INTRODUCTION
WELCOME to The Indie Band Survival Guide, a practical how-to manual to get your music heard, distributed, sold, booked, promoted, and seen. In the past, you could only do all of this with the backing of a major record label, but you can now do it on your own. Well tell you how to get started and walk you through the process.
This book is for all musicians, from hobbyists to professionals. Its also for managers, bookers, labels, promoters, recording engineers, music teachers, music-video directors, filmmakers, and anyone else who works with music. In fact, many of the methods we share here are useful for any creative endeavor; you dont have to be a musician to get a lot out of this Guide. But our focus is on how each topic relates to music. For instance, when we explain how to create Web sites, we specifically cover the creation of music Web sites, even though the principles of good Web-site design we share are applicable to any site.
The information in this book is applicable to musicians of all ages, from teens starting their first garage band to retirees who have rediscovered their love of music and want to share it with the world. It will be indispensable to you whether or not you have a lot of experience with the Internet. The Guide will explain how to use all of the talents that you already have and supplement them with tools, techniques, and a network of people to accomplish what was only possible for major-label bands in the past.
More than anything, at the heart of this book are essential techniques for getting your music to the world.
WHO ARE "WE" ANYWAY?
"We" are lead members of Beatnik Turtle, an indie band with more than a decade of experience, more than a dozen albums, a song that was licensed to Disney for a commercial campaign, years of live shows, college-radio play, countless podcast plays (well explain podcasts, dont worry), theater shows at venues such as Second City, TV theme songs, music videos, Web sites, and a completed Song of the Day project where we released one song each day for a year. In case youre curious, all things Beatnik Turtle can be found at www.beatnikturtle.com.
We are two working professionals—an IT expert and an attorney—and weve brought all the knowledge and experience from our respective fields to bear on this book, just as you will learn to take advantage of your own skills in making your band a success. Thanks to our backgrounds, the two of us are just as inclined to discuss the state of the music industry or the future of in de pen dent music as we are to actually sit down and jam.
In the end, though, we are indie musicians with a band. We generated the material in this book by actually solving the problems we discuss here. In fact, this is the book we wish wed had when we started out over a decade ago. For instance, when we wrote the section about how to submit your music to podcasts, we recorded the steps wed been using for years, then did another round of submissions to test and refine the process.
So when we say "we," were talking to you as one musician to another.
WHAT YOU NEED TO GET STARTED
Were going to cover a lot of topics, but were going to take for granted that you know how to sing and/or play your instruments, and that you have your own music to perform. You might do cover songs, or you might write your own music, but, either way, we assume that you should already have that ready to go.
Finally, we assume you know how to use a computer and possess at least basic Web skills. We arent going to spend a lot of time explaining what hyperlinks are or how to use a Web browser. Many of the opportunities that have opened up for musicians in the last few years are on the Web, so youll be using it quite a bit to promote your music and get it heard by a worldwide audience. If youd like to do some background reading, we suggest the book Internet for Dummies by John R. Levine, Margaret Levine Young, and Carol Baroudi for a basic overview, as well as the book Rule the Web! by Mark Frauenfelder, which can help you get the most out of the Internet.
HOW TO USE THIS BOOK
This book is about doing.
In this book, we cover the theory behind how things work so you can navigate unfamiliar tasks (such as publicity), but you should expect to act on these how-to steps and suggestions, not just think about them. This book will work best if you have a note pad next to you while you read so you can take notes on what to do next.
Were big fans of Getting Things Done, a book by David Allen that provides an excellent system of organizing your tasks and your time. With the Guide in hand, you can shortcut trying to figure out what you should do. Thats what we struggled with for the past decade. We wrote it here so you can pick up where we left off.
Lastly, the Guide is not a book of lists and links. Although we have important links throughout this book, new tools and services for musicians are always popping up (as well as disappearing). For this information, as well as a way to connect to other motivated musicians, head to IndieBandSurvivalGuide.com.
Naturally, as a musician youll want to improvise on what we suggest here. Go for it. As we like to say, these tools and lessons are no substitute for artful practice.
TERMINOLOGY
Below, we provide our own definitions of a few music-business terms to avoid any confusion about what they mean when we use them:
• Unsigned: Refers to a band or musician that does not have a contract with a label for recording, production, and distribution. Unfortunately, it seems to imply that being signed is the goal, and that musicians who havent been signed have a lower status than those who have. We will not be using this term, and we suggest that indie bands skip it as well.
• Independent ("indie"): Used to describe a band, musician, or label in de pen dent of the major labels. We dont believe that musical success should be defined in the context of business contracts. The definition we use is, in de pen dent musicians are artists who handle their own music careers. Its something to be proud of.
• The music industry: The music industry has changed so much in recent years that a person in the business just five years ago would hardly recognize it. While today the term still seems to refer to the monolithic music business, its more safe to say that many industries are coming together around music. This term is in transition, but we will use it to talk about the business of music.
Because the traditional players in the music business used to be gate-keepers for the distribution and sale of music, many of their terms defined music between what was inside their system, and what wasnt. This isnt surprising: in the past nothing outside the system would get heard by anyone but local bar crowds. What is surprising is that these terms are still used even though musicians have gotten access to almost all of the same recording and distribution channels that the traditional players use. When people talk about bands that are signed or unsigned, we ask them what difference they hear between a song that is owned by musicians and one owned by a company. Is there some magic way to analyze the audio signal to get an idea of who owns it?
Fortunately, music is music, no matter what contracts are signed and how the lawyers have chopped up the rights. Music fans dont care about contracts, they care about the music and the musician. And thats the point: there no longer needs to be a middleman between musicians and music fans.
This book will tell you how to reach the fans who are waiting for you.
Excerpted from The Indie Band Survival Guideby Randy Chertkow & Jason Feehan
Copyright © 2008 by Randy Chertkow & Jason Feehan
Published in 2008 by St. Martins Griffin
All Rights reserved. This work is protected under copyright laws and reproduction is strictly prohibited. Permission to reproduce the material in any manner or medium must be secured from the Publisher