Social Media For The Local Music Scene
June 24, 2008 – 12:03 am | by Daryl TayI’m writing this with Singapore in mind, but I think it could work anywhere.
Rubin and I had a discussion tonight about bands in Singapore, whether they’re talented or not, whether they could make money or not, etc etc. Towards the end of the night I needed to blog and turned to him for inspiration and he said “write about the local music scene”. Brilliant.
So here’s social media for the local music scene.
1) Get repeat plays.
One of the podcasts I listen to mentioned recently that in the music industry, frequency is your currency. So you get people to play it as many times as you can. Give it away free to everyone on MySpace, give it free to the polytechnic radio stations, give it free to the university Campus Radio stations. It doesn’t matter if you’re making money out of it at this stage, just give it free.
I can’t say how many times I haven’t liked a song on first listen, but it grows on me after three or more listens. I’m sure it’s the same for many other people.
2) Pimp yourself.
In a lot of ways, the local music scene is like the local blogosphere. There’s a lot of crap in there, but there are gems too. So how do you get people to notice you? Make yourself searchable. That means pimping up your website, going on MySpace, maybe creating a fan page on Facebook, whatever works. When someone hears your band name and goes home to search for you, you’d better turn up on page one of Google.
Case in point: Origami. I think that’s how it’s spelled because I was only walking past, but I liked their rendition of Kelly Clarkson’s Miss Independent, so much so I wanted to get in contact with them and offer to try to get their track on Campus Radio. So I come home, Google Origami and zilch. How do I help you get your music out there when I can’t find you? Do yourself a favour. If your band name is called Hystericks Stickz, change your name to something Google-able. That advice is free.
3) Get help.
No, don’t get someone to buy you a $30k ad on national radio. There are free (or at least cheap) ways to go about doing it. There are many, many polytechnic or university students out there who would probably be willing to help put your name out there or build you a blog, or pass your cd on to three friends. What could you offer them in return? Well that’s up to you. But remember: your most loyal customers are also your best.
Finally, a disclaimer: All this only works if your music doesn’t suck. As with everything else, content is king. If the content you’re producing sounds like screeching and/or cawing, no amount of publicity is going to help you.
So, now that you know all that. You want a social media/digital strategist to help your band out? Start a conversation with me. Here, Plurk, Twitter, Facebook, whatever works for you.
Tags: blogosphere, campus radio singapore, facebook, Google, myspace, origami, pimp yourself, Plurk, self-publicity, singapore local music, singapore's local music scent, smu campus radio, twitter

5 Responses to “Social Media For The Local Music Scene”
By brian on Jun 24, 2008 | Reply
Haha, i sure could use a hand handling social media for Leeson. we’re recording another single soon and we definitely wanna give it away for free as we did with ‘Absolute Beginners’
Campus radio is definitely a way, but some tried and tested pitching to radio stations is the way to go as well -)
we should talk! with @beatmastermark and all that -)
By brian on Jun 24, 2008 | Reply
oh! and i was updated of your plurk thanks to RSS and Google Reader! been ignoring plurk for far too long now..
By Jens on Jun 25, 2008 | Reply
This is an interesting post. Are you familiar with the book “The Long Tail” by Chris Anderson?
Jens
By Daryl Tay on Jun 25, 2008 | Reply
@Brian: Definitely. I think mainstream radio stations are the eventual goal, but if you can get a couple of hundred fans across all the schools with a campus radio and rally them to email the radio station like every couple of weeks, THAT will make their voices heard.
@Jens: Yes I have! Why?