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P2P manifesto

This doesn't howl enough to be a true manifesto in my book. But it does sum up the dilemmas facing those who want to be creating music.

posted by bendy @ 3/24/2005 12:20:00 PM [permanent link]

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Blackstrap continues

We broke up for a while, playing our last gig shortly after the 2004 elections. But here we are, practicing again, looking to play out in summer of 2005.

posted by bendy @ 3/22/2005 11:36:00 PM [permanent link]

Go away again!

said Anonymous, at 3/23/2005  


Speak your name, anonymous....

said bendy, at 3/24/2005  


use your real name, then, mr. bendy

said Anonymous, at 3/24/2005  


This post has been removed by a blog administrator.

said Anonymous, at 5/19/2005  


Blackstrap makes me feel 32 again. I love them.

said Anonymous, at 8/05/2006  


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Blackstrap is a rockpunk band that was formed in 2002 by several disgruntled music fans. Some had played in bands for years, some had never been involved in music.  All of us were upset with the direction the USA was moving. As you can tell, our impact on all that has been overwhelming.

We broke up in 2004, just before releasing a debut EP. We still feel bad about messing up 307 Knox Records like that. We got back together in 2005.  We might drive each other crazy again, so no promises.

We're a band that doesn't have many options as far as money and time and touring and all those other thing that could make a band be your life. The web is the main way we promote ourselves. We figured out we should share what meager knowledge we have obtained.

RESOURCES

or "Promoting Your Music as the Music Industry We Know and Dislike Dies...."

Websites are a lot of work to figure out, and don't work any magic on their own. Most people who view your website are already going to know you exist. Just having a website doesn't mean anyone is going to visit. So don't worry about securing an Internet domain right away.  Stick some music on MySpace, and then participate in sites that might actually drive interested listeners to your music.  Blackstrap gets more hits from our link on ncpunkonline.com than from higher-profile sites where we get lost in the shuffle.

There are advantages to having your own custom built website and domain name, but it's only as useful to the extent that it gets linked to.

Here are some sites that are important and help to get noticed. They aren't all music sites, specifically. Alot of them require participation. But hey, you wanted to be on stage, right?



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