Wayne Krantz
guitar, electric
” data-original-title title>Wayne Krantz
,” data-original-title title>Gary Husband
,” data-original-title title>Scott Kinsey
,” data-original-title title>Gary Willis
,” data-original-title title>Oz Noy
and on and on.It’s also quite possible you may have even encountered him as well. Along the way to adding Grammy-winning producer to his credits, he has also donned many other hats, not only managing and booking his artists and tours, but everything else from staging festivals to working merch tables and even taking phone orders for releases on the Abstract Logix site during the early days.
But even if you have never crossed paths with Souvik Dutta, if you are a music lover, you know himbecause he is one too. That’s why the driving force of his enterprise is not financial but stems from a pure love of music and an enthusiasm to foster it. This may indeed seem at odds with today’s entrepreneurial mindset, but the impressive trajectory and body of work Abstract Logix has attained seems to show just how impactful the altruistic motivations of an affable and inadvertent impresario may have been to the artistic ecosystem as a whole(and why it’s worth getting to know him a little better).
All About Jazz sat down with Souvik Dutta via Zoom in the Spring and Summer of 2024.
All About Jazz: Tell a little about your upbringing. What part of India do you hail from?
Souvik Dutta: I was born in Calcutta in Eastern India, a major city with over 15 million people. When I was growing up in the ’80s, it was better known around the world as the home of Mother Teresa. Amazing music and creativity in various forms like film and literature have originated from that part of the world. The culture and the vibe generally lean towards a slower pace compared to the rest of the country.
There was a period in the ’70s and ’80s where acceptance and acclaim in Calcutta was almost a pre-requisite to being called a successful Indian classical musician. Legends like Pandit
Ravi Shankar
sitar
1920 – 2012
” data-original-title title>Ravi Shankar, Ustad Vilayat Khan, and Ustad Ali Akbar Khan called the city home at some point in their illustrious careers.
AAJ: Were you from a musical family?
SD: Both my parents were regular professionals, but like many Calcuttans, they had a fondness for Indian classical music and spent a considerable amount of time learning and living it. I have fond memories of my folks having jam sessions with their friends at home. They did this once or twice a week for several years. My dad told me recently that I had this uncanny ability to pick the songs they were performing at that moment out of their songbook. I don’t quite remember doing it though [laughs]. I have vivid memories of being surrounded by music all the time, whether at home, concerts or just social gatherings.
MTV arrived in Calcutta a few years later than it did in other places in the ’80s. But the American or British music that I was exposed to mostly came via bootleg tapes, or friends of friends bringing it over from London or New York. You could visit an area frequented by Western travelers called Free School Street, where some would bring music from their country and sell it to local shops. You could walk around and find a great selection of rock, jazz, blues, African, big band music, original pressings, and Japanese imports.
Most importantly, there was a hip scene of local musicians and bands who introduced us to contemporary Western music through their shows. Getting to hear some of that classic music live, even by cover bands, was a thrill. The spirit and the intent were very much there, at least enough to stoke interest in a young person growing up in the city.
AAJ: Do you recall what your first exposures to Western music were?
SD: If memory serves me right, it was ABBA. My mom liked them too. Also Boney M, who were a British R&B and disco band. They were quite the rage in urban India at the time. Then there was
Jimi Hendrix
guitar, electric
1942 – 1970
” data-original-title title>Jimi Hendrix and of course The Beatles with their obvious connections to India and Ravi Shankar. Oh, and
Pink Floyd
band / ensemble / orchestra
b.1964
” data-original-title title>Pink Floyd was popular among teenagers. Those were probably some of the first things I heard.
In ’84, Shakti came to Calcutta. I knew who Zakir Hussain was then, but I knew nothing about Shakti. Don’t forget, being eleven, I was still quite young. Zakir-Bhai was already a very well-known national personality, as was his father, Ustad
Alla Rakha
percussion
1919 – 2000
” data-original-title title>Alla Rakha. They were a celebrated family of incredible world-class musicians. Zakir-Bhai, with his unique combination of prodigious talent and undeniable mass appeal, was already a hero to most young Indians and featured regularly in magazines and television. I was in awe of him.
AAJ: Is that how John McLaughlin first got on your radar?
SD: What radar? I was 11 years old! [laughs]. But yes, that was the first I heard about him. To be honest, I was more into sports than music at the time, but I do remember there was a big buzz around Shakti coming to our city and I kind of remember my cousins and their friends being really excited about a special night out on the town. Even years later, people would still recall that ’84 Shakti tour of India.
AAJ: So, as a youngster, did that turn the tide for you from sports to music?
SD: No, the credit for that must go to my parents. Because they were so into music, they wanted me to have some kind of formal musical instruction at home; and that was a beautiful thing they did for me. They placed me under a wonderful local gentleman, a sitar player. I spent 3 or 4 years studying under him and got introduced to Indian classical music.
Soon after that, I also got into rock and pop music of the time:
Led Zeppelin
band / ensemble / orchestra
b.1968
” data-original-title title>Led Zeppelin, The Allman Brothers,
Jeff Beck
guitar
1944 – 2023
” data-original-title title>Jeff Beck,
Cream
band / ensemble / orchestra
” data-original-title title>Cream, The Eagles, and
The Yardbirds
band / ensemble / orchestra
” data-original-title title>The Yardbirds. I became a huge Van Halen fanbut who wasn’t, right?
Michael Jackson
vocals
1958 – 2009
” data-original-title title>Michael Jackson‘s Thriller (Epic, 1982) was a game-changer. Prince,
Dire Straits
band / ensemble / orchestra
1977 – 1995
” data-original-title title>Dire Straits,
Peter Gabriel
vocals
b.1950
” data-original-title title>Peter Gabriel,
Sting
bass, electric
b.1951
” data-original-title title>Sting,
” data-original-title title>Level 42, and on and on. The ’80s were a great period for pop music, and an incredibly rich time for a young music lover to be growing up.
I took some bass lessons and played in high school bands. I think it was through my teacher, Lew Hilt, that I got hipped to the music of The
Mahavishnu Orchestra
band / ensemble / orchestra
b.1971
” data-original-title title>Mahavishnu Orchestra,
Steely Dan
band / ensemble / orchestra
b.1972
” data-original-title title>Steely Dan, and
Little Feat
band / ensemble / orchestra
” data-original-title title>Little Feat. I would go to the homes of older friends who had all that stuff in their collections to make cassette copies. I had hundreds of hours of music.
By the time I came over to the States to go to university, my big attraction was getting to see some of this music live. Remember, there was still no internet in 1991we had no exposure to music beyond what we could get locally via a small bit of TV.
I cannot help but smile when I think of those early days: young, fearless and star-gazed… searching for something. America was this entirely mysterious and amazing place: home to Jimi Hendrix, The Allman Brothers, Van Halen, The Grateful Dead, Frank Zappa… I just had to figure out a way to get there and education was the smartest way for me to convince my parents to sanction a move abroad.
I arrived in North Carolina in 1991 and, a month or so later, I was attending gigs with Van Halen, The Allman Brothers, Little Feat,
Dixie Dregs
band / ensemble / orchestra
” data-original-title title>Dixie Dregs,
Santana
band / ensemble / orchestra
” data-original-title title>Santana, John McLaughlin,
” data-original-title title>Pat Methenyall the bands I had been listening to. I was in AmericaI had arrived. It’s very hard to put it all into words. It was a transformational phase in my life.
AAJ: Where did you attend university?
SD: I did my undergraduate at Wesleyan University and higher studies at North Carolina State University, close to Raleigh. I took a year and a half off after my sophomore year though and followed The Grateful Dead and many other bands around the country.
That was the first time I got to experience what an American road trip was all about. It was an amazing discovery of life, a true psychological and cultural eye opener. I mean you read about it, you heard about it, but then it takes on a whole new meaning when you live it. Those years helped shape my life.
I returned to school a couple of years later and lived in a farmhouse with friends. We had this reasonably-sized yard where we built a small stage and would invite local bands to stop by. It became a fun, fun thing. I also used to work at a local bar in the evenings and, since it was pretty much run by friends, we created a community music venue out of it. The management loved the crowds every night and we got to have musica win-win situation for all. We partied like the Merry Pranksters [laughs].
AAJ: What did you do after graduating?
SD: In ’97, I moved to Raleigh and started my career in IT. The first few years were just about working my butt off and paying my student loans. I even taught evening classes at a local community college but every time I could, I would go out and see live music. This has always been a great area for all kinds of live musicjazz, bluegrass, rock.
AAJ: So how did the genesis of Abstract Logix come about?
About five years later, at a reunion of close friends, I came up with this crazy idea of having a live band.
” data-original-title title>Jonas Hellborg,
Shawn Lane
guitar, electric
1963 – 2003
” data-original-title title>Shawn Lane and
” data-original-title title>Jeff Sipe were going to be on a tour of small clubs, so I found a possible date, wrote an email to Bardo Records (Hellborg’s label) and had the balls to ask him if they would perform at my joint. Unbelievably, Jonas agreed so we moved all the furniture and had them perform in my living room.
Now I had some basic IT background at the time and since I was already dabbling in video, I thought it would be exciting to have a single-page website that was going to stream a concert out of my living room. Talk about an experience! it was a whole lot of fun, having those legends play at a gig at my home. Looking back, I still can’t believe we made that work. [laughs]
By the way, I hope folks take the time to check out the records by Shawn Lane and especially the ones with Jonas. He passed away very early at only 40 years old, relatively unknown and it was and is such a tragedy. He stands as one of the greatest and singular voices on the guitar. We got to spend a reasonable amount of time together during the couple of years I knew him. The tour of India we did in 2003 could be a book or movie unto itself. [laughs]. A beautiful soul too.
AAJ: How did that initial contact with Hellborg and Lane help other things to develop for you?
SD: Well that was a very important weekend. I had international musicians performing in my home and I was getting great emails from people all around the world. At the time, YouTube was not quite that common yet, so having a live video streaming was pretty cool in 2002. That one event established the presence of that website to quite a few fans. As a result, Jonas called me and asked if maybe I could sell a CD via the website. In a way, that was the start of the online retail business.
AAJ: What was that record, by the way?
SD: I think it was Temporal Analogues of Paradise (Day Eight Music, 1996). That record changed my life.
AAJ: So how did having that one record and video evolve into the music clearinghouse?
SD: Well, a lot happened in the next few months. I would usually go out to see live gigs in the area, and it became a routine to take some photos for the website blog. I remember one of the first of these was
Garaj Mahal
band / ensemble / orchestra
” data-original-title title>Garaj Mahal with
” data-original-title title>Fareed Haque and
Kai Eckhardt
bass, electric
b.1961
” data-original-title title>Kai Eckhardt.
Then around Spring of 2003, I found out Shakti was going to do a month-long tour in the States. I was so excited that, in the spur of the moment, I emailed Christian Pegand [John McLaughlin’s manager at the time] in Paris to ask his permission to sell records at the gigs [laughs]. He must have been tired of my persistent emails but in the end, he put me in touch with Universal Music Group in New York to ensure I had inventory. With a couple of friends, I rented a minivan and drove around the country selling merchandise.
That was an important time in the evolution of Abstract Logix. I learned a lot being out there on tour and also having the time of my life. Some great connections and lifelong friendships evolved out of that tour that I cherish today.
AAJ: At this point, were you thinking about the site having a stylistic focus or even being a label?
SD: Not yet. This was 2004 and before I thought of having my own record label. I was just organically building relationships with musicians, listeners in the community, industry professionalsjust people who found what I was doing interesting via the blog. It started out slow and then it picked up momentum. At the same time, we were expanding our online retail music offering and connecting independent musicians directly with fans. I augmented our content with interviews, reviews, concert listings. Our community was growing, and we went from selling a record every three days to 30 records a week. The income from the Shakti tour helped fund the expansion of the website into a sophisticated e-commerce and engagement platform, connecting fans with musicians and labels . Another pivotal moment was when John McLaughlin called me out of the blue, which led to me distributing his three-disc educational DVD called This is the Way I Do It. We had met each other the previous year during the Shakti tour, and he found out that I had a day gig working in tech. He asked me to set up an online shop to securely take orders. That opened the world of John McLaughlin fans and guitar fans to Abstract Logix and things really started to take off after that.
AAJ: So what was the first step towards Abstract Logix becoming a record label?
SD: Well, later that same year, Jeff Sipe, with whom I kept in touch with, introduced me to guitarist Jimmy Herring over the phone. Now I’ve been a die-hard Aquarium Rescue Unit fan since I moved to North Carolina in the ’90s and had always loved Herring’s playing with
” data-original-title title>Phil Lesh and
Jazz Is Dead
band / ensemble / orchestra
” data-original-title title>Jazz Is Dead. So I went down to an ARU gig in New Orleans to meet up with Jimmy and Jeff,
Oteil Burbridge
bass
b.1967
” data-original-title title>Oteil Burbridge and Bruce Hampton.
A few weeks later, Jimmy and I met again in Raleigh about the
Project Z
band / ensemble / orchestra
” data-original-title title>Project Z record. I still laugh when I think about our funny conversation over that lunch. Jimmy was so apologetic about the music. I remember him saying, “As they say down in Atlanta, Z Musicit’s not music for everybody. It’s vomit!” [Laughs].
AAJ: It is an amazing record but it has a formlessness and abandon that certainly makes it something no “normal” record executive would want to go near.
SD: But that is exactly what I likecraziness and anarchy. I must have been a last resort for Herring and Sipe, but I bought it because it was right up my alley and frankly, no one had ever offered to sell me a record [laughs].
Also, right around that same time, I met
Alex Machacek
guitar, electric
” data-original-title title>Alex Machacek who had moved from Austria and had recorded an album called [sic] with
” data-original-title title>Terry Bozzio. He was looking for distribution. I knew about Alex via Shawn Lane from a couple of years before and I believe Shawn heard him when he was in Vienna.
Anyway, all those exciting things were happening in my little musical universe. Distributing records, running an e-commerce operation, building a music community, going on the road with John McLaughlin. Then it was like, “Wow, maybe I should start my own record label with all these great artists.” Not that I even knew what that really meant.
Jonas Hellborg put me in touch with City Hall Records in San Rafael and from then on, things just started to coalesce: Scott Kinsey and Gary Willis from Tribal Tech,
Tony Grey
bass, electric
b.1975
” data-original-title title>Tony Grey, Gary Husband,
” data-original-title title>Lenny White. It was all so thrilling to work with musicians that I had spent a lot of time listening to. John McLaughlin was touring, doing 50-70 gigs every year with the 4th Dimension or Shakti, and he brought me along on all his tours worldwide. I got to meet so many fans across the world who ended up buying music at the gigs and then later via the website. I was working at least a hundred dates a year globally and it helped get the word out about our catalog literally in every continent to these niche set of fans.
AAJ: It seems amazing that you were able to hold down your day gig while all this was going on.
SD: I was lucky in the sense that I was already able to work remotely to a large degree, even back then. Since I was never in a traditional office, working remotely from anywhere on the road or at home equated to the same thing. I got good at multi-tasking on stage or over a conference call. The more I think about it now, I can’t believe how I managed it all [laughs]. it must have been youth [laughs].
In those early days of the label, John McLaughlin was recording Floating Point (Abstract Logix, 2008) in India. I went and met him and, seeing that I had a formal label and was already distributing his DVD, he asked me about releasing his new album. I said, “I’ll do my best, Sir.” [laughs]. I mean, am I going to say no to my musical hero?
See, here’s the thing: I am one of the guys who says “Yes” in life when I should probably say “No.” But I jump off the cliff, work my ass off and hope the stars align in my favor. I am lucky that most things have worked out. It seems that at these kinds of inflection points, I tend to go out on a limb and hope the stars align.
AAJ: So people were bringing you projects and records to put out but at a certain point, you also started to put projects together yourself, bringing together musicians that had never recorded togethersimilar to what Mike Varney was doing on his Tone Center label.
SD: That started early with Improvision (Abstract Logix, 2007), which was the seventh record on the label. I was friends with Jeff Sipe and Alex Machacek by then, and I also met bassist
” data-original-title title>Matt Garrison via John McLaughlin. Although they came from different backgrounds, I could hear something special in my head long before they had even met. So, I talked to my wife, Shweta, and said, “Do you think we can spend the money to put this thing together? The guys have never met but I think if we can put them in a room for a weekend, it could be amazing.” So, they all flew down and…
AAJ: Evidently, your wife said yes.
SD: Yeah [laughs], that weekend, they all came to my house and had a snack in the evening. Being aware of each other as musicians but never having met, then we went down to a club where Sipe’s brother-in-law, Mikey, was the bartender. They had given us the place for the three of them to play together for the first timecold. They went in with blind trust in me and each other and man, it was incredible! I remember a smoking version of “Teen Town.” The next day we went to shitty studio in Raleighwe didn’t know at the time that it had a defective boardand they improvised for two days. Then Alex brought these sonically defective tracks home and re-engineered them into what became the Improvision album. When I say re-engineered, I’m saying he supplementally recorded single notes from Matt Garrison and all kinds of individual drum and cymbal hits from Sipe so he could go in and reconstruct the recording. The tracks from the studio were riddled with distortion and were unusable. What he did was amazing! Alex has phenomenal patience and great engineering skills; not to mention his musicality -he is a master.
AAJ: Wow, one might never even suspect.
SD: That’s the genius of Alex Machacek. He is such a great producer and editor too.
AAJ: In addition to putting out recordings on your label, you started to book and arrange tours for many of the artists on Abstract Logix. How did you come to take that leap?
SD: That first started with me setting up small tours for Jimmy Herring in the southeast. After his first album Lifeboat (Abstract Logix, 2008) was released, Jimmy couldn’t get his agent of choice. He said, “Hey Souvik, if you think you can do it, why don’t you give it a try?” So, it was a tour that included stops in Nashville, Atlanta, and of course Raleigh. It must have been around ten dates.
AAJ: By now, you had been on tour with McLaughlin many times. Was it different now being on the other side of things?
SD: It was fun learning about the touring business. That along with my continuing fascination with the whole road trip thing, it felt like I was destined to do it: a hidden force kept me inspired. It took a lot of hard work and sleepless nights, though. [laughs]
The first couple of tours with Jimmy Herring Band had Oteil Burbridge, Scott Kinsey,
” data-original-title title>Greg Osby, Neal Fountain and
” data-original-title title>Matt Slocum with Jimmy and Jeff always a constant. We had a lot of great times driving thousands of miles. Jimmy had such great bands and guys over the years with The Invisible Whip and then The 5 of 7. After that it was one thing and onto the next. Running strategy and operations for tours and festivals across the globe, building my network and learning from experts and simply trying to get better at my job. Soon after, I also connected with another favorite of mine,
Wayne Krantz
guitar, electric
” data-original-title title>Wayne Krantz. I used to go see him in New York in my mid-twenties. It would be a decade later that we would work together on Krantz Carlock Lefebvre (Abstract Logix, 2009), which I produced. I have continued to work with those cats since then. Krantz is simply one of a kind, an uncompromising renegade.
Things kept evolving and led to working closely with Gary Husband,
” data-original-title title>Ranjit Barot,
” data-original-title title>Oz Noy, and putting together special collaboration projects like The Ringers [with Wayne Krantz, Jimmy Herring and
” data-original-title title>Michael Landau], and Ozone Squeeze with Oz and
” data-original-title title>Rai Thistlethwayte.
AAJ: Well let’s talk about 2010 and The New Universe Music Festival you helmed in Raleigh. Even for a two-day festival, it seemed like no mean feat, bringing together all these jazz/rock and fusion artists in one place.
SD: It was another one of those things that I probably shouldn’t have done but I went for it and came out alive, feeling fulfilled and amazing [laughs]. The logistics were complicated, and the fact that the two-day festival fell smack in the middle of a John McLaughlin & The 4th Dimension tour that I was also handling made it even more implausible. We had to fly out the next day to Cancunjust crazy. My team in Raleigh buttoned everything down afterward . Lots of beautiful things happened that weekend: musicians connected for the first time, some got reacquainted. All the acts had solid sets; and there was a special tribute to John McLaughlin. Zakir Hussain flew in…
No, it is not common to have John McLaughlin,
” data-original-title title>Lenny White, Jimmy Herring, Zakir Hussain, Wayne Krantz and
Anthony Jackson
bass, electric
” data-original-title title>Anthony Jackson at a festival hanging out and playing together. It was special, and thank God, we have it on film. So many came from far and near. What a blast!!
AAJ: Any plans for another festival?
SD: Absolutely. I have been thinking of creating a unique festival or property that brings music and other forms of arts together, bridging cultures, and promoting music via schools in healing and therapy. I don’t want to get ahead of myself, but I’m putting some serious thinking into this and need time to sort it out. 2025 is the year I am bringing New Universe festival back and I hope it becomes an annual affair. Wish me luck.
AAJ: Do you have a location in mind?
SD: Honestly, I love the area here in North Carolina where I live. It is hip and people from all walks of life and from all over the world live here. There are great universities and companies around. It is one of the fastest growing areas in America too with a convenient airport. After the Shakti recognition this year, I met a local senator who called me out the blue to congratulate me. Turns out he is a fan of Jimmy Herring and Shakti. I met him and other city officials who are interested in working to bring great events to our area so I’m hopeful to make this a reality.
AAJ: Your wife, Shweta, was a visible presence at the festival in 2010 and has since been credited numerous times on many Abstract Logix releases, including being an executive producer on the Shakti album, This Moment (Abstract Logix, 2023). Would you talk about her role at the label?
SD: We met a couple of years after I started the company and both of us were figuring it out on the job as they say. I spent every available moment thinking about music and artists while she managed logistics, fulfillment, accounting. We also have a core team who has worked with us all this time. We had so much fun working together and putting in a crazy amount of hours.
AAJ: Well, the success of the Shakti 50th anniversary tour and the Grammy for This Moment are things for you both to be proud of. They are also a pretty nice way to mark the 20th anniversary of Abstract Logix. What was it like to win at the Grammys?
SD: We are still pinching ourselves about the entire Shakti tour, the album and the Grammys. That was a rainy day in Los Angeles, the storms rolled in just about when we all congregated at the entrance. There were many musicians and industry members from all walks of life and it was exciting for my wife and I to be with them. We all sat together with our families. Zakir Hussain had just won his first Grammy of the night with
” data-original-title title>Bela Fleck. We were elated.
A few minutes later, Shakti won the Grammy for Best Global Music Album. They played “Purple Haze” over the PA and my 20-year journey flashed in my brain. I dreamt in purple as I was filled with a profound sense of love and gratitude. I thanked Mandolin U. Shrinivas and knew he was there in spirit. So was Bruce Hampton and Shawn Lane. John McLaughlin, who was in Portugal for a family reunion, called us within seconds of the announcement as they were all up at night watching it on TV. In the middle of those awful rains, we returned to our hotels and the phones just lit up. Zakir Hussain won three Grammys that night. It was special to see millions of Indians and world music fans elated. Every newspaper and TV channel in India carried the story about Shakti winning at the Grammys. It was a surreal moment.
AAJ: What did it mean to you?
SD: Well, Shakti represents the world I love. That music has been a part of me since I was 10 years old and it had a profound impact on me. I can always turn on that music and it just makes me feel special and takes me somewhere else. I am not sure if I am making any sense but, to me, there has never been anything quite like it.
See, when I was a kid, we had Shakti’s Natural Elements (CBS, 1977) on vinyl at home and my father would play it often. That intro to “Mind Ecology” just grabbed me instantly and I could not get over it. I would keep bringing the needle back to play that intro section a hundred times and over many months and years. I still haven’t gotten over it. So when I say that all of this must have been written in the stars for me, it feels like the closest explanation I can give.
Music has given me so much in life, I don’t even know where to start but I can tell you without any doubt that John McLaughlin changed the course of my life. The fact that he gave me an opportunity when I barely knew anything about the record business is still mind-boggling. I have spent close to twenty years traveling with him and the joy and the great times with everyone in his team is a dream. I can never overstate his profound impact on me and my family. Friends have asked me to write a book about this. Maybe I should hurry up before I forget it all. [laughs]
AAJ: 20 years on, when you look at Abstract Logix and its catalog, what do you see?
SD: Well, I didn’t have a plan, and I wasn’t coming from the music business so in a sense I was free to be creative and experimental. The catalog is reflection of my taste and some of the music I love. I would have loved to work with many other great musicians but either they were already working with others, or we never crossed paths. But in my little orbit, I had access to wonderful artists, and they had access to me
AAJ: Well, you have created a sort of hallmark for yourself and the labelone that denotes eclecticism but also top-tier musicianship.
SD: Well thanks. Whether it’s your cup of tea or not, the catalog represents some of the greatest musicians telling their life stories. I am just happy to play a small role in making it possible.
I have been lucky to be able to keep music as the number one priority. Everything else came after and I would not have wanted to do this any other way. It feels kind of strange when folks say I help musicians. I look at it as the other way around. I feel privileged to be around brilliant musicians, their creativity and the joy that environment brings. . For myself and other music fanatics, we understand deeply the gift music keeps giving us. It is unexplainable. After a great concert or listening to a new record, when strangers share the profound impact that the music had on them, it makes everything worth itall the hard work you put in and the bullshit that comes with the business. I am a fan just like them. Music is magic and I will always be a part of it in one way or the other till I disappear into the abyss.
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