Reflecting on BumRushTheCharts.com
It’s a little more than a month since Bum Rush the Charts (BRtC) was the talk of new media and the post-event results were published (The results are in!). This must mean I’m a week late to do my post-BRtC anaysis (see pre-analysis at An academic look at BumRushTheCharts.com).
The BRtC tagline reads:
On March 22nd, 2007 we are going to strike fear into the hearts of the music industry and make an independent music artist #1 on iTunes.
This sounds like a measurable mission statement. The question becomes, did BRtC achieve its goal? I don’t believe it’s as simple as that. If you dig deeper into the site, BRtC had many goals that spawned as the movement took shape. So, I’m going to park the mission statement for a few minutes to look at the the effort more holistically.
CHARTING THE SONG
To achieve any semblance of success, BRtC needed to put Black Lab’s song Mine Again on the iTunes Rock charts. Given the mainstays (e.g. Queen, U2, Nickelback…), this is a tough category to crack particularly since, and I’m guessing here, the charting algorithms must have some sort of half-life calculation that ensures “lifers” carry more weight than the “flash-in-the-pan” artists.
And chart they did. Mine Again had impressive peaks around the globe. Small markets such as The Netherlands were particularly kind, pushing the track to #2. Some of the largest markets including the U.S., Canada, the U.K. and Australia put BlackLab in the #11, #10, #71 and #35 positions, respectively. If that’s not impressive enough, consider that Mine Again charted in the overall top 100 in several markets including The Netherlands (#15) and Canada (#33), and squeaked in to the Swedish (#98) and U.S. (#99) overall top 100.
BRtC reports “Just getting onto the charts is pretty huge.” I agree. BRtC did more than just crack the charts and that’s worth noting.
Their post continues with “Note that there are record companies out there that can’t do what we did on the 24th.” I wonder how many record companies have actually tried or even considered to flood iTunes.
RECOGNITION BY THE MEDIA
BRtC reports that it received coverage in the Washington Post, BBC, San Jose Mercury, Billboard, Spin, CBC, Businessweek and others. I find it odd (and I know that I am guilty of this as well) that social-media-types still consider recognition by external parties such as mainstream media a significant measure of success. Old habits die hard, I suppose. For all of their apparent attention, BRtC went largely unnoticed. Keep reading.
BENEFICIARIES
Along the way, Black Lab decided to donate a portion of the revenue from BRtC to a college music scholarship fund. Another win and may have helped to attract some of the media attention I just mentioned.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED?
Armed with the background information, let’s revisit the original mission statement.
“strike fear into the hearts of the music industry” — I checked in with a few people in the music industry including Miles Copeland (former manager of The Police) and Adam Smith (manager of Barenaked Ladies). Neither had heard of BRtC prior to my contacting them. During my follow-up, I learned that the music industry never even noticed BRtC, partly because iTunes is not yet considered a measure of success in the industry. Mostly, though, a single band making a chart appearance for “a few hours” doesn’t present any particular risk to the economics or balance of the music industry. You see, half-life, even quarter-life, staying power carries more weight than a freight train rushing by.
It was viewed as ironic that BRtC used proven and trusted music industry methods to exert influence to chart a song/artist (right down to predetermining the single for the community), particularly since BRtC was trying to demonstrate that the independent music scene can compete by breaking industry norms.
“make an independent music artist #1 on iTunes“ — So close, yet so far. Still, #2 in The Netherlands and #11 in the U.S. is nothing to laugh at.
In the end, it was the inability of the grassroots community to convert the momentum and keep Mine Again in the charts for a measure of time that made it unworthy of concern by the industry.
TAKING STOCK
What about the community spirit? The funds raised for music programs? These are by-products of the mission. Some would argue that they are PR gimmicks used to sell a good story. Rightly or wrongly, they are a good story. Anytime people get together in a productive and positive way and manage to spread the love is a good thing. It makes you wonder if the goals should be turned around to bum rush the education system.
Ideas take a while to evolve and become permanent. Consider the music industry. It took thirty years to build a strong reproducible model that resulted in huge multi-national companies with multi-million (and billion) dollar annual revenues. Specialties such as A&R, marketing, distribution, etc… didn’t just appear overnight. They were developed over time and they had to start somewhere.
BRtC is a somewhere. It was the first large-scale (read international) effort to harness the passion and concern of the grassroots and independent music communities and they managed to walk away with some trophies.
HOW TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE
Relationships gain strength and permanency when they’re taken care of on a daily basis. That is, you’ll find that your partner is happier when they are acknowledged daily, not just on Valentines Day. Likewise, the best way to support the independent music community is to always seek out independent artists you like and actually buy and promote their music. If you “quietly” do this everyday, people will take notice.





