Management
manage your band
manage your band
Print
Categories: Basics, Create Music, Learn, Record, Uncategorized
No CommentsTags: low budget, protools, recording sessions, studio
You’ve rehearsed a lot, and are ready to lay down some tracks at a nice, or not so nice recording studio. You’ve probably like I did, paid a bunch of money to have someone engineer the demo and are really wanting things to go well.
Here are just some thoughts about what things to think about once you are ready to go and get everyone together to play. I recorded some pop songs, and so these are the things that I had to keep in mind, but I guess that the process would be slightly different say if you were recording a hip hop track, or classical concerto, or anything in between. But for us, it was all about planning…
Print
Categories: Basics, Learn, Play A Show, Rehearse, Uncategorized
No CommentsTags: back up, microphone, Shure, sing, SM58, sound, vocals
I’m not a singer, but I have played in bands and have tried to sing. Most of the time, it sounded bad. It wasn’t that I am a bad singer, although that probably contributed to the situation. It’s because singing at a club in front of loud instruments calls for some adjustment of technique. For the first year of playing out at bars, I would sing backup, but it wasn’t really being heard in the room. Then there were the times, that I felt I was on key and in tune, and yet, stuck out too much. I think that at the core of it, the technique of singing into a microphone in a band situation is different from say singing in a choir, or in the shower. Microphones accentuate certain aspects of the sound, and reward for crispness of the sound coming out of your mouth, rather than the tone coming out. Like I said, I’m not a singer, but I have noticed some things here and there about singing backup that might be good to keep in mind…. Continue Reading
Print
Categories: Advertise, Audience, Communicate, Learn, Lifestyle, Social Network, Touring, Video
1 CommentTags: bands, barack obama, drunk, music, music business, scene, sharing audiences
A few weeks ago, my band AM, played this fundraiser for Barack Obama’s campaign. It was basically a hipster neighborhood event in Williamsburg/Greenpoint in NYC where they got a bunch of bars together to host a bunch of indie bands. One ticket got you a bracelet that allowed you to go to any bar that was hosting this thing and see all the music that was being made. It was called Ba-Rock Brooklyn.
So, it was pretty cool to meet all the bands there that night, and to my surprise (since I am a pessimist when it comes to people showing up at shows), there were a lot of people out that night and everyone raised $2500 for Barack. Not bad for a neighborhood thing.
I realized that part of the success of these kinds of nights is the “Music scene” aspect of it all. It works better to ask your audience to go to an event where they will be able to hear lots of different musics than just hear your band. So, the draw is “Come see a night of local indie music”, rather than “Come see my band”. A slightly different Continue Reading
Print
Categories: Advertise, Audience, Communicate, Lifestyle, Social Network, Touring, Video, Website
No CommentsTags: 50 cent, AdSense, blog, calendar, events, facebook, how-to, myspace, ning.com, rss, Social Network, widgets
Steps
Setting up a network is fast and easy. Figuring out which features make sense for you, and moving or linking to any other content you have on the web, might take a while but is something you can do in phases and complete over time. Here’s what to do:
Print
Categories: Advertise, Audience, Communicate, Lifestyle, Market, Shows, Social Network, Touring, Video, Website
No CommentsTags: 50 cent, AdSense, blog, calendar, events, facebook, myspace, ning.com, review, rss, Social Network, widgets
When you make and share music you are creating a community. It may be a big audience at a show, or a small group of friends blasting your tunes in the high school parking lot. In collecting an audience you are often bringing together people who have more in common then just an appreciation for your art, like the way they dress or the other music they listen to.
The promise behind Social Networking on the web is that it allows people to parallel what goes on in “Meatspace” in virtual form. Ning.com is a site that helps your fans connect with each other and keep up with your artistic endeavors.
Overview
Ning makes it super simple to create and customize a brand new social network. It allows you to go beyond the simple profile that the Facebooks and MySpaces of the world allow. Your fans can even create groups within your Continue Reading
Print
Categories: Communicate, Learn, Touring, Website
No CommentsTags: fanbase, google, how-to, living, logistics, maps, review, rocking, room, soundcheck, tutorial, wnyc
Google maps is the best!
As it gets harder and harder to tour for a small act, with gas prices and lodging and every other thing you need to go on tour costing all kinds of money, people are finding alternative ways to go on tour. People use myspace and facebook to connect with their fans and crash at peoples’ places. A few years ago, the band that I was playing in booked small tours where we rented a van and booked some bigger shows that paid some money, and then used that money to stay in motels and peoples’ houses. The amount of telephone planning and mapping and logistics took a good chunk of time and energy. One of the things that I’ve recently discovered, and maybe because I’m not as computer literate as my partner Craig, is using Google Maps to map and plan tours. You can create a customized map to mark Continue Reading