Category: Indie Labels (Page 6 of 6)

Notes From the Orphanage Part 3

When my editor told me he started this bit, I was the happiest person of all. Not only because all CDs come through me first before they are assigned and the pile is as high as a New York skyscraper. But because that means more artists get some kind of coverage. So here’s to you, Mr. Pulling Orphans Off the Pile Man…..

NOTES FROM THE ORPHANAGE

Avi Granite: 5 (Pet Mantis Records)
Old school jazz with dirty horns and distored guitars. I’m going to go out on a limb here and say this is thinking man’s jazz. Or even better, jazz for the stoner in you. But no matter what you call it, guitarist Avi Granite and his band are incredibly talented musicians.

Sam I Am: Whatever’s Got You Down (Hopeless)
A pretty good rock band with pop and punk flavors, but the lead singer sounds like (and I can’t think of any other way to say this) Fred Flintstone. It’s like I keep waiting for him to shout “WIL-MA” in the middle of each song. Seriously, singer Jason Beebout is just too distracting to keep this thing in your CD player for very long.

Dirty on Purpose: Hallelujah Sirens (North Street)
This is the kind of guitar-driven alt-pop that is perfect for kids who want to chill out in college dorms or for radio stations anywhere below 90 on the dial. Some of it is downright depressing, but in a good way. Did I just contradict myself? I think I did. Well, check this album out and see if you disagree.

Mushroomhead: Savior Sorrow (Filthyhands/Megaforce)
This is the kind of stuff that Beavis and Butthead would raise index finger and pinky to. And while it rocks and screams like you would expect from this Cleveland metal band, the songwriting on the album is pretty damn good, too—particularly on “Simple Survival” and “Save Us.”

The Beautiful Girls: Water (Cornerstone RAS)
This is not a band of hot chicks, as you might expect, but rather it’s four dudes who make music that sounds like Jack Johnson mixed with a bit of G. Love & Special Sauce. It’s good stuff too, especially the title track; and lead singer/songwriter Mat McHugh has a compelling voice. Now, someone please pass me the marijuana.

Cute is What We Aim For: The Same Old Blood Rush With a New Touch (Fueled By Ramen)
A pretty good band with some pretty catchy songs if you like the sort of pop/punk in which the lead singer puts a clothes pin on his nose while singing. This is MTV bordering on VH-1. But for the love of God can we please stop with the long band names and long album titles? I mean, does anyone think this is a good band name? Why not call yourselves Sally Looked at Me in English Class and I Think I Got A Two By Four In My Pants?

Kristy Frank: Freedom (Ruffnation)
This is teen pop but with a rock edge, ala Michelle Branch. And what are they putting in the kids’ milk these days? Kristy, a California native who is part Swedish, is only FIFTEEN. And this album is surprisingly catchy and well produced. I smell an MTV darling.

It’s An Indie World

With Sony/BMG and Warner Bros. recently getting hit with payola lawsuits, more music being purchased digitally, and more new artists becoming hip to the fact that they can survive on their own without “borrowing” money from a major label, the music industry is becoming more indie than ever. Distribution companies such as Redeye are allowing independent artists and indie labels the option of using channels that were previously reserved for the majors. And artists are able to sell their own CD’s online and digitally, as well as through traditional touring….and realizing that they can make and KEEP all or most of the proceeds. No more concern about getting dropped or about the spending the next five years paying a major label all the recoupable expense associated with breaking a new band.

And when the war against payola reaches the radio programmers, it could be the end of FM radio as we know it. Which begs the question: will anyone care? I know I won’t. And once again the best artists are the ones who will get noticed.

A band you missed – The Irises

The Irises and their debut album Not Good In Bed would have made the top spot of my Best of 2004 list last year, if the Beastie Boys hadn’t also released To The 5 Boroughs as well. Actually, I would have liked to have listed both albums as best of last year, but wasn’t allowed to, so the edging out occurred. Still, I’d like to key you all in on to this fantastic group, especially those of ye who are into power pop or melodic pop of the three-minute variety. I’m still spinning this disc regularly, and that’s truly saying something after a whole year.

The band is fronted by lead singer Roxanne Heichert. She’s got one of those voices that you can get into instantly, which is great, because the music appeales instantly as well. My fave songs on the album are “Perfect Boyfriend,” “I’m That Fool,” and “Loneliness,” but all the songs here are top notch. The Irises understand the whole less-is-more ethic, too. Ten songs and thirty some-odd minutes. Just like the old days. Hopefully they’ll put a new album out soon that’s just as excellent as the debut, but until then you can check out their official homepage and listen to clips of the songs there. However, this is one of those grooves that definitely should be purchased as well. If you missed ’em, check ’em out now.

Octone Records doing it the right way

New York City-based Octone Records is not your typical indie record label by today’s standards. Launched a little over four years ago, Octone is an independent company that is best known for signing and breaking Maroon 5, one of the hottest acts on the pop charts today.

Maroon 5 is still supporting its debut release, Songs About Jane, and adhering to the label’s philosophy of building a fan base through touring, which they have been doing for five years straight. The band has also been embraced by radio. All of this has resulted in a debut that has gone quadruple platinum nationally, and sold nine million copies worldwide.

And while Octone is a privately funded label, it has a joint venture with the RCA Music Group that can help launch an artist to levels Octone cannot reach with its own marketing efforts. RCA assists with pop radio, video, and international distribution. This kind of arrangement helps the label to compete with the majors.

The biggest key to Octone’s success, however, is general manager David Boxenbaum, who has been with the label since its inception in 2000. Boxenbaum spoke with Bullz-Eye.com about how important it is to have an initial investment.

“You need to have enough working capital to survive until you start selling records,” he says. “Too many indie labels are undercapitalized, so they don’t have the money to realize the full potential of their label or artists. Or even worse, they go broke, not because they have bad artists or are running the label poorly, but because they ran out of money before they can start to generate positive cash flow.”

With nine million records sold, Maroon 5 has given Octone a significant head start on those returns. But that won’t change the way the label or its artists operate. Like any successfully run business, Octone will continue to send its artists on the road and market them the same way.

But how, then, does Octone follow up such a massive inaugural signing and move forward? Basically, it follows the same core principles, and tries to build on them. The label signed Michael Tolcher, another road warrior who is gaining new fans on a daily basis through rigorous touring and a debut release called I Am. Tolcher is charting on Hot AC radio nationwide, tours with pop icon Gavin DeGraw, and has been exposed to national television audiences on shows such as “Jimmy Kimmel Live” and “Last Call with Carson Daly.”

And over the past year, Octone has signed three more artists—clever pop/rock band As Fas As, from Portland, Maine, whose singer Spencer Albee says “sounds like a peanut butter and jelly sandwich tastes”; Flyleaf, an intense and heartfelt alternative band based in Dallas; and Minneapolis based piano-driven rockers Dropping Daylight. All of them have two common denominators—strong songs, and an affinity for the road.

Boxenbaum says that a band’s live show is the most important aspect. “Touring and live shows are the only way you build a core fan base,” he says. “Radio sells records but isn’t a good medium to find dedicated music fans that stick by an artist.”

And while many labels are looking for the next Pearl Jam or Radiohead, Octone is just looking for an artist that has something compelling to offer musically. Of course, that music also has to be something that will work on radio. “Without radio or MTV,” says Boxenbaum, “you usually have a limited sales ceiling.”

The label also prides itself on signing fewer artists than other labels, but being able to “super serve” those artists one at a time, as Boxenbaum claims. This, along with the other beliefs of the label, has made Octone an easy choice for artists looking for representation. “After talking to many labels, Octone’s ideas about how to break a band are fantastic,” says Sebastian Davin of Dropping Daylight. “They made us feel assured we would be given all the efforts they had to give.”

Lacey Mosley of Flyleaf agrees. “All they had to say was everything we could ever want in a label,” she says. Not surprisingly, she concurs that the next step for Flyleaf is “lots of touring and lots of fans, more touring and more fans.” The touring aspect is not something Octone had to sell to any of its artists.

Still, the climate of today’s music industry is extremely volatile. Many of the major labels are merging with each other, and there is an urgency like never before to have immediate gratification. So labels are signing artists based on hit song potential, and if they fail out of the gate, they wind up on the street and out of their contracts faster than ever before. Not so at Octone.

“We need to feel very strongly about an artist,” says Boxenbaum. “We can’t say, ‘Well, I don’t know if this artist is the real deal, but this song could be a hit so let’s give it a shot.’ That approach doesn’t work for us.”

That approach suits the label’s roster just fine. When asked where they see themselves in five years, each artist had a similar response, which involved releasing multiple albums and touring in support of them. Both Albee and Davin used the term “touring our asses off,” but Tolcher probably summed it up best, envisioning himself “on a tour bus, heading to the next show.”

That’s music to Octone’s ears.

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