Wednesday, October 13, 2021

ONLY 0.4% OF MUSICIANS COULD POTENTIALLY MAKE A LIVING FROM STREAMING, STUDY REVEALS

 The vast majority of these artists are signed to major labels


As director at a residential property development company based in Johannesburg, South Africa, Laurence Grigorov has a keen interest in local architectural and development news and information. This keeps Laurence and his company up to date with the latest trends and designs in the development field.

Laurence Grigorov enjoys listening to music in his downtime in order to relax and unwind.

A study estimates only 0.4% of musicians would be potentially able to make a living solely from streaming.

New research estimates that only artists who achieve around a million UK streams per month over a long period are likely to be in a position to earn a living from music. Fewer than 0.4% of artists with music on streaming services achieve a million streams in a typical month and many of these streams are based on older tracks, reducing the figure further.

The study, titled "Music Creators' Earnings In The Digital Era" was released by the UK Intellectual Property Office this month. The researchers analysed data from streaming services between 2014-2020 and also used interviews and focus groups with musicians.

The study says that changes in how musicians have made money digitally has “been rapid” due to the influence of streaming services.

The most significant finding is that only musicians with one million or more monthly streams—roughly 1,723 or 0.4%—can rely solely on this income.

Of musicians whose income is entirely based on music, 43% reported earnings of £20,000 or less, and 64% reported £30,000 or less.

Cherie Hu, founder and publisher of Water and Music, writes that 65 to 75% of streams for the top 0.4% of artists come from their back catalogue, rather than new releases.

Hu also says "the vast majority of these artists in the top 0.4% are likely signed to major labels" and estimates that the number of streams required to earn money is much higher than it was five years ago.

This is backed by data found in this study as the median reported income for those currently signed to major record companies (£51,816 in 2019) is considerably higher than for all other groups of artists, with those previously signed to major record companies next (£25,500). The median reported income for those signed to independent record companies is £20,250 and for self-releasing artists it is £12,944.

Text & Image courtesy of www.mixmag.net


Friday, September 10, 2021

THE FIRST TRAILER FOR THE MATRIX RESURRECTIONS HAS DROPPED







The film will be the fourth from the iconic sci-fi franchise

Laurence Grigorov is a director of a residential property development company based in Johannesburg, South Africa. The company specializes in modern, luxury apartments, cluster units and bespoke homes. Laurence Grigorov enjoys reading and watching movies in his downtime, allowing him to be fully focused during his work. 

The trailer for the new Matrix film, The Matrix: Resurrections is out now, with the film set to hit cinemas on December 22.

The trailer is full of a number of easter eggs referring back to the earlier films, with Priyanka Chopra’s character potentially being an older version of Sati from The Matrix: Revolutions, and Yahya Abdul Mateen II playing a younger or "new" version of Laurence Fishburne's Morpheus.

Keanu Reeves and Carrie-Anne Moss seemingly reprise their roles as Neo and Trinity in the new movie, which appears to take place in the modern-day and focuses on Neo’s inability to remember his time in the Matrix.

He’s regularly taking "blue pills" until he meets a Morpheus-like character in Abdul Mateen II - with similar events to the first film unfolding in the trailer.

With a number of double-bluffs in the trailer, it’s still early days in figuring out exactly what will unfold in the fourth instalment of the franchise. Jada Pinkett Smith and Lambert Wilson will return, with a number of new characters added to the lineup, including Jonathan Groff, Christina Ricci and Jessica Henwick.

https://youtu.be/9ix7TUGVYIo

Text & Image xourtesy of www.mixmag.net

Monday, August 2, 2021

 

The Real Reasons You Aren't Building Bigger Ab Muscles

Gunning for a six-pack? Building your abs can help make it happen sooner and last longer. But only if you train your core with smart techniques! Here are mistakes to avoid and how to fix them.


Laurence Grigorov is director of a residential property development company based in Johannesburg, South Africa that specialises in modern, luxury apartments, cluster units and bespoke homes.

Laurence Grigorov enjoys training at the gym in his spare time. This allows him to both destress and maintain a healthy physical condition. Laurence Grigorov firmly believes that a healthy body and well-rested mind are crucial in order to maintain a high level of work focus.

If you looked at this headline and asked, "Why would I want to grow my abs?" then we may have just discovered one reason that your stomach isn't quite as defined as you want.

For one, building the muscles of your abs helps them to be more visible at higher body-fat levels. Just ask those offseason bodybuilders with visible abs at 13-15 percent body fat! And when you do get down under 10 percent, those bricks you've built will really pop.

But like building the rest of your body, there's a lot that can go wrong between "dreaming about it" and "seeing it in the mirror." Here are some mistakes that might be holding back your midsection muscles and how to fix them.

Mistake 1: Only Focusing On One Ab Muscle

That forward-facing six-pack may be what you covet, but building truly defined abs demands a three-dimensional approach from all angles—and even from the inside.


Your abs are composed of three separate muscle groups: 

  • Rectus abdominis (the "six pack" muscles): Trained by crunching-style motions
  • Obliques (internal and external): Trained by rotation and bending to the side
  • Transverse abdominus (TVA): Trained by isometric work (planks) and stomach vacuums

A Better Way: Train all three groups with the best muscle-building ab exercises! The TVA is the most often neglected, even though it can help you keep a tighter, flatter stomach at any body-fat level.

Mistake 2: Not Adding Resistance

The abs contain a greater percentage of what are known as slow-twitch muscle fibers than other skeletal muscle groups. However, fast-twitch fibers still make up almost half of your midsection musculature.

Not sure what that means? Here's what you need to know: Fast-twitch muscle fibers have a greater potential for muscle growth and they are built with heavier sets for low to moderate reps. In other words, training nothing but high-rep bodyweight movements isn't going to do much for them!

A Better Way: Perform some of your training with heavy sets of 8-12 reps on weighted movements to help build up the "bricks" constituting your six-pack.

Mistake 3: Always Doing The Same Routine

Falling into a comfort zone is your enemy when training abs—or any other body part.

If your ab routine consistently includes machine crunches for 3 sets of 20 reps, and you seem to be doing the same work every ab-training session, it's time to up the ante and intentionally make your training harder. This "progressive overload" can come in the form of weight, less rest, or higher volume, but always strive to improve on what you did before.

A Better Way: Continually increase the stress to continue making gains. That's the progressive part of progressive overload. This is where following a structured ab program like 30-Day Abs with Abel Albonetti can be a game-changer.

Mistake 4: Keeping Your Back Straight

Maintaining a flat back is an essential safety cue for bent-over rows, deadlifts, squats, and other compound lifts. But when training abs on moves like cable crunches, you need to unlearn this lesson!

Here's why: Arching your lower back makes you bend at the hips, not the waist. Only when you bend your lower back forward or "flex" it are you able to fully contract the rectus abdominis, causing it to shorten.

A Better Way: Think of your spine curling in a controlled manner on the concentric (raising) motion, and then uncurling on the eccentric (lowering). Both motions are important to building muscle.

Mistake 5: Resting Between Reps

This is a tempting form of rep-cheating can look one of two ways:  

  • With cables or machines, allowing the plates to "touch down" between reps
  • With bodyweight movements like decline sit-ups, allowing your shoulder blades to touch down between reps

In either case, it takes the tension right off the muscle you're trying to work.

A Better Way: Stay tight and don't let yourself rest until the set is over! The more you keep the muscle working, the greater the time under tension and the greater the muscle growth.

Eating to build muscle in your abs—or anywhere else? Protein is your friend. Aim for 1 gram per pound of body weight each day to support your tough workouts.

Mistake 6: Rushing Through Reps

Many people's ab workouts—timed circuits in particular—are fast and furious, aiming to perform as many reps as possible as quickly as possible. This approach encourages sloppiness and momentum, which often means that muscles other than the abs end up doing the work.

A Better Way: Switch your focus from quantity of reps to quality of reps. Hold the top (peak contraction) for a count on each rep. You may end up doing fewer reps in the end, but you'll make the muscle work harder, which is really what you want to be doing.

Mistake 7: Over-Relying On Hip Flexors

Many people think they're doing a lower-ab movement when they do leg raises, but they're actually doing much more work with the hip flexors.

How do you know the difference? Hang from a pull-up bar and keep your body straight. Now raise your legs about 60 degrees. Notice how your lower back is still flat—it hasn't started to round. That means your abs aren't yet engaged; it's all hip flexors to this point because they're responsible for raising your legs.

A Better Way: Raise your legs to the point where your lower back curls. If you can't do that, perform an easier variation like knee raises on parallel bars, or even reverse crunches on the ground.

Mistake 8: Pulling On Your Neck

This can also look different for weighted and unweighted moves. It could be pulling down toward the ground during a cable crunch or pulling up with your hands during bodyweight exercises. In either case, it does nothing to work your abs and serves only to place your neck in a vulnerable position.

A Better Way: Imagine there's a small orange between your chin and your sternum. Be careful not to squeeze that imaginary orange, and you'll find you are better able to work the abs without tweaking your neck.

Text & Image courtesy of www.bodybuilding.com


Friday, June 11, 2021

 

Artificial island Lynetteholm to be built in Copenhagen harbour


Laurence Grigorov, as director of a residential property development company, finds ideas and inspiration from international architectural designs for projects that the company is involved in. Laurence Grigorov has been developing luxury residential projects in Johannesburg, South Africa for nearly 15 years. He is highly influenced by modern design trends and attempts to instill these inspirations in the upcoming projects.

The Danish parliament has approved the building of Lynetteholm, an artificial island off the coast of Copenhagen that will house 35,000 people and protect the city's harbour from rising water.

The 275-hectare Lynetteholm project was designed by COWIArkitema and Tredje Natur as a housing and business district that will also become a bulwark against climate-change induced storms.

Lynetteholm will be built by development company By & Havn (City & Port) using soil from construction projects in Copenhagen and the surrounding area.

The artificial island will be located between Nordhavn and Refshaleøen and will protect the city from "more frequent storm surges and rising water masses," said Tredje Natur.

In total homes for 35,000 people will be built on the peninsular that will partially enclose the harbour to act as "climate and storm surge protection".

After winning approval in the Danish parliament, where it was voted in by 85 votes to 12, Lynetteholm is set to be built over the next 50 years. However, it has met resistance from environmental groups, according to the BBC.

This is partly because construction of the island requires transporting 80 million tonnes of soil through the city, which has been estimated to result in 350 lorry journeys per day through the Danish capital during the construction period.

It has also been criticised by the Coalition Clean Baltic, which has "grave concerns" about the project. It says Lynetteholm could have "disastrous consequences" for the Baltic Sea environment.

By & Havn has stated that it will monitor the project's environmental impact.

"The project has been environmentally assessed and qualified in consultation with the country's leading experts and in dialogue with Copenhageners, and therefore the Folketing [parliament] has today been able to adopt Lynetteholm on a well-documented and informed basis," said By & Havn CEO Anne Skovbro.

Marine feasibility studies, archaeological studies and tender for contracts is due to take place later this year and By & Havn expect Lynetteholm to be completed in approximately 30 years.


Words & image courtesy of www.dezeen.com