Creating a buzz

  • Thread starter Thread starter ecktronic
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ecktronic

ecktronic

Mixing and Mastering.
Can anyone think of or know of ways to create a buzz around their own band? Trying to get my band noticed by loads of people. Ive put our music on soundclick and internet radio stations aii and indieindie radio. Got a feature in a few local papers. Play gigs and advertise them by word of mouth and on forums.
Not too sure what else to do.

Heres a link to some of our stuff.

SEROTONE
http://www.soundclick.com/bands/8/seratonescotlandmusic.htm
 
If you really want to create a buzz, you need to get offline.

Even the largest bands on the Internet, like a lot of the old mp3.com bands, never did as well as most local acts.
 
Play good and play frequently, expose your band to as many people as possible, if you are good the buzz will generate itself. If you generate it then you will have to live up to the reputation that you have generated for yourself. A good press kit and demo will help to get more gigs and therefore more exposure. The more exposure, the better your chances of developing a stronger following, the bigger the crowd you can attract the more you will be noticed.
 
I agree, the very best "buzz" created is direct human contact. That being said, there are tons of tips for promoting and enhancing your music presence online and offline, and here are a just a few (these are mainly geared toward online).

*Business Cards- you must include either the link to your website or to at least the best place that hosts your music. Consider your link as your online business card.
*Play for free if you have to, any where, any time. Create an event and donate the proceeds to a charity. This can open up some interesting contacts and opportunities.
*Collect addresses, email addresses to keep your fan base current on what you are up to.
*Consider having a house concert.
*Create your own support group of family and friends- and communicate well with them on your plans and goals.
*Hand out your CDs. Have your web link printed on the CD.
*Print up a poster or flyers about your upcoming show and post it wherever your type of fans would hang out and include your web link, show date, name of CD, where CD can be purchased.
*Send press releases, reviews of your shows to local newspapers, magazines and event papers.
*Check your public and local radio stations that play your type of music and try to get some air time.
*Hand out your CD to club owners that feature your type of music.
*Get your name in a good, comfortable web forum and ALWAYS include the link to your music!
*Join online music groups and newsgroups.
*Give a review get a review, honestly is the best policy, but not brutality.
*Create a newsletter, if you are a decent writer, with content of value to the receiver.
*Send out press releases and reviews of shows
*Get online airplay.
*Know your audience, who and what your target areas are.
*Start a Blog, well written and kept current.
*Use internet class ads to promote upcoming events and possible collaborations with others.
*Create a banner to drop in your forum signatures or other online locations.
*Word of mouth has always been the best promotion. Get people talking about you.
*Be unique and interesting to look at in some way. Let people know you are professional and have star quality...build your image.
*Be innovative in your promotional efforts!
*There is a such thing as OVERKILL, in that it is better to describe your band/music as "we sound similar to the Beatles" rather than "we are the biggest thing since Led Zeppelin!". So word your description accordingly.
*Never spam email.
*Never mail your CD without a purpose or a contact person's name on it and expect miracles. Far better that the contact person knows to expect your CD, his or her name is spelled correctly, and you are mailing it to a company that actually works with your style of music.
*Learn every area of the business you are in. Knowledge is power.
*Meet people, get out there and shake hands, and without overkill, let them know about your music.
*Be on friendly terms with other bands and artists in your area.
*Create a “street team”, whether online or offline…they are core people that wish to help you further your marketing efforts.
*Join quality OMD web sites with useful productivity tools, traffic and collaboration potential and include in your signature in ALL your web travels a link to your music. Example: http://www.artistopia.com
*Be persistent!

Suggests are just that, suggestions. You find what works for you and/or tweak any of the above. These are all tried and true marketing tips and by adjustment, would work for nearly any business. The old motto of "who can promote you better than you?" ... is the whole basis of your name being on the streets. You never know who knows somebody that knows somebody that will be just the introduction you need.

Check out this link to an ongoing discussion on these tips about promoting your music online and offline - that "buzz"...

Music promotion
 
I'm not against playing for free, but like any paid gig, you should make sure there is a return on your investment before doing so.
 
i'm gonna bump this cuz i don't think most people really know how to create a buzz (including myself)...not that this will give you everything you need, there are some great ideas here.
 
I agree completely that live giging is the best way to create a buzz. I'm kinda surprised that noone touched on the idea of talking a local venue into letting you host an open mic night. Get other bands and musicians out to see and hear you play then let them jam. They're sure to bring their friends and fans along... what better buzz can you have than another local musician talking about you?

- Tanlith -

I'm Baaa'aaack!
 
tanlith said:
I agree completely that live giging is the best way to create a buzz. I'm kinda surprised that noone touched on the idea of talking a local venue into letting you host an open mic night. Get other bands and musicians out to see and hear you play then let them jam. They're sure to bring their friends and fans along... what better buzz can you have than another local musician talking about you?
I've done plenty of open mic nights, and there's not much of a buzz going on there. it's a bunch of solo singer/songwriter/guitarists (mostly) who bring like 4 friends tops, and there is very little jamming going on. They go up there, play there 2-3 songs, and sit down...no buzz. The open mic is basically an amature night, that most people in bands don't waist their time with. I've got nothing against them. I did them myself, but now that i play with a band, we avoid them as we see little to no payback. It's not a bad place to get over stagefright though.

Just my 2cents...maybe your open mic nights are different than the ones out in San Francisco though..
 
Cheers for the links, ill take a look at them. Gigging is a good way to let people hear and see what the band is all about, but i dont see any harm in having the band on the internet atall. Its just another form of advertising the band really.
Anyone tried any publicity stuns or anything along those lines? Anyone think its wrong to do so?
 
A few years ago in the college town I lived in at the time, a local band setup in the parking lot of a 7-11. I don't know how they arranged the whole thing... I assume they had permission (maybe a family member was the manager) because they were plugged-in to the electrical outlet by the ice machine. Their "stage" was the sidewalk and a parking space.

I was just stopping in to get a drink and all the sudden I see this band jamming in the parking lot. That definitely got my attention. However, I had places to be so I didn't stick around to see what happened. Unfortunately, I forgot to check the local newspaper the next day to see if they got any exposure. I don't know who they were or if they still exist-- so I guess they didn't get much "buzz" from the event.

But they definitely got an "A" for effort in my book.
 
Open for the Hot band in your local area or any national act. If you play as well if not better then the headliner people will be talking about you.
 
All You Need is Just these 5 Thing's & You will Suceed, Ok.

1. Have a Deep Passion and/or Love of Music

2. Be Very Determined and Never-Ever Give Up

3. Start Small and Work Your Way Up to the Top. You Gotta Pay Your Due's

4. If You Believe in YourSelf with all Your Heart & Soul, Other's will Too

5. And Last, but not Least. Have Fun with It. Enjoy YourSelf & the Journey
 
Pappy GaNuga said:
1. Have a Deep Passion and/or Love of Music

2. Be Very Determined and Never-Ever Give Up

3. Start Small and Work Your Way Up to the Top. You Gotta Pay Your Due's

4. If You Believe in YourSelf with all Your Heart & Soul, Other's will Too

5. And Last, but not Least. Have Fun with It. Enjoy YourSelf & the Journey

Are you religious?
 
Robertt8 said:
...it's a bunch of solo singer/songwriter/guitarists (mostly)

OK let's assume "a bunch of" = 5

...who bring like 4 friends tops,

5 x 4 = 20 -- That's 20 more people in the club than there would be without the open mic night.

...and there is very little jamming going on. They go up there, play there 2-3 songs, and sit down...no buzz.

I guess it comes down to your definition of "buzz". The way I see it, every extra set of ears counts. And you PR work doesn't stop at the microphone. I used to go to pleanty of open mic nights back in the 80's and I'd spend my time going around talking to anyone who was brave enough to hit the stage. Musicians today seem far too antisocial. Not that they're not willing to talk to a fan, but they sure won't go out of their way to go meet the audience. When I used to play the circuit I'd make sure to meet as much of the audience as I could... making an effort to even ask "Hey! How you all enjoying the show? Anything particular you wanna hear? If we know it we'll play it!" makes the people in your audience feel good... people may never remember what you said or played that night, but they always remember how you made them feel.

And I don't even want to get started on this "go big or go home" attitude I keep seeing today (I'm reminded of a club here in Windsor recently where I attended an open mic that fell short on attendance - only about 15 people showed up... the band packed up and left!!) ... seems like eveyone wants to play like 5-10 gigs then expect to have a packed house... take a page from the history of the greats: Play for any audience no matter how great or small and alway always always give it all you got... weather it's for 5 people of 5000 git it the same effort. No matter what genre you prefer, the names that stand the test of time got there from persistance and effort... i mean face it, if you listen to some of the old recordings of live performences, musically they're medeocre, but man did they give it all they had! Jimmy Page; Robert Plant; Jimmy Hendrix; Johnny Cash; Jennings and Nelson; Christofferson; Marty Robbins; Hank Williams Sr. -- these names are remembered because they "paid their dues" -- something that today's musician doesn't seem to be willing to do. Of course this doesn't apply to all of todays musicians... for those of you who are paying your dues I salute you!

Just my 2cents...

And here's your penny change. ;)

maybe your open mic nights are different than the ones out in San Francisco though..

They sound about the same, but I was trying yo point out the long term concept: I remember (back in about '85-'86) a band called "Reform School" from this area that used to play at the "Island View Tavern". They're attendance was weak at first, so they held a weekly open mic night on Thursdays. Over the next few months, it became the place to be for live entertainment. The real reason for their success? They worked the room whenever they weren't on stage. I remember one of them telling me once. "Being a musician is 80% public relations and 20% performance." And these guys could play well. They were tight and had their chops down. I think the downfall was they were a cover band. No original works... at least none they shared with the audience.

Anyhow... not trying to bust yer ball there Robertt8, just elaborating on a point. :))

- Tanlith -

Nothing succeeds like a budgie with no teeth! - Benny Hill
 
Pappy GaNuga said:
1. Have a Deep Passion and/or Love of Music

2. Be Very Determined and Never-Ever Give Up

3. Start Small and Work Your Way Up to the Top. You Gotta Pay Your Due's

4. If You Believe in YourSelf with all Your Heart & Soul, Other's will Too

5. And Last, but not Least. Have Fun with It. Enjoy YourSelf & the Journey

Whilst your pieces of advise in themselves are good, they are certainly not all you need to get to the top! You could do all of these five things and still be playing to 20 people at an open mike night 30 years later! You forgot to mention talent, mangement, promotion, media exposure, etc... You seem either a bit naive, or alternatively very succesful!
 
Good advice tanlith, its up to the band to get the supporters.
 
"If your ship doesn't come in, swim out to it"
"I couldn't wait for success, so I went ahead without it."
- Jonathan Winters

Buzz isn't happening on it's own, it must be created.
 
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