PaperDog wrote:Its not hard to write a song. but it sure is hard to write one that has mass appeal.
I disagree....There must be a bazillion songs that don't have a message worth figuring out, but have gone Gold because of the way it was produced and marketed.
I also disagree with the general perception of "hired guns" vs regular members. I've lost enough time & money trying to edit an extremely good live drummer into being a great one in the studio. I've lost enough money trying to get a good guitar player to consider the song over his own personal desire to show how fast he can play, rather than hiring someone who just knows that we need basic chords and something melodic during the interlude. And I'm not going to argue any more with a bassist over what the bottom line should be. I'll hire someone who can hear it the first time....or is at least willing to take direction from the songwriter & producer (me). I
could play every instrument myself, but why do that when I can hire the best and tell them what to do?
Then I'll put a band together who can play it. They will know what the part is when they show up for an audition and I'll know if they can pull it off. I've chosen to go without using a regular full-time band for the last 10 years and it was absolutely the best music-career decision I ever made. But the point of the thread isn't about having a regular live band. That's easy to do once you have paying gigs.
This thread is for songwriters who perform live and it's about making a great recording, so you can get to the point of having paying gigs and hiring the band you really want. If you are waiting on a record label (not saying that any of you are) to do it for you, then you are living in a fantasy that ended many years ago and it's time to wake up.
I've noticed there are a quite a few people on BandMix who seem to think that someone else is holding them back, that they need someone else to "discover" and help them. We all need help to advance our career aspirations, but opportunity usually only happens to those who are prepared and ready. Many record labels are only signing artists who have a ready-made project to release. Of those labels who make new recordings, they base their opinion of whether they should sign a "recording artist" on a recording that was made as an indie.
If you want to be a recording artist, it's about making recordings worth buying. There are 300 million people in the USA alone so if one in three hundred like your music, then you are potentially Gold. Finding a niche is how record labels stay alive, and it's the same thing with an individual artist.
Jerry Abbott (Pantera) told me in 1988 that they were going to change from glam-pop rock to hardcore BECAUSE it was a smaller market and they could reach every listener worldwide by advertising in only 2 magazines. To continue in the glam-pop world meant competing with everyone from Van Halen to Def Leopard, with full page ads in Billboard and a huge marketing budget. Yet, once they had secured the loyalty of a specifically hard-core audience, they could begin expanding into other areas of rock. It's called narrow-marketing and it worked well for them.
In the same way, if an artist can discover what makes them unique and narrow-market to that niche, they could survive on sales of 10,000 a year without any help from a manager or label. THEN, the managers and labels would come looking for you and you'd be negotiating from a position of strength without signing your future away.
But the point of the OP was, "If you aren't willing to invest in yourself, then why would anyone else be?"
You guys seem to take your careers seriously so it's probably not directed at you specifically, though it wouldn't hurt if this challenges you, too.