misterx said:
Hello,
1) How would one go about getting radio airplay from an indie production? Indie being me-myself and I making the music. Usually the artist gets royalties for radio play. Or do we just let them play it for free and hope it triggers cd sales?
The writer
does get royalties when a song he wrote is played on the radio.
However, it's not likely you'll get your song played on the radio. I don't know myself whether payola still exists (it certainly did at one time ... people went to prison for it), but for whatever reason radio stations generally won't play something that's not released by a real label. I guess there are exceptions, but they're rare enough to be remarkable.
I don't think letting them play it for free would be much of an incentive.
Don't try to offer payola yourself. Even if someone
is getting away with it, I wouldn't bet that you could.
2) Say you have enough songs for a cd, you have the means to do it ALL yourself. (cd's, selling, etc..) What advantage would you have if you got signed from a real indie label?
Someone might buy your CD. Which is a not insignificant advantage.
You can make your own self-released CD relatively cheaply nowadays (it probably won't be up to label-release standards, but you should be able to make something reasonably good). This might make sense if you draw a lot of people to live shows -- sell 'em at a table at the show. You get whatever you're selling them for, and the people who buy have something to make them remember you, and they may play it for their friends, relatives and pets.
But -- based on my limited knowledge -- you're not likely actually to make much (if any) money from a self-released CD. There are exceptions, but (like the radio air play exceptions) they're rare enough to be remarkable -- and those who do succeed probably do so as much or more on the basis of their business/marketing acumen and general pushiness, rather than musical skill.
Sure, there are record stores that are nice enough to put out a rack of local self-released CDs on consignment ... but is anyone going to buy them? Why would they? You're not going to have the things that would trigger significant buying, like radio airplay, a video on MTV, a name someone's heard of before .... You might sell significant copies if you have a big fan base from live shows (or a ton of relatives). Of course, you can probably sell to your fan base with a table at your shows.