Archive for August, 2008
Celebrate 8.8.08 With a Free Song Download
Today is the only day in 100 years where it will be 8.8.08. This is an interesting day though, in that one of the artists that I manage, Wes Sp8 (pronounced Speight), we market using that 8 in his name. So, we at Radical Notion are throwing a bit of a celebration of the day by releasing a live rehearsal version of Wes Sp8’s Please Ep song “Behind My Back.” There were only a couple of mics set up a record button pushed. I think it was that day too where our in-house recording studio was named The Attic Lab by Wes’s drummer Josh Hood.
Here is how you can get your Free Song Download!
Simply send an email to 888@wessp8.com before 8 pm tonight and you will get an auto-response email containing an easy link that will automatically download the song to your computer. All this just to say Happy 8.8.08!
I hope you let me know what you think of the recording by leaving a comment. Any and all thoughts are encouraged!
No commentsAbout the Techniculties…
Yes…I did not post in the month of July. Problems with Wordpress. I am just not learning that sometimes things are not my fault. But, if a person really wants to get something done, and done correctly, whose fault it is has no weight. Who Cares. A very close friend (Casey Iorg, 24 and single in Washington D.C.) of mine says it this way. “No matter what happens, at the end of the day, YOU are still responsible for your production. So find a way to get it done!”
Thanks for your patience. See You Soon.
No commentsFirst Release; Full Length Speed Ahead
Let me start out today by saying, that outside of this blog, there are some very good resources available simply to help you in your quest for music success. Just to point out some of them, I have them listed to the right of this post. Within that list, I highly recommend Music Marketing [dot] Com, Producer’s Notes and Kings of A&R (just to keep up with what is happening in the music business.
So you are releasing a full length record right off the bat. Congratulations on having a large amount of solid material. Again, I would stress that you find the right songs for an album. Try to stay away from putting a collection of your best songs on it, as the record may end up being a run of 7 or 8 songs that are good together, then having 4 or 5 songs that don’t really fit. That will give the fan an excuse to buy only one or two songs from iTunes rather than buying the whole record.
Let me touch on something I had mentioned last week about categorizing the moods of your songs. Let’s just take for example that you want to put 12 songs on your album. There are 15 to choose from and you’ve got five “1’s,” five “2’s” and five “3’s.” If you were to simply say, “Hmm…I’ll just dispose of one from each category leaving an equal amount of songs to represent all the moods of the music.” I disagree. I am a fan of asymmetrical nuances in music, i.e., seven “3’s,” three “2’s” and two “1’s;” but that is my subjective opinion, aren’t they all though? What a business eh? Keep in mind that this is not science, it is based on emotively connecting yourself with your audience. That is what brings them back.
It all boils down to this. You’ve got a big pot of chili in front of you that you are about to enter into a cook-off (one of which I have won by the way…). There are certain amount ingredients/seasoning that you want to put in that pot to win the contest. The Pot of Chili is the record and the songs are the salt and pepper. Here it is though, let’s say you have your 13 songs picked. During pre-production you decide to take one song out and put another one in. Essentially, using the chili metaphor, you’re changing the entire seasoning. The bottom line is this; you want your pot of chili to win. So add the right seasonings.
Are there any records that you enjoy from first cut to the last? If so, tell me about it.
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