Archive for the ‘ Artist development ’ Category

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10
Feb

Persistence is polite

I’ve spent the whole week working on booking a tour for a guitarist I work for. Not having your emails returned, voice mails listened to, or messages past on can easily become depressing and disheartening. The guitarist in question is an awesome musician, a great guy, and a wonderful live performer… But, while he is world renowned with fans found in every corner of the globe, he is by no means world famous. What this means is that it is, more often than not, a sales led process when it should be easy simply based on the quality of the performer I’m booking this tour for.

I was trying to remember the mantra that I keep returning to at times like this “Persistence is polite”.

I was trying to remember who said it??? So I Googled it… And if course… It was one of Derek Sivers soundbites!

Love you Derek :)

http://sivers.org/persistence

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29
Jan

Musicians digital assistant

Derek Sivers, founder of CD Baby, started Muckwork which doesn’t seem to have got off the ground yet. It’s based around the idea of having a network of digital assistants who can do the dirty work for you so you can focus on the creative stuff… A lot of my work with artists is based in this very principal. I do a lot of work for free with musician friends and emerging artists who can’t afford a retainer. I usually only work with artists who I think have the potential to make a career out of music and will be able to start paying me for services further down the line.

Some of what I do is assistance with managing the digital strategies of my artists: websites, social media, ecommerce, email newsletters, direct to fan campaigns, so I guess to that type of artist, I could be seen as a digital assistant.

If I think of a good name for it I may formalise it into a little business… Any ideas?

Rich

Ardua Music :: Per Ardua Surgo

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24
Jan

Webinar :: How To Use Facebook To Promote Your Music :: 6th Feb @ 2:00 AM – 3:30 AM

A free webinar by Michael Brandvold and Brian Thompson from Thorny Bleeder on promoting your music on Facebook but unfortunately it’s at 2:00am UK time…. however, for $5, you can purchase a recording if you fall asleep!

Go here Music Marketing Webinar

Rich

Ardua Music :: Per Ardua Surgo

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9
Jan

Commitment to routine

I have a 1 month old daughter called Henrietta. The night before last, she showed me the benefit of a solid routine… We tried to change her nappy after her feed rather than before it, but she took this to mean that she was going to be fed again after her feed, as she’d already learnt to associate nappy changing with the feed following on.
She kept us up for most of the night as she couldn’t understand this change in routine!!! We should have stuck to what worked!

A bit about musicians daily routines here >>

Online routines here >>

Instrument practice routines >>

A bit about rehearsal routines >>

And possibly the most important routine, your health >>

I went from pretty much couch potato to running the London Marathon using a training routine.

Routines are really important in life as well as your musical career. Whether they be bizarre rituals before a performance, rehearsal routines to make sure you’re maximising productivity, or healthy living routines that allow you to focus on tasks throughout the day, commitment to your routine can help you get the best out of yourself.

Any essential musician routines I’ve missed? Let me know in the comments below.

Rich
Ardua Music :: Per Ardua Surgo :: Beast & Pieces

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31
Dec

What is artist development?

It’s not an easy question to answer, which therefor means, it’s not a stupid question to ask.

It used to be that the first sort of deal you’d get from a major label would be a development deal.  You get signed for a few singles, or demos with label having the option to move you onto a proper recording contract.  At which point you’d be sent out gigging for 6 months or a year to hone your performance skills.  If they signed 20 artists to this type of deal, the one who broke through would pay for all the others… But this doesn’t seem to be the same anymore with recorded music revenue not being what it once was during the CD boom years.  Most labels worth their salt are looking for artists to have done this early development groundwork, the grass roots level stuff, themselves.  Artists need to show labels that 1) they’re committed and 2) they’re is something there that the label can take to the next level.

To me, artist development is about taking stock of every part of a musicians career, making an assessment on where each element is at, setting targets, and prioritising, planning, performing and tracking the development of each part.

A hugely important part in artist development is planning.  This can be as simple as having an idea of where you want to be in 12 months time or it can take the form of an elaborate written plan which clearly outlines goals, strategies, performance, impact tracking procedures, and much more.  It’s really all about getting from A to B, or from A to Z if that’s where you’d rather end up.  What’s important about good artist development is knowing where you are now, and where you want to be, so that a plan can be created and followed and results can be tracked.

Development without good impact and performance tracking is lacking in it’s potential.  If you don’t know the impact of what your doing, and what effect it’s having on moving towards your goals, you’re effectively driving blind and could find out, after hours/days/months/years of effort, that you’ve been spending your energies on the wrong things.  It’s easy to do but it’s also really simple to avoid with good impact tracking.

Of course, development can sometimes happen with no planning at all, but more often than not, an element of luck will be involved in these instances and I believe that you’re far better off putting in the time and effort to plan goals and strategies in the first place to assist you in getting lucky.  Essentially creating your luck.

At some point in an artists career, development focus can shift from the creative aspects to the business elements.  The development of income streams for example.  Unless an artist is simply producing music for the love of it, there will come a time when career development is as essential as artistic development.

So… Artist development can mean a lot of things but essentially it boils down to the pursuit of progress and is relevent throughout all of an artists career, although to a seasoned veteran, it may take on the name ‘artist management’.

Rich Hearn

Ardua Music :: Beats & Pieces :: Per Ardua Surgo