Proceed to WirelessDevNet Home Page
Publications, e-books, and more! Community Tutorials Store Downloads, tools, & Freebies! IT Career Center News Home
newnav.gif

Newsletters
EMail Address:



   Content
  - Articles
  - Columns
  - Training
  - Library
  - Glossary
 
   Career Center
  - Career Center Home
  - View Jobs
  - Post A Job
  - Resumes/CVs
  - Resource Center
 
   Marketplace
  - Marketplace Home
  - Software Products
  - Wireless Market Data
  - Technical Books
 
   News
  - Daily News
  - Submit News
  - Events Calendar
  - Unsubscribe
  - Delivery Options
 
   Community
  - Discussion Boards
  - Mailing List
  - Mailing List Archives
 
   About Us
  - About WirelessDevNet
  - Wireless Source Disks
  - Partners
  - About MindSites Group
  - Advertising Information
 

WirelessDevNet.com Press Release

Cellfish Media Launches First-Ever Hip-Hop Mixtape Downloadable to Cell Phones


New York — August 14, 2007 — DJ Envy is joining forces with Cellfish Media to bring the latest and greatest in new hip-hop straight to consumers in a brand-new format, dubbed The Mobile Mixtape. Each week exclusive tracks featured on the show are made available and delivered straight to mobile devices without the need to buy CDs or carry an iPod.

Why the mobile mixtape? These ultra-exclusive collections of new singles are the hottest commodity in hip-hop. According to Envy, “If I have a hot mixtape, it’ll sell out. A new album will be hot only for a few weeks, then die down. That’s what the kids want.”

Cellfish Media, a leading mobile entertainment content provider, will distribute the seven-track mixtape compilations mixed by DJ Envy, providing them as ringtones and full-track downloads to mobile consumers. Subscribers will get seven new ringtones each month, daily insider tips about hip-hop stars and video blogs with exclusive celebrity interviews for their mobiles. Subscribers will pay a per-download fee or buy tracks in a discounted package.

“Yesterday, kids would have to wait for a mixtape to be pressed up and distributed; today, they have to run home to their computers and search for it; tomorrow, the instant something is blowing up, it shows up in your pocket. Yesterday is over,” said Jonathan Dworkin, Vice President of Talent and Programming at Cellfish Media.

Over 500,000 mixtapes are sold every week, mainly to 18-to-24-year-olds who prefer organic DJ stylings and hard-to-find remixes to traditional record label artist releases. New artists rely on mixtapes to gain credibility and buzz, including 50 Cent, who said in an interview with MTV.com, “Mixtapes are the entry level of hip-hop.”



Sponsors

Search

Eliminate irrelevant hits with our industry-specific search engine!









Wireless Developer Network - A MindSites Group Trade Community
Copyright© 2000-2010 MindSites Group / Privacy Policy
Send Comments to:
feedback@wirelessdevnet.com