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Iowa-based laptop ambient/electronica musician has hit podcast
Mark Rushton, an ambient/electronica musician, has seen the number of
subscribers to his podcast increase 167% during the month of September.
(I-Newswire) - Mark
Rushton started podcasting his original ambient/electronica music in late
2004 after realizing that promoting his music via college and public radio
stations was a dead end.
"I got a number of plays here and there, but it really wasn't worth all the
effort and expense that I put into it," said Rushton. "I suspect that most
of the CDs I mailed out ended up in the garbage."
One day in late 2004, Rushton read a story about podcasting and everything
clicked. Even though he didn't own an iPod, Rushton had utilized mobile
music solutions such as XM Satellite Radio, MiniDiscs, and burned CDs for
portability. He learned what he could about XML, audio editing, and put
together some early shows on a site he has since retired.
"It was my old Hooray For Vouvray web site," says Rushton, "I had over 7000
downloads in the first six months I was podcasting. It was getting huge."
Rushton decided to scrap Hooray For Vouvray and consolidate everything at
his MarkRushton.com web site during the summer of 2005. While that briefly
killed momentum, things picked up quickly when the music program iTunes
received podcasting support.
Another favorite of Rushton's is Feedburner.com, which tracks subscription
numbers and hits to his free podcast. While Feedburner doesn't track all of
ways people can subscribe to his podcasts, Rushton estimates at least 75% of
his subscribers find out about his music via iTunes and Feedburner.
The latest podcast, a program featuring a single 34-minute piece of music
recorded live in mid-September, has been downloaded nearly 500 times in the
first two weeks of being available. A podcast Rushton put out in June has
received nearly 2000 downloads in three months.
"There's no way radio would have played me that much," says Rushton, "and
even non-commercial radio would have completely ignored a 34-minute long
improvised ambient/electronica piece that was performed live."
A byproduct of all this exposure is that numerous people have been asking to
use Rushton's music for commercial and non-commercial uses. While an ASCAP
member since 2002, Rushton has needed to hastily add music publishing to his
business interests, something he hopes to have completed within the month.
So what does the future hold for Mark Rushton and podcasting? Rushton is
very optimistic: "I'm always happy when anybody downloads my music for
free, and even happier when people buy my paid iTunes downloads and CDs.
That hundreds of people are downloading my music and subscribing to my
podcasts at this very early stage of the game only means that the numbers
will continue to climb over the next few years. I can't imagine thousands
or tens of thousands of people worldwide listening to my music on a regular
basis, but within a year it's probably possible."
MarkRushton's podcasts can be downloaded for free at
http://podcast.markrushton.com or you can
subscribe via itunes at
http://itunes.markrushton.com
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