BELMONT UNIVERSITY -CONCERT PROMOTION AND BOOKING

MBU 4830  Spring Semester 2007

Instructor David Herrera

Phone: 460-6908 Cell-419-2954  Office RM 227 MBC

E-mail: herrerad@mail.belmont.edu

MC200A  3:30-615 PM Wed.

Introduction:

This interdisciplinary course is designed to give students the opportunity to work together in a competitive, teamwork situation in the development of, and the promotion/marketing of actual concerts in local venues off campus. The purpose of concert promotion is to give students the maximum exposure of the actual application of the concepts and skills that are involved in the promotion of music concerts reflective of the reading and instructional material presented in class.  During this semester, you will pursue the promotion of concerts at small local venues and on campus. Both semesters will entail the direct application of media development, press coordination, marketing, development-implementation of promotional activities, event set up, and talent acquisition in an lab (actual) environment.

 

Course Description:

        Concert Promotion and Booking (3). Prerequisites: MBU 352 or permission of instructor. A study of the role of the concert promoter and the organization of concert promoting, including contracts, riders, venues, audience projections/demographics, and finance (budgets, corporate sponsorships, gate receipts, etc.).

 

Course Outcomes/Objectives:

  • Gain insight/define and gain practical applications for concert promotion/promotion
  • Understand the process and gain insight into the ongoing study of contemporary issues and problems relating to the concert promotion/touring both as an independent artist and as a buyer recording industry.
  • Understand the fit and relationships within concert promotion/touring and gain experience soliciting venue, talent, and the coordination of promotional activities related to course content.
  • To create an awareness and sense of appreciation for the complexities and politics involved in concert promotion
  • To stimulate the development of professional qualities/time management leading to professional excellence in concert promotion, including: responsibility, dependability, initiative, and respect for self and other team members.
  • To define the component parts of concert promotion (set up / confirmation / execution / settlement) & understand the different factors that affects the responses of promotional effectiveness to audience attendance.
  • To understand the central position of media planning, media buys, publicity, and the organization and purpose of the media plan and buy.
  • To identify the critical elements in soliciting sponsorships as well as the attribute of effective proposal writing.
  • To offer opportunities to engage students and community partners in community service learning though engagement of activity.

Performance Criteria

  • Students will be able to create and apply the component parts needed for the projecting a revenue stream for an activity or concert.
  • Students will be able to forecast, set up, promote, and execute the marketing and settlement of a typical event/concert.
  • Students will apply the professional qualities of time management, leading to professional excellence in project management, project design, and team excellence with respect for self and other team members.
  • Students will understand, evaluate and then apply the operational elements of mounting an actual concert in an external venue.
  • Students will be able to research and create a sponsorship proposal for an activity or event/festival.

 

 

 

 

 

Text and Materials

1) How To Be Your Own Booking Agent, Jeri Goldstein 2nd Ed. Available at Bookstore or online

2) Optional—Performing Musicians should purchase Billboard Musician's Guide 23rd Edition: available online ASAP, Price: $ 15.95 See Billboard .com and click “directories” or try Davis Kidd Bookstore. This is a cheap and useful tool for tour design at the indie level.

3) Additionally, please bookmark http://www.starpolish.com/advice and print and read these sections before discussed in class

Section “Booking Shows and Performance Marketing”

22.        Booking Local / Club Shows

 23.       Case Study: Increasing Club Draw

 24.       Booking College Shows

 25.       Case Study: Booking College Shows Without Using NACA

 26.       College Performance Contract

 27.       Booking Non-Traditional Shows And Events

 28.       Booking Agents and National Touring

 29.       Performance Marketing / Tour Support

4) Christian Music: Tips on promotion of concerts.  Jeff Roberts and Assoc. http://www.jeffroberts.com/NewSite/index.html  (Click on promoter info)

5) Tour management http://starpolish.com/advice/print.asp?id=92 

6) Additional supplementary material (contracts-agreements-spreadsheets) will be provided as at campus.belmont.edu/herrerad   Please check frequently for updates

 

COURSE PROCEDURES AND POLICIES

  1. Attendance: Attendance as presented in the current Belmont University Catalog. Officially, if you miss more than four classes you can be involuntarily dropped. Due to timeliness of class, attendance is expected—especially if teams are meeting.  Occasionally class will be cancelled for team preparation/activity/projects. Check web site for notice. 
  2. Prepared Assignments/class projects: The student will be given written assignments and projects to complete weekly and throughout the semester.
  3. Class Notes: All exams/Quizzes/work assignments will be derived from material presented in class and readings, so it is expected that notes will be kept and reviewed periodically. You will be asked to read assigned readings before class, as well as keep a log or notebook for projects for inclusion in status report.  
  4. Exams and Quizzes: In addition to mid-term and final exams, quizzes will be given at the discretion of the instructor along with work to be completed outside the classroom.  Quizzes will reflect readings, and all materials presented. No test or quiz will be “made up.,” Excused absence per official University Function of activity with a note from Provost. Excessive unexcused absenteeism will result in a reduction of the course grade at the instructor’s discretion—with warning to student prior to action. Guest Speakers may be used, and students are responsible for all material presented in class from lecture, readings, and guests for testing purposes. If you want to receive a respectable grade in this class, you will need to make it a point to be present for every session.

Grading:

20% Assignments and weekly status reports

20% Quizzes/Tests

25% On Campus Concert Projects—Small Teams (Curb Café & Latin Street Fair)

25% Off Campus Project (Final Event Implementation)

10% Final Exam

Assignments: Projects will survey various application driven assignments and presentations.  Assignments will incorporate the following from reading/class materials and implement into actual projects due for outside class concerts:

1.       Weekly Status report from team for team project

2.       Offer Sheet-talent acquisition

3.       Offer Confirmation-documentation of deal points for both venue and artist

4.       Contract Budget / Settlement Sheet-projection of expenses

5.       Performance Contract: confirmation document negotiated with Artist-

6.       Tech/Hospitality Rider (as needed)

7.       Expense Sheet: Projection for complete Show/venue of students choice

8.       Production timeline” Load in / Load Out specifications: applied to Artist (Fall); Artist/Vendors (Spring).

9.       Marketing plan/timeline and cost sheet (design of promotional activities off campus)

10.   Creative design of artwork/posters

 

Projects

Curb Café and Class Concert Activities:

            Off campus—local venues: Small teams will be formed for the set up/booking/promotion and settlement of actual concerts in local venues. Details will be delivered in class. All class members are expected to attend each others concerts—as well as assist in street level promotions. Grading will be split between the set up/promotion of the event and the execution of the event (2-3 events). 

            On Campus--Curb Café:

Class will be responsible to design, market, and promote a series of event at the Curb Café for the general student population as well as external audience. Events are design to be implemented on every Friday beginning in March 16-April 27, 2007. This will teams and class design of promotional concepts, solicitation, talent buying, confirmation, load in/load out, and general execution of the artists and all promotional activities. A small budget will be utilized for these events to be discussed in class. Acts will be proposed and set up on approval by Instructor and the CEMB.

 

Latin Street Fair: Class will be directly involved in the set up of the Nashville Latin Music Street Festival to be held Saturday May 5th, from 8AM-6PM at Belmont University. Group teams will be distributed and managed by students’ team leaders with firm responsibilities and assignments. Class time will be utilized for this activity, but may need “outside time” in group setting.

 

In general for all activities, students will need to form groups that will coordinate into activities for the event in relation to the class material such as:

·         Press coordination

·         Development of radio/TV spots

·         Development of activities

·         Solicitation/booking of participants

·         Placement of marketing displays

·         Execution of event

 

Quizzes: Quizzes based on reading assigned and extra-external reading on the web for reflection on activities as the semester progresses. Details to be discussed in class.

 

Accommodation of Disabilities. In compliance with Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act and the Americans with Disabilities Act, Belmont University will provide reasonable accommodation of all medically documented disabilities.  If you have a disability and would like the university to provide reasonable accommodations of the disability during this course, please notify Tammye Tanksley, Director of Counseling & Developmental Support in the Office of the Dean of Students (460-6407) as soon as possible.

 

COURSE TOPICS AND CLASS SCHEDULE

All dates/activities subject to change—The likelihood, at instructors discretion, is to delete activities as I see schedule is burdensome--please be flexible.

 

 

CURB CAFÉ SHOW SCHEDULE SPRING 2007

MBU 4830.01 CONCERT PROMOTION AND BOOKING

 

 

 

Friday

February 23

Submit Materials for Friday March 16

 

Friday

March 2

Submit Materials for Friday March 23

SHOW

Friday

March 9

SPRING BREAK

 

Friday

March 16

Submit Materials for Friday March 30

SHOW

Friday

March 23

Submit Materials for Friday April 13

SHOW

Friday

March 30

Submit Materials for Friday April 20

SHOW

 

Friday

April 6

EASTER BREAK

 

Friday

April 13

Submit Materials for Friday April 27

SHOW

Friday

April 20

 

SHOW

Friday

April 27

 

SHOW