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Song Tagging Push Underway, by Randy J. Stine - 0 views

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    Radio tagging is supposed to be Radio's next big thing. The only problem is that currently, most consumers aren't widely tagging and downloading songs. I don't even think most consumers are aware that radio has enabled this feature. Most people are too busy surfing the stations trying to find a song that they haven't heard a begillion times. Radio seems to be naive of this fact, and have been moving full steam ahead with their song-tagging project. It works by using HD Radio and the Radio Broadcast Data System signals to tag songs with identifier metadata, called a Unique File Identifier (UFID) code. iPods or Mp3 players docked to the specially equipped radio can store the song metadata and indicate tagged songs available to download from the iTunes or Microsoft library, once the player is synched with a PC.
songplacements

ExploreMusic - Reviews - The Scariest Film Theme Songs - 0 views

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    Explore music has recently published the results of a poll determining the scariest theme songs in film. As a songwriter i find this list as an invaluable tool that you can use to compare songs in your library that you have deemed scary. Take a listen to each song in the list, most can be found on Youtube, and listen carefully to what instruments are being used and how they are being used, then mimmic these styles and sounds in your productions. Music supervisors are constantly basing their selections off of similar sounding songs, so having songs that mimmic the top 5 should definitely help with increased placements. Remember good artists copy, great artists steal. Landing at number 1 by the way, Psycho Theme (Psycho) by Bernard Hermann.
songplacements

All in a Good Night's Sleep | Music Publishing & Songwriting - 2 views

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    Ways for musicians to make money in their sleep. Place your songs with other recording artists. Let them do the touring and the twittering, while you earn money. Place your songs in films and television shows. Not only does it publicize you as an artist-it generates sync fees and performance income. Place your songs in video games or other products. The licensing rates are pretty low, but the exposure is ridiculously high. And you don't have to travel in a van, tear-down or set-up. Place your songs in advertisements. It's not only about grabbing that Apple iPod spot. There are national, local and international advertising opportunities that could fund your band's next road-trip. Create new music for film/TV libraries, which license "needle-drop" music to a wide variety of media. The sync fees are virtually non-existent, but because these are non-exclusive licenses, the same piece can be used again and again, generating significant performance money....
aminul6373

MJ Nayon Feat Khujle Sei Dhon Bangla New Hit Song Cover 2016 - 0 views

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    MJ Nayon Feat Khujle Sei Dhon Bangla New Hit Song Cover 2016 If you Like tis song please share on facebook, Twitter, google+ & Linkdin ===================================================== Follow Mj nayon On facebook: facebook.com/nayon.muhammad Like our facebook fanpage: facebook.com/bluemusic2015 Subscribe our channel for regular updates: youtube.com/c/bluemusic2015 ====================================================== Song title: MJ Nayon Feat Khujle Sei Dhon Bangla New Hit Song Cover 2016 Singer: Al mamun & MJ Nayon Music Compose : MJ Nayon D.O.P: Astah Media Music Direction & Mixing: MJ Nayon Lyrics & Tune: Fakir Sahabuddin Original singer: Fakir Sahabuddin Movie: Haoyar Pakhi
songplacements

FMQB: Radio Industry News, Music Industry Updates, Arbitron Ratings, Music News and more! - 0 views

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    Radio isn't just for listeners anymore the RAB (http://www.rab.com/) CEO Jeff Haley is calling for a further commitment for radio station to start encoding their broadcasts with Song tagging technology, proving that the radio is no longer just for ears but for the eyeballs as well. The iPod Nano and Zune music players are both FM enabled devices that would provide a perfect opportunity to display the encoded signals, including song names. The overall idea is to drive more song purchases and awareness at the radio level, an even stronger indication that radio is still an effective medium for songwriters.
songplacements

Building Your Song Catalog | Insider Music Business - 0 views

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    We can't stress enough the importance of building up your song library. Organization is as much part of the process.
songplacements

Getting Your Head Turned Around | Insider Music Business - 0 views

  • Having a collaborator forces a number of changes in the way you do things. Just having to consider the ideas someone else has about your song is one factor. The way they work is another.
  • 50/50 split before you start. Don’t worry about who did the most writing work or whether it is harder to be the composer or lyricist. Having been on both sides of the fence, my own thought is that are equally hard to do well.
  • If you are an aggressive publisher and your partner just wants to write, then you need to handle the publishing.
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    Tired of creating songs that sound too much alike? Add a partner to the group. The ideas that a partner can bring to the table and they way that they work through and create songs can bring you all of the orginal flava that your new music has been craving.
songplacements

Radio Business Report/Television Business Report - Voice of the Broadcasting Industry - 0 views

  • There is still only one way to jump start a song on the way to hit status, according to songwriters – radio airplay. The fact that there is so much diffusion on the internet only heightens radio's importance.
  • It’s all about volume, and that means exposure to as many ears as possible – the kind of exposure that just isn’t available at any one spot on the internet.
  • Mass hits come from mass exposure
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  • the labels seem to have a singular drive to do the wrong thing.
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    In a panel discussion at the CMJ Music Marathon the Path of a Hit Song seemed to be highlight of the event. Those panelists who have had Hit Song success say that radio is key. Mass hits come from mass exposure. READ MORE.
songplacements

Tips for the Mix to the Master « Music Producers Forum - 1 views

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    Pre Mastering Last week we saw a lot of interest in our mastering explained article, so this week we thought we would being you the prequel of mastering explained, preparing your songs for the mastering process. These tips are in no way a doit yourself guide for getting your songs to killer quality. Mastering should be done by the master, mixing should be done by the professional, let these tips serve as a guideline for being able to participate in the conversation with whomever you've hired to take your recording to the next level. http://musicproducersforum.wordpress.com/2010/02/03/tips-for-the-mix-to-the-master/#more-693
songplacements

Rules for Untangling the Music Library Dilemma | Insider Music Business - 0 views

  • e issue of the quality of the song itself and then one of the quality of the recording
  • you can use critiquing services to determine if your songs meet commercial standards
  • As far as the quality of the recording itself goes, the best thing you can do is listen to the music samples on the sites of the music libraries and compare. Do you measure up?
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  • study the music you are competing with.
  • The important part is directing the song to the person they ask you to send them to, in the format they ask for.
  • Libraries, like music publishers, find homes for songs.
  • They are the connection between you and television, movie, video game, and video producers who need music.
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    What exactly does a music library do. Music libraries are becoming more important to the indie musician as money gets tighter and the demand for indie placements rises. Songplacements.com is now the premier music library in southern California, helping artists land opportunities previously only available to the majors. With that being said, the insider has a great piece on exactly what a music library is and does. Knowing how company's such as Songplacements.com operate empowers you, the independent musician, allowing you to better exploit our services, and hopefully land more placements!
songplacements

AfricanABC: The business of songwriting - 0 views

  • we wrote together on a regular basis as if we had a day job
  • took about a year until we got our first professional writing job
  • build up a library of songs
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  • recorded. Properly
  • setting up a simple home studio as it is far cheaper
  • having a songwriting partner
  • DO YOUR HOMEWORK
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    Came across this article that will definitely increase successful placements. I particularly like the points of saving money with a home studio, building a library, and finding a song writing partner to help compensate for any weaknesses, that you may have.
songplacements

Judy Rodman - All Things Vocal: Pop Style Trick: Suspend Vocal Technique Momentarily - 0 views

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    Suspend Vocal Technique Momentarily Have You heard those songs when it sounds like the vocalist is whisper-singing and wondered "man how do they do that". It's not quite singing and its definitely not a full blown whisper, its actually a track that a lot of Pop vocalists keep in their bag of tricks. Vocal Coach Judy Rodman has some bad news for you wannabes, the trick can either be executed expertly or poorly. I'm guessing the poor one sounds like somebody choking on a rice grain. To find out more about delivering vocals with authentic emotion rather than just "singing" head over Judy's blog and check out a couple videos.
songplacements

Mastering Music - Explained « Music Producers Forum - 1 views

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    Mastering proffesional Adrian Carr of ACMastering recently posted a good article explaining mastering in fairly simple terms for those who are still convinced that "mixing and mastering" is one word. One thing that really helped me to understand mastering back when it was a big question-mark to me, was the differences in the files types each technique used. When mastering a song your are working off of the final exported two-track (that Wav or Aiff file all your hard work went into), whil with mixing you are working with each individual track that you laid individually during your recording, at this point your song is probably still sitting on some virtual sequencer like cubase, garage band or protools. I dunno, it helped me understand it a little more.
songplacements

Pitching Songs And market Research | Insider Music Business - 0 views

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    Songwriters looking to get paid: Market research and Song Pitching go along way.
songplacements

Will Someone Please Pay the Piper? | Music Publishing & Songwriting - 0 views

  • 1. The best approach is slow and cautious. Right now, we are in the jungle. In the jungle, you don’t rush blindly ahead. You dip a toe in the sand, and see if you sink. We have no hope of predicting which of these services might catch on. We need to move slowly, with very short-term agreements and see what works and what fails. And we need to be sure not to undermine our other business partners while we do that. Which leads to… 2. We should support our allies and punish our enemies. Rob McDaniels for InGrooves estimates that it takes 150-200 streams of one song to equal the royalty income on a single download. Right now, our industry still relies on the sale of physical product (believe it or not, it’s still the primary source of revenue) and on digital downloads. Perhaps streaming is the future. Perhaps not. But we would be very unwise to cut ridiculously low-cost rates to a business model that obviously threatens both physical retailers and iTunes. Let’s take care of the people paying our bills. At the same time, we should continue to press ahead with legal efforts against things like Pirate Bay– efforts that are finally starting to show some results. 3. We need to recognize that “bundling” and ad-revenue sharing is a marriage, and it works both ways. If we bundle the cost of music access into the cost of a mobile phone or the sale of a computer, we’re now not only in the music business, we’re in the electronics business. Any economic factors that hurt the sales of phones and computers will now hurt us as well. 4. Most of all, we need transparency in the negotiations and setting of rates, so that everyone in the music community understands what they’re being paid and how it’s being calculated.
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    1. The best approach is slow and cautious. Right now, we are in the jungle. In the jungle, you don't rush blindly ahead. You dip a toe in the sand, and see if you sink. We have no hope of predicting which of these services might catch on. We need to move slowly, with very short-term agreements and see what works and what fails. And we need to be sure not to undermine our other business partners while we do that. Which leads to… 2. We should support our allies and punish our enemies. Rob McDaniels for InGrooves estimates that it takes 150-200 streams of one song to equal the royalty income on a single download. Right now, our industry still relies on the sale of physical product (believe it or not, it's still the primary source of revenue) and on digital downloads. Perhaps streaming is the future. Perhaps not. But we would be very unwise to cut ridiculously low-cost rates to a business model that obviously threatens both physical retailers and iTunes. Let's take care of the people paying our bills. At the same time, we should continue to press ahead with legal efforts against things like Pirate Bay- efforts that are finally starting to show some results. 3. We need to recognize that "bundling" and ad-revenue sharing is a marriage, and it works both ways. If we bundle the cost of music access into the cost of a mobile phone or the sale of a computer, we're now not only in the music business, we're in the electronics business. Any economic factors that hurt the sales of phones and computers will now hurt us as well. 4. Most of all, we need transparency in the negotiations and setting of rates, so that everyone in the music community understands what they're being paid and how it's being calculated.
songplacements

Seven Steps To Songwriting Success | Insider Music Business - 0 views

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    Great Songs aren't written, they're re-written.
songplacements

Artists House Music - Music Business for Musicians - Music Distributor Fee Comparison - 0 views

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    Are you a the visual type? I am, thats why this chart comparing all of the online music distributors is freakin awesome. If your new to the world of online distribution then let this chart be your roadmap to thousands if i dare say millions of sold songs.
songplacements

Time to face music: Radio beats MTV as fans still tune in to get their new pop music - 0 views

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    The Nydailynews says that radio is not supposed to be here right now. First, the TV was supposed to kill the radio by changing it from an audio to a visual medium, that didn't work so much. Then MTV was supposed to be the radio killer back promoting a product that sucked the magic out of songs by pre-empting the listener's imagination - again the radio withstood the test of time. To be fair MTVs claim was that television and radio could work together, promoting and enhancing the other and thats exactly what happened. iPods, and social media are the disruptive technologies now but something tells me many other mediums will kick the bucket before our good ol friend the radio lays its head to rest.
songplacements

How Am I Doing? « eleetmusic - Direction in music, marketing and business - 0 views

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    Okay, so your an independent artist, more power to ya. You write, produce, record and distribute your own tracks, but how well is your music being received. Major record labels have numerous methods to track the performance and popularity of their music. Soundscan, and Billboard are some of those ways. But once the music reaches the consumer thats when the metrics come to a screeching halt. Luckily now as an indie musician you have many ways to track your music, some ways actually rival those of the record labels. You can now monitor your brand, and even statistics such as how much time my audience spends listening to my material, and what songs are shared the most in their network.
songplacements

ExploreMusic - Tech - A New iPod/iPhone Theory - 0 views

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    could apple be creating some form of radio experience that allows users access to any song you want, whenever you want it, from wherever you are using whatever device you choose? could we be headed towards the mass distribution of streaming music services and Internet-delivered radio?
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