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Posted on Dec 10, 2008

The Top 7 Mistakes That Indies Make.

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By James Pew


Living under a rock with a windless sail...So many indies are doing just that. Sadly, I share the blame.


"The Net is the very best thing that has ever happened to everybody but superstars". - Bob Lefsetz


It is becoming clearer all the time that music's future home is the Internet. Social Networking and this weird web 2.0 concept have elevated our entire musical culture to something different, and dare I say...cool! Just when you thought that modern music, so often misunderstood or regarded as uncool, was stagnant - we now are standing at the brink of passing cool entirely, and moving to something quite possibly - Way Beyond Cool!


I've already talked about the revolution of indie music production and a few of its problems - that was much easier for me having so many emotions regarding production value and the loudness issue. But because I spend so much time in the studio, I was in serious need of crawling out from under that rock, and taking a closer look at the social networking movement, and the so-called new paradigm of the music business. I meet a lot of indies still living under self-made rocks.


I'm convinced there has never been a better time for independent artists. The general public is hungry for quality musical content, and there seems to be an endless amount of hard working talented people making great music. Musical activity is massive.


Our studio regularly works with amazing local talent. This month we had blues guitarist Darran Poole of 2008 Juno Awarding winning band Fat Head and internationally acclaimed trumpeter Brownman, in the studio. Darran played guitar and fiddle on the upcoming full-length release of the Gary Kendall Band. An inspiring and treasured figure of Toronto's vibrant blues scene, Gary Kendall is a seven-time Maple Blues bass player of the year award recipient, and Juno nominee with the legendary Down Child Blues Band. Other local greats appearing on Gary's release include Suzie Vinnick, and a handful of past and present Down Child alumni. It's also worth mentioning that this years' winner of the Maple Blues new talent award, the Douglas Watson Rhythm & Blues Revue, are currently tracking at Euphonic Sound. Other roots genres are just as alive with zillions of indie roots muso's possessing loads of talent. Then of course, we have popular forms like rock and country and urban. We see overwhelming amounts of indie talent in these genres as well. Music is alive and well - and in a steady state of growth. Mainstream circles will try to convince you otherwise - but to most of us indie music participants, and many fans as well, the mainstream is not on our radar.


Most Indies I work with are making great sounding records, delivering exceptional live performances, and seem to be making good use of internet tools on the promotion/networking side. However, many are making mistakes. When a self-producing and self-managing indie artist makes a decision, we have to respect that they know whats best for them. As much as we give advice and try to influence important decisions, the final direction is up to the artist. So here is a list of the top seven most common mistakes indie artists make.


1. Ineffective use of web networking/promotion tools.


Inadequate use and understanding of social networking and various other web promotional resources is the biggest factor affecting the success of many indie music careers. I've spent some time on the following blogs, check them out and add to the discussion. If you know of any others, please let us know. Knowledge is power.


http://www.musicthinktank.com/

http://newmusicstrategies.com/

http://www.bob-baker.com/musicpromotionblog/index.html

http://lefsetz.com/wordpress/


2. Mastering


An understanding of mastering is the one thing that eludes many indie recording artists. Because they don't understand it, they often come to the conclusion that it must not be important enough to worry about. In some cases, an unmastered mix may sound so great that you think - "man, its done, it's perfect". If this sounds like you, I really think your making a mistake! Don't take my word for it check out this article.


http://www.datamusicata.com


http://www.studiorecordingengineer.com/forum-41.html.


3. Poorly Executed Production


Production value refers to live shows and audio recordings. Sometimes a client will blow into the studio like a tornado, give you some files to upload, lay down a few tracks, ask for everything dumped back on a USB key, and blow back out the door. I never meet or speak with the other engineers involved, and the client rarely has any knowledge of the file formats or the state of the audio footage they bring with them. I hear a lot of bad sound engineering in many situations. I actually had a hip hop artist blame me for bad mastering once, even though the beat he provided to rap on came fully mastered with brutal amounts of audio limiting and compression. He recorded his vocal at our studio but there was little we could do - except redesign the beat, which he didn't want to do. He chose to have us re-master the beat with his newly added vocal. So we did it. Then, predictably, people started telling him that it sounded bad. It did sound bad. So he blamed me. I gave him all his footage and suggested he try another studio. Long story short, the other studio told him the same thing I did. He called me back and apologized and I'm pretty sure we'll be working together again. At least I hope so 'cause that kid had skill. The point is if you are an indie recording artist with little knowledge of how to attain quality production value, you need a producer or some sort of knowledgeable music director to help you through the process. The same goes for live performances - an understanding of what you, the performer, need to do to ensure things are sounding good is key. Live performance production value includes everything from how well rehearsed the band is - to what state your instruments are in - to the live sound engineer who mixes your show.


4. Intonation and General State of Instruments


Stringed instruments need to be "setup" by an expert. They need intonation often, several times a year if you play a lot. When you skip this step in preparation for a recording or live show it is likely your guitar or bass will not be in tune throughout the positions on the neck. It goes without saying that your recording/show will be better if your instrument is in tune. Electronics on instruments and amplifiers often need servicing - If a guitar has a loose output jack, it will short out. If an instrument or amplifier is not electronically grounded, it will give you 60-cycle hum (undesirable electronic noise).


5. Preproduction


Here's an article that discusses preproduction. Not a good idea to skip this stuff.


http://www.venetowest.com/musing/prepro.html


6. Taking wind from sail


Showing your work to your fans before its completed will exhaust the wind from the sail of the fully completed work. First impressions are critical. If you are more than just the songwriter of the music; if you are the performer and featured artist, having quality recordings of the material you publish is helpful. Hold back the demos until you get around to giving them the production value they deserve. Releasing your entire cannon of material all at once can also rapidly exhaust your winds of momentum once the buzz you generate from initial release dies down. Especially if your catalogue is a variety of demo experiments and half- hearted attempts at recording. Leave your audience wanting more, make them wait a little and pay them back for their patience by delivering something extraordinary.


7. Cynicism


The following points are true:


-Being an indie artist is unbelievably difficult.

-Saying that life is unfair is among the largest of understatements.

-When it comes to being an indie artist, there are countless injustices you must constantly endure.

-There are forces at work causing damage to the culture of music.

-We live in a jungle and our only chance of survival is sticking together.


However, by supporting other artists, you support the local and/or global community you exist in. By support, I'm referring to more than just buying a show ticket or a CD - positive vibes and encouragement is necessary to keep people energized about music. If you are in a state of perpetual cynicism about the unfair aspects of the music industry, you are not helping yourself or anyone around you. Focus on what you can do - what is within your means, and take control of your destiny. Make it happen. Do not except NO for an answer. Themes of pain and suffering are deeply rooted in music - the correlation is easily seen. Maybe artists are supposed to suffer a little - but maybe in modern times, the suffering can be managed a little and tragic endings can be avoided. The music industry is US. It's what WE say it is. And it's what WE make of it. There are recent developments (topics discussed on this blog) that are changing the music industry - I echo Bob Lefsetz's sentiment by saying that the Internet IS the best thing ever to happen for indie artists. There is much to be optimistic about. The tide has turned.


Creative Commons License


The Top 7 Mistakes That Indies Make by James Pew is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.

Technorati Tags: bob lefsetz, brownman, creative commons, darran poole, douglas watson rhythm and blues revue, down child blues band, fat head, gary kendall, independent artists, indie, indie artists, internet, Intonation, Intonation and General State of Instruments, juno awards, lefsetz.com, loudness wars, maple blues, music, Music Culture, Music Production, Music Promotion, music think tank, musicthinktank.com, new music strategies, newmusicstrategies.com, Poorly Executed Production, promotion tools, suzzie vinnick, technorati, the loudness issue, the top 7 mistakes, toronto blues society, web 2.0, web networking, web networking/promotion tools, www.bob-baker.com


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