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AMG Artist Development
"10 Steps to Independent Musical Success or Record Label Shopping"

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record label shopping
"Independent A&R for the
Independent Artist"



 

 

 

 

 

 





































































AMG RECORD LABEL SHOWCASES

AMG offers Major Record Label Showcases for artists in our Development program. Each showcase has a Guaranteed Minimum of 3 Major Record Labels in Attendance.

Each artists or bands from the AMG Artist Development Roster or Alpha Management can perform for thirty minutes.

The AMG Record Label Showcase is kicked-off with a music industry networking party. In 2009, two hundred music industry executives attended the networking party and showcase!

Major Record Labels that have attended our showcases include:

  • Atlantic
  • Bad Boy
  • Capitol
  • Island
  • Koch
  • TVT
  • Sony

After each performance, the artist/group meets directly with the A&R Representatives to obtain feedback on their performance.

Your Major Record Label Showcase includes:

  1. AMG chooses, contracts, and rents a club or hall for your showcase.
  2. AMG contracts three major record labels to attend.
  3. AMG invites all of our NYC's music industry contacts to your showcase via a personal invitation.
  4. AMG hosts a pre-networking party with appetizers for the music industry.
  5. AMG hires a host for the evening.
  6. AMG provides tickets for you to sell to recoup your showcase expenses.
  7. AMG provides a media & promotional blitz for the event.
  8. AMG Video Tapes your event.
In addition, AMG hosts the annual AMG A&R Power Summit. The AMG A&R Power Summit is a demo shopping conference open to artists and groups of all genres. To receive information on upcoming events, please sign up for our newsletter.

**ONLY OPEN TO Artists enrolled in the AMG Artist Development Program**
AUDITION TODAY!

AMG SHOWCASE REVIEW 2009


AMG National A&R Record Label Showcase
Don Hill's
Written by Dan Tulino
Photographed by Krisztina Fazeka

Band "Lost Parade" performing at Showcase

Walking into Don Hill's music club on Tuesday, November 15th, I walked into a world created by Alpha Music Group, The AMG National Record Label Showcase.

I was greeted by smiling faces, eager musicians and the most bad-add red leather booths I have seen in all my years of gig-chasing.

I immediately grabbed two cold Buds and found my seat near the stage, ready to listen to the fifteen hot artists and bands. The showcase featured some of the most talked-about artists/bands from many genres, including Rock, Pop, Jazz, Latin and Urban. Some of the industry's top dogs in attendance included reps from Koch Entertainment, Universal Records, Atlantic, Sony/Jive/BMG, and G-Unit.

Don Hill's, across Greenwich St. from one of New York's oldest establishments - The Ear Inn, has an honest blend of Crash Mansion style mixed with the CBGB ambiance. Before I could even guzzle down my first brew, I was approached by the hospitable reps from AMG and also by the most hyped band of the night, Lost Parade. The only way to describe Lost Parade's sound is the way the band's Jeff Faulkner described his group to me during our interview, "We are great rock with balls!"

Before Lost Parade took to the stage, the packed crowd (who had been treated to free food throughout the show), was supportive of the three opening acts. Then it was Lost Parade's turn and they certainly made the most of their fifteen minutes time slot. Listening to them blaze through their tracks, "Echoes" and "The Meaning of Us, " was like listening to Three Doors Down or Radiohead. Although they are presently unsigned, Lost Parade is a band to watch and certainly one to listen to.

Bluefire

As the night continued, two bands after Lost Parade grabbed me by the throat and did not let go. The first was a band called Blue Fire. I swear it was like watching a young Dave Mustaine resurrect the original Metallica line-up.

Lead guitarist/vocalist Joshua "Pix" Karickhoff, born April 1991, and his cousin bassist/vocalist Gustauve "Bigman" Ward, born December 1988, endangered the ears and minds of every audience member throughout their fifteen minutes. They displayed some of the most technically-advanced musicianship I had ever heard. Watching Blue Fire perform was almost frightening, knowing they will one day be playing to sold-out stadiums; they were that good.

YoFlaco

The other band that left a resonating effect was the un-expecting Yo Flaco, an eight-piece hip-hop/jazz/pop group armed with bass, drums, keyboards, a full horn section and dueling vocals.

Yo Flaco brought back to life the meaning of live dance rock with the kind of performance that has previously landed them in the finals at the American Music Awards. As talented as they are enigmatic, one could walk past them and assume they are the latest boy band based on looks alone. Yet once they hit the stage, Yo Flaco delivered in a way that only kept me questioning how they remain an unsigned band.

With endless unworthy pop stars flooding the airwaves, Alpha Music Group is proving that there is a place for originality and integrity in the music industry. This showcase was proof positive and November 15th was a night I was proud to say I was a New Yorker.