Music Licensing Opportunities



Over the last few weeks, I’ve been exploring new ways to generate some cash from the music that I write and record. The good news? There are a lot of ways to generate the money, as I have found. The bad news? It seems like every other artist has discovered the same thing that I have. I’ve found a bunch of websites that claim to “specialize” in what is called song placement or music licensing – places called “pitching houses” (basically just a new name for a music publisher). The problem is that I’m having trouble navigating this over-crowded sea of music speculators.

For lack of a better comparison – actually, no, I think it’s a perfect comparison – the digital music licensing world looks *exactly* like the California gold rush days: everybody is vying for the same territory, the “mining” technology (a content delivery system) is readily available to almost all artists, and the value of the commodity (good, quality music) is fluctuating based on its availability.

So what does this mean for my music and the music that Swiftly Running Records represents? It means that now, more than ever before, I have to rely on personal contacts to exploit song placement opportunities. And the best way to continue to establish those relationships is to be where those decision-makers are – to live where the music supervisors live, eat where they eat, attend the events they attend, invite them over for dinner, take them out for coffee. I know a heck of a lot of them live in L.A., a few in Nashville (I think), and maybe some in NYC(?). But I’m not so sure I’m willing to relocate just so that I can pitch my songs. (Maybe I can get somebody else to do it[?].)

I want to play. I want to perform the music I write. I want to be on stage. I’m just looking for a way to make enough money to keep doing what I love.

Instrumental Record?

I’ve been doing a lot of thinking lately. Always a bad sign. Why? Because it means that you’re not happy, I think. I have a lot of “unfinished” songs sitting in a drawer right now, and I was thinking about the best way to finish the songs. I listened to some of the sketch recordings I made and I came to a conclusion: one way to finish all of these songs is to keep them instrumental. They range the gamut, stylistically, and not all of them even need words to stand – the melodies and instrumentation can hold themselves up as is. So I just might do that. It would be yet another non-Jay Mathes “project” that I’m a part of, but it might be worthwhile, especially considering it might give me more material to pitch to advertisers, TV, movies, and video games. Just a thought. I’ll keep you posted.