7 April 2009
Bob Dylan, marketing, Music Links
Dylan's marketing push shows web savvy
First, Dylan offered the track “Beyond Here Lies Nothin’” for free download, while this week he offers Newsweek the chance to host “Feel a Change Comin’ On.” In addition, an interview with Bill Flanagan, the first two parts of which were posted on Dylan’s web site, now moves to Newsweek.com, where the third installment is now posted. Who could have predicted in 1993 when the Internet began to take off that newspapers would be cast aside in favor of reading on tiny TV screens and an artist busy recording covers of old tunes would be used to draw eyeballs to that new format?
But the marketing doesn’t stop there. In a nod to past promotions that allowed you to put your own text on Dylan’s cue cards in the video for “Subterranean Homesick Blues,” a promotion for “Beyond Here Lies Nothin’” allows users to create a “lyrical portrait video” that includes their own text and colors that reflect their mood. Here’s mine.
That’s a lot of cutting-edge promo for a 67-year-old folksinger. Will it matter? Well, Dylan had his first No. 1 album in 30 years with Modern Times, so anything is possible. His target demographic is certainly of the CD-buying, rather than MP3-downloading type. And early reviews are positive.
Posted by John Kenyon
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18 August 2008
marketing, McSweeney's, Music Links
AC/DC fact and fiction
AC/DC has announced the title and tracklisting for it’s forthcoming album. This wouldn’t normally be news here at TIRBD, but in this case, I’ll make a self-serving exception. Back in 2002, inspired by what I’m not sure, I wrote a little humor piece called “AC/DC: The Board Meeting.” It envisioned AC/DC as a corporation where album and song titles were generated by a board comprised of band members. I found the juxtaposition funny, and so did the folks at McSweeney’s who posted it here. Flash forward six years, and AC/DC has finalized its first album, Black Ice, since that piece was written. I’m somewhat saddened to say that I came up with a goose egg in terms of my title predictions, but seeing what they actually chose makes me realize I was closer than I’d comfortably expect. A little quiz – which is mine, and which is AC/DC’s?
1. Rock ‘n Roll Train
2. Put Your Glove on My Love
3. Wired for Rock
4. Smash ‘n Grab
Wasn’t easy, was it? The real titles were 1 and 4, mine were 2 and 3. I’d trade a songwriting credit for the rights to any of my titles should the members of AC/DC find themselves with cliche block in the future. It might be worth it to me. The band has an exclusive deal to sell its album through Wal-Mart stores, with the surprising blessing of its label, Columbia. The times they are a-changin’.
Posted by John Kenyon
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