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“9 Great Resources For Musicians On The Move” plus 1 more |
9 Great Resources For Musicians On The Move Posted: 02 May 2018 02:27 PM PDT If you’re a traveling musician who doesn’t have a desire to settle down anywhere in particular, there’s a lot of precedent for you (bohemians, Robert Johnson, Bob Dylan), but the modern world doesn’t necessarily seem friendly to your lifestyle. At least that’s what it seemed like until now. Luckily, you came across this handy little guide. This world may be friendlier than you think, you just need to access the right resources. Here are some of the best ones for you.Housing - BedlyNew York City is a mecca for live music and there’s no shortage of label scouts looking for talent. Nothing wrong with a short-term stay to find out where you can go with your music in NYC. But it can be tough to roll there without a place to stay. Bedly has the answer: on-demand housing. You’re not required to sign a lease, your apartment is furnished, and all you have to do is pass a background check, fill out the app online, and provide a verified payment option. Once you figure things out, you can pick up and head to the next town or the next apartment whenever you want.Housing - CouchsurfingOf course! If all you have is a backpack and a guitar, you can go practically anywhere with the Couchsurfing platform and stay for free. Just book your gigs on the go, or busk in any city, and crash on one of 400,000 couches worldwide. This is also a great way to meet people. You could lease a short-term storage space for your gear month-to-month in any big city and couchsurf all over town until you’re ready to move on.Housing - HostelworldThrough Hostelworld you’ll pay less than you would for a hotel, and there are 36,000 of them in 170 countries. There are private rooms in some hostels where you can sleep and keep your gear. This site also has a pretty handy guide to traveling on a budget. As with Couchsurfing, it helps to have a plan for your gear — a car or van with tip-top security, someplace to store it — but never discount the fact that plenty of world travelers go all over the place with their instrument. You’ll just have to make sure your baby stays safe with whatever means necessary.Management - Artist GrowthThis app can help you manage your finances and keep your tour schedule on the up and up. It’s a tour manager in your pocket. You can DIY with everything, including merch, guest list, ticket requests, tour expenses (which you’ll want to keep track of for tax purposes), and of course, agreements with venues.Gigs - SplitGigsWhat’s one of the hardest things about running around and booking your own shows? It’s that oftentimes you need bands to play with, and if you’re not well-established there isn’t always a local promoter to help you out. Enter SplitGigs. This is a social network where you find other artists to share shows with you. Obviously you can use Facebook to find bands in any city, but it helps to have multiple apps at your disposal.Gigs - ReverbNation Gig FinderReverbNation has a database of over 600,000 venues, and you can customize your gig based on your needs. If you’re touring solo, look for solo-friendly venues. With an 8-piece band? Find an auditorium. Through the app, you can search each city for venues and submit an electronic press kit directly to booking managers.Gigs - SonicbidsWith Sonicbids, you can pick gigs and apply to play them through the app with an electronic press kit. You can also search for session musicians and other bands to play with. In the website’s words, “Whatever career stage you’re at, we have the gigs you’re looking for. From local shows to international festivals, plus contests and licensing deals, it’s all here.” Plus, the site has a very useful blog for all things music.Promotion - ServiceScapeWhat’s the key to promoting your music through search engines? Maintaining a good website with a quality blog. ServiceScape gives you important information on how to build a blog audience and how to write well. As a result, music fans in cities all over the world could know about you before you ever visit. If someone does a search for “music blogs,” yours is more likely to pop up because it’s high quality. If you’re short on time and have the funds, you can hire ServiceScape’s writers to do the work for you. Travel blogs are huge. Imagine one that doubles as a music blog — that’s pure gold.Promotion - HootsuiteHootsuite is a social media management tool that helps you save valuable time by giving you a single place to post on multiple social networks. You can also curate other people’s content and share it so that you’re actually being social instead of just promoting yourself. Furthermore, you can filter and monitor what others are saying about your band or related topics, so you can stay on top of what’s going on throughout the social media sphere.
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Why Everyone Should Try An Instrument At Least Once Posted: 01 May 2018 05:39 PM PDT I’ll be the first to admit that I’m not musically inclined. I can draft a novella quicker than some can cook breakfast, copyedit with my eyes closed, and do a spot-on impression of Cher from Clueless. Yet, if you put a music book in front of me and sit me down at the piano, chances are very high that you will not like what you hear. It’s a shame, really, because I love music more than just about anyone I know. From the lyrics to the instrumental compositions, I love to dissect a piece and really sink my teeth into it. When I was younger, I kept spiral-bound notebooks wherein I’d write all of the words to my favorite songs. Keep in mind this was about two decades before Google took over and you could quickly search for the lyrics online. Rather, I had to do it the old-fashioned way. I’d sit by my boombox in my room with a blank cassette just ready to record my favorite jam. As soon as it came on, I’d hit that button, then immediately begin scribbling down all the words I could catch. Some were more difficult (I’m looking at you, “Crossroads” by Bone Thugs n’ Harmony) while others I could get on the first try. It was around the spring of my seventh grade year when I developed my intense obsession with the band Shenandoah. I say I loved the group as a whole but who I truly adored was Ralph Ezell, the lightning-handed pro behind the gorgeous bass guitar solos that stole the show on many of their title tracks. A country music lover since birth, wandering aimlessly in a family in love with R&B and soul music, I thought if I simply tried hard enough and directed some good thoughts in that direction, I could hone a talent akin to his. I came home from school one day and begged my mother to sign me up for guitar lessons. It was nearing my birthday, so I informed her that all I wanted that year was a shiny new one. Then, like all moms somehow just know how to do, she pulled some (literal) strings and granted my wish. I was greeted on my birthday morning with a gorgeous new guitar, tucked sweetly into a black case lined with blue velvet. I picked her up and looked her over like someone had handed me the crown jewels. She’d arranged for me to take lessons with this elderly woman a few towns away, who advertised in the local newspaper. A renowned musician in her younger years, she’d said in her ad that playing was the only thing that kept her fingers from cramping up with arthritis, so she continued to play, and to teach. As I couldn’t yet drive, my mom would load up me, as well as my two younger siblings, into the family van. They’d all sit in the car for 45 minutes while I went inside and learned some chords. I’ll never forget coming out of my first lesson to find them all stifling back laughter, then eventually just erupting in giggles on the drive home. My sister, only seven at the time, remarked that it sounded like someone dying in there. I gave it my best college shot, but the woman’s temperament, coupled with my hard-to-ignore total lack of skill, eventually got the best of me. I asked my mom if I could just “practice” on my own and I’ve never seen her more relieved in my life. I did just that for about a month, then eventually lost interest and started dating the boy one grade above me who would become my husband in about 15 years. But I kept that old bass guitar and every once in a while, I get it out of its case. I strum my fingers across its strings and our two children cover their ears in mortification. I’ll never regret my time spent dabbling in music, primarily for what it taught me about my family, myself, and the real world. I learned that my mother and father will do absolutely anything if they think it will make me happy. I learned that musical talent is a gift to be revered and respected, and not something that just springs up overnight. Once I finally figured out how to play “Mary Had a Little Lamb” (still my crowning moment), I learned that if you practice long enough, even the most novice among us can grow. Playing the guitar taught me more life lessons in a few short months than many learn over the course of a lifetime. I’ll hold onto it until my own kids are able to ask me for it one day, eager to try their hand and give it a go. Of course, like my own mother, I’ll encourage them ceaselessly, mock them minimally, and love them fiercely all the way.
Courtney Myers is a freelance writer and editor from High Point, NC. A music lover since she could crawl, she enjoys talking about everything industry-related, from the technical side of music to the whimsical. This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
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