English · Tips

Tips & Tricks – Sending A Demo (Part 1)

After over 10 years of  handling demo material sent over to my indie label, I ended up with a valuable collection of tips & tricks. I wish to share them with our Music2Deal community. They may be relevant to some, but may be irrelevant to others or most of them are already well known as basic rules in the industry. In any case, I believe that it is worth sharing.

No matter what you are doing in the music industry; a newcomer media composer or singer, a semi-pro musician to break into further horizons or even a long-time-professional, you would be required to send a demo (or show-reel, sound-reel, etc.) to somewhere sometime.

By an incorrect perception, the term „demo“ usually sounds something like „a primitive proof of what you can do“. The correct meaning would be, being an abbreviation of „demonstration“, can also denote some references and past productions of what you have done and those would not necessarily be primitive. This is why those are usually named as “show-reel” or “sound-reel”, as if it is differed from a „demo“ which is thought to sound more degraded;

–       mock-up,
–       recorded vocals over playback with midi sounds
–       trial audio file
–       web-cam-recorded poor performance
–       mobile-phone-recorded acapella vocal
–       un-mastered pre-recorded rough material, etc…

Which ever is mentioned, this article is widely related and applicable to both primitive recordings and show-reels or sound-reels, in term of presentation and submission.

I bet, everyone who receives demo materials would agree that a demo can not be and should not be rough. No one can stand for a bad tuned guitar in a poor mix or a vocal with bad intonation over 8 bit general midi sounds in a demo recording and would decide to work with the sending party, although the sleeve of the demo CD remarks ;

„This is an amateur recording and if you give me a chance I can do it
better !“

“Of course I will sing better in your high-tech studio”

“I would play this solo much better if you provide me a US made stratocaster”.

Never try these excuses… Do not send a demo, work-out and wait until you find yourself perfect. Check with your younger brother or sister. They would tell you the truth.

A demo material is not only a demonstration of your musical ability or talent, but sometimes more of yourself, your expectations, intentions, your character, carefulness, responsibility, seriousity and ambition that they will want to know, before considering to work with you. So, a demo is a package of many other things as well as your music and/or performance. I guess; no one can claim that a perfect voice with a very badly prepared demo material would always beat the less powerful vocal with an impressive presentation. Spend time with the quality of your demo package and send it to a lesser number of recipient, instead of spreading tens of copies of a lousy CD with bold marker hand written name on it or spamming label emails with copy paste messages with 10 mp3 tracks attached.

So here are some tips & tricks for newcomers who are keen on learning how to send a demo to a label, producer or manager :

1)     Basic rule : never send an unsolicited demo ! You will waste your time and money. Remember that hundreds come everyday and go to the waste box, because some labels,  producers or managers do not spare time or assign labour power to screen them. Send an e-mail or call their office to find out if they accept demos or want to receive yours. Try to get a contact name to direct your mailing. Do not think that they are working like a „social government organization” or “a public desk for demo acceptance“ who are obliged to accept all demos and give a response in a certain time. They are not. They may choose not to accept any demo.

2)     Make a study about the person or company that you are contacting with a demo. Do not mis-spell their names. Be aware of their activities. Do not put yourself into irrelevantly foolish situation. You may loose your chance even before you get heard.

3)     What ever you wish to send as demo, be creative and impressive. Try to build an empathy in your mind, with the person who sits there to screen all incoming material, before putting them to a higher level who has a decision. If you impress the first level, then you have more chance to be heard. How to make an impressive demo package ? You must find out this one. Are you really believing that you will impress the audience when you are accepted ? If yes, then start by that person.

Tips & Tricks – Sending A Demo (Part 2) will be published on Friday. Stay tuned to read 8 more great tips!

By Volkan Gücer

German · Tips

8 Quick Tips For Your Band Website

  1. Be up to date-Nobody wants to read things you posted two years ago

    -Keep your readers up to date about gigs, tour dates and CD releases

  2. Relevant information-Readers visit your website because they want relevant information

    -A website is not a diary

  3. Contact information-You should give your readers the possibility to conctact you

    -Also useful for business enquiries

  4. Photos for journalists and bloggers-Offer photos for journalists and bloggers

    -This makes it easier for them to promote you

  5. Sharing function-A sharing function is very useful, because readers can share your website, a special post or a song with their communities

    -This might help you to get new readers

  6. Videos -Let your readers watch your newest music videos

    -This is entertaining and – if they share the videos – a very good promotion for you

  7. Newsletter-Offer a newsletter to inform your readers about new posts, videos or events
  8. Design and usability-Don’t overload the website

    -Keep it user-friendly

    -Design is a matter of taste but the usability should be good and easy

    What are your tips?

by Sara Shirazi

English · Tips

How free hosts can help you working on your music with people around the globe

Music2Deal is a platform for producers, songwriters and artists around the world. But what happens if you decide to record a song with somebody who lives at the back of beyond? I would like to present you some platforms and possibilities which make it easier to exchange big music files.

1. Dropbox

Dropbox is a very easy and effective way to share and exchange your files with others. It is a free service and non of your files will ever be lost, even if your laptop is totally damaged.
You can work from any computer, no matter where in the world you are and this makes it very easy to work on a song with others.

Pros: It’s free; 2GB free storage space; easy and quick

Cons: You need to register as a user

www.dropbox.com

2. File-Upload

File-Upload is a free service. After a quick registration you will have access to unlimited storage space. If you don’t want to register as a user, you will only be able to upload 200 MB per upload.

Pros: Unlimited storage space; it’s free

Cons: You need to register as a user if you want to use the unlimited storage space

www.file-upload.net

3. Rapidshare

Rapidshare is a free hosting platform. You need to register as a user to use the service. One negative aspect is that your files will be deleted after 30 days.

Pros: It’s free; no upload limit

Cons: You need to register as a user; your files will be deleted after 30 days

www.rapidshare.com

Other free hosts you can use:

-mediafire.com
-4shared.com
-mongofiles.com
-hotfile.com
-filefactory.com
-gigasize.com

If you know other good hosts, feel free to let us know!

by Sara Shirazi