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Evolve140
Only Sidechaining a Bit



Registered: Mar 2005
Location: Denver

quote:
Originally posted by Evolve140
Home listening has nothing to do with club experience. I know you weren't directly comparing them though. I have been to huge events where I thought the sound could be better. Maybe we don't know what the best could be, since everything is so superficial in club land (shit land) now? Maybe trying to attain such a pristine sound is elitist, but shit, considering how poorly and mismanaged the scene is operating, and how sophomoric listening practices can be, how do you know ALL of us wouldn't truly benefit from a pristine listening environment? I'm all for it, sign me up. Imagine, loud enough you don't need ear plugs, clear enough you don't need to turn it up. Let's not sell ourselves short, after all, this is our fucking scene now.

at this point i am pretty drunk. nice discussion though.

Old Post Apr-29-2011 19:50 
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DJ RANN
Supreme tranceaddict



Registered: May 2001
Location: Hollywood....

quote:
Originally posted by EddieZilker
Here's my thinking, outside the box:

Kind of sketchy but...



I think there has to be a market for it but audio quality is the way I'd like to go.



I saw this and remembered how events used to sound verses how events and other venues began sounding by the time I informally stopped going to clubs. If you listen to what this guy says about the sound-chain (And I suppose DJ RANN might have more of an idea if this guy is smoking too much of his own hype or not), he's proposing an ideal that starts out with a perfectly mixed, perfectly mastered track.

Like I said, though, I've heard songs I'd previously heard on decent sound systems lose their charm, entirely, when put through a negligible sound-system. If I were a producer who was confident in his work, I'd find a list of DJ's who regularly played on a Funktion One (or similar), and start marketing to them.

How that fits into building a revolution, in terms of marketing, is that, hypothetically, you're delivering a product to a niche. It affords them better control over what they're getting if you can consistently deliver a quality product with such sensibilities in mind as to be both exquisite and compatible with their sound-system. If you can get a select few people to do things this way, where you have much more control over the quality, then you can help advance product quality for Funktion One clubs and Owners. It's not some hyper-mastered MP3 that gets downloaded from Beatport and people should just stop selling music that way.

The other part of my recommended solution is to stop feeding the machine. I think a lot of people are mislead that it's going to be some milk & honey experience when they get signed to a label who's selling on Beatport but then the song doesn't make the artist more than $100.00 (but feel free to correct me on that - I'm certain there are variations).

There's also the fact that Beatport is involved in a law-suit concerning how it's leveraged its artist's bay out of Denver night-clubs it doesn't own. I agree with not talking about the problems as much as the solution, but I think part of the solution is not to be part of the problem. Don't feed it with the revenues it gets from your product.

Really, this is all just spit-balling here, but ditch the labels and start one up as a cooperative, where label mates share administrative responsibilities. The middle-man makes most of their money because a large pool of artists is belting out a large amount of product. Again, stop feeding this part of the beast and let it die.

Finally, there's an old adage that says, "If you want to take a look at what you want, take a look at what you've got." And really, what do we have? If you're unsatisfied with bad promoters and shifty contracts, stop playing the game. Drop out, do something else for a living, continue to make music but fuck the riff-raff.

It may take a little while for it to start happening and you'll probably have to save up for a few years, or at least pay a loan, if you really want to drive a used BMW but I suspect a comfortable living could be made with a little discretion.


I actually used to know Tony (he & F1 were my client in London) and I have to say, he's not blowing smoke.

I could address this on a number of reasons, from the fact the popularity in modular line array systems have done nothing to improve quality over traditional speaker stacks, to the fact that digital technology and advances in materials has indeed not made a practical positive impact.

I too hate the mp3 (I have never downloaded an MP3 for DJ'ing purposes, only wav) and his argument for playing higher rates is every valid, at least in a theoretical sense.

Now while I see mp3 serves a purpose, and for the average consumer, many may think it does not matter, I actually believe it does. Think about the great rock and pop productions from the 60 through the 80's (70's especially). People bang on about how great that music is. Yes a lot has to do with talent and the collective environment, but I also beleive the playback medium is at least a subconscious factor, to that certain magic. It's not just a tactile or melancholic thing relating to the mediums. There is a magic coperative thing that happens when the talent is equal to the quality. The same factor translates to a live gig. Great music hread through a great transfer medium increases it'w worth more, than just the sum of the parts.

From a marketing view as you suggest, yes I think there's a niche, and I think if it were able to create a valid platform, it could be a lot more, even have mainstream or mass-market appeal.

There are more niche enthusiasts out there than you think, and it's just a matter of connecting with them. There's also an aspirational aspect that can be huge to tap in to, with people who think they know (that's actually how CD's superceded vinyl in the mass market place - digital technology, modern design, better quality etc).

There are certain people who already do this, both for themselves but also for consumers.

one score engineer I have worked with will not mix in anything less than 96k (32 bit float) when mixing, and he'll walk out if he can't be accommodated, as he just won't put his name to it.

One composer I worked for records everything he does in 96k for the same reason, and uses analogue synths where ever humanly possible - it makes his job easier when "selling" these scores to the client, because they sound so fucking good. It's inadvertantly become his tradmark, even if people don't quite understand the inner workings (i.e. why it sounds so good).

IMO, there's definitely a market for positioning something with respect to quality, especially, in some ways, if it carries a premium. There's always that perception of "expensive quality", and I for one am happy to pay more for something if it's quality in it's aesthetic, function, build or even experience (see apple products for more information).

The problem is marketing it under at least the cover or pretense of a niche thing to large numbers (but this has the advantage, if done right or seeming like a secret or coveted to a lucky few). The other issue is scalability, essentially taking it from small production to large and delivery of that process without damaging the brand, but it's certainly not impossible, as any high end luxury goods manufacturer will tell you.

Back on to the technical aspect, I think 24 bit 96k as a medium should become a reality very soon as a mass product. Interenet speeds are now fast enough to cope with, not to mention storage space which is only going to get bigger for less money over time.

Old Post Apr-29-2011 21:43 
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Storyteller
Supreme tracneaddict



Registered: Feb 2005
Location: The Netherlands

Any more people that have thoughts about what should happen to make the music industry a healthy one again?


___________________

Storyteller Website | Storyteller @ Facebook | Storyteller @ Beatport | Storyteller @ Soundcloud | Stephen J. Kroos - Europa (Storyteller Remix)
Anthony Mea - Get It On (Storyteller Remix)

quote:
If less is more think about how much more more would be.
-Frasier

Old Post Apr-30-2011 10:10  Netherlands
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Zak McKracken
Trance



Registered: Jun 2003
Location:

vinyl. the format itself is a quality filter.

Old Post Apr-30-2011 10:52 
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Richard Butler
Supreme tranceaddict



Registered: Apr 2009
Location: London

quote:
Originally posted by Storyteller


engage your audience on social media and respond to their questions and input regualarly and you've got hundreds of followers



Great thread.

In my other life, I sometimes give companies feedback on where they are going wrong. I find almost all companies get many things wrong.

Execution and simplicitry is key.

So your idea about engaging your audience for example. It's been tried by a few but so far they get the execution all wrong.

Take for example Sandervandoorn - sure he does a lot right but he also is overlooking some very key fundamentals. I found his site and forum too clunky and that means too time consuming so he lost me.
Those faults are easy to remedy but as is always the case, the people running the thing do not understand properly the real minute to minute needs of the end user.

You even see these faults with very pro firms such as Audi. For example the dashboard on many of thier cars cannot be cleaned with most ordinary cloths without parts of the cloth ripping off and being left on the dash. How can such a pro firm miss this point? Well, it's always the same reason - the people at the top are out of touch and do not stress test thier products in the way a REAL end user will - so for example in the Audi R&D centre they will have professional cloths so they wont have tried ordinary households varieties so the problem goes unseen.

Back to music, by all means set out to ENGAGE, but make damned sure your facilities really are engaging and simple - make any registration or security process VERY simple. Do not annoy people with unecessary security or silly techy nonsense - keep it a 1 or 2 step process. Make it easier than all the competetion to register as a user. Don;t use third party systems that annoy people, like some forms of PAYPAL that have many faults (for example asking for a phone number - the end user may not remember what phone number he had 10 years ago when he got the credit card). Use third party shit that works and is simple.

PROPERLY ENGAGE - so far some organisations and artists say they wanted to engage but in reality it's hit and miss, now and then, not value laden, too erratic. The expectations and delivery are not as good as the hype was.

MARKETING - how many times do you get a promo in your inbox only to find it's very annoying as there is no CLEAR one click way to hear it? THIS IS BACK TO THE AUDI SCENARIO - the designer forgot the end users needs again.

In a promo you want it simple, fast and un cluttered. A big 'play me now' button, job done. You do not want the hassle of a link to beatport simply to hear the track first.

Again, take care of these small details, always with simplicity in mind.

EXECUTION - think of those hyped producer interviews - how many of them get all the basics wrong - thier voice too muffled and roomy, the music too quiet - sloppyness all the time. You must execute every tiny detail well and think everything through.

MATERIAL - OK, flame time, ha ha!
First off, no I'm not there myself yet, so lets get that one out the way, but I think I do know what a MASS audience wants, and frankly hardly anyone delivers it.
By all means be an in tact uber cool 'artiste' if you want, but you know what, if you want to make big sales, then you probably want to think in terms of a product. FLAME FLAME.

If I were looking for material for a label I'd be UTLRA fussy, and I mean almost nothing would get on there unless it met a 10 point stricy criteria set of values.

Any track under consideration would be played to non dance heads, ordinary lady gaga fans, because just targeting a dance audience would not be sufficient. People in a scene often cannot see the woods for the trees - it's good to get the take of non experts.

IMAGE - very few labels artwork stands out - we all get carried away thinking ours is great, but 99% of it is forgettable. As such you need to put an immense focus over months getting brand image artwork done.
This would involve an intensive study of all major brands in the last 100 years.

Viral networking - it's a full time job, if it were me I'd pay a young person to do it 24/7 BUT TO MAKE IT REAL AND NOT ROBOTIC - nothing worse than those lame messages 'cool tune, you can check mine out here'.

WEBSITE - 99% of sites are lacking. Most are uch to complex, and seem to start out with the premise you have all day to look at a site, when in fact Humans have no time left, they are bombarded night and day with messages and complexity. YOUR SITE SHOULD SIT ABOVE ALL OTHERS AS AN UBER FREINDLY, LOW TIME IMPACT, ULTRA SIMPLE island in a sea of caalamity.
There's a reason Google does so well - look how ultra simple thier main search page always was, no annoying other boxes to worry about, just a clean white screen and simple seatch.Complexity is a major failure - yet many get wrapped up in it as they think by being clever and complex they are working hard.

FAVORITES CLICK SWITCH - imagine a site where a big add to favorites switch is present - this reminds the end user to bookmark it - but this is not enough - how will it look when saved into thier favorites? It should show as a clear and distinct nimage not some meaningless bit of text that gets overlooked later and forgoton. DETAILS, TINY DETAILS.

Anyway I could go on, but I won't, I don't want to bore ya.


___________________
https://soundcloud.com/butlerrichard

Last edited by Richard Butler on Apr-30-2011 at 11:17

Old Post Apr-30-2011 11:05  United Kingdom
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Richard Butler
Supreme tranceaddict



Registered: Apr 2009
Location: London

quote:
Originally posted by Storyteller
Any more people that have thoughts about what should happen to make the music industry a healthy one again?



I just spotted this after I added a long post. Mine is more concerned with some ideas how to make it in the current scene.

As to how to make an industry healthier - impossible - just do your own thing right and do not be concerned with the industry as a whole.
In any event, in the eyes of some stake holders it is healthy.


___________________
https://soundcloud.com/butlerrichard

Old Post Apr-30-2011 11:20  United Kingdom
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cryophonik
Boom shanka



Registered: Jan 2008
Location: Elk Grove, CA USA

quote:
Originally posted by Storyteller
Any more people that have thoughts about what should happen to make the music industry a healthy one again?


I'd say that it's healthier now than it has been in the recent past. The days of the uber-superstar are dwindling because, in the past, the record labels largely decided who was going to be a star and which songs would be force-fed to the masses. They filtered out anything that didn't meet their perception of what a rock/pop star should be, which meant that a lot of talented people, including many friends of mine, got shafted. Now, with the advent of the personal computer and the ubiquity of the Internet, virtually everybody has the ability to produce CD quality music and the ability to have your music heard is limited only by your ability to market yourself. The down side is that the market has become very saturated and very dilute, so setting yourself apart from the competition will likely be one of the next big challenges (i.e., business opportunities) for the music industry.

The castle gates are being torn down and the power has been restored to the lower and middle classes. The question, in my mind, is whether or not the cycle will continue, or will a few individuals find a way to regain control from the masses?


___________________
cryophonik.com | facebook | soundcloud

Sonar Platinum | Ableton Live 9 | Logic Pro X | Access Virus TI2 Keyboard | Kurzweil PC3X | Nord Lead 4R | NI Maschine

Old Post Apr-30-2011 15:44  United States
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Storyteller
Supreme tracneaddict



Registered: Feb 2005
Location: The Netherlands

awesome post Richard, i agree on so many levels. i think with the proper engagement a first release could get you well over a 1000 downloads within a month. It would of course require a proper investment too which almost everybody forgets.

And getting the industry more healthy is just a generic question. i guess it's way more interesting to just see how people over here think they can reach their target audience.


___________________

Storyteller Website | Storyteller @ Facebook | Storyteller @ Beatport | Storyteller @ Soundcloud | Stephen J. Kroos - Europa (Storyteller Remix)
Anthony Mea - Get It On (Storyteller Remix)

quote:
If less is more think about how much more more would be.
-Frasier

Old Post Apr-30-2011 15:46  Netherlands
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Beatflux
Rising Star in training



Registered: Mar 2006
Location: Planet Alf

It's extremely obvious to me that very few artists have any kind of marketing sense at all.

If you're music is generic and samey, then its even a more uphill battle to get noticed. People like Armin and Tiesto make generic music, but they can just spam their name on flyers.


___________________
quote:
Originally posted by dj_alfi
change your avatar for fucks sake.

Old Post Apr-30-2011 16:57  Trinidad and Tobago
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cryophonik
Boom shanka



Registered: Jan 2008
Location: Elk Grove, CA USA

The future of music is Odd Future:


___________________
cryophonik.com | facebook | soundcloud

Sonar Platinum | Ableton Live 9 | Logic Pro X | Access Virus TI2 Keyboard | Kurzweil PC3X | Nord Lead 4R | NI Maschine

Old Post May-01-2011 03:44  United States
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Evolve140
Only Sidechaining a Bit



Registered: Mar 2005
Location: Denver

quote:
Originally posted by cryophonik
The future of music is Odd Future:

heh, funny.

Old Post May-01-2011 20:39 
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mathieu
Supreme tranceaddict



Registered: Oct 2010
Location: Montreal, Canada

wolfgang

Old Post May-01-2011 22:13  Canada
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