Jump to content

Your Ad Could Be Here

Bridget Murphy

Active Members
  • Posts

    162
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    4

Blog Comments posted by Bridget Murphy

  1. It sounds like "Angel in Chains" and "The Dead Sweethearts Polka" bring a unique flavor to the Southern Pigfish album with their outrageous themes, although they may not necessarily focus on political content. Their inclusion adds depth and diversity to the album's overall narrative. It's amusing that you felt compelled to play "The Dead Sweethearts Polka" at the Library event, especially with an accordion player present. Their reaction, while appreciative, also hints at a preference for more lively subject matter! It's all part of the creative journey, exploring different themes and styles.

  2. On 7/17/2020 at 1:20 AM, john said:

     

    So, just a few questions! lol

     

    I added numbers to your questions in my quote for easier reference. :)

     

    1. Use a Rode NT 2 as my vocal mic. It, and / or other mics plug straight into my interface, a MOTU 828 ES (https://motu.com/products/proaudio/828es). It provides phantom power where needed. I tend to record acoustic via mic, though sometimes record quick and dirty acoustic scratch tracks via direct line using inbuilt acoustic mics. Electric guitars go through my Roland Boss GT10 guitar FX unit. Sometimes line in to an simple amp sim, sometimes using IK Multimedia's AmpliTube 4 VST and for amp, cabinet and full signal chain. Keys I usually use through midi and sound supplied by Native Instrument's Kontakt with a library like Output's Exhale, other times I use my Korg 01W sounds or something loaded on my EMU Esi 4000.

     

    2. As mentioned above. I have a range of free and VST Some are specific to my DAW. I use Studio One 4 and Cakewalk. As a mobile system I use a Roland VS 880. I do sometimes use a tape sim. I will need to dig out a full list of my current VST. I have an old Tascam DA 20 Mk2 DAT that I pretty well use for accessing old mix downs and old reels I used on a Tascam 32, Fostex E16 and on a Revox B77 but I don't have those tape machines or ready access to them any more.

     

    3. Primarily released on my own website as I keep 100% profit and I can be much, much more creative in bundling, product definition and sales funneling. The main benefits for Apple or Google play would be discoverability but that only kicks in when you have numbers to chart reasonably highly. Spotify has slightly better discoverability but terrible payouts. The ability to reach out to people who have bought my music is heavily compromised and clunky on those platforms and in some cases not possible at all. Point is I would release using an OMD onto those playforms primarily for the legitimacy it lends you, but completely focus on pushing sales on my own site. For every sale there I have a valid email address to follow up.

     

    4. A growing mailing list, social media, my own blogs, music bloggers, press releases to local press, music press, streaming etc... Real world gigs are beyond me due to health issues.

     

    5. Outside of the releases mentioned, as additional tracks, yes.

     

    6. Funny you should say that... I have started a marketing challenge to do just that:

     

     

    It is a series of challenges aimed at getting some of the basics. Think of it like layers to an onion. It builds up in layers. People are used to doing bits of the solution, but they don't appreciate the difference having the right components in place makes. They hear "try Twitter, that's brilliant for musicians", so they sign up, work on it a bit and eventually become disappointed with the results, because they do it in isolation. The truth is you need key elements and build from there. Importantly, you don't just need tools, you need strategy. That strategy must include coordination.

     

    So i would encourage people to try the challenge above, but understand it only gives you a first layer. The idea is simple. Build each layer with set aims, including your ability to carry out the task. Automation is your friend (when done right).

     

    We also have some fund raising products in development, including:

     

    • Indie Artist Core - Subscription - Entry level community membership level including access to a music contact database with more than 9,300 entries, a complimentary basic indie course and some community benefits. This should be ready this weekend and launched within the next few weeks. As a subcription, when we update, evolve or expand, you automatically have access to it.
    • Ultimate Indie Guerrilla - 10 pdfs covering all the main assets, tools and strategies needed to build a fan base.
    • Songstuff Indie - Subscription - Advanced Indie tools and strategies to market your music. It includes paid advertising campaign strategies, social media strategies, electronic press kits, image, building your fan base and much more. The aim is to help you to create a viable music presence you can build on for years to come. Much is cutting edge for indie music. Strategies and tactics evolve all the time and artists are wise to keep up.

     

    There will be more to come :)

     

    7. Alias? John Moxey, my own name. It is pretty distinctive as an artist name :). Deep Red Sea is visual. It does allow me a bit more freedom to experiment. I didn't want a variation on my name or a completely diferent personal name. I don't rule out the poossibility of bringing the two projects together at some point in the future. It allows me to market in very different ways. It also allows me to compartmentalise risk.

     

    8. Live venue has a distinctive feel. As long as you can get a good enough quality and the venue adds something special that you can capture. You have to put play an impressive gig. I quite like the live in studio with a small invited audience approach.

     

    9. I started playing age 4. My mum taught piano and sang opera. At a young age my sisters and I would be trouped out in front of her musical friends to perform. I started the violin at 7, sang in a choir, school orchestra, pipe band (tenor drum, bass drum then bagpipes), took up guitar in my teens, mandolin, didgerioo, bodhran all play a part in my love of music and composition. Performance was always there. By the time I had been playing in bands for a couple of years in many ways being on stage became the place I was most at home. My first job after school was working in a recording studio. When in bands I did occasional work as road crew for larger bands. After I injured my back and performance was a real issue I studied Electronics with Music at the University of Glasgow. Music has always been there for me.

     

    10. I used to be pretty good at snooker capable of briefly looking impressive while not being completely consistent. I was briefly on the snooker team at university. My largest break was 63. I haven't played in years due to my back injury.

     

    :)

     

     

    Good luck in learning and playing with bodhran.

    • Like 1
  • Who's Online   0 Members, 0 Anonymous, 24 Guests (See full list)

    • There are no registered users currently online
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By continuing to use our site you indicate acceptance of our Terms Of Service: Terms of Use, our Privacy Policy: Privacy Policy, our Community Guidelines: Guidelines and our use of Cookies We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.