Filed under: Tha Biz

THA BIZ VIDEO: MTV Follows Birdman As He Sets-up Cash Money's Grammy Party

Very interesting special that should air on MTV soon and really shows Baby as a person. They follow him as he plans Cash Money's Grammy Party as well as meets with artists and studio personel. Lil Wayne, Drake, Nicki Minaj, DJ Khaled and more all make apperances. CMR is basically set-up like most mob families. Birdman is to John Gotti as Suga Slim is to Carlo Gambino. Meaning, Birdman is the flashy one but Slim is the one who is really calling all the shots. People in the know have known this for years and Birdman says it here also.

My favorite part is when Birdman says that he doesn't like loud music because he's trying to conserve his ears (I'm the exact same way). They also show his children and his son Brian is poised to be the next head of CMR.

THA BIZ: A Rappers Guide to Surviving Online (via Digipendent)

A Rappers Guide to Surviving Online

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Consistency: Your online profiles should all have the same look and feel as your main page and be linked to one another. Online profile pages are not a substitute for owning your own domain at yourbandname.com!  The longer a fan spends on your pages, the stronger the connection to your music and career. Your standardized package should include:

 

  • Biography: you should have a well-written standard bio
  • Concerts: uniform, active and up to date show schedule
  • Photos: professional-grade “official” band photos
  • Videos: music videos for your best songs and videos introducing the band
  • Music: a standard set of your best songs (you can experiment to find the best mix)

Reach: you want your band, music and videos to be on as many sites as humanly possible.

 

  • Use sites like ArtistData, TuneCore and TubeMogul for distribution. Each of these sites allows you to upload once and publish to dozens of sites, use a platform that will save you lots of time and the tediousness of entering the same information multiple times.

Depth: you want to engage with your fans wherever they are.

 

Make sure to check your profile pages each week, respond to comments and accept friend requests. It should be pretty obvious which networks are most popular for your fanbase but pay attention all the other networks because they will change in relative importance.

 

Know your Fans: capturing names, email addresses, and demographic information at shows and online is one of the most important career-building activities you can do.

 

Every subscriber on YouTube, every follower on Twitter, and every friend on MySpace and Facebook has opted in to updates on your band and career. When you are launching a music video, new online profile, competing in a contest, on tour – who do you think you should mobilize? By focusing on this base, giving them exclusive content, early listens, VIP treatment or special tickets you get them hooked and they will turn their friends on to your music.

 

Stand Out: By definition, what has worked for other bands to get attention will not work for you.

 

It has been years since an artist was “discovered” off MySpace. Giving away your music for free will not make you a #1 UK band like the Arctic Monkeys, choreographing a music video on treadmills will not revive your career like Ok Go. Allowing consumers to “choose the price they pay” will not result in Radiohead/NIN level coverage.  Use your unique story, style and creativity to give people a reason to pay attention, talk about you and care about your music.

 

Disclaimer: All of this falls apart if your music doesn’t move people.

 

THA BIZ: 9 Mistakes To Avoid When Recording Your Own Album (via Music Think Tank)

Before you can begin to think about marketing yourselves online you’ll first of all need to take care of the music. If, like me, you’re making that music at home then you’ll be aware of the many benefits this arrangement brings - you have the freedom to try whatever you like, you don’t have one eye on the clock and you never have to get the last bus home.

The flipside is that you are on your own and, to put this gently, there will be no-one there to keep an eye on you. You are entirely free to lead yourself down any number of blind alleys before you grab the wrong end of the stick and beat yourself up with it. Recording at home requires patience, discipline and good planning……and all at the same time…and from musicians.

What could possibly go wrong?

Since the price of freedom is eternal vigilance, here are the 9 mistakes we made in homemaking our debut record that I’m keen to avoid as we begin our second. I’m fairly certain I’m not the only person in the world who learned his good habits the hard way so if you think I’ve missed anything important please feel free to add some tips of your own. I’d also very much like to hear your tales of self-inflicted recording calamity!

OK, off we go..

1: That Odd Buzzing Noise Will Come Out In The Mix

..and one day there will be free jetpacks for us all. No matter how good you think that last take was, if your singer kicked the mikestand halfway through or the small change was rubbing against the keys in your pockets, then you need to think about starting that take again.

2: If You Are Having Drums, You Might Want To Record Them First

You may think you’ve nailed that guitar part to that click track but there are two people who won’t share your confidence. The first person is the drummer and he will till you all about this when he comes to play along to the song. The second is the person who will spend weeks going through the all the component drum audio files, making miniscule adjustments to the placement of a kick beat here and a high hat there. When I say weeks, I mean WEEKS…easily enough weeks to fill a month or two.

3: “Hey, Shall We Tune-up?”

This one sounds teeth-grindingly obvious, doesn’t it. Oh yes, so obvious in fact that you’d never believe anyone could make such a stupid, stupid error.

*cough*

Moving on, then…

4: Effects Breed Like Rabbits

It might not sound the way you hear it in your head but if you cave in now and add that tiny bit of distortion - just to make yourself feel better about everything - then imagine how great you’ll be feeling when you come to the mix and you can’t get rid of it. Record EVERYTHING dry.

5: “You Sound Like You’ve Got A Cold…”

If you didn’t have a cold when you recorded the vocals for the other 9 tracks, why do you want to do record the vocal for this one now?

6: Clean Out Yer Ears

If you’ve listened back to that rough mix more than 10 times today then it’s probably time to go out, meet your pals and get drunk. Additionally, when you all come back from the your night out your friends will probably be in the mood for some ELO or possibly some Fu Manchu. That track without vocals and that piano part littered with cack-handed mistakes will be waiting patiently for you tomorrow - it ain’t going nowhere.

7: Less Is More

These days home studios can be augmented with a dazzling array of plugins that enable you to have thousands and thousands of different sounds and instruments at your fingertips. You are limited only by your imagination, but remember that this cuts both ways.

8: Organise, Label & File

At some stage, when you’ve recorded your last vocal or overdub, you’ll want to think about mixing your album. When this point comes it is waaay too late and entirely pointless to have the bright idea of giving audio files sensible names and putting them into folders that, say, represent the names of the different songs they come from.

9: Back-Up

Death, Taxes and At-That-Crucial-Point computer malfunction. They come to us all in the end. Back-up your work daily, weekly or even monthly….but make sure you do it.

Now, go and make a great record!

 

THA BIZ: DJ Pain Shares Free VST + Sounds/Instruments for ACID PRO

"Sharing a free VST sound font player and a resource for downloading hundreds of free instruments. These programs can be used with any program (FL, Protools, Logic, etc) but the installation instructions are specifically for ACID Pro"

How to install vsts:

Download SFZ for free: http://www.cakewalk.com/support/project5/sfz.aspx

Download free soundfonts: http://themusictip.com/producers-corner/

THA BIZ VIDEO: Poor Righteous Teachers (Hip Hop's Change To Negativity Was Intentional)

Yeah, there are a lot of ignorant rap apologists who go through great lengths to deny the obvious.

"Rap music doesn't influence kids, this guy's just mad that he's not rich, record labels just promote what sells, etc."

All of that is false, but they're pretty commonly held beliefs in our generation, not just kids. The fact an artist as ignent as Waka Flocka is being promoted more than an artist such as Wale is all the proof you need.