Tagged with tour

Planning a Summer Tour

So today I finally got motivated and began planning my 2009 Summer Tour *forms hands into devil horns and headbangs*. I am thinking it will be a month long, the entire month of August. I will start in Seattle and travel south to San Diego, couch surfing, hosteling, and camping along the way. Of course, I will bump into my numerous family members along the coast as well. Perhaps I will even get to play a gig with one of those bastards after all these years. It has, after all, been almost two years since Globeytron 3000 graced the stage at the J&S Bean Factory!

YouTube Preview Image
Tagged , , ,

Tour Imminent?

It’s nearing 2 a.m., and I am wrapping up some late night work for my current contract employer.  After a gig at The Clubhouse in San Luis Obispo, a guy from a popular band out there (I can’t remember the name…) told me that I could make more money building websites while touring than the bars would ever pay.  I believe this to be true.

I am getting the touring itch.  I want to do the West Coast again.  Rent a car, drive up and down the coast, stay at some hostels, smell the Pacific Ocean, see avocados on on trees.  That sort of thing.

Since that tour is unlikely to happen until summer, I will be booking a bunch of local shows in January and February and March.  I want to get a bunch of shows in after the new record is finished.  Speaking of the new record, It is totally kicking ass. Ryan came over and recorded some backup vocals today for Colleen and a couple of other songs.

I am missing Bavery’s presence in the Twin Cities.  For those of y’all who don’t know, he is a high-powered MBA who just moved to Chicago.  He is also the co-producer of Faraway Farm (the new record’s title).  His musical insights and interests make my music better.  It’s like a “you had me at hello” thing.  He sits down at the desk, presses the spacebar, and I just know that the music will be better for it.

Tagged , , , , ,

Bringing Online Social Media to My Band

I am reading David Meerman Scott’s “The New Rules of Marketing & PR“, and I am thinking of new ways to market my band, including blogging, podcasting, and press releases. I am already doing all three of these things with little consistency and little measurable results. That is, I am not sure if all my blogging, press releases, YouTube videos, and podcasts are having any impact on my fan base.

For the new Cryns #3 album, Faraway Farm, I am considering releasing all of the tracks with a Creative Commons license, allowing any non-commercial entity to use the tracks as they wish. Plus, I am thinking of doing the same thing with the source tracks, allowing hip-hop groups to sample specific vocal or instrument tracks of the album. It will also allow people to utilize my tracks on YouTube mash-ups and any other sorts of mash-ups or cut-ups that are imaginable.

I am at a point in my life where I just want something to happen with my music. I want to be interviewed. I want people to show up to my concerts. I want to look out at crowds and see people listening and singing along. I want to tour Europe and the West Coast (again).

I also want to use this release as an opportunity to test many of my online social media theories. Mainly my belief that honesty and openness on the web can make this band thing more exciting. Playing in a band is one of those addictions that have few moments of rewards borne of many thousands of hard work. Disappointment is a re-occuring emotion after shows. It’s not anyone’s fault. I have heard all sorts of popular actors and musicians talk about the loneliness of their work, and I am beginning to see what they mean. No matter how popular or famous or rich I get, I still live a normal life with normal people. And when the lights have dimmed, and I have left the stage, it is still just a night out on the town with my super hot girlfriend, who, despite my great efforts to prove the contrary, still does not view me as a hugely popular rock star.

Getting back to the online social media thing, I think that linking up with friends and fans in real time, online, as I am touring, might provide me with a greater sense of satisfaction with my music than has been previously afforded.

Tagged , , ,