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Advice: Adding (The Right) Members To Your Band

Hello, everyone. Thank you for taking a few minutes out of your day to spend on our blog. The post your about to read is part of our long-running artist advice series, and like many of the posts in this column the entry you’re about to enjoy was written by a band with experience in the topic at hand. This week’s guest authors are Fox & Cats, a promising young pop rock outfit from Texas with a new record titled ‘Ampersand’ due out next month. Click here to learn more about the band and their plans for the future.

When Nicole and I decided to play music together as Fox & Cats we actually intended to play as a four-piece. When we found it difficult to find reliable people to fill the extra spots we ultimately agreed to press on as a two-piece.  This turned out to work really well for us for quite a while. We only had two minds collaborating on the project, which made it easy to set out clear ideas when it came to song writing. It also made it extremely easy for us to travel around. All of our equipment fit perfectly in the back of Nicole’s Toyota Tacoma, so we never had to worry about parking a trailer or taking multiple cars out to shows. 

Being a two-piece also gave us a bit of an edge for our live shows. People seemed to be drawn to the fact that it was just the two of us up there making all that noise. It wasn’t until December of 2014 that we finally started playing with the idea of adding other musicians in to the mix again.  Being a two-piece had its perks, but there’s just something so satisfying about a driving bass line to fuel a song. I also have this habit of hearing lead parts that should be filled by guitar and keys in my head when we write and play shows, which creates this hole that I feel compelled to fill.  So, we had a show booked at Scout Bar in Clear Lake, Texas for The Texas Buzz award ceremony and we decided this show should be special since we were nominated for two categories and had been fortunate enough to be asked to play.  For the first time in almost 4 years we performed as a four-piece and it was extremely satisfying to hear the parts I knew should be there but hadn’t been before.

Since then we’ve continued as a three-piece, keeping our friend Chris Dunaway on bass.  We’ve already been working on new material and it’s very clear how much creative freedom having an additional member will allow us.  After all, some of the best songs ever written are fueled by badass bass lines. Just imagine ‘Another One Bites The Dust’ by Queen without that sweet, sweet bass. Having an additional member on full time is also a huge help when it comes to touring and playing shows. Hauling around gear, dealing with merch and making long drives between cities can be quite a handful with just two people. It has definitely given us some perspective and allows us to truly appreciate having another set of hands.

The biggest challenge when adding additional members to a band is finding people who share the same musical vision and who also are able to fit in and get along well with the current members on a personal level. That’s the main reason it’s taken us as long as it has to add new members to the band. We truly got lucky with Chris and we hope to continue to grow and build our live sound as we move forward

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How To Pitch A Music Editor

Written by Noisey Music Editor Dan Ozzi

I am a music editor. [holds for applause] And as a music editor, a large part of my job entails working with freelance writers. I get to publish people’s written words about music and pay them to do it. With no disrespect to cancer research scientists or pornstars, that is the coolest fucking responsibility in the world.

But it’s hard to find good writers. Once every month or so, I send a tweet out into the world, reminding writers of my email address and that I am open to pitches. I’ll usually get a couple dozen responses. Of those, maybe one is pursuable. The rest vary from lukewarm garbage to steaming hot garbage. That’s not a knock at the skill of those writers. I have no idea how good their writing is, and I’ll never know, for this reason: Their pitch was so shitty. Pitching is as essential to being a writer as the actual writing itself. You’ve got to know how to pitch just as well as you like, know how to make all them good words and stuff.

I want to accept more pitches and publish more stories, though. I want to publish so much good music writing that we are bathing in a digital ocean of perfect word choices and beautifully crafted metaphors about songs. So in my small effort to combat this bad pitching epidemic, here are a few tips that might help you not blow it with editors.

Make Sure You Have a Fully Formed Idea and Aren’t Just Talking Out of Your Ass

You don’t need to have your whole article written, but you should have a clear idea of what the topic is and what points you will cover. I get a lot of pitches along the lines of: “How about a piece about how Michael Jackson was like, the original Drake or something?” These emails tend to come in after midnight and smell like Adult Swim commercials and Doritos if you know what I’m saying. Then I will send a response saying, “Cool, can you further explain WTF you’re talking about plz?” And surprise, surprise, the explanation is usually: “Like… Because they both wore red jackets and stuff. I don’t know, it might be stupid.” Cool, I’m glad we bonded over the shared experience of wasting our time together. Never forget.

Condense Your Piece Down to One Sentence

Instead of writing out five long-winded paragraphs explaining what you want to write about, give me a summary in one sentence. Or even a proposed headline. Have you ever heard of an elevator pitch? Sure you have. It’s how you would describe a larger project to a person if you had only a brief elevator ride with them. So imagine this: You are in an elevator with me. I am quietly sobbing because I suffer from severe vertigo and crippling phobia of smelling farts in enclosed spaces. How do you make me interested? Go! Sell me this pen!

Know the Outlet You’re Pitching

If you are pitching a site that is both #cool and #hip and sometimes even #edgy, you should craft your pitch to reflect that. Know their voice and also their audience. Do they mostly cater to people under 25? Do their readers use phrases like “on fleek” and “trill?” Is their audience primarily interested in cool vape tricks on Vine? Know all of this stuff and when pitching, don’t come across like you’re trying to write for some academia blog. Conversely, if you are pitching an academia blog, you probably don’t want to use phrases like “on fleek” and “trill.”

Know the Editor You’re Pitching

If you’re introducing yourself to an editor, start with a quick, personal opening line like, “Hey Dan, I really liked your last thinkpiece about how stingrays are the most punk fish in the aquatic kingdom. Good stuff.” This does two things: One, it lets me know that you are a real person who is catering to me, a fellow real person, and that you are familiar with what genres/beats I cover. And two, it kisses my ass just a tiny bit which I need because I am a music writer and require constant stroking of my ego in order to survive.

“Pitch” Is Not a Good Subject Line

That’s it, really. You won’t even get your email opened, let alone answered, if the subject is “pitch.” Put the basic idea of the article in the subject.

Here’s a good subject line: “This Venezuelan Hardcore Band Holds the World Record for Most Consecutive Hours Spent Masturbating”

Here’s a bad subject line: “pitch for you”

Check to See if It’s Already Been Done

Here’s a good use of two seconds that will save everyone involved a bunch of time: Before you pitch an idea, go to the site you’re pitching, enter the topic in the little search box, and hit “enter.” If this topic—or a similar topic—has already been covered, take your business elsewhere.

Be Timely

Different pitches have different lifespans. A long, well-researched investigative piece has the potential to live on forever and ever in the ethers of the interwebs. But something quick and dumb about the Left Shark or escaped llamas has a shelf-life of a day, if that. Send a pitch about a day-old meme and prepare to have your email printed out and passed around the Secret Society of Editors to be mocked while you are forever branded as that freelancer who wanted to write something about the IKEA monkey.

Pitch Ideas, Not Bands

This is probably the single most important piece of advice and I guess I should have put it at the top but am too lazy to change it now. As a music editor, roughly 8,000% of the pitches I get are just interviews with bands the writer likes. “Hey Dan, I want to interview this band The Shitty Pitches. They rule.” Well for starters, tell me something interesting about The Shitty Pitches or what you plan to interview them about. Is there something special about them? Did they grow up on a remote island and not hear music until they were in their thirties? Do they play on instruments they hand-made from their parents’ checks to their liberal arts colleges? TELL ME. Otherwise I’ll just assume it’d be a generic interview that asks my least favorite questions and will pass.

Do Not Pitch to Ask if You Can Pitch

I get this one a lot and it never stops confusing me. Someone will email me and all it will say is “Hey Dan, I wanted to send you a pitch about a band. Would that be cool?” No one has time to lure a timid writer squirrel out of its hole. Pitch or get off the pot.

Do Not Send Generic Garbage Pitches for Garbage People

This is another one that seems like common sense yet happens all the time. Someone will send me something like “I want to write about the current state of punk.” This is kind of like pitching a Hollywood producer a movie about love. Narrow it down.

Do Not Rattle Off Any Old Whatever the Fuck from Your Phone

When you send me a one-line email with “sent from my iPhone” at the bottom, what that basically tells me is that a thought ran across your brain and instead of thinking it out, you just fired it off to me while waiting on line at Cinnabon.

Don’t Pitch Out of Your League

If you pitch an editor with “I want to interview Kanye West,” you damn sure better know Ye personally and had him sign a blood oath saying he’d be down for an interview. There is nothing more obnoxious than someone requesting to interview a celebrity and then asking the editor to put them in touch with that celebrity. We don’t have giant rolodexes of famous people here. (Just kidding, we totally do. But don’t assume that.)

And Lastly, Here’s a Good Sample Pitch Email

Subject: Bands and their grandmas

Hi Dan, [Hey, you used my name! Now I know you are a real person and not a Pitch-Bot 5000. Cool.]

Nice piece last week on how peanut butter is the punkest food. Thought it was pretty… nutty. Was that terrible? [Woah, you have a sense of humor and are maybe a person I could stand working with on a regular basis? Sweet.]

My name is John Q. Writer and I am a freelance writer who has written for CoolBlog dot com and OtherCoolBlog dot com. [Include a link here to your online resume or blog or something where I can get a feel for your style. DO NOT go into your life story—where you went to college, what you studied, the first time you did hand stuff under the bleachers. I do not care.]

As you probably know [assuming that I am on the pulse of culture, nice nice…], a lot of bands are taking their grandmas on tour these days [maybe include a link to something on this on the very, very small off-shot that I, a person “in the know,” am not glued into this particular important cultural trend]. I wanted to write a piece called “Get in the Van, Nanna” exploring this idea. Why do bands do this? What benefits are there to touring with your grandma? I want to talk to Band Number One, Band Number Two, and Band Number Three who have all done this and also speak with their grandmas. [Woah, all of this info is helpful and interesting and I could totally see my readers digging this and sharing it on TweetBook.]

Let me know if you’re interested. [I am.]

Many thanks,

John

[This is the blank space where you’ll notice it does not say “sent from my iPhone.”]

Sound good? Cool.

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Where Indie Musicians Fit In At The GRAMMYs

When I was younger I watched the Grammys every year with awe, rooting for my favorites and even imagining myself as a nominee some day, walking up to the stage to accept my golden award.  A singer/songwriter can dream, can’t she?  Year after year I surrendered to the glitz and glam, the eccentric performances, and the fantasies of one day holding my very own Grammy, seemingly the most prestigious award in the music community, proving to the world: I have made it!

Time ticked by and I threw myself completely and happily into my career in music and throughout the years, reality carried me on miles of touring, hours in studios, and the day-to-day duties of running my own business.  As I lived my dreams, I gradually watched the almighty Grammy show less and less, even outright boycotting it one year, resigning to the fact that a Grammy was meant only for the superstars of the world, which I would never be, nor was striving to be—an unrealistic goal and intangible dream.  It was best to stick to my middleclass place of blood, sweat, and tears, I thought—working hard to make ends meet: the real music business.  Real life was traveling, singing my songs, connecting with people—not the life we saw projected so disingenuously dazzling on TV.  

Then one day, short of a year ago, a fellow musician invited me to a networking mixer at a local bar, hosted by the San Francisco Recording Academy chapter.  Having been hibernating in the studio finishing up my new album, I thought it was a good idea to get out and meet people in the local music scene.  I ended up seeing a lot of people I knew, as well as making new friends.  I learned that the mixer was actually an after-party for the San Francisco chapter’s Music Business Night School, a weekly series of panels that they host every year with professionals presenting topics pertinent to the music business.  I hadn’t known this program existed and the more conversations I had, the more I realized that I hardly knew anything about the Recording Academy and in fact, the Grammys was just one thing out of many that the Academy is responsible for—it’s the highest profiled event, so it’s what most people are familiar with.  I learned that the Academy is made up of 12 chapters around the country, and I even knew some of the board members.  They were musicians and local professionals I had met over the last few years—my peers.  Suddenly, the elusive and impervious Recording Academy had faces—familiar faces—and I was instantly less intimidated by the connotations of its title.  One of the board members, who I had incidentally met years ago when we both played with the same drummer, encouraged me to go online and read about the San Francisco chapter and apply to become a member.  I read that their mission is “to advance artistic and technical excellence, work to ensure a vital and free creative environment, and act as an advocate on behalf of music and its makers.” [www.grammypro.com].  I applied and became a voting member of the Recording Academy, which was actually empowering and fulfilling, knowing that I had a voice in the biggest honor in the music industry: the Grammy!

I met a lot of new people, members of the Academy, independents just like me, in all genres: singers, songwriters, musicians, producers, engineers, both in my local chapter and, thanks to the Internet and touring, other chapters too.  And then came the forever-mind-changing nugget of knowledge that slapped me in the face: some of these indie artists have been nominated for a Grammy, and some are even Grammy winners!  After a moment of stunned wonder, I connected the two dots: If they can do it, I can do it.  In other words, you don’t have to be a megastar to win a Grammy after all.  It’s possible for an indie musician too.

This all occurred during submission season and since my new album, Follow Your Heart, had just been released, my fellow members recommended that I submit my new music for the Grammys.  With help and support, I did just that and as it turned out, the two songs I submitted were accepted onto the initial voting ballot.  I was so excited and proud, and this was another stepping stone to unburying a once improbable dream hidden away—a mirage that turned out to be real after all.

During voting season, I saw the amount of hard work that eligible indies who had their music on the ballot for consideration did to get their music heard, in order to gain more exposure with the hope of achieving enough votes for recognition with a nomination.  I learned and networked a lot, and made some amazing friendships in the process.  And when the official nominations were announced, I barely gave a moment’s grief to not being on that list as I was so profoundly excited to see some of the names of people and albums I had grown to know and love, and some I had voted for in black ink myself.  

It was a sensational whirlwind attending my first Grammy awards show this year.  After a week of pre-parties, concerts, and networking events, I got all dressed up in support of music’s biggest night and saw some of my new nominated friends accept their first Grammy at the pre-televised awards show (where the majority of Grammys are presented before the televised edition).  When their names were called, it felt like a win for all of us indies in a way.  Their Grammy-seeking journey, all the way up to the big win, is nothing short of a massive inspiration to the indie nation and most definitely sends a clear message: It is possible.

I’m still trying to navigate my way as a new member of the Recording Academy, but so far it has been a motivating and educational experience.  In recent news, the Academy has announced the Grammy Creators Alliance, with initiatives to advocate for music creators’ rights, an effort in fact for the working musician.  I don’t know if I’ll ever be nominated for a Grammy, but I can say that I’m grateful for discovering a whole community of like-minded music professionals that I now have access to, and this experience has given me a sweet reminder, as it should for all artists, signed or unsigned: don’t be afraid to dream big.

Katie Garibaldi is a San Francisco based singer/songwriter, who released her seventh album, Follow Your Heart, in the summer of 2014. It is her first full-length release of all new compositions since her award winning Next Ride Out in 2009.  The album, produced by Garibaldi, was recorded at John Vanderslice’s world-famous Tiny Telephone Recording Studios in San Francisco, CA, and was engineered by Ian Pellicci. It features some of Garibaldi’s most personal songs, and includes performances by notable musicians, including the Magik*Magik Orchestra. Brent Black of criticaljazz.com calls Follow Your Heart, “Americana music that transcends genre and geographic location,” in his five-star review of the album.  

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4 Necessities Of A Successful PR Campaign

Hey there, everyone! We are thrilled to welcome guest contributor Angela Mastrogiacomo back to the site for another set of tips to help up and coming musicians make the most of their publicity efforts. If you want to learn more about Angela and her work in music, check out Muddy Paw PR at your earliest convenience.

I’ve been in the music industry for about six years now, and in those six years, I’ve been a journalist, a publicist, a promoter, a social media expert, a bio/press release writer, and a few other things along the way as well. I’ve had the privilege of working with a lot of amazing, and talented artists, but nothing gets me down more than seeing passionate artists with a ton of talent miss the exposure they deserve because they don’t run a proper PR campaign. Of course the obvious answer is if you have the funds, hire a publicist. But sometimes, funds are tight and that just isn’t an option. So for those DIY moments, I’ve compiled a list of four basic, yet essential elements of a successful PR campaign.

New Content

One of the most common hiccups I see bands encounter is trying to secure press for themselves when they don’t actually have anything happening. It’s incredibly hard to run a PR campaign around old releases, which is why I always ask my artists to have something new. It doesn’t have to be a whole new album, but what about a new music video? Lyric video? Remix? Cover song? Acoustic session? Anything, really. But without something new to promote, you’re grasping at straws to get anyone to notice.

Artist Participation

Artists seem to think that PR campaigns are kind of a one and done deal. Either you pay a publicist and then just rake in the reviews and features, or you send out one email to a couple blogs and expect the rest to come back to you. But that’s not how it works. If you’re hiring a publicist, you’ll still need to be on top of communication to make sure you’re getting your publicist everything they need (answers to interview questions, guest blogs, photos, etc) in a timely manner. If you’re going the DIY route, it’s even more imperative that you get comfortable with persistence and participation, because you’re going to be sending out a whole lot of emails, follow up emails, thank you emails, and, if you’re a good sport, posting any coverage you get all around your social media accounts.  Successful PR campaigns, like anything in life, don’t just happen by magic. They require a lot of blood, sweat, and yes, sometimes even tears.

An Excellent EPK

Your EPK is a blog’s first impression of you. The way you sound, the way you look, the way you present yourself. This isn’t the time to cut corners. That isn’t to say you need to hire out. It just means you need to put a lot of time, attention, and detail into the pieces that make up your EPK. As they say, you don’t get a second chance at a first impression.

Connections

This is one of those necessities that is really at its core, incredibly simple, but incredibly crucial. Without the proper connections, almost none of the above will matter. Sure, you might get lucky and snag an article or two. But the majority of a successful PR campaign really comes down to connections. So if you’re not hiring a publicist who might already have these connections, you better get networking. Talk to anyone and everyone you can in this industry, and don’t just stick to the internet. Social media is a great tool for connecting to bloggers, bands, and fans from across the world, but some of the most important and meaningful connections I’ve made have been from getting out into the community, and various events (SXSW, CMJ, Warped Tour, etc) and meeting people in person. (You know, like the old days!) Never underestimate the power of your connections. Oftentimes even if a connection isn’t right for you in the moment, they’ll be able to point you in the direction of someone who is. And hey, you might even make a few friends along the way!

Angela Mastrogiacomo is the owner of Muddy Paw Public Relations. Muddy Paw specializes in working with up and coming artists on personalized campaigns designed to bring their careers to the next level. To date, we’ve secured placements on sites such as AbsolutePunk, Substream, Property Of Zack, PureVolume, Anti-Music, and many more. You can find us at www.MuddyPawPR.com

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Advice: Using Your Live Show To Sell More Albums

Hey there, everyone! Thank you so much for carving a little time out of your busy schedule to spend a few minutes browsing our blog. This post is actually a guest piece, developed and written by Chris Jahnle from Kill/Hurt Records. It’s about how one band on his label, Ivory Deville, found great success and exposure by leveraging their live show in a unique way. It’s a simple idea, but the results were far greater than even we could have anticipated. If you’re in a band, please consider this article a ‘must read’ in the days ahead.

This site exists to promote the future of the entertainment industry, and to do that we need input from people like you and your entertainment-loving friends. If you have any questions about the content in this article, or if you have an artist you would like to see featured on this blog, please contact james@haulix.com. We can also be found onTwitter and Facebook.

My name is Chris Jahnle and I run Kill/Hurt Records, an independent record label based in Los Angeles, CA. I’ve been in the music industry for 10 years as a musician, audio engineer, and working for record labels of all sizes. My main area of expertise is digital marketing and web development. I worked at Interscope Records and the Collective in that capacity before starting Kill/Hurt and my own web development/digital marketing company.

At Kill/Hurt we work with a number of artists, but I’m here today to discuss Ivory Deville in particular. The band is a non-traditional 5-piece blues-rock honky-tonk party machine that has a stellar live presence and consists of:

Johnny Elkins: Lead Vocals/Guitar

Tia Simone: Vocals

Laura Marion: Vocals

Wolf: Bass

Ryan Wykert – Drums

I came across these guys about a year ago and thought they were phenomenal – their live performance knocked me out of my shoes. Pretty soon we had their debut full-length record on our hands and the unique challenge of translating the essence of Ivory Deville arose. As with all album campaigns focusing on new artists, the biggest hurdle is separating the band from the noise. We knew we wanted to have a side conversation with those interested and bring them into Ivory Deville’s world.

After a more traditional PR campaign coupled with email marketing outreach and digital marketing, we had some great momentum going for the new record, but needed something to take us into the new year full speed ahead. Since the band is made up of naturally visual artists, from their clothes to their on-stage facial expressions, really cultivating that full experience was the perfect call. We had some great press photos, but Dave Bell and Jake Cotler, Ivory’s management team, had the excellent idea of putting together a 1-day shoot and have the band come perform 4 songs off the album in a full-on stage production that showcased the band’s excellent live performance capabilities, their unique style, and of course their amazing facial expressions and dance moves!

The way the videos setup the band was perfect, especially as they were heading into their first month-long residency. The live videos were an excellent tool to promote the record as well as their actual live shows. By the end of their residency, we are continuing to build momentum and the band is stepping up to some bigger shows as a result. We still have the last video; so I think that will come in handy as we’re building buzz online and selling tickets. What worked so well about these videos was the band being the perfect fit for it and their management team’s deep knowledge of the band’s identity. Figuring out the best way to have that side conversation and doing it in a way that expands the band’s artistic presentation is the real takeaway. Then it becomes creative and it’s no longer “marketing” – it’s an extension of the band’s world.

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How To Turn A Party Band Into A Full Time Job

Hello, everyone. Thank you for making time amidst your busy week to browse our site. The feature you’re about to read was created in collaboration with the band Purple, and we thought it only fitting to begin things by sharing with you a bit of their music. Enjoy:

This site exists to promote the future of the entertainment industry, and to do that we need input from people like you and your entertainment-loving friends. If you have any questions about the content in this article, or if you have an artist you would like to see featured on this blog, please contact james@haulix.com. We can also be found on Twitter and Facebook.

I wasn’t really trying to turn my party band into a job. I just didn’t want to do ANYTHING else except play music. My heart was set on it and I focused all of my intense pent up energy from feeling stuck in a small town into music. To me, I would have rather died than go to school and get a normal job. When I was in school and working, I felt completely brain dead. So I said, “fuck this shit.” and quit college and my job. And I freaking went for it man. I looked up every opportunity to find shows out of town. Battle of the Bands, House parties, opening slots…whatever man!!! I had to get out and tell the whole world how I felt through our tunes. I really believed in it, ya know. So I did it.

When we first started playing shows, there was never that many people there. I didn’t give a crap though. I played as intense as possible. After every show, I can barely pick my head up from head banging so hard. My voice is shot from screaming and I’m soaking wet with sweat. That is how I turned it into a job. I give the audience everything I’ve got from this little body and smack them in the face with it. I make them want to keep getting smacked in the face. And you know why they want it? BECAUSE PEOPLE WANT TO FEEL. You have to do it every time too. You never know who is watching. Thats how we got record deals and booking agents. They saw us giving it everything we’ve got. Just like in any job. The boss wants someone hard working and passionate. 

Another thing to learn while turning this party band into a job, is how to focus even when your tired and probably drunk. You gotta learn how to control your mind. You gotta learn how to be the most confident person in the room even if you feel like a big fat loser that day. You will probably feel like a big loser some days when you wake up under a pool table feeling terrible and you gotta get back in that big stinky van and drive 8 hours. But you push through it and you always have your mind on the big picture. you gotta remember.. “this isn’t about me. Its about music and making people feel good with it. And I’m the only person for the job and I can do this. Im awesome.” Sometimes I say that to myself even if I don’t fully believe it that day. I say it until I do believe it again. 
A lot of people think people in bands are just a bunch of fuck ups that need to get real jobs. Well if you believe that, fuck you. It is a real job. Your weekend would suck without music. 
Hannah Brewer is the singer and drummer behind PURPLE, a Texas party band with a lot of energy to spare. We love Hannah’s music and believe you will too if you give it a chance. Head over to Purple’s official website for album information and tour dates. If you get the chance, you definitely want to see this band live. You won’t regret it.
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One Great Way Artists Can Avoid Annoying Friends And Facebook Followers!

Hello. Thank you for finding time in your schedule to browse our site. You can go just about anywhere on the web without fear of government issued vehicles raiding your house, so we’re thankful you have chosen to spend your precious time here. The post you’re about to read is aimed at improving the social networking efforts of musicians on the rise, but in reality the tips provided can be applied to almost any individual or small business hoping to further their digital impact.

This site exists to promote the future of the entertainment industry, and to do that we need input from people like you and your entertainment-loving friends. If you have any questions about the content in this article, or if you have an artist you would like to see featured on this blog, please contact james@haulix.com. We can also be found on Twitter and Facebook.

If you work in the live music industry, you spend a lot of time inviting people to concerts. Hopefully you are inviting them with a variety of methods, Facebook events being one. Which is great as long as you do it properly.

I get invited to a TON of shows, that the glorious nature of being friends with so many bands and promoters, there is always something going on, there is always too much going on really. The byproduct is that you receive a lot of Facebook event invites, which is great, great FB events get you all the details and can be a perfect way to get show info HOWEVER there is one kind of invite that becomes REALLY tiresome:

Invites to shows that are nowhere near me.

Now, every once and a while someone may be genuinely confused, maybe they met me in Calgary and keep inviting me to Calgary shows, no biggie, I may reach out to let you know but we all get confused sometimes. The thing that will get under your fans skin is the generic shotgun blast invite everyone to everything. I am obviously not got to come to your shows in Toronto, Winnipeg, Regina, Boston, Portland, Vancouver and Calgary, so don’t invite me, this isn’t confusion it’s laziness.

It only makes your invites less effective.

When you keep seeing the same basic information over and over that doesn’t apply to you, pretty soon you brain stops really taking in that information. Our brains know that they can’t handle every little detail they see in a day, so it categorizes things in order of importance, when your event is continually irrelevant to your listeners, pretty soon…it goes into the wrong bin, it’s irrelevant.

But it’s hard work to invite everyone! It’s slow! I can’t possibly know where all 2700 of these people are from!

Yes, it is harder, but if it’s more effective. It is a bit slow, BUT Facebook has given you the tools to make it not so very painful AND to make sure you can find the right people AND it’s free! If you don’t know about Graph search yet, you are missing out. Here is how it works:

In the search bar you type: My friends who live in __________A better way to make sure you invite the right friends to your Facebook event

Facebook will then display a list of all your friends who live in that city. Killer.

Now, open up a separate window.

You could use a tab, but having two windows side-by-side will make this go much faster. As you go down the list simply type the name of the person and invite. I takes time but it’s really not bad at all.  And that’s just the beginning of how musicians can take advantage of graph search…but that’s for another post!

This post was written by Andrew Jones, editor of Checkered Owl. It originally ran on his blog, but we loved it so much we felt it deserved to shared once more on ours. If you like his work and want to read more of his writing, or if you want to be super cool and offer him full time industry employment, reach out and connect with him on Twitter.

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Penises, Butts, and Gossip: Why Modern Journalism Sucks

Greetings, everyone! It gives us quite a thrill to learn that you were able to find time amidst your hectic schedule to spend a few minutes with us talking about the state of music journalism. The post you are about to enjoy was created by our longtime contributor Lueda Alia, a brilliant young woman with years of experience in digital media under her belt. She’s written here before, and I can promise you right now she will delivered additional content in the future.

This site exists to promote the future of the entertainment industry, and to do that we need input from people like you and your entertainment-loving friends. If you have any questions about the content in this article, or if you have an artist you would like to see featured on this blog, please contact james@haulix.com. We can also be found on Twitter and Facebook.

My social media feeds are full of rants (and often snarky comments) from frustrated people in the entertainment industry. What worked so well for many years suddenly doesn’t seem to work anymore. Distribution of music has never been easier (Soundcloud, BandCamp, Spotify, Rdio, Pandora, etc.) and there are more publications, magazines, and blogs than ever before. Why, then, is it so difficult to secure artists and brands the exposure they deserve?

Well. The past two weeks, publications have been busy publishing articles on Kim Kardashian’s butt and Lorde’s “feud” with Diplo regarding his “tiny penis”:

The Guardian
Taylor swift ‘booty’ diss by Diplo inspires Lorde’s wrath

Spin
Diplo Disses Taylor Swift’s Butt, Lorde Follows Up With the Perfect Comeback

The Huffington Post Entertainment
Lorde Totally Owns Diplo After He Disses Taylor Swift on Twitter

Rolling Stone
The Everything Index: Kim Kardashian’s Pavlovian Posterior Experiment

Fact Magazine
Diplo Prompts Gross Taylor Swift Kickstarter; Gets Shamed By Lorde For His ‘Tiny Penis’

CNN Entertainment
Make fun of Taylor Swift? Not on Lorde’s watch

Billboard 
Lorde Perfectly Disses Diplo After He Insults Taylor Swift

NME
Lord explains her Diplo ‘tiny penis’ comment

NY Daily News
Lorde defends Taylor Swift, disses Diplo’s “tiny penis” on Twitter

Fox News Entertainment
Katy Perry’s boyfriend Diplo disses Taylor Swift’s butt; Lorde disses Diplo’s manhood


Grantland
Asses of Fire: Why Kim Kardashian’s Magazine Shoot Failed to ‘Break the Internet’

Stereogum
Lorde Clarifies Comment About Kim Kardashian’s Butt

NME
Lorde says Kim Kardashian cover of Paper magazine is ‘pure heaven’

VICE
Getting to the Bottom of Kim Kardashian’s Alien Appeal

Time Magazine
Kim Kardashian’s Butt Is an Empty Promise

I could go on for hours with similar examples, but you get the point. Instead of using these platforms, which reach millions of people, to promote and reward deserving individuals for their skills and talents, the relentless pursuit of advertising revenue has pushed us to cover gossip about butts and penises.

We get it. Kim Kardashian has a huge ass, and Lorde made fun of Diplo in a hilarious way! And that’s a great way to get people to click on your website! Great, now writers and journalists are using wasting their skills writing about ludicrous and irrelevant stories, and all is well!

It’s easy to poke fun at these publications for struggling to adapt to technology and the internet. In order to remain relevant and make money, they have opted to become TMZ-esque because it’s easy and it works. But I can’t see this being a long-term solution, because all of these publications are becoming mirror images of each other and nothing more.

One of these days, we will start to care about journalistic integrity once more. We will begin to write stories that deserve to be shared with the rest of the world, and we’ll reward people who have earned the exposure through hard work and creativity and not through their fame. But that day is not today. And thus, everyone (artists and publicists included) needs to adapt the way they work in order to succeed. Stay tuned for my next article, which offers suggestions and advice for navigating the current landscape.

Lueda Alia is a music industry professional and freelance entertainment writer with years of experience working directly with artists on the rise. She maintains a great personal blog, as well as Made Of Chalk (which we featured on this blog earlier this year).

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8 Steps to Creating an Effective Sales Promotion Strategy for Your Music

Hello, everyone! Thank you for finding a few minutes in your schedule to spend learning about the industry with us. We did not create the post you’re about to enjoy, but after reading it earlier this month we knew we had to make room in our content schedule to highlight what it has to share. Bobby Borg is an incredibly talented writer, and we’re honored to feature his work on our site.

This blog exists to promote the future of the entertainment industry, and to do that we need input from people like you and your entertainment-loving friends. If you have any questions about the content in this article, or if you have an artist you would like to see featured on this blog, please contact james@haulix.com. We can also be found on Twitter and Facebook.

Sales promotions are short-term incentives intended to stimulate a quick buying response in your target customer. Coupons, one-time exclusive offers, customer loyalty programs, two-for-the-price-of-one discounts, and limited-time prizes with purchase are all examples of sales promotions in the consumer world. While it’s true you’ll have to give away your music for free to build awareness and help start a buzz, sales promotions can be applied to everything, including merchandise, studio time, music lessons, concert tickets, and more. From choosing the right type of sales promotion that fits your band, to executing your sales promotions tastefully, these eight tips will help you create a strategy that brings light to your products and services and generates healthy sales.

1. Decide on the type of sales promotion that fits your band

Whether you choose to utilize discount ticket coupons that you allow fans to print out from your website, or you announce a “one-time exclusive offer” to purchase your music at your record release party, remember that you must always stay in sync with the desired image you’d like to project into the marketplace. An anti-capitalistic punk band must obviously use sales promotions very subtly (or not at all), or they might otherwise come across as being phony.

2. Decide on the different media you’ll use to deliver your sales promotion

Remember that sales promotions can be delivered using internet techniques (email and your personal website), guerrilla marketing techniques (postcards and flyers you hand out to people on the street), direct marketing techniques (brochures you mail), and face-to-face selling techniques (pitches you make to music students and recording clients). The idea is to utilize a couple different mediums to ensure you thoroughly reach your intended audience.

3. Decide exactly when the sales promotion will begin and end

Sales promotions must have a clearly defined beginning and an end. Will it be just for the night of a show, for two weeks, or for the entire holiday season? Whatever it is, make it very clear. "Urgency" is a key ingredient in sales promotions and in getting your fans to ultimately respond.  

4. Test the sales promotion on a limited number of people

Before printing a few hundred coupons to send off to your fans, be sure to get some feedback on the words and graphics you use. The idea is to create the most effective promotion that will push your fans’ buttons and get them to take action. Test out your sales promotions on a small sample audience first and make any necessary adjustments. You’ll save time and money.

5. Keep the purpose of your sales promotion clearly in mind

Be clear on why you’re holding a sales promotion and what you’d like to achieve. Is your goal to sell a specific number of units so that you can take your musical act out on the road? Or is it to raise a certain amount of money for your Kickstarter or GoFundMe campaign to produce a live concert that will benefit a charity? Whatever it is, state a very clear objective.    

6. Control the number of promotions you hold

Remember that too much of a good thing is a bad thing. Sending out emails every other week telling people that they can record in your studio at a “one-time specially reduced price” just looks bad. Always be tasteful, truthful, and subtle.

7. Stick to the rules of the promotion

Don’t be tempted to make an offer that’s not in line with the rules of the promotion. Doing this can clearly compromise the integrity of the promotion and even your brand. Stick to your own rules! If you say the promotion ends on December 24, the promotion really needs to end on December 24.

8. Remember that “sales” is not a bad word

Some people think of marketing as sleazy or pushy. This reaction is usually due to bad past experiences with deceptive advertisements or pushy marketing tactics. But as media critic Douglas Rushkoff said in a PBS special entitled The Persuaders, "Don’t let your marketing show.“ If you can focus on the creation of products and services that uphold your vision, satisfy fans by giving them what they need, and present your offers in a non-intrusive manner that make fans feel like they’re part the process, people won’t even know you’re marketing to them. 

Unless you’re just a hobbyist, at some point you have to start generating some type of income from your music. Sales promotions cause fans to take action and help increase your sales. So make no mistake: if you want to make it, you have to market.

This post originally appeared on the SonicBids blog.

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What Exactly Does An Artist Manager Do?

We have become big fans of Andrew Jones’ work in recent months, and every week or so we like to share some of his unique industry insight on our blog in order to provide a different perspective on this crazy place we call the entertainment business. Today’s post is a little sillier than the others, but it still has a good message to share.

This blog exists to promote the future of the music industry, and to do that we need input from people like you and your music-loving friends. If you have any questions about the content in this article, or if you have an artist you would like to see featured on this blog, please contact james@haulix.com and share your thoughts. We can also be found on Twitter and Facebook.

“So, what do you exactly do all day?”

As an artist manager people ask me this all the time, and it’s always a little complicated to answer. There are a variety of answers to this question, and honestly every manager is different. Even one manager may handle slightly different tasks for different clients or handle something for one season but hire a third party for another.

However to me being a manager ultimately means doing whatever it takes to break your artist. Whatever.

To that effect here are a few of the things I have done as an artist manager:

1. Network
2. Encourage artists
3. Route tours
4. Try to get bands on large tours
5. Invite other bands onto tours
6. Help pick singles
7. Give notes on demos
8. Give notes on mixes
9. Help determine track order
10. Record video
11. Edit video
12. Design websites
13. Consult on social media strategy
14. Apply for grants
15. Deign posters
16. Design merch
17. Book dates (don’t do this if you live in California or New York…)
18. Find sponsors
19. Speak into band conflict
20. Talk to publishers
21. Take songs to music supervisors
22. Find publicists
23. Work with publicists
24. Track songs to radio
25. Stall for time
26. Negotiate into a record deal
27. Negotiate out of a record deal
28. Buy digital advertising
29. Chase down money from promoters
30. Design webpages
31. Find local bands to join bills
32. Work with promoters on advertising
33. Line up radio station visits
34. Line up newspaper interviews
35. Blog
36. Maintain email lists
37. Write email blasts
38. Pitch to agencies
39. Write bios
40. Create presskits
41. Create riders
42. Go to conferences
43. Submit music to podcasts
44. Stay on top of digital trends
45. Edit press releases
46. Write press releases
47. Solicit album reviews
48. Set-up photo sessions
49. Approve photos
50. Approve album artwork
51. Upload music to all platforms
52. Find sponsors
53. Track stats
54. Fill and update calendars
55. Set-up interviews
56. Promote local shows
57. Fill showcases
58. Take the blame
59. Text a lot
60. Increase Hype
61. Build a street team
62. Write letters
63. Work with charities
64. Create pre-order packages

…And most importantly….

65. WHATEVER IT TAKES

This post was written by Andrew Jones, editor of Checkered Owl. It originally ran on his blog, but we loved it so much we felt it deserved to shared once more on ours. If you like his work and want to read more of his writing, or if you want to be super cool and offer him full time industry employment, reach out and connect with him on Twitter.

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