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Business struck a chord with special mix of
musical services
BY Brett Clanton, Staff Writer
Every day, Diana Thorntons humble home office in Metairie
welcomes young musicians big on dreams but short on cash.
Some of them come with freshly recorded studio albums in hand,
ready for Thornton to design an eye-catching cover or with
hopes she can find a manufacturer for their CDs; others just
bring their questions. She sees them all.
In 1997, Thornton, then a struggling freelance graphic designer,
and partner Parker Dinkins, an independent sound engineer
with his own CD remastering business, formed Crescent Music
Services LLP. The idea was to save young musicians the headache
of navigating the far-flung music industry by consolidating
several typically freelanced services under one roof. The
new business could provide an artist with a CD cover, promotional
posters and fliers; find a printer for glossy CD booklets;
digitally buff the imperfections from a ragged studio recording
and locate a manufacturer to press 1,000 CDs at a time
all at a discounted rate.
Business took off immediately, says Thornton. Though she
wont discuss numbers, Thornton says gross sales in 1998
doubled her first years total and doubled again in the
following year. Last year, she says sales rose by 30%. The
rapid growth encouraged her to make a go of it on her own,
and in 1999, Thornton dissolved the legal partnership with
Dinkins and kept the Crescent name for herself. Thornton says
she still considers Dinkins Master Digital remastering
business an affiliate.
With 20 years experience as a graphic designer, Thornton
says designing album covers is her greatest strength. But
its the other services in the company name that allow
her to make a living in the music industry. Its the
combined package that filled what she calls the huge
gaping hole in the Louisiana music industry.
She didnt want aspiring musicians to have the same
experience she did when making her own CD: the shopping for
printers and manufacturers, the fumbling around, the mistakes,
the expense that comes from inexperience. There had to be
a better way, she thought.
Today, Thorntons client list includes Rebirth Brass
Band, Ellis Marsalis and jam band Iris May Tango, standouts
among a much longer list of unestablished local artists with
perhaps only a single demo CD to their credit. For the lesser
known, she feels a special affinity. A songwriter herself,
Thornton says shes uniquely qualified to advise up-and-coming
musicians because Ive sat in my clients
seat. Ive been on both sides of it.
In 1999, Thornton won Offbeat Magazines Best of the Beat
Award for an album cover she designed for local singer-songwriter
Beth Patterson. But her crowning achievement may be landing the
business of Basin Street Records owner Mark Samuels. Basin Streets
catalog features hot-selling trumpeters Kermit Ruffins and Irvin
Mayfield and Latin jazz band Los Hombres Calientes. Thortons
designs on these artists CD covers, now recognizable all
over town, have increased Crescents exposure, and Basins
strong sales have improved Thorntons standing with her subcontractors.
After working with a graphic designer in Houston on an early
project, Samuels says its super great to
have someone local to work with, especially when he needs
to turn around a project fast.
While Thornton limits her clients to New Orleans musicians,
she has found it difficult to have the same commitment to
local printers and CD manufacturers the printers because
theyre too expensive and the CD manufacturers because
the few local outfits doing it cant produce the quantity
and quality she desires, she says.
Artists often seek her out because of her relationship with
Sony Disc Manufacturing in Terre Haute, Ind., which packages
and presses 1,000 CDs at a time that look national,
she says. A CDs cover and packaging are the first impression
a buyer gets of an artist and deserve the best quality available,
she says, and so far, shes only found that outside New
Orleans.
A typical package from Crescent Music including cover
design and printing of four panels of art inside and outside the
CD cover, shipping and 1,000 wrapped CDs runs about $2,400.
While there are cheaper packages, such as Santa Monica, Calif.-based
Rainbo Records and Cassettes $1,249 deal with the same services
included, Thornton says no one in New Orleans provides the same
quality and hands-on consultation. Anthony DelRosario, owner of
local rock record label Turducken Recordings, says hes used
a CD manufacturer in New York to press his labels CDs and
plans to work with another in Portland, Ore. for an upcoming release.
I would look into Crescent Music Services and compare
prices, says DelRosario.
But for graphic design and digital remastering, DelRosario
believes New Orleans cant compete with what he finds
out of state.
George Buck would beg to differ. Bucks GHB Jazz Foundation,
with nine record labels, one of which claims clarinetist Pete
Fountain, produces one CD a week on average, he says. With
the exception of the CD manufacturing, which he does with
JVC Disc America in Tuscaloosa, Ala., Buck finds local craftsmen
to digitally remaster and design the foundations CDs.
For 10 years, Buck has worked exclusively with Wendel Printing
in eastern New Orleans and has found them to be inexpensive
and highly qualified. But, he says, his needs are always basic,
rarely requiring more than a simple photograph on the CD cover
or a spare CD booklet all of which he leaves in the
printers hands.
For a young artist, needing guidance, a service like Crescent
would be very helpful, says Buck. The more
people doing it the better.
01/08/2001 - Vol. 23 - Issue 28 - Page 8
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