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Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Co-creating A Fanbase With Music Curation and What Artists Can Learn From Bloggers


Co-creating A Fanbase With Music Curation and What Artists Can Learn From Bloggers
By Yannick Servant of Digital Edge from Official.fm, a blog of resources for musicians and the new music industry.
A recent profile of Spotify's Daniel Ek gave us a glimpse into the CEO's vision for the future of music: machines and algorithms deciding for us what it is we want to listen to, when and where. We're not big fans of this idea that automation will pave the way to a more enjoyable musical experience. Rather, we believe that music consumption and discovery remain fundamentally social, meaning there's a powerful opportunity at hand for artists to make a difference, to use music curation (the human facilitation of discovery) to grow and connect with an audience.
We had already looked at this idea a couple of days ago, but if you push it further, you could find there's untapped potential in the use of online tools to connect with the other artists in your musical scene, and their fans, just as much. Using curation as a means of sharing the stage, and co-creating a fanbase.
"There's untapped potential in the use of online tools to connect with the artists in your musical scene, and their fans"
To illustrate the point, there's a species from the Internet fauna artists can find inspiration in: bloggers. These people have a very strong culture of sharing, featuring and cross-promotion. In the blogging world, you can rarely survive alone, and it becomes much easier to become successful much faster when you make friends with other bloggers. As illustrated by blogger coach Corbett Barr in the web pages of "Start A Blog That Matters", connecting with other bloggers gives you people to challenge your ideas, people to send you more traffic, people to work with on joint projects, people to help promote your creations, and it makes the whole experience more fun, increasing the odds of you sticking to your blogging commitments.
A lot of this makes sense when you transfer the ideas to the music business. As an example, think of the curated playlist on Spotify, This is My Jam, Whyd or Mixtaping.fm (among others, pick your favorite) as the musical equivalent to the blogger's guest post. By curating a playlist, you feature your friends, long-time inspirations or up-and-coming artists, much in the same way as influent blogs will often offer to promote aspiring bloggers, or feature blogger buddies, on their much-read pages. If people start returning the favor, it's an exercise that can quickly translate into very real numbers.
"Think of the curated playlist as the musical equivalent to the blogger's guest post"
For example, let's say you put together a playlist with tracks from 10 artists you feel close to in your scene, with a couple of simple assumptions: each of you has 2,000 fans (or followers), and there is no cross-over in your fanbase. If each of those 10 artists shares your playlist, you'll be reaching a potential of 11*2,000 = 22,000 fans. Assuming 20% actually listen to the content, and a quarter of those become fans or followers of you and the artists in your playlist, that's 1,100 new fans for everyone. Some of the assumptions are simplistic, but you get the picture.
This idea of curation as a means of putting a musical scene you feel a part of in the spotlight has yet to overpower the hype of discovery algorithms, but already some artists have been headed in that direction for some time, notably in the electronic music and hip-hop scenes. Take a look at French artist Brodinski: his Facebook and Twitter feeds are filled with musical content from artists he's close to. Or Boston duo Soul Clap, who regularly create DJ charts on Beatport; and, because, there's a "buy" link on the tracks, these guys are actually providing their fans with an incentive to financially support the acts they've curated. If you believe in the power of connecting with other musicians, of creating a movement, your job as an artist becomes to get connected with your scene, finding the artists you see as part of your movement, help them be discovered and identified as part of the movement, and help them reciprocate. As long as there's an unmistakable unity, the bigger the movement, the bigger everyone's personal gains, ultimately.
"Your job as an artist becomes to get connected with your scene, finding the artists you see as part of your movement, help them be discovered, and help them reciprocate"
Let's recap. Done properly, curation is a powerful means of connecting, sharing, building your scene, and is a real way of boosting your career. Because by doing so, you:
- Get more people to listen to your music and convert them into fans
- Increase your media outreach
- Develop lasting relations with other artists in your scene
- Generate gratitude among your existing fans for sharing cool new tunes with them
- Show there's no narcissism in your approach: you're not there to poach fans, but to build awesomeness around your entire scene, to transform it into a movement.
Building a movement can mean anything from connecting 5 local bands to attempting to recreate the British Invasion of the 60s. It's about figuring where the mutual benefits start working out. One inspiring artist who made this question an integral part of his career is The RootsQuestlove. From the very start in the 90s, he focused on making his act part of something bigger than himself. One result of that philosophy was his incredible show in 2011, "Questlove's Afro Picks", which I had the luck to attend in Paris. As a member of the audience, it made you want to pour into the whole musical genre after the gig, not just the discography of the Roots. And that was really where he hit bullseye. Real-life curation.
It won't necessarily come as natural for every artist to take such a social approach to his music, but the good thing is that it's never been easier to give it a try. Inspired by Brodinski, Soul Clap or Questlove? Been experimenting yourself?
My personal thoughts: I agree with this article myself, because alot of this I have done myself. My favorite website that I have done this with is called "Reverbnation.com". You can do everything, or at least most of what the article is talking about, I have done for years.

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