Music is an art form that has universal appeal. For many of us, music is associated with every aspect of our lives. We listen to it all the time, obsess about the artists who create it, write about it a lot and spend our money on gigs, festivals, albums and merchandise. Music is often used to define a decade or a generation and in the past it has also been used to sell cigarettes.
In the mid 1990s, multinational tobacco company British American Tobacco (BAT) decided to tap into that “universal appeal” and use music, specifically dance music, to influence young people to start smoking and to smoke their brand – Lucky Strike.
Anyone who smokes in Australia (or doesn’t for that matter) knows the dull green packaging that is used to brand all cigarettes sold here. Since implementing plain packaging and prohibiting stores from even displaying cigarettes behind the counter, there is no advertising whatsoever, and smoking is often considered an anti-social habit. The government has increased taxes and put extensive limits on the locations in which people are allowed to smoke in an effort to encourage people to stop, including enforcing distances between food areas, doorways and more. The cigarette advertising of the past is a fairly alien concept to us, and seeing cigarettes portrayed as fashionable and attractive in movies and advertisements of previous eras seems like another world entirely.
With increasing restrictions on straightforward advertising in place, marketers in the 1990s had to get creative. Instead of using films, BAT used real people – and real music.
To skirt some of the laws coming into play, while marketing to a key demographic – hip, young people, BAT decided to utilise dance music and the live music scene in London as a marketing tool. They partnered up with longstanding club, and later record label Ministry of Sound to promote their cigarettes to young party-goers. The Ministry of Sound is still hugely popular today, as a club, a tech brand, a source for those longstanding beloved compilation albums, and of course, as one of the foremost dance music labels in the world.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_XkotJGrs80
A 2011 report published by the European Journal of Public Health reviewed previously secret tobacco industry documents that outlined BAT’s plans to sell Lucky Strikes using the Ministry of Sound. Everything from promotional images to press releases explaining the campaign strategies are accessible through the article, which explores how the two companies collaborated across the UK, Europe, Asia and beyond.
First, a little history. This type of guerrilla marketing, using the music industry to promote tobacco and develop brand identity and recognition within young adults, started back in the mid 1970s. US company Brown & Williamson began promoting within the live jazz scene in New York, sponsoring New York’s Kool Jazz Festival in 1975 and promoted their menthol cigarettes, which they specifically tailored to African American males. They sponsored the festival because “music is the framework or building block for a deep, emotionally resonating theme … [with dimensions of] nostalgia, reflection of mood, [and] group identification.” The brand hoped that associating with jazz music would bring them credibility and increase the popularity of male menthols. Similarly, Camel launched their Smooth Moves events which involved live music, contests, branded merchandise, games and free cigarette samples.
BAT and Philip Morris similarly sponsored the famed Montreaux Jazz Festivals throughout the 1980s and 1990s, again wanting to associate themselves with the “youthful imagery” and specific musical tastes of the era. As music had, and always will have a universal appeal, the trick then was to make that work to the advantage of the tobacco companies.
While B&W associated itself with jazz in the US, BAT found its niche within the dance music culture in Britain throughout the 1990s.
In the 1990s, bars, clubs, karaoke venues and discos became a “fertile ground for cigarette promotions and events aimed at young adults.” Nightclubs and bars were the ideal places to integrate cigarette brands with the lifestyle, and to ensure that smoking was part of “normal adult life,” starting from a younger age – 18 – 25, the demographic most commonly found in clubs at the time (and still today.)
The Ministry of Sound established itself as a nightclub in 1991 and quickly rose in popularity and fame to the point where it was considered a ‘superclub’ and a brand unto itself. Its image was undeniably cool and many who attended the club were seen as tastemakers and influencers among London’s youth. The basis of the partnership was to link live music events and dance music culture with the Lucky Strike brand.
In their proposed strategy, BAT explained, “If we liaise closely with [discos and bars] and develop a partnership for the promotion of the outlet and our brands, then we should be able to gain control of the music, light show and DJ for the purposes of BAT promotions.”
Key events included two massive national Ministry of Sound tours, launched and sponsored by BAT, first kicking off in 1995. The tour visited more than 50 events in various London clubs, bars and student unions, while a second follow-up tour came after the first successful run. A multitude of marketing tools were implemented; this included free cigarette samples, free merchandise giveaways, branded games and advertisements in local magazines. They even brought out a “sampling posse,” essentially an updated version of the ‘cigarette girl,’ and enforced venues to exclusively stock Lucky Strikes – including only stocking vending machines with the brand.
The tours were as overwhelming success. BAT recorded boosts in sales of Lucky Strike after every single event and announced in a UK press release that from “June 1996 – year on year,” they increased sales over 100% as a direct, specific result of the Ministry of Sound tour.

A flyer from a Lucky Strike x Ministry of Sound event at Kings College, London. Image: Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Public Health Association
After their success in UK, BAT launched similar campaigns in China and Taiwan with the brand State Express 555. They took the Ministry of Sound event on a world tour that reached as far as Cambodia, Vietnam, Bangladesh, Mauritius and Indonesia among others. During the tour BAT also contracted Ministry of Sound to create merchandise, club culture guides and three-track CDs branded with the 555 logo to hand out at events – on top of just straight up handing out smokes to attendees.
MOS toured throughout Europe, South America, South Africa and beyond, advertising Lucky Strike, 555 or Benson and Hedges depending on the location. In 1998, Lucky Strike was promoted in Russia and Western Europe, while B&H was marketed in Mauritius in 1998 and 1999. The company developed a term to describe the intended demographic: ROCAS – Responsible, Optimistic, Confident and Ambitious Smokers. This was a more specific strategy than other brands, who were looking more broadly at the HORECA industry (Hotels, Restaurants, Catering), by the way.
Other tobacco companies to tap into this relationships included Rothmans in Nigeria and Camel in Argentina. The report talks about one particularly notable point during a travelling disco in Russia, in Novosibirsk, Siberia, where attendees were only able to gain entry to the club if they brought five empty packs of Marlboros with them.
These techniques didn’t finish in the 1990s, nor at nightclubs, for the record. In 2008, an Alicia Keys tour of Indonesia was initially sponsored by Philip Morris International/Sampoerna (PM later withdrew at Keys’ request). A Japanese cigarette company sponsored a music festival in Tanazania in 2009, and BAT and Lucky Strike were still promoting their brand in venues throughout Spain at the same time.
BAT and other tobacco companies used the positive, trend-setting associations and influence of dance music to cultivate brand credibility and brand association among young people to ensure that their cigarettes were an integral part of that culture. Ministry of Sound, and other music events and companies in its wake, had built an identity that represented innovation and exciting, fresh, underground dance music. To associate with this group of people and this culture was a powerful, and for the most part, extremely successful guerrilla marketing tactic at the time.
Similar to the way brands now use Instagram or Facebook to associate themselves with certain lifestyles, ‘influencers’ and social sub-groups, tobacco companies used nightclubs and related music events. These companies capitalise on the knowledge that young people are eager to follow trends and willing to do whatever is deemed cool.
Examples like these demonstrate the importance of the measures taken by Australia to stop tobacco brands exploiting something so precious to sell cigarettes to people.
Source: European Journal of Public Health
Image: Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Public Health Association
Woohoo! It’s giveaway time.
Ministry of Sound have just dropped their latest compilation, FUT.UR.ISM 3.0. As always, it’s been impeccably curated, featuring a range of familiar and fresh beats from all over the globe – with a seriously healthy dose of homegrown talent.
From Kaytranada and Vic Mensa to Basenji, from Chet Faker to Paces, Duke Dumont, Caribou, Hudson Mohawk, Purity Ring, Childish Gambino, Jamie xx, Maya Jane Coles and more, WOW! This is one incredible two-disc set. I guarantee it’s going to be playing in my car for the foreseeable future.
Want a copy? Fear now – we’ve got FIVE copies to give away to YOU!
It’s easy to enter:
1. Like and share Howl & Echoes on Facebook
2. Email giveaways@howlandechoes.com with “FUTURISM” as the title, and your name in the email.
Note: You must be living in Australia to enter
We will be drawing the winners at midday on Wednesday May 13. Get on it!
Here’s the full track list for the album. It’s amazing.
DISC 1
1. Kaytranada feat. Vic Mensa – Drive Me Crazy
2. Hermitude feat. Young Tapz – Through The Roof (Kilter Remix)
3. Flosstradamus & TroyBoi – Sound Clash
4. Rustie feat. Danny Brown – Attak
5. Alison Wonderland feat. Wayne Coyne – U Don’t Know
6. Hudson Mohawke – Chimes
7. Grimes feat. Blood Diamonds – Go
8. Carmada feat. Maribelle – On Fire
9. Purity Ring – begin again
10. Brenmar – Hula Hoop feat. UNiiQU3
11. Tkay Maidza – Finish Them
12. Spank Rock feat. Amanda Blank – Assassin
13. Childish Gambino – Retro [Rough]
14. Touch Sensitive – Teen Idols
15. Jamie xx – Girl
16. Slumberjack – Horus
17. Basenji – Heirloom
18. Flamingo feat. Hunt – Drip Away (Nick Lynar Remix)
19. GodWolf – Resist
20. Paces feat. Kučka – Nothing’s Forever
21. HWLS feat. Noah Breakfast – 004
22. Kilter feat. Ngaiire – Coward (Naderi Remix)
23. Knife Party – Boss Mode
DISC 2
1. Andras & Oscar – Looking Back
2. Cosmos Midnight feat. Wild Eyed Boy – Snare
3. Hayden James – Something About You
4. Porches – Horses
5. TCTS feat. Aniff Akinola – Coup Da Ville
6. Roland Tings – Pala
7. Chet Faker – 1998 (ReShaped by Homework)
8. Jungle – Time (Joe Goddard Remix)
9. Jack Ward – Yoghurt
10. Sam Smith – Leave Your Lover (Motez Remix)
11. Duke Dumont – Slow Dance
12. Shiba San – I Can’t Remember
13. Nadastrom – Falling Down (Justin Martin Remix)
14. Caribou – Our Love
15. Maya Jane Coles feat. Moggli – From the Dark
16. Acaddamy – I’ve Been Waiting
17. Hot Since 82 feat. Alex Mills – Restless
18. GotSome feat. Wiley – Vibe Out
19. Tiga feat. Pusha T – Bugatti
20. Will Clarke – The Goog
21. Waze & Odessey & R. Kelly – Bump & Grind 2014
My first introduction to the institution that is The Ministry of Sound was through their ridiculously well-curated mix CDs. I’m pretty sure even my parents had a few copies of some early chill-out mixes, and they’ve remained a staple in my music collections ever since.
Their new collection is a four-album 80s mix, and it is BOSS. From funk to hip hop to soul to pop, this is one helluva playlist. The PERFECT soundtrack to any house party, road trip, and just everyday life in general.
The best part is that we’ve got THREE to give away to you lucky readers, woohoo!
Entering is simple:
- Like Howl & Echoes on Facebook and
- Email giveaways@howlandechoes.com with “MINISTRY OF SOUND” in the title and your name
That’s it!
We’ll draw the winners on Wednesday March 25.
See below for the full tracklisting. In the meantime, get hyped up by this:
DISC 1
- Frankie Goes To Hollywood – Relax
- The Human League – Don’t You Want Me
- Gary Numan – Cars
- Soft Cell – Tainted Love
- New Order – Blue Monday
- Yazoo – Don’t Go
- Heaven 17 – Temptation
- Joy Division – Love Will Tear Us Apart
- Bronski Beat – Smalltown Boy
- Go West – We Close Our Eyes
- Talk Talk – It’s My Life
- ABC – Poison Arrow
- Paul Hardcastle – 19
- Spandau Ballet – Chant No 1 (I Don’t Need This Pressure On)
- Tears For Fears – Mad World
- Duran Duran – Save A Prayer
- Simple Minds – Don’t You (Forget About Me)
- Visage – Fade To Grey
- Blondie – Rapture
- Nik Kershaw – Wouldn’t It Be Good
DISC 2
- Run-DMC – Walk This Way
- The Beastie Boys – (You Gotta) Fight For Your Right (To Party)
- Salt N Pepa – Push It
- Grandmaster Flash feat. Melle Mel – White Lines (Don’t Do It)
- The Sugarhill Gang – Rapper’s Delight
- Rob Base & DJ EZ Rock – It Takes Two
- N.W.A. – Express Yourself
- Eric B. & Rakim – Paid In Full (Mini Madness – The Coldcut Remix)
- Stetasonic – Talkin’ All That Jazz
- Young MC – Know How
- Herbie Hancock – Rockit
- Harold Faltermeyer – Axel F
- Hashim – Al-Naafyish (The Soul)
- Afrika Bambaataa & The Soul Sonic Force – Don’t Stop…Planet Rock
- Shannon – Let The Music Play
- Ollie & Jerry – Breakin’…There’s No Stopping Us
- Chaka Khan – I Feel For You
DISC 3
- Cameo – Word Up!
- Rufus & Chaka Khan – Ain’t Nobody
- Sister Sledge – Thinking Of You
- Daryl Hall & John Oates – I Can’t Go For That (No Can Do)
- Shalamar – I Can Make You Feel Good
- “D” Train – You’re The One For Me
- Womack & Womack – Teardrops
- Colonel Adams – Trapped
- Rockers Revenge feat. Donnie Calvin – Walking On Sunshine
- Steve Arrington – Feel So Real
- Indeep – Last Night A DJ Saved My Life
- Gwen Guthrie – Ain’t Nothing Goin’ On But The Rent
- Change – Change Of Heart
- Loose Ends – Hangin’ On A String (Contemplating)
- Joyce Sims – Come Into My Life
- Ashford & Simpson – Solid
- Nu Shooz – I Can’t Wait
- Jocelyn Brown – Somebody Else’s Guy
DISC 4
- Nenah Cherry – Buffalo Stance
- Black Box – Ride On Time
- Coldcut feat. Lisa Stansfield – People Hold On
- S’Xpress – Theme From S’Xpress
- M/A/R/R/S – Pump Up The Volume
- Technotronic feat. Felly – Pump Up The Jam
- Inner City – Good Life
- Steve ‘Silk’ Hurley – Jack Your Body
- Marshall Jefferson – Move Your Body (The House Music Theme)
- Ten City – That’s The Way Love Is (Deep House Remix)
- Frankie Knuckles feat. Jamie Principle – Your Love
- Farley ‘Jackmaster’ Funk & Jesse Saunders feat. Darryl Pandy – Love Can’t Turn Around
- D-Mob feat. Gary Haisman – We Call It Acieed
- Jungle Brothers – I’ll House You (Club Mix)
- Mr Fingers – Can You Feel It (Instrumental)
- 808 State – Pacific 707
- Joe Smooth – Promised Land


