Blog » Bill's blog - July 20-25, 2008
Tuesday 12th August 2008
Following the medical drama of the day before, juxtaposed with the stunning welcome by the crowd at the Festival De Jazz gig, Bill spent a quiet Sunday catching up on the cricket. He pointed out an article in Le Journal De L'ete that had a photo of Bill, Terry and Albert in and an article.
The next few days followed a similar pattern. On Monday, Bill went out to lunch with his daughters - only to be approached for autographs during lunch. He also bumped into Rod Stewart and friends, before heading back. On Tuesday, with the sun beating down, Bill and the family headed off to Jon Acevshi and Yasmin's castle home in St.Jeannet to have dinner. The girls loved the castle, spending the evening exploring its hidden reaches, before everyone headed home. Bill also used the following days to catch up on his photo projects, with some interesting ideas surfacing about some of his photos.
THe big, Stones-related news happened on Friday, July 25. Bill hadn't been able to sleep and got up before dawn to catch the TV news (and online news) that the Rolling Stones had split from their record label EMI, and moved to Universal.
One internet news report stated:
"Ending months of speculation, the Rolling Stones have split with longtime label EMI and inked a new deal with the Universal Music Group. The pact covers not only future studio albums but the band's lucrative back catalog from 1971's "Sticky Fingers" onward.
EMI, which has endured a rocky transition to private equity ownership by Terra Firma in recent months, is understood to have lobbied heavily to convince the Stones to remain with the company.
New recordings will be released via UMG's Polydor label worldwide, putting the distribution of the entire Stones catalog under one roof for the first time. The deal covers both digital and physical distribution, with UMG already working on a long-term strategy to digitize the catalog.
The Stones tested the waters with Universal in April, when they released the soundtrack to the Martin Scorsese documentary "Shine a Light" through the label. U.S. sales are at 106,000 copies, according to Nielsen SoundScan.
After recording for Decca Records through 1970, the Stones formed their own Rolling Stones label for the release of "Sticky Fingers" the following year. The previous deal with Virgin/EMI dates back to 1991, prior to Virgin's acquisition by EMI the following year. Warner Music, EMI itself and Sony BMG (as CBS) had all previously handled the catalog between 1971 and 1990.
ABKCO and Decca are co-owners of the copyrights outside North America for the Stones' catalog from 1963-1970.
The Stones released three studio albums for Virgin: 1994's "Voodoo Lounge," 1997's "Bridges to Babylon" and 2005's "A Bigger Bang." The titles have sold a combined 3.6 million copies in the United States."
Bill seemed unimpressed - he spent the morning taking nature photos and stoking up a barbeque for lunch.
The next few days followed a similar pattern. On Monday, Bill went out to lunch with his daughters - only to be approached for autographs during lunch. He also bumped into Rod Stewart and friends, before heading back. On Tuesday, with the sun beating down, Bill and the family headed off to Jon Acevshi and Yasmin's castle home in St.Jeannet to have dinner. The girls loved the castle, spending the evening exploring its hidden reaches, before everyone headed home. Bill also used the following days to catch up on his photo projects, with some interesting ideas surfacing about some of his photos.
THe big, Stones-related news happened on Friday, July 25. Bill hadn't been able to sleep and got up before dawn to catch the TV news (and online news) that the Rolling Stones had split from their record label EMI, and moved to Universal.
One internet news report stated:
"Ending months of speculation, the Rolling Stones have split with longtime label EMI and inked a new deal with the Universal Music Group. The pact covers not only future studio albums but the band's lucrative back catalog from 1971's "Sticky Fingers" onward.
EMI, which has endured a rocky transition to private equity ownership by Terra Firma in recent months, is understood to have lobbied heavily to convince the Stones to remain with the company.
New recordings will be released via UMG's Polydor label worldwide, putting the distribution of the entire Stones catalog under one roof for the first time. The deal covers both digital and physical distribution, with UMG already working on a long-term strategy to digitize the catalog.
The Stones tested the waters with Universal in April, when they released the soundtrack to the Martin Scorsese documentary "Shine a Light" through the label. U.S. sales are at 106,000 copies, according to Nielsen SoundScan.
After recording for Decca Records through 1970, the Stones formed their own Rolling Stones label for the release of "Sticky Fingers" the following year. The previous deal with Virgin/EMI dates back to 1991, prior to Virgin's acquisition by EMI the following year. Warner Music, EMI itself and Sony BMG (as CBS) had all previously handled the catalog between 1971 and 1990.
ABKCO and Decca are co-owners of the copyrights outside North America for the Stones' catalog from 1963-1970.
The Stones released three studio albums for Virgin: 1994's "Voodoo Lounge," 1997's "Bridges to Babylon" and 2005's "A Bigger Bang." The titles have sold a combined 3.6 million copies in the United States."
Bill seemed unimpressed - he spent the morning taking nature photos and stoking up a barbeque for lunch.




