4. Band Information
Reggae Band
All Loyola Students
Members: Barrett Maury, Joe Tontillo, Colin
Powell, Nathan Strong (aka Taco)
They don’t mind getting heavy and loud.
5. Reggae
“The music and lyrics that together constitute the popular
phenomenon of reggae are a unique combination of
communicative elements that attest to a distinct historical era
and emancipatory orientation toward a newly decolonized
world (Tracy 2005).”
“Music does not exist autonomously of other
social, economic and political institutions. Music may still be
able to change the world as well as reflecting it, but, when
we talk of music’s politics, we are not just talking of the way
it articulates ideas and emotion. We are also talking of the
politics that shape it (Schumann 2009).”
6. Target
Reggae has a rebellious and political history;
therefore, the best people to market this to would be
college students
7. How Will I Market
Them?
Assemble a street team
Start a mailing list
Post flyers for shows
Get and wear merchandise
8. Street Team
Find fans who want to promote
Find a way to communicate
Rally
Spread the word!
9. Starting a Mailing List
Bring a clipboard with columned paper to shows
Get fans to write their emails
Send them updates about the band
10. Posting Flyers For
Shows
Post Flyers:
Businesses
Bulletin Boards
Via internet
12. Key Areas to Market
Loyola Campus
Tulane Campus
Broadway Street
13. Where to get Shows
Café Prytania
The Republic
Ampersand (started doing some non electronic shows)
14. Works Cited
Tracy, James F. "Popular Communication And The
Postcolonial Zeitgeist: On Reconsidering Roots Reggae
And Dub." Popular Communication 3.1 (2005): 21-41.
Communication & Mass Media Complete. Web. 16 Mar.
2012.
Schumann, Anne. "Popular Music And Political Change
In Côte D'ivoire: The Divergent Dynamics Of Zouglou
And Reggae." Journal Of African Media Studies 1.1
(2009): 117-133. Communication & Mass Media
Complete. Web. 16 Mar. 2012.
15. Contact Information
John Saia
Loyola University
Phone: (985)-991-9401
Email: jmsaia@loyno.edu