Music for a movement
Concert founder comes into her
own promoting events for the burgeoning U.S. Hispanic youth market.
By Tim Dougherty
Melissa Giles isn’t
your typical impresario.
But then, the Urban latin music festival
anything but a run-of the mill pop music concert. A showcase for
an array of latin musical genres, the daylong festival is aimed
primarily at adolescent and twenty-something U.S. Hispanic who
speak Spanglish or otherwise take their pop culture cues from throughout
the Americans.
In its debut last October at Miami’s Bayfront Park Amphitheather, the
event attracted a crowd of almost 10,000. This despite a decidedly unconventional
marketing campaign and at last three other Hispanic-oriented events taking
in the city the same day.
" I sort of shocked myself, I knew it was going to work but we had a lot
of things working against us," says Ms. Giles, a student at Miami International
University of Art and Design, who organized and promoted the festival. “We
shocked a lot of people who didn’t think it would work”.
Now the 20-years-old entrepreneur is hard at work on a follow-up event. This
years Urban Latin Music Festival will take place October 5, again at Bayfront
Park. Ms. Giles hopes to attract a capacity crowd of 12,000.
This time around she’s forged marketing alliances with radio stations,
magazines, and Mun2, Telemundo’s youth- oriented cable channel. The latter
will broadcast a one-hour special on the festival and provide on-air advertising.
The rapid succession of gains owes both to Ms. Giles’ entrepreneurial
precocity and the growing profile of the hybrid urban Hispanic culture.
Born in Reading, English, to a British father and a Venezuelan mother, Ms.
Giles was just 13 when she began buying wholesale jewelry to sell to classmates.
Four years she formed an all-girl guerilla marketing team, Misto L.E.S. Marketing
and promotions, whose clients have included Baby Phat, FuBu, Enyce, J.Lo, and
Tanqueray. Group members had out fliers and promotional T-shirts, and in the
case of clothing manufactures, model clothes.
After Ms. Giles hit on the Urban Latin Music Festival concept, she enlisted
the help of her father, David Giles, president of Awesome Events and a former
nightclub owner. He not only tutored her on the ins and outs of mounting concerts,
but also put $150,000 to produce the event.
For her part, Ms Giles saw a perfect opportunity to put her fellow guerilla
marketers blanketed the Miami area with posters and flies announcing the festival.
She also advertised on the Internet and radio.
The idea behind
the event, she says, is to celebrate the lifestyle of youth
people like herself who are versed
in the argot of city culture from New York to Buenos Aires. Reflecting the
expansive pop tastes of such people, the inaugural Urban Latin Music Festival
saw a musical lineup that ranged from hip-hop to merengue and bachata acts.
Recording artist and broadcast Angie Martinez served as host.
"I was very pleasantly surprised at how well it came together,"
Says Mr. Giles, who earned a small profit on his investment. “The best news
is that everybody had a good time. It’s quite a unique audience. No one
has really reached out to this population segment, so there are a lot of opportunities
there.”
According to Cultural access group, Hispanic account for the majority of
the under-18 population in Los Angeles, New York, and Miami. Seventy percent
of U.S Hispanics are under 35.
"Obviously the key to reaching (the U.S. Hispanic youth) market is relevance-
relevance to their ethnicity, their lifestyles, their media habits, and their
culture," says Cultural Access Group chairman David Perez. Ms. Giles and her father believe they’ve hit on the means to do just
that. The two have formed a company called Soulfrito, which will produce concerts
along the lines of the Urban Latin Music Festival. Plans also call for artist
management and music publishing devisions and a fashion line. The Gileses expect
to take the Urban Latin Music Festival to Boston and New York in 2004 and perhaps
go national after that.
For Ms. Giles, it all comes down to highlighting the uniqueness
of the U.S. Hispanic urban culture. Along those lines,
she is producing a number
of smaller
events in Miami under the Soulfrio banner this summer, including poetry
readings, art exhibitions, and films screenings. And on October 3, she
will host the
Urban Latin Music Conference at Miami’s Doubletree Grand Hotel, Which
is expected to draw some 200 attendees, including leaders from the latin music
industry.
" I want
to promote Urban Latino culture and arts. That means music,
fashion, films, literature, and visual arts", she says. |