How to Promote
Your Favorite Performer
Folk
music resists commercial cliches - and commercial media channels.
Instead it depends on word of mouth. So how do you as a fan help
subvert the system and spread the word?
Difficulty
Level: hard
Time Required: years
Here's
How:
- As
a fan, remember you are your favorite artists' main publicity
agent.
- Name
recognition is a key problem - so even mentioning them is helpful.
If I call a club and the owner says, "Oh yes, someone just
mentioned you the other day," it can mean the difference
between "Call me back in a month" and "Let me
get my calendar."
- Call
your local radio station/folk show and request songs. If they
play something you like, call in and let them know you appreciate
it and hope to hear more.
- Request
your favorite artists at clubs and festivals.
- Ask
for your favorite artists' CDs at local record stores. If they
haven't heard of it, they assume no one else has either. If they
stock it, it might sell.
- If
you have a webpage, mention them there and link to their site.
See also How to Build a Fan Site.
- Now
this gets tricky. Depending on your favorite artist's situation,
it can make a big difference when and where you buy the CD and
when you request it on the radio. CD releases, even on small
labels, have a "street date" and the sales during the
week following tracked closely.
- Radio
stations have an "Add date" when they start putting
a CD in light, medium or heavy rotation. Your requests during
that time can be crucial.
- So
how do you find out this kind of arcane information? Ask the
artist at a concert. They probably know and can let you know
what will help them the most.
- Some record
labels and management companies will give out this info. You can contact
them through the internet.
- Call
your record store or radio station and find out when the album
is coming in. Often they'll get advance publicity about upcoming
releases.
- If
you want to get really into the muck, find out which of your
favorite radio stations report to Gavin. This is a ratings service,
like a national poll. Getting played on these stations can make
artists visible on this national survey.
- Find
out if your record store reports to Sound Scan. Similar concept
to Gavin.
- All
this stuff turn you off? Here are more folk-friendly approaches:
Learn a song and perform it, even just for friends.
- Bring
friends to concerts with you
- Make
compilation tapes and give them to your friends. This is a controversial
subject, but the bottom line is, the more this kind of music
is heard, the better. Think of it as your own private radio show.
Just make sure recipients know that if they like a song and listen
to it a lot, they'll buy it.
- Try
to organize opportunities at the local level. If you think an
artist would be appropriate for a school presentation or town
library series or band shell, get involved.
Notes:
- Don't
be a nuisance. DJs know if you are calling in every week to request
the same band.
- Persevere.
Pop acts come and go in 6 months. Folk artists' careers grow
year by year. Every bit helps.
Related
Features:
Hugh Blumenfeld, Editor
hugh@balladtree.com
Home
© 2001 Hugh Blumenfeld/The Ballad Tree