How AI Can Help Independent Musicians Promote and Create Unique Content

How AI Can Help Independent Musicians Promote and Create Unique Content

From Music Discovery to Interactive Experiences, AI-Powered Tools and Services to Take Your Music to the Next Level

As the music industry evolves, independent musicians face more competition than ever. However, with the advancement of technology, especially in the field of artificial intelligence (AI), there is now a plethora of tools available to help independent musicians promote their music and stand out in a crowded market. In this blog post, we will explore some ways that AI can help independent musicians promote their music and create unique content, as well as suggest specific tools and services that can be used to achieve these goals.

Music Promotion and Discovery

  1. Music Discovery: One of the biggest challenges for independent musicians is getting their music heard by the right people. AI-powered music discovery platforms, such as Spotify’s Discover Weekly or Pandora’s Music Genome Project, can help independent 

musicians promote their music by suggesting it to listeners likely to be interested in their genre. These platforms use algorithms to analyze the music and listener data to create personalized playlists and radio stations.

2.   Music Promotion: Another challenge for independent musicians is promoting their music to a broad audience. AI-powered music promotion tools, such as Music Gateway or RepostExchange, can help independent musicians to promote their music by connecting them with music bloggers, influencers, and playlist curators. These platforms use algorithms to match independent musicians with the right promotion partners based on their music style and target audience.

3.   Music Analysis: AI can also help independent musicians by analyzing their music and providing feedback on how to improve it. AI-powered music analysis tools, such as Amper Music or AIVA, can help independent musicians identify patterns in their music, such as chord progressions, melody, and structure, and provide feedback on improving it.

Creating Unique and Engaging Content

  1. Generating Lyrics: AI-powered lyrics generation tools, such as Jukedeck or Amper Music, can help independent musicians write song lyrics by suggesting phrases and sentences based on a specific theme or genre. 

2.   Creating Music Videos: AI-powered music video creation tools like Wibbitz or Adobe Premiere Rush can help independent musicians create engaging and visually appealing videos. These tools use machine learning algorithms to analyze the music and create a video synchronized with the song’s beat and melody. Independent musicians can use these videos to promote their music on social media platforms like YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram.

3.    Interactive Music Experience: Independent musicians can also use AI to create interactive music experiences for their fans. AI-powered music platforms like OpenAI Jukebox and Amper Music allow musicians to create interactive music experiences by enabling users to play with different elements of the music, such as tempo, melody, and instrumentation. This will enable musicians to create unique and engaging experiences for their fans and also helps them get real-time feedback on their music.

In conclusion, AI is a powerful tool that can help independent musicians to promote their music, create unique content and stand out in a crowded market. With the right tools and strategies, independent musicians can use AI to reach new audiences, analyze their music and create interactive and engaging experiences for their fans. So don’t wait any longer.

The 4 New Audience Metrics on Spotify for Artists 2022

The 4 New Audience Metrics on Spotify for Artists 2022

Spotify for Artists makes it easy for musicians, managers, and labels to study the behavior of their listeners. Every update Spotify introduces brings the online platform closer to becoming the best streaming playground for artists, data-wise. 

The Swedish streaming service recently added four spanking new engagement stats on Spotify for Artists. In this article, you will learn how to access, interpret, and utilize these four stats to the benefit of your artist brand.

Spotify Audience Metrics: Old versus New

It is not uncommon for artists to put out documentaries of how they struggled in their formative years, a good example is the off-season documentary film recently released by Jermaine Cole.

Like an artist, the journey of becoming a fan can be very interesting. Some listeners get converted via late-night talk show performances, word of mouth, YouTube reviews, Instagram influencers, Facebook communities, Reddit groups, Spotify Playlists, Marquee Ads, and many more. The list is endless, but the discovery avenues that matter most are the ones that can be pinpointed, traced, and reused. That is why Spotify for Artists is a powerful tool for building a cult-like fanbase.

In the past, Spotify only provided artists and labels with conventional engagement metrics such as listens, clicks, impressions, and reach. However, they got negative feedback from artists complaining about the lack of depth and key metrics on the data provided on Spotify for artists. This is still a small improvement in the Beta test phase but it’s already available and better than before.

The New Spotify Audience Engagement Stats

It is true that your artistry is defined by your personality and personal experiences. However, as you grow in this cut-throat music game, your decisions and art will be colored by the audiences your music attracts. You would have to speak their language, connect with them, tour their various locations, dress like them and maybe give them a shoutout in your songs. To do any of these, you must first know them.

Under the “Audience” section on Spotify for artists, you can access your listeners’ data. You can limit the data to a specific timeframe. Here, you can know the “source of streams”, as your streams can come from your profile and

catalog, playlists, library, and other undefined sources. The monthly listeners’ data is updated daily to help artists improve their Spotify campaigns, but it shows the number of users who stream your song(s) during a 28-day duration.

Also, you have access to the demographics of your listeners such as age, country/city, gender, and predilections.

Streams / Listener

The average number of times your listeners played your songs. A higher streams/listener indicates a higher audience engagement.

Saves

The number of times people saved your music to their library, showing an intention to listen again in the future.

One advice artists get when they ask for the best way to grow their Spotify presence is to up their save rate and start a pre-save campaign before the release. So does it mean to save a song on Spotify?

Your song is automatically saved to a Spotify user’s library when the person likes your music by clicking the heart icon or playlists your song.

Playlist Adds

The number of times people added your music to their playlists, showing an intention to listen again in the future. Now, you have easy access to the total number of playlists your songs were added to.

Before, you only had access to the top 100 playlists your songs are on. These playlists are arranged according to the number of streams amassed from them. If you are checking your Spotify for Artists dashboard via the web, your song needs not less than 2 listeners from a playlist to be visible on your end. If you are using the Spotify for Artists mobile application, your song needs not less than 25 streams for the playlist to be visible to you.

Intent rate

The percentage of your listeners who saved or playlisted your music, showing an intention to listen again in the future. In the eyes of the Spotify algorithm, higher intent rate indicates a higher audience engagement.

The intent rate measures the percentage of listeners that saved or playlisted your song. A high intent rate shows that many listeners like your song and are interested in listening again in the future. According to a Spotify study, an increase in interest rate resulted in a 250% boost in the number of streams amassed by several artists six months after.

Final Thoughts

Artists like Travis Scott and Justin Beiber can sell-out shows (online and offline) at any time and day because they have built a cult-like following. The only way to do this is to build a strong relationship with your fans and these new stats can be used as great indicators to measure yours. Spotify is not just giving artists the avenue to get new listeners but also the chance to build a reliable fanbase. Seize the opportunity!

The music industry and its romance with the Metaverse

The music industry and its romance with the Metaverse

99 cents does not do justice to the hours of songwriting and vocal practice artists invest in their craft. While the streaming era has increased the availability of music to people around the globe, artists are getting paid a tiny fraction of the revenue generated from their music catalogues. Tech companies like Spotify and Apple have made music practically free so that artists have to rely on merchandise sales, features, and tours to make a decent living. Two factors responsible for the underpayment of artists are the centralised industrial system and capitalist interest. Many independent artists believe that the Metaverse can be the remedy to both problems by offering a decentralised system where artists have control over the price tag on their music and create more opportunities for artists to make digital sales of virtual goods that require little production costs. 

How the metaverse is influencing pop culture

The Metaverse or Web 3.0 is a meshwork of 3D virtual worlds. It further fulfils the promise of the internet – which is to connect the human race. It allows the “existence” of unlimited structures and experiences that are not possible in the actual world. Also, people can assume different body forms, even other animal structures, in the Metaverse. In summary, the Metaverse brings human freedom to another level. Recently, the music industry has been flaunting two main elements of the Metaverse, namely NFTs and cryptocurrencies.

The NFT niche has been growing in popularity over the past six months. Chances are you have come across social media accounts with dope 

Music Metav

apes as their profile picture on Twitter, Facebook or Instagram. While most of the copycat versions have no Blockchain value, the original bored ape non-fungible tokens (NFTs) are popular among celebrities. The Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) NFTs were bought by artists such as Snoop Dogg, Justin Bieber, Post Malone, Paris Hilton. Eminem bought Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) NFT for $450,000 on the 30th of December, 2021. The major selling point of the Bored Ape NFT is that the owners have full commercialisation rights to the ape art, meaning they can use it in any entertainment project, be it music, movies.  television, or novel. In addition, the users have access to Yacht Club and a digital graffiti board called “THE  BATHROOM”.

Apart from investing in virtual art projects, musicians can release their music as NFTs. One artist who has successfully put out an NFT project is Tory Lanez. On releasing the NFT album, When it’s dark, Lanez announced that he sold over 1 million copies, meaning he went platinum in 24 hours. The NFT was sold for a dollar per copy. One beautiful thing about releasing a project as an NFT is that core fans can get multiple copies of the project, making it easier for artists to reach certain milestones. Why would anyone buy a thousand copies of the same album? Well, the idea sounds ridiculous, but the logic behind such a move is pretty solid. People who buy multiple copies get it so they can resell it for a higher value. For instance, only one million copies of the album, “when it’s dark album”, was produced and sold on the day of release. To listen to the project, you need to buy it from a current NFT holder. These new owners can make profits off their virtual assets. It’s an opportunity for fans to make money while supporting their favourite artists (a feature that the current DSPs like Deezer, Spotify and Apple do not offer). For every NFT resold, the artist gets a share, making a very lucrative idea.

While other artists have been supportive of the metaverse idea, one artist who does not seem impressed by the idea of virtual assets is none other than Kanye West. According to an Instagram post on the official Kanye West page, the Donda crooner said, “Stop asking me to do NFT’s. I’m not finna co-sign. For now, I’m not on that wave. I make music and products in the real world.”

The Early Adopters

Given the negative attitude of established companies to cryptocurrency, one would expect traditional labels to toss away the idea of the Metaverse. Well, to our surprise, they are the early adopters rather than the laggards. Like two sides of the same coin, what seems to the indie artists as a route to freedom is viewed by the big labels as a means of expanding their influence and of course, making more dough. It must be noted that the metaverse can be a centralised tyranny or a decentralised haven of freedom. However, Blockchain Metaverse is decentralised. 

Warner Music Group, the parent label of Atlantic records, Warner records, Elektra Music Group, and Parlophone, has partnered with Sandbox to create the first music-themed in the Sandbox decentralised Metaverse.

The giant label aims to create virtual musical experiences and concerts in the Metaverse. Also, the label announced that they will be selling virtual LANDS close to their WMG property.

Snoop Dogg recently purchased his former label, Death Row Records, making him a certified label owner. Like WMG, Snoop Dogg announced his intention to convert Death Row into an NFT record label. According to Snoop, “We (Death Row Records) will be putting out artists through the metaverse. Just like we broke the industry when we was (sic) the first independent  (label) to be major. I want to be the first major (label) in the metaverse.” 

The race to be the first label to “break into” the Metaverse is on. And we hope the move benefits the artists as much as it enriches the labels.

Since Mark Zuckerberg dropped a bombshell by announcing his venture into the metaverse and his company’s name change from Facebook to Meta, the metaverse has stirred a debate online. People who antagonised the Metaverse are worried about safety and the rifting effect of a 3D immersive technology, especially when pioneered by Facebook, a company that has a bad history with data security on its platform. On the other hand, the early adopters (in this case, labels and artists) are concerned about the financial opportunities and endless possibilities the Metaverse presents. Although the concept is not new, Zuckerberg has helped bring it to the limelight.

How to recognize fake Spotify Playlists

How to recognize fake Spotify Playlists

Don’t get scammed by crooks who disguise themselves as organic playlist curators. Instead, become a mobile bot streams detector by following the steps discussed in this guide.

There is no automated app for checking the validity of Spotify streams garnered from playlists of interest. Hence, artists must rely on instincts, logic, or common sense to differentiate between bot-supported playlists and organic ones. Contrary to popular belief, it is pretty easy to detect fake playlists, but you must be quite familiar with the techniques discussed in this guide.

Who is the Biggest Loser?

When a desperate artist pays for a thousand bot streams on Fiverr or a sketchy website, who is the biggest loser. Spotify or the artists?

To solve this puzzle, we must understand how Spotify makes its money and payout model.

According to Eric Dott, an associate professor of music theory at the University of Texas, Spotify is not getting mad at artists who use artificial streaming because technically, they have nothing to lose. He maintains that creating systems that eliminate bot streaming might be more expensive than letting it remain on the platform. Although Spotify has called out a few artists who used artificial streaming, they have little incentive to go on a massive campaign against entities that use bots to boost their streams.

In his words, the money lost to artificial streaming affects the musicians’ share, not Spotify’s share.

This is because Spotify makes money from subscriptions of fans and ads, but artists only get paid per stream. So the amount paid to artists depends on the net revenue from advertisements and premium subscription fees.

A dollar gained for fake Spotify streams is a dollar lost by innocent artists who get their streams from organic listeners.

Follow the steps given below to detect fake Spotify playlists.

Check for an unreasonable spike in followers count via Chartmetric

Chartmetric is a data analysis tool that can be used to see how well or how bad a Spotify playlist is performing. You can also get data on how an artist’s account is performing. It is a freemium tool, but you can check any Spotify playlist’s followers’ count graph for free.

Search for the playlist name or paste the playlist link in the search bar on the Chartmetric website. Look out for any sign of ridiculous increase or decrease in followers’ count on Chartmetric. You can ask the curator to explain what influenced the increase in followers. If the curator cannot provide a tenable answer, assuming the followers are bots is safe.

Calculate the ratio of the monthly listeners to the number of followers

You can get the ratio by dividing the number of monthly listeners by the number of followers. Round off the results to get whole figures. The normal ratios are 1:1, 2:1, 3:1 up to 26:1. New artists that are just gaining clout can have a ratio of 50:1. However, artists who bought fake streams can have ratios of 100:1 up to 200:1.  In a case where an artist with 100,000 monthly listeners has 50 followers, know that something is wrong somewhere.

Check for random recommended artists

Based on the artist’s playlists, Spotify recommends related artists on the artist’s profile page. However, if an artist gets plays from bot-supported playlists, the Spotify recommendation would be incorrect.

Ask the playlist curator for proof of organic growth

Most fake playlist curators would want you to believe they are getting streams organically. Ask them about the growth process. Real playlists curators use influencer marketing, cross-playlisting platforms, Facebook ads, and blog placements to boost organic streams. If a playlist curator claims he or she is using Facebook ads, ask for proof. If they cannot provide you with evidence, there is a high probability that they are getting plays from bots.

Ask other artists who have been featured on the playlist via social media DMs

If you got duped by an Amazon manufacturer, you would be motivated to drop a bad review and report them to Amazon. Unfortunately, although artists can report playlists to Spotify, there is no way to drop bad reviews since the act of soliciting for playlist features is illegal on Spotify.  

You can reach out to artists featured on the playlist to know their experience with the playlist curator. If they say the streams are fake, it is most likely fake.

Check the top cities of the artists on the playlist

In the past, Spotify had a feature that allowed anyone to check the top cities where an artist’s listeners are based.

More often than not, the top cities of artists should come from well-populated areas. The exceptions are artists who are famous in small cities. Such artists might be able to pull off impressive numbers from their hometowns. Also, artists trending in a particular town might experience a sudden spike in streams coming from that region.

If the top cities shown on the Spotify profiles of various artists that are featured on a particular playlist are the same or the top cities have small populations, the playlist is fake.

Spotify removed the feature some weeks ago due to unknown reasons. The data visible on the about section of artists are the number of followers, bio, playlists, and the number of streams on recent tracks.

Final Thoughts

If you have been added to a fake playlist and discover that the listeners’ location doesn’t add up via your Spotify for artists dashboard, ask to be removed from the playlist and report them to Spotify.

How Tidal is Becoming the Best Streaming App for DJs

How Tidal is Becoming the Best Streaming App for DJs

While Spotify is trying to play catch-up in 2021, Tidal is already years ahead of other streaming platforms.

In 2018, Tidal announced its partnership with Dubset, a rights clearance startup that has previously collaborated with Spotify and Apple in 2016. The deal will help Tidal monetize DJ mixes and payout royalties to artists. Dubset, formerly known as The Future FM, is affiliated with popular labels like SonyMusic, Merlin, and Warner Music — making it easier for Tidal to get tracks cleared via the online mixed-audio distribution platform.

Decriminalizing the production of DJ mixes

The music industry hates bootlegs, mashups, or DJ mixes because the production of such materials encourages illegal usage of rights holders’ music and piracy. Although artists heavily criticize its use, the DJ mixset is an integral part of EDM, dancehall, and afrobeat genres. The inability to create innovative ways

to satisfy both the users of these genres and the artists pushes millions of music listeners to pirate bay (an online index of digital content that allows users to share entertainment files such as albums or mixtapes, and DJ mixes).

Dubset scans and detects the songs in a DJ mix, making it easy for Tidal to pay artists and DJs.

With the aid of a proprietary software named MixSCAN, Dubset can identify the songs and their respective rights holders. Before a mix can be analysed, it is run via MixSCAN, which identifies audio content using audio fingerprinting and textual fingerprinting. Dubset production engineers further analyse the report of the software. A mix that has gone through the three-step identification process will be given a special mixDNA. The mixDNA consists of metadata that helps identify the tracks used in a particular mix.

A new dawn at Tidal

Following Jack Dorsey’s acquisition of the majority stake at Tidal for $297 million, there seems to be an instant turnaround in the way things are run in Tidal.

The audio-streaming platform initially created by Hov is fast becoming the DJ’s favorite DSP. Tidal made two brilliant changes that are aimed at making the lives of amateur and professional DJs easier. These two changes are;

Equipping DJs with more DJ apps

Tidal has seen a growth in the population of DJs using its DJ software integration service. In response to this development, Tidal announced that it would integrate more DJ apps such as Edjing Mix and Hercules’ DJUCED. Currently, the Tidal app houses integrated apps like Rekordbox, Algoriddim Djay, and Serato.

Providing new sets of DJ-friendly playlists

Any run-of-the-mill playlist can keep regular listeners on the Tidal app for hours, but DJs require more. The audio-streaming platform added BPM-specific, artist-curated, instrumental, and era-specific playlists to its platform to make DJing easier using Tidal.

Final Thoughts

Tidal is doing everything within its capacity to keep growing its DJ fanbase. By creating a safe space for DJs to operate in today’s royalty-driven world, Tidal is improving the music experience on its platform.

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