Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Well it's been a long while since the last blog. I'd like to wish my reader a happy new year and hope he had a good Christmas too!

There's not many gigs planned at the moment as I'm working off my 'quota' from before Christmas. On the schedule I work from, I reckon I'm the equivalent of about 6 weeks over-quota at the moment! Now that may well sound like a cop-out but when there's lots of gigs and an outbreak of rehearsals with various projects other things I'd like to be doing get put off. (I think I wrote in one of the previous couple of blogs about the number of bands I'm in at the moment).

The things that get put off are namely recording/songwriting and practicing. The latter may come as a shock to you, but yes-getting to do some proper, structured, productive practice is not very easy to fit in when you're hanging round some hotel waiting to play a gig.

The writing and recording process is of course more time-consuming. I'm fairly quick at writing songs (not necessarily any good, but quick) but the arrangement and production process takes a lot longer. There's so many decisions to make every step of the way, and then there might be some backing vocals to arrange and record, or a dreaded tambourine part. Anyway, the main thing is that I would at some stage soon like to put some new songs out as it's getting on for 3 years since the last album and I always find it exciting working towards the next album.

So I'm not being idle, honest!!

There were a couple of great gigs with Atlanta Soul just before 2011 ended. The Cafe Artisan gig on Dec 17th was excellent with a great sound, and the New Year's Eve gig at Heywood Civic was also a belter, and easily the best NYE gig I've ever done. I've had some really dodgy Dec 31st gigs (mentioning no caravan clubs) so perhaps this wasn't the stiffest competition, but I think it's still worth saying how much I enjoyed it.


SOCIAL NETWORKING

Things are changing rapidly on the social networking front so I thought I'd fill my reader in on this area too. The current state of play from my point of view is:

nb: click the title to link to my page for each one!

1) MYSPACE (remember that one?): Completely deserted and one-legged compared to it's heyday with numerous programming issues. A shadow of it's former self. However, still better than Facebook for promoting music (see below!).

2) FACEBOOK: The biggest site and easily my least favourite. Any site that persistantly tells you what to do, who you can or can't add and only lets you add people you 'know' is no good to me for promoting my music. The whole bloody idea is to attract people you don't 'know' who then you get to 'know' if they decide they like the songs. People I already 'know' I 'know' already and therefore I don't need to pester them to get to 'know' me when they already 'know' me anyway. This whole 'say no to strangers' culture has meant that in nearly 2 years of daily persistance, I've managed to attract 200 people onto my group page. I could do that on Myspace in a couple of days. For me, Facebook only works if you have a circle of friends to gossip to about nothing in particular. I have a different medium for doing that, it's called a pub. Everytime I trawl down the 'home' page I feel like I've gatecrashed a gigantic coffee morning.
No wonder I keep getting banned!

3) YOUTUBE: The site that now means there's virtually no need to buy a CD ever again (oops, that's buggered up my next album!) and a musician's dream for learning coversongs quckly. It also had a modest but very useful social networking content called 'friends' and for the more commited you could be a 'subscriber'. With a little effort over the past few months inviting people with similar tastes in music to be my 'friend' I'd managed to treble my number of channel and video views....
Then wallop, they change the format, do away with the 'friends' function and make everyone be a 'subscriber'. This removes the social networking tool called being a 'friend' and leaves anyone attempting to reach out to people (me) with only the 'subscribe' function which makes me seem like a spammer. Of course the net result was no-one subscribed back (they were happy to be 'friends') and my traffic plummeted in the first week to a fraction of what it had been. Great.
The most frustrating thing about youtube now is that there's all these people saying exactly the same as me on commenting about favourite songs, but I've no effective way of reaching them.

4)GOOGLE+: I levelled with youtube (owned by Google) in thinking they must have tactically killed youtube as a networking site in order to lure people onto Google +. I joined a couple of weeks ago. Any site that offers to take on Facebook is a friend of mine! Unfortunately no-one uses it and it's a complete waste of time.

5) TWITTER: The last great white hope and, thankfully, one that appears to be working well. I've been on it only a few days and already I'm really enjoying it. I'm finding that the simple approach of short messages is the best way to communicate with people within this multitude of choice. Even better, by syncing it to Facebook I now don't have to go on Facebook. AND, better still, I can pretend I'm a personal friend of Sharron Davies, oops.


So there you go, have fun with whatever you're doing and remember: Do you know this person personally, and have you read our draconinan spam policy? xx


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