Knowing what to expect when you visit a recording studio can take away a lot of nerves and ensure you have a great session.
Even if you don’t write your own songs you can record onto backing tracks. A lot of rappers will buy beats online and then visit a studio to record their rap over the top and some studios provide or produce beats themselves.
If you’re a singer who doesn’t play any instruments, ask your local studios if they have any writers on the team who can help you come up with an original song.
A good place to start if you are completely new to recording in a studio is going there and simply recording a cover song. You will learn what it’s like to record and when you are more comfortable you can come back and do original songs.
First time in recording studio tips
When you visit a studio, you will meet the engineer -the person who controls the recording equipment. They will talk to you through headphones on something called TalkBack and they will explain to you what you need to do, when you need to start singing etc.
The producer is somebody who directs what should happen to get the best performance from you. So they might say:
“let’s do that again”.
“A Little Bit Stronger”.
“Let’s put more emotion into that”.
“How about you try singing it like this”
Often in small recording studios, the engineer and producer are the same person.
You have a choice as to whether you want to be produced.
Most really appreciate the help of an experienced producer to tell them what they need to do to get the best performance, but some don’t.
A great producer can put you at ease and get a great performance!
There is usually separate room that you go in to record your vocals. You stand in front of the microphone (which will be height adjusted) and they will ask you about whether the volume levels are right for you.
You can say “turn my vocal up, but keep the music as it is”
“turn the music up, but keep my vocal as it is”
or “turn them both up (or both down)”.
It’s really important to get the right levels so that you aren’t straining or under-singing because of wrong volume levels.
I’ve seen some people sing with one side of the headphones off and the other on. Should I do that?
There is no right or wrong. Having both on there will be less chance of the microphone recording what is coming out of the headphones while you do your take and some artists love to be fully immersed in the music, but others find that by having one ear off they can hear themselves more naturally and therefore put a better performance in. So it’s just personal choice.
You may be wondering “what do I need to bring to a recording session?”
Usually this will just be you, lyrics that you need and links to backing tracks or actual files you want to be used. It’s a good idea to talk to the studio beforehand and agree what you need to bring because there’s nothing worse than turning up with your iPad which has your track on, only to find that they don’t have a cable that plugs into that in order to get your song off of it!
Remember, recording is not a live performance
‘Doing takes’ means recording the same thing over and over and this can be edited perfectly later on. If you make a mistake, just carry on because the next take can be chopped in later. By the end of the recording session you might have done five, six different takes and the producer or the engineer can cut up all of those into one perfect take.
Some physical considerations for singers
It’s important to look after your voice. Don’t go having just eaten, avoid dairy products, bananas, alcohol and caffeine (tea/coffee. Consume lots of water so that you sound the best you possibly can.
Emotion
Your voice will be compressed after its recorded, which basically means that the loud parts will get quieter and the quiet parts will get louder. This ensures that your voice sits properly over the music.
This can cause a problem if you’re relying on ‘quiet’ to be your basis of what sounds emotional. Work on real emotion in singing lessons before you go and then give it your all!
Final points in how to prepare for a recording.
Never give the engineer or the producer the lyrics to the song that you’re going to sing.
Ask them to tell you what they think you’re singing. There are a lot of songs out there where misheard lyrics happen and the reason is all around poor mouth shapes. If this happens to you in a recording session, it can only be spotted by somebody who doesn’t know what the lyrics are because as soon as you know, you will naturally hear those words!
Go and visit your local Studios, get a relationship with the. Ask to come down and have a look at the place or book a session in. You don’t lose anything and you might gain so much.
Please Subscribe to us on YouTube and you’ll then be able to pick up all of our #TuesdayTopTip series for free.
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Do online singing lessons work? Are online singing courses as good as a real teacher?
In this article we will look at online singing lesson pros and cons by comparing courses vs local singing teachers.
Deciding which option is right for you when you learn how to sing is important and it may be that a combination of both works best.
This is obviously a very personal decision. YouTube is saturated with many singing videos from different people with different levels of experience and different ideas on teaching how to sing.
There are some absolutely fantastic things that you can learn from these videos. Equally though, it can be incredibly time consuming to keep going through endless online music training videos to find the ones that will truly help you and so it is worth considering at the start if you truly have time for that – especially when many teachers contradict each other with topics such as mixed voice and belting etc.
Exercises, vocal warm-ups and improving your range can definitely be taught using online, pre-recorded means.
When considering how to learn online, you may decide that it’s worth paying for a course that is set out by one voice teacher who you like.
This decision could save you masses of time searching the internet for help and you will spend more time focussed on improving your voice instead.
There are many sites you can look at for courses like this including Udemy, Yousician, takelessons and of course on our site too.
However, online vocal coaching videos don’t 100% replace the need for a real singing teacher.
Even our own online course – “Fast Track Singing” (which has been sponsored by VocalZone) includes a chapter on how to find a singing teacher for that exact reason.
A singing teacher can help you work on real songs and work through your own individual vocal issues to become a better singer overall.
Just like you would research the best singing course for you online, it’s equally important to find the best local teacher for your needs.
Some teachers are very technical, have University qualifications in vocal anatomy or similar.
Others are more focussed on the fun side of singing and might be less qualified but better singing teachers for you, because they connect with you better.
If you want to take exams, you need a teacher that is authorised to send you to examinations and knows the syllabus for that.
Some teachers don’t teach certain genres like Opera for example, so your choice may be based on your particular singing voice
What if you don’t have a great local singing teacher available?
Do online vocal lessons work?
Singing teachers have been teaching online on Zoom all the way through the coronavirus lockdown and so yes online voice lessons are definitely possible and the benefits of this are that:
You can choose any singing teacher in the world that you want to work with
You can learn from the comfort of your own home
You can save on travel costs
You will be motivated to continue practising because you have future lessons booked in
However there are definitely some drawbacks to this way of learning, such as:
It is internet speed and internet connection dependent
You have to be the one that presses play/stop on the recording to avoid a lag with the audio
If you go to a singing teacher who has a studio setup, you can do recordings to hear yourself getting better over time.
This is a little bit like when your mom or grandma used to put marks on a door to measure your height. It is not always easy to remember being that small, but by seeing the marks on the door you can see the different heights you reached.
The same applies with singing. You won’t necessarily notice the small changes in your voice, but hearing yourself on different recordings you will (and other people will notice the difference in you too).
Whatever you decide, online course vs real singing teacher, it is important to be consistent and keep learning and practising week after week. That is what brings success.
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Every year artists of a certain age group come to us and ask what the difference is between mainstream music education and an artist development program and it’s a great question. We appreciate the need to understand the difference between the two, because it can affect your future.
It’s important to understand that an artist development programme may not be right for you and mainstream music educationmay actually be the best option for you.
I’m going to talk about the benefits of mainstream music, education and compare them to the benefits of an artist development programme, so that you can decide which is the best option for your future.
Going to university or performing arts schools is a big life decision. It’s the first time for many young people when they will live away from home and it’s also the time when students get to decide what option to take through UCAS which will hopefully give them the skills and qualification to do the career of their choice. But what if your career choice is to be a singer or a performing arts entertainer?
Then you will be thinking “are performing arts courses better than artist development?” Or even wondering “what’s the difference between artist development and university courses?”
Before thinking of applying for either you will of course need to ensure that you meet the entry requirements. This could be a certain level of grades, or passing an audition.
When I went to college I wanted to take Music, Psychology, French and German. I arrived at the college and they told me that if I wanted to be a sound engineer I had to take Maths and Physics and I changed my options because of it, only to find I hated both and dropped out to go back to most of what I’d wanted in the first place.
Since becoming a successful and award winning music production professional, I can honestly tell you that you do not need maths and physics qualifications to do the job!
Whether money, moving home, a focus of career training (over general syllabus training) or gaining a qualification is driving your thoughts to this blog post, I hope that you will get some benefit from weighing up the different options to make the right decision for you.
The Benefits of Mainstream Music Courses
You might be looking for a performing arts course, or popular music diploma or similar and one of the best parts about a higher education music course is that you will be in a classroom environment with other musicians, learning alongside them.
This can be great for:
Making friends
Making Connections
Working with people
Experiencing the general buzz of being in that kind of environment
You may get the opportunity for work experience
Learning alongside your peers is a great part of college or university education and can set you up with friendships for life.
Other great parts of working in mainstream music education are:
The overall experience of being at a university or a college, such as things like freshers’ week and the ability to live somewhere else in the country and experience that ‘growing up’ part of life.
Getting a qualification at the end that may allow you to add letters to your name
You may have to do mainstream education up until the age of 18. In which case, you really have no choice and can therefore choose to do a music course or work on a development programme alongside it.
The Benefits of an Artist Development Programme
Great considerations in relation to artist development programmes are that:
Everything is focused around you
You learn exactly what you need, to get you to be a professional artist as it is specifically designed around you
No more learning about topics that you’ll never use
It’s one-to-one training
You could take a programme and do a different subject at university as a backup
So you won’t get the friendships that you would if you were in a mainstream education setting, but you will get the training and impetus to succeed because it’s just about what you need and it’s pushing you forward for your career.
Also, consider that with a development programme:
You are working with a team of industry experts
Everyone is focussed on:
Working on your songs
Working on your recordings
Working on your promotion
Working on building your fanbase
The drawbacks of Mainstream Music Education
There are a number of aspects about college and university music courses that have a downside. Some of the more obvious ones would be that:
Performing arts degrees / general university courses can cost upwards of £30,000 and you will end up having to pay that debt back over your lifetime
You have to study for 3 years
You are in competition with the other students who want the same thing
A lot of music industry jobs don’t actually require degrees in music subjects
You will not have a team specifically working on the management and development of your career
Let’s compare the above to the drawbacks of development programmes
The drawbacks of Artist Development Programmes
You won’t get a certificate or any official educational recognition from the course
You aren’t involved in it full time, so if you need a structured, classroom based timetable to keep motivated this won’t be for you
You won’t necessarily live close to the development company, so will have to do more travel than if you lived close to university
You won’t be working with other musicians, so will not have the friendships that a mainstream course would bring you
Should I do a University Course or Artist Development?
Considering all of the above, you should be able to decide whether a development programme is right for you, of if mainstream education is a better option. Perhaps you will choose to do both simultaneously?
Certainly either option will give you:
The performance skills you will need
Experience of live events
Teach you about a wide range of subjects, including the music business, artist management and record labels as a whole.
Either way, we wish you all the best with your future career.
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Part of being a singer will involve taking part in auditions. Knowing what not to do in an audition can help you pass more of them, so here are some common audition mistakes that you should avoid at all costs.
Don’t choose a song that’s too popular.
There are songs out there which everyone wants to sing and it’s only natural that you would too – it shows you as being versatile, modern, or ‘with the times’. However, they’re not necessarily the best ones to choose for auditions for a number of reasons.
If the judging panel hears the same song all day, they will get bored of hearing it and this could harm your chances of success.
By choosing a song that’s very popular, you open yourself up to being compared to somebody else.
If you choose a different song they won’t be able to compare you like for like and you will therefore be judged purely on your own merits.
Imagine being the judge – if you have five people singing the same song, you’re then able to whittle that down by deciding who sang that song best – and that might put you at a great disadvantage in an audition.
Don’t forget to research the judges.
People will often turn up without even knowing who the judges are. Researching this information, you can really hone in which song you want to sing because everybody likes different types of music. If you know that they work with certain types of artists, you can actually choose the sort of song which is most likely to resonate with the majority of the panel.
If they like the song and they like your voice, then you are in the best position for success.
Practise the talking part too!
It’s nerve wracking but speaking to people during an audition is just as important as singing because it makes the first impression.
Are you going to stand there and wait to sing your song? Or are you going to say something?
Are you going to talk to the audience if there’s an audience there or not?
If you want to speak at an audition, you should practice what you’re going to say because when nerves take over it’s a good idea to have something in the bag that you can just pull out.
Show your personality.
Even the most extroverted artist can come on stage and look like they’re really shy. It’s important to try and work through nerves and find a way to bring out your natural personality.
Equally the opposite applies- don’t go out there being all extrovert if that’s not you. Be Authentic.
Give Eye Contact!
We use eye contact in order to keep people’s attention and focus on us, or to show that we are paying attention to them. This is equally important at an audition.
Keep it natural – you don’t want to be staring the judges out because that’s very uncomfortable.
But you do want to make a regular eye contact if they’re looking up at you, because that will keep them connected with you and make them feel that this is a real person with real feelings doing this audition. It’ll be harder to say no to you!
Don’t miss out on all the networking.
The music industry is about who you know and there are many connections that can be made at auditions. Before you enter the audition room you will be in a waiting area and so many times, singers will sit in their own, or with their family group and they don’t even speak to anybody else in the room.
Well, how do you know who else is sat in that room? The next number one star might be there and if you were to make a connection with them, you might one day collaborate with them. That might then lift your career (or vice versa) because it’s about helping each other out.
So if you’re going to an audition network, network, network. Get people’s details, hand out your own cards and be there in the moment.
Ask for feedback
You might fail an audition, you might get the news that “Sorry on this occasion you haven’t been successful”. How often have you been followed up with them? Said, “thank you very much for that. Could you please give me feedback on what I could do better?”
So simple. They can turn around and say “I’m sorry, we don’t give feedback”. But what if they do? What if they could tell you what it is that you did wrong or what you could do better? That’s gold, because you can then take that information and know how to do a great audition, then use it to hopefully be successful in the next one.
https://www.360artistdevelopment.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Pop-music-scaled.jpg25601707matthew@360artistdevelopment.comhttps://www.360artistdevelopment.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/360-artist.pngmatthew@360artistdevelopment.com2021-07-27 17:28:052021-07-27 18:57:28Avoid These Common Audition Mistakes
In this blog we will look at how to approach a music manager and things to consider when doing so. It is true that they can take your career to the next level but it’s also important to only contact them when you are ready.
We will give some real world examples of when that would (and wouldn’t) be the case. The music business is just that, a business and you’ll need to plan for management like you are looking to get hired – full of facts and figures about you.
When you contact a music manager (if you’re at that stage where you need one) you need an electronic press kit or EPK. You need to make sure that it’s formulated with:
Photographs
Biography and general information about yourself
Links to your songs to promote your music
Any video links of things that you’ve done
Stats in relation to your fan base/your earnings/any gigs that you have booked and any gigs that you’ve done
This is particularly important if you’ve toured around or supported any known bands or musicians.
Make your electronic press kit buzzing – this is the music industry! If you want to know how to get a management deal – make the manager want to sign you! They want to see that you’re blowing up as an artist – and as a singer you have to make them want to get involved with you, hear your music and know it’s a match for them – so show yourself off in the best possible light!
“I’ve had a hundred thousand streams in this record” “I’ve been featured on BBC introducing” “I’ve been been on television” “I’ve been on a tour around the UK” etc.
One caveat to this is don’t ever lie or overcook information because you’ll get found out, and by lying or overstating something that you’ve done, it doesn’t help anybody in the long run.
Finding a manager is hard but like all work relationships, once you do find the perfect ‘manager for singer’ relationship, it is one that’s built on trust.
You have to trust your manager, just as much as they have to trust you.
So often, people will send emails asking for management when they do not need management.
People have an idea that you need a music manager in order to be signed by a record company and that is not correct. You need a manager when your music career is so involved that you can’t handle it yourself. That’s what a manager does. They handle your business.
Music managers will be doing things like working with tour managers, booking agents, other key music industry professionals. They’ll be finding you gigs. They’ll be helping you with your accounts, liaising with record labels, helping with promotions and finding sponsorship.
They’ll be doing all this sort of stuff around you as an artist, but if you’re a brand new artist who has 5,000 streams on Spotify and maybe two to three hundred fans – then you do not need a manager.
If you haven’t got any songs yet, you do not need a manager
If you are contacting music management companies because you think it’ll help you get signed or get live gigs – you do not need a manager
You DO reach out to music management contacts when you have a really decent fanbase, you’re earning money through your music and importantly when you have something to manage, because that’s when they also earn money – this is a business that works on commission from your earnings, so if you are earning nothing at all then guess how much your manager will be earning? And who in this world works for free?
There are certain management contracts where you can pay them per month to manage your business. But then you have to ask yourself, what am I paying for? Why am I paying somebody to manage my business if I don’t yet need my business managed?
If there’s no way you’d pay a music manager to work for you on a monthly retainer basis right now, then you know deep down that you’re not at the stage where you should be contacting them to make that great first impression.
Let’s say you’ve read the above and you’re ready to go out and find the perfect music manager for you.
How do we approach potential managers? How do we even find them? Well, you can find managers in a number of different ways:
You could subscribe to magazines such as Music Week in the UK, where you will often see that managers are either interviewed or they post adverts for their artists saying congratulations on certain Awards.
You could look at the unsigned guide and contact people there.
You can look online, searching for managers of particular artists that you’re interested in or you could search for the actual artists themselves and then look at their Wikipedia or social media to find out who manages them.
Once you have a name, then go on to their website and contact them.
It’s actually a lot easier than you might think contacting artist managers, because at the end of the day everyone needs each other. Music managers need great singers like you in order to be able to continue in their business and great artists like you need great managers in order to propel their careers even further forward.
Just remember that this is a business and everything has to be mutually beneficial in any business transaction.
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…And the six mistakes that singers often make when doing so
(See Mistake Number 6 For a Top Tip At KNOWING What The Industry Professional Did With Your Email!)
Mistake Number 1…. Not Including the Person’s Name in the Email.
Dear Matthew, Dear Frank, Dear Jennifer,
what a difference that can make compared to:
Hi, Hey there.
Which one would you respond to?
You’re contacting this person presumably because they may be of benefit to your career and therefore you are making a first impression with the very first words that person reads of your email. If you can’t even research their name and write it in the email what does that say about you? Perhaps more importantly what does it say about how highly the person you’re writing to thinks you value them?
Now I know that we have a lot of emails to send and often people will go on to a site searching for a list of music managers, music industry contacts or producers – or if you are thinking about how to contact a&r at a record label – whoever it might be., it’s likely that you will want to send the same email out to everybody – and that’s understandable. I’m sure we’ve all done that.
But include their name, make it personal. It’ll take you an extra minute, but it changes the odds of them replying to you massively because it’s the difference between making them feel like you’ve written an email to them personally, or whether you’ve just written an email to everybody.
It’s not rude to not reply to a generic email sent out to everyone is it? But to ignore an email that’s personally written for you? You’ll see where I’m going here.
So please, the next time you send an email. Never hey there. It’s ‘Dear’ and whoever you’re writing to if you want to make that best first impression.
Mistake Number 2…Forgetting To Take Out Company Information from a Generic Email
Even if you are using your own email template to send to people and you have put Dear ….. Let’s say that you want to work with 360 artist development, so you’ve put some text in about how you’re an artist and you’d love to work with 360 because you’re impressed at how we get great opportunities for our artists and it could help your music career…
Don’t then accidentally send that same email on to somebody else with a different name on the Dear….. and still including 360 artist development! I’ve seen it happen many times before with emails, where somebody else’s company is named in it! So if you are going to use your template, be very, very careful and triple check before hitting send!
Mistake Number 3…Do Some Research first!
We live in an information-rich society and it’s not that hard to find information about the person or company you are writing to. Yet it is amazing how few people actually fully research the person or the place that they’re sending their email to and simply focus on themselves. You should be able to say something that you like about that particular person’s achievements, or that particular company.
For example, if you were writing an email to us you could say “I see that you’re an award-winning development company and I would really like you to be involved with my music”.
Great. That one sentence shows that you’ve researched us. It shows that you actually do want to work with us, the email is definitely meant for us and so must be a genuine comment. If you make somebody feel good about themselves while they’re reading your email, they may feel more inclined to want to help you out.
So don’t just focus on yourself, remember who you’re writing to and why.
Another example would be f you’re thinking “how do I contact a record company?” You’ll need to ensure that you are focussing on why that label is right for your kind of music and how you compare with their current roster.
Mistake Number 4….CC’ing Everyone into the Same Email
The next mistake that I want to talk about is CC’ing (carbon copying) everybody into the same email.
This usually happens when people are making mistake number 1 and they will accidentally or deliberately include everybody in the CC line. Now this is a big No-No. A lot of music professionals do not want their email address to be given to everyone on the email list you have sent out, which means your first impression is abusing their privacy and opening them up to spam. This shows a complete lack of respect.
Sending a generic email, thereby making mistake numbers 1 and 3 shows that you haven’t researched them, you’re not really interested in working with them. You just want to send the email out to everybody and by putting it all into a cc, it’s lazy and it’s unprofessional.
So send each email separately, even if it takes you longer.
Mistake Number 5….Not Following Up
One of the biggest mistakes you can make is not following up.
People will send one email, if they don’t get a reply, that’s the end of that relationship.
Let me tell you something. Music industry professionals are very, very busy. You might have sent that email when they’re away, you might have sent that email when they had a really busy day and they may have glanced at it and thought, “Oh I need to come back to that”
but they might forget –everybody is human. They might have forgotten to look at your email, they might have forgotten to reply to you and if you never follow up with them then they will forget about you.
If you don’t get a reply, that doesn’t mean harass anyone, but do follow up – because it’s those people that follow up who often get the best results! Here is an idea for a follow up email:
Dear…..
I sent you an email last week and wondered if you’d had a chance to listen to my song?
Thank you very much in advance.
Kind Regards
(Your name)
This may potentially trigger them to think. “Oh, sorry. I didn’t reply to you. I have listened now and XYZ”.
Of course, they might still ignore you in which case move on, but follow-up because you may then get those connections that you want.
Mistake Number 6…..Using Attachments
When you send an attachment, a lot of companies block them, which means that your email may never reach your intended recipient, or it will go into their spam box.
It will also fill up any storage space on their hard drive if thousands of artists sent attachments and that is another reason why they are often blocked. Use download links in order to be able to send those emails and they will get through the system all the way to the music industry professional you are trying to contact.
It’s also a great idea because you can monitor when they’ve listened, if you use a service like disco.ac or similar, then you will end up with the ability to create custom links for each person that you’re sending it to and you will then be able to see when they have accessed your music, if they’ve downloaded it, if they have streamed it or not – which means that when it comes to following up,
you’ll be able to write an intelligent email, because you’ll be able to say:
Dear…….
I noticed that you haven’t listened to my music yet, would it be possible for me to send it to you again?
Or
Dear…
I hope that you’ve had a chance to listen to my music and I would like to get some feedback, whatever it may be?
So try and change your way of working to incorporate download links and see how it can change your whole perspective on how to follow up and when!
https://www.360artistdevelopment.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/writing-email.jpg6831024matthew@360artistdevelopment.comhttps://www.360artistdevelopment.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/360-artist.pngmatthew@360artistdevelopment.com2021-07-19 10:33:502021-07-21 19:22:47How To Contact Music Industry Professionals
Building an engaged fanbase online and learning how to get more followers is important if you are going to succeed as a singer in the music industry.
Social media is just that – it’s social and it involves media and it’s important to understand those two terms if you’re going to build a fan base.
So often with new artists all you see is “listen to my single”, “I’m releasing a new single”, “look at picture of me in the studio”, “buy my single”. This is in your face boring stuff which people don’t want to see.
Why do you go on to social media?
You go on to social media to connect with friends, perhaps to see funny videos – whatever the reason, you do it for a break from reality. You don’t do it to be bombarded with loads of musicians trying to get you to listen to their latest single do you? And you don’t do it necessarily to buy loads of stuff from other businesses. So it’s very important to consider yourself as a business, because you are trying to get more fans and get people to listen to your music, which is in effect the product that you make.
But you have to do this in a clever way that really works.
Getting more followers and keeping more followers means engaging with your fanbase in a way that’s not annoying to them and where you give them value and actively engage them.
For example, if you were to subscribe to our YouTube Channel so that you can watch all of our TuesdayTopTips, it’s because you want to watch these tips, you want to be better at what you do as an artist and you know that this can help you get there.
It’s the same if you’re working on Facebook as an artist, or if you’re posting on Instagram. If you want people to follow your music and you want people to pre save all your singles, you need to build trust in a community that likes what you do.
So the first tip in relation to building a fan base, is to go online and have a look at artists who are similar to you.
Really dissect what they do on their own pages and Instagram feeds. See whether they have a certain theme, whereby they use the same colour scheme (for example Ariana Grande on her Instagram seems to use the same colour filters which are kind of pastel-coloured).
You could potentially go for something like that, or you could look at the timing of when they put their posts out and see whether there is a particular schedule they stick to – as having a regular time when you post is also important for consistency when it comes to building a fanbase and working with a similar target audience. For example, if you’ve seen a lot of our TuesdayTopTip series, you know that we post at 4pm UK time on a Tuesday. If you watch a TV program you know it comes out on x day at y time. Imagine if they just released it whenever they felt like it? How could you possibly get into watching it if you never knew when it would be on?
The second tip would be to make sure that you treat each platform differently.
Don’t just post the same content on every platform because they are very different to each other. Video content on TikTok is going to work great on TikTok, but might not work at all on Facebook or Twitter. Just like on Instagram you’re mainly looking at images. So treat each platform as its own thing.
Don’t go overboard with the amount of platforms that you use so that it just becomes saturated and you can’t deal with the amount of things you have to do. But equally don’t just concentrate all your efforts on one platform, because not everybody uses the same platform that you do as your number one.
Tip number three is making sure you create content with a good ratio of personal, professional or promotional types of content.
People want to see you as a human being and therefore, posting personal photos is important – you on a beach, you on holiday, you with your pets, you doing sewing at home, whatever it is that that makes it you.
This shows people that you are somebody who they can connect with, somebody who’s like them.
Then we have professional. That is pictures of you doing your craft. Whether it be you in the studio, you practicing on a stage, you in a concert…whatever it might be, those are the professional images.
And then finally, promotional. Listen to my single, download my new single, my new single’s out. But that should be the least that you post.
Tip number four is don’t reinvent the wheel.
Look at things that have gone viral. Look at things which people like to hear. For example, harmony videos where people do multiple layers of harmony. There are plenty of songs and you could choose to do a new take on that. It’s not a new idea, but it can certainly get you great views. One of our artists got over 400,000 views, doing a similar thing. And again, it’s not Reinventing the wheel, it’s doing something that people like to see and it can help you to grow a fanbase for your music.
So, have a look on things like TikTok and see what really is trending, what people love – and create your own video of that style and go with it. You may find that you get loads more fans and loads more followers from doing something like that.
Tip number five is don’t forget to use hashtags.
Hashtags are really important to tell the computer (or the system that you’re putting your image into) what this is actually about.
If you have an active fan base with millions of fans, you probably don’t need as many hashtags because you’ve already got your fan base and they will see your new posts anyway because they follow you.
If you’re new and you’re trying to grow a fan base, you need those hashtags to bring new people on, because people searching for certain images like “Studio UK”, “producers UK”, “rappers us” “rappers”, whatever it might be, they might search for that hashtag and then your image will come up, or your post will come up, because you’ve put that hashtag in your post and told Instagram or whichever platform you are using that this is what your image is about and that really can drive traffic to your profile!
This is why it’s really important to include hashtags, because you can then attract a new audience to your posts.
My final tip would be ask questions in your post.
If you ask questions that need a response, you can increase your engagement rate. “Have you ever done this before?” “Can you sing as high as I can?” post your video. whatever it might be, do something which requires a response from the person watching it. Because if they comment or like your post, or if they share it, their friends will see that too and so on. That then grows your reach massively.
Don’t forget to head over to our YouTube channel and subscribe for more #TuesdayTopTips and good luck building your fanbase!
https://www.360artistdevelopment.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/Engaged-Fanbase.jpg10001000matthew@360artistdevelopment.comhttps://www.360artistdevelopment.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/360-artist.pngmatthew@360artistdevelopment.com2021-07-19 10:33:402021-07-21 19:25:01How To Build An Engaged Fanbase
When you are looking to build a career in the music industry, one of the options open to you is taking an artist development programme to prepare you in the fullest way for
• Building a fanbase
• Building a portfolio of material to promote to the industry and
• Building your skills to the absolute most professional level
so that you can indeed compete with the best.
But how do you know how much an artist development programme really costs when there are so many options out there and everyone seems to be throwing around the phrase ‘artist development’?
This article will help break down the most common reasons why prices of development programmes vary so greatly and can seem either cheap or expensive in comparison with one another. That way, you will be fully equipped to know what to look out for and what is right for you, not just in terms of cost but in terms of product – and more importantly rights in the music.
SONG PRODUCTION
The biggest element that will push cost up or down is song production, which in basic terms is where songs are turned from ideas into actual recordings. The reason why adding or taking away songs increases the cost of an artist development programme so dramatically, is because:
• The process is very time consuming. It can take many hours to record the parts in that create the overall song and sometimes days to edit and ‘mix’ the record.
• It requires a high level of skill and the more experienced the person, the more it is likely to cost, but also the better the overall sound at the end should be.
• It requires a huge investment in sound equipment and businesses must charge accordingly. You could be recording on a microphone that costs thousands – and that is just the mic!
The final point above will also have a dramatic effect on your budget depending on the location and size of the studio you choose to work in. Businesses have overheads (costs to rent property, electricity, staff costs etc.) and so it is only natural to expect to pay a lot more if you choose to work in a large, central London studio, than in a smaller one based elsewhere in the UK.
If you then factor in the cost of a highly experienced producer/engineer working in that same studio, vs a smaller, non-central one you can start to understand that a higher price does not necessarily mean a better end product – you may be paying for the location.
Other Factors that Influence Song Production Cost
You will no doubt have seen ‘beats’ or ‘songs’ available online at cheap prices, only to then find that you can buy the same beat at either $35 or $350 depending on the license you want to pay for.
Licensing is all about the rights you have to use the music. Let’s just consider how that might affect you as an artist.
A $35 license will likely give you the non-exclusive right to have the beat/song without any producer tags (the sound on the recording that says something like GREAT PRODUCER BEATS all over it). But non-exclusive means that the seller can also sell that same beat/song to as many other people as he or she wants.
The pros of this for you are:
• You can get started in writing and recording songs in a very cost effective way
• If you had a budget of five hundred to spend, you could do many different songs with this model, compared to having a custom song or other type of license
• You’ll be able to release more music to your fanbase
The cons of this type of licence for you is:
• Many other artists will have purchased the beat, so you are showing yourself off on a backing track that lots of others have used before (and will use after) you. Imagine if that happened in the charts where artists were writing songs to the same backing all the time – it wouldn’t look very professional
• I’m sure you’ve heard of Shazam – the way that you can listen to a song and it identifies who it is? If you’re using the same backing track as other artists, you may find that it confuses your song with somebody else’s and your fans cannot find you, or worse – you get blocked on YouTube for copyright violation because it recognises it as belonging to somebody else!
A $350 license is likely to be exclusive, which means that you – and only you – can use the song. It will be taken off sale when you purchase it. Some things to consider if you go for this option would be:
• Is it a complete buy-out or not (in other words, do you have to credit the writer as a songwriter and are they entitled to songwriting royalties. Neither of these are a bad thing, you just have to know what you are legally required to do)
• How long has the music been online before you purchased it? (People steal music all the time, recording sounds from the internet and this may have already been used by other artists illegally, which can still cause the problems you see above)
• Has the music ever been sold under any other license? (There’s no point buying it exclusively if even one person has purchased a non-exclusive license before)
The benefit to buying music in this way is that you can listen to many different options until you find the song that really gets your creativity going. The downside is that with so much choice it can be hard to focus in on what’s best and of course, you will be required to write the song over it – so if you aren’t good at songwriting this might not be the option for you.
Some artist development companies will have ‘stock songs’, which in effect is the same as the above but with the benefit that it won’t have been on the internet for the whole world to listen to and potentially steal. You can then choose which one you like. This can be a great option for some people, but it is not bespoke to you and therefore shouldn’t be charged at the same rate as something written specifically for your voice and style.
The Bespoke Option
Some artist development companies will have songwriters who will write songs with you or for you. Other companies will expect you to have song ideas ready and they will then make those ideas into records. Either way, this form of working on songs from scratch is bespoke – in other words completely unique to you. The music will be written to perfectly suit your voice, your vocal range, your likes and help form a consistent album or EP of songs that go together and showcase you as an artist.
The factors that influence how much your artist development programme will cost in this bespoke writing area will be based not just on the location/size of studio/experience of staff element, but on rights to the music.
There are a number of rights that come with making recordings. We won’t be covering what rights actually mean and how they work in detail in this article, but will in a future blog post.
The main two to consider are:
• Master rights (who owns and controls the physical recording and therefore who can grant licenses for its use, such as on TV). Eventually a record company would own these rights, so it’s not something which you as an artist would naturally expect to own in a professional setting – but if you are paying for a ‘buy out’ when doing song production, these rights will be yours.
• Songwriting (publishing) rights (who is involved in the songwriting process and what splits are agreed upon between the writers. Sometimes on a buy out, the writers of the music will not claim any and you will be able to register it 100% to you).
As the featured performer (singer), you will receive performance royalties due to you, whether you wrote the song or not.
So if you consider a song as a whole, this is a fair split because:• A record company (and sometimes you on a percentage) earns from the song with the master rights
• You earn from performer rights (and sometimes a split of songwriting) and
• The songwriters earn from publishing rights
When is a buyout a good thing/bad thing?
A buyout is a great thing for you if you want to retain full control of your music and earn every bit of money that comes in from the record. This works for some – just look at Taylor Swift who had this issue with her ex-manager. She decided to re-record all her music, rather than let him continue earning on it. But most artists, famous or not do not own full rights in the music.
For you to decide if a buyout is a good thing to factor into the cost of your artist development programme, you should consider why it is being offered in the first place.
If a company really believes in you and your music and thinks that you could become a successful chart artist, why would they allow you to buy all the rights to the music, when they could retain what would be rightfully theirs and thereby earn future royalties when the songs are successful? (Particularly in terms of songwriting credit – and sometimes producers ask for a percentage of
master rights to be agreed on an individual contractual basis). Perhaps they say they believe in you… but maybe they don’t!
If you pay for a buyout, the cost will be significantly higher than a deal where royalties are involved. You have to decide for yourself if it’s worth the extra cost to retain all the rights.
If people are working on a buyout basis, how can you be sure that they will do their best work? It’s only human nature to consider this question, because what price do you put on a song that might earn millions in the future?
And would you be more likely to do your best work if you:
a) Really believed in the artist
b) Took a smaller up-front fee and requested your share of future royalties vs a buyout price
VIDEO PRODUCTION
The next factor of artist development programmes that can have an effect on price is video production. It isn’t as complex as song production at all but it still has a lot of the same cost considerations:
• To do it right is time consuming
• To make it look great, it requires great (expensive) equipment
If you are putting cover videos out on the internet, it’s perfectly fine to do it yourself on a mobile phone – it shows you’re real. But sometimes you want something more professional in the studio.
This is where video production as part of an artist development programme can really assist you to build quality videos to build a fanbase. After all, people are more likely to find you in the early stages singing a cover on YouTube than they are listening to your new original singles on Spotify.
Some development companies will offer full-on music videos as part of the programmes and others will offer cover video productions. There is a big difference in cost with this, as some music videos can cost more by themselves than a whole year of an artist development programme.
TRAINING
The amount of training and the cost per hour of training will have a minimal impact on the overall cost of an artist development programme. It is vital to have training and for you to ensure that the programme you choose can teach you what you want to learn.
Common areas that are taught during a programme can include:
• Vocals
• Songwriting / lyric writing
• Performance
• Music Business & Contracts
• Media Interview Techniques
• Social Media Management
• Microphone Techniques
• Music Production
Another factor that can influence the cost of training is whether the provider has you learn as part of an online course (pre-recorded), in a group/classroom setting or individually. Different people will
take benefit from each of these approaches to learning. Some like the online way of taking it at their own pace, others will thrive in a classroom environment being able to work alongside others and some want to focus on 1-2-1 training so that only what they need to know is taught and this can fast-track learning significantly (but costs more overall).
PHOTOGRAPHY
Another area often included in development programmes is photography – after all, people see you before they hear you and so having great promotional images is vital for success.
There are many different considerations with photoshoots that will drive the cost up or down:
• How many images are included in the cost?
• How long is the shoot?
• How experienced is the photographer?
• Are they a specialist at music photography?
• If images have to be paid for separately to the shoot, what does each image cost?
• Who owns the copyright?
• What are the terms of use of the images? (Does someone have to be credited/does it have a watermark)
• Are the images purely studio based, or on-location, or both?
• Is a makeup artist included?
OTHER BENEFITS THAT MONEY CAN’T BUY
So the above should have answered the question of “how much does an artist development programme cost?” and how you can have control of this cost by being savvy in relation to what you really need and want from your programme. But there is something that in many ways is even more important that you can’t necessarily put a price on and that is the other benefits of being with a company, that money can’t buy!
How much would it help and be worth to you:
• To be able to send a text/WhatsApp message to your development company to ask questions and seek guidance whenever you needed an answer?
• To be featured on their page so that you can be found by the music industry?
• To be promoted by them so that your music is listened to? – As there’s a big difference between a company contacting a company and introducing an artist and an artist themselves saying ‘listen to my music’
• To have a team working to try and help you make it in the industry and finding opportunities for your career to progress?
• To have an entire team of professionals behind you that you don’t need to hire separately – from producers to trainers, promoters to graphic designers, photographers to songwriters?
You are now clued in to the ways in which artist development programme costs can change and I am sure having read this article you are now wondering where 360 fits into the above.
•We do not have stock songs. We work entirely on a bespoke basis to ensure that all songs are being written to compliment the artist in the most unique way possible.
•We do not have buyouts. We personally don’t believe in them because of the problem around whether people genuinely do their best work under those terms.
We only take on artists we believe in and we want them to succeed and having a mentality where everyone will benefit from their success, meaning that you as an artist can be assured that everything possible is being done to help you achieve that success rather than being left on your own to promote yourself and your music.
It is normal for rights to be shared – it’s common industry practise – and therefore our song production prices are lower because we do retain rights in the music.
We retain ownership of master rights but pay you an equal 50% share of all master rights income.
We retain the right to be credited equally in songwriting royalty. We take no commission on your performer royalty, which remains 100% yours.
•We work from a studio near Leeds, West Yorkshire. It is fully owned by us and therefore our overheads are low.
We have highly experienced producers and top of the range equipment.
We won an award for Music Production Company of the Year 2020 and Best Music Composition Specialists – UK in the Global Excellence Awards.
We have songwriters who can write for you or with you on all songs.
•Our training is world-class. We can teach all of the previously mentioned topics and have options for you to take an online class in singing in addition to in-person lessons, but otherwise all of our training in 1-2-1. There is no classroom learning here. We won awards for being the Most Outstanding in Vocal and Performance Coaching – UK and Best Artist Development Specialists for our training.
•Our video production is studio based with high quality equipment. We offer full music video options with all the bells and whistles, but they are not part of the development programme costs, unless you take the Award Programme.
•Photoshoots are conducted with an experienced music photographer.
All images taken on the shoot are provided digitally with no copyright retained by the photographer.
Depending on the programme, a number of images are edited afterwards.
Images are both studio based and outdoor and the shoot lasts approximately 2 hours, which is sufficient to usually have 4-5 outfit changes.
Makeup artists are available on request.
•The money-can’t-buy factor is really why we keep receiving 5-Star reviews. All of the above is standard for us, it’s just a given. We want you to succeed and will do everything we can to help you in your artist development journey.
https://www.360artistdevelopment.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/20210706_124513.jpg828828matthew@360artistdevelopment.comhttps://www.360artistdevelopment.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/360-artist.pngmatthew@360artistdevelopment.com2021-07-19 10:33:302021-07-21 19:32:10How Much Does An Artist Development Programme Cost?
Music formats and the way we consume music has changed massively over the last number of decades. From tape cassettes and vinyls, through to the compact disc, not to forget the attempt at making super audio CDs and minidisk successful. This then led to MP3s and now streaming and the landscape continues to change and […]
https://www.360artistdevelopment.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/360BLOG-scaled.jpg25602560adminhttps://www.360artistdevelopment.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/360-artist.pngadmin2021-06-14 13:53:362021-07-14 11:13:52The Future Sound Of Music
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