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How To Create Value For Yourself As A Music Photographer

Hello again, everyone. We have heard your demand for additional photojournalism posts and we have set to delivering just that. The post you’re about to enjoy was written by Matt Vogel, professional tour photographer and someone whose work has appeared in essentially every music publication people who enjoy alternative music might read. It’s a little longer than some of our other photo columns, but it’s definitely worth your time.

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

Every year the barrier of entry for music photography seems to get lower. This isn’t a bad thing, in fact I think it’s awesome. But what it means is that the number of people working toward becoming music photographers is much higher. It’s not an uncommon thing to be a music photographer these days, and there are thousands upon thousands of us. 

Cameras that can perform in low-light are no longer super expensive, starter prime lenses can be bought for cheap, and it’s easier than ever to start working for a publication of any size and get photo passes for shows. Boom! You’re in.

I often hear photographers complain about other photographers who are undercutting their prices or offering to do jobs for free to get the experience. It’s a very real issue but the fact of the matter is that there are people out there willing to pay music photographers. If you’re being undercut for a gig, yeah that sucks, but if you’re working with the people you want to be working for – the ones that value your work – you can meet your personal definition of success and also create work that you will be proud of.

The artists I work for don’t just value having “someone" out there to take photos, they want the right person. Every musician has an artistic vision for how they want their band to be represented, and some have higher standards than others.

There are thousands of aspiring music photographers out there and standing out from the crowd isn’t easy. This isn’t a tell-all blog post for how to become successful but I wanted to share a few things that helped me get to a place where the bands I work for see me as a valuable asset of their team.

Oh, and in this post I’m talking about working directly for bands. That was my goal and that’s who I typically shoot for, so I just want to make that clear!

#1 – MAKE IT ART

It’s photography! If you want to stand out, do it differently. There’s obviously huge subjective arguments as to what makes a good and bad photo and you can spend years at an art school becoming knowledgable about this. But fact of the matter is you should be proud of your photos, and hopefully they will feel like they are uniquely yours. I try to be a really good photographer. I try to get unique angles, catch the most exciting, fun, and memorable moments, and edit in a style that I not only love, but also hopefully makes my images recognizable.

#2 – BE COOL

I know that headline sounds stupid, but I’m serious. When I work for bands, they want someone they can trust and someone they enjoy being around. Photographers are really disposable. There are so many of us! So you have to be cool, and you have to be trustworthy.

Being on tour is like being roommates with someone, times ten. You’re cramped in a van or bus or whatever, and have no personal space and are around each other 24/7. If people don’t enjoy being with you or you don’t click together then nobody is happy. And hey, sometimes personalities don’t mesh and that is nobody’s fault. But building a trusting relationship with artists you work with is so important. If they can’t trust you to be around and capture everything aspect of their lives then neither of you will be happy, and you won’t be producing the best photos you can be.

Your photos can be incredible, and you can sometimes be hired on that alone, but if you are not a solid person to be around then you probably won’t be invited back. 

Nearly all of my touring work is from referrals, which is awesome! That means people are vouching for me as a good person to have around and they think I do my job well. That means so much to me. I feel like very few artists are willing to hire people that aren’t vouched for or don’t know personally.

Me napping with Trevor of Our Last Night in Russia

#3 – CREATE AMAZING CONTENT

Ok so you’re cool? Check. Creative? Check. Now get to work! I do my very best to optimize my workflow, know my gear, and try to understand what my artist needs and wants.

UNDERSTAND WHAT GEAR CAN HELP YOU DO YOUR JOB BEST, AND EITHER GET IT OR WORK TOWARDS GETTING IT.

Most people can’t buy all of the gear they’d like right away, but anyone can research and recognize the tools they are working toward getting, and why they are better.

KNOW WHAT TYPES OF PHOTOS DO WELL FOR YOUR ARTIST.

Some artists get incredible feedback from behind the scenes stuff, some get way more engagement from live shots.

GAIN AN UNDERSTANDING ABOUT SOCIAL MEDIA, AND TEACH YOUR ARTISTS.

Your content is a marketing tool. Your photos make shows look fun and exciting, and that in turn sells concert tickets. This is simple but true, and I feel like very few people recognize this fact! Someone commenting on a photo your artist posted saying "WOW THIS LOOKS AMAZING, NOW I’M GONNA BUY TICKETS” is exactly what you want. It can be art and also be an effective marketing tool at the same time – they’re not mutually exclusive. 

Also, you have to understand social media. Does your artist want to post 30 photos individually on their Facebook timeline every day? Maybe not the best idea. Teach them to regularly update their Instagrams, use photos to promote ticket sales, etc. A lot of artists are really good at this, but some aren’t. If your artists are using social media right then your value as a photographer and content producer goes through the frickin’ roof. This is so important.

LEARN HOW TO PRODUCE MORE CONTENT, AND DON’T BE AFRAID TO ABANDON IT IF IT FAILS.

Try new stuff! I’ve tried creating daily square Instagram videos for artists, shoot acoustic videos, post entire photo albums to a website, upload videos directly through Facebook, shoot and edit tour weekly updates. There’s so, so much more than just ‘take photos’ that a photographer can do on tour.

However, sometimes only taking photos is the best thing you can do. Some artists don’t benefit that much from tour updates, and they take up a ton of your time as a photographer. Figure out what works and what content is worth your time producing. If you try to do too much then the quality of everything you’re producing is going to go down.

ASK YOUR ARTIST AND THEIR TEAM WHAT THEY NEED.

Talk to your artist, their publicist, their manager, their label, and figure out their needs and wants. You want your artist to be successful and your title may be photographer, but you are really a content producer. So anything relevant to producing content for your artist is something you should be willing to do – and sometimes that means getting extra money for things, which never hurts.

There you have it. These are just a few ways to create value for yourself as a photographer beyond just taking good photos. Hope this post helps!

Matt Vogel is a professional photographer who spends most of his life traveling from city to city with some of the biggest names in alternative music. He also writes about his experiences, which he shares alongside photos on his official website.

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My Favorite Photo Of 2014: Thomas Falcone

Greetings! With 2014 quickly coming to a close, we wanted to find a unique way to present the best moments in music from the previous year to our readers without falling into the stereotypical routine of posting list after list detailing events and releases we never covered in the first place. We don’t really weigh in on music in general, so why try and do so now?

After much thought and debate, we settled on a new concept that we think everyone enjoy. Together with a group of our favorite music photographers, we have compiled a collection of images that showcase some of the best and most intimate moments in music from 2014. The images shared in this series were chosen by the photographers who captured them, and the only guidelines they were given was to choose the one image that meant the most to them. Some included an explanation for their photos, while others did not, but everyone chose images that are sure to linger in your mind for days to come.

First up, professional music photographer Thomas Falcone.

This image means the world to me. This is an image of Derek of Mayday Parade (alternative rock band-frontman) sleeping in his bunk on our tour bus on the last day of our tour in Orlando in 2014. Throughout the last couple years of touring and traveling with this band, I’ve seen it all. They’ve taken me across the world to places I never even heard of to watch and document them playing music. We’ve hiked mountains, played with koalas, taken photos all over historic places in England, have stayed up till 5am drinking wine on a hill in front of the Coliseum, one of the members getting married, and even lived in a house with them as they wrote and recorded multiple records. The growth and creativeness of Mayday Parade have led me to who I am today with my art and personality. They’ve showed me what I love, and who I truly am.
I took this photo of Derek sleeping because it was the end of my second full record cycle with the band. They are about to write album #5 and taking some time off on the road after the recording process. I am not fully sure if I will return so I wanted this last photo ever taken of them to mean something special. I’ve documented them everywhere, except where they rest. It may mean that I am putting this long term project to sleep, or it may mean some time apart from the band. Who knows. But it will forever be one of my favorites taken until I head back out with them again.
Thomas Falcone is a professional music photographer whose work has appeared in a number of influential publications. He shares work regularly on Twitter and Facebook, so if you like what you see above we highly encourage you to follow him on other networks. We hope to share more of Thomas’ work in the months to come.
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A Day In The Life Of A Professional Tour Photographer

Hello, everyone! Welcome to the beginning of a new work week that promises to be filled with thrilling content and insightful conversation. We have been looking forward to this particular week for several months, mostly because it coincides with the launch of our latest tool in the continuing fight against digital piracy. You can expect to learn more about that as the week carries on, but for now we are going to take a look at what it’s really like to be a professional photographer in the music industry.  If you have any questions about the content of the blog, or if you would like more information regarding the distributional services offered by Haulix, please email james@haulix.com and share your thoughts. You can also find us on Twitter and Facebook.

Every week I find myself engaged in conversation with young people who are both excited and a tad bit nervous about the future of the music industry. In each of these conversations I try to find the time to ask what the person speaking with me sees at their ultimate career goal, and nine times out of ten the response I receive involves spending excessive amounts of time on the road. Sometimes they want to be a tour manager and other times it’s front of house sound, but without a doubt the response I receive most often is that people want to find a way to make a living taking photos on the road. Call it a tour photographer, or a group archivist, or simply a freelance music photographer, whatever the title you slap on it the desired work environment is the same: See the country through the windows on a van/bus and capture every moment along the way. 

I wish so very badly that we could provide a step-by-step guide to achieving this goal, but the fact of the matter is that you have about as good a chance of becoming a professional tour photographer as you do winning the lottery while simultaneously being struck by lightning. There are literally thousands of aspiring music photographers across this country, including several hundred who contribute to so-called influential music blogs. The difference between one photographer getting landing a dream tour gig and another not has as much to do with hard work and talent as it does networking and blind luck. The best advice we can offer is to work hard, keep an updated portfolio, and constantly challenge yourself to try new things. Once you have a handle on all that, talk to everyone who will listen and learn to promote yourself without coming across as desperate. In time, people will notice your work and opportunities will begin to come your way. All you will have to do is be prepared for the challenges they will no doubt present.

It’s incredibly important that you understand up front there is no such thing as an ‘easy job’ when you are part of a touring group/festival. Everyone who is not performing on stage nightly has to handle multiple tasks, some not related in the slightest to their job title, in order for the entire production to successfully move from city to city. If you find yourself in a position to join a tour, you too will be expect to chip in daily to help with tasks and challenges as they arise. 

To help emphasize and further explain just how demanding life on the road can be for someone hired as a professional photographer, we have partnered with current touring photog Ashley Osborn to present a rundown of what a typical day looked like on her most recent outing with hard rock favorites Chiodos. This was the group’s first tour since 2012 and demand for tickets were extremely high. Ashley took photos, sold merch, and did a few dozen daily tasks in between. The tour lasted several weeks, with each day presenting a similar-yet-unique set of challenges. You can view her daily routine below:

11:00 AM: Bus arrives at venue.

11:30 AM: Wake up, check out the day sheet for the day and evaluate it for a good five minutes to plan out my day. For those of you who don’t know, a day sheet it basically all of the information you need for the day.

12:00 PM: Roll out of bunk and kind of try to make myself presentable to society.

12:01 PM: Grab phone, open google maps, search for nearest place to consume as much coffee as possible.

1:00 PM: Load-In (AKA be back at venue to bring in all of my merchandise). This is when I go in and figure out not only my own spot, but all of the support bands’ merch spots for the night as well, gather up tables and chairs for everybody, etc. I tried my hardest to make it as easy as possible for all of the other merch people.

1:30 PM: Begin setting up displays and merch area. Usually this involves sorting all sizes and making the day’s sheet. Then I figure out what I need to restock for the day.

2:30 PM: Restock merchandise. For people who don’t do merch (haha) this basically means I bring it what I need for the day. Things we sold a lot of / out of the night before. Then I bring it back in and count everything I just pulled from the trailer, add it to my sheets and sort it all into it’s right spot.

3:30 PM: Gather up supplies and make VIP laminates for band’s acoustic meet and greet.

4:00 PM: Find food because usually by this time I haven’t eaten today. Vegan treats were always the #1 most wanted.

4:10 PM: Usually I change and ACTUALLY make myself kind of presentable to society?

4:20 PM: RUN AROUND LIKE A CRAZY PERSON DOING LAST MINUTE THINGS BEFORE 5PM ACOUSTIC MEET AND GREET BEGINS. AHHHHH. Usually during this time a merch rep comes to find me and has to count me in or asks me to send them all of my merchandise sheets or something kind of annoying and last minute (it’s okay because they are just doing their job). I’m just always mega stressed during this stretch of time.

5:00 PM: Acoustic performance (photographing this).

5:15 PM: Meet and greet. Every day I took all of the meet and greet photos.

6:00 PM: DOORS. Now it’s sell time! Hang out and talk to fans, sell merchandise, make new friends with cool fans and edit, show off my semi-cool fanny pack, upload and update photos on the band’s social accounts. Priority other than selling merchandise during this period was trying to get all of the meet and greet photos finished.

9:15 PM: Typically time to go find all of the band and take behind the scenes shots before their set begins. This was my favorite part of the day every day!

9:30 PM: Set time! Shoot, shoot, shoot!

9:45 PM: Run to merch and begin uploading photos to computer, switch memory cards and run back to set to keep shooting.

10:00 PM: Run back to merch again, upload those photos that I just took and edit photos, upload at least 10-15 photos for the band to post after the show. I did all of this while selling merch during their set. This was the most insane part of my night… somehow I managed every single night to have photos done for the guys before the set was over. They never TOLD me I had to do this – so don’t get me wrong. I just thought it was important for us to do this. Fans loved seeing all of the images from their show and it makes the experience that much more personal. I love that! Makes me so happy.

11:00 PM: End of the night mad rush. At least 100 kids come to merch after the show to buy things so it’s just a really crazy (somehow fun) rush that happens in a matter of 10 minutes.

11:15 PM: Begin counting out all merch. This basically means I count every single item at my merch table, enter it into my sheets and boom. While I do this I also pack up bin by bin that way when I’m all done, I’m ready to roll my things out and put them in the trailer.

11:40 PM: Settle out with the merch representative at the venue. For those of you who don’t know, every night most venues take a percentage of merchandise sold from every band on the tour. It ranges from 10-20%. Sometimes they take state tax too. There’s some paperwork, etc I have to do with the venue during this time as well. Sometimes it takes five minutes, sometimes it takes twenty.

12:00 PM: Hang out with tour manager in front lounge while eating dinner (I loved making grilled cheese and tofurky sammies on the bus) and work on finalizing merch sheets for the night, count money, make sure everything matches up then send everything off to management/accountant, edit more photos, catch up on life, watch movies, etc. Winding down at the end of the night is always nice.

4:00AM: Go to bed sort of. This means laying in my bunk and texting friends, tweeting, reading, etc.

As you can see, there is a lot more to being a tour photographer than waking up and taking pictures. We will be partnering with several other photographers in the weeks ahead to present you with their daily routines, but I will tell you right now most are fairly similar to the one described above.

If you want to become a professional photographer, we highly suggest spending some time on our series dedicated to mastering the various aspects of live event coverage. Click the links to read parts one, two, and three. We expect additional installments to be released in the coming weeks.

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Industry Spotlight: Thomas Falcone

Hello, everyone. Welcome to the latest installment of our ongoing industry spotlight series. In an attempt to continue evolving we’re using today’s interview to highlight an area of the business we’ve only briefly touched upon in the past. If you like it, let us know and similar columns will following in the weeks ahead. You can email james@haulix.com with your thoughts, or reach out through Twitter. We look forward to hearing from you.

For many young creative minds, Thomas Falcone lives the music industry dream. He wakes up in a new city almost every day surrounded by his closest friends and spends the entirety of each afternoon and night taking pictures with his camera. Yes, he’s a professional tour photographer, and today we’re going to learn how he found his place in the business of music.

As far as I know there has never been a photographer who attended a single show and instantly found themselves working within the music industry on a regular basis. Like anything worth doing, making a name for yourself behind the camera in music takes time, and Tom Falcon has dedicated his life to mastering his approach to photography. He now finds himself on tour with Mayday Parade, one of the biggest bands in the alternative rock scene, and his future looks brighter than ever.

If you would like to stay in touch with Tom and follow all his activity on the road, make sure you bookmark and frequent his photo blog. Additional questions and comments can be left at the end of this post.

H: For the record, state your name, occupation, and who you’re currently working with/for:

TF: Tom Falcone, Touring Music Photographer. Currently on the road with Mayday Parade on the Glamour Kills Tour

H: Let’s start at the beginning. When you think of your earliest memories with music, what comes to mind?

TF: Backstreet Boys. Arguring with my brother on who’s Backstreet Boys album we purchased was going to be. We fought over who was going to be the one holding onto it and listening to it non stop haha.

H: Do you recall the first album you purchased with your own money?

TF: Backstreet Boys.

H: This spotlight is a bit different from others we have done because you’re not necessarily a journalist. You can be, and at times have been, more than anything you’re a professional photographer. To whom or what do you attribute your interest in photography?

TF: I love capturing documentary style photography. What people are doing, in places that others have never seen. We are lucky enough to travel the world and see things a lot of people don’t get to see, so that’s what I like to capture. A lot of my most recent work is very candid, and I love it

H: What was your first camera, and how did you acquire it?

TF: I used my moms Kodak Easyshare camera for random things like photos of flowers and self portraits. I told my parents I wanted to work and purchase my first DSLR. I worked with my father at a auto repair shop for $100 a week for about 7 weeks and purchased my first Canon Rebel DSLR with a 50mm 1.8

H: Do you remember when you first considered pursuing photography as a career? If so, can you tell us a bit about the time leading up to that realization?

TF: It was more when I first started getting paid, and getting the opportunity to work with bands on a personal level. I started meeting local bands and hanging and shooting around with them when I was really young and eventually built a portfolio to pitch to record labels and managers etc.

H: When it comes to music photography, did you start with concert or promotional work? Who was the first band you worked with?

TF: I started with concert. I didn’t think that I was good enough for promo photography just yet. I worked with bands in my local scene called The Showcase, Kick Over The Traces, Moraine etc. I still love them

H: You now find yourself on the roads with bands for a living, something I’m sure every aspiring music photographer reading this would one day like to do themselves. When people ask you how you reached this point in your career, what do you tell them? It clearly was not an overnight occurrence.

TF: I tell them to just be themselves. Shoot something different. So many people take live photos and so many people capture the same thing. Be different and be yourself, I mean, don’t act different around bands, or people on the road. Everyone is normal.

H: At this point in your career, how do you measure success? What would you consider failure?

TF: I know it sounds lame, but I find myself somewhat successful. I have a band that I tour with full time and create images that I love as well as inspire other people.

H: A lot of people believe great photography requires great gear. Do you agree?

TF: No. I just bought a small little Fujifilm camera that does amazing work, and it isn’t even a DSLR.

H: What is the biggest misconception people have about life as a photographer?

TF: That I most likely just party and take photos of them. I’m not sure. A lot of people can think what they want but…we just have fun haha

H: A lot of the photographers we’ve researched maintain online stores. Do you have a place people can buy your prints? (feel free to plug anything you like)

TF: Smugmug is great

H: Networking is key to success in the music industry. What advice would you offer young photographers about navigating the business from a networking standpoint?

TF: Networking is amazing. Conferences, meetings, social networks. It is all the ingredients you need to become successful

H: What is your ultimate career goal?

TF: To build a portfolio of one band over a span of years to see progress, growth, passion and love.

H: If you could change one thing about the music business, what would it be?

TF: I don’t really deal with the “music business side of things” haha. I’m a photographer.

H: Thank you for taking the time to speak with us, Tom. Do you have anything else you’d like to share?

TF: Just keep on trucking, make images you love and share them with everyone.

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