music promotion. I'd like to give special thanks to reader Daryl Shawn
for bringing to our attention this fascinating story about an artist
who planned a 7 week house concert tour almost entirely through people
he met on Twitter. In the article, the artist compares his standard
tour procedure with his "Tweet" based tour and explains how he made
more money, had more fun, and managed to sleep and eat cheaper on the
road than ever had before. You can read his full article here.
me thinking about marketing music "outside the box", and some of the
more interesting promotional tactics I've heard about over the past few
years. Radiohead made a huge media splash when they announced they
would be releasing "In Rainbows" and allowing customers to name their
own price for it. Nine Inch Nails (with some help from TuneCore)
offered their album "Ghosts I-IV" in a number of different formats,
including 9 free tracks on BitTorrent sites, all 36 tracks on Amazon,
and then multiple physical packages including a limited pressing $300
deluxe version.
Other people have tried a different tactic, looking to earn money for
their albums before they've even completed them. In early 2008
singer-songwriter Jill Sobule asked for donations to help cover the
cost of recording her new album. In exchange, supporters would
receive "prizes" of different levels – some examples include $500 to
have your name sung on the album's final track and $5,000 for a
personal house concert.
I would be interested to learn more about some of the experimental
promotional moves attempted by our TuneCore users. No idea is too big
or too small, I'm simply curious to know what you've tried. What
worked well, what didn't? Did you have an idea that seemed far fetched
at first but turned out to be your secret weapon? Post your thoughts
here!

