Royalty Free Music Discounts, Deals and Freebies
We’ve made it super easy to see all of our deals, discounts and specials in one place so you don’t have to search through the entire site to find bargains on royalty free music and sound effects.
We will be updating this every month with new specials.
The really cool special this month is the ‘Stimulus Package’ with two royalty free music and sound effects collections available for free download with every purchase.
| The Royalty Free Stimulus Package | |||
| To do our part to help stimulate the economy by giving entrepreneurs as much music as possible for free to create their new products and venture out on their new endeavors we are giving away two royalty free music and sound effects collections with every purchase.
|
|||
|
On all orders we have a 10% and 20% discount that is applied automatically to the shopping cart as you shop. Once you hit $200 in your shopping cart you will see the 10% discount kick in and once you get above $400 you see the very substantial 20% discount get subtracted from your grand total.
|
|||
|
As if four DVDs of incredible film music weren’t enough we’ve recently added the royalty free film music collection Hollywood Soundtracks Vol 1 to the mix for absolutely free. |
|||
Our hugely popular collection of 50 of the most recognizable royalty free classical music tracks has just gotten more propular with the addition of 25 classic Tchaikovsky peices for absolutley no charge.Just download and use them. Check out Appollo Symphony Orchestra: Greatest Hits and listen to the 25 beautiful Tchaikovsky tracks that you can download for free. |
|||
Richard Quest Remix (Deep Hypnotic State)
![]()
We’re big fans of Richard Quest and have been twittering with him since he began his show on CCN called ‘Quest Means Business’. The show is cool because he twitters while he is on air.
His voice is of course great for a remix.
(Monalia is playing Melodica and piano)
If you want to download the MP3 you can find it here http://tr.im/gCN5
Ha! Got the twitter stamp of approval from Richard himself!

And now we got a really nice write-up on the CNN blog promoting the track:
Making Music While the Economy Burns
Check out our recent Christian Bale Techno Tirade Remix as well (due to very explicit language this remix is rated NSFW, not safe for work).
Posted on February 20th, 2009 by admin | View CommentsChristian Bale Techno Remix
I just couldn’t pass up a chance to remix the Christian Bale rant. His voice is so melodic and rhythmic when he is going insane. It’s perfect for a remix. This is something we through together in a couple of days just to get something out there before we leave for Paris.
Posted on February 7th, 2009 by admin | View Comments
Free Royalty Free Music CLips: Pads and Beds
Here is the lastest in the series of free royalty free music clips. A bunch of looping pads and beds for you to download and use in your personal or commercial projects.
The preview is MP3 and the corresponding WAV file is the link below. It needs to be WAV to loops properly as the conversion to MP3 destroys to loop edit by adding blank audio to head and tail.
Waiting (right-click here download this free royalty free music clip)
This Way Comes (right-click here download this free royalty free music clip)
Sneaky Pete (right-click here download this free royalty free music clip)
Snappy Hi (right-click here download this free royalty free music clip)
Rhythmic Ship (right-click here download this free royalty free music clip)
Night Howls (right-click here download this free royalty free music clip)
News Flash (right-click here download this free royalty free music clip)
Marimba Mix (right-click here download this free royalty free music clip)
Magic Bell (right-click here download this free royalty free music clip)
Freedom (right-click here download this free royalty free music clip)
Frantic (right-click here download this free royalty free music clip)
Posted on January 30th, 2009 by admin | View Comments12 Websites Where Musicians Can Pitch Their Music to Producers
There are lots of royalty free music sites out there to submit your music to but there are more and more sites appearing that actually pitch your music to certain projects and producers for free or for a fee. There are also a few crowd-sourcing / collaboration type sites here.
These sites are distinctly different from the free-for-all type sites like productiontrax, audiojungle and audiosparx and might be an interesting addition to your search for outlets for your production music.
1. Humtoo.com
http://www.humtoo.com/
A global meeting place for music makers and content creators. This site is pretty cool as it is free to signup and submit your music to videos and project descriptions.
2. Film Music.net
http://www.filmmusic.net/
Paid monthly subscription to submit music to be considered
Immediate Access to our Film/TV Music Jobs Database
Access to Film Music Network Live! 24 hr/day streaming audio of Film Music Network events
Immediate Access to our Film & TV Music Salary & Rate Survey
Full benefits and discounts at all participating Film Music Network Vendor Partners.
3. The Composer Collective
http://www.thecomposercollective.com/tcc/composersignup.asp
The Composer Collective is comprised of cinematic composers dedicated to creating dramatic scores of the highest quality for film, television, interactive and commercial media. We group composers into innovative and productive workforces, giving the film industry a much-needed resource for intelligent music at never-before-seen productivity levels. This service is known as TeamScore™.
Choosing TeamScore™ puts you on the front lines of the film business as it changes and adapts rapidly to the demands of distributors and consumers worldwide.
4. Taxi.net
https://www.taxi.com/join/?88.7.207.46.6651122970743537
Paid yearly subscription is $299.95
http://www.taxi.com/abouts/join-whatyoullget.html
More than 1,200 opportunities per year to pitch your music to Major and Indie Record Labels, Top Music Publishers, and Music Supervisors working on film and TV projects. That’s TEN TIMES the number of opportunities you’ll get with TAXI imitators! And don’t forget, we have opportunities in nearly every conceivable genre of music.
5. Broadjam
http://www.broadjam.com/delivery/index.php?sessionID=q4qqrqkt2vc05bi4s15palahj1
offers an ‘opportunities’ service for $5-$10 per sbmission depending on what type a paid account you have
a broadjam member to enter opportunities. sign up today. you’ll also get other services designed to help independent musicians like you, promote themselves.
6. Studentfilms.com Forum
http://forums.studentfilms.com/eve/forums/a/frm/f/6156029451
Jobs posted for composers and composer submitting their resumes and profiles. Free to register.
Lots of posts like ‘Composer Needed’ and ‘Composer Available’.
7. Soundreef (beta)
http://www.soundreef.com/private_beta/promoterPage?o=13
Swap music for promotion? Not sure what that means but worth investigating.
8. YouLicense
direct job opportunities are available here
http://www.youlicense.com/Opportunities/default.aspx
here’s the RSS feed for the jobs list
http://www.youlicense.com/XML/RSS/Opportunities/YouLicenseOpportunities.xml
9. Minimum Noise
http://www.minimumnoise.com/
A new site with all kinds of projects for "crowdsourcing musicians".
10. Pump Audio
http://pumpaudio.com/artists/index.php
There is no submission fee. If your music is not used, you lose nothing.
You will receive 50% of the license fees we receive for your music.
Pump’s deal is completely non-exclusive.
Our deal will never prevent you from working with anyone else.
11. Musicdealers.com
http://musicdealers.com/
A new site where you can upload and create a profile and the people at musicdealers pitch your tracks to potential clients.
12. Musicloops.com
Our site where you can submit a demo. No fees to join. Price your own tracks, lots of sales, with 50% of the price goes to the composer.
10 Ways Businesses Use Twitter / 5 Essential Twitter Apps
Find out how to use Twitter to streamline your business and improve your bottom line including a list of the essential third party twitter apps you need to succeed.
![]()
1. use twitter to directly connect with customers
you can use twitter search to look for your industry keywords and connect to people in real-time as they ask about products, prices, etc.
2. use twitter as intranet communication for your employees
so they can keep up with each other throughout the day. much easier than texting, emails or phone calls. Updates could be set to private for security reasons.
3. use twitter for customer service
many companies are letting their customers contact via twitter for questions and help.
4. use twitter for updates and announcements
much quicker and more informal than an email newsletter. Have your customers follow you to see you product/website updates and announcements.
Customers can subscribe via mobile or RSS for instant notification.
5. use twitter to exponentially spread the word
if all of your employees have there own twitter accounts with their own set of followers you can use them to spread the word about a new blog post, a new product, a new company video, etc. Their friends tell more friends who tell their friends and so on.
6. follow your competitor’s twitter accounts
I do this just to keep tabs on them
7. time management
twitter can be used to keep a detailed record of what you are doing every day. you can set up a separate account to do this.
8. meetings
use twitter as an informal and casual way of arranging a meeting with workmates from wherever you are.
9. twitter groups
There’s a new service that is becoming popular very quickly called twittgroups. I’m not sure how to use this for business just yet but it is worth checking out. Possibly start a twittgroup for your company or industry or product?
http://twittgroups.com/index.php
10. twitter todo list
use twitter to record down what you need to do while you are away from the computer.
5 Titter Apps you can use to implement these strategies
1. Feedalizr
Mac and PC
http://www.feedalizr.com/
a desktop app that streams a variety of feeds straight to desktop. Use this in conjunction friendfeed.com and you will get everything you need streaming across your desktop in real-time.
2. TweetDeck
http://www.tweetdeck.com/beta/
TweetDeck is an Adobe Air desktop application that is currently in public beta. It aims to evolve the existing functionality of Twitter by taking an abundance of information i.e twitter feeds, and breaking it down into more manageable bite sized pieces.
3. TwitAlert.com
http://www.TwitAlert.com/
Receive emails alerts for for twitter search results.
4. Twitterfeed
http://www.twitterfeed.com/
Automatically stream any RSS feed into your twitter account. Your blog posts for example.
5. Brightkit
http://brightkit.com/
BrightKit lets you manage multiple Twitter profiles and pre-schedule tweets. Any number of users can manage shared profiles. BrightKit will provide solid tweet metrics right on the dashboard, and loads of additional features are on the way.
Posted on December 19th, 2008 by admin | View CommentsInterview on ‘The Score’ Website
Check out my interview on the new ‘The Score’ website.
http://filmandgamecomposers.com/blog/?p=196
Emmett Cooke has rebuilt his filmandgamecomposer.com website and it is looking really cool.
The home page is now dedicated to composer interviews.
http://filmandgamecomposers.com/
Posted on December 10th, 2008 by admin | View CommentsFree Royalty Free Music Clips: JimmyG Music
I found another site that has a section of free royalty free music available for download.
It is mostly sad piano music with a perfunctory heavy metal track thrown in but worth a listen.
You have to register to download which is a bit of a drag
http://www.jimmyg.us/JimmyGMusic/MusicDownloads/tabid/99/Default.aspx
You can also download free royalty free music clips from our free music loops page on Partners In Rhyme
Download Free Royalty Free Music
Posted on November 25th, 2008 by admin | View CommentsFree Royalty Free Music Clips from Apple
I ran across this page today where Apple is giving a promo pack of royalty free music clips on the Apple site here
royaltyfreemusicpromopackvol3.html
I took a listen and it is actually just four tracks of very “GarageBand” sounding generic music.
You can also download lots of free royalty free music clips on the Partners In Rhyme website on this page
Download Free Royalty Free Music Clips
All original and cool played by real musicians.
Posted on October 13th, 2008 by admin | View CommentsFree Horror Scream Clip plus Horror Music and Scary Sound Effects
It is that time of year when producers and party planners start searching for horror music and scary sound effects for their productions and Halloween parties.
Free Royalty Free Sound Effect Clip
Here is this week’s free royalty free sound effect clip called Scream Female Horror:
scream_female_horror_2.mp3
Here is a convenient list of links pointing to all of our mast scary and horrific stock music beds and scary sound effects.
Horror Music Tracks for Halloween
Choose from over 100 scary music tracks and horror music beds here on the musicloops.com site in Horror > Suspense music genre:
Horror Music Collection
If you need lots of Horror Music plus some scary sound effects check out our Horror! collection on partnersinrhyme.com:
Horror! scary music beds, horror stings and slams plus scary sound effects
Scary Sound Effects Collection
We also have a brand new collection of scary sound effects available here:
More Horror Sound Effects
Our catalog of horror sound effects on sound-effect.com is growing every week. Check out some of these categories in the Horror Sounds genre:
Accents
Aliens
Ambience
Body Fall
Body Hits
Bone Break
Dinosaur
Dragon
Ghost
Monster
Production Elements
Robot
New Composer: Emmett Cooke
We have a new composer uploading tracks to www.musicloops.com, his name is Emmett Cooke and his style is very unique and well suited to a variety of genres. His compositions are deceiving in that they sound simple but the melodies are complex and very effective at evoking specific emotions. Loneliness, hope, longing, joy.
You can see how effective his soundtracks are by viewing this impressive animated short he just did the score for
view ‘Connect Ed’ the animated short
You can see how the music conveys almost all of the emotion in the story, without the music the story would not have the same effect and might no even make sense.
If you’d like you can incorporate Emmett’s music into your own productions by visiting musicloops.com here:
Emmett Cooke’s music available on Musicloops.com
100 megs of Free Drum Loops
I just updated our free drum loops page with over 100 megs of free drum loops for you to download and use in your music completely free of charge. The free drum loops genres include rock, drum n bass, jungle, techno and hip hop.
Free Drum Loops from Partners In Rhyme
| Free Drum Loops Preview Player listen here first to see if you like the loops then click here to download free drum loops |
|
|
Funky Blues Guitar Solo
Here is this week’s free royalty free music clip. It’s actually just me practicing my blues chops over a bass line and a drum pattern from Strike (drum plugin from digidesign).
There’s no real ending for it but there’s enough of it to edit and and use what you need:
youLicense, soundsnap and audiomicro
I’ve been noticing that a few audio websites are now changing their business models and going with subscription.
Soundsnap.com
Soundsnap is a great place to download royalty free music clips and sound effects and was originally an altruistic concept that I guess eventually had to fall to capitalist ideals. Soundsnap will soon be changing to a subscription model where the user has to pay a monthly fee to download the sounds on the site.
Details are unclear but it is definitely going to change the basic concept of SoundSnap (which I always thought was a great idea).
YouLicense.com
One of the “big players” in music licensing has also announced that they will be going “subscription”. This time however it is on the composers’s end.
It will cost $39.95 every 6 months (or $39.95 every month, I don’t know, it is hard to tell from the wording in their newsletter and on their website) for a musician to post his music to be heard by production companies in need of licensed music.
This does away with their 9% fee for accepted material and puts a mandatory monthly payment on the composer.
They must not be turning much of a profit with their original concept to warrant such a drastic change on the end of the business model that (historically) has the least money.
Audiomicro.com
Audiomicro sells music and sound effects for extremely low prices. I’m not sure what self-respecting composer would upload to a site that pays out $0.50 for the licensing of a full length track.
Their business model seems to be an oxymoron since you can’t have “the lowest prices for the customer” *and* “the biggest payout for the composer” at the same time. It’s simply impossible.
They are also “paying you to upload” when in reality they’re giving a cash advance of $0.50 per track which you have to payback to Audiomicro (by not being paid until you sell that amount of tracks).
A quote from one of their statements is “at least somebody is paying the composers”, they were telling this to Partners In Rhyme who pays out almost $20,000 every month to their composers…
…and our composers get to keep their money
Partners In Rhyme
Partners In Rhyme has always, from the beginning, strived to help composers make a living at what they love to do. We have never charged them to join any of our websites, we have offered advice (that has been taken and profited upon) and we are always investing and developing in new features and ideas to help our family of composers make a living at composing music.
New Composer: Dimitry Lifshitz
Dimitri Lifshitz is one of our favorite new composers and he is uploading some awesome music to musicloops.com right now.
I think the Alt Rock track Feel Alive is probably my favorite, although if you need a super-funky 70′s/techno track try
Get The Funk Out is pretty cool.
Dimitri also has a sensitive side with tracks like, well,
Sensitive and a very impressive comical quality with tracks like
Don’t Misbehave .
Check Dimitri out all of our other great composers on www.musicloops.com.
Posted on September 2nd, 2008 by admin | View CommentsFree Sound Effect: Call to Prayer
We recently visited Fes, Morocco for a week or so. We stayed in a beautiful hotel just on the edge of the Medina on a hill. It was a perfect spot to record the Call to Prayer that happens 5 times a day beginning at 5AM.
For those that might not be familiar with the Call to Prayer it is one of the strangest things you’ve ever heard, especially in the Medina as there are hundreds of mosques and minarets, all equipped with distorted loudspeakers and cheap microphones. The elder of the mosque starts wailing into this old fashioned PA system, then times that by 200 with each mosque trying to outdo the next in volume. It is eerie sounding.
It goes on for a while and is basically just a reminder to get to the mosque to do your prayer ritual.
Here is one of our recordings of the Call to Prayer:
call_to_prayer-fr9t_11-02.mp3
Royalty Free Jazz Music from Alan Marchand
We’d like to welcome our newest composer to the Partners In Rhyme family,
Alan Marchand is adding his huge catalog of traditional jazz to the www.musicloops.com catalog.
A few of my current favorites are:
Summer Solstice with its steamy, romantic sax melody.
Down Memory Lane with its upright bass and 1930′s feel.
and of course there’s Melodious Thunk
These are all royalty free music clips that you can download immediately and start using in your commercial projects today. If you need that old-time, traditional jazz feel these royalty free music clips from Alan Marchand may be just what you need.
Posted on August 28th, 2008 by admin | View CommentsFree Royalty Free Music Clip: Orchestral Gothic Loop 1
Here is my weekly free royalty free music clip (or sound effect clip).
This it is the Gothic Loop 1 from our new Film Music Series
. This particular music clip is from the Film Series: Main Theme Songs collection.
(This is an MP3 file which usually means they won’t loop properly, however I have gone in with an MP3 editor and removed the blank audio at the head and tail that the MP3 conversion usually adds to the file.)
Posted on July 29th, 2008 by admin | View CommentsRoyalty Free Composer Tips: Creating A Music Library pt2
Some great questions from musicformedia over at filmandgamecomposers.com:
When you first created your library was it all music you had already made, or was it stuff that you created specifically for the purpose of selling in a stock music library?
We started out our music career as composers for TV shows and commercials, radio ads and video games. We would always give our clients 3 or 4 different ideas to choose from for their spot. These were all fairly well-developed ideas. They would choose one and the rest would go on the shelf. Our first collection of royalty free music (published in 1996) was a collection of these alternate choices.
Once that collection started selling we realized we needed to create music specifically for our production music library.
If you were creating your library of stock music from scratch again, what would you do differently?
I think I would have kept track of the different mixes better. In the old days once a mix was done the set up was pretty much lost forever. Now we can recall any mix and have it come back sounding exactly the way it did a couple of years ago.
Do you think there is a set “package” of types of music you should upload? What I mean by this is, if you sell a lot of music, is there a certain amount of of types that sell more than others – ie. should you create a library of 50 songs (each with a 60 second edit, 30 second edit, 15 second edit and 2 or 3 loops), maybe 4-5 sound effect bundles – like a “Video Game” Sound Effect Bundle, “Horror Movie” Sound Effect Bundle etc. I hope this makes sense – my general question is, should you be creating a set amount of each type to maximise sales?
Bundles are great, the more creative the better. In my experience many of our customers go for the full length track but people who just need a loop for their website will buy one or two of these from the package. Lots of people buy the 60 second version because it is usually a bit cheaper.
We have some composers who upload bundles of music loops and corresponding button sounds. Music and complimenting sound effects is a good idea (we did this with our Horror! collection and it sells very well).
In your case maybe some nice ambient nature sounds to go along with your piano music.
Some advice on pricing your packages; if your full length track is 1:30 I would price it the same as your 60 second version.
In general I would price the 60 second version of the tracks close to or the same as the full length track price.
How long are your tracks usually? I have a lot of 20-30 second piano pieces, but I’m not sure they’re long enough.
This is considered fairly short, you might want to extend them. 20 seconds is good for a website, most of our 20 second loops go for $9.95.
The 30 second version might be $14.95 or $19.95 but you really want to get up to at least 60 seconds for most uses.
I’ve noticed a few full sized scores for films – ie. 10-15mins tracks – do you sell any of these yourself, and do you find they sell well?
Most full scores are actual symphony recordings of classical music. At least on our websites I haven’t seen any composers uploading anything over 5 or 6 minutes.
Posted on July 29th, 2008 by admin | View CommentsFree Royalty Free Music Clips: 8 Bit Rocket
8 Bit Rocket has a fairly large selection of really cool music loops available for free download and free use in your projects:
http://www.8bitrocket.com/music.aspx
11k versions of the music clips (loops) fall under the Creative Commons license (see their website)
The 44k versions have different licensing requirements.
Posted on July 28th, 2008 by admin | View CommentsFree Sound Effects: Cannon Battle
One of my latest uploads to sound-effect.com is called Cannon Battle.
It is a recording of the revolutionary re-enactment group here in Gracia (Barcelona, Spain).
All of the actors have a gun called a Blunderbuss. The guns are enormous and enormously loud and the revolutionary soldiers roam through our streets with them firing at will.
It is an awesome sound to wake up to.
So, I woke up and took my NAGRA out to record the Blunderbuss Battle.
When I got back to the studio to edit the sounds I tried pitching it down without changing the length and it accidentally turned into a Canon Battle.
Right-click (control-click on a Mac) and choose save as:
cannon_battle.mp3
I’m making this available royalty free to my blog readers and especially to Machinima producers as I have been talking to some of them recently and they seem to be having a hard time finding high quality music and sound effects for their productions (for free since most of them are broke).
I will posting more free stuff every week.
Free Royalty Free Music Clips: Purple Planet
I found some more free royalty free music clips today available from Purple Planet.
They have a variety of genres available like calm, dramatic, jazzy, blues, mystery, horror and comic.
Their website states:
"All the music here can be used essentially for free (though we appreciate a small donation) for any type of film production or web presentation (youtube, podcasts, blogs etc). This includes revenue-generating, commercial uses."
Check them out if you need free music, it all sounds pretty good.
Royalty Free Music Composer Tip: How To Build A Catalog
I have been selling royalty free music for more than 10 years now. I receive composer submissions and demos on a daily basis. I also see what sells and what customers are requesting everyday.
I don’t often give advise to composers but thought I would post some basic observations in case it is of any use to composers looking to get into the royalty free music industry.
1. Be Prolific
If you want to make a living at selling your production music the first thing you need is a large library of music.
The composers who have large catalogs on our sites earn the most and earn very consistently. 75-300 tracks and up is considered a large library.
2. Create edits and loops with your full length tracks.
The customers on our websites love the fact that we offer not only full length tracks but edits, loops, underscores and alternate takes. You can also sell the whole package of full length track, edits for a higher price than the full length track alone.
This coupled with a large library will practically guarantee steady sales (as long as the music is top quality of course).
A typical package would be:
Full length track 2 to 3 minutes
60 second edit
30 second edit
15 second edit
2 or 3 loops.
3. Write What You Know
Professional production music composers are a very versatile lot. They can write music in many styles and can do it convincingly. However many of the demos I receive are from composers who are trying to be all things to everybody, writing in as many styles as possible with the majority of the track coming across as mediocre. We pass on these types of demos 99% of the time.
If you are an excellent New Age Music composer don’t try your hand at Nu-Metal just to fill out your catalog, write more New Age Music instead. Write the music you love to write, not what you think will sell.
4. Add Something Real
In this day of laptop studios, garageband and reason it seems that everyone is now trying their hat at being a “composer”. I may be old skool but back in the day musicians used to practice their instruments for hours everyday and went to school to study harmony and composition. Today it seems that anyone who can download some free drum loops from the web calls themselves a composer.
All this to say when you compose try adding something real to your compositions. Instead of only relying on your loop library (the one that thousands of other people are using) try adding some real guitar parts, or a weird vocal part, or a sax, get your friend to play harmonica, pick up any simple percussion instrument, even a tambourine, and record it live. Give your standard loop library composition a soul by adding something real.
5. Melody
Just like in popular music melody plays a big factor in royalty free music. Sure there are lots of instances where you want the music to sit in the background and not attract too much attention but according to our sales stats music with a good, strong, uplifting melody outsells all other types of music.
6. Holiday Music
Would you like a Christmas bonus every year in your royalty free music paycheck? Then do Christmas and holiday music in whatever style your composition skills are strongest. A hip hop version of Jingle Bells, an ozzy osbourne version of The First Noel.
This would go for all types of public domain music, a Nu-Metal version of God Bless America, a jazz version of the Star Spangled Banner, drum n bass Auld Lang Syne, etc.
Our customers just love this kind of stuff.
7. Structure
Make sure to think about the listener when you’re are putting together the structure of your royalty free music tracks.
a. Don’t have a 2 minute intro before getting to the main melody. You need to grab the listener quickly, get to the point as soon as possible (within reason of course).
b. Give them an ending. No fades. Give them a proper ending with a chord and cymbals that ring out. This is very important for the ends of commercials and radio spots.
c. Give them a B section, also known as a bridge. You can do the same thing with a breakdown if it is dance music. You need to give the customer some variety in the track, something to play with in editing.
Hope this helps. Let me know what you think.
I’ll be posting more tips for royalty free music composers in the coming weeks.
-Mark
Digital Music 2.0 (the last day)
The day started (for me) with a panel discussion on digital music and mobile distribution. This was in a separate room from the other
discussion regarding podcasting. The mobile discussion didn’t have translation and the entire panel was speaking in Spanish. It was basically an hour long Spanish comprehension test for me. I was then invited to a panelist’s lunch by my new friend Sam Levin. It was great to be able to sit down and talk to the panelists over lunch. Everyone had great stories that I could really relate to (and would most likely be extremely boring to 99.9% of the rest of the population). Gerd Leonhard told me about his days at the helm of licensemusic.com during the internet bubble, spending tons of venture capital money with big offices in San Francisco only to crash along with the hundreds of other companies during the time. It actually sounded like lots of fun.
Simon Wheeler of The Beggars Group told me about his day to day accounting headaches. Sheets and sheets of invoices for royalties of pennies all to be added up, accounted for and paid out. We have the same types hassles at PIR but on a somewhat smaller level. It was a good warning to keep building good accounting practices as we grow.
Talked to a couple of people from Pitchforkmedia who I had never heard of before but their music site is apparently very popular.
There were quite a few representatives from various Catalan government agencies and when asked about what they do and how they promoted their service they answered “we have spots on the radio”.
Sam was incredulous, “have you heard of internet!? do have any internet promotion at all?”
To which they replied “we are working on building our website”.
If there is one thing I learned from this entire conference is that the Catalans (for the most part) are firmly stuck in the 80′s.
They go on and on describing how the internet is a terrible thing, people are stealing music! the government must do something to stop these people from stealing our music!! we have to go back to the old days when people bought CDs from us!!!
Good grief! Wake up!
Anyway, the panel on internet payments was promising in the beginning but turned into a “let’s go back to the old days and shut down the internet!” type of argument in due course.
The final workshop called Digital Distribution with the 7 major Spanish digital distributors was about as boring as they come, long Powerpoint presentations, people reading from their scripts with their heads pointing at their shoes.
I left after 20 minutes and enjoyed the rest of the beautiful sunny Barcelona afternoon.
All in all I enjoyed the Digital Music 2.0 conference in Barcelona, it had it’s good and bad points but it was great to be in a roomful of like-minded people for two days.
Oh yeah, there’s also a good chance I’ll be one of the panelists next year.
Digital Music 2.0
Here is an excerpt of some of the discussions resulting from the panels on the first day of Digital Music 2.0:
We need a Networked Music Business. We need a Web-Native Music Business.
What does Music2.0 look like:
1. Respect for the Creators and the Users, first and foremost
2. Based on Access first, then Copy
3. Based on Usage Rights, not (just) Copyright
4. Based on dozens of revenue streams, not just ‘selling copies’
5. Driven by Sharing
6. Driven by Syndication (and users marketing what they like)
7. Decentralized
8. Powered by an entirely new kind of Advertising
9. Multi-platform access but mostly mobile
10. Bundled in other services, basic access ‘feels like free’
11. Open and transparent
Kevin Kelly:
The key is to offer valuable intangibles that can not be reproduced at zero cost, and will thus be paid for:
1. Immediacy – priority access, immediate delivery
2. Personalization – tailored just for you
3. Interpretation – support and guidance
4. Authenticity – be sure it is the real thing?
5. Accessibility – whereever, whenever
6. Embodiment & Experience
7. Patronage – “paying simply because it feels good”
8. Findability & Curation
Today I will be going to the Podcasting discussion, the Mobile Content discussion, the online payments workshop and the final panel discussion called ‘Digital Distribution’.
The conference itself is pretty amazing as it is happening in three different languages. The panelists are speaking in either Catalan, Castalleno or English and they beam out instant translations via wireless headphones.
Very cool.




Recent Comments