Here is a little note on yet another fan funding website called Artist Share. Its model differs from those of SellABand or SliceThePie where any band can sign-up and start the funding process right away.
Artist Share is selective: either you’re accepted or you’re not, and the site apparently aims at pretty specific styles of instrumental music like classical and jazz. Another important difference is that fans don’t necessarily obtain shares of the produced album, and therefore don’t perceive royalties from its sales.
Although Artist Share clearly isn’t for everyone, it still offers a nice take on the fan-funding model. In exchange for financial support, the fans are offered access to a more personal and probably more rewarding side of the production – the creative process.
We had already talked about the band Shane Hines and the Trance who had devised a donation plan to get their album funded by offering donors personal attention like guitar lessons, free cooked dinners, house concerts etc (read the story here). Artist Share works a little along those lines. In exchange for donations, fans receive different offers depending on the amount of their donation. Prices start at a couple of bucks and can go up to thousands of dollars with offers ranging from limited edition CD/DVD packages to an invitation to a recording session. The artists really chooses what he wants to throw in the deals.
Lots of offers are about helping the fan get to know his band a little better by making the experience personal. By doing so not only does the artist feel validated but so does his donor-audiences. I think this brings great value to the creative process as the main actors, the bands and their fans, work together for the completion of the project.
What better way to consolidate healthy long-lasting relationships with your fans then by helping them help you. In most cases that’s what they all strive for.




Riseandshine.tv’s daily songwriter / audience music collaboration
Posted in Music 2.0/Networking, tagged ben walker, christmas, comments, ihatemorning, magma lady, mastering media blog, music, musical brainstorm, rise and shine radio, riseandshine.tv, sellaband, song, songwriter, twitter, twitter song, xmas, xmas special on December 18, 2008 | 2 Comments »
Rise and Shine is an internet radio station that has come up with a remarquable concept – hosting a weekly Xmas festival where every morning a songwriter is assisted by hundreds of viewers (via the Mogulus player interface) to compose a track in three hours.
Rise and Shine’s Xams special started yesterday and will be on all week (so until the 24th) airing from 7pm to 10pm GMT, and you can watch it here: http://riseandshine.tv/livestream/
I got note of this today so I stall haven’t watched an episode, but I did read this blog post from the Mastering Media Blog that really got me curious. Apparently there is great synergy between the songwriters and his helper audience as everyone contributes their two cents to the making of the song.
Yesterday’s song was orchestrated by the now infamous Ben Walker (music 2.0 activist who wrote the Twitter Song and who hosts ihatemorning.com). It’s called Magma Lady and it’s really good. Check it out.
Magma Lady:
This really could lead to new composition methods. There has been tons of online music collaboration websites that have popped out of nowhere this past year. Although we still can’t tell if these startups will be successful on the long haul, the whole tech savvy home-studio generation is ripe for the online experience of music creation.
Rise and Shine’s concept of music collab is ingenious because it doesn’t only focus on musicians – it focuses on a community trying to actively help musicians write music. It’s a musical brainstorm where everybody is invited. It’s a sort of game both parties are happy to play. Ben Walker already has his online fan base so his image is established. Imagining all those people helping him out to write a song reflects the level of validation he’s earned.
Would be very cool to have that concept implemented in a sort of forum-like website where musicians could create their own threads/channels allowing anyone to come in and contribute. Would be a fun solution when you’re in lack of inspiration.
When I first heard of fan-funding sites like Sellaband, I was thinking ‘man, why didn’t I think of that’.Well there are other ways for fans to help bands out other than revenue and promotion-wise, and Rise and Shine is a perfect example.
(follow them on twitter – @riseandshinetv)
Woof.
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