CULT Welsh band The Alarm has generated more than £20,000 in subscription revenue from its new LP following an exclusive preview on streaming app FanCircles.

The band released its 'War' LP on the lesser-known fan engagement platform before it debuted on major streaming services and spoke with fans during a pre-release unveiling on Thursday, February 25 – the birthday of lead singer Mike Peters.

The first track was dropped at 9.30pm, with another new song following every 15 minutes until the record’s global release at midnight.

“We were in the middle of making this album that was written and created in 50 days, so were open to new ways of delivering our music,” said Mr Peters.

“The FanCircles environment arrived on our doorstep and it seemed a great way for us to launch the album, so we launched it on the night of my birthday and spent four hours live on the platform, The Alarm Central, talking to our fans.”

FanCircles has provided artists with an income stream via their own private social network during the pandemic and has attracted more than 500,000 users to its Fan.Direct portals and mobile app.

Over 40 acts have already signed up to the platform, including The Levellers, Paloma Faith, The News Boys, Ed Harcourt and Bon Jovi guitarist Phil X.

“What struck me about it was that it seemed a brilliant new way to take The Alarm's relationship with our audience forward without being in the domain of the big publishers and big tech,” said Mr Peters.

“It has also created a safe space for me personally to be able to communicate and interact with people who care about the music of The Alarm.”

The Alarm have a long-running fan club and are due to tour later this year to mark their 40th anniversary as a band.

FanCircles is the brainchild of Kevin Brown, founder and former CEO of tech giant Awin.com, the UK and Europe’s biggest affiliate network, which was acquired by Axel Springer in 2012.

“Working with a band like The Alarm is an absolute privilege,” said Craig Swan, FanCircles’ director of account management. “They have incredible fans and an amazing history, but they are also forward-thinking.

“The launch of their platform, The Alarm Central, coincided with the release of their new album War. Not only did we deliver a unique, interactive launch night on the app, we also generated over £20,000 in subscription revenue in an extremely short period of time.”

Based on streaming revenue estimates, artists signed up to FanCircles need just 50 annual subscribers to make the same money as one million streams.

Mr Swan said: “A key difference with us is that a fan can access the community for free if they choose to. Our premium tier offers insane value from the artist, but we are 100 per cent community focused. This is the future of a heightened relationship between artists and fans.”