Singer-songwriters Liam Kyle Cahill and John White played at a recent house concert called โ€œFolk All-Stars.โ€ On the surface it felt like many other house shows: small space, lots of people, very intimate and great sounding.

But unlike other house concerts, this one played out in front of a backdrop that read โ€œParlor Shows,โ€ while the Emmy-winning Reno Sessions film crew recorded the concert for โ€ฆ posterity? Novelty? Probably for a short film. Either way, it felt like the beginning of something bigger and cooler than the name โ€œFolk All-Starsโ€ might suggest.

Step into my parlor

The idea behind Parlor Shows is simple: connect musicians with house venues directly. This is accomplished the way all things are accomplished these days: as a two-part app and website platform. Currently in the beta stages of development, the Parlor Shows app is due to launch later this month. This platform will make it possible for bands and hosts to contact one another and set up shows in private homes, effectively cutting out the middlemenโ€”promotersโ€”and saving time and cash.

โ€œItโ€™s the Airbnb of house shows,โ€ said co-founder Ashley Jennings. In addition to creating Parlor Shows, Jennings is a musician in her own right, one-half of a dark and sleepy electronic duo called Agitprop.

โ€œThe reason weโ€™re trying to solve this problem is because my husband and I have a band and although Iโ€™m pretty connected in Reno, I was still having a hard time booking shows and getting paid,โ€ she said.

The idea of starting a booking app based loosely on the Airbnb model came from Jenningsโ€™ own experience using Airbnb to save money on lodging while she was on the road. Slowly, the idea of creating a physical community grounded in online interaction seeped into Jenningsโ€™ musical brain, and Parlor Shows was born.

The app itself is slick. Itโ€™s easy to look at, simple to use, and has lots of automated features. Usersโ€”whether they sign up as musicians or hostsโ€”can make profiles that advertise their preferred music genre, set ticket prices, and match venues along Google Maps routes. There is also a gallery feature that allows bands to view the venue before booking, as well as a sliding scale for hosts to choose what percentage (if any) they would like to take from the show. According to Jennings, most hosts arenโ€™t terribly interested in getting paid, but the app still gives them the option.

Vanessa Vancour is a host who will not take a cut. โ€œI see the whole purpose of Parlor Shows being to support independent music,โ€ she said. Vancour will host an outdoor Parlor concert later this summer in her backyard. โ€œI would love to have my friends over and have a concert. โ€ฆ I just want to host it.โ€

Another feature of the app is its rating system. Like Airbnb, Yelp and other review sites, Parlor Shows gives its users a way to keep each other honest. If a band trashes a house, the host is going to write about it in a review. If the host posts photos of a sizable backyard for an outdoor concert and only delivers a city balcony, bands will be able to warn other musicians.

Even concert-goers can get in on the action. Tickets are purchased through the app, so in addition to getting a notification that discloses the โ€œsecret locationโ€ of the concert, consumers also receive reminders for other shows based on their preferences. After going to a concert, attendees can rate both the venue and the musicians, providing yet another layer of data for future Parlor users.

โ€œWe believe the market will decide itself,โ€ said Jennings. โ€œWeโ€™re tying to create a product where reputation and trust are first and foremost.โ€

Songs from a room

Parlor Shows has a new downtown office, a cool logo, and two people who know what theyโ€™re doing (Jenningsโ€™ co-founder is Seattle-based CTO Casey Mees). Each day, the network of hosts and musicians growsโ€”right now, by word of mouth and soon through the app.

Even before performing at Parlorโ€™s inaugural house concert, โ€œFolk All Starโ€ Liam Kyle Cahill had a pretty good idea about how the app could enhance his profession. โ€œI spend 90 percent of my time either booking shows, sending emails, making phone calls, or promoting shows. โ€ฆ The hardest part for me is that it leaves a lot less time for actually writing songs, playing shows and performing. I plan to use it as a supplement. Iโ€™m always going to want to have other shows, anchor shows that you lock in first to know where youโ€™re going to be. But the best part about a house show is that you can plan it a month in advance.โ€

The intimate house concert setting also appeals to musicians. John White, the other โ€œFolk All-Star,โ€ said that at the house show, โ€œpeople listened to the lyrics โ€ฆ or at least they were quiet enough to make me imagine that they were.โ€

To get a better sense of what it takes to operate in the music booking industry, Parlorโ€™s main competitor is Sofar Soundsโ€”which stands for โ€œSounds From A Room โ€ฆ Sounds.โ€ And while the name is a bit redundant, Sofar has the advantage of maintaining its hype after being around for more than six years.

Like Parlor, Sofar sets up house concerts. The websiteโ€”there is no appโ€”plays up the exclusive nature of its house shows for both bands and attendees, stating, โ€œWe put on 100+ secret concerts every month in 105+ cities, featuring talent carefully curated by our teams.โ€

This โ€œcareful curationโ€ is a difference between Parlor and Sofar. While aspiring Sofar musicians and concertgoers must apply for the privilege of playing and attending a Sofar show (and even then only a small percentage get in), Parlor takes away the need for staff and volunteers by simply handing over control to its users. This eliminates a bit of the exclusivity factor, but it also cuts down on waiting time and opens up the playing field to everyone. In other words, it becomes scalableโ€”the golden feature of any app worth its weight in silicon.

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