Free Soundtracks – Getting Your Music Into The Movies
January 31, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
If history has influence on current events, musicians can rest assured that during difficult economic times, people will seek out entertainment to take their minds off of their troubles. Movies and Music are at the top of that list, so we shouldn’t be surprised to see an increase in awareness thanks to a combination of the economy, Guitar Hero, Rockband and the always popular American Idol (or insert your country HERE Idol).

While the former music industry crumbles into a slow, self-inflicted suicide stabbing of itself, there is an opportunity for independent musicians/bands to form alliances with independent filmmakers. Recently, I read a story in TechDirt about a independent movie production, for a movie called The Graduates, that was going to heed SEC Bad Boy Mark Cuban’s suggestion of giving away soundtracks to movie goers. Being a big fan of both independent movies and indie music (not to mention Mark Cuban), I was really intrigued by the idea of attempting to give away 1,000,000 soundtracks to an independent movie. So I contacted executive producer of The Graduates, Ryan Gielen, for an interview to better understand this process and how it might benefit both independent musicians and movies in the future.
SMMuG: For the bands and musicians who are not familiar with the movie making process, how do Executive Producers find music for their films? Is there a directory, website, association or service that helps movie makers find specific types of music?
Ryan: Many films have music supervisors who seem to have an encyclopedic knowledge of music. They’re like a Cinematographer in a lot of ways- they interpret the story and the tone and the textures and pick out music that expresses those things. On The Graduates we asked bands I already knew and loved, and we put out a call on several websites and blogs for music submissions. The soundtrack is a mix of both.
All told, Matt (my producer/brother) and I received about 10,000 song submissions and whittled that down to 24 songs. I didn’t particularly care where or who the music came from, I just wanted to find the perfect song for a particular scene. There are so many incredible bands looking for exposure that it wasn’t difficult to find those songs.

Ryan Gielen
SMMuG: It’s clear that your Free Soundtrack promotion would be beneficial to the movie, but what are the specific benefits that musicians would receive by participating in your project?
SMMuG: There are some good examples of strong soundtracks drawing attention to a movie, but do you seek out independent bands that have large followings in order benefit from their fan base? If so, how did you determine what kind of following each band might have?
Ryan: For The Graduates, I never looked at the bands’ followings, because the soundtrack is not the product. The film is the product, so I wanted songs that made the film stronger. I don’t think I’ve ever looked at the MySpace friends or whatever bands use to determine their fan base because I’m not a promoter or a booker, I was just looking for pieces that would help this scene or that scene.
SMMuG: What are your plans for marketing and promoting this very unique offer in the markets where your movie will be screened? Do have street teams or what local promotional efforts are you using to raise the awareness for your film? Are any of the bands involved in your promotional efforts? Maybe brief concerts before or after the screening?
Ryan: When our release schedule is in place we’ll work with the bands to schedule the kinds of events you’re describing, but in the meantime we’re doing tons of grassroots outreach- emails, phone calls, blog articles. When we get close to screenings we’ll have our street teams in place along with articles and other local coverage. We’ve gotten pretty good at this- we’ve had 7 or 8 standing room only festival and sneak preview screenings in five different states. I hope we can carry that over into the release, I know we’re working our asses off to make that happen!
SMMuG: Frequently, I’ll purchase soundtracks to movies prior to actually seeing the movie – Mark Mothersbaugh’s musical influence with Wes Anderson movies are a prime example. Watching the movie, the familiar soundtrack increases my appreciation of the movie. Is there any discussion about getting ticket sales up front so that the soundtrack could be in possession of the movie goers prior to the screening?
Ryan: We hope the free soundtrack will have this effect. We’re giving away the soundtrack in order to generate buzz, sure, but most importantly we want people to see the quality and entertainment value of the film. We’re not just competing against $250,000 movies, we’re competing against all movies, so how does a little tiny indie like us get attention, and show off the goods? We think this is a start.
Wall Street Journal Explains the Social Music Success of Bon Iver
January 4, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment

Justin Vernon
Late in December 2008, the WSJ posted an important and useful story about Wisconsinite Justin Vernon and the road from north woods recording obscurity to having record labels chasing him for deals. Beyond a great story for aspiring music artists, there are some excellent resources listed in the article as well including TuneCore.com, CDBaby.com and SonicBids.com others.
The WSJ story concludes with some wisdom about the Internet causing the equivalent of the French Revolution for the old music industry.
Wall Street Journal Article: Musician Finds a Following Online, written by Shelly Banjo & Kelly K. Spors
-pjc





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