Home > Company Startup, Digital Music > Music Balloon gets ready to launch Jan 2010

Music Balloon gets ready to launch Jan 2010

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Musicians, fans and friends,

The idea of Music Balloon was born one evening in April 2009 when Steve and I were throwing around business ideas in the pub after work. We were excited about music and the changes happening in the industry. We could see that more people than ever were enjoying music but the industry itself was loosing touch with the musicians and their fans.  We had an idea for a business that would do two things: put the fun back into discovering new music and look at the industry from the artists’ and fans’ perspective. We did our market research and off the back of that we both quit our jobs in Summer 2009 to go commando – we were actually going to start Music Balloon.

It’s been a crazy few months and from where we stand now, we are set for a beta launch in January 2010. We wanted to start a blog to keep people updated about what’s going on pre-launch in the Music Balloon world, share our controversial opinions about the music industry and hopefully spark some debate to get people engaged. We’d love you to interact with us by either leaving comments, linking to us from your blogs, contacting us in person or just following us on our journey. Starting from the beginning of November, if you’re an artist you will be able to leave your details on our website and become part of the Music Balloon from the very beginning. It’s a rapidly changing time for digital music at the moment, get involved!

Music Balloon loves unsigned and Indie artists. It’s an online platform for digital music. Some stuff that we offer – the killer 3 or 4 ideas that we came up with that night in the pub – can’t be discussed in detail here because they are our ammo against the big boys. We’ll tell you all about them as we get closer to launch. But the principles and opinions that steer the Music Balloon can be discussed here. There are some industry experts out there who get these principles and opinions and we respect them – for example David Kusek and Gerd Leonhard who wrote The Furture of Music in 2005, Radiohead, Mojo Nixon and co. who continually push the boundaries of how they get their music to their fans and the Featured Artists Coalition – but so many in the industry don’t. Is it right for the music industry at large to make Internet Service Providers’ responsible for illegal file sharing or should the over-protectionist record companies be more innovative with their royalties? Should music be free or should it just not be so damn expensive? The likes of Spotify (Europe), MOG (US) and Google Music (mainly China, for now) have catalysed the record companies into doing something new. That’s great but the digital music evolution has only just begun.

Please join us, follow our journey and leave comments and questions when you feel like it.

Alex and Steve

www.musicballoon.com

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