As a banner year only gets better for Australian singer Gotye, Variance is excited to announce that the man behind one of the year's most popular songs will be on the cover of the upcoming April issue, which will be released on Sunday. His hit single, "Somebody That I Used to Know" (feat. Kimbra), continues its climb on the charts this week--with no signs of slowing down anytime soon. (The video for the surprise hit currently has a staggering 131 million views on YouTube.)

"Somebody" escalates 5-4 on the Billboard Hot 100. The collaboration, which tops the Alternative Songs for a sixth week, also jumps 4-2 on Digital Songs (with 208,000 downloads, up 25%) and 36-20 on Radio Songs (44 million, up 19%). "Somebody" remains at No. 2 on On-Demand Songs (871,000, up 12%).

Gotye's album, Making Mirrors, released in the United States on January 31--and it hasn't left the iTunes Top 10 since. Based on current available data and radio airplay trends, "Somebody" will keep rising. The singer, who's currently on his sold out U.S. tour, will also make a timely Saturday Night Live debut on April 14--which will certainly help cement his growing profile.

In an era known for pop/dance domination (Lady Gaga, Katy Perry, Rihanna, etc.), the top two tracks on this week's On-Demand Songs chart (fun.'s "We Are Young," and Gotye's "Somebody") are also the top two titles on the Digital Songs and (in reverse order) Alternative Songs charts. fun., also having an incredible year, are the cover story of January's issue of Variance.

For previews of the new issue, be sure to follow Variance on Facebook and Twitter. To listen to some of the artists in the new issue, check out the NEW Spring Playlist now.

The 11th annual Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival organizers have announced a great lineup, drawing from an astounding range of music scenes to create what is sure to be another incomparable 4-day weekend. The festival will be held on June 7 – 10 on the same beautiful 700-acre farm in Manchester, Tennessee, 60 miles south of Nashville. Bonnaroo once again will expose its fanbase to legends, current favorites as well as new artists who are about to break. Featured acts in 2012 include: Radiohead, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Phish, The Beach Boys Featuring Brian Wilson, Mike Love, Al Jardine, Bruce Johnston and David Marks, Bon Iver, The Shins, The Avett Brothers, Skrillex, Black Star, Alice Cooper, Feist, Flogging Molly, Childish Gambino, Ben Folds Five, The Roots, Bad Brains, The Civil Wars, St. Vincent, Alabama Shakes, tUnE-yArDs, Punch Brothers, Flying Lotus, Dawes, The Joy Formidable, Das Racist, Grouplove, Gary Clark, Jr., Kurt Vile & The Violators, Big Freedia and more.

Official festival website is www.bonnaroo.com

2012 Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival Confirmed Artists:
Radiohead
Red Hot Chili Peppers
Phish
The Beach Boys Featuring Brian Wilson, Mike Love, Al Jardine, Bruce Johnston and David
Marks
Bon Iver
The Avett Brothers
The Shins
Foster The People
Skrillex
Aziz Ansari
Dispatch
Feist
The Roots
Alice Cooper
SuperJam
Black Star
The Word featuring John Medeski, Robert Randolph and North Mississippi Allstars
Ludacris
Ben Folds Five
Flogging Molly
Spectrum Road featuring Cindy Blackman Santana, Jack Bruce, John Medeski, and Vernon Reid
Mac Miller
Childish Gambino
Major Lazer
tUnE-yArDs
Afrocubism
Flying Lotus
Umphrey’s McGee
Little Dragon
St. Vincent
City and Colour
The Civil Wars
Young The Giant
Two Door Cinema Club
Punch Brothers
NEEDTOBREATHE
Fitz & The Tantrums
Bad Brains
Yelawolf
Dawes
Battles
Danny Brown
The Black Lips
SBTRKT
Phantogram
Kendrick Lamar
Charles Bradley and his Extraordinaires
The Kooks
The Joy Formidable
The Antlers
Kathleen Edwards
Mimosa
Kurt Vile & The Violators
Alabama Shakes
Das Racist
Delta Spirit
Gary Clark Jr.
Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk
Laura Marling
Trampled by Turtles
Mogwai
The War On Drugs
Ben Howard
Grouplove
Blind Pilot
ALO
The Devil Makes Three
White Denim
EMA
Here We Go Magic
K-Flay
The Lonely Forest
Mariachi El Bronx
Big Freedia
Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr.
The Soul Rebels
Kvelertak
SOJA
Steven Bernstein’s MTO Allstars Plays Sly
Big Gigantic
Sarah Jarosz
Orgone
Darondo
Fruit Bats
Moon Taxi
More artists to be announced soon.

Upon joining the publicity ranks in New York City, Shelby Meade worked with Moby, Foo Fighters, Beastie Boys, Luscious Jackson and Radiohead. In 2001, Meade took her skills to sunny Los Angeles and started her own PR company, Fresh and Clean Media--now a well-known and well-respected publicity and marketing firm specializing in music, action sports, fashion, film, festivals and other related fields. Some of their clients include Cold War Kids, Jack Johnson, Matthew Mayfield, Bassnectar, Lollapalooza and the Austin City Limts Music Festival. Meade recently sat down with VARIANCE to discuss public relations and the music industry.

A lot of PR firms tend to specialize in something. Diversity has been important to you since you started your company. Why is that?

MEADE: I think I got that mindset from one of my early boss- es. I started in the music business working in a branch office firm—learning how everything works, from retail to radio and all that good groovy stuff before getting moved to a national office, which is where more of the marketing and publicity took place. Kind of the second tier of things, but I grew up around music and sports. So I would be reading Creem Magazine, surfing magazines, and skate magazines. To me it made sense in my mind that everything tied together. Your hangout spots are about music and culture and lifestyle. Then I moved to New York and I was working mainly with hip-hop music. That was an exciting time for me, being up at the Apollo with Busta Rhymes and doing photo shoots with those guys. So after working at MCA Records and getting my job at Elektra [Records], my boss at the time said, “you can’t just work hip-hop music. We don’t break down bands according to genre. You work everything.” At first I was like, “but I just want to do hip-hop.” And she told me, “you’re not going to do much if that’s the case.” That’s how it’s been for me ever since. For my team now, the surf and skate world works with the Ben Harpers. It’s great.

You’ve kind of evolved with the industry. Where do you see things going?

MEADE: To me, public relations has never been just about what’s in the magazine. It’s about what you’re creating around it. It’s building a lifestyle. You can’t just go to a magazine or media outlet and say, “write about my band or feature my athlete.” You have to read the magazine and know their culture and know how your client fits into it. Not a lot of publicists do that anymore. It’s not fair to the client. Press is getting on the phone with an editor, having conversations, emailing them to discuss their edit calendars and seeing what makes sense for everyone. You can’t just jam things through. I don’t believe in doing things that way. It’s not good business. Artists and entertainers have to realize that good public relations is about the long-term.

What happens when a client wants the short-term fix?

MEADE: I don’t work with them if they do...When I chose to leave Elektra, I opted to work independently and I’ve held that standard since then. Sometimes it’s not a lot of fun when the clients aren’t coming in but you kind of have to hold your ground and know that good things are going to come if you just do the right thing. We actually have a client base that gets along. They all like each other and they work together. So I think it pays off.

Read the entire discussion on in the new issue of VARIANCE, page 56.

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