This is the Myspace dedicated to helping promote the amazing band, Saving Jane, and to helping promote their Street Team (which helps promote the band).
To check out Saving Jane go to their myspace at www.myspace.com/SavingJane
If you are a fan of Saving Jane and wanna check out this whole street team thing, go to
www.fancorps.com/savingjane/signup
Taken from Saving Jane's Myspace:
For anyone who has grown annoyed by the music industry's habit of selling songs with sex rather than substance, Marti Dodson has an album for you. It's more like a movement. With One Girl Revolution, Saving Jane's lead singer is trying to bring us back to a time when songs were based around heartfelt stories that didn't have be delivered with a wink and a wiggle.
In 2002, the band self-released its 11-song debut, Something to Hold Onto. Three years later came Girl Next Door (Toucan Cove), with which the band build a grassroots following, scoring regional radio exposure, which led to regional tours. In April 2006, Dodson and company signed a deal with Universal for the re-release of Girl Next Door, which has gone on to sell 100,000 copies, propelled by the smash title track.
"Girl Next Door" became a hit on both radio and iTunes, where it was downloaded some 600,000 times. The gold-certified single became the theme for MTV's Tiara Girls, and was included on the hit compilation Now 22.
It has helped the band register more than 2.5 million profile views on MySpace, where the song has been played more than 7 million times. It also brought Saving Jane and Dodson to the country's attention: Since 2005, Dodson, a born stage performer who thrives in the spotlight. and Saving Jane have toured nationwide, opening for the likes of Daughtry, Kelly Clarkson, Pink, All American Rejects and The Fray. They've been featured in Billboard and Teen People and performed on Live with Regis and Kelly. Dodson, meanwhile, has become a spokesperson and model for the Wet Seal clothing brand.
With One Girl Revolution, both she and the band are growing into themselves. "I think most artists start out wanting to be on a major label," Dodson says. "That's the ultimate goal. It was for us. And then we just found out that it wasn't everything it was cracked up to be, that it wasn't right for us. We didn't get to make the music we wanted to make, and there was a lot of pressure about image. So on One Girl Revolution we just wanted to go back to a place where it was all about music, and making the music we wanted to make. That's what this album is all about."