Over the weekend, Reuters took a look at the Atlanta-based company DiscRevolt, which allows touring bands to sell digital copies of their record without lugging a computer around on tour:
The company provides artists with customized prepaid cards that fans can redeem for MP3 downloads on its Web site. Here's how it works: Artists buy in bulk a set of cards that they can design with their own custom artwork and text. Each card has a unique redemption code and holds 15 credits. Participating artists then upload their music in MP3 format to their profile on the DiscRevolt site, which can also accommodate a bio, contact info and artwork. Bands can either sell or give away these cards to fans, who use the redemption code to download individual tracks — one credit per track.
Where pressing CDs generally costs on average of $1 per disc — excluding cover art and booklets — DiscRevolt prices range from 100 cards for $99 (99 cents each) to 1,000 cards for $450 (45 cents each). Larger bulk orders can run as low as 25 cents per card.There are no further per-track costs for tracks downloaded from the site. Artists pocket the cash they make by selling the cards individually — typically between $5 and $10. And even kids without a credit card can buy them.
While the piece itself is a little press-releasey (seriously, any sentence that starts "And even..." is straight out of the marketing handbook to our ears), DiscRevolt's model sounds pretty straightforward to us; also, DiscRevolt is currently MP3-only, which at the very least allows for wide compatibility with potential buyers. The only qualm we have about the company's plans, really, is its 15-credits-per-card model—since you can only use those credits to buy music from the artists you got the card from (as well as a few "featured" songs), that setup feels to us like it's just encouraging lots of skit-filled concept albums to be unleashed on the digital world.
Digital riches await savvy indie bands [Reuters]
DiscRevolt [Official site]









Comments
I'm sticking with Personics.
I like Discrevolt. The cards look snazzy as hell. We got some, but I forgot to put the band name on them. Oops.
good idea, but fuck the idea of 15 downloads per card rather than just a single album on a pre-paid card. You either have excess you may not care about if a band has a 12-track album, or it's totally useless with a band who puts out an 18 track album.
I'm all for bands being able to wring a little extra profit out of their albums, but wherever the magical "15 tracks" number came from, it's going to keep me from bothering to pay real money for this stuff.
Well, I think that they are working on these issues and in most cases it means you end up with a few extra downloads. We sell these things at shows for very cheap and people seem to dig it. Good business card, too.
Comment on this post
Reply by EmailLogin with your username and password below. Or comment on this post via email.
Forgot your username or password? New User?