What Artists Can Learn From Greta Van Fleet [VIDEO]

Greta Van Fleet

Michigan’s Greta Van Fleet is one of the most successful and most often criticized bands on the planet. Following their lead is something every aspiring artist should consider.

There are far more talented rock bands vying for attention right now than anyone can hope to cover. The vast majority of these musicians will spend their entire careers caught somewhere between local hotshot and moderate success. Some may write songs capable of changing the world, but the likelihood that anyone outside their circle hears those tracks is relatively low. The reasons for that frustrating fact are numerous, but studying Greta Van Fleet can explain how artists can position themselves for breakout success.

Hailing from a part of Michigan known more for its holiday spirit than its music, Greta Van Fleet became an international sensation in 2017 thanks to a nonstop touring schedule and two promising EPs. Almost overnight, the world of rock was divided into two groups: People who appreciate the group’s throwback sound and those who feel the young men from the midwest were ripping off several legendary acts. You probably have an opinion, and we’re not attempting to convince you otherwise.

Parts of the rock music community continues to debate the band’s quality to this day. Still, the general public has made their opinion known by pushing the band into sold-out amphitheater performances and spending their hard-earned cash buying their music. There’s also the band’s four GRAMMY nominations, as well as numerous glowing reviews from the global music community.

Greta Van Fleet has reached a level of success that any group of musicians would kill to achieve, and that popularity is not a fluke. The band and their team work incredibly hard, and there are lessons from their rise that can help other musicians build lasting careers with devoted fans.

First and foremost, Greta Van Fleet understands branding. One look at the band’s photos, videos, or logo, and you immediately know what type of music they perform. Their marketing efforts sell the promise of a specific image and sound that the group delivers on through everything they do. It’s a textbook example of “what you see is what you get,” and in a time when the competition is fierce, there is something to be said for giving people exactly what they want.

Likewise, the band isn’t afraid to embrace their influences. Millions of rock fans worldwide would give anything to hear more material from the legendary bands of the 60s and 70s that laid the foundation for everything that came after. Those groups, by and large, are no longer releases new music. That leaves a void that Greta Van Fleet is happy to fill. That doesn’t mean that they’re compromising their artistic vision or writing inauthentic music. In reality, the group is doing exactly what they want. They wish to be as big as the bands that people never forget, and they’re following the blueprint of those acts in hopes of becoming a similarly iconic group.

Greta Van Fleet also understands the digital age. They know that everyone has a voice and that success is often determined by the number of people talking about your music. The group has faced more criticism than any mainstream rock act since Nickelback or Creed, but they don’t let that get them down. They understand that there are millions of musicians people could discuss. People talk about them, which means they are getting clicks, streams, views, etc. The volume of conversation matters more than its contents, at least to an extent, so long as people keep talking, the band continues to thrive.

The last point worth making is that the band’s success would not be possible without leveraging their fans’ support. The group’s rise in popularity came after they turned to friends, family, and listeners to fund a live EP way back in 2014. That release leads to licensing the helped kickstart GVF’s ascent through the world of rock, but it may never have existed without the band first asking their audience for support. The group invited their fans to play a pivotal role in their journey, and their followers obliged. That level of transparency has helped the group create a community around their music, unlike any other fandom in rock today. It’s all because they were open about their need for assistance.

Point being: It’s okay to need help. Fans want to see you succeed, and if you ask them to support you, they will probably do what they can to assist in whatever you hope to achieve.

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James Shotwell