Showing posts with label Kickstarter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kickstarter. Show all posts

Friday, September 28, 2012

Subterranean Kickstarter Blues, Part 1- Korbl Klemecki

EDITOR'S NOTE:  FUCK THIS SHIT

As I write this, the artist has just crowd surfed in roughly a swimming pool sized draping of fabric. She tried to do the same while rehearsing, but the audience was just 18 random college students. Last night, at her concert in Philadelphia, she tried again, but the energy of the crowd must have just not been quite right. Back on stage, she jokes about it, and from that happy moment of “finally, we got it to work,” launches into possibly the saddest song, “The Bedroom Song,” on the new album, “Theatre is Evil,” a song from one lover to another whose distanced themselves as the romance has died, but they continue to share the same bed. The mood whiplash works. This is the second time in the concert they've performed the song. After the first time, she read accounts tweeted from her fans with the prompt “quick, I need this for experiment! tell me in one tweet something sad/bad that happened in your bedroom. (no humor, won’t work) GO#InMyRoom.” As she read, she spoke both into a microphone, and an unexplained phone. Now she plays the audio that she recorded into the mike as she sings and talks, turning an already intense song and moment into a haunting experience of sorrow, loss
and cathartic oneness.

This all started four months and 11 days ago, on April 30, 2012 with a Kickstarter, a crowdfunding site. In the description, Amanda Palmer said “this is my first BIG, LEGIT studio album undertaking since breaking from a major label.” Well, for us, the fans, it started then. She'd already spent four years putting together a new band, the Grand Theft Orchestra, and laying out the songs for the album. She cast up on the web an appeal, or rather, a call to action, exhorting her fans “THIS IS THE FUTURE OF MUSIC-THIS IS HOW WE FUCKING DO IT-WE ARE THE MEDIA” with marker on cardstock in a video where she held up sign cards, channeling Bob Dylan in Subterranean Homesick Blues.

She's just led the crowd in singing Happy Birthday for the bassist, Jherek Bischoff and brought out a cake and champagne for him, as the entire management team joined the band. The office manager just moved, and apparently is now going to be rooming with someone in the crowd. Any other band, that might seem sketchy, but Palmer's fans are almost like a vast family of people who just haven't all met each other yet.

Now someone in the management team is singing Call Me Maybe.

Like I said, it works.

Palmer set a goal of $100,000 to handle all of the production of the album, with a May 30, 2012 deadline. Pledge rewards ranged from a digital copy of the album for $1, to the crazy, random mystery “Summer Mailbox Invasion!” reward for $250, which included special vinyl LPs of the album and surprise gifts on top of the album in digital and CD form, to custom painted turntables for $500 pledgers, all the way up to house parties at the pledgers' houses, art sittings and dinners with the artist, and even what was called the “THE GRAND THEFT MAKEOVER/PHOTOSHOOT FULL BAND
INVASION” where the band would show up with costumes and makeup and wigs and glitter, and party and mess around with the pledger culminating in a photo shoot ($5,000, $10,000 and $10,000 respectively). This reporter, who did pledge what he could, is sad that no one claimed that last one, as he sorely wished he could have. Or one of the turntables, for that matter. What? No I don't have any records, it would have just been amazing.

And amazing is exactly what I would call both this album and the whole journey. Within six days, the Kickstarter had 10,000 backers. More than 4,000 of those backers were in the first day. Collectively, those 4,000 funded the project twice over in that time. On a facebook post asking if anyone could remember how quickly it funded, Palmer replied “I think it was between 3-6 hours…” Because Kickstarters go for the full time allotted, rather than just until they're fully funded, the project went on to raise $1,192,793, or almost 12 times over. Palmer was the first musician to raise over $1 million on Kickstarter.

This project, that started as a hopeful, but unpredictable, dream, may also mark a new era in music. Indie albums get made all the time. This may, however, be the first time that a fan base has come together in such huge support, and funded an album, being sold in digital form for $1, twice over in 24 hours. It helps that, by doing the album independently, Palmer can cut through and forgo paying a lot of the middlemen that a traditional album has to pay. In her Kickstarter video, Palmer states that making the album through a major label was scheduled to cost $500,000 between recording, promotion and distribution. She goes on to say that she's “happy she let label.” She'd “much rather stand here, with Jim, holding up signs to ask you for the money to run [her] business. ...this way,” she continues, she'll “actually see a profit from her music.”

For a long time, the music industry has been a necessary evil for artists. But now, with the internet, things are changing, and musicians can reach all over the world, to connect directly with their fans, to make them feel like they're actually at concerts even when they can't be (at the celebration of the project being funded, Palmer wrote the names of every backer in sharpie on New York Yellow Pages, and filled a giant aquarium with them), to feel like the musician is a friend, or even a member of a weird, strange, hyper-random family, rather than an unapproachable monolith of a being on some stage somewhere, who couldn't care less about an individual fan.

--Korbl Klemecki

EDITOR'S NOTE:  Palmer's use of her Kickstarter funds has naturally attracted some controversy.  I'll be tackling that issue in a forthcoming piece, along with some commentary on my own misadventures as a lightly crowdfunded musician.
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Wednesday, August 3, 2011

"Listen to your friend David J. He's a cool dude."


Well, sometimes you just have to help a brother out. I wouldn't think the august David J would need a Kickstarter to get something off the ground, but this is a brave new world. And he has five days left to do it! Do what? No, not remind anyone of the babe. PUT ON A PLAY, that's what! Here are the details:



KICKSTARTING DAVID J’S BOLD AND CHILLING
NEW TAKE ON THE GRISLY UNSOLVED MURDER
THAT TARNISHED TINSELTOWN AND HAS BAFFLED EXPERTS
FOR OVER SEVENTY YEARS!

Set to Premiere at the Bootleg Theater in Los Angeles on September 8, 2011


The Chanteuse and the Devil’s Muse, a new play with live music written and directed by David J (Bauhaus, Love & Rockets) needs your help.

David J has launched a new Kickstarter campaign to bring his unique and thrilling vision to the stage. With a goal of $5,000, and less than two weeks to make their goal, The Chanteuse and the Devil’s Muse is still in need of just over $2,000. As professionals in the world of fundraising will tell you, there is no donation that is too small. This is a brilliant opportunity to become a part of a saga that has been playing out for over seven decades!

Donation levels begin at $1, which gets your name in the program, and go up to $1000, which will get you a live, in-home performance by David J, Ego Plum and Ysanne Spevack (Los Angeles are only), a signed copy of David’s new CD, a signed limited edition “Songs from the Play”, a signed limited edition 7” single of two songs from the play, your name in the program along with 10 tickets to see the play at the Bootleg Theater and a meet-and-greet with the cast following the show, and ten VIP passes to see the show again in November at the Million Dollar Theater. No donation is too small. Your support would be greatly appreciated.

The Chanteuse and the Devil’s Muse is set to take the stage at the Bootleg Theater in Los Angeles on September 8, 2011 and run through October 1, 2011. In this theatrical staging, the music works as a framework around which another related story is interwoven; that of torch singer, Madi Comfort. Will her police interrogation reveal a dark secret that will finally unlock the mystery of the Black Dahlia murder?

The murder and dismemberment of Elizabeth Short in 1947 has been one of Hollywood’s biggest mysteries. It has been written about in numerous books, dramatized for the big and small screen, and now David J is giving the story his own twist in The Chanteuse and the Devil’s Muse. However, he needs the support of patrons like you to make this play a reality.

The Chanteuse and the Devil’s Muse revisits the ‘Black Dahlia’ song cycle that he originally composed in collaboration with Ego Plum (Ebola Music Orchestra, The Gogol Project) for the independent feature film, ‘The Devil’s Muse’. The play features live music by David J, Ego Plum and Ysanne Spevack (Smashing Pumpkins, English National Opera). The role of Madi Comfort will be played by Daniele Watts (two-time NAACP Award-winner and Ovation Award nominee) and the part of Lieutenant Frank Jemison by Douglas Dickerman. The production also features the internationally acclaimed Butoh performer, Vangeline.

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Donate now by clicking on the link below!

Support David J’s New Play on Kickstarter
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Friday, January 28, 2011

Y La Bamba is making a new record. We need your help!

Hello Dear Readers,

I wanted to let all of you guys know that Y La Bamba (the band that I play bass and sing in) is going to be recording a new full length album in the coming weeks. I totally feel like I am using this blog for my own gain doing this(because I am), but I wanted to let you know that to help fund the album, we jumped on the Kickstarter bandwagon. As with the other kickstarter campaigns, it's not like you are donating you money to get nothing but graditude in return. We gots all sorts of incentives that you get in return for your money donations. Check our Kickstarter page to see them all. Also check out the video our friend Ben Fee (of the Bar Bar Sessions fame) made for us.

-Ben

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