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This is some
info on DIY music from a Canadaian perspective - most of the
ideas will seem quite familiar!
So you have a
band, a CD, a practice space, a so-so van, a couple of gigs coming
up and an internet connection - what next? Convergence. A dirty
word for corporations but a promising term for bands striving
to go that extra mile for exposure and financial independence.
The internet is proving itself to be beneficial to the newest
bands and others who recognize that they have to reach far beyond
the city limits to make a go of music as a career.
Your two immediate
online needs are a URL or domain name that is representative
of band, preferably www.yourbandname.com with a main email address
of info@yourbandname.com that is checked regularly (www.internic.net
worldwide or http://www.cira.ca in Canada, www.yahoo.com). With
thousands upon thousands of bands online, doing searches for
indie bands who have lost themselves at the end of a very long
URL - can consider themselves truly lost. Don,t make people fight
to find you! There are many sites that allow you set-up your
presence for free or for a monthly fee that includes your own
domain name, an email service that allows group emails (ie. regular
newsletter or gig/touring announcements), merchandise sales with
e-commerce capabilities (credit card processing and shipping)
and a walk through of all the steps involved in building your
pages (try www.freedomtogroove.com).
After your website
our first foray into online money-making was joining mp3.com.
It was relatively easy to upload our music but we're not making
any money off it and haven't for over a year as the cost to be
a Premium, member per month exceeded what we were making off
plays. It was enough to put back into the band for expenses,
posters, photocopying press kits, printer cartridges, postage,
recording, gas money, CD dubbing costs etc.
Curious on how
to market your site, join mailing lists, book a tour, contact
an A&R rep and get the best deal on pressing CD? Check out
many of the dozens of websites put together by your peers (www.indie-music.com
is excellent) that contain many articles, links, resources and
directory listings. What you probably will not find is information
on music licensing. Licensing? This is the term applied to the
process of placing music on visual creative projects, such as
film soundtracks (film, video, digital), television programs
and advertising campaigns.
As more and more
music is being made available online for different uses it is
natural for production people to turn to the internet to find
music. Why? Because you can buy anything on the internet! Savvy
bands are spending time on film bulletin boards offering up their
music for soundtrack use, indie labels are offering licensing
options on their websites and composers are banding together
and starting their own online write-for-hire agencies. If you
or your bandmates don,t have the time, effort or expertise to
find soundtrack opportunities and successfully pitch your music
there are avenues for you.
Who to trust?
I,m on movie sets a lot and I can tell you how hard it is to
approach the music supervisor or the producer with CD. They may
love it or I might lose my job. Not wanting to jeopardize my
finances I,ve found a few online companies that specialize in
indie music licensing and are non-exclusive (which means you
can join as many as you want - no exclusive memberships). Before
signing with any company remember you are entering into a business
relationship that involves your work and payment for use of that
work.
Contracts?
The licensing company should have a legal contract that requires
the signatures of the owners or the authors/composers of the
music sent in. If the company is legit they will want to protect
themselves from fraud artists that will send in other peoples
music and profit from it. Also there is the final license contract
with the filmmakers or whomever to peruse - is it for a Master/Sync
license? or just a Sync license? (www.ascap.com, www.bmi.com
or www.socan.com can define these terms if you are not familiar
with the industry jargon).
Fees?
The contract should also state very clearly the fees (monthly?
yearly? by the byte?) involved and how future licensing income
will be split between you and them and how often you will be
paid.
Pre-Cleared or
Restricted?
Also, ask about whether the tracks are required to be pre-cleared
or if you can request restrictions. Some companies have a standard
restriction that reads something like this track cannot be used
on scenes depicting racism, pornography, use of tobacco, alcohol
or drugs,. Requesting a restriction will obviously limit the
amount of interest your music garners and ultimately the pay-out.
Personally I don,t care if a European sausage company wants to
use my music on a television commercial - I,m an indie musician
who can barely pay the rent, who is going to blame me for taking
the money? I,ll take that money and invest it in my bands future.
Where to start?
Start where you begin all your other research - on your favorite
search engine (www.google.com is huge). If you want to go the
total DIY personal route based on your location, use your city
name and keywords like film production,, indie movies,, production
companies,, music wanted,, etc. Most cities and provinces have
film associations and unions that keep track of local shoots
and list them on their websites with contact information. Be
prepared to be your own sales agent - you will have to send each
of the interested parties a pitch package (some require two -
one for the director and one for the music supervisor), diligently
follow-up, negotiate your terms and if needed, hire a lawyer
to proof your contract.
If you are willing
to let go of a lot of control, a full-service online licensing
agency like Realia Music Inc. (www.realiamusic.com) may be worth
looking into. One of the larger agencies online, their online
catalogue consists of indie music from around the world and it,s
pre-cleared and priced by a sliding scale that caps at $5,000/world-wide
usage. They have restrictions available but only a special case
basis (pre-existing contracts between musicians and other parties
- I asked) and provide a one-stop service for people who have
limited budgets, tight schedules and credit cards. They have
a one-time $5 membership fee and a $1/song submission fee, 50/50
license split and a $2/song shipping fee for songs licensed.
Your songs are represented for as long as you wish and if you
get an exclusive deal with a publishing company or label, they
promise they will remove your songs within 24 hours.
If you have a
good idea of what your music is worth and prefer to wrangle your
deals yourself try SongCatalog Inc. (www.songcatalog.com). Their
system provides a virtual middleman for your negotiations. You
submit as many tracks as you wish for placement in their online
Active List, or in the Vault, and pay per track. Fees are billed
monthly and start at $4.95 for up to 25 audio files stored in
the Vault, and $9.95 for up to 25 songs featured on the Exchange,
(site search engine) and increase by smaller increments every
50/100/200 songs registered. There are different levels of search
capabilities that have a separate fee rate but you can check
out there website for more details. People who wish to license
music register at no cost, browse the catalogue and when a suitable
track is located, they send an email - through the website -
to the owner who then responds. Dialogue and negotiations ensue
and you are ultimately responsible for finalizing your deal.
I would advise
to check out the smaller companies, they appear to have more
staying power than the large online music companies (licensemusic.com
- one of the first and definitely the largest - shut down business
abruptly months ago and is currently being auctioned off on the
internet through a bankruptcy trustee). Many have forayed into
licensing but the complicated traditional licensing system (long
protracted negotiations, complicated territorial and usage structures,
clearances, exorbitant fees, favored nations, and script/scene
approval) has not translated well online. There was no immediacy,
no click through satisfaction that everyone has come to expect
from the web. Once the costs of software development, technical
support, hosting fees and high-priced management were factored
in the license fees were unaffordable and potential buyers were
back in the nightclubs chatting up bands after their sets.
Online there
is a market for indie music even if the band has broken up, doesn't
tour, is brand new or not commercially friendly, and it requires
hardly any work on behalf of the band. You fill in an application,
get the appropriate signatures, mail it in and wait for the money
to arrive. It is the agency,s business to market their catalogue,
customer services and bring the buyers in.
With record labels
setting their standards higher and higher for new signings, showing
up with a portfolio of licensed tracks in your package just might
be the wedge you need to get in the door. It really doesn,t matter
where the track was used or for what product, the fact that your
music can be sold for hard cash is the attractive quality they
are looking for.
Always remember
to be realistic with your expectations and tell everybody that
you have a licensing agency, (it does sound impressive and looks
even better on your bio). There are hundreds of thousands of
bands in the world with at least one album under their belts.
That,s a lot of competition for the same dollar. It,s also unlikely
that directors Steven Spielberg or Kevin Smith are cruising these
sites for music for their next big project - they have budgets
that afford them just about any song they want. As an indie musician
with an indie agency, your music will be marketed to projects
without a great deal of exposure attached to them. Focus will
usually be on the catalogue not the individual bands, there are
fees and it is a relatively new industry - it may take years
for it to take off and compete with traditional process.
But don,t despair,
it only takes one new digital filmmaker with a vision and a few
thousand dollars to help pay off the band van or press those
extra 500 cd,s. It,s a cheap and viable new way to get your music
heard by a larger and potentially lucrative audience and that,s
what you want. Isn,t it?
Article by Scooter
Johnson (deadcat@shaw.ca)
Photography by
Suzanne Goodwin
(all fees referenced
are in Canadian dollars)
Bio: Scooter
Johnson started his illustrious career in the entertainment industry
by studying the cello in elementary school, soon dropping the
cello in favour of the far more romantic (and simpler) instrument
- the gut-bucket bass. As the premier "bucket-master in
Canada he spent 5 years touring the country with his Hillbilly
band The Hard Rock Miners and has created 5 internationally distributed
albums with his ssychobilly band The Deadcats. Living in Vancouver
(Hollywood North) also afforded him the opportunity to engage
in the business of acting. A regular (background performer) on
the Chris Isaak show and having worked in films and TV with such
luminaries as "Sly Stallone, Greg "BJ and the Bear
Evigan, Isabella Rosellini, and musicians Paul Stanley, Thomas
Dolby, Stuart Copeland, and Sheila E (amongst many others); his
search for fame and immortality has almost been concluded and
it is time to pass on his knowledge to the next generation of
seekers after the flame.
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