Showing posts with label record labels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label record labels. Show all posts

Wednesday, 3 July 2013

Musician boutique



I've seen a lot of musicians, good musicians, creative musicians, become worn out with trying to "make it" and give up.  It saddens me because I believe in most cases they've been aiming for the wrong target, one that was never within their grasp.

The concept of "making it" that so many musicians have bought into is fundamentally flawed and is a poison legacy of the mainstream commercial record industry of the last fifty years. It says that your music (and ,sadly, you also)  only have value if you reach a huge audience and sell a great number of "units".  However, even in that industry's pre-internet heyday, the vast majority of signed, recorded artists never attained that and there was always a far greater community of unsigned musicians who didn't even have access to a mechanism to achieve it.

The problem is that we want to be a supermarket, churning out whatever sells, to the widest, most undiscerning audience. Quality means nothing and decisions are made based on potential profit margins.

I have a different idea of success.

If I can record the music I want to record, without pressure from anyone to conform to the latest pointless fad, and release it so that it is accessible to a broad audience and some people buy/acquire it and like it, and the whole process doesn't bankrupt me, then as far as I'm concerned I have been successful.  I am doing what I've always wanted to do and my creative drive is satisfied.

To continue the shopping analogy, the digital post-record-industry music world lends itself more to a boutique model than a supermarket model. A boutique can provide a high quality, beautiful product to a select, discerning audience. No-one can tell it what it can or cannot  make available.  It needs to make enough to survive but doesn't need to shift vast amounts just to cover its overheads.

So, if you're a musician who is tempted to feel that what you do is pointless because you haven't become a household name after years of hard work, perhaps the answer is to realise that you don't work in a supermarket, you own a boutique.  Seek a smaller, more appreciative audience. Paradoxically, perhaps, it's not a smaller vision, it's a bigger one.

Monday, 10 October 2011

 

EaRtH CiTy ReCoRdZ is a new label set up by our friend Celt Islam and the label he has worked with for a while, Urban Sedated Records.

The label was set up for alternative and electronica musicians and artists and the label is happy to hear from anyone interested in releasing their material.

Please send any demos to Abu Sulayman at celtislam@googlemail.com 

You can hear some of the label's music here: http://soundcloud.com/earthcityrecordz



Celt Islam


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Saturday, 4 September 2010

Free music from Secret Archives of the Vatican on Bandcamp

We have been adding Secret Archives of the Vatican releases to the Bandcamp website and you can see our page HERE.

Bandcamp is great because you have a wide choice of download formats available - you're not stuck with crappy mp3s - in fact, the lowest quality mp3 available is the highest quality mp3, a 320kbps.

We've added our two most recent EP releases, The Glidepath EP and Wisdom Truth. Both are free.

Wisdom Truth The Glidepath EP

We've also added our 2009 album release, Remembering Machine, and it is now free also!

Remembering Machine

We'll be adding more tunes soon!

Thursday, 12 August 2010

Intransitive Recordings

Intransitive Recordings

Intransitive Recordings is a label I've just discovered. I think their releases are all CDs or CDRs.They say this about themselves:

Intransitive is a record label and online magazine dedicated to electronic, electro-acoustic, and otherwise unclassifiable “experimental” music. No, I don’t like that term very much either, but it’s general enough to mean something to somebody........If you hear two Intransitive releases and can sorta tell that there is some unifying aesthetic behind them both, but can’t quite put your finger on what that is, then I’ve done my job.

Sounds worth investigating to me!

Man with megaphone

There's a magazine element to what they do:

The magazine is my way of facilitating conversation between artists, between artists and listeners, and between anyone who is curious about the issues that move people to make abstract sounds and the artists themselves. You will find monthly Round Table discussions about issues related to sound-making… articles by artists about their own work, and dialogue between sympathetic folks… in-depth interviews, book excerpts, galleries of visual art and essays on film by sound artists, and looks behind the curtain to talk about the experience of thinking about and making this noise. Please join the conversation! Feel free to comment on articles that interest you, and share them with others.

Check out the magazine HERE.