[ddots-l] Re: A friend of mine sent me this

  • From: Mike C <m_dsmusic@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Tue, 23 Mar 2010 06:25:38 -0400

 that's fantastic, he was actually at the right place, and time.
From: Dancing Dots 
Sent: Monday, March 22, 2010 4:18 PM
To: ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
Subject: [ddots-l] Re: A friend of mine sent me this


Thanks for sharing.  No, I have never heard of him.  But he probably never 
heard of me either.  (grin)

He's not blind, is he?

Regards,
Bill

Bill McCann
Founder and President of Dancing Dots since 1992
www.DancingDots.com
Tel: [001] 610-783-6692 





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From: ddots-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:ddots-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On 
Behalf Of Greg Brayton
Sent: Friday, March 19, 2010 1:09 PM
To: ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [ddots-l] A friend of mine sent me this


The article is below, does anyone know about this musician?

You've probably never heard of Todd Hahn, but you might have heard his music. 

Hahn, 47, has scored soundtracks for everything from 
President Obama's campaign commercials
 to History Channel 
documentaries
. He's done work for the Learning Channel, WETA (where my wife is employed), 
National 

Geographic, and a host of other current and former politicians and
advocacy groups. Think U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, former 
president 

George W. Bush and even the 
Swiftboat Veterans. 

The musical entrepreneur grosses more than $500,000 in a good year, pocketing 
more than half 

that after expenses. 

He has no employees. Works at home. Loves what he does and gets to hear his 
stuff on 

television. 

And $50,000 worth of technology makes it possible. A piece of music software 
called MIDI 

(music instrument digital interface) allows the Potomac resident
to pound a set of piano keys and reproduce in a couple of days the sound of a 
symphony 

orchestra that once would have taken weeks and cost a small fortune.


"I call up the guitar sound and the computer will re-create its sound," he 
said. "I can 

offer a dramatic musical score for a relatively inexpensive amount
of money. And all that money [that would have gone for the orchestra] goes to 
me." 
<!--[endif]-->

I call it a miracle of productivity. 

Hahn has at least $10,000 invested in music sounds alone on his computer, 
ranging from a 

harmonica to a full 120-piece orchestra. He performs hundreds of
jobs a year, charging anywhere from $750 to compose background music (called 
wallpaper) to 

$2,500 and above for a more complex score that pulses a political
ad. 

"I've developed a niche business here in D.C.," he said. 

How? 

"A convergence of three things," he said. "I was at the right place at the 
right time 

meeting the right people. The technology was right. And I was creative
enough to deliver a decent product." 
<!--[endif]-->

Hahn learned piano as a kid in Akron, Ohio, from a former professor from the 
Julliard 

School. After graduating from the Institute of Audio Research in New
York with a degree in audio engineering in 1984, and after a short time at the 
University of 

Akron, he studied music composition at Julliard himself. His
first job was as an assistant engineer at a studio in Cincinnati. The studio, 
known as the 

Fifth Floor, was a hotbed for funky band music. Hahn was in
his early 20s, making about $20,000 a year. 

He calls those days "the starving artist years." 

There were a lot of very talented music and advertising people working in 
Cincinnati at the 

time. Chalk it up to Procter & Gamble, the ginormous consumer
goods manufacturer headquartered there. An entire sub-industry of music 
studios, filmmakers, 

sound people and advertisers grew around the company. 

"I was the third-string guy, helping score things like industrial films," Hahn 
recalled. 

Soon, the third-string guy graduated to solo gigs. His first job was writing 
the music for 

an admissions video that Dennison University wanted to send to
potential students. That led to other college jobs and to freelance work for 
places such as 

the Columbus Zoo, for which he would create music for dolphin
and penguin exhibits. 

Hahn was soon making $50,000 a year. He quit the Fifth Floor in 1986 to go out 
on his own. 

He moved to Columbus and opened a small studio with $20,000 he
had saved. He started cold-calling companies, producers, movie directors and 
others. 

"If I was lucky enough to get a job and the client liked it, then word of mouth 
spread. Once 

you are in a production community in any area . . . your name
starts getting around." 

The lessons from these years were valuable. To get his foot in the door, he 
would write some 

pieces on the condition that he would charge a fee only if
the buyer liked the result. Over time, he learned how to set a price for his 
work. 

"They would say, you've got $2,000 to do this show, and I would say, I will do 
it and give 

you one revision if you don't like it." 

The big turning point -- every entrepreneur has one -- arrived when a childhood 
buddy hired 

Hahn to score internal videos for the American Federation of
Teachers, which is headquartered in Washington. A Bethesda audio group called 
the Soundsters 

offered him a job at its studio off River Road in 1990. 

Hahn loaded his equipment on a rented truck and drove to Washington, where he 
quickly did 

the soundtrack for a Discovery Channel multi-part documentary
about military aircraft and hardware. 

He scored a 20-minute internal film for the National Institutes of Health that 
taught 

scientists how to dispose of radioactive waste. 

A friend introduced him to media consultant Mark Putnam (now Murphy Putnam 
Media), who was 

looking for something more dynamic than old tunes to infuse political
ads. Putnam hired him to score the political ads for a Putnam client who was 
running for 

mayor of a big city. The idea for original music caught on, and
Hahn's niche of political business took off. Now it brings in well more than 
half of his 

revenue. 

"During a heavy political year, I can bill half a million dollars or more," 
said Hahn, who 

left Soundsters in 1993 to go out on his own. Hahn said the key
to keeping his clients happy is relying on their input and knowing what they 
want. His goal 

is to stir so much emotion in listeners they will vote for
the candidate. 

"Music is a catalyst for emotion," he said. "Once you put music against the 
scene, it 

explodes. Just watch 'The Magnificent Seven.' You put music to that
and all of a sudden these guys on horses are heroes. That's what we're trying 
to do when we 

are selling a candidate."

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