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Anybody hear of Jango.com and/or jango airplay?

PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 4:09 am
by fisherman bob
I just signed up for jango.com. I can listen to whatever artist I want whenever I want, and they play samples of unknown artists right alongside the famous ones (similar styles, genres). Has anybody ever investigated jango airplay or used that service for their own copywritten recorded songs? I think it's a great concept. I'm possibly looking forward to trying it out after we record our CD. It seems like the fees for repeated internet play of your own material is reasonable, and it could bring in a very wide audience all over the country and world for that matter.

PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 4:32 pm
by Hayden King
they have been contacting me for about a year now but I haven't signed on. I too think it's a great concept and am considering it more as of late.
Good Luck with em Bob!

www.myspace.com/blunderingeye
http://c1.ezfolk.com/bands/6039/index.php
www.myspace.com/445175001
Facebook group/Hayden King

"It is what it is"

PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 8:52 pm
by fisherman bob
Hayden King wrote:they have been contacting me for about a year now but I haven't signed on. I too think it's a great concept and am considering it more as of late.
Good Luck with em Bob!

www.myspace.com/blunderingeye
http://c1.ezfolk.com/bands/6039/index.php
www.myspace.com/445175001
Facebook group/Hayden King

"It is what it is"
The best part of the concept is that your own songs get played along with songs of a similar genre. the part I don't like is that it appears like a pop-up ad, I think a lot of people might get it off their screen before they listen to it. I have no idea if their prices are good or not. In theory it sounds reasonable. I wish there was some way to contact other musicians who have done this and get their feedback. I also didn't read the terms very extensively. I glanced over it briefly. What I read looked okay, but you have to really read the fine print. There is also no way to know how many times per week, per month, etc. when your song might appear. They probably have numbers they could provide you, but I would hope that if you pay for 1,000 plays it doesn't get spread out over three months. The cost is VERY reasonable especially spread over all the band members. We all want airplay of our songs and this is a very interesting concept. Your tunes could be playing all over the world right along artists you emulate. It's very focused marketing, and it could be very successful marketing if done right...

PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 8:55 pm
by philbymon
CDBABY does something sorta similar. They recommend similar sounding acts, anyway.

It does sound like a good idea to me, too. Tnx, bob.

PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 10:29 pm
by ColorsFade
Jangos...

Oh man. That brings back memories. Tork. Tigole. Jangos. Despim. Parv.

I'm sure that just went over everyone's head... but damn...

PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 11:03 pm
by gbheil
Humm video game reference no doubt.

Any how, no Bob, I have not heard of any such service.
The concept sounds interesting. Though I am not too sure about my paying for airtime for my music.
And another good question would be, whom do in emulate?
Sure we could be shuffled into a generic Christian music genre'.
But I hear little if anything on the CR stations even slightly remenescent of our style.

PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 11:04 pm
by fisherman bob
ColorsFade wrote:Jangos...

Oh man. That brings back memories. Tork. Tigole. Jangos. Despim. Parv.

I'm sure that just went over everyone's head... but damn...
It went way over my head. Fill me in on the details..

PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 11:27 pm
by RhythmMan
Um correct me if I'm wrong . . . but it's 'pay to play,' right?

PostPosted: Thu Sep 17, 2009 2:34 am
by ColorsFade
fisherman bob wrote:It went way over my head. Fill me in on the details..


This is going to be a big sidetrack... Enter at your own risk...




Jangos was the name of someone's avatar in an Everquest guild. The guild was called "Legacy of Steel".

Tigole Bitties was their guild leader (transpose the first letter of the first and last name to get in on the joke) and he ran their website: http://www.legacyofsteel.net/oldsite/index-1.htm

Legacy of Steel was one of the most accomplished raiding guilds on any of the Everquest servers. But that wasn't what made them special. There were a lot of great upper-tier, elite raiding guilds with major accomplishments that nobody ever heard of.

What made Legacy of Steel stand out was their web site and how Tigole maintained it. They had a web presence that was unmatched due mainly to the way Tigole ran things.



Now, you have to understand, this was before the advent of blogging; nobody was doing anything like this. And not with the flare that Tigole was doing it.

Tigole had a great sense of humor and it came across in this writing. He was tireless, really, about maintaining that site. He posted loads of screen shots of their exploits and updated it frequently.

He also ranted. And he ranted like it was nobodies business. Since his guild was often the first to experience new content, he was usually the first to see how things were screwed up, and he was relentless about ripping the developers for their foul ups. But he didn't just rip them; he often offered solutions on how things should have been done. And his reputation, the website, all of it, eventually landed him a developer job at Blizzard designing World of Warcraft. Tigole went from being a game player to a designer, and that was pretty cool.

But what was funny - what was sheer comedy gold for those of us reading that website - was the Stalkers, Wannabees, and Unoriginal Bastards.

Stalkers, Wannabees and Unoriginal Bastards were people who stalked Tigole by sending him private "tells" of a funny nature. And while what they said was often funny, what was even more hilarious were the character names they came up with to stalk him. They would create characters with outrageous names, usually puns based on Tigole's name or someone else in the guild (like Jangos), and they would create these characters with these weird names specifically to stalk Tigole.

But the extra-funny part was that Verant, the company that designed Everquest, had a bad-name filter. So the challenge for people was to get past the naming filter. And each time they did, Verant had to tweak the filter some more. So, due to the filter, you had to be extra creative to come up with a name. And people came up with some funny stuff, like this for instance (grabbed from the April 1st, 2001 update):

Tigoledundee tells you, "That's not a knife. THIS is a knife!"


I mean, it was just sh*t like that... it was funny; just simple fun; and it often made my day.

I played Everquest for 5 years and belonged to a raiding guild. And I can't begin to explain to you the skill and the tactics and the strategy that goes into raiding, and I can't begin to explain to you the camaraderie that you can foster in a guild like that. I've really never witnessed anything like it, not even in the military or in a rock band. I've never quite had that kind of experience; it was unique and I still have friends to this day I chat with online that I met in those games.

Legacy of Steel's website was required reading. It was like waiting for Peter King to update his Monday Morning Quarterback. You just waited with baited breath for Tigole or Tork to update that site and smack you with rants and funny sh*t.


Jangos is an uncommon name. So when I read that, well, you can see where my brain immediately went. Funny, stupid stuff that sticks with ya.

PostPosted: Thu Sep 17, 2009 3:01 am
by fisherman bob
RhythmMan wrote:Um correct me if I'm wrong . . . but it's 'pay to play,' right?
Thanks for your responses Alan. It IS pay to play, but hopefully directed at people who might enjoy your music. The key to it IS IT WORTH THE PAY? It's almost impossible to determine that. How would this tie in with our other goals in music? Could this a part of a comprehensive business plan? I need to do some research and then write down actual goals I have for this band. Thanks again ALan for your valuable input as usual...

PostPosted: Fri Sep 18, 2009 12:49 am
by ANGELSSHOTGUN
THANX Alan. Input such as yours is worth MUCH.

PostPosted: Fri Sep 18, 2009 4:28 am
by fisherman bob
I'm liking Jango more and more. I've got a Freddie King station, Junior Wells station, Muddy Waters station, Little Walter station, etc. Aside from the occasional pop-up ad this is a guerilla marketing dream come true. I've been sending inquiries to get some further clarification about putting my own music on jango airplay. I particularly want to find out if I can have my tunes only played locally (Kansas City metro, Kansas or Missouri). I'll let everybody know what I find out. This has some great potential IMO. If nothing else I LOVE tuning in my own Freddie King station (Woohoo! :D )

PostPosted: Fri Sep 18, 2009 4:50 am
by Sir Jamsalot
That IS hilarious. I've never gotten into EQ, but I've been playing WoW for about 3 years now. I'm letting my acct expire so I'm not tempted to waste hours raiding when I could use that time trying to learn my recording software. I can completely relate to the comradery of a guild. I'm in touch with my guild outside of wow.

Thanks for the great background story. Good read.
Chris

ColorsFade wrote:
fisherman bob wrote:It went way over my head. Fill me in on the details..


This is going to be a big sidetrack... Enter at your own risk...




Jangos was the name of someone's avatar in an Everquest guild. The guild was called "Legacy of Steel".

Tigole Bitties was their guild leader (transpose the first letter of the first and last name to get in on the joke) and he ran their website: http://www.legacyofsteel.net/oldsite/index-1.htm

Legacy of Steel was one of the most accomplished raiding guilds on any of the Everquest servers. But that wasn't what made them special. There were a lot of great upper-tier, elite raiding guilds with major accomplishments that nobody ever heard of.

What made Legacy of Steel stand out was their web site and how Tigole maintained it. They had a web presence that was unmatched due mainly to the way Tigole ran things.



Now, you have to understand, this was before the advent of blogging; nobody was doing anything like this. And not with the flare that Tigole was doing it.

Tigole had a great sense of humor and it came across in this writing. He was tireless, really, about maintaining that site. He posted loads of screen shots of their exploits and updated it frequently.

He also ranted. And he ranted like it was nobodies business. Since his guild was often the first to experience new content, he was usually the first to see how things were screwed up, and he was relentless about ripping the developers for their foul ups. But he didn't just rip them; he often offered solutions on how things should have been done. And his reputation, the website, all of it, eventually landed him a developer job at Blizzard designing World of Warcraft. Tigole went from being a game player to a designer, and that was pretty cool.

But what was funny - what was sheer comedy gold for those of us reading that website - was the Stalkers, Wannabees, and Unoriginal Bastards.

Stalkers, Wannabees and Unoriginal Bastards were people who stalked Tigole by sending him private "tells" of a funny nature. And while what they said was often funny, what was even more hilarious were the character names they came up with to stalk him. They would create characters with outrageous names, usually puns based on Tigole's name or someone else in the guild (like Jangos), and they would create these characters with these weird names specifically to stalk Tigole.

But the extra-funny part was that Verant, the company that designed Everquest, had a bad-name filter. So the challenge for people was to get past the naming filter. And each time they did, Verant had to tweak the filter some more. So, due to the filter, you had to be extra creative to come up with a name. And people came up with some funny stuff, like this for instance (grabbed from the April 1st, 2001 update):

Tigoledundee tells you, "That's not a knife. THIS is a knife!"


I mean, it was just sh*t like that... it was funny; just simple fun; and it often made my day.

I played Everquest for 5 years and belonged to a raiding guild. And I can't begin to explain to you the skill and the tactics and the strategy that goes into raiding, and I can't begin to explain to you the camaraderie that you can foster in a guild like that. I've really never witnessed anything like it, not even in the military or in a rock band. I've never quite had that kind of experience; it was unique and I still have friends to this day I chat with online that I met in those games.

Legacy of Steel's website was required reading. It was like waiting for Peter King to update his Monday Morning Quarterback. You just waited with baited breath for Tigole or Tork to update that site and smack you with rants and funny sh*t.


Jangos is an uncommon name. So when I read that, well, you can see where my brain immediately went. Funny, stupid stuff that sticks with ya.