana, CA - (IFS) Kenneth Howard Smith, CEO of SDC OmniMedia Group did request that an inventory be given to the songwriter’s catalog of Keristene Music. It is reported that approximately 578 compositions are now logged with Broadcast Music, Inc, Nashville and that of this group of songs, Linda Lou Kestin-Meier, since 1976 to the present has written over sixty (60%) percent of all the songs in the catalog.

It is requested that a split in the partnership is required. Kestin and Smith have been contributing over the years to the catalog at a rate of 36 songs per year. Some years produced no recordings and other years generated more then 150 songs to the catalog. Smith request that the original owners keep their 33 1/3% shares each, and as an equal owner of 33 1/3%; that Smith be granted a split to his shares to 16.66% percent and transfer these offerings to Ms. Kestin-Meier and along with Smith shall continue to have only one (1) vote together; and that upon the non-participation of Mr. Smith or Ms. Kestin that his/her remaining shares shall be transferred to the remaining participant; which will bring his/her total shares to 33 1/3% percent. The vote for administration and control shall remain with the co-partner voted by the co-partners and shall be transferred every four (4) years on the first day of the month of January.

Keristene Music Publishing - The Start of a Publishing House

History of Keristene Music Publishers, Ltd. The year was 1969 that Irene Tarbell decided she was not a great singer nor a good songwriter, but she knew where the powers lay; and the life blood of the music business was in the hands of the publisher. Not the artist. Not the producer. Not the record company. And you needed just one hit record. Tarbell believed, Kenny Smith was good for at least one (1) HIT Record.

Tarbell’s vision that was in the administration of owning her own music publishing company. It was with the birth of their daughter, Kristine that Tarbell decided to rename her little publishing company KERISTENE. K.H.Smith Music transferred it’s song catalog to Tarbell’s Keristene Music, Ltd. company with the stipulation that Smith would always write his songs for Tarbell’s publishing company and that all the shares would be split 1/3 each to Kristine, Kenneth and Irene. Her mother’s name is Irene and her father’s name is Kenneth. A combination of each of the parents and the baby’s names created Keristene. The first recordings to be licensed to the young company were written by co-founder Kenneth Howard Smith.

Tarbell’s name appears on her KHS/Futura Records label with the1972 release of “Natural People” that placed the single in the Warner Bros. Records office and the single In CashBox Magazine’s top 100. It was a turn table hit which send Tarbell her first check for airplay royalties.

The Rosamond, California group Purple Olive recorded Journey To The Center Of Your Heart which gathered a lot of listeners from their song being played on KUTY-AM, in Palmdale, California in that year when the station played local music. After all, the Antelope Valley is the home of Billy Foster, Bobby Ormsby, Kenny Smith, Captain Beefheart’s Don Van Vliet, Merrell Fankhauser, Jeff Cotton and Frank Zappa to name a few.

It’s a turn-table hit record with Captain Don Imus, Andy Barber, Jerry Stevens and Bobby Ford kept spinning the four track tape cartridge with our song on it every hour on the hour for weeks, and it was their turn in the official radio rating logging for the clearing houses. It was the most requested song to be played for an entire month. KUTY radio signal reached the upper San Fernando Valley Area to Van Nuys Boulevard in North Hollywood to the south and Canoga park to the west of the valley. The signal was very clear, and then it would disappear at various cross streets.

Today, the catalog is well over one thousand songs ranging in all styles of music. This also gives you a chance to listen to the new songs of Linda Lou Kestin. With over seven CD volumes of of her lyrics, set to songs by Kenny Smith.

Ms. Kestin’s international achievements are world renown as a school principal and an awarding songwriter. In Contents Under Pressure, the new CD by Smith, revived one of her 1977 songs written with David Hasselhoff entitled One Of Those Girls.

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Monday, November 13, 2006

R E S O L U T I O N - 11-13-2006-01

SMITH DATA COMMUNICATIONS OMNIMEDIA GROUP
D-TOWN RECORDS – MUSIC RECORDING DIVISION

R E S O L U T I O N   - 11-13-2006-01

 

Let is be known to all men that on this date, November 8, 2006, Kenneth Howard Smith will split his shares of 50% percent ownership in D-Town Records, which includes it’s subsidiaries and associated recording labels and services trademarks as follows:

 

AMJ International

CKS Records

D-Town Records

D-Town International

Move-UK Records

D-West Records

Heavy Rock Records

Marshmellow Records

Pinguin Records

Solidarity Records

SDC MultiMedia

Platinum Sound Records

 

This date forward will be shared at 25% percent ownership to Linda Lou Kestin-Meier of Santa Ana, CA.  And furthermore, that Mr. Smith’s remaining shares upon his non-participation will go to Kristine Joanne Tarbell of Memphis, TN.

 

1)        That JanTony Productions to manufacture, imprint and distributed all recordings in the D-Town Records Original Artist Catalogue

2)        Lee Rogers Craton, the first recording artist, CEO and President of D-TOWN RECORDS; and the original owner, through his son, Mr. Tony Craton of JanTony Productions, administrator of The Lee Rogers Craton Family Trust Recordings, will retain 50 Percent of D-TOWN RECORDS and will continue to honor the agreement that manufacturing and marketing of LEE ROGERS music, lyrics, likeness and master recordings will remain with D-TOWN RECORDS.

3)         Mr. Smith and Ms. Kestin will retain administrative control over the music Compact Disc Imprints, Videos and DVD’s; with CKS Records to remain

Present owners addresses are as follows:

Kenneth Howard Smith, Elizabeth, Colorado; 25%; Owner/Officer

                                        Kristine Joanne Tarbell, Admin to Kenneth Howard Smith

Linda Lou Kestin-Meier, Santa Ana, California; 25%; Owner/Officer

Anthony (Tony) Craton, Jantony Productions;

Executive of The Lee Rogers Craton Family Trust; 50%; Owner/Officer

 

 

Signed this day, November 8, 2006.

 

/s/

———————————————————————–

Kenneth Howard Smith, Chief Executive Officer

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R E S O L U T I O N - 11-13-2006-03

SMITH DATA COMMUNICATIONS OMNIMEDIA GROUP
D-TOWN RECORDS – MUSIC RECORDING DIVISION

  

R E S O L U T I O N

Let is be known to all men that on this date, November 13, 2006, which includes it’s subsidiaries and associated recording labels and services marks as follows:

D-TOWN®RECORDS

D-TOWN® INTERNATIONAL

D-WEST® RECORDS

Ownership to LEE ROGERS CRATON CATALOG has been expanded to include the following artists:

 

                                                                                                                Dee Edwards

Cody Black

Fabulous Peps

The Peps

Connie Van Dyke

Don Heart

Buddy Lamp

Magictones

International Kansas City Playboys

Melvin Davis

Lillian Dupree

Roosevelt Grier

Freddie Butler

Precisions

Romeo Rand

Lil’ Soul Brothers

Ronnie Love

Silky Hargreaves

Chuck Hently

To Wit:

The initial agreement between Ms. Stephanie Hanks-Smith, the family administrator for The Michael Anthony Hanks – MAH’s Music Publishing Trust; Ms. Hanks-Smith agreed to the written records by then board members of D-Town Records in the year 1965;

                                                                Mike Hanks, President, MAH’s Music, D-Town Records/Soul Records

                                                                   Pete Hall, Music Distribution Company, VP, D-Town Records

Martha Jean LeQueen (Strasburg), VP, D-Town Records, Syndicate DJ

Roosevelt Grier, NFL Player/Actor/Artist, VP, D-Town Records

Roger Brown, NFL Player, VP, D-Town Records

Lee Rogers, Artist/VP, D-Town Records 

That Mike Hanks was voted out of the company, and his shares liquidated; that Pete hall would be instated as the new president; Mr. Hanks was granted all rights to the MAH’s Music Publishing; all rights to Soul Records label and it’s artist roster on that label; with ALL the artist’s themselves being ask to choose to go with Mr. Hanks OR stay with PETE HALL and D-TOWN. 

Further proof of this action, was that Mr. Hanks joined Motown Record Corporation and transferred his Soul Records label to Motown distribution; furthermore, the following artists joined Mr. Hanks at the Motown Offices as follows; The Fabulous Peps – renamed to the Undisputed Truth, etc.

And Now in the year 1979 - Mr. Lee Rogers, CEO and executive producer, with Kenneth Howard Smith as a co-owner and the President of D-Town Records and Platinum Sound Productions in the year 1979, reconfirmed with Ms. Hanks-Smith’s that she could not be paid twice for the same transaction by her father.  Mr. Hanks took his shares and went to Motown Records.  Mr. Hank’s interests in D-Town had ceased upon his non-participation.  He has abandoned all of his rights, except the publishing mechanicals.

Mr. Rogers, did offer to Ms. Hanks-Smith  through Mr. Kenneth Howard Smith, President, the following arrangements; 

1)      That Platinum Sound Productions and D-Town Records, Inc.; it’s assigns, subsidiaries, agents and future owners would pay all publishing mechanical royalties on MAH’s Music Publishing catalog that contained only the LEE ROGERS RECORDINGS that were imprinted and re-recorded on any media in the present and future and that Mr. Rogers recording catalogue belonged only to him and his estate for the life of the products; and that all the rest of the music catalogue, that MAH’s Music Publishing has rights to, they could have mechanical rights to it.

2)      That Only The Lee Rogers Family Trust could imprint and distributed his catalogue for life of the product, and that it would be passed on to his son, Anthony (Tony) Craton of JanTony Productions.

3)      That MAH’s Music could not imprint and/or manufacture or give outside licenses to anyone with it’s product containing any performances by LEE ROGERS.

4)      That this agreement was violated by Donald Hanks, a member of the MAH’s Music Publishing Family Trust; and granted licenses with songs on these CD’s – “DANCING IN D-TOWN” “THE MAGIC OF D-TOWN” with performances by our artist LEE ROGERS appearing on these CD which were manufactured and released worldwide by My Kinda Music, SoundWorks, Goldmine Soul Supply, all of the United Kingdom.

5)      That this agreement has been breached and hereby cancelled and all rights to masters of the original D-Town Records Artists are hereby withdrawn; with all rights returned to D-Town Records and SDC OmniMedia; this date first written above

6)      That JanTony Productions to manufacture, imprint and distributed all recordings in the D-Town Records Original Artist Catalogue

7)      Lee Rogers Craton, the first recording artist, CEO and President of D-TOWN RECORDS; and the original owner, through his son, Mr. Tony Craton of JanTony Productions, administrator of The Lee Rogers Craton Family Trust Recordings, will retain 50 Percent of D-TOWN RECORDS and will continue to honor the agreement that manufacturing and marketing of LEE ROGERS music, lyrics, likeness and master recordings will remain with D-TOWN RECORDS.

8)        Mr. Smith and Ms. Kestin will retain administrative control over the music Compact Disc Imprint, Videos and DVD’s; with CKS Records to remain

9)      the sole entity of Ms. Kestin-Meier, but administered by Linda Lou Kestin and Kenneth Howard Smith.

Present owners addresses are as follows:

 

                                                               Kenneth Howard Smith, Elizabeth, Colorado; 25%; Owner/Officer

Linda Lou Kestin-Meier, Santa Ana, California; 25%; Owner/Officer

Anthony (Tony) Craton, Jantony Productions;

Executive of The Lee Rogers Craton Family Trust; 50%; Owner/Officer

 

 

Signed this day, November 13, 2006.

/s/

———————————————————————–

Kenneth Howard Smith, Chief Executive Officer

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted by InterNetics eMagazine at 18:15:26 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

R E S O L U T I O N - 11-13-2006-02

SMITH DATA COMMUNICATIONS OMNIMEDIA GROUP

D-TOWN RECORDS – MUSIC RECORDING DIVISION

R E S O L U T I O N

Let is be known to all men that on this date, November 1, 2006, the governing board of directors and it’s franchise partners as listed below to investigate the new D-Town Records label of Dallas, Texas; and it’s rights to use our name and likeness of our company that was started in 1956 by our original founders Michael Anthony Hanks and Lee Rogers Craton. Below please find a list of D-Town Records Licensees and franchise members:

Smith Data Communications OmniMedia Group

Sony Music Corporation

(Columbia Records/Tuff City Records Division)

Ms. Stephanie Hanks-Smith, Executive Admin for

The Michael Anthony Hanks Family Trust

MAH’s Music Publishing (BMI)

Tony Craton, Executive Admin for

The Lee Rogers Craton Family Trust

JanTony Productions

Ace Records of England

SoundWorks of United Kingdom

Goldmine Soul Supply of England

My Kinda Music

Platinum Sound Productions

D-Town Records

D-Town International

Keristene Music, Ltd. (BMI)

Kenneth Howard Smith

Linda Lou Kestin

Kristine J. Tarbell

Sandra C. Joseph InterNetics

The governors understand your position and your hard work and requests that you paid the licenses and membership dues to be included in our franchise organization. You will be given thirty (30) days to reply. If you fail to comply with our franchise membership, then we will request that you immediately change your business name on all stationary, websites, business titles, logos, wording of all type that shows the trademark name of D-TOWN.

Lee Rogers Craton, the first recording artist, CEO and President of D-TOWN RECORDS; and the original owner, through his son, Mr. Tony Craton of JanTony Productions, administrator of The Lee Rogers Craton Family Trust Recordings, will retain 50 Percent of D-TOWN RECORDS and will continue to honor the agreement that manufacturing and marketing of LEE ROGERS music, lyrics, likeness and master recordings will remain with D-TOWN RECORDS.

Mr. Smith and Ms. Kestin will retain administrative control over the music Compact Disc ImprintS, Videos and DVD’s; with CKS Records to remain the sole entity of Ms. Kestin-Meier, but administered by Linda Lou Kestin and Kenneth Howard Smith.

Present owners addresses are as follows:

Kenneth Howard Smith, Elizabeth, Colorado; 25%; Owner/Officer

Linda Lou Kestin-Meier, Santa Ana, California; 25%; Owner/Officer

Anthony (Tony) Craton, Jantony Productions;

Executive of The Lee Rogers Craton Family Trust; 50%; Owner/Officer

Signed this day, November 8, 2006.

/s/

———————————————————————–

Kenneth Howard Smith, Chief Executive Officer

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