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Guest post by Chris Castle of Music Technology PolicyAn interesting interview with artist, songwriter, small business owner and advocate Blake Morgan about how he mixes his advocacy and touring as an artist, leveraging tour press for his advocacy work. Castle: You just came off of a West Coast tour with Tracy Bonham, how did that go? Morgan: Honestly one of the best tours I’ve ever experienced. The audiences were amazing––we sold out almost all of the shows on the run––everyone was so engaged and energetic. And working with and alongside Tracy is a total thrill and an honor. The East Coast leg of our 2018 Tour kicks off in Boston in just a few weeks. I already can’t wait. Castle: There’s a balance between doing the music work for the fans and doing the advocacy work for what’s right. How do you combine the two? Morgan: That’s true, it is a balancing act. But recently I’ve begun to see and experience it differently. I now see how my art and my advocacy work are related to each other, instead of different from each other, and I find myself welcoming the balancing act. I feel my job as an artist is to captivate my audience for however long I’ve asked for their attention. In my advocacy work I’ve found “justice” to be a pretty captivating force. So I bring my #IRespectMusic advocacy to my shows, on stage and off, and I now bring my guitar to Capitol Hill when I meet with members of Congress. I find that each––the art and the advocacy––underscores the other now, and I’m happy to be seen wearing both hats at the same time. Castle: I noticed that you were getting questions in your tour press about your advocacy work. How often did that subject come up? Morgan: It comes up every time. With press, and with fans. People at shows bring #IRespectMusic signs, or ask me questions after the show about something music-related that they’ve read about this past week. They’re excited to talk to me about both my music and my music advocacy, and I’m excited to talk to them too. Same with music press––they want to talk about what I’m working on, musically, and about music rights, and what the new tour is about as well. I really love the blend. Castle: How did you handle those questions and how did the journalists feel about it? Were they knowledgable? Morgan: Well I handle them by telling the truth (as Mark Twain said, ‘it’s the easiest thing to remember’), and that makes it simple. Whether the question is about a new piece of legislation, or my recent criticisms of Spotify, or the launch and growing arc of #IRespectMusic, I try to remember that many people who will read the article may be new to these issues and I have an opportunity to reach them for the first time. For example, that artists have never been paid when their work has been played on AM/FM radio in the United States still shocks and horrifies those who are still unaware. In a funny way, it’s like voter registration (which I’ve done too) in the sense that one is getting people involved on the ground floor. It’s like you’re deputizing people––music lovers and makers alike––to the cause when they haven’t been aware of these fundamental injustices. The journalists often are knowledgeable, but they recognize that many of their readers may be new to these issues too, so they often give me the opportunity to bring those readers up to speed. I’m really grateful for that opportunity. I think the journalists are often eager to interview me about these issues because in their day-to-day music coverage of bands and artists on tour they don’t always get the chance. It’s interesting. Castle: I know you’ve had an over two-year sold out residency at Rockwood in NYC. Do you think there’s a difference between how a Rockwood fan relates to you as an advocate and how someone new coming to the show for the first time reacts? Morgan: That’s a great question. The Rockwood Music Hall audiences are also New York audiences, and that makes a difference too. But I think mostly, those shows are like “home games,” and the 100-150 shows I’ve done on the road over the past two years are obviously “road games.” The difference is simple: on the road I want to give everyone in the audience a sense of who I am and what I’m about (artistically and otherwise), and I have about 60-75 minutes to do it. I have to come at the show as if people in the audience haven’t seen me before, but with a nod to those who are coming back too. In New York, I can sort of jump in the middle of things a bit more, as that audience knows me and has been coming to other shows in the residency presumably. Plus my footprint in New York is just bigger in general, so the New York people are pretty up to speed. When I get back from a tour (I’ve traveled over 75,000 miles these past two years), I find I have a whole bunch of emails waiting for me to catch up on as fans I’ve just met or made write to me and get on board with #IRespectMusic. I see it on Twitter and Facebook in real-time when I hit a city too. It’s amazing.#irespectmusic Tour Advocacy With Blake Morgan [INTERVIEW]
In this interview, Chris Castle sat down to chat with Blake Morgan, a performing artist, business owner and advocate for the music industry about how he is able to combine. Continue reading [https://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2018/04/irespectmusic-tour-advocacy-with-blake-morgan-interview.html]