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Dispatch to Zimbabwe
Christina
Couch, Christian Science Monitor (CSM)
February 23, 2007
http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0223/p13s01-almp.html
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| Wired:
Jam band Dispatch has cruised to success with the help of the
Internet. |
When
The Police announced a comeback, the trio's reunion was heralded
with fanfare that included a performance at the Grammys, a televised
press conference, and a splashy interview in The New York Times.
Result: The trio has just sold out two nights at New York's Madison
Square Garden. By contrast, when a little-known trio named Dispatch
decided to reunite, it posted a note on its MySpace page. Already,
the band has sold out three nights at Madison Square Garden.
Call it a masterstroke
of social networking. In January, the band sold out three July concerts
– which are expected to raise $2.2 million for charities in Zimbabwe
– in a matter of days. The feat was accomplished simply by offering
presale tickets to the 50,000-odd fans who count the band as a MySpace
"friend." Fast-moving buzz on fan blogs and sites like
Facebook took care of the rest.
Dispatch's Internet
fan base "continues to blow my mind," says Brad Corrigan,
who, like the other two band members, Chad Urmstom and Pete Heimbold,
is a multi-instrumentalist. "We're just this little Podunk
band that stopped playing five years ago. With the Internet and
word of mouth, we just don't understand our leverage in terms of
tickets."
But Dispatch,
hailed as one of the most surprising grass-roots successes of the
past decade, never had much use for tradition. Formed in the mid
'90s, Dispatch managed to bypass the major record labels entirely.
They cultivated a loyal fan base through file-sharing programs such
as Napster, which are usually the bane of successful bands. Their
2000 album, "Who Are We Living For?" reached number 18
on the Billboard Internet sales chart and was named one of the Top
10 albums of the year by Rolling Stone.
The group disbanded
in 2002, then reunited two years later for a second farewell concert
in Boston that brought in over 110,000 fans – thought to be the
largest independent music event ever.
The band claim
this reunion isn't permanent, but a response to the dire poverty
in the Southern African country.
Before his Dispatch
days, bassist/ drummer Chad Urmston briefly lived in Zimbabwe, where
he befriended a local fieldworker named Elias. Later, Urmston wrote
a song titled "Elias" for Dispatch's 2001 album "Gut
the Van."
"It became
one of our anthems. Kids were really stoked to hear the song,"
recounts Corrigan. "This was our way of telling Elias that
Chad still cares for him."
Dispatch formed
the nonprofit Elias Fund to sponsor community development and education
in Zimbabwe, including scholarships for both of Elias's children.
"[These
shows] aren't about money. They're about awareness. We want people
to ask us 'Why Zimbabwe?' " says Corrigan, who, along with
Urmston and Heimbold, plans to visit the country in May.
"We know
that we can bring this cause to our fans," says Corrigan. "There's
something happening here that's bigger than all of us and we're
going to be a part of it."
Giving fans
the ability to connect with a band is, of course, what helps drive
traffic to sites such as MySpace. Musicians are offered a free space
to upload songs and publish concert information; listeners, on the
other hand, are able to stay more closely in touch with their favorite
artists than ever before.
"It's changed
the music landscape," says Josh Brooks, vice president of Content
and Publishing for MySpace. "People used to discover bands
by flipping through local fliers, but now you can go to MySpace
and find a band. And if they have 30,000 fans, you should probably
listen to their music."
For newcomers
like Colbie Caillat, a Los Angeles-based musician who's currently
ranked as the top unsigned MySpace artist, the free exposure can
lead to bigger tours and greater media attention.
"Through
MySpace, I get 50,000 song plays a day. My music is just now being
heard," says Caillat, who chalks up her debut on "Last
Call with Carson Daly" and a blurb appearing in Rolling Stone
– two promotional vehicles usually only available to artists with
heavyweight label backing – to the popularity of the site.
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