Query failed: received zero-sized searchd response. What your Music Profile Should Say About you

What your Music Profile Should Say About you

  • Related Videos
  • Related Articles
  • Related Q&A

Your online music profile is the bottom-line essential information on WHO you are as a band, singer, songwriter and/or musician. Your profile, as to how it fits in the big picture at Artistopia, an artist development site for indie and unsigned artists, is your biography or resume that presents you to the music industry, other musicians, and your potential fans. That makes it a very important page on the Internet, right? It needs to be interesting, well-written, informative and to-the-point, for this is you marketing yourself. When writing this document, there is much to consider to make it presentable.

Consider these scenarios:
1. An A&R rep is listening to your music on an indie radio webcast and thinks, “who is that?!” So they click on your name to learn more about you. Your music brought them to your profile. Will they be impressed by what they read?
2. A label rep is browsing the artist profiles for a band they need for a certain project, perhaps local to them. Does your profile, gig information, and band description quickly give them enough details to discover you?

In the Internet world, any webmaster will tell you content is king. Why? Because it is how online visitors find you. The number one source for driving traffic to web pages are search engines, and it is content they want and nothing else. (Content is literally text, characters, paragraphs, sentences – it’s information.) You can easily improve the traffic to your profile by entering as much relevant content about yourself as is necessary to describe your music, history, act, image, and musical goals.

Knowing this and knowing that in this busy-busy click-happy Web world, you have to have your band description clearly stated at the top of the bio! The rest of the fill-in details are at the bottom. If you have captured the readers attention at the top, they will follow through and read more. Otherwise, they will leave your profile and look for another band that presents themselves better than you did.

The best place to start is by creating an outline, in Word (or other program). Know how many total characters you can use in the field you are entering information in. Use spell-check and save it for later updating. Collect your thoughts and make notes about your background, your musical history, goals, accomplishments, band members, who plays which instrument, etc.

* The music business is a BUSINESS so present yourself professionally.

The first paragraph should be an introduction. It is the lead-in to who you are, what your music specialty is (genre), where in the world you are from, and perhaps an enthusiastic quote given to you about your music. If you sound like a certain pro band or artist, what makes you different from them?

* Busy industry people may not finish reading after a few lines if the opener does not capture them quickly. And you have to live up to the hype you dish out!

The second paragraph could cover what you are currently up to musically. Here you might mention a new release you are working on, or music projects you are involved with. What promotional plans do you have to support your current activities? Mentioning an upcoming tour or gig would be good here.

The third paragraph will include band member information (who plays what) or brief mention of background experiences, instrumentation, and/or accomplishments, that accentuates your artistic development. Artistopia offers locations for detailed information on these entries, so use the available space to present yourself wisely.

The Mission Statement section will cover your music career goals and is aimed at the industry professionals that might be searching for your particular talent. The Influences section will be who your musical influences are, so there is no need to waste the readers time mentioning them elsewhere.

You have to remember, A&R reps, labels, producers, potential collaborators, are all very busy people that have heard it all before. Do not waste words but find a way to stand out from the typical. The music you create may bring them to your profile after they heard it to learn more about you, so it is up to you to show them that you are a person that they can work with.

It is absolutely amazing to see artists that don’t take the time to do this. In countless web travels and thousands of music profiles, you see artist descriptions from as short as a one-liner like “We want to be heard,” to certain social site artist descriptions that go for MILES. There is a big difference in giving the reader vital information that should be included your profile and info that no one will ever care about that should not.

Therein is the essence of what your music profile should be saying about you.

Artistopia Staff

Artistopia - The Ultimate Artist Development Resource http://www.artistopia.com is an artist development and community on the web providing indie and unsigned music artists, songwriters and bands all the tools needed for music business collaboration and networking.

Rate this Article: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s)
Print Email Re-Publish

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/music-articles/what-your-music-profile-should-say-about-you-284455.html
Add new Comment



Captcha

  • Latest Music Articles
  • More from Artistopia Staff

How to Construct a Diminished Chord in Less Than 10 Minutes

By: Kyle Morrison Lovely | 07/01/2009
Although not as common as major and minor chords, diminished chords are equally as important to understand. Learning how to build diminished chords is a crucial skill for musicians in all genres, and you can learn how to do it in just a few minutes.

Music Review of Freedom Wind by the Explorers Club

By: Darren Tan | 07/01/2009
Freedom Wind by The Explorers Club awed us with the beautiful vocal “Forever”. The moment Jason sang, “She’s the kind of girl who’s in my thought, all night…”, along with James, David and Wally. It was really awesome!

Learn Guitar Notes

By: Ricky Sharples | 07/01/2009
This article will serve as a kick-start to your understanding of guitar notes and their place in your musical progress.

Live Radio Realised to be a Dream Weaver on Websites

By: Nisha Garg | 07/01/2009
Live radio is applauded across the world since its introduction on websites. People have started to enjoy listening to radio on websites that offer free services. The quality of sound and the number of channels available are also impeccable.

Increasing Number of Online Guitar Resources

By: Claude Johnson | 06/01/2009
Learning to play the guitar can seem like a mammoth task for the complete beginner, but with a few tips in the right direction it doesn't need to be out of reach. The first thing to consider when learning playing the guitar is how often you are going to practice, and from where you will access your guitar.

Reading Guitar Tablature: a Beginner’s Guide

By: Presto | 06/01/2009
This article provides a quick guide to how you can use guitar tablature to quickly learn songs.

5 Popular Latin-american Music Genres

By: Steve McMains | 06/01/2009
Latin American Music has been enriched by the contribution of native music traditions European folk music tradition as well as African music. Some of the popular Latin Music genres include Samba, Son, Salsa, Tango and Bossanova.

Buying Vintage Guitars Online Has Benefits

By: Robert Meyer | 06/01/2009
The article highlights the benefits of buying vintage guitars online including a world marketplace and the convenience of shopping from home.

The Gig is Up - Getting Those Gigs

By: Artistopia Staff | 17/12/2007 | Music
The music question that echoes throughout the Internet, "How do I get gigs?" Indie music artists now have a checklist for thinking on not only how to get that next gig, but ways to promote it and make it your best show ever.

Music Online Glossary – When Music, Music Careers and Pcs Collide

By: Artistopia Staff | 17/12/2007 | Music
From Net-newbie to someone that’s been in the business of music for years, you may run into word, term or phrase online that throws you occasionally. Artistopia offers you a way to decipher the music terminology that will eventually cross your path while being on the Web.

Why Artist Development Makes a Difference

By: Artistopia Staff | 26/10/2006 | Music
The Internet has had an enormous change on the music industry and those that create the music. This has created fascinating possibilities and tremendous opportunities of exposure for bands and music artists across the world. This also raises many questions for undiscovered talent to be heard above the clamoring din.

Article Categories




Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the Terms Of Use and Privacy Policy | User published content is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Copyright © 2005-2008 Free Articles by ArticlesBase.com, All rights reserved. (0.75, 12)