0:00
49:49
Retroceder 15 segundos
Avanzar 15 segundos

He graduated at 16, jumped into the chaos of touring, and learned the music business the hard way, by selling CDs in parking lots, sleeping in cars, and betting on himself when nobody else would. We talk with hard rock artist and manager Jesse Barton about the real mechanics behind building a band from the ground up: booking shows through MySpace, getting onto bigger bills by promising ticket sales, and turning face-to-face fan connection into a lasting audience.

Then we get into the stuff artists usually learn too late. Jesse breaks down record deal basics like advances, recoupment, and royalty splits, plus what happens when a label deal feels like a breakthrough but turns into a logistical and financial trap. He shares how those mistakes reshaped the way he reads contracts, runs merchandising, and protects long-term momentum, and why “more money, more problems” is not just a lyric when you finally see touring at a higher level.

The conversation goes deeper into studio recording and modern production, from early sessions that exposed weak prep to building cleaner workflows in Pro Tools. Jesse also opens up about loss, how music became a lifeline after his dad died, and how construction skills helped him build a world-class recording studio in Spokane. We wrap on perspective, why success is relative, and how working as an artist manager lets him help others avoid the potholes he hit first.

If you like honest music industry stories, touring lessons, and practical advice for independent musicians, hit subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review. What part of Jesse’s journey hit you the hardest?

Episode Links

Send us Fan Mail

Support the show

Links

Contact

Socials

Services

Books

Merchandise

Support

Otros episodios de "The Jay Franze Show: Country Music - News | Reviews | Interviews"