GETTING THE TRACK PROMOTED
By now you should have had the track copyrighted and have found a good publisher. The next step is to decide what you want to do with the track. I would recommend sending the track to a few big name DJs and Radio Stations to build hype. I always do this with my productions even if its a small worldwide mail out of 10-20 DJs/Radio Stations worldwide, or a track I'm going to release on Compulzion where by I do a bigger mail out. Of course this is helpful if you have built up huge contact lists of DJs and know them personally, but this takes time and effort and for quicker results you can hire a promotion company to do this.
This is what I actually do as a business. A record label/producer comes to me and I send the track to DJs, Radio Stations, Magazines, CD Compilations/Licensees and more to build hype. Also you can come to me with a track unsigned and I will try and find a label for it. I have helped license Vicky Devine to Drizzly, Audiowarp to Dataless, dB Shredaz to Atmosphere, Synthetic + Major Tom to Mental Madness, DJHusband to Digitally Infected, DJ Pred to Pro State Digital and numerous other clients.
Compulzion (Hard Trance/Hardstyle/Techno/House/Commercial/Hardcore) (UK)
[ran by Me (Louk) and handles promotion for labels such as German Trance, Tetsuo, Theracords, NTR and many others]. -
info@compulzion.co.uk
It's not just only me who does this so it's fair to mention some other wicked clients too:
Concrete Promotions (House/Trance) (UK)
[handles labels like Skint, Deconstruction, Global Underground etc] -
http://www.concretepromo.com
Music House/Hyperactive [Dance orientated remixes of commercial stuff and handles labels like Nebula and the new Pendulum and Tiesto releases etc] (UK)
http://www.music-house.co.uk
CONTACTING A&R
By now you should have a track which in an ideal situation a few DJs are playing. The best bet is to then take it to a label. This next step sounds simple but so many people overlook it I am often shocked. Target the labels who release music SIMILAR to what you are making. The best way to get their contact address is to look at records you are buying and send them a polite e-mail.
Seriously, nothing infuriates an A&R guy when he gets sent a demo that is not the style of the label at all, The amount of house demos I get sent for Compulzion for instance is ridiculous and although it's rude to say it I have to write back and go 'Have you even heard what we put out?'. So rather than do that and be ignored / upset an A&R the best bet is to target a label that release a similar style. Forward an e-mail that says something like this:
Hi there,
I hope you are well. My name is Louk, I recently purchased a track on your label and am interested in sending you guys a demo of my material as it is quite similar to the style you release. Can I please have an e-mail address to send a link to?.
Look forward to hearing from you.
Many Thanks,
Louk
Hopefully you will get a reply and then it's best to send a link. Here are some DO's and DONT'S I suggest you read (as when listening to demos nothing irritates me more than the following).
* DON'T Send a 2 minute soundcloud clip. Most labels I know are starting to hate soundcloud. If you want to give a label a demo at least give them a copy of the full track in 128 kb/s mp3 or something. It's a bit of an insult to not send the full tune.
* Similarly DON'T send an unfinished track and apologise for it. Looks really unprofessional. I used to do this to be honest but it hindered me more than helped. When you contact a label it's always best to send a finished track rather than (and I quote from an e-mail I once received), 'This is all I have done so far as I can't afford proper decent monitors, would u release it?'. When you contact a label you should be selling your track not hindering your chances of them releasing it.
* DO Check your spelling, punctuation and grammar as well as a simple text message speak hardly gives the best impression!
* DON'T Send large e-mail attatchments. A link is brilliant. To be honest the most professional way to do it would be to invest in yourself and buy some webspace (see WEB PRESENCE below). As a direct link from your artist name is much better than a Sendspace, Rapidshare, Megaupload, Zshare etc link that expires and you have to wait a minute to download. If I set up webspace for my Cohesive alias and bought the
www.cohesive.co.uk domain for instance it would look far better sending a link from
http://www.cohesive.co.uk than
www.sendspace.com/265ZRX or something.
* DO send your track directly to the one label. If you wish to send it to another send it in a separate e-mail. This is not only curteous but it's more of a personal touch than approaching loads of labels at once in the hope that one might sign it, especially if you are silly enough to send the e-mail direct to everyones address in the TO field so that can others can see it. This will greatly reduce your chances of getting signed.
* Finally the most irritating of all... Please DON'T send links to your track on facebook especially not a Facebook Chat Message and expect people to listen straight away, it hardly ever happens and is *** irritating! Most labels prefer to be emailed links to their inboxes which they can check/sort into folders (like I have a demo folder) and reply when ready. Sending a 2 min clip of your unfinished tune on facebook just cause you want reassurance it sounds good is likely to get you deleted/blocked rather than help you on your way. This must sound really touchy but after the amount of artists contacting me with 2 min clips expecting instant responses it's really annoying.
MCPS / people / PRS
I touched on these above but if you want to publish music yourself you need to register with the MCPS-PRS alliance. The MCPS look after Mechanical Royalties (royalties from CDs/Vinyl/Digital Downloads). The PRS look after performance plays (radio plays etc).
people are more concerned with those of you who have performed on any recorded music, but this is touched on above.
PRS For Music (UK)
http://www.prsformusic.com
people (UK)
http://www.ppluk.com/en/performers
WEB PRESENCE
Right you've made your track, got it copyrighted and now the next thing to do is promote it online. I suggest making 128kbps soundclips of the best 4 minute section of your track. For me I usually make a soundclip from just before the bassline is to come in and just before the drum outro at the end and fade it in and out.
It's best to set up a basic web page so that you have some information about yourself as an artist. I recommend buying some webspace like I said above as for £40 per year you can have your own web domain and
info@yourwebdomain.co.uk address, that looks much better than a hotmail.com address.
Once thats set up it might be wise to hire a designer to design you some artwork and logos and also set up a website for you. My designer for Compulzion is someone who I can highly recommend both for cost effectiveness and professionalism. His address is below.
Following on from that. It is good to get a well written artist biography, profile done written. Please get it spelling, grammar and punctuation checked before uploading else it will look hugely unprofessional and having a good image is a great thing. I can also write one if you need one done as I have written profiles for Kamui, Uberdruck, Iain Cross, Jake Nicholls and many more in the past.
Social Networking is a must and sites like Facebook, Twitter, Bebo, Soundcloud, Reverb Nation and more are beneficial too. Whilst these in my opinions are tools of the devil, they are necessary evils in getting your name out there and promotion. Though to be honest I (and also most my family, friends, girlfriend etc) are quite addicted to facebook, it can be beneficial and gigs have come as a result of it. Set up simple pages on each with your contact details. Soundclips of your tracks, and some well written hype/information about yourself and some artwork if you can cause this looks wicked. Try to build up fan bases on all as there are some who use certain sites but not others, and if possible (though its easier said than done), try to stay on top of updating everything to help improve consumer awareness.
UKWSD [Web Space Providers] (UK) -
http://www.ukwsd.com
Xpress MMCG [Graphic + Web Space Designers] (UK) -
graham@xpressdjs.net
Facebook -
http://www.facebook.com
Twitter -
http://www.twitter.com
Bebo -
http://www.bebo.com
Soundcloud -
http://www.soundcloud.com
Reverb Nation -
http://www.reverbnation.com
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