Connecting To Fans

Connecting to fans beyond the screen, makes your music real in both worlds. An online presence is essential, but pairing it with face-to-face interactions turns casual listeners into fans. Use business cards with your website URL. Direct people from your shows to your online hub. Every gig can lead to deeper connections, selling merch, sharing stories, and inviting audience members into your musical world.
Are You Confusing Your Fans With Your Live Show Announcements?

Feeling ignored? You might be confusing your fans and your show announcements might be the problem – not your fans. Don’t simply send time, date, and a flyer. Instead, give your fans what they need – context, value, and clarity. Put essential details in plain text, explain why they’ll care, and make it easy to act. Good announcements don’t just inform – they invite engagement and support.
10 Crucial Elements Of A Band Bio

There are a few elements of a band bio, and they each help you to create a lasting impact. Make your first impression count. Your band bio is more than a list – it sets the tone. Include your name, location, contact info, sound, and key influences right away. Then, add what you’re doing now – releases, tours, writing sessions. Share your background and top highlights – radio play, awards, press quotes. Keep it honest, typo‑free, current, and craft multiple versions for different needs.
Marketing Your Music: The Tools You Need And How To Connect

Author Profile Jessi Hamilton Marketing Your Music Marketing your music is often overlooked by independent artists. All artists should have a marketing plan. Something that lays out the strategy and tactics that they plan to use. It also takes account of all the artist’s assets. Here’s what I would recommend for a game plan. Press […]
Should I Manage My Music Career As A Singer/Songwriter?

Act like your music career matters, because it does. You’re not just self-managing; you’re steering your own creative future. Take control by designing a clear, real-world system that balances your time, goals, and hustle. Divide your focus across three essential areas: your well-being, your music, and your business, dedicating intentional hours to each every week. Own the vision. Build the structure. Let your progress follow.
Great Managers & How To Find Them

Great managers don’t just handle logistics, they become your strategic ally. Look close to home, friends who rally behind your gigs or grassroots supporters often grow into passionate, trusted managers.
Experience matters, but honesty matters more. The best managers tell you the truth and know when to push and when to wait. They network, protect your image, and work behind the scenes, so your music shines.
Record Contract Basics

A record deal isn’t a promise, it’s a financial handshake. Understand the essentials before signing: Expect an exclusive agreement where your music is tied to one label under their terms, often structured as album-by-album options, labels aren’t obligated to release every album in the contract. Analyze the advance, royalty rate, and album count, even small wording changes can shift your earnings. Always consult someone who knows these contracts, entertainment attorneys protect your future. (exclusive terms, deal points like advance and royalties, and getting expert help are all important.)
Music Publishing Contracts

Understanding music publishing contracts is essential. Don’t sign blind, understand exactly what you’re giving up, and getting back. Music publishing contracts vary widely, what’s shared, what’s licensed, for how long, and how much you’ll earn. Know your deal types: single-song, exclusive songwriter, co-pub, admin, collection, sub-publishing, or outright purchase. Understand key variables: which rights you’re licensing, territories covered, money flows like advances and royalties, and your right to audit. Start smart, protect your songs, and make licensing work for you.
The Cover Song Quagmire

Do you want to record a cover song without legal drama? Learn the 3 common ways to get a mechanical license before you release a cover. Find out how much you’ll pay, where to apply, and what rights you need to clear. Do it right, credit the original writers, pay royalties, avoid penalties.
Copyright Part 3 – Almost Everything I Know

Copyright Part 3. Your music has power, and that includes your moral rights. As a songwriter, you don’t just own the money-making rights, you also hold inalienable moral rights:
Paternity – the right to be credited.
Integrity – control over changes to your work.
Divulgation – deciding when your song is released.
Withdrawal, pulling and revising your work later. These rights give you meaningful control, don’t let publishers or corporations quietly try to take them away.