How to Create Gigs

by Mrs. Gunn

This post isn’t about how to get shows or gigs that already exist, like getting into a festival or into an established venue for your genre. This post is about how to create gigs. How to create performance opportunities in places that have never had your genre before, and even get paid to do it.

First of all, you have to think of yourself as an entrepreneur. You have to have a great product. If you don’t sound good, then don’t try to do this. Make sure you get a recording of yourself, analyze it, and make sure you sound good. If the music doesn’t sound good, go back and practice some more, then come back to this post.

Secondly, you need to amass an email list of all your family and close friends. Yes, I said family. OK so if your family isn’t going to come, that’s ok, just put a list together anyway. It’s more about quantity than quality when you first start out.

Third, get your act pared down to one or two people who don’t mind playing for free or for food. Just once. Remember this is for promotional purposes so the full band may not be required. You may need to double on another instrument (go back to step one if you can’t play that very well).

OK so here is where the magic is.

Research all the locally owned restaurants, bars, coffee shops, venues, wineries, and open fields in your local area. Think of everything! Restaurants owned by local people, non-chain, and are high priced tend to be able to afford live entertainment.

Here’s the key: you know the saying – “adapt or die?” Basically, you may have to bend your genre a little bit. If you’re typically pretty loud, you may need to do an acoustic set. If you’re typically pretty soft, you may need to turn up the volume. Change your act to what would be appropriate for the venue.

Remember you are here to entertain, to give people a chance to get away from reality. At the same time, you get food and you get to play music. Consider it a gift to do this for money.

Then, send an email to a restaurant or venue. Try to find somewhere that has similar music to your genre, and if they already have regular music then that will be easier to get into. If they don’t have regular music, don’t give up. Any locally owned restaurant will have live entertainment if it brings in more guests.

Follow up with a phone call. Find out when the manager is on duty, and drop by. Offer to play once for free, or just free food for your buddy(ies), and then offer to play on a low night, like Monday or Tuesday.

This next step is the most important: once you have something set up, email and text blast your friends. Post an event on Facebook and invite everyone you know. Twitter it up. Put it in Artist Data and those updates feed to your Facebook and your Twitter so there’s a reminder right beforehand. Do a text blast and let everyone know you’re playing. Just get the word out, and build it up like it’s a CD release concert or something.

Get people to show up. If you fill the club on a Tuesday night, they will definitely have you back!

And that is how you create gigs!

With a little ingenuity and a little luck, you can be performing two or three nights a week in your home town. Try it, and let us know if it worked! Don’t be lazy! Get out there and just do it. You have nothing left to lose! Adapt or don’t play! Lose yourself in the music… you get one shot… ok enough of that. Good luck and let us know how it goes if you actually try this.

Oh yeah, and when you do play, put a sign up so people can see the name of your band. Even if it’s just a duo or solo act, use it as a chance to advertise your band. And don’t forget about farm houses and open fields. Create your own music festival. Invite another band to play before you, sell food and drinks, and you will not be disappointed! After all, it’s all about the music, right?

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Mixcraft File Structure

by Mrs. Gunn



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Feist Case Study

by Mrs. Gunn

Feist is putting out an album, and the way she is promoting it is to put up little video snippets of her music. Check it out at http://listentofeist.com!

She is putting up one little video at a time, and it seems to be a really great idea. I also like her website. Simple and to the point.

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If you want to waste hours of your time…

by Mrs. Gunn

First saw this on tumblr – now I’ve got to the source – way cool!
http://www.sembeo.com/media/Matrix.swf

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Intro to Mixcraft – Part 1 – Overview

by Mrs. Gunn


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Moving to Streaming – a comment on the Lefsetz letter *updated*

by Mrs. Gunn

This post was taken from a blog entitled “The Lefsetz Letter” written by Bob Lefsetz, music industry insider. He basically says that Spotify is going to take down iTunes and that artists will be vying for streaming time rather than radio/sales. To take the physical product completely out of the picture is a bit extreme. There will always be people without internet. Spotify is amazing, and a long time coming.  It allows you to share playlists, and tracks, but we’re all still trying to figure out how it all works. The one thing I’m trying to figure out is, does the track have to be part of the Spotify database to be shared? Or can you share an mp3 off your own computer with someone else? And what’s the difference between the greyed out and white songs? I’m still trying to figure out Spotify so please be patient with that! I hope I don’t get in trouble for writing this!

From the Lefsetz Letter, at http://lefsetz.com/wordpress/index.php/archives/2011/08/05/moving-to-streaming/

Moving To Streaming

By Bob Lefsetz

Ladies and gentlemen, start your engines, the streaming era has begun. And it’s going to turn the music business upside down. So much of what now exists will evaporate. The game will be completely different. It will switch from one focused on sales to actual listening. Right now, Spotify is pioneering. It appears to be trumping its competitors, Rhapsody, MOG, Napster and Rdio. But the big behemoth Apple is waiting in the wings. If you study the history of the Cupertino company, it’s rarely first, that’s a recent phenomenon, it usually enters a sphere late, after the public is inured to the behavior, and Apple perfects it. Apple was late with CD burners, iTunes was not the first jukebox, the iPod was not the first MP3 player. But Apple employed design, both software and hardware, to create elegant solutions that were intuitive, simple to use, requiring no manual, and ultimately triumphed in the marketplace.

Don’t say Apple doesn’t rent, just look at movies and TV in the iTunes Store. Steve Jobs is famous for saying one thing and then doing another. Funny how he can change position and politicians cannot. Apple only strikes when the time is right, when a business can burgeon. Streaming is now here. Expect only one streaming service to triumph in America. Spotify has the early-mover advantage, but Apple has the installed base, and everybody’s credit card number. And when Apple moves, everybody knows overnight. Steve Jobs gets on stage and it’s bigger than any rock show. Furthermore, users spread the word and people trust Apple.

It makes no sense to own product. You want your music everywhere. Quality will improve with bandwidth. The ship has sailed. What does this mean for you?

1. It’s no longer about the initial sales transaction, but getting people to actually listen to your music. Your relationship doesn’t end when people buy your music, it begins when you get them to click.

2. It’s less about foraging for new customers than satiating old ones. An established fan streaming your track ten times is just as good and cheaper to accomplish than finding ten new fans to stream your track once.

This is assuming the artists makes royalties on streaming. The amount of royalties for streaming is different depending on how the streaming happens. Royalties for streaming on demand (MP3skull, youtube, etc) is really low compared to Pandora/satellite radio. If it’s given on demand, it’s just not worth as much for some reason. If it’s streamed as a radio station (where someone else determines what you’re listening to), it’s worth a lot more. My question is – what category does Spotify fall in?  If the artist really wants to make money from streaming, they are better off getting it onto Satellite radio and services such as Pandora. The concept of trying to get everyone to stream has to be done to such a great scale that only super duper popular artists would benefit. I think I heard that for the 150 million views for one of her tunes on Youtube, Beyonce only made about $15k in royalties from that. If people expect to make money from streaming on Spotify, I’d be interested to see the royalty rate.

Additionally, people are lazy. It takes work to hook your cell phone into the car stereo. People will still listen to radio in the car as long as it’s more convenient than Spotify/Pandora. In other words, I think people most people will be too lazy to use Spotify to its fullest extent. The teeny boppers will be on it constantly, but as people grow older, they’ll just resort to whatever is easiest. Now once they put Spotify in the car radios, that will be the day!

3. Marketing and promotion are reminders to get people to stream as opposed to buy.

Agree and disagree. Marketing and promotion will try to get people to come to shows. Maybe a little toward buying the album but mostly toward live performance.

4. Historically, it’s been all about the release date. Stopping leaks and working everybody into a frenzy to buy the first week. Now you won’t care if a track leaks, you’ll just put it up on the streaming site and book revenue.

This is already true. Except that there is very little/no revenue from putting it on a streaming site.

5. Sure, you’ll create events to stimulate streaming. But there will be many as opposed to few. And they’ll be more targeted. Today’s events reach many people who just don’t care. In the streaming future you’ll alert your fan base and then execute. Knowing who your fans are will be crucial. Whether it be Facebook, Twitter, e-mail or some unknown social network, you will go directly to fans. It will not be about pitching middlemen, print and TV and radio, to get the word out.

True. It’s always been a poor business model for iTunes to not hook artists up with the people that buy their music. Maybe Spotify can somehow change that.

6. Recommendations will be key. When another band or a fan spreads the word via playlists, infecting new listeners. Radio is inefficient. It’s about advertising, not music. You want tobe turned on to tracks by someone with the same sensibility, whose only goal is to turn you on to something great.

This is true. Wished Spotify would allow ppl to send single tracks. However radio will always have its place because people are lazy.

7. Playlist makers will be the new deejays. It comes down to who you trust. Anyone can publish, but not anyone can gain followers. Pandora and the like will fade, because they lack the human connection and their recommendation engine is just not as good.

8. You will get into business with he who can guarantee the most streams, not he who can pay you the most money. An advance means nothing. Marketing and promotion mean nothing without resultant streams.

9. There will be a streaming chart, which will cause people to check out winners. This will be determined by data, not influence. It won’t be about paying off the radio station, but reaching critical mass so that others will experiment by listening to you.

10. There will be multiple charts, based on newness and genre. Listeners will comb these to enrich their listening.

11. People will listen to more music than ever before. As a result, money will flow into other areas of the business, i.e. touring and merch.

Good luck with that.

12. Just because you can play, that does not mean you can win. Just because you’ve got your music on the streaming service, that does not mean anyone will listen to it.

13. Genre will no longer matter. You won’t complain that there’s no radio format for your track. Klezmer has equal footing with hip-hop. That does not mean as many people will listen to klezmer, just that the barrier to entry will be low.

True.

14. To get people to continue to listen you will constantly release new material, make live material public, the album will become passe. It makes no sense to get everybody to listen for a short period of time, you don’t want one big bang, but a constant flood.

True, but I think people will still do an album every now and then. To document.

15. Every act will have its greatest hits. Album cuts will be for fans only. You will constantly produce, trying to reach the brass ring. You won’t care about the losers, that which does not gain traction. If you fail today, record and release tomorrow.

True, except people won’t expect to make money from recordings.

16. Creativity will burgeon. With it being so easy to get into the marketplace and be heard, risks will be taken.

17. You need someone to gain you attention, you don’t need someone to press and distribute, to get you on the radio, to pay off middlemen to get you exposed. The manager will be king. Record labels will fade. Tribes of like-minded artists are a better place to park your rear end than a conglomerate with a plethora of acts that don’t sound like you. You want synergy. It’s more important to be on the Bonnaroo or Lollapalooza playlist than be signed to the major.

Already true.

18. Expect those with money and power to try and rig the game. I.e. major labels will try and game the system, generating plays and income for their acts. The streaming service will do its best to try and quash this behavior, but even Google has trouble weeding out those who try to optimize search.

This is true. Labels will pay someone in India $1 per hour to constantly stream on multiple computers. Probably already the case in some instances. But in the end, taste will prevail. You can only fake it so much.

 

This whole letter really makes me think about how we got to the way things were. What is the thing that makes people like music? When you’re young, it’s from recommendations from friends first then the popular people. Middle school kids have this huge “herd mentality” that makes them want to listen to whatever everyone else is listening to. As people get older, though, their tastes diverge from the norm. The “herd mentality” is still there, but there are more outliers in the older generations. It’s more about what you really like, and my question is: what determines what you really truly like? Is it the radio? Your parents? Something you heard while you were in the womb? A blogger? A friend? Word of mouth? Radio? Lyrics? Your internal rhythm? This is all dependent on what you are exposed to, and your ear. A lot of people like bands live but not the recorded sound.

I think this post is just a person trying to take what is already in place – the music industry – and package it in a new container. But that won’t be the case, if you ask me. Spotify won’t make you rich, nor will it make you famous. It’s the blogs and word of mouth and local presence that will make you into a success. Musicians who wish to be rich and famous will try to get that way not by selling their music (because it can’t be sold), but by selling their image, their culture, ethos, their coolness. Isn’t that how this all got started?

 

What do you think? I gave my op. Now give yours in the comment section below.

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Case Study: 3Oh!3

by Mrs. Gunn

 

This is a post (edited) taken from the Music Think Tank blog. The link for the post is:

http://www.musicthinktank.com/blog/diy-promotion-songwriting-and-pricing-w-3oh3.html

 

3Oh!3 is worth studying because –
1. They write all their own songs

2. Two man band

3. Self produced 1st album

4. Warped tour

5. Signed with an indie label, Photo Finish Records

6. Collaborated with Ke$ha, Katy Perry, more

7. Kept it local while makin’ it big (Boulder, CO)

8. They talk a lot about their philosophy regarding making it in the music industry

9. They write popular songs

Whats you’re opinion? Do you think it’s true when they say they try to keep their merch cost low for the fans?  Have they sold out by going the record label route? Are they truly DIY? Check out their website and write your comments below.

Article below:

 

DIY Promotion, Songwriting and Pricing w/ 3OH!3

The Band: 

3OH!3

The People:

Sean Foreman and Nat Motte

Current Projects:

Just finished performing on Warped Tour, currently recording 4th studio album

Hometown:

Boulder, CO

 

 

When you think of DIY bands, chances are the acts that come to your mind are not on the billboard charts. At least not yet. When we first reached out to 3OH!3 for an interview, we had our doubts as well. However, as you will see below, 3OH!3 was born and raised in DIY ethos and continue to move forward with the same mentality even today. Needless to say, it’s worked out pretty well for them. Not so long ago, members Sean Foreman and Nathaniel Motte were sending their demos in cute little packages to every record label they could find the mailing address for. Today, even though they sell extremely well and collaborate with the likes of music’s biggest names (Ke$haKaty Perry), they remain grounded in the practices it took to get them this far in the first place. Give the interview a read — you’ll be pleasantly surprised at what they have to say, if not a little bit inspired as well!

IndieAmbassador.com: Reading about your background, it appears that you guys got discovered by doing what everyone tells you not to do: sending demos to labels. Was it really that easy or was there more to it?


Sean Foreman: Oh yes, the sending of demos. I must have missed the memo that you aren’t supposed to send CDs out to labels, because I definitely did. Not only a CD, but I literally hand crafted little cute suitcases with photos and another CD without the music video. I was the Martha Stewart of demos. Not that it helped, they ended up on the record label’s floor I’m sure, but nonetheless it was fun to do and I felt like I was championing our band. Our path to finding a manager and an agent and eventually Photo Finish (our label) was a much longer series of events. Every time I go into the photo finish office now I go through and listen to all the demos as tiresome as that can sometimes be, it’s also fun.

IndieAmbassador.com: Obviously you’ve progressed past that same grassroots promotion. Any outside the box marketing techniques that are working in particular for you guys today? How was it helping to produce the video add-ons for your latest release’s deluxe package?


SF: I don’t think we have progressed past that same grass roots promotion. We continue to do things that is entirely untethered from our label that Nat and I think of spontaneously. For our CD release for Streets of Gold we took over the planetarium in Boulder and created a personalized laser show for some new songs as well as performed for the handful of people. We continue to break the wall down between musician and fan with interviews direct on UStream or answering questions on twitter. We have always pioneered our marketing with either an image or an idea and worked out thematically that way. Thankfully all our art and graphics for T-shirts and CDs have been done by Nick Motte (Nat’s brother) and Andrew Kimmel in Boulder. So we always are on the same page about our overall aesthetic and it keeps it in house.

We placed extra add ons in our deluxe version of Streets of Gold, sort of like that demo, but a little bit more realized. Our long time friend Isaac Ravishankara flew out to LA while we were recording and recorded a sort of mockumentary that we all wrote. Additionally I drew a comic specifically for the deluxe. It was a blast to make a variety of pieces, not just music for the album, and hopefully the fans got something special out of it too.

IndieAmbassador.com: You’re both songwriters, something that makes you unique among top 40 acts. How much of an effect did writing all your songs in a snowy mountain cabin have on the vibe of Streets of Gold?


SF:  To be a song writer in the Top 40 is pretty unique. All those acts or artists you think are writing their own songs (and I mean even the ones that aren’t the most obvious) are walking into the studio with the song already written, ready to record. Nat and I not only write our own music but we produce it as well. I can count on one hand top 40 artists that do the same. Not that I’m patting myself on the back, although I wouldn’t have it any other way, it’s just a rarity in the business. Not to say we don’t collaborate. I think an artist would never learn anything without collaboration and thankfully we’ve learned a lot in the process of collaborating with certain artists and producers.

Colorado was a great place to write and demo out music because it’s first and foremost, home. There’s no glitz and glamour or the shady facade of LA to distract you. So Nat and I get down to the important task of just working and writing. We tried to demo out 2 to 3 songs and ideas a day. Which over the course of 14 days turns into quite the process but was essential.

 

IndieAmbassador.com: Because you’re both songwriters, you lead very busy lives in terms of collaboration with other artists. Any tips for musicians on balancing it all? Are there any specific tools or resources that help you with this?


SF: Balancing your life can be difficult, but for one turn off the TV. Work like you should with anything you love. Obviously if you have a job you have to work around that, but just put in the work. Music speaks for itself, but its voice can only travel so far without putting in the footwork. Nat and I might be considered weird by other artists because we don’t go into the studio at midnight and do drugs all night […edited for content…]. Nat and I get into the studio around 10 am and work until 8 or 9 PM and so do most other songwriters. Artists a lot of times need that magic hour of creativity and to be honest that might work for some people but I prefer to think that a good balance of work and creativity is usually better than a one in a million lightning strike of brilliance.

Indieambassador.com: Despite the fact that you guys are constantly touring, you’re revered for having an incredible live performance, rejecting the temptation to appear as exhausted as you actually might be on stage and thus enhancing the concert experience for fans. How do you manage to stay emotionally invested in show after show like that?


SF: Touring like we do can be extremely tiring. This might sound cliché but a lot of times we do go on stage exhausted and unsure but the crowd amps us up and inspires a new energy. We put so much work into our live show because we feel it is one of the most important things we do and thankfully our fans give back what we put out.

IndieAmbassador.com: When I caught up with you backstage at Warped Tour, you mentioned that you’re constantly trying to find a way to make your products as affordable as possible for the sake of your fans. What in particular does that entail, and do you think you sell more because of such a strategy?


SF: I don’t know if we sell more. I guess our aim to keep prices low isn’t an aim to reach higher profits and would make any business man cringe but we owe it to our fans. We know the price of our product, though it may be immaterial, and we want to keep that as low as possible for our fans. We consistently work with promotors that dont add surcharges to tickets, we sell our merch for reasonable prices when other bands hike them up. If you wish to read more about our struggle with price matching you can read one of Nat’s diatribes on our Facebook page.  We obviously wish to continue making music and it’s nice to be able to pay rent with what you do, but we also care very much for what the fan gets out of the experience and we can bite the bullet on price points if it means we are reaching a larger audience.

IndieAmbassador.com: What is the largest challenge facing 3OH!3 as a band right now?


SF: Well, as we mature as a band and as people we face new things everyday. Whether it is a lawsuit or a disgruntled promotor or even last night a meth head in Des Moines tried to attack Nat as he was walking out of the venue. We face new things every day but honestly we are still having a blast and face an exciting future.

IndieAmbassador.com: What excites you most about the music industry right now?


SF: The music industry right now is ever changing.  Someone brings something new to the table everyday that changes the game. I love the mixtape culture. The ‘I don’t […edited for content …]’ about money mentality of just releasing music. Its so immediate and I think it really works. It builds hype and helps the artist along. I’m also excited that the technology to record and produce is not in the hands of the elite — any kid in his basement can record an album and there is a lot of great stuff out there as a result.

TrueDIY is an educational series produced by Indie Ambassador. Through our video panelsindustry profiles and articles, artists and music professionals can educate themselves on general business topics, new technology and current industry trends.

 

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How to play the chords to Party Rock Anthem

by Mrs. Gunn

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