July 12, 2009 at 11:05am
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reblogged from bijan

Right on Trent

john:

bijan:

Trent Reznor from the Nine Inch Nails has some great advice for young, unknown artists trying to make it.

via Trent:

Forget thinking you are going to make any real money from record sales. Make your record cheaply (but great) and GIVE IT AWAY. As an artist you want as many people as possible to hear your work. Word of mouth is the only true marketing that matters.

To clarify: 

Parter with a TopSpin or similar or build your own website, but what you NEED to do is this - give your music away as high-quality DRM-free MP3s. Collect people’s email info in exchange (which means having the infrastructure to do so) and start building your database of potential customers. Then, offer a variety of premium packages for sale and make them limited editions / scarce goods. Base the price and amount available on what you think you can sell. Make the packages special - make them by hand, sign them, make them unique, make them something YOU would want to have as a fan. Make a premium download available that includes high-resolution versions (for sale at a reasonable price) and include the download as something immediately available with any physical purchase. Sell T-shirts. Sell buttons, posters… whatever. 

Don’t have a TopSpin as a partner? Use Amazon for your transactions and fulfillment. [
www.amazon.com

Use TuneCore to get your music everywhere. [
www.tunecore.com

Have a realistic idea of what you can expect to make from these and budget your recording appropriately. 

The point is this: music IS free whether you want to believe that or not. Every piece of music you can think of is available free right now a click away. This is a fact - it sucks as the musician BUT THAT’S THE WAY IT IS (for now). So… have the public get what they want FROM YOU instead of a torrent site and garner good will in the process (plus build your database). 

The Beastie Boys’ site offers everything you could possibly want in the formats you would want it in - available right from them, right now. The prices they are charging are more than you should be charging - they are established and you are not. Think this through. 

The database you are amassing should not be abused, but used to inform people that are interested in what you do when you have something going on - like a few shows, or a tour, or a new record, or a webcast, etc. 

Have your MySpace page, but get a site outside MySpace - it’s dying and reads as cheap / generic. Remove all Flash from your website. Remove all stupid intros and load-times. MAKE IT SIMPLE TO NAVIGATE AND EASY TO FIND AND HEAR MUSIC (but don’t autoplay). Constantly update your site with content - pictures, blogs, whatever. Give people a reason to return to your site all the time. Put up a bulletin board and start a community. Engage your fans (with caution!) Make cheap videos. Film yourself talking. Play shows. Make interesting things. Get a Twitter account. Be interesting. Be real. Submit your music to blogs that may be interested. NEVER CHASE TRENDS. Utilize the multitude of tools available to you for very little cost of any - Flickr / YouTube / Vimeo / SoundCloud / Twitter etc. 

If you don’t know anything about new media or how people communicate these days, none of this will work. The role of an independent musician these days requires a mastery of first hand use of these tools. If you don’t get it - find someone who does to do this for you. If you are waiting around for the phone to ring or that A & R guy to show up at your gig - good luck, you’re going to be waiting a while.


Fantastic advice. That’s exactly right.

The only thing I would add is that I wish Trent would get a blog instead of posting in the NIN forums. And naturally, I would recommend using Tumblr just like Ra Ra Riot recently did :)

Wow, great stuff. Not a huge fan of his music but I agree %100 with his logic. I wish more bands did stuff like this.

Notes

  1. justinlowery reblogged this from tedr
  2. succoallapera reblogged this from tedr
  3. slack reblogged this from tedr and added:
    Some solid advice even if you’re using
  4. bigdumbobject reblogged this from tedr
  5. caz reblogged this from john and added:
    This bit (which I squirrled away from...the advice is… in my opinion…
  6. apollolee reblogged this from tedr
  7. danebrown reblogged this from artistspaid
  8. yophlly reblogged this from john and added:
    Wow, great stuff. Not a huge fan of his music but I agree %100 with his logic. I wish more bands did stuff like this.
  9. talby reblogged this from bijan
  10. flatguy reblogged this from francesco
  11. thoughtsreleased reblogged this from john
  12. francesco reblogged this from tedr
  13. nussbaum reblogged this from lumber
  14. saimagery reblogged this from artistspaid and added:
    Worth reading the post from Ian C Rogers of Topspin as well that Trent added to the original post. It’s here (very...
  15. lumber reblogged this from charlestheirishman
  16. charlestheirishman reblogged this from bijan
  17. jayparkinsonmd reblogged this from veken and added:
    Veken…it’s super nice to have you on the Hello Health team. Veken is the latest addition to a rock solid group of people...
  18. thetapeleader reblogged this from artistspaid
  19. artistspaid reblogged this from bijan
  20. rurorjuror reblogged this from bijan and added:
    I’ve seen a lot of great band become immensely popular because of this.
  21. tedr reblogged this from bijan
  22. joshkinberg reblogged this from bijan and added:
    Josh says: Trent is on his game. This same advice is applicable to any artist making digital works (text, images, moving...
  23. john reblogged this from bijan
  24. veken reblogged this from bijan
  25. bijan posted this