![]() | All Advertisers |
| |||||||
Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Amatuer Jingle production. | okta | Work in progress / advice requested / Show & Tell / Artist showcase | 3 | 22nd July 2006 07:49 AM |
| local radio station jingle | AlanTide | Work in progress / advice requested / Show & Tell / Artist showcase | 2 | 2nd March 2006 03:16 AM |
| I'm officially in the Jingle business | Kris | The good news channel | 3 | 23rd January 2006 06:34 PM |
| Jingle Jingle | FMNYC | Post Production forum! | 4 | 2nd December 2005 12:10 AM |
| Jingle Producers- Signal path? | Prickstein | Post Production forum! | 10 | 12th September 2005 01:56 AM |
![]() |
| | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Rate Thread | Display Modes |
| | #1 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: US of A
Posts: 1,014
| Music/Jingle Houses Anyone care to share the names of any reputable music/jingle houses that get gigs for tv commercials?
__________________ I only need one more piece of gear... |
| | |
| | #2 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Melbourne, Australia
Posts: 1,834
| Machine Head. One of the best in the US.
__________________ "My voice has a built in extortion box" - recent vocalist I recorded... |
| | |
| | #3 |
| Gear nut Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: LA
Posts: 108
| As there are hundreds, maybe it'd help to know why you're asking? |
| | |
| | #4 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: US of A
Posts: 1,014
| I've written and recorded several pieces of music in different genres that might be good in a commercial. I'm looking for some people to work with to get them pitched. Thanks for your help!
__________________ I only need one more piece of gear... |
| | |
| | #5 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Jun 2002
Posts: 717
| That's not really how the business works. The point of going to a jingle house is to get exactly what you want, either a knock-off of something real that needs to be tailored to all the timing of your video or a very specific idea. A big jingle house will also be able to give you a lot of variations on a theme. A piece all by itself really isn't very useful. The spot starts with video, not music, unless it's starting with a specific pop hit. The music is made to go with the spot. |
| | |
| | #6 | |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: US of A
Posts: 1,014
| Quote:
Thanks for the insight. I guess what I'm asking is for opportunities to write a piece of music (or pitch a piece of existing music) to go with a video for a commercial. Know what I mean? Any companies that you know of that might want to give me a shot? Thanks again...
__________________ I only need one more piece of gear... | |
| | |
| | #7 | |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Jul 2006 Location: So Cal
Posts: 3,838
| Quote:
Go google this for a start: jingle houses Best of luck! Bill | |
| | |
| | #8 |
| Gear nut Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: LA
Posts: 108
| I have to be honest with you, if you're serious about it, you need to be able to write a few pieces and produce and record them within a few hours.... at a moments notice. Whatever you have written/ produced may be very worthy musically, ... but jingles are about speed, and catering to clients who don't know what they want. I'd suggest building a large library. It's not uncommon for individual composer/producers to do 10 versions of a spot, or 10 spots in a week. If you can crank out totally high quality stuff at that pace, that clients like, ... you'll be very busy. |
| | |
| | #9 | |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: 3rd Coast
Posts: 2,026
| Quote:
As for actually getting someone to give you a chance, just send them an email with a link to an MP3 of the track(s) you're referring to. Someone will listen and it might spark some interest. Be prepared for a lot of non-responses though. | |
| | |
| | #10 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: 3rd Coast
Posts: 2,026
| That's good advice. Although speed will be important, the absolute MOST important skill is the ability to interpret requests from clients that will often be vague and may not appear to have anything to do with music. Some clients will be very specific, others will throw out words that don't make any damn sense to you at all. You'd need to cut through all of that and give them a track that makes the visuals come alive. If you can make them realize that your music makes it a much better spot and you can do it with consistency, you're in. There's also the understanding of ad politics but that's a whole other thread. A whole other forum. |
| | |
| | #11 | |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: US of A
Posts: 1,014
| Quote:
Again, any specific places to contact would be greatly appreciated. Happy Holidays!
__________________ I only need one more piece of gear... | |
| | |
| | #12 | |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Aug 2005 Location: undergound railroad
Posts: 6,989
| Quote:
this can be very frustrating. i can tell you from experience. if you're really talented, and motivated, though, i wouldn't NECESSARILY discourage you from trying. but, talking to younger, more excited people who are actually successful IN the business may help to shed some light on the reality for you. find a way to get to those people, but remember it's a very competetive business, so don't be surprised if people are snappy, or unhelpful - after all, they'll view you as potential competition. good luck.
__________________ Sqye (sky) *wired planet new music *CREDITS* link directly above ipod player *wired planet *fallen planet "he who is the author of a war lets loose the whole contagion of hell and opens a vein that bleeds a nation to death" .... Thomas Paine | |
| | |
| | #13 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: US of A
Posts: 1,014
| I'm kinda' getting that impression as there has been only one guy (Led) who has offered any names. Thanks Led! You are obviously very secure in your talent. Anyone else? Best regards...
__________________ I only need one more piece of gear... |
| | |
| | #14 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Jun 2002 Location: Chicago
Posts: 823
| |
| | |
| | #15 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: US of A
Posts: 1,014
| Mike Tholen! Another secure talent willing to help a brother out! I have a question for all: What percentage of the $$ do most music houses take? Thanks again to everyone...
__________________ I only need one more piece of gear... |
| | |
| | #16 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Jun 2002
Posts: 717
| Dude, it's not security. It's as if you started a thread asking what the big studios were and how you'd get a job at one and how much will you make. Or how about this one: I have a band. How do I get signed? Do you know what labels to contact? How much will my deal be? Be real. It's a huge, huge industry with a million versions that you apparently have zero attachment to. You've been given a very honest and up front bunch of answers about how it works, and some very real perspectives. Don't turn it into a pissing contest. Here's a very real response: Jingle houses regularly getting major national spots do not spend time listening to unsolicited demos. Period. I've never, ever seen it happen. Why? First off, they are in major advertising towns that have lots of local talent. Additionally, for all the reasons outlined above, what you put together is nowhere near as important as how you deliver under pressure to what the clients want in many, many kinds of genres of music. They can only know this by seeing you under pressure writing to picture. For this reason, unless they know you and have seen you work, either by cross-pollenation of houses or from working up from within (by far the best path), it doesn't happen by just sending out some music in a demo. |
| | |
| | #17 |
| Gear addict Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: Berlin
Posts: 455
| for me, ive spent years getting my feet in doors of small and big jingle (music production is more pc) houses and personally couldn't see myself "giving up" my sources for work, especially to someone i don't know. some of these places are small and adding another producer in the mix only will decrease my chances of getting paid. sorry but thats that. i think thats why you're not going to get a lot of reponses. you have to do a search yourself. for most, they had to go through a lot of hardwork and BS to get these relationships going. its not a "secure enough with my talent" thing , its the fact that i had to do a lot of work to get into this. as it is now, when i get calls for a gig, i know im competing against tons (10, 20...) of other people. |
| | |
| | #18 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 3,904
| I started "jingle" engineering with Bill Meeks back in the late '70s. He is pretty much regarded as the person who pretty much started the concept of CUSTOM MUSIC for radio advertisements and radio IDs. He started PAMs in the early '50s. www.pams.com Most of the big CUSTOM MUSIC composers/producers got their start by building a demo reel and shopping it to ad agencies. Eventually you get used on a successful campaign and they start to use you. Eventualy you get to be the "go to" guy. Other VERY important items: You are convenient to the agency's location You have a client friendly studio You are the kind of person that the producer wants to hang out with They trust your decisions You can turn out product in a timely manner You can change your product in a timely manner You might be wise to contact a company that sells production music libraries. They will listen to your music and if it is something they need, they'll buy it. How are you paid? Buy out... one time fee. You can also get a "creative fee" if you are part of that process. If you are EXTREMELY lucky you might get points.... don't expect this. Custom music can bring $15k for a composition and the work to make it right. Production music is a different matter and usually brings in between $500.00 $1200.00 per COMPLETED piece. Obviously a fully orchestrated (with real instruments) will bring more than a "rock" style cut. If you really want to get in this business then start worked at or with a studio or company that already does this type of work. Danny Brown |
| | |
| | #19 |
| Gear Head Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: O'Hare Airport Flight Path
Posts: 46
| If you want to get into the "jingle house" scene, move to Chicago. Commercial Music houses tend to spring up where the big marketing and ad agencies are headquartered, and many of the biggest are in Chicago like Frankel and Leo Burnett. Go to this site, http://www.creativedir.com. Browse for a couple hours, as this site is sort of the ad industry contact motherload for the midwest. Thank me later when you're rich from writing the next "Ho Ho Ho, Green Giant" jingle. ![]() |
| | |
| | #20 |
| Gear interested | i'd like to 2nd all the comments of extremely short deadlines. I engineer for a composer who does a lit of jingle work. The deadlines are completely crazy and the descriptions the client gives are terrible "I want something that kind of sounds big and anthemic but maybe dance-y and i need it this afternoon" was one we heard last week for a car dealership. |
| | |
| | #21 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 3,904
| There is way more than writing "music that would sound good for a TV commercial." Can you make it be EXACTLY 59.30? 29.30? There is quite an art involved. DB |
| | |
| | #22 |
| Gear addict Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: Berlin
Posts: 455
| my average deadline would be 48 hours. many time 36 or 24. its crazy. not to mention, your often dealing with people who aren't good at giving musical direction who are dealing with ad people who aren't good at giving musical direction. like most grind work in the music biz, if you love to work on music , this is not the best business to be in. ive seen most people i know in the biz completely stop working on their own music. just jingles, all the time, with crazy deadlines, and dealing with ad/music house people all the time. |
| | |
| | #23 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: US of A
Posts: 1,014
| Thanks Subsonic, Bubba, Josh, Steve & Rob - Rob - Thanks! I'm certainly not trying to turn anything into a pissing contest. Just trying to learn someting here. I thought that was what this forum was for. Sorry to have given you the wrong impression. Subsonic - Thanks for the link. That's the kind of thing I'm looking for. Much appreciated. Steve - I appreciate the underscoring of the short deadlines. It seems like a very challenging undertaking, but very I'm willing to give it a shot. Josh - I understand your position in not wanting to give up your sources. Like I said, this is my first attempt to learn about this, and I do appreciate your sincerity as well as your respectful reply. Danny Brown - Thanks so much for your information. You obviously have quite a bit of expertise in this field. Thanks for understanding my lack of experience. Anyone else care to offer any further guidance? Happy Holidays to you all and I hope you have a very successful 2007...
__________________ I only need one more piece of gear... |
| | |
| | #24 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: May 2005 Location: Albany, New York
Posts: 3,472
| The only advice I've got may seem trivial... "I only need more piece of gear" is your signature... is that supposed to mean something?
__________________ Mountaintop Studios ~the peak of perfection~ Petersburgh NY 12138 mountaintop@taconic.net |
| | |
| | #25 | |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 2,365
| Quote:
well, could be that you are good at writting music but here are few things. as someone pointed out, music or jingle houses dont buy your music. what you looking for is for your music to be in music catalogs or stock music. like "xtreme music" etc. which will have your song as well as a pool of composers in one cd for video editors, music supervisors etc. to be place in film and video and comercials. its usually a publishing company you share 50%/50 if your lucky or a derivation of publiching company. as for jingles and jingles houses , you have to prepare a demo to work in one. not only does your music has to sound profesional quality but it has to be done in less than 5-8 hours. i worked in NYC and call for a comercial where at 11am and for the next day we needed to have 10 demos for one comercial. it was about 5 composers in total, one studio with a SSL and a kickass engineer. studio stays with 60% and the rest was shared among the composers who one the gig. the demos, are about as profesional quality as u can get. its the type of demos you will want to pitch sony to get to produce a cristina agulera almbum or simething. that one gig was for budwieser and they pay 60 grand for the winner and 5000 for the demos. | |
| | |
| | #26 | |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: US of A
Posts: 1,014
| Quote:
It's a repetitive phrase that continues to come out of my mouth every time I try to get approval from the CFO (my wife) every time I want to buy something new... Only meant as a joke. Maybe you've been there?
__________________ I only need one more piece of gear... | |
| | |
| | #27 | |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: US of A
Posts: 1,014
| Quote:
__________________ I only need one more piece of gear... | |
| | |
| | #28 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 2,365
| cool. let me know if u need any other info |
| | |
| | #29 |
| Gear maniac |