Geek Writes a Song a Day for 13 Years, Celebrates Song #5,000 With Big NFT Auction
But Mann released that video after song #4,000, reflecting that “A bunch of videos went viral. I released eight albums. In 2016 I got the Guinness World Record for most consecutive days writing a song. And I’ve carved out this living delivering keynotes at conferences all over the world — as well as watching all the other talks then getting up at the end to sing a song that recaps everything.”
And now 13 years, 8 months, and 9 days after he first began, “I have officially written 5000 songs in 5000 days,” Mann announced Friday on Twitter — sharing a special 5,000th song including singing appearances from 112 of his listeners. Mann still shares his videos free online — but for four years, Mann has also been auctioning the songs as NFTs living on the Ethereum blockchain. (By Friday night someone had bid 5 ETH — about $1,700 — for song #5,000. And the NFTs also confer membership status for the decentralized autonomous organization, SongADAO).
Mann also writes songs on commission on a “pay-what-you-feel” basis, and has even written songs for companies like SquareSpace and OKCupid. (“Most businesses pay between $2000 and $5000 for a song and a video.”) Once Steve Jobs even opened Apple’s press conference about its iPhone antennas dropping phone calls by playing one of Mann’s satirical songs.
“I saw that on YouTube this morning, and couldn’t help but want to share it,” Steve Jobs said, according to this 2017 summation of Mann’s other wacky career highlights:
On day #202, he won a $500 American Express gift card in a jingle contest held by Microsoft for the launch of their Bing search engine. When TechCrunch quipped that Bing had succeeded “in finding the worst jingle ever,” Mann responded with a second song — setting TechCrunch’s article to music (along with a speculative interior monologue which Mann acknowledges is “completely made up.”)
Mann later admitted that his jingle was the worst song he’d recorded that July. (“I wrote it in 10 minutes …”) And his worst song that October was a related song that he’d written when “I received an email from Microsoft of a video showing middle-school kids in Pennsylvania singing and dancing to my Bing song.”
“I was horrified. Don’t get me wrong, the kids were adorable, but Bing? What had I created!?”
But he was honored when the kids told him they’d enjoyed dancing to his song, and when they asked for one about their own school, Mann obliged.
When Steve Wozniak turned 60, Mann was ready with a musical tribute — Song #588, “That’s Just Woz….”
And in January of 2011, as the world learned Jobs had taken an indefinite medical leave of absence, Mann released song #753: Get Better, Steve Jobs…
Mann’s duet with Siri earned over 1,609,675 views….
On Day #810 Mann convinced his girlfriend Ivory to sing the other half of a duet called “Vegan Myths Debunked.” They’d apparently been dating for a year before he started his song-a-day project. But after four more years, on Day #1,435, Mann and his girlfriend Ivory decided to break up — and released a music video about it….
And in 2014, on day 1,951, Mann’s wife gave birth to his son Jupiter….
Day #2000, in June of 2014, Mann answered questions from Reddit users, answering every question with a song….
At a speaking engagement, he offered his own perspective on time: “100 days went by, a year went by, a thousand days went by. At a certain point, it just becomes a part of my life. And so that’s how I stand before you now having written 2,082 songs in as many days.”
As the audience applauds, he segues into his larger message, “I’m happiest when I’m making.”
The article closes by quoting the song Mann wrote on Day #2001 — for a video which included part of every one of the 1,999 previous videos, in a spectacular montage called “2000 Songs in 2000 Days….”
“And I will sing until I’m all out of breath. And the color of the sun is a dark, dark red. And the governments will fall. And we’ll sing until it hurts. And we’ll ring forever through the universe.”
The video ends with a personal message from Mann himself.
“Make something every day,” it urges in big letters.
“Just start. I believe in you.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.