Facebook Or Twitter For Musicians |
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Facebook Or Twitter For Musicians |
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Sep 17 2013, 03:06 PM |
My answer is also BOTH!! I have been using facebook for many years an give a good use to it. In the last months I discovered the sense of twitter, I had the account since 2011 but I rarely post there. Nowadays I'm trying to use it many times a day. I think that Facebook should be actualized twice a day, and twitter is the "minute by minute" of the musician. You can contact different people with them so both are important to use.
Follow me: @gabileopardi -------------------- My lessons
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Sep 22 2013, 11:21 AM |
Honestly, GMC is the perfect place for that kind of thing FACEBOOK/TWITTER can be a good way to follow bands/brands/etc. that you like, to get it all in one spot and such. But for what your talking about, youtube for vid hosting and GMC for sharing progress is a great combo I'd say dip your toe in to Facebook/twitter for giggles and see what you think.. This is entirely separate from what Taka started out with in the thread though. In terms of Social Media for the purpose of PROMOTION OF YOUR MUSIC and such, it's more about coverage. Leaving off one of the major social media outlets is just shooting yourself in the foot. But it seems folks are mixing their personal use of social media with their Pro/Semi Pro use of Social Media which are two very separate things IMHO Todd So, what you are saying is that it is better to be on a bunch of social networks than to focus all your energy into one or two? I think I will do that, and use something like Hootsuite to manage it. I still do have a website, so I think that it is a good idea to have that as my central 'hub' on the internet. The website also has links to all the networks I'm on, so if someone goes to the website, there's a good chance they'll be on at least one of them. Todd is right - on FB, you will probably encounter a lot of folks that can throw mean stuff at you, simply because they can't do more and they are living frustrated lives behind a computer. But, in my opinion, you should try everything It's always cool to fish for reactions and opinions, but! BUT! Never ever, let yourself put down by mean people - you have no reason to, as I have seen you are steadily growing into a fine player! Yes, I used to take criticism and negative stuff personally, but frankly now I don't care. If they don't like my music that is fine and I respect that, but then they shouldn't feel the need to have to tell me that its bad. Agree'd I think it's not Twitter and Facebook that are killing music, but it's the massive amount of disrespectful users around these social networks that ruin music. Honestly, if Facebook and Twitter was full of people like here at GMC, it would be a great tool, and you'd be able to develop friendships with people through yours or each others music. |
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Sep 22 2013, 05:04 PM |
I don't think it's one or the other, Facebook and Twitter users are a symbiotic downward spiral which thrives on competitive shallowness in any field. Many people use Facebook to measure themselves against others, many also do that with youtube. Sure you can try to argue that some people use it responsibly but that doesn't make it much better. It's like saying that newspapers are informative because they sometimes include factual information, when the reality is that the amount of such information is lost in a sea of exformation(yea it's a word). Also the way everything is angled on the internet, newspapers, tv, whatever social media you want is to an insane degree. People do 1000 takes on a song and edit the hell out of it to "look good" and get a higher social networking "ranking". It's all politics/sociology, and in the end I can't support it. "The business of the journalists is to destroy the truth, to lie outright, to pervert, to vilify, to fawn at the feet of mammon, and to sell his country and his race for his daily bread. You know it and I know it, and what folly is this toasting an independent press? "We are the tools and vassals of rich men behind the scenes. We are the jumping jacks, they pull the strings and we dance. Our talents, our possibilities and our lives are all the property of other men. We are intellectual prostitutes." -John Swinton (ex-New York Times) And I thought I was a little dark "Facebook and Twitter users are a symbiotic downward spiral which thrives on competitive shallowness in any field." That's a great line - I'm definitely using it! -------------------- - Ken Lasaine
https://soundcloud.com/klasaine2/foolin-the-clouds https://soundcloud.com/klasaine2/surfin-at-the-country-hop Soundcloud assorted ... https://soundcloud.com/klasaine3 New record ... http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/kenlasaine Solo Guitar ... https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXZh...5iIdO2tpgtj25Ke Stuff I'm on ... https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXZh...b-dhb-4B0KgRY-d |
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Sep 30 2013, 04:57 PM |
You had to be REALLY, REALLY GOOD to make something of yourself in pre- internet age... I wouldn't go that far. As one who's been involved with learning, performing, recording, teaching and generally making a living in music since before the 'internet age' I can tell you that there was just as much shite produced and thrown out there then as there is now. It just gets seen/heard quicker, easier and more ubiquitously now. It seems(?) like it sticks around longer because it's so easy to archive and it's archived by so many. Consequently it makes it into the mainstream view and consciousness relatively quickly because so many see it almost instantaneously. In the old days if say the new Deep Purple record sucked, it would never get past the first round of judges: rockers, rock radio DJs and the guys behind the counter at the record store. Your parents and/or ad execs would never get exposed to it and it just faded away to be forgotten forever. On the other hand a record like Tommy or Nevermind or Joshua Tree or Van Halen 1 continued to become more popular with a more varied demographic until it essentially kinda re-routed pop music and even culture to some degree. *Those are just examples - whether you personally like those albums or not is immaterial. The 'filter' was the slower speed at which information was disseminated. Good stuff kept going and crap burned itself out. Another example: in 1973 (among many many many others) these four records were released - Floyd's Dark side of the Moon, Zep's Houses of the Holy the De Franco Family's Heartbeat, it's a Lovebeat and Clint Holmes' Playground in My Mind. I'm sure we all know two of those but all were 'hits'. This post has been edited by klasaine: Oct 2 2013, 04:35 AM -------------------- - Ken Lasaine
https://soundcloud.com/klasaine2/foolin-the-clouds https://soundcloud.com/klasaine2/surfin-at-the-country-hop Soundcloud assorted ... https://soundcloud.com/klasaine3 New record ... http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/kenlasaine Solo Guitar ... https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXZh...5iIdO2tpgtj25Ke Stuff I'm on ... https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXZh...b-dhb-4B0KgRY-d |
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Oct 2 2013, 04:27 PM |
That's why the big pro bands still have promo people - agents, managers, press agents, etc. and the smaller acts have 'street teams' (big ones have those too).
This post has been edited by klasaine: Oct 2 2013, 04:28 PM -------------------- - Ken Lasaine
https://soundcloud.com/klasaine2/foolin-the-clouds https://soundcloud.com/klasaine2/surfin-at-the-country-hop Soundcloud assorted ... https://soundcloud.com/klasaine3 New record ... http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/kenlasaine Solo Guitar ... https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXZh...5iIdO2tpgtj25Ke Stuff I'm on ... https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXZh...b-dhb-4B0KgRY-d |
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