15 Jul
Posted by elemental as Commentary, Marketing Tips, New Music Business Models
Even though I’m clearly firmly entrenched in the digital age, I’m still a little old school when it comes to music. What I mean is that while I buy digital music on a regular basis, I still love the idea of CDs- something tangible that gives me more than just the music - liner notes, pictures, lyrics, all the writing/production credits etc. There’s no doubt in my mind that the advent of digital music has devalued music and the consumption of it. Quantity has overtaken quality in many cases - how many free songs can I download, how much can I fit on my iPod, how many new artists can I find today. Nothing inherently wrong with any of that, but it just means that, in these terms, a single, solitary song is seen as disposable and barely worth paying for.
So it made me very happy to see what Lucas Gonze has been working on with his own music. He has created a dedicated page for a song “Frog In The Well” which adds a tremendous amount of context and value. There’s video as well as audio files, blog posts, sheet music, and background info. This is smart from several points of view and I’d love to see more artists doing this:
1) Additional SEO-able content for your site
2) With the addition of comments, you can create community around one song and further engage your audience.
3) Adding all this value for one song adds an additional emotional appeal to your music. Not only can fans see the amount of care and attention that has been invested on the part of the artist but it broadens their experience of the song and their emotional attachment to it.
4) By using a Creative Commons license and encouraging derivations, the life of the song is extended.
These are just some of the benefits of this type of song - enhancement and I look forward to see what Lucas and other artists will continue to do with this type of experiment.
If you are an artist and are doing something similar, or implement a similar method to Lucas, feel free to drop me a line.
Lucas has also taken this concept a step further and published on his blog a manifesto for the song page which includes ideas for structured implementation of this concept. I highly recommend reading this
One Response
benefits of song pages « the Wordpress of Lucas Gonze
July 17th, 2008 at 5:52 pm
1[...] July 17, 2008 Reblogging elemental-consulting on how dedicated pages add value to single songs: [...]
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