Slicethepie
Slicethepie is a revolutionary website that acts as an A&R and financing engine for the discovery and funding of new and established artists.
| Startup type: | Company |
| Status: | Active |
| Stage: | Beta |
| Publicity: | Open to speaking to journalists. |
| Funding: | Venture capital firm, Venture capital firm, Venture capital firm |
| Industries: | Internet, Media |
| Location: | UK |
| Website: | http://www.slicethepie.com |
| More info: | CrunchBase |
OUR NEWS
Current status
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Our latest Blog entry can be found here: http://blog.slicethepie.com/2010/03/08/whos-going-to-pay-...1 week ago |
1 week ago
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13 March 2010
slicethepie was featured in: |
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09 March 2010
Slicethepie twittered:
Our latest Blog entry can be found here: http://blog.slicethepie.com/2010/03/08/whos-going-to-pay-... |
3 weeks ago
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26 February 2010
slicethepie was featured in: |
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23 February 2010
Slicethepie twittered:
Fancy a gig tonight? go see @bellmusic http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=353998194446 |
1 month ago
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19 February 2010
Slicethepie twittered 13 times, here's their latest:
Are you an Artist? @graceyh would love you to take part in our Artist Survey: http://bit.ly/aQoXxW |
ABOUT US
Slicethepie is a revolutionary new website that acts as an A&R and financing engine for the discovery and funding of new and established artists. Slicethepie turns every music fan into a record label and harnesses the ‘Wisdom of Crowds’ to identify the highest rated artists on the site who move forward to a showcase and then onto financing.
THINGS WE NEED
The Slicethepie team hasn't posted any needs yet.
COMMENTS (1)
Team (1)
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David Courtier-Dutton
Worked in the City of London and Hong Kong, first as a lawyer and then as a technology focused corporate financier. In 2003 established an award winning residential real estate company with revenues of over $50 million.
Followers (14)
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Richard Tyler
Enterprise Editor of the Daily Telegraph
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Eric Eaglstun
Web developer living in Phoenix, AZ.
Hello! The music industry is certainly seeing its share of changes...but in the end, I doubt the expression of music and the arts will ever change, just the industries surrounding them.
Those who produce in this content-starving world of infinite "channels" (artists/musicians, etc.) shall soon find themselves in economic demand!
Can you smell a renaissance?
*Grin*
Yours in the Spirit of Gifting!