Letterman has also had several extended musical performances available online, 
sometimes live.

Conan has ramped up the musical diversity (IMO) on his TBS show, and web 
exclusive tracks appear to be the rule rather than the exception.  And he'll 
strap on the guitar every once in a while.

And on those occasions that Colbert or Stewart will have a musical guest (seems 
like once a month for Stephen), an interview is a given.  Of the two, Colbert 
seems to have the more eclectic taste.  Perhaps it's due to the setup of the 
half-hour show, but it seems you don't see a sit down with the musical guest on 
most other shows unless it's also promoted as a big deal.

Not sure how much of Ferguson's musical lineup reflects his taste or a 
cramped/limited performance space, but the lineups tend toward the lesser-known.

David




________________________________
From: David Lynch <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Tue, January 4, 2011 12:06:34 PM
Subject: Re: [TV orNotTV] Re: How 'Jimmy Fallon' Whips Its Late-Night Music 
Competition

On Tue, Jan 4, 2011 at 10:04, PGage <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 4, 2011 at 1:44 AM, Dave Sikula <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> I have to say that I dislike most of the musical acts Dave features,
>> but the philosophy seems to be less "book the big acts," than "find
>> bands whom we can bill as making their network or TV debuts."
>
> I like the music Dave books, which I think is more eclectic than Dave Sikula
> does (I think we have had this argument before); but I agree with him and
> disagree with Kevin - with periodic exceptions most of the music on
> Letterman is (and has been for a very long time) closer to being new or
> somewhat cutting edge than big and mainstream.

Eclectic, I'll agree with, but I think whether you call it mainstream
or not actually depends on how you define "mainstream." If you're the
type who values obscurity in your musical choices, then Dave's guests
are mainstream; at least two times out of three, I've heard of the
musical guest even though I make no effort to follow the music world
beyond what's played/promoted on commercial radio. On the other hand,
it's not like the show has someone from the top 40 on a daily, or even
weekly, basis and his booker seems to be more likely to book an act
that may never make it to stardom than one that's past its prime.

-- 
David J. Lynch
[email protected]


      

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