| Title: | MUSIC V4 | 
| Notice: | New Noters please read Note 1.*, Mod = someone else | 
| Moderator: | KDX200::COOPER | 
| Created: | Wed Oct 09 1991 | 
| Last Modified: | Tue Mar 12 1996 | 
| Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 | 
| Number of topics: | 762 | 
| Total number of notes: | 18706 | 
         I'm just a little curious... Does anyone in this conference
         have real "personal success story" in the struggle to get a
         record contract on a major label?  I'm about to start the
         "demo-tape shuffle" and I'm looking for some voices of
         experience.
         
         merci,
         
         douglas
         
         ps:  Cross-posted in Music_making
| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 247.1 | NEMAIL::MERCIER | Do you hear the Pig?? | Mon Jun 15 1992 12:59 | 10 | |
|     My band CoNtaGioUs is currently raising some interest with a couple
    of Independent Labels. Ill let you know how it progress's. Do you
    have a lawyer shopping the tape for you?? If not, there are certain
    labels that will accept un-solicited material. IMO I would say that
    packaging is very important.....A&R people see alot of tapes and
    probably dont listen to half of them....make yourself standout above
    the rest
    
    Good Luck!
    Bob
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| 247.2 | is a label required ? | PBST::MUNNS | Thu Aug 06 1992 17:30 | 9 | |
|     Why go with a label ?  You can approach a disc or tape manufacturer
    with $'s and have them stamp out thousands of copies.  I suppose that
    a label can promote your material and handle the supply chain.  Can
    an individual do this alone (provide promotional material and
    CD/cassette to local retailers, ...) ?
    
    The International Buyers Guide, in your public library, has
    names/numbers of manufacturers.  For $3K you can have > 1K discs +
    inserts, at least for all your friends...
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