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BY Jex Exmundo
December 06, 2022
Who says your Bored Ape Yacht Club NFT has to live behind a screen for its entire digital life? Beyond access to the BAYC community, one of the key perks of owning a Bored Ape is getting the rights to its respective IP. Over the years, this has given holders plenty of opportunity to create additional value from their investments.
However, for some creatives who’ve picked up NFTs from one of the most expensive collections on the market, this investment goes deeper than watching a line go up and down. Owning an Ape means the opportunity to build something that could potentially do what Damon Albarn’s Gorillaz did two decades ago: create a musical and cultural phenomenon that successfully straddles the line between reality and fiction.
So are any Bored Ape-led musical outfits in a position to challenge Gorillaz’s top spot on the growing virtual band pantheon? Let’s find out.
After blessing the airwaves with hits like Ginuwine’s Pony in the 90s, Timbaland gradually established himself as one of the music industry’s most prominent players. Today, the multi-platinum-selling producer hopes to leverage his influence and golden touch in Web3. How? Through one of the music industry’s most enduring ways of generating hype and excitement around a project: beef.
When Timbaland first acquired his Ape, it was simply known as Bored Ape #590. Today, the Ape goes by Congo, and he’s got a bone to pick with Timbaland. However, unlike most music industry feuds, the two directly traded blows on the same track, Has A Meaning. Of course, putting together such a feud would mean putting in actual work in the real world. To help sell this illusion, Timbaland maintained a hands-on approach in putting together the track’s music video. Speaking on this unorthodox publicity stunt in a prior interview with nft now, Timbaland explained, “The difference is [that blockchain-based characters] don’t die. [They] stay in the metaverse, it’s a different world.”
Indeed, the metaverse may prove to be the key to Congo reaching his full potential as Timbaland’s rival. For anyone interested in keeping track of this rare man vs. author conflict in hip-hop, a full-fledged metaverse experience with Congo is currently in the works. Will more established players in the music industry take this unique intertextual approach with their NFT IPs?
In November 2021, Universal Music Group made headlines when it announced its intentions to form a Bored Ape supergroup of sorts: Kingship. Founded under UMG’s Web3 imprint 10:22PM, Kingship immediately positioned itself as a Web3 parallel to Gorillaz as soon as the world discovered its existence.
So, given that it’s been well over a year since these Bored Apes formed a band, surely they’ve at least delivered one song fans of the idea could rally around, right? Not quite. Currently, Kingship merely has NFT passes granting users unlimited access to its future events and projects it has lined up.
In lieu of making music, the team behind the project has been building out a roster of real-world creatives that will enable them to bring this Bored Ape band into reality. Headlining Kingship’s music leads is producer and songwriter Fauntleroy, best known for previous collaborations with the likes of Bruno Mars, Beyoncé, and more. That points to a good chance that when Kingship does end up releasing music, it will slap.
Not every Bored Ape band has taken its sweet time to deliver music to its potential fanbase. The Bored Brothers — a virtual duo led by OneRepublic frontman Ryan Tedder and noted musician and producer Kygo — came onto the scene in March 2022 with a music NFT, video, and more. The duo’s first single, “Drip,” dropped exclusively on sound.xyz on April 22, 2022, and quickly sold out to 300 collectors for 30 ETH.
Our first single 'DRIP'
~200k Streams and ~125k Monthly listeners @Spotify.
~75 ETH volume and ~250 NFT Holders on the 'DRIP' Music NFT, traded up to 1 ETH @soundxyz_.
Music Video NFT minted for free and traded up to .75 ETH @glassprotocol.
We 💚 our progress and community! pic.twitter.com/S4iztKMwWN
“This project stems from an overwhelming desire to curate and create music outside our respective genres. We’re flirting with everything from deep house to Miami bass and deeper dance genres like Phonk,” reads the band’s description on sound.xyz.
With successful launches already under its belt, the Bored Brothers’ eventual mission to provide users with an immersive fan experience via the metaverse looks less like a pipe dream and more like a logical next step forward.
Now we know @zeethbayc gets a bit jealous
“Bad Girl” is out now
link in bio pic.twitter.com/Jwqc8nLTuL
Escapeplan, created by Big Night Talent, is a producer and DJ duo featuring two BAYC NFTs as its members. WME made headlines when it signed the band in March 2022. Soon after, the duo released their first single, “Jungle” featuring rapper Rich the Kid. Through ownership of the one-of-one Trippy token, one holder can claim four percent of all royalties generated by the single moving forward.
Fans speculated that it wouldn’t be the last time this duo would virtually work with another notable name in the mainstream music industry, and they were right. In late November 2022, Escapeplan followed up its earlier success with the release of “Bad Girl,” a track featuring DJ Sak Noel as part of its creative team.
So, will there ever be a Bored Ape band big enough to rival mainstream artists? It’s too soon to tell, but these four could be on their way to going platinum in the metaverse.