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OK, a day or so after my panel at the fantastic Future of Music Policy Summit, and I want to try and toss out a few thoughts.

First off, while I’m typically not real big on conferences, I can enthusiastically recommend this one. The values of the conference and the caliber of speakers/workshops makes this - in my mind - the go-to conference. Get yourself registered for 2010 asap.

So, my panel was entitled New Musician’s Toolbox. I moderated, and the panelists were: Duncan Freeman, founder, Band Metrics; Charlie McEnerney, Host + Producer, Well-Rounded Radio/Musicians for Music 2.0; and Alexis Rodich, Director of Marketing and Partner Relations, BandsinTown. Excellent panelists all, and certainly people/companies committed to adding value. I urge you to check out each of these companies.

I think what really hit me about the conference was that it’s the first time where I felt like the expectations of the attendees wasn’t completely whacked. I’ve been doing these conferences for longer than I care to remember, and, in fact, it was after a conference where I spoke, in which, simply because I had the suffix “A&R” attached to my name, that my panel was over-crowded with a teeming mass of demo-wielding aspirants attempting to fast track themselves to a record deal, that I decided to write my first book telling people that foisting a demo on a fatigued record label executive in the hopes that this would somehow further your career may not be the very best strategy.

None of that at this panel.

Instead, rather than perceived access being the factor that motivated people to come to the panel, it appeared to me that information was what was being sought. And, again, not information for how to get signed to a label, but rather information that they (the panel attendees) could use in order to further their own ventures.

This is a pretty seismic shift.

I’ve seen it coming for some time, but — like the lake being over taken by algae that doubles in size every day — it seems like the progress is now inexorable and exponential. Artists realize there’s no looking back, and - importantly - there is beginning to emerge some principles and best practices for the way forward. While these principles and pieces are still formative, you can kind of feel people assembling the disparate elements in a manner that makes sense given their individual situations; building on the wisdom of others and customizing.

On my panel we had many of the important pieces: Band Metrics represents the crucial analytic piece that bands must familiarize themselves with (if you can’t measure it, it doesn’t exist (yes, that’s what she said)). I believe each of us on the panel said something along the lines of, “You must familiarize yourselves with SEO and analytics.” Band Metrics makes this easy and useful; they’re on to something.

BandsinTown brings the element of live performance. In this era of all things online, too often bands sort of downplay the importance of playing live. I’ve written ad nauseam on the importance of balancing (Straddling) your off line world with your online world. BandsinTown offers important solutions. (I kind of think Band Metrics and BandsinTown may want to collaborate.)

Well Rounded Radio represents the continued importance of media, even as it evolves from a teeny group of gatekeepers at magazines/radio/etc. to a more bottoms-up decentralized-but-connected trusted sources with voices. Charlie made some important points about how you must think in terms of psychographic affiliations rather than just assuming you’re marketing to people who like music that is similar to yours, and thus they will like yours too.

This idea was best summed up by the excellent artist, Vienna Teng who, from the audience, told of the fact that her music was being used with some frequency in some sort of anime mash up; and that this occurred without her really having anything to do with it. However, measuring this impact, and discerning the sources of interest (via analytics) allows you to then react with some form of plan to maximize these elements of light.

Terms popping around the panel:
Social Forensics
Sentiment Analysis
1000 True Fans

If there was anything I felt lacking in our panel (and, I would guess, it was covered in others) was that essential to an artist’s tool box is the ability to sell directly from their own site and capture information from this process. I, naturally, gave a shout to Topspin and CASH for this particular breed of functionality.

Additionally, something related to this that must be in the artist’s toolbox is some way to develop (source), manufacture, and sell merch. This is a decidedly non-trivial issue as the music business, more and more, becomes the merch business. Shout out here to PAID.

Once these elements coalesce a bit more systems are going to emerge. The inspiring thing to me is that we no longer really have to pound the fist on the table and command (beg) artists to not worry about getting signed to a label. Artists - at least at this conference - didn’t seem the least bit concerned/interested in this. Rather, the interest seemed to be about strategic partnerships and best practices.

Here’s to the dawn of a new era, here’s to the Future of Music Policy Summit, and, yeah, raise a toast to St. Joe Strummer.

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I’ve had the pleasure to be helping out the insanely talented Benjamin Taylor and his team recently. If you’re unfamiliar with Ben’s work, you’re missing out. He sings like a very lyrical jazz player; like Chet Baker plays/sings, like Clifford Brown, or Paul Desmond.

His music is not jazz (strictly speaking), by the way; it’s just incredibly well-written and played, uhm, folk-pop. Sort of hate that. Too reductive. You’ll have your chance to make up your own mind in a second.

Before we get to the music, I want to talk about what we’ve been up to.

We started by re-designing Ben’s site. Now, I’ve been through my share of nightmarish web dev experiences, and I gotta say, this one was amazingly painless.

All the credit in the world goes to Jason Feinberg at On Target Media. He immediately got that we needed functionality and ease of use prioritized over design (we, actually haven’t even “designed” the site yet; that is, there’s no fancy .psd files yet overlaying the “guts.” I’m not sure we need them). He chose Drupal as the CMS, and had everything cooking basically over a weekend.

The next step was to develop an email capture and commerce solution. We spoke with Ian Rogers at Topspin, and he and his team got us rocking (in fact, Ian recommended OTMG).

Topspin has developed very robust widgets. Better to show than tell. The players below are Topspin widgets. Go ahead: stream the music, share them via email, embed them, and by all means click the “Get it Now” button to be taken to Ben’s Site where you can buy the music. Doing so gets your email into Ben’s database, and - using the Topspin features - Ben and his team can analyze the data in a variety of useful ways.

Additionally, a few days ago, we set up a Twitter stream for Ben; you can follow him: HERE.

Through all of this we’ve increased traffic to Ben’s site by a multiple of 5x over the course of a couple months.

As I said in a previous post, artists are now able to create their own ecosystem.

Here’s some music. Enjoy

Benjamin Taylor The Legend Of Kung Folk Part 1 (The Killing Bite)

Benjamin Taylor Another Run Around The Sun

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David Byrne and Brian Eno’s most recent collaborative album is now available. You can listen (and embed on your own blog) HERE. Or you can listen right here:

The site is powered by TopSpin. I’ve written about TopSpin’s CEO, Ian Rogers, before, and while I’m pleased to see some of the innovations they’re making (and am certain more are to come), and am glad that he’s giving props to people like Billy O’Connell and his CASH Music, I gotta believe that certain functionality was left out in the interest of iterating (totally understandable, by the way).

Specifically, what I believe they will do shortly is, rather than just give people the opportunity to embed albums on their blogs, the bloggers will be able to be little retailers; i.e. sell the album from their blog, have TopSpin do the transaction in the background, and divide up the proceeds, with the majority going to the artist, a bit to the blogger, and ToPspin will get a cut for the transactional assist.

I’ve prattled on about this concept in too many blog posts to even link to them all at this point. We’ll see. Maybe I’m wrong.

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