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 CD Promo
founders Damon, left, and Denny Tedesco of Woodland Hills produce musical compilations on
compact disc for use as corporate freebies. [photo: Charlotte Schmid-Maybach] |
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ens. Mugs. Flimsy ball caps. Compact discs -- one of these things does not belong. But it does.
The first three have long been a staple of corporate
giveaways. While compact discs don't seem like they'd keep company with the traditional
freebies, they will if the Tedesco brothers get their way. |
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Rather than
a logo pen that gets used once and lost, or a fruit basket
that gets eaten and forgotten, the brothers, owners of Woodland Hills-based CD Promo, sought to
create a product that companies could use as a long-lasting marketing tool. Born into a music family, Damon and Denny
Tedesco saw custom CDs as the perfect way to do it, so they created samples and
shopped them to companies nationwide.
While the brothers handled the music selections, they let the firms
pick all the artwork and information to go on the inside booklet. |
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Though the Tedescos are vitally concerned with the tunes on the
discs, it's the info contained in the notes that draws companies in. Once
the customer unwraps the disc, they're suddenly a captive audience.
"It's the cereal box mentality," said Damon Tedesco, 32. "You give
it to someone when they look at your product, then they rifle through and look at all
the stuff on the jacket. They'll always look at at least something inside."
What that inside contains is up to the consumer. From nostalgic
photos for a class reunion to worldwide sales locations for a film company, the
Tedescos have cooked up discs for clients nationwide.
Bill Brewer, manager of Acura of Pasadena, came to them looking for a
promo that customers could hang onto.
"A T-shirt will get washed, soiled, and tossed out," he said. "This
is something you won't throw away. If you have good music, people will listen and remember
you."
To show off Brewer's dealership, CD Promo crafted a disc that looked
like a car tire, and published service hours and information within. The music
wasn't too bad, either, he said, so he signed up a few artists to play his holiday
parties.
Though the idea sounds simple enough, the brothers go to extreme
caution to detail just how difficult it is.
"We thought it would be an overnight success," said Denny Tedesco,
40. "But here we are six years later and it's just taking off right now."
The newfound success, with their products being handed out
internationally and phones ringing at all hours of the day, has been hard won, based
on years of painstaking negotiating within the music and business worlds. Through
time, the Tedescos have called in favors from a slew of musicians to secure rights to
their songs, and made sure to repay those favors in kind.
The brother grew up surrounded by music, the sons of well-respected
session guitarist Tommy Tedesco. Watching their father -- who played on seminal
albums like the Beach Boys "Pet Sounds" but never rose to stardom on his own -- get
jerked around by the industry, the pair decided that if they were to enter the business,
they'd make sure
to do so with class and ethics.
Though their promo CDs, with names like "Happy Holidays from USA Today"
and "Hilton St. Paul/Minneapolis Airport" may not seem like lucrative projects for
talented players, the brothers' business practices make them worthwhile.
"Usually people are out to take you for what you can get," said
John Leitham, a Studio City bassist who's contributed numerous cuts for the pair's
discs. "They understand that the artist needs to make a living, so they're not out
just to get money."
The discs also send the music of the artists, talented but unheralded
journeymen, into a wide distribution unavailable in other forms. Thom Rotella, a
jazz guitarist with more recording sessions under his belt than he can remember, has
found the arrangement to work out quite well indeed. In return for
licensing songs to CD Promo, he gets a tidy paycheck and essentially free marketing.
"It's been a real great thing for me," he said. "It's a channel
that gets to people who you couldn't find in a record store."
And it's good music, the brothers say adamantly. Damon, a recording
engineer and disc jockey, and Denny, a lifelong music devotee, aren't interested in
foisting crummy music off on subpar discs.
"We wanted to get quality music, stuff we'd be proud to play at our
cocktail parties or in our cars," Damon said. "If it excites us, then we'll put it on
a disc."
©Los Angeles Daily News, April 22, 2001. |
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