IMDB Page: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt8830290/
What:
They are currently editing and the movie is to be released this summer. The goal is not fortune or fame, but to create a cult classic.
Dave Stein is the producer, Jesse Braintree is putting together the soundtrack and asked me for an “urban” song, which will appear in the movie somehow, perhaps just a few seconds, or as credits roll, as well as on the soundtrack.
I’m in Jesse’s shitty, making-fun-of-country band, Jesse and the Hogg Brothers, we had a part in the movie (we were killed by chickens), so there’s the tie in.
Why:
Why would I ask you to be part of a “HORRORible” Hip Hop song if you play guitar?
- 273k subs
- You enjoy horror movies
- You have sense of humor and don’t take yourself too seriously
- You might mention it in a video or two, you might not
- I haven’t been able to get in touch with Buckethead
Why would you want to be involved?
- To say you are involved with a cheesy horror movie
- IMDB credits if you like
- To impress weird people at horror conventions
- To make your parents proud
- To know, deep down, that you are a winner, unlike most stepdads.
How:
Procedure:
I shoot you over an mp3. You do something to it, guitar, vocals, rap, percussion, chicken sounds, whatever, then shoot .wav stem(s) back.
Compensation:
You would be paid $1 for your contribution and would have no ownership of the song or master recording. You will be registered as a performer under whatever name or AKA you like. A queue sheet will be filed with the PRO’s, and I can help you with any of that if you are not familiar with it.
Song Submission:
You can submit your own song(s) for consideration for the movie and soundtrack if you would like. We are running short on time, but there’s a good chance it could find its way into the movie and soundtrack if you can get me something in the next week or two. You’d retain copyright and masters, the licensing fee would be $1, a queue sheet would be filed with the PRO’s.
For the soundtrack, I would count on no compensation until sales of that track reached $100 in mechanical licensing at statutory rate (9.1cents). So, for every roughly 1000 copies the album and single combined sell, you’d get $100.
Thanks for taking a look.
If you have questions or want to move forward, email or text / phone is easiest for me, or IG works too.
Tony Coke
tony@mewsick.com
214.208.4006