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Industry News News

Calculating Spotify’s Per Stream Payout is Harder Than You Think

The most popular streaming service on the planet has a bad reputation when it comes to paying artists, and the math speaks for itself.

No one denies the need for artists to make a livable wage. If the COVID-19 pandemic has taught us anything, it’s that musicians cannot rely on tour revenue to stay afloat. Fans are often encouraged to buy music because it helps more than streaming, but who amongst us listens to physical media regularly? Opening Spotify on our phone or computer is easy, and more often than not, the easiest method of consumption is the one consumers prefer.

The per stream royalty rate at Spotify is mystery. Visit ten websites claiming to know the exact amount offered to musicians and you’re likely to find ten different answers, each more worrisome than the last. The reason for the confusion is in the math.

Spotify does not pay a flat rate per stream. Major labels and artists in a position to negotiate may get one price, but people using distribution platforms-which accounts for the vast majority of musicians on the platform-get another. The streaming company also factors in the total amount of plays on the platform in a specific timeframe against how many streams an artist receives during that time. So getting 100 plays in Q1 of 2020 could easily prove more or less valuable than 100 plays in Q2.

The two biggest factors, however, are listener type and location? Streams from premium users pay more than streams from listeners using the platform’s ad-supported tier. For example, streams from the United States pay more than streams from India because subscription rates and advertising levels are comparatively higher in the U.S.

Of course, Spotify doesn’t offer data related to the rates in each region or how payouts for streams from premium users compare to payouts from those using the ad-support free tier. Musicians, labels, and industry analysts often say they should, but Spotify has no reason to do so unless forced.

After gaining access to streaming payouts from multiple indie artists over the last six months, we’ve found that Spotify is paying, on average, between $.003 and $.005 (one-third of a penny to one-half of a penny) for each stream. Again, that number is likely higher for artists on major labels and other industry companies who have unique deals with the streaming giant. In some cases, that number could be much smaller. For example, premium subscribers from Indonesia pay roughly $3.51 per month for the service, so streams from that region earn less for musicians than streams from Denmark (where people spend more than $14 per month).

To put that figure into perspective, let’s consider that the minimum wage in the United States is defined at the federal level as being $7.25 an hour, which amounts to an annual salary of $15,080.40 when based on a full-time, 40-hour workweek. With an average payout of $0.004 per stream, solo artists need 3,770,100 Spotify streams to earn that amount. That figure is much higher for groups, especially when you factor in label splits, songwriter payouts, and management cuts.

The question now is what can we do? Streaming is here to stay, and even though growth may be slowing in certain regions, the fact remains that we now live in a digital world of on-demand listening that won’t be reverting to physical media consumption for anything less than an act of God.

Artists wishing for better pay need to band together. Not just on a national level, but internationally as well. The problem with streaming royalties effects musicians from all walks of life in every style of music. Just 10% of artists account for more than 3/4 of the total payouts, which means most creatives are earning next to nothing. That cannot continue, or at least, it should not. But who will be the first to take a stand, and what will make corporations like Spotify listen?

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Haulix Industry News News

Haulix LIVE! Returns Thursday, August 20, with a Free Music PR Panel

The Haulix LIVE! panel series continues this month with an in-depth conversation featuring three of music’s leading publicists.

If there is anything to learn from the age of COVID-19, aside from the need for personal hygiene, it is the importance of connection. Human beings are not meant to live in isolation. We need relationships as much as we need air in our lungs and water in our cups. Friendships are the key to everything, including happiness and success, which explains why these long periods without human interaction are so tricky.

With that in mind, Haulix LIVE! is here to fill a void in the entertainment business. Twice a month, Haulix brings together the greatest minds in music publicity and promotion to share their knowledge with anyone hoping to hear it. These events are 100% free, and they are open to everyone.

Join us on Thursday, August 20, at 2PM EST for a free PR roundtable with special guests Jesea Lee (High Road Publicity), Jon Asher (Asher Media Relations), and Rey Roldan (Reybee Inc). The event will cover the state of music PR today, emerging trends in music publicity, and advice for people hoping to work in the field. Viewers will also have an opportunity to ask our guests questions. Click here to register.

About the panelists:

Jesea Lee, a man who hails from the birthplace of Rock n’ Roll where the river was hot, but the beer is cold, is the co-owner and Head Publicist at High Road Publicity. Lee fell in love with music at a young age, starting his first band before he could even play an instrument. Applying that “dive headfirst” attitude to the business side of music, Lee was hired as a PR intern at Tragic Hero Records which quickly led to him becoming the director of publicity at Tragic Hero, Sun Pedal Recordings, and Revival Recordings. At the beginning of 2015, the newly-formed company High Road Publicity launched with Lee at the helm. Since then, he’s worked with many talented and burgeoning artists, making meaningful impacts to their careers.


Jon Asher, known for being a regular fixture on the Montreal music scene, founded ASHER MEDIA RELATIONS in September 2007 to aid bands and labels in celebrating their headbanging tunes to the world. A musician himself, and a McGill University graduate in public relations, Jon had his epiphany – to help out the struggling artists and help them gain the attention they need to support their music. He has worked with a number of independent and established artists such as Annihilator, Gene Hoglan (Testament, Death, SYL, Fear Factory), Quo Vadis, Fuck The Facts, Striker, Psychostick, Necronomicon, Helion Prime, Hibria, Mutank, Anonymus, Sons of Butcher, Kill Devil Hill ft. Rex Brown (Pantera) + Vinny Appice (DIO, Black Sabbath)), Drum Wars (Vinny Appice vs. Carmine Appice), Nephelium, Ninjaspy, Scythia, All Else Fails, Auroch, Planet Eater, Vesperia, Rockshots Records, Wacken Metal Battle Canada/USA, Armstrong Metal Fest, Loud As Hell MetalFest, Calgary Metalfest, Metalocalypstick Fest, Decimate Metal Fest, Le FestEvil, Obscene Extreme America Fest and many more. He has also guest lectured at McGill University on Music Publicity for the public relations program plus has spoken on panels for Alberta Music (Calgary), Indie Week (Toronto), Noctis Fest (Calgary), Halifax Pop Explosion, and mentoring sessions at SXSW (Austin, TX).  


Rey Roldan is a veteran of the music industry, both as a publicist and journalist at I.R.S. Records, Mammoth Records, Grass / Wind-up Records, Jive /Silvertone/Zomba Recordings, KSA Public Relations and Island Def Jam, for over two decades. He’s also the founder of Reybee, Inc. (est. 2004).  Throughout his career, he has been involved with musicians and artists from practically every facet of the entertainment business including music, film, books, television and plays. He has spearheaded campaigns for artists including Britney Spears, Brooks & Dunn, Duran Duran, director Baz Luhrmann, Backstreet Boys, Sting, Hootie & the Blowfish, Hanson, Dresden Dolls, A Tribe Called Quest, as well as the films Bridget Jones’ Diary, Grammy winner Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, O Brother Where Art Thou? He has also helped launch record labels including Lost Highway, Jive Electro, and Planet Dog. If that’s not enough, he’s also currently a staff writer at American Songwriter Magazine.

Don’t miss your chance to interact with these amazing publicists. Click here to register TODAY!

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Editorials News Recommendations

Haulix Recommends: State Champs Deliver Heart and New Material on ‘Unplugged’

Arriving amidst an avalanche of acoustic EPs and reimaginings, pop-rock favorites State Champs share a collection of mostly new material that fans won’t soon forget. 

State Champs has never quite fit the mold of an alternative band. Too pop for the punk kids and too punk for the pop world; the upstate New York-based group has always found success on their terms. They don’t need radio or Rolling Stone to pay attention because young audiences around the globe are connecting with their music. Their songs speak to the struggle of growing up and navigating relationships in our increasingly complicated world.

If the age of COVID-19 has given us anything worthwhile in music, it’s a seemingly endless supply of unplugged and reimagined releases. Every week it seems that multiple artists are stripping down or otherwise reworking their biggest hits to keep fans engaged while touring remains impossible. It’s smart business because these releases usually cost very little to produce, but so many artists are attempting to cash in that most EPs of the sort are getting lost in the shuffle.

Enter Unplugged, a simple title for a release that is anything but. Rather than giving into tradition and releasing different versions of proven material, the men in State Champs are giving fans four new tracks (and two acoustic reimaginings—just for good measure) that look toward the future. The intimate nature of the recording allows for the group’s talent to shine through. There is no room for production wizardry or inauthentic lyricism. State Champs share who they are and where they want to be, all while delivering big hooks with catchy melodies.

“10 AM,” one of the lead singles from the Unplugged, captures the release’s energy with a mention of wanting something different. The entire affair feels made for summer, with shimmering electronics on top of a driving acoustic line and drums played with brushes. If it were electric, which it seems destined to become, the song would bring crowds together in gang vocals that emphasize every syllable of the chorus. As is, however, it’s a reflective track about learning to love yourself in times when your best isn’t good enough. 

Another track, “Crying Out Loud,” delivers an instantly memorable riff that gives way to piano accompaniment that adds dramatic heft to the affair. Love and longing remain a focus of the lyrics, but the sentiment is different. After years of rejection, anyone in their right mind would begin to question the value of letting others in. Heartache tends to make us numb. That’s how our hearts and brains work to protect us when we feel hurt. State Champs know that feeling all too well, and they’ve lived long enough to understand it’s no way to live. Love is the one thing worth fighting for, even if it doesn’t seem like it right now.

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News

Concerts Are Back! We Investigate The First Socially-Distant Venue [VIDEO]

A new venue in England points to a promising, but different future for live music.

On August 11, a new venue opened in Newcastle, England. The Virgin Money Unity Arena is a 2,500-capacity concert space unlike any other. It’s the world’s first socially-distant venue, and it features 500 concert pods where fans can gather to see their favorite musician perform.

That’s right. People can see live music in large groups again. The performance looks the same as always, with bright lights and loud amplifiers, but the crowd is socially-distancing by design. Some believed such a feat was impossible, or that people wouldn’t be interested, but the Virgin Money Unity Arena’s first show was a total sell-out, and more are happening soon.

Virgin Money Unity Arena has shows planned throughout August and September, but the question remains: What will we do in winter? Countries in the northern hemisphere have two to three months before consumers won’t be willing to stand outside for live music. What happens then? Will more creative venues like the one in Newcastle emerge, or will live music be placed on a seasonal hold? Will people fight for shows, even if science tells us gathering in large groups is bad?

In this Music Biz News update, host James Shotwell discusses the venue and what it may tell us about the future of live music. He also looks ahead and questions whether or not similar spaces will exist when winter inevitably arrives.

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Business Advice Editorials Industry News News

Instagram’s Reels is DOA. Here’s Why TikTok Is Superior

As the world waits to see if the United States follows through with a TikTok ban, Instagram’s competing service Reels feels dead on arrival.

Instagram launched its long-teased Reels feature at the beginning of August. A direct competitor to TikTok, Reels allows users to post 15-second clips set to music and other sounds they share with the global Instagram community. Its release follows the news that President Trump will be banning TikTok in September, but so far, the rollout isn’t taking the world by storm.

On the surface, Reels should be a hit. The feature looks and feels a lot like TikTok, which boasts more than a billion users worldwide. Users can browse through a seemingly endless collection of user-generated content set to catchy and humorous audio that provides a quick escape from the hellscape of 2020. Content creators can also use the sound from other creators’ clips, a tool that helped songs like “Old Town Road” from Lil Nas X go viral on TikTok.

But there is a problem—actually, more than one.

Reels may have the look and feel of TikTok and a large potential user base, but it suffers from being a small part of a much larger platform. To find Reels, users must first open Instagram, navigate to their explore page, and click on the Reels option at the top of the page. That is two more steps than TikTok, and the problems continue from there.

TikTok users have two feeds of content two choose from; one that they curate themselves through follows, and another that is generated by the platform’s algorithm. Reels only offers one feed, and it combines algorithmic predictions with what users want with the people they follow. You cannot follow someone in Reels alone, so any Reels creators someone follows will have photos and videos from those creators appear in the user’s main Instagram feed.

Then there is an issue with the length of Reels clips. TikTok allows users to make their content up to one-minute long, but Reels limits clips to fifteen seconds. That may be enough time to do a quick dance or lip-sync, but it places a seemingly unnecessary cap on creative expression.

Many of Reels’ most significant flaws stem from a core misunderstanding of why people use Instagram as opposed to TikTok. Instagram is a social network people use to give friends, family, and followers a glimpse into their lives. It is, in many ways, a carefully-curated glimpse into someone’s private life (or the life they want you to believe they lead). TikTok, on the other hand, is made with entertainment in mind. Most users don’t share personal content, just memes. It’s about making people laugh or smile or momentarily forget about whatever is bothering them. As the kids say, “it’s not that deep.”

However, all hope is not lost. Reels could become a go-to platform for creatives, but to do so, Instagram and its parent company, Facebook, need to reconsider their goals. What are you trying to accomplish? Do you want to entertain, and if so, how do you make that clear? Give users the ability to curate a Reels-specific following and make it easier to find the app’s feature. Facebook could even take things one step further and make Reels a standalone app for content creation that allows for cross-posting to Facebook and Instagram.

Instagram has built a large part of its business by stealing ideas that other services made famous. Its popular stories feature, which is the most used part of the app, is a variation of a similar tool that Snapchat brought to the public years prior. Similarly, though with less exciting results, IGTV is a variation of YouTube. These features both had their fair share of growing pains, but the longterm value is worth the effort needed to make them right. Reels could be the next ‘borrowed’ idea that hits big, but it’s not there-at least, not yet.

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News

How To Get Ahead And Win Fans In Music Today [VIDEO]

Most musicians are terrible music professionals, but with a few changes, anyone can make strides toward success.

There are great artists making music with the potential to change countless lives that will never be heard by anyone outside of their immediate circle. Is that because the industry doesn’t care about talent or that there are too many talented people trying to get ahead? NO! It’s because many musicians have no idea how to treat their career as a business, which is the only way most get ahead in music today.

For the sake of simplicity, let’s assume you have great songs. You won’t get anywhere without songs people want to hear, so if you’re reading this, I will you are a capable songwriter. You have to believe this as well, but we’ll get to that in a minute.

I spend a lot of time working with musicians who have all the pieces of a great career; they have a specific look, strong branding, memorable songs, and a fierce devotion to their craft. The problem is, those same artists cannot bring those pieces together in a meaningful way. I can’t fix that for them, but I can share the same advice I offer all of them:

You need a PLAN!

Most artists know where they want to go in their careers. They say things like, “We want to headline stadiums,” or “we want a platinum single.” Far fewer artists know how they’re going to reach those goals. Success in music requires planning, and that applies to all facets of your career. It would be best if you had a release plan, a promotional strategy, a social media plan, and a practice plan. What you’re going to do is not enough. You need to know how you’re going to get there, and the step you’ll take along the way. BE SPECIFIC.

Stop making excuses

We make excuses for everything. We want to promote ourselves, but we don’t have a budget. We want to have a cool logo, but we don’t know how to design things. We want to write a great melody, but our previous attempts fell flat.

Excuses are hurdles we put in front of ourselves to justify not working harder to achieve our dreams. They give us a reason to abandon our dreams and settle for less than we truly desire because we convince ourselves our goals are out of reach. That kind of thinking has ruined countless careers, and it will ruin yours too unless you make a change.

Starting today, commit to overcoming excuses. Work with a smaller budget, learn to design, write bad melodies until you find one that works, and do whatever else needs to happen so you can live your best life. Be the person you see yourself becoming rather than someone who gets defeated by walls they build in front of themselves. There is always a solution. It may not look or feel the way you thought it would, but that’s okay. Just keep going.

Focus on the fans that matter

Social numbers aren’t everything. Monthly Spotify Listeners do not determine your value as an artist. I’ve seen musicians with millions of digital followers play to empty rooms, and I’ve watched as complete unknowns sold-out places those so-called stars could never fill.

Digital stats don’t matter unless they translate to actual sales. One-thousand fans buying your album for $10 is worth more than 1,000,000 people streaming your new single and never listening to your music again.

Quality over quantity is key to building an audience. You need to stop worrying about the size of your fanbase and start concerning yourself with engaging your current fans in a meaningful way. Figure out the content your fans want to see, produce it regularly, and keep engaging with them as much as possible. Make them feel as if they’re indispensable to your career, and they will do everything they can to convert others to your fandom.

And above all else: Be yourself

Every notable entertainer today is viewed as being authentic. Their careers are made possible because fans believe they know the artist or group on a personal level. They feel like the talent’s best friend even though they’ve never met.

Being your true self is the only way to get ahead. You might be able to craft a hit song without putting yourself into the lyrics, but the success won’t feel as good or worthwhile if your soul isn’t in the product. You don’t want to end up on stage every night performing material you don’t care about, and your fans don’t want to pay to see that. Give the people the one thing only you can provide: Yourself.

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Industry News News

Chad Nicefield Launches Weekly Songwriting Workshop Series, ‘Hacks’

The greatest minds behind modern rock’s biggest songs are lined up to chat with Chad Nicefield in the coming weeks. Will you be watching?

Chad Nicefield is back. Just months after his band Wilson announced an end to their career, Nicefield has returned to the world of rock with a weekly songwriting series that artists and fans can appreciate. Hacks: How Did You Make That? takes listeners behind the scenes of the industry to show how some of the biggest modern rock hits came together. It’s an unpredictable journey into the strange world of creativity that is both fun and insightful in ways few songwriting workshops ever achieve.

The debut episode of How Did You Make That? premiered this week (August 4) and featured Chad’s former bandmate, songwriter/guitarist Jason Spencer of Wilson, discussing the group’s hit song “Dumptruck,” which has more than 10 million streams on Spotify.

Upcoming episodes include Shinedown’s “How Did You Love” with songwriter Scott Stevens, Sammy Boller’s “Cloak Of Light” with the guitar virtuoso himself, Nickelback’s “For The River” with producer Chris Baseford,producer Steve EvettsMotionless In White’s “Thoughts & Prayers” with songwriter Tom Hane, and many more.

Each installment of this weekly series hosted by Nicefield is limited to 35 participants, offering exclusive access to some of the top songwriters and music producers discussing their creative process. Tickets are priced at $15 and proceeds will be donated to NIVA (National Independent Venue Association) aligned charities established to help artist crew members, music venues and venue staff who have faced serious hardships due to the COVID-19 pandemic. One charity will be chosen by the guest each week.

HACKS: How Did You Make That? takes participants on a live virtual ride alongside the creative mind(s) behind the music and art they love. HACKS… will offer an unparalleled, exclusive look behind the scenes, explaining the making of the hit song featured in each episode.

Nicefield explains, “From the initial spark of creativity all the way through the guts of its birth, we’ll provide a deep look inside the raw materials used to create the art as we walk fans through how it became what the world knows it as today.” Emphasizing the program’s support of the music community, he continues, “Help those who create the music and art we love get the assistance they so desperately need by asking, ‘How Did You Make That?’

During the workshop, audience members will interact with Nicefield and the guest via video and will be able to ask questions during the live stream.

For more details and to purchase tickets for upcoming workshops, visit: https://fundo.area120.com/hacks/#/home

The current list of upcoming episodes for HACKS: How Did You Make That? hosted by Chad Nicefield is as follows:

Tuesday, August 11 – 4:00 PM PT / 7:00 PM ET

Scott Stevens (songwriter) – Shinedown’s “How Did You Love”

Delve into the process of writing Shinedown’s “How Did You Love” with guest Scott Stevens, the hit songwriter responsible for co-writing songs from bands like Shinedown, Halestorm, Highly Suspect and many more.

Tuesday, August 25 – 4:00 PM PT / 7:00 PM ET

Sammy Boller (guitarist / songwriter) – Sammy Boller’s “Cloak Of Light”

This live workshop presentation with guest Sammy Boller, the guitar virtuoso and songwriter known for his solo work and with the band Citizen Zero, explores his guitar playing and writing process on his song “Cloak Of Light.” 

Tuesday, September 1– 4:00 PM PT / 7:00 PM ET Guest to be announced

Tuesday, September 8 – 4:00 PM PT / 7:00 PM ET

Chris Baseford (producer) – Nickelback’s “For The River”

Chris Baseford is a producer for acts like Nickelback, Rob Zombie, Avril Lavigne and many others. He’ll discuss his process of producing Nickelback’s hit “For The River.”  

Tuesday, September 22  – 4:00 PM PT / 7:00 PM ET

Steve Evetts (producer) – song TBA

Producer Steve Evetts will discuss a song to be announced soon. Evetts is known for his work producing bands such as The Dillinger Escape Plan, Every Time I Die, Symphony X, The Cure, Saves The Day, He Is Legend, and Sepultura, among others.

Tuesday, September 29 – 4:00 PM PT / 7:00 PM ET

Tom Hane (songwriter / artist) – Motionless In White’s “Thoughts & Prayers” 

Songwriter Tom Hane has co-written hits from acts like Motionless In White, Love & Death and others. HACKS will be diving deep with Tom into his process in penning Motionless In White’s “Thoughts & Prayers.” Tom is also known for his tenure behind the drum kit with In This Moment during both the Blood & Black Widow record cycles.

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Industry News News

Better Noise teases ‘Sno Babies’ film with trailer, soundtrack highlights

Better Noise is making more than just great music. The company behind the biggest rock bands in the world is about to release one of the year’s most important films.

If the release of our podcast series High Notes did not make it, Haulix believes addiction and recovery are two things that need more attention in 2020. Both inside the entertainment industry and out in the everyday world, people everywhere are struggling with this disease, often in total isolation. Addicts hide their problems from those that love them for a variety of reasons, but with your help we can de-stigmatize talking about addiction and generate understanding for those plagued by addiction.

Better Noise Films, one branch of the Better Noise company, has released the first trailer to Bridget Smith’s feature film SNO BABIES. The film, produced by Allen Kovac, Mike Walsh and Michael Lombardi, stars Katie Kelly (Game of Silence), Paola Andino (Queen of the South), Michael Lombardi (Rescue Me), Evangeline Young (The Good Wife) and Joanne Baron (This Is Us). SNO BABIES will be available on On-Demand & Digital platforms on Tuesday, September 29.

Looks pretty great, right? Sno Babies is the urgent cry for help and understanding that we need right now. It’s a grounded look at a topic most don’t understand delivered in a relatable, non-exploitative way that will shake your soul.

Here’s the description:

A gripping and emotive tale, SNO BABIES depicts the grim realities of addiction and its effects on a middle-class suburban town. Kristen and Hannah are best friends–smart, likable and college-bound– and also addicted to heroin. The pair of seemingly unlikely addicts spiral down a path of destruction, hiding their secret from well-meaning but busy parents behind pink bedrooms and school uniforms SNO BABIES shows how easy it can be to both miss and hide the signs of addiction behind the façade of “good” neighborhoods and pleasantly busy communities.

SNO BABIES is the first feature from Better Noise Films, a new venture from entertainment mogul Allen Kovac. As manager of artists such as Bee Gee’s, Luther Vandross, Blondie, Meatloaf, Motley Crue and The Cranberries, Kovac has put together many TV Documentaries for his artists such as HBO special ‘The Bee Gee’s One Night Only’, MTV VH1 special ‘Mötley Crüe’s Resurrection of Mötley Crüe’, Meat Loaf: In Search of Paradise. Most recently Kovac co-produced Netflix 2018 sensation ‘The Dirt’ based on the life of Mötley Crüe, with 95% audience rating on Rotten Tomatoes, and SNO BABIES is the first of two 2020 releases for Kovac’s Better Noise Films.   

Kovac said, “Studio heads, agents and managers know there is nothing sadder than when an artist or actor you’ve worked with passes away through misadventure. This movie is a wakeup call to the entertainment industry that we can’t lose more Academy Award winners like PrincePhilip Seymour Hoffman, or River Phoenix.”  He continued “With over 70,000 people dying of drug overdoses in 2019 in the USA, this film is a way parents can open up the conversation of drugs with their kids before they go to college, an older brother can share a link to SNO BABIES to his younger brother to watch and say that he’s there to answer any questions afterwards, or for a rehab group to watch together. This is a conversation we need to have in the USA to destigmatize addiction. I have worked with Nikki Sixx of Mötley Crüe and SIXX:AM for 13 years to make this a global conversation to save lives, please join us!“

With the country’s opioid epidemic spiking from COVID factors, and the entertainment industry continuing to lose its people to substance use disorders, Better Noise Entertainment has committed to fighting this problem by collaborating with the Global Recovery Initiatives Foundation (GRI) to raise funds that will strengthen the field of recovery and directly benefit struggling communities. Better Noise Entertainment will use their expertise in content creation, audience connection and creative storytelling to develop and amplify messaging to a wide pop-culture audience. Better Noise Films’ share of profits is being donated to GRI. In addition, all artist royalties from the soundtrack are being donated to GRI with matching contribution by Better Noise Music. The donation will be used to deploy 1,000 Recovery Corps workers into communities to provide peer support and access to services for those in early recovery.

Other entertainment industry companies collaborating on this project to save lives include Live Nation, Ticketmaster, iHeart, Pandora, Sirius among others.

“Pop culture is a key vehicle to breaking stigma and educating the public about both danger and hope,” said Catherine Hartnett, Executive Director of the Global Recovery Initiatives Foundation (GRI). “Young people, especially, resonate with messaging that is cultural and reflects emotional and personal experience.  This movie and its soundtrack convey a message of hope coming from despair and can give a young person who is struggling a sense of hope that they too can get well and thrive.”

“It’s incredibly important to shine a light and lend a helping hand to people that are struggling with substance abuse, especially during these trying times,” said Rick Franks, President of Live Nation North American Touring. “Live Nation is proud to support Better Noise in their commitment to save lives and raise awareness for such an important cause.” 

The official SNO BABIES soundtrack features some of the biggest names in rock music today.  The soundtrack will include two tracks from SIXX:A.M. and will include the Top 10 hits from Country/Rock star Cory Marks (“Outlaws & Outsiders”) and from chart toppers Bad Wolves(“Sober” – the #1 hit) as well as new music from Eva Under Fire, From Ashes to New and Escape The Fate.  

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Industry News News

Watch our EPIC Music PR Panel with The Chain, Scorpion LTD, and Dewar PR

Three of the brightest and most creative publicists in music today spent nearly an hour sharing the secrets to success, and you can watch the whole thing right now, for free.

Here at Haulix, we believe the key to a better music industry is education. We feel everyone should have the opportunity to learn from those with experience in the field of their choosing. Colleges may offer something similar, but the cost is often far too high for many to afford. Books are another alternative, but the information they contain is often out of date within a year or two.

The best way to learn about succeeding in the music business is to speak with successful music professionals. We see Haulix LIVE! as the perfect means to facilitate widespread, cost-effective learning in a time when most (if not all) of us are stuck indoors. It’s your chance to hear how the movers and shakers of today’s entertainment industry do what they do best, and it’s free for anyone with an internet connection.

On Thursday, July 30, at 2PM EST, Haulix held a free PR roundtable with special guests Cait McMahon (Scorpion LTD), Curran Reynolds (The Chain), and Curtis Dewar (Dewar PR). The event will cover the state of music PR today, emerging trends in music publicity, and advice for people hoping to work in the field. Viewers also had an opportunity to ask our guests questions.

About our panelists: For nine years, lead publicist and co-owner of SCORPION Cait McMahon has refused to back down. Starting as a low-key music blogger in college, McMahon graduated with a degree in Communications and International Public Relations which ultimately let her to explore entertainment PR and digital marketing. Although she began with little to no professional advice from a hard-to-permeate industry, giving up has never been a part of her genetic makeup, thus creating a firey and determined industry leader. After meeting Jason Duarté, a longtime music authority from Philadelphia, on a shared job that left them both unfulfilled, the duo hard launched entertainment public relations and digital marketing firm SCORPION LTD in November of 2019. SCORPION has worked on film projects such as blockbuster Knives Out! and Netflix Original Documentary Disclosure, to rock bands like Hinder and LOWBORN with its primary goal of industry disruption.


Based in Brooklyn, New York, Curran Reynolds started his career in 2000 as the head of publicity at Earache Records’ US office, then set out on his own in 2005 to handle PR for some of the most compelling artists in the underground – from metal and hardcore, to noise-rock and post-punk. Clients have included Kayo Dot, Jucifer, Trap Them, Landmine Marathon, Kælan Mikla, The Sword, and many more. He is the founder of Precious Metal, a weekly series of live shows in NYC that ran for seven years (2006-2013) and helped revitalize the city’s metal scene. As a writer, his work has been published in magazines such as VICE, Mass Appeal, High Times, and The Journal. He made albums and toured the world as the drummer for Today Is the Day and Wetnurse, and currently writes, records and performs music under the name Body Stuff. In 2016 he teamed up with Justin Pearson (owner of Three One G Records and member of such bands as The Locust) and graphic designer Brandon Gallagher, to create The Chain, a bicoastal collective handling a range of PR and art services for clients in the music industry.


Canadian publicist Curtis Dewar has been working in the music industry since 2012. Having started as a writer for blogs he started doing freelance PR in 2013. After successfully handling several campaigns, he founded his own PR company Dewar PR in 2014. Since that time he has done PR for a wide range of metal artists including Lindsay Schoolcraft, Bolzer, The Sign Records, Black Bow Records and many others. In addition, he co-hosts the Dumb and Dumbest podcast with Matt Bacon and Keith Chachkes and runs monthly 30 day challenges where he helps aspiring bands increase their social media presence.

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