I’ve been mis-spelling hustle

I know I’ve been missing posts a lot of days lately.  It’s because I’m too busy running around rather than because I’m so lazy that stuff isn’t getting done.

Tomorrow should be the last batch of Aarktica & Vlor out to our main distribution channels.  So that will be good to have those out already.  Meanwhile I do still have to send out some of the international press & all the radio on them.

Lost Kisses #11 is a couple pages thicker than normal & unfortunately this is giving me trouble on both the paper cutter & stapling fronts.  I need to wrap my mind around what to do about it.

I’ve been doing some more hustle about getting in on Silber music placements on movies.  Waiting for it to happen & hoping there’s a sale by the end of the year to offset other losses (because all the releases are at the end of the year there is no time to recoup on things unfortunately).

Did some research today for finding some more new reviewers & radio stations.  Hopefully things will be getting a sense of a juggernaut with the increase in reviews & radio play coming with the Aarktica & Vlor (as they both have more established brand than the Moodring disc did & it seems to be getting some buzz).

Got all the stuff ready for the Aarktica MySpace campaign.  Should finish it around release date & that will be followed up by the Vlor promo campaign.

Got in the Attrition covers album with a Remora track on it.  Hope to listen to it sooner rather than later.

Signed Remora up on TheSixtyOne & Vlor up on New Band Daily.  We’ll see if either of those actually generates interest.  It’s always hard to tell what’s useful for promoting a band.  Which reminds me, I’ve never successfully been able to log in to Snocap to see if I have money there waiting for me.  I guess I should try it now….

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ultimate mini

So I’ve hinted a little on this before.  Today I finished the scanning & layout & printed the first batch for Ultimate Lost Kisses #11 drawn by Dave Sim (Cerebus).  Hopefully it will be the kind of thing to generate some interest in Lost Kisses.  It’s pretty much the biggest validation I could get on my comics.  Since Will Eisner died I really feel like Sim is the living person with the greatest knowledge of what comics are about & what they can do.

Going to be getting a lot of stuff mailed out of the house tomorrow & it should make things feel a little less messy.

I had a dream where I left my guitar & amp at a show.  It felt real for a moment & I woke up confused.  I think it was because of doing the record fair & not having any equipment.

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minor multi-tasking

So the little label fair thing today was cool.  Not too huge of attendance, not too many sales, but a couple contacts with other labels for co-oping on shipping out new releases to save some cash.  We’ll see if anything comes to fruition.  While I was there I did manage to write 30 letters for press folks, so it feels like I accomplished something.

I talked to Ted Johnson about why compilations don’t work, “You’re asking me to dedicate an hour of my time to figure out which bands I actually like?  I’m just not going to do that.”  So maybe there won’t be a new physical label sampler.  The digital only might be the right route.

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Fire Powers Versus Teeth

Well, I got out my emails to music supervisors for potential collaboration.  I got word back from one who seems pretty interested in portions of the catalog, talked on the phone for the cult of personality sale.  So hopefully something good will come through.

Laid out the first issue of Marked.

Kinda concerned about the record label fair tomorrow.  I feel like it’ll be a waste of time.  But hopefully I’ll be able to bring enough work to take up the time.

Started work on folding up the press releases for Vlor/Aarktica & prepping them for the mailing.  Hopefully the first batch will go out Tuesday. Tons of fun.

Been doing work for the MySpace marketing for Aarktica.  The campaign will probably start in a couple days.  Also going to do some work about changing the Google Adwords stuff for Aarktica.

Hoping to get some more stuff done before sleep.

fiction/dream
He’s alive again.  Or maybe it’s that I’m dead.  Life or death isn’t as relevant or important as the joy of seeing him again.  I go to tell him how happy I am to see him & the confession is clearly a social blunder.  He tells me to get away from him.  I put my hand on his shoulder & he grabs my wrist to remove it.  Where he’s touching me burns.  It doesn’t feel like the burn from friction from squeezing & twisting the skin, but more like there is some mechanism in his bones specifically created to make this burn that’s happening to me now.  That this was his sole purpose in life/death, to burn my right wrist so that the hand would be useless.  I grab his hand to remove it & he tightens his grip so that the burn goes through the flesh & bone  & my hand falls to the ground.  I bite his throat & push him to the ground.  There always is a rivalry with those we love.

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Recent Reviews: Moodring, Hotel Hotel, Northern Valentine

MOODRING: SCARED OF FERRET
you can expect plenty of Silber action over the course of the next few missives. a North Carolina based imprint who we must admit we’ve quietly admired from afar these last few years who have been in touch with us twice during these last few days – once via losing today wherein they kindly sent links to their latest / forthcoming releases (if that is I recall rightly) and also via our my space update page whereupon Brian – chief Silber drew our gaze and ever attentive ear in the general direction of Moodring whose debut release ‘scared of Ferret’ he described with persuasive succinctness as ‘awesome’ before qualifying such high regard with a general description that reads thus -
“other words to describe them are a bit harder to come by. The presence of piano & clarinet give a free post-jazz flavour. Mae Starr’s ghostly vocals sound like the lounge music on a sinking ship. The deep groove jams sink in to form some kind of modern American gamelan sound. The music is raw & infectious & immediate & feels more proto-everything than post-anything”.
So with that we were prepped to expect something we could kiss and whole heartedly recommend without fear of rebuke or humiliation, a little rummage through the labels showcasing my space player offered up for our listening delight ‘into the doom’. We selected. We waited for said track to kick into life. We listened in awe. There was the occasional tapping of foot. A more frequent raising of an eyebrow – the right one in case you’re taking notes. And of course an appreciative nod of the head. I think he’s onto something here we thought to ourselves. ‘into the doom’ is as equally likely to appeal to admirers of Fever Ray as it to Transglobal Underground whilst alternatively likewise bridging the finite gaps between of Neu! / Tangerine Dream and Ariel Kalma / Tubby Hayes. It really is a curiously contagious hybrid of styles, primarily underpinned with a definable krautrock groove enhanced by the mesmerising cosmically voyaging electronic loops. Weaved between a seductively sultry snake charming middle Tibetan like voodoo / arabesque mirage like signature atop of which Mae Starr weaves a demurring and uber sexy love spell that at times has her sounding like some secret love child of Grace Jones. Expect further Silber and of course Moodring action in these pages soon.
~ Mark Barton, Losing Today

Born as a side project of two Oregon guys who play under the Rollerball moniker, after growing to a quartet, Moodring has landed on Silber with their newest album titled SCARED OF FERRET. After a couple of listening, the eleven tracks of the album made me recall the atmospheres of old Kraut rock records. You know, stuff like Amon Duul or the first Kraftwerk but in this case Moodring succeeded into mixing the tribal attitude of the tracks with the space trip mood by using also free jazz influences thanks to the use of piano and clarinet. Tracks like “#9″ or “Shaker tab” are a good example of what I’m saying because of their oblique approach to melody and sounds. Keeping high the level of experimentation the band didn’t compose tunes without sense of melody by producing a drugged mishmash, they approached the track list like a long session were there’s an overwhelming feeling of alienation (psychic kind of) produced with the use of rock language where here and there female vocals lead the dance. Nice one…
~ Maurizio Pustianaz, Chain D.L.K.

Monte & Mae are best known for their work with Rollerball, an outfit that has been bouncing around the underground for nearly a decade and a half. Moodring is where Monte & Mae let their freakier jams reside, which is pretty freaking freaky considering the canon of material produced by the mother ship Rollerball. What started out as a side project for the couple has morphed into a full fledged band. In 2007 Jesse Stevens (OvO & Plants fame) joined the fold; he also acted as recording engineer on this album. Michael Braun Hamilton (Nudge/Momeraths) added some more spice to the secret sauce with his spaced out clarinet-ing & bass burbling. Strabage Hands (a.k.a. Shane “Bunny” De Leon a.k.a. Miss Massive Snowflake) designed the beautiful black & white packaging the CD resides in. Shane was in Rollerball for a good chunk of its existence.
“Scared of Ferret” is an appropriate name for this disc. That animal has always given me the willies. There is something spooky, visceral and feral about Moodring’s music. Moodring creates these great claustrophobic grooves that slither and slide between the cracks in the haunted basement of one’s mind. Mae’s vocal range can go from angelic to demonic (in a good way). Jesse’s drumming give form and forward movement to these spectral druid jams. The drumming allows Monte & Mae to go way out there in their “melting the cheese on the radiator” as Brother JT would say, while Jesse makes sure they keep on trucking. Monte Bass burbles & bleats while Michael adds to space drip-page with his sonic sloshing of his clarinet, much like the role that Shane had when he was in Rollerball.
“Pole Cat Intro” features some ghostly mumblings, keyboard blubbering, percussion clattering and spaced-out flute before seamlessly transitioning to “Rintin Fire.” The basketball percussion, washes of static and Mae’s disembodied vocals creep along the ground like a thick fog on some forsaken wasteland. #9 sounds like it could be a Rollerball outtake, with the gypsy accordion & Mae’s gorgeously delayed vocals. The clarinet gives an eerie eastern European feel to the song. “Shaker Tab” features the sound of a toy keyboard dying with a propulsive house beat; the discordant elements somehow meld into a slightly insane driving, maddening, yet pleasing mix. “The Weasel” is a kraut-rocking jam that features Monte’s stellar space bass grooves and Mae’s back-masked vocals, which seem to collapse in the black hole created by the heavy grooves. My favorite track on the disc by far is Into the Doom. A simple loop slides on down the path and is joined by clarinet, bass & drums. Mae’s vocal are soon too on the march. Another bird-like theremin sound floats above the mix. The song fades out as the parade finally passes.
This album is a great addition to the Moodring catalog. I think the guest performers add depth, space and movement to their other-worldly jams. The music is dense and complex, chilling yet pleasing. This music is perfect for autumnal nights when you want to get your spook on.
~ Dan Cohoon, a=1/f squared

My first contact with this band (a duo at first, now a quartet) that’s been active since 2005. It is basically a side project of the band Rollerball, who does slightly twisted indie rock. On Scared of Ferret, I’m hearing a darker, doom take on Rollerball. Same quality in songwriting, but in an ethereal, ghostly post-jazz guise (Mae Starr’s vocals definitely have a doomed quality). It’s nice but not particularly remarkable, although a second spin could change my mind.
~ François Couture, Monsieur Delire

HOTEL HOTEL: THE SAD SEA
I don’t know if post-rock is or ever was actually a movement or just the natural outgrowth of musical history, and I certainly am not interested in its validity as a genre label; it’s a useful tag to throw on a number of bands from around the world that, while they don’t actually sound alike, have a certain sensibility in common, so I’ll use it out of pure practicality.  You’ve got Godspeed You Black Emperor and related bands in Canada, Mono in Japan, Mogwai in Scotland, Wang Wen in China, and so on — if there’s a post-rock band in India I’d love to hear them.  The Texas band Hotel Hotel are a solid entry into the fray, and their particular take on it includes the simple fact of their instrumentation: two guitars (or guitar and bass), two violins, and drums.  On this, their third release, th
ey are joined by a number of guests of added guitars, keyboards, drums, and viola.  The added players don’t change the bands general sound, however, which frequently takes spacey guitar drones and adds hypnotic violin motifs building from silence to climax over a long slow course.  It’s one of those cases where simplicity is used to great effect, for while the individual parts are not complex, they are combined in ways that work wonders.  For a taste of their sound, Silber Media has a free live EP available for download, and if you like that, this studio work is even better.
~ Jon Davis, Expose

NORTHERN VALENTINE: THE DISTANCE BRINGS US CLOSER
The driving medium of music is time.  Usually compressed to allow the listener easier access to interactions, the higher clock speeds and shorter forms lock into reassuringly predictable patterns.  Northern Valentine join a minority of artists in departing from this formula, taking a longing look at something music is equally well-suited to: suspending our sense of time.  The steady state is an elusive state, but one that sits just over the horizon of the appropriately pelagic region mapped out by The Distance Brings Us Closer.  The five pieces are laconic, discrete layers of processed guitars, keyboards & violins, added for timbral authenticity.  The envelopes are all marshland soft, with virtually no hard attacks occurring anywhere.  “Dies Solis” (“Days of Sun”), followed by the piece “Dimanche” (“Sunday,” implying some relation) typifies the interestingly segregated structures used here, isolating voices according to frequency range & then looping them at uniform but staggered intervals.  The long-delayed, lockstep recurrences produce an odd dilating effect, with details coming in & out of range in the best vertical music tradition.  NV is usually frank about their loops, with few instances of concealment, enrichment, or other sleight of hand, revealing a simplicity that is at times admirable & at others perhaps too familiar in presentation.  The timbral palette is mostly thin, dishwater-colored, & gratefully dissonant in many places, adding some appreciated pathos.  The Distance Brings Us Closer is not perfect, but it does offer glimpses of what in time should become more profound & genuinely enveloping work.
~ K Leimer, Expose

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Working on the Right Things

So sometimes life gets in my way for my getting work done here at Silber.  So it goes.

I got the barcode stickers made for the Aarktica.

I got the blurb stickers done for the Aarktica & Vlor.

Printed out the press releases for Aarktica & Vlor.

I printed out the address labels for the Vlor & Aarktica press mailings.

Did the follow up for the Moodring/Lost Kisses (week 3 of follow up).

Contacted some folks about booking shows for Small Life Form/Slicnaton in November.

Got in the MP7 player, but haven’t loaded on the Silber stuff yet (or tested that it is in working order for that matter).

Spent a long time looking at schematics for building my own pedals & geeking out over the idea.

Went through some channels at Live365 looking for DJs to potentially service.  It looks like in general Live365 is one the way out, but I often am 5-10 years behind the times.

Fooled around with some no input mixing using some of my cheaper equipment.  It’s interesting because it acts totally different on my seventies equipment than things worked on my 4-track & 8-track (maybe because they were recorders?).  The 4-track & 8-track I was running effect out loops back into inputs to get feedback loops that sounded like traditional feedback, but the stuff my cheap mixer seems to be good at making is beat oriented.  Which really makes no sense to me.  The only way I can get it to be more tone oriented is by running the feedback line into a reverb unit.  Maybe somebody with a little more knowledge than me can explain this in a comment below?

Goals for tomorrow include:
Sending out quarterly invoices to distros (& reminder solicitations of new releases to some of them).
Doing paperwork for the new digital store Sideways Through Sound.
Sending promo info to various music supervisors.
Loading an MP3 player for Saturday’s label fair.
Prepping the Aarktica & Vlor for promo to press/radio.
Laying out new mini-comics.

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Goals for the day

Spent half the day contacting bloggers to take down links to free downloads of Silber releases & asking the hosting site to remove the files from DMCA violations.  There’s no real good solve for the situation.  Is it a good sign that a couple hundred people were willing to pay $0.05 on a Russian site for the new Aarktica or a bad sign?

Did the quarterly paperwork for taxes & tomorrow I should get out the royalty checks to artists.  It was a low quarter, but I’m anticipating things swinging up a little from here on out.  We’ll see what happens.

Got some minor site updating done.  More to go of course.

I did the paperwork for geting Vlor & Aarktica set up for digital distribution.  Going to try mail those out tomorrow along with some orders.

Still a lot of emails back & forth about the Moodring getting airplay.  A few stations on the west coast requesting radio sessions, which is awesome.  A few stations asking for radio IDs which is cool as well.

Goals for tomorrow include:
Making the barcode stickers for the Aarktica & putting them on the copies of the disc for the distros.
Sending out quarterly invoices to distros (& reminder solicitations of new releases to some of them).
Making the press/radio blurb stickers for Vlor & Aarktica.
Doing paperwork for the new digital store Sideways Through Sound.
Sending promo info to various music supervisors.

Goals for near future:
Loading an MP3 player for Saturday’s label fair.
Prepping the Aarktica & Vlor for promo to press/radio.
Laying out new mini-comics.
Sending out the next wave of follow up messages for Moodring/Lost Kisses.

Goals for the end of the month:
Collecting some tracks for making a new digital label sampler for free download.
Re-working the Lost Kisses soundtrack into a Small Life Form album.
Figuring out what’s up with the Remora: Mecha album.
Sending out all the Aarktica/Vlor promos.
Printing & assembling new mini-comics.
Making prototype Silberspy action figure.

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Station Thieves, FTC, Out of Print Books, An Interview.

I need to set things that can be completed in an individual day on my to do list so I can feel like something is actually accomplished.

Trying to catch up on my emails & such on the Moodring follow-up.  The Moodring is starting to get some reviews in as well as getting in rotation at a few stations.  By the time I’m caught up it’ll be time to send out the next batch.  A couple of radio stations have their copies of Moodring missing.  That’s one of the problems with college radio, theft is absolutely rampant.  You would think in a day when people routinely download albums & don’t purchase CDs that theft at radio stations would disappear, you’d be wrong.  I mean, downloading songs to listen to without compensating the artist is morally debatable, but taking the physical copy the artist sent to be broadcast on the air to help spread the music is pretty freaking shitty.  So if you are reading this because you’re such a big Silber fan that you stole stuff from a radio station, can you please return it?

The Federal Trade Commission announced today that they will require all bloggers doing reviews to list if they got any swag or free materials when doing a review.  This would include having an item (like say a CD)  for free.  It is aimed at “fake reviewers” who rave about things (mainly technology) for money.  But the implications to personal blogs is interesting.  We’ll see if it’s worked out by December when the law kicks into effect, but as of this time it is supposed to include such intangible things as free movie passes to review a movie.

I got an email from Amazon today that they were not going to be able to obtain my copy of the book collecting the letters between Robert E. Howard & H.P. Lovecraft that I ordered before publication about 7 months ago & it’s already out of print now.  I was supposed to pay $60 for it.  Now there’s one copy of it for sale at Amazon for $1000!  Seriously, what is up with that?

Prіntіng соmраnіеѕ оffеr a range оf services thаt hеlр buѕіnеѕѕеѕ, оrgаnіѕаtіоnѕ аnd іndіvіduаlѕ tо асhіеvе a рrоfеѕѕіоnаl finish whеn it comes tо рrоduсіng рrіntеd mаtеrіаlѕ. Whether this is a ѕmаll print job ѕuсh аѕ producing a handful оf posters tо рrоmоtе аn event оr a large-scale рrіnt саmраіgn featuring lаrgе numbers оf promotional flуеrѕ, printing companies should bе the fіrѕt роrt-оf-саll for anyone looking tо рrоduсе thеѕе іtеmѕ. Print company new york оffеr a рrоfеѕѕіоnаl fіnіѕh tо рrіntіng jоbѕ, but they also hеlр tо mаkе life еаѕіеr and ѕіmрlеr fоr thеіr сlіеntѕ. It can bе difficult tо achieve the реrfесt fіnіѕh оr tо еnѕurе nо mіѕtаkеѕ are mаdе whеn attempting tо саrrу оut a DIY рrіnt job, whісh is why іt іѕ rесоmmеndеd thаt printing іѕ left tо the professionals who ореrаtе рrіntіng соmраnіеѕ. Prіntіng соmраnіеѕ саn оffеr bеѕроkе ѕоlutіоnѕ fоr all kіndѕ of рrіntіng projects аnd they will gеnеrаllу tаіlоr their services tо suit a раrtісulаr budgеt, mеаnіng thеіr clients gеt thе right level of service аt a price that suits them.

There was a deal with getting a song placement in an advertisement that would have probably set Silber up for the next couple of years that fell through today.  I’m kinda bummed about it, but at the same time the possibility gives me a lot of hope that Silber can continue to function despite various problems in the music industry.

Talked with Nic Slaton a bit about the Small Life Form/slicnaton tour as well as the future of the music industry.  We’re both kinda leaning towards music in other medias as the way to get our labels to stay functioning at a level of relevance.  I should have been pushing Silber that way years ago, but I just didn’t know how to do it.  Not that I really know how to now, but I’m a little closer.

So I got asked to do a little interview for I Heart Noise.  I figured I’d go ahead & post in the answers here:
1. When did you start Silber Records and what were some of the obstacles you have encountered (if any)?

I started my music zine (now webzine) QRD in 1994 & that morphed into Silber in 1996 with the first CD I released.  There are always obstacles & they vary with the times.  In 1996 it was hard to find out where to send stuff for reviews & get the word out.  Now it’s easier to get the word out, but there’s a lot more competition for notice.  There’s always been trouble with getting good distribution that actually pays & there probably always will be.  These days of course there’re problems with people thinking music is not valuable & worth paying for, but hopefully that will turn around one day.

2. What do you look for in up coming artists who you would like to sign?

There are three different things I look for & they boil down to business, artistic, & personality.  On the business end there is the question of whether they have an established fan-base & a North American touring presence (because our best distribution is in North America) & if they can help to expand the Silber brand name (being a business is part of being a business).  On the artistic side I don’t even know exactly what the “Silber sound” is, but I know it when I hear it & I want someone that fits in with the label & that Silber can help them to some degree with giving them exposure & what not.  The personality side is huge as well because to some degree anyone that is on Silber to some degree represents me personally & so I don’t want any jerks on the label.  Plus if you had the ability to only work with friends, who wouldn’t?   So there’s a balancing act of who can help me, who I can help, & do we get along & have similar goals in music.  I think the number one thing that impresses me is if someone says they’re contacting me because they’re a fan of a few of the bands that have worked with Silber.

3. Where do you see Silber Records in five years from now?

Hopefully having a slightly higher profile & being more highly respected.  Maybe making most of the money from film placements & being able to give bands money to use to hit the road.  I think ideally there would be two albums released every other month with occasional comps & EPs as well.  But of course I can’t even predict if there will still be a music industry in five years.  Maybe things will have changed that albums come free with t-shirts.

4. Similarly, where do you see music industry in 5 years? What place do you think record labels will have in the music scene?

I think music consumers have been overloaded & drowned with low quality material for the past few years.  Music has gotten cheaper & easier to produce & manufacture & it’s hard to sort out the gems from the shiny bits of plastic.  This is really frustrating to the consumers & the bands that are trying to promote themselves.  So I think the branding associated with certain labels is going to become more important (whether they are releasing things in a physical format or a digital format).  I also think there’s going to be a revival of people going to see live music performed.  Right now there is a problem that people can make an album & book a tour without really being entertainers or even competent musicians for that matter.  Consequently people are not getting good experiences with live music & are not going to clubs as much as they did in say the early 1990s.  It’s just a matter of times before the only clubs left are the ones that do their jobs & get musicians that have a great stage presence & people love to see live & once people get used to seeing that they’ll start to bring their own shows up to that level & more people will start to come to live music.  Of course I could be wrong, the future could be people just making videos of them playing in their own houses.

5. What advice would you give to new artists / young labels?

For Artists:
Listen to music on the radio & figure out why it’s good or bad to you.  Go see bands playing live & figure out what they are doing right & wrong.  Then figure out what you are doing right & wrong & improve it.  Trust that quality will eventually rise to the top with persistence.  Play live as much as you can & pay attention to & interact with your audience as much as you can.  Only release music you’re proud of, there’s already enough bad music available.
For Labels:
You are running a business, so that means you need to get some basic accounting skills or you will not last.  Ask other labels what to do.  Ask your favorite label if they have an internet internship program (we do at Silber & it’s a four tier program that essentially ends with someone handling one of our themed compilation from start to finish (collecting tracks from bands, doing the artwork, writing the press release)).  Build a brand for yourself.  Have a logo that looks good on a t-shirt.  Make friends instead of enemies with everyone you can.  Offer new content (be it actual music or just informational) as often as possible on your website.  Labels like Projekt, Dischord, Young God, & hopefully Silber
are successful in part due to the cult of personality associated with the owner of the label; so figure out a way to build that level of charisma. Realize that you should spend as much on promotion as you do on manufacturing.  Oh, & try to put out good music – because it takes just as much money & work to put out a good album as a bad one.

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Begging (Free MP3 player?) & Business Models

Gotten a lot done in the past couple days.  Sent out the email blasts to DJs (those I currently have in my data base, still working on growing that list).  Sent out the email blast to people who do direct orders about the new stuff available. (Something I think I’ve only done once before, but probably should do every time there’s a release, but it feels a little like begging. I’ve never followed the pusher business model, just a supplier business model.  I don’t want to push music on to people; I want them to natural be attracted to a superior product at an incredibly reasonable price.  But maybe my business model from when I was in middle school doesn’t translate to the digital age.)  Answered a crap ton of emails from various promo folks. Melbourne weekly eastern is one of awesome guide on business model with continuous news updates.

As per the last blog post about illegal downloads, some folks have emailed me suggesting I offer people an opportunity to pay for stuff from the “free” catalog & just make it easier for people to pay for stuff they obtain in channels where Silber doesn’t get paid (used discs, promos, downloads, whatever).  So I added buttons to do that on a bunch of pages.  I guess it will be interesting to see if it really does result in income.  It’s also interesting for that matter how some of the free download things have thousands of downloads while others only get a hundred or so.  I really don’t know exactly how the world works.

While going through & adding those buttons I went through a lot of abandoned portions of the website.  There was a page from 2004 that was built around links to iTunes & things like that.  There was a contact page that I was never able to figure out how to get the form to work.  Of course various old sale pages.  It’s funny to see how out of date certain things are.  But I guess that whenever I go to other labels’ websites they are even worse.

I got in the artwork from Kimberlee Traub for Worms #5.  So I am really getting behind on the comic book work.  I need to still lay out Just A Man #3, Marked #1, & Ultimate Lost Kisses #11.

Hopefully this week will find me catching up on a lot of things, but it’s hard to say exactly what will happen.

Next Saturday I’m going to be at a local label fair & I need to get ready for that.  I was thinking about getting an MP3 player (I don’t own one) & loading the Silber catalog in it for a listening station.  Anyone have an old one they are interested in sending me for free?  Like one that’s 500MB or something & runs on AA batteries would be ideal.

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Boosts & Blasts

So I got the second batch of follow-up for the Moodring done today.  I really wanted to do it yesterday.  For those of you who might one day run promo, I find the six day contact cycle works better than strictly weekly, because some people are more available on particular days & this way you hit everyone on their most available day at least  once in the follow-up process.

Sent out my blast to record stores about the upcoming releases.  About a fourth of the emails had gone bad.  Hopefully they just changed their addresses & are still in business.

Tomorrow should be the end of the three weeks of blasting to potential new Moodring fans.  It’s interesting that I get 5-10 thank you messages from new Moodring fans a day, but no sales boost.

Talked with Sarah June about how to arrange career ideas to actually make money.  Will our ideas work?  Who knows….

I’m already running into problems with illegal downloads of the new releases.  I’m still not sure what to do to combat this.  Does anyone know what’s going on in that regard in Japan?  It seems they’re always a little ahead in technology, so maybe the Japanese labels have something figured out with how to stay in business.

Worked some more on Lost Kisses 12, running into problems making the dialog as accurate as I’d like.  I guess I just need to get the first draft done & worry about the details in later drafts.

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