United States of America (Press Release) November 2, 2007 --
In the big-time entertainment world of Britney Spears, Chris Brown or Timbaland, a couple hundred bucks doesn’t even pay the electric bill. But for the average struggling musician the internet makes it incredibly easy to get paid for the art they create.
“This is a living breathing example of the internet leveling the playing field for the little guy. In the traditional label distribution system, it’s just impossible for someone like me to create original material in the morning and get paid that evening,” comments Scot Dantzer, former Capital/World Domination recording artist & digital content creator.
There is a huge audience for this kind of loose-copyright, licensing arrangement direct with the composer. Podcasters, web video & content creators, game programmers, music on hold…all rely on music in their customer experience.
“Sometimes less is more with this kind of thing,” say royalty free music user Anthony Hess. “I needed a piece of music and I didn’t have time to sort through a library. I found exactly what I needed, downloaded it and moved on.” The site Hess found was Dantzer’s PLRMusicClub (http://plrmusicclub.com/ ), a for fee royalty free music service. And it’s a win-win situation.
“I can sit in my home studio in Philadelphia and make my music available to producers everywhere in the world. And they can use the magic of the internet to find exactly what they want and pay accordingly, ” says Dantzer.
“This is a living breathing example of the internet leveling the playing field for the little guy. In the traditional label distribution system, it’s just impossible for someone like me to create original material in the morning and get paid that evening,” comments Scot Dantzer, former Capital/World Domination recording artist & digital content creator.
There is a huge audience for this kind of loose-copyright, licensing arrangement direct with the composer. Podcasters, web video & content creators, game programmers, music on hold…all rely on music in their customer experience.
“Sometimes less is more with this kind of thing,” say royalty free music user Anthony Hess. “I needed a piece of music and I didn’t have time to sort through a library. I found exactly what I needed, downloaded it and moved on.” The site Hess found was Dantzer’s PLRMusicClub (http://plrmusicclub.com/ ), a for fee royalty free music service. And it’s a win-win situation.
“I can sit in my home studio in Philadelphia and make my music available to producers everywhere in the world. And they can use the magic of the internet to find exactly what they want and pay accordingly, ” says Dantzer.

In the big-time entertainment world of Britney Spears, Chris Brown or Timbaland, a couple hundred bucks doesn’t even pay the electric bill.
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