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ok...say you've got 10 or 12 songs ( or more) as ready as they're ever gonna be, and you'd like to assemble them in 'album' format, and your interest is audience quality not generating income, what are some of the possible routes known by those reading that could be more successful at achieving listeners ...assuming, of course, the music is worth listening to ? thanks for your thoughts...k
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Goya g10, Yamaha CN525E, 10string classical, Babilon Lombard N, Ibanez GA5TCE Alvarez a700 F mandolin, Epiphone Mandobird Ovation 12 string 1515 Takamine F349, Takamine g340, Yamaha LL6M '78 Fender Strat Univox Ultra elec12string Lute 13 strings Gibson Les Paul Triumph Bass Piano, Keyboards, Controllers, Marimba, Dusty Strings harp |
#2
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no one ?
well...I heard Soundcloud is better for listeners but Bandcamp for generating the green. I don't care about Green. So I don't need , nor want a paypal account. Period. What I would like is a streaming system (service) that has a seriously successful algorithm to reach listeners. I also would like it free of social media inhibitions, like censorship in general....ie utuby is a nonstarter for example. So has the branch been whittled down to soundcloud? Are there things one can do on soundcloud to achieve better listener results? Settings ? Is it down to posting on music forums for attention, or is there a more sophisticated methodology that can be implemented to reach potential listeners, short of hiring a million Indian bots? What are your thoughts...grains of wisdom?
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Goya g10, Yamaha CN525E, 10string classical, Babilon Lombard N, Ibanez GA5TCE Alvarez a700 F mandolin, Epiphone Mandobird Ovation 12 string 1515 Takamine F349, Takamine g340, Yamaha LL6M '78 Fender Strat Univox Ultra elec12string Lute 13 strings Gibson Les Paul Triumph Bass Piano, Keyboards, Controllers, Marimba, Dusty Strings harp |
#3
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If you want to keep control of your material being organized and distributed as an "album" then Bandcamp is probably the closest thing to what you're desiring. Someone seeking out your material can still download individual songs and you can set the price to zero.
Don't forget that we're responsible for the royalty fees for each play and clearing any copyright issues before making it available. I'm not sure about any limitations they place on material, but I've listened to some pretty "rough" material from Bandcamp, so I wouldn't think that would be a problem. The only way to freely distribute your material with no limitations such as advertising or even mild restrictions on your chosen material is to set up and run your own server. That has a whole raft of problems such as expense, web access costs, and maintenance headaches. Then you would still need to promote your own material. How to get folks to preview and listen to your material is the subject of entire books. That's not an easy task, given the amount of new material that gets posted to all of the streaming sites every day. Websites such as Last.fm display their download count, and the numbers are in the thousands PER SECOND. Multiply that by the number of even more popular streaming sites and you see what you're up against to get anyone to actually listen to your offerings. There is probably some published material ranking where listeners go for searching out new material, I don't know anyone who looks for music on Soundcloud. It's a good place to upload material for posting on forums and such, but I don't think there are many random searches being done there. It does seem to be used by a few artists that develop a following and then distribute their work there. I'd certainly be interested if you come across any innovative or effective method to draw listeners to your material. Please post here if your research yields anything. Last edited by Rudy4; 09-14-2023 at 07:08 AM. |
#4
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But here's the problem...if you put your music rated at zero value....I imagine that's one of the top three ingredients that make up a Bandcamp algorithm. So far it doesn't seem Bandcamp, which I might or might not use, or Souncloud are anymore than the brownbag they put our vinyl in. Just a protector of the medium, but not intrinsic to getting heard. I did read up on this subject a few months back and seems there's a new middleman position of launching music, which these organizations will , for a nominal fee , load you up on every possible outlet...but I never saw any way they would actually get the music listened to. All of this back in my day was done by radio. Spread faster than the speed of the internet. Don't ask me how...but it worked. It was alot simpler then. Then the dj's were popstars. I had friends...cut demos...then partied with dj's on klif to get airtime. Airtime is what we're talking about here. but even radio was simpler then! thanks Rudy
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Goya g10, Yamaha CN525E, 10string classical, Babilon Lombard N, Ibanez GA5TCE Alvarez a700 F mandolin, Epiphone Mandobird Ovation 12 string 1515 Takamine F349, Takamine g340, Yamaha LL6M '78 Fender Strat Univox Ultra elec12string Lute 13 strings Gibson Les Paul Triumph Bass Piano, Keyboards, Controllers, Marimba, Dusty Strings harp |
#5
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You are correct that the "get listened to" part is a difficult problem. I know of no sure-fire answer. Whatever answers there are probably include a lot, and I mean a lot, of plugging away. I doubt any method works most of the time, so you're going to work hard at promotion and you're still trying to draw to an inside straight.
The Distrokid et al method will handle getting on Spotify, Apple Music etc handily. Listener growth is on you however. I have not used any of those services so I have no recommendation. I have had a bit more than 120,000 listens to the Parlando Project material. I love looking at the stats and seeing listeners from all around the world. Having worked in the non-profit world, I consider what I do as "No Profit/No Income" business. I have no desire to run a small business, even though I admire those who do. Here's what I did. I distribute the music audio files as a podcast (I use Libsyn). A minority of listeners hear it as a podcast, only what they hear is <5 minutes of music instead of an hour or more of talk and in-jokes like a conventional podcast. Most of my listeners hear the music when I include links on my blog where I talk about my encounters with the text I use for lyrics (mostly literary page poetry in the public domain). Now this is more of a "singles" experience than the album concept you want, but I'm free to do what I want, and the costs are tolerable. WordPress.com still has free plans I think, though I moved away from that after a few years due to the obnoxious ads they'll insert if you get any readership, but I'm on one of wordpresss.com's affordable paid plans now. If you want to minimize monthly costs, you could host your audio on The Internet Archive. Or you might be able to imbed links via a typical cloud base storage solution like iCloud or Onedrive you already have. I made my choices years ago, and I've stuck with them as I plugged away. Blogging has some who'll come upon your work by accident or by links, but most of my visits come from search engines. SEO is a black art, but plugging is a big part of it I think. "Plugging away" is my shorthand for persistence and log-rolling along with some evaluation of what works and what doesn't as you go along. I'm not very good at it, so I can't really supply the best model for it.
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----------------------------------- Creator of The Parlando Project Guitars: 20th Century Seagull S6-12, S6 Folk, Seagull M6; '00 Guild JF30-12, '01 Martin 00-15, '16 Martin 000-17, '07 Parkwood PW510, Epiphone Biscuit resonator, Merlin Dulcimer, and various electric guitars, basses.... Last edited by FrankHudson; 09-15-2023 at 12:10 PM. |
#6
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Not sure if this will be helpful but I recently released an EP on Spotify/Apple Music using DistroKid.
https://distrokid.com/hyperfollow/ev...ver-new-jersey This was totally a vanity project and so far I've made 26 cents LOL. Feel free to ask any questions but the "getting my tracks onto the streaming services" process was fairly straightforward. I used https://www.canva.com for the album art. Hope that helps somewhat!
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Martin:1956 00-18, 1992 D-16H, 2013 HD-28, 2017 CEO-7, 2020 000-28 Modern Deluxe Santa Cruz OM/PW, Larrivee OM-03R, Taylor GS-Mini Mahogany, Taylor 356CE, Fender American Professional Stratocaster, MIM Telecaster, Gibson Les Paul Studio, Epiphone ES-339 Pro YouTube Channel | Listen to my stuff on Spotify/Apple Music |
#7
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Goya g10, Yamaha CN525E, 10string classical, Babilon Lombard N, Ibanez GA5TCE Alvarez a700 F mandolin, Epiphone Mandobird Ovation 12 string 1515 Takamine F349, Takamine g340, Yamaha LL6M '78 Fender Strat Univox Ultra elec12string Lute 13 strings Gibson Les Paul Triumph Bass Piano, Keyboards, Controllers, Marimba, Dusty Strings harp |
#8
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Not sure why you think DistroKid requires PayPal. I use my Amex to pay for the service/extras (ie cover song licenses) and I setup ACH for my payout (if I ever make enough to get paid)
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Martin:1956 00-18, 1992 D-16H, 2013 HD-28, 2017 CEO-7, 2020 000-28 Modern Deluxe Santa Cruz OM/PW, Larrivee OM-03R, Taylor GS-Mini Mahogany, Taylor 356CE, Fender American Professional Stratocaster, MIM Telecaster, Gibson Les Paul Studio, Epiphone ES-339 Pro YouTube Channel | Listen to my stuff on Spotify/Apple Music |
#9
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I wasn't necessarily connecting the two. On looking at it thou, it's a subscription service...i.e. every year that fee comes around. I've found that after about 2 years, that gets old. I don't know anything about ACH, but I prefer to not do banking in the US.
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Goya g10, Yamaha CN525E, 10string classical, Babilon Lombard N, Ibanez GA5TCE Alvarez a700 F mandolin, Epiphone Mandobird Ovation 12 string 1515 Takamine F349, Takamine g340, Yamaha LL6M '78 Fender Strat Univox Ultra elec12string Lute 13 strings Gibson Les Paul Triumph Bass Piano, Keyboards, Controllers, Marimba, Dusty Strings harp |
#10
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What distribution avenues have you already looked into and were not impressed with? For example youtube is a big one however around 3.7m new videos are uploaded to YouTube every day.
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Derek Coombs Youtube -> Website -> Music -> Tabs Guitars by Mark Blanchard, Albert&Mueller, Paul Woolson, Collings, Composite Acoustics, and Derek Coombs "Reality is that which when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." Woods hands pick by eye and ear
Made to one with pride and love To be that we hold so dear A voice from heavens above |
#11
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I would like to stream somewhere where money is not the primary factor, nor the secondary....but quality. Truthfully...when I go to soundcloud or spotify or bandcamp or wherever.....98% of the music is junk. There are whole genre's of music in america that are nothing but junk...and sadly that's what's on the lineup. Until I found agf....I thought there were only a few survivors of good music left in america. For years I only bought music by nick cave and tom waits. And now after madonna, rap, hiphop, and taylor swift, there seems less hope everyday. As the title plainly states....I'm not interested in the financial angle...at all. I don't want to make any money...zero. It'll be like a greeting card, or a karmic debt. Initially.... ...but I would like people to listen...not just bots. Didn't I read where that singer with the "men North of Richmond" song was raking in like $35k a day from utuby. That'll be like winning a lottery. Most of those lottery winners end up more broke than before they won. He'll have some attention he wasn't expecting, and to survive that attention, he'll have to sign up. Even Hanks Williams signed up. That's the only way to pay the piper. Sadly he's not that great so it'll be like the old plantation store, just modernized. Accrue a debt that can never be paid off. Thats the last thing I want. I don't want to sign up. Unless... it's really worth enough to pay the piper, and ...still be free. And that takes alot....more than a few weeks of 35k, and just enough to alert you know who as to why. So for now I'll keep it simple. I'd just like ears. After the first album... results will dictate path. Optimally I would get critics and collectors. Then chaos theory steps in, and no one know wtf's will happen. And maybe...or most probably it will all get lost in the dark, and I'll go back to doing something I have more talent at than music. As a thought while writing this.....I thought , if I was a streaming company today....I would organize a songwriting contest between AI and humans. Now it appears humans must prove our artistic skill over machines ....or we're toast. I'm afraid ...where we are...that Madonna and Taylor will easily loose that contest. I'd like to throw a towel into that ring, just to see how long it takes to dry. What else is there to do? We're either men of substance, or fools running an errand. Did I answer your question? Probably not....thanks
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Goya g10, Yamaha CN525E, 10string classical, Babilon Lombard N, Ibanez GA5TCE Alvarez a700 F mandolin, Epiphone Mandobird Ovation 12 string 1515 Takamine F349, Takamine g340, Yamaha LL6M '78 Fender Strat Univox Ultra elec12string Lute 13 strings Gibson Les Paul Triumph Bass Piano, Keyboards, Controllers, Marimba, Dusty Strings harp |
#12
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If you just want to be heard (and income is a minimum factor):
Try some digital distributer. I have been using CDBaby Maybe even try radio play https://www.sharetopros.com/blog/how...-get-plays.php Join forums that likely have an interest in your type of music. Post your stuff there. With that type of thing you may get feedback from those listeners.
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Derek Coombs Youtube -> Website -> Music -> Tabs Guitars by Mark Blanchard, Albert&Mueller, Paul Woolson, Collings, Composite Acoustics, and Derek Coombs "Reality is that which when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." Woods hands pick by eye and ear
Made to one with pride and love To be that we hold so dear A voice from heavens above |
#13
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Goya g10, Yamaha CN525E, 10string classical, Babilon Lombard N, Ibanez GA5TCE Alvarez a700 F mandolin, Epiphone Mandobird Ovation 12 string 1515 Takamine F349, Takamine g340, Yamaha LL6M '78 Fender Strat Univox Ultra elec12string Lute 13 strings Gibson Les Paul Triumph Bass Piano, Keyboards, Controllers, Marimba, Dusty Strings harp |
#14
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You appear to me to have a lot of on principle stipulations as you try to form your plans. Already a lot of suggestions have been no-go from you due to things we didn't even know were musts for you.
You may have to jump in, following your principles, bending if you decide you will -- or not -- and iteratively determine the path forward for you and your music. If you believe in your music (as you seem to) consider how that balances with the I won't do stuff. I'm not telling you to compromise. I'm no model either. One thing I meant to say at first, though it's inherent in my "keep plugging along" refrain in my earlier post. Most musicians, particularly those trying to find an audience without backing/outside promotion assistance, particularly those who have something that's not commercial, do not find their audience with one "magic bullet" piece of fine work that finds its way to an audience just because it's good. Rather they keep at it, persist, grow their audience, however limited, over a period of years. It was only about three years in that my Parlando Project started to get audience traction. The pieces I produce now aren't necessarily better than the ones I produced five years ago -- in some cases current pieces may suffer from my inability to devote enough time and focus due to changes in my family and myself. I got my small but appreciated audience by continually putting things out there and connecting with others who had parallel quests and sensibilities. Do not underestimate persistence. You mentioned Tom Waits. Tom Waits had a major label record contract fairly early in his career back when labels had some interest in picking up and promoting "draft picks" that might pan out. He was located in an entertainment hub city where it was easier to rub shoulders. He had famous fans a few years after that. It still took him a decade before Rain Dogs is released, and it's taken decades since for that record to be absorbed by an audience something like the size that can appreciate it. You may not have any of those things. Like me, you may be ready to settle for a smaller audience that Waits achieved, but time and persistence is something anyone can utilize -- likely something you will need to utilize.
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----------------------------------- Creator of The Parlando Project Guitars: 20th Century Seagull S6-12, S6 Folk, Seagull M6; '00 Guild JF30-12, '01 Martin 00-15, '16 Martin 000-17, '07 Parkwood PW510, Epiphone Biscuit resonator, Merlin Dulcimer, and various electric guitars, basses.... |
#15
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Goya g10, Yamaha CN525E, 10string classical, Babilon Lombard N, Ibanez GA5TCE Alvarez a700 F mandolin, Epiphone Mandobird Ovation 12 string 1515 Takamine F349, Takamine g340, Yamaha LL6M '78 Fender Strat Univox Ultra elec12string Lute 13 strings Gibson Les Paul Triumph Bass Piano, Keyboards, Controllers, Marimba, Dusty Strings harp |