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#sale music
prince-de-pro · 2 years
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WEBSITES TO SALE MUSIC OR EARN WITHOUT HARDWORKING .
No experience needed,sit back and make a lot.
1-Airbit
Sell beats and music.
Earn Up To $120 Of Free Promo Credit For Each New Seller You Refer.
https://airbit.com/s/PrinceDePro
$120 worth of additional promo credits when they sign up to a yearly Platinum subscription. Plus your friend already receives $100 credit on this subscription, giving them a total of $220 free promo!
2-Unison
Join and Earn a reliable extra income to support your dream of becoming a full-time music producer
Promote high-quality, unique products that have helped over 220,000 producers make their best music
​Tap into the immense $30 million+ marketing power of Unison and use it claim your piece of the pie
50% commission across the board plus 10% lifetime commissions for each referred customer
​​​The top converting offers in the entire music industry – turn the highest percentage of referrals into sales
A variety of products to promote in all genres including over 150 MIDI packs, plug-ins, sample packs, preset packs and more
BECOME AN AFFILIATE
Start Earning As Soon As Today
WHO WE’VE WORKED WITH:
Artist Logos Mobile Updated
Money Bag 1
When You Join The Unison Affiliate Program You’ll Enjoy:
High Commissions
We offer 50% commissions on the initial sale, plus 10% lifetime commissions on anything else your referral purchases in the future. This means the effort you put into getting the first sale can pay off for years to come.
Advanced Tracking.
BECOME AN AFFILIATE
Start Earning As Soon As Today.
Referral link
https://unison.audio/ref/princedeprohowto%2540gmail.com/
Page link
https://unison.audio/ref/princedeprohowto%2540gmail.com/?campaign=Prince%20De%20Pro%2CHow%20To
Product
Millions of assets including Fonts, Themes, Photos & More. All-in-one subscription. Unlimited downloads with an easy license.
Audience
Designers, Developers, Video Professionals, Students & More.
Payout
Up to $120 for eligible annual subscribers, or up to $60 for eligible monthly subscribers.
3-Ditto
Sell your music.
You can earn up to a maximum of $50 in cash with our refer-a-friend scheme. You’ll earn $10 for each of the first 5 friends that successfully sign up for a paid Ditto subscription directly from your unique link.
https://dittomusic.com/en/blog/refer-a-friend-to-ditto-music-and-earn-rewards/?gclid=Cj0KCQjwhY-aBhCUARIsALNIC07PDcqqAqhygqScfemeqNBpx9dOqtCyzVPVOM3I5tFtHBQnjjtk9QAaAvUdEALw_wcB
Virtual sheet music.
Earn a big 30% commission right away.
Start earning money in less than 5 minutes.
https://www.virtualsheetmusic.com/?af=Prince_De_Pro" rel="nofollow">Find Sheet Music plus Audio Files to download instantly at Virtual Sheet Music <SUP>&reg;</SUP></A><!-- End Virtual Sheet Music Code →
4-Musicdiffusion
-The best music distribution Platform Artist and music labels.
-Sell your music on iTunes, Amazon,   Facebook,Beatport and more.
-Keep your 100% rights with no exclusivity.
Page link
https://www.musicdiffusion.com/?ref=1409
Ambassador link
-Earn up to 20% of our future sales by referring your music friends to us!.
https://www.musicdiffusion.com/ambassador-program/
Playgroundses
Distribute you music
Earn through referral program
Link https://www.playgroundsessions.com/?ari=mu
5-TuneCore
Sell your music on Time core or..
Earn cash for every friend who joins TuneCore after clicking your referral link, and pays to distribute music for the first time or signs up for Publishing Administration.
$5 1freind
2-5 friends _$5 each friend.
6-10 friends _$10 each friend.
11-25 friends_$15 each friend.
25+ friends_$25 each friend. 
There’s no limit to the number of friends you can refer
Share your link: 
http://fbuy.me/v/princedeprohowto
Start referring to your friends today!
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moldwood · 5 months
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macklemore showing up as one of the biggest mainstream celebrity voices on this. remember everyone who stayed quiet
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littlemsteee · 1 month
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millenari · 1 month
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fr tho one criticism of Cats that always tickles me is the specific brand of 'its so weird/horny/unsettling/goofy' that implies the critic in question thinks Cats is like that on accident. like i hate to break it to you but the song where they all speak in sync while creepy carnival-esque music plays is intended to unsettle. the abrupt transition from depressing bittersweet songs to high-energy bops is intended to give you whiplash. the rapidfire slinging of random terms that dont make sense is intended to throw you off. the unusually h‌orny undertones are supposed to be, well, unusually h‌orny. why? because
they are cats bro
if the tone/presentation/events seem strange and inhuman its because the cast of characters are, in fact, not human. like,,, Cats presents to its audience a fantastical snapshot of a kind of life that belongs to an animal on the outskirts of human society: a life of violence and community and s‌ex and ritual and utter senselessness, and then people who see it will unironically go 'wow wtf why does this piece of media lie so far outside of my scope of normality. lol 🤣'
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jakeperalta · 7 months
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I just think that selling different album variations so that people have to buy multiple editions to be able to (legally) listen to all the tracks is a blatant cash/sales grab. but then to only announce/make one available at a time so that people can't even make an informed decision about what they are buying is just taking the piss
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atomic-chronoscaph · 3 months
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TGIF
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shiftythrifting · 2 months
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The record is cheating a bit bc it came from a curated second had record/book store but it's still so great I had to share
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beatlesgirl1978 · 6 months
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The Beatles - Beatles for Sale photoshoot was photographed by Robert Freeman in London's Hyde Park, in the autumn of 1964, near the Royal Albert Hall.
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They're here, they're queer, they're Jellicles!!!! They're on stickers, magnets, and pins *bicep emoji* *weed emoji*
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neitherabaron · 25 days
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Day 1 - Up the Sides and Down the Middle
September's here and so is the first fiddle tune!
You can listen and download the track (and all the other ones coming out this month) for free, here:
I'm doing 30 of these, one a day, for Refugee Action! It's gonna be a lot of work but I can't wait - I'm so happy to be on this journey.
If you like the music, you can sponsor me below and help out Refugee Action:
Refugee Action provide expert advice to those struggling with the UK's unfair and purposely convoluted asylum system, and support people with refugee status settle into their homes and communities.
If you could help out even a little, it would mean a whole lot! Thank you!
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Pinback Buttons just for you. 6 bucks for 6 pins. Promo code TUMBLR for 15% off.
Cartoons, Movies, TV Shows, Horror Movies, Music, Pokemon, Comic Books
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Pick and choose and make your own 6 pack.
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ganonfan1995 · 1 year
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the healing power of "panasonic blu-ray 99 dooollars."
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faetae2014 · 10 months
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Shakira 🔥
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dreamings-free · 4 months
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It's not just the Black Keys. Why are so many big tours selling poorly? Stereogum | June 11, 2024 | by Zach Schonfeld
long (and US focused) but still quite interesting article on the current state of concert touring, why tours are getting cancelled or downsized, and what's up with ticket pricing. (my selected excerpts/highlights under the cut)
[excerpt, all highlights mine]
[Eric Renner Brown, a senior editor at Billboard] adds, “I do think [The Black Keys] are an artist that can fill those rooms still. I think the demand is there in terms of people who want to see Black Keys. But perhaps at that price point, the demand was not there.”
Ostensibly, agents and promoters should have access to data that can give them a better sense of demand. But they often place outsized importance on raw streaming numbers.
“The data is very confusing,” says the anonymous booking agent. “There’s a lot of passive listeners for data. You can have millions upon millions of streams, but that doesn’t mean it’s gonna turn into tickets. The opposite is, there are some artists who don’t have many streams at all and they can sell like 2,000, 3,000 tickets.”
[..]
It’s worth noting that the Black Keys have released four albums since returning from hiatus in 2019, and toured arenas as recently as 2022. This may be a case of oversaturating the market.
The band’s 2019 and 2022 arena runs weren’t exactly sold out. In between, the band left their longtime manager in 2021, signing with Irving Azoff and Steve Moir at Full Stop Management. Some sources speculate that Azoff, a former CEO of Ticketmaster, may have encouraged ambitious touring plans. On Thursday, Billboard reported that the group has now parted ways with Azoff and Moir. (The management company did not respond to a request for comment.)
“Essentially, you have some very big managers that are out of touch with the granular finesse and nuance of ticketing,” says another anonymous booking agent. “And they have these large expectations and they tell their agents what they want. And the agents are probably texting each other on the side, going, ‘This man is out of his fucking mind.’ But they do it anyway because, in the case of Black Keys, they’re not gonna challenge Irving Azoff.”
[..]
One contributing factor to instability in the touring industry is the rising cost of… well, everything. It’s part of why ticket prices are so high; it’s also part of the reason some acts are backing out of touring commitments.
Bands at all levels have been sounding the alarm about this for years. In 2022, for instance, Animal Collective canceled European tour dates and explained, “We simply could not make a budget for this tour that did not lose money even if everything went as well as it could.”
Industry insiders say that’s not uncommon. “Everything is ridiculously expensive,” says a tour manager who works with major acts and asked not to be named. “There’s not enough gear for everyone to share, so the vendors are having to pay high amounts for equipment. A single bus for a six-week tour can cost $100,000. Multiple that by multiple buses, and then trucks, and then crews are at a minimum, so they’re getting top rate right now because there’s not enough crews.”
COVID, of course, exacerbated this crunch. “What happened after the pandemic is, everyone was ready to tour at once,” the tour manager says. “There’s not enough gear to cover all of that. A lot of bands have had to cancel tours because they don’t have gear or they couldn’t afford the gear,” the tour manager continued. “I was on a tour with somebody last year where we had to book a private jet because there were no buses available. For the first week of the tour, we had to charter planes.”
Acts are thus incentivized to book bigger venues to recoup the costs of touring. The catch-22 is that bigger venues necessitate more elaborate stage production, which makes for a more expensive tour.
“There’s the expectation to have that production,” says the tour manager. “If people went back to having just two trusses of lights and a P.A. and no frills, it was just about the music, they can afford to tour. But everyone wants to see those flashing lights. Everyone wants to see that video.”
“So much of the economics of these big tours is completely invisible to fans and consumers,” says Kevin Erickson, director of Future of Music Coalition, a nonprofit advocacy group. “You can sell out a tour and come back in the red if there was a cost overrun or a miscalculation.”
For mid-level acts with sizable followings, these frustrations are compounded by a lack of suitable mid-sized venues.
“For a band that maybe has assessed its demand in the market to be in the 8K range or something for capacity, where are they going to go if that sort of venue doesn’t exist?” says Brown. “And if, say, the local theater that seats 3K or 4K can’t accommodate two or three nights, it can only put them for one night on the tour routing. That’s a real concern.”
[..]
At the end of the day, it all comes back to price. The average ticket price for one of the top 100 tours rose from $91.86 to $122.84 between 2019 and 2023. Concerts are too damn expensive, and there’s a growing sense of consumer frustration with shows that cost as much as airline tickets.
-> read the full article here on Stereogum.com
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atomic-chronoscaph · 4 months
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TGIF
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