Billboard – August 10, 2019

(C. Jardin) #1

52 BILLBOARD | AUGUST 10 , 2 019


MARKETING WITH MEANING


QUEER MUSIC FANS HAVE ALWAYS BEEN LOYAL (AND LUCRATIVE) CUSTOMERS. BUT


TO REACH THEM, LABELS NOW HAVE TO LOOK BEYOND THE DANCEFLOOR


BY MITCHELL KUGA


S


HORTLY AFTER THE 1996


release of Tori Amos’ third


studio album, Boys for Pele,


Atlantic Records approached


DJ Armand Van Helden


about remixing her song


“Professional Widow.” The


request came from Atlantic’s


three-person gay and lesbian marketing


division, which was formed in 1995 with the goal


of promoting Atlantic artists to queer audiences


— the first department of its kind among major


labels. Though the request wasn’t explicitly for a


“gay remix,” it went without saying. “Gay clubs


often premiered music ideas, and that included


remixes,” says Marc Mannino, who was the


division’s coordinator from 1995 to 1998.


Van Helden shed the song’s mournful


harpsichord riff and transformed it into


a four-on-the-floor rave-up — and the


response in nightclubs was immediate. Most


importantly, “Professional Widow (Armand’s


Star Trunk Funkin’ Mix)” generated


grassroots buzz around Amos’ album,


particularly among queer listeners. “People


still get goose bumps [when they hear that


remix] and can recall that moment on the


dancefloor,” says Mannino, now executive


producer at audio production company Swell


Music + Sound. “Those kinds of things have


long-lasting effects on an artist’s career.”


Back in that largely pre-internet time,


marketing to gay and lesbian consumers was


relatively straightforward: reach them at the


places where they shopped and partied. In


the club-centric ’90s, Mannino says remixes


played a big part in that strategy, as did booking


performances by straight artists with gay


appeal (like singer-songwriter Duncan Sheik


and British duo Everything but the Girl) at


venues like Barracuda, a Manhattan gay bar.


Atlantic also convinced bookstores, clothing


shops and Starbucks locations in predominately


gay neighborhoods to sell records by artists like


Jewel and Pet Shop Boys.


Today, though, marketing artists to the


LGBTQ community has evolved into a


cottage industry of boutique agencies, whose


efforts have expanded far beyond nightlife.


Instead, as corporations increasingly pursue


the LGBTQ community’s dollars, and as


social media makes activist causes more


accessible, these agencies describe their work


as largely advocacy-driven: educating clients


about issues and legislation affecting the


LGBTQ community; facilitating partnerships


with organizations and brands that support

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