Glitchhog wrote:"I don't make pony music because I enjoy it, i make it because it's gotten me more of an audience."
A true musician doesn't take advantage of an audience like that. There are plenty of places you can post your stuff that aren't pony-related. It may not get you a million views straight off the line, but using ponies as a gateway to fame without actually enjoying doing so isn't smart, it's just offensive imo. What do you think the publics general reaction to your music will be if they discover you only used pony for 'the views' and not because you enjoy it? Your music is excellent and you have the potential to go far if you get your name out there. Have you:
Signed up for every music forum/radio site/etc. you can find?
Posted your music on Reddit? From my experience, non-pony subreddits get more traffic when it comes to music.
Ultimate-Guitar is a great place to post original stuff.
BandCamp and SoundCloud are also excellent hubs for hosting your content.
Mixcloud couldn't hurt, either. There's always the chance someone will find your stuff there.
Keep active contact with your fans. They'll respect you more for it.
I could go on and on. The internet offers almost endless opportunities to showcase your talent if you know where to look. You WON'T get famous overnight. Hell, I've been at this for 4 months, and I've only recently been receiving attention. And I'm fine with that. It means things are happening and it gives me more drive to push myself harder. You currently have more subscribers than me AND you have a video that's hit the 15,000 view mark. That's a big achievement. I need to be blunt here, because I can't say it any other way, but you're being extremely selfish. My honest advice is to get out there and make your name known. Post on forums, offer advice, ask for criticism on your work, give criticism to others, etc. Use what attention ponies HAVE given you to push yourself further without them (unless you genuinely DO enjoy making pony tunes, which so far, from what you've said, isn't the case). It just seems you "want it now", as Applebloom would say. I'm sorry, but that isn't going to happen. You want a career in music? Expect to have to give it EVERYTHING YOU HAVE. Wallowing in self-pity and playing the victim card never worked.
Sorry for being so blunt, but that's sadly the way it is.
Codeum wrote:How is it not the way to go? you want me to just go "oh yeah lalala this is so much fun. I haven't eaten in days, but this is just so much fun. I love making music that only a handful of people will hear!
TheSunAndTheRainfall wrote:Codeum wrote:How is it not the way to go? you want me to just go "oh yeah lalala this is so much fun. I haven't eaten in days, but this is just so much fun. I love making music that only a handful of people will hear!
Yes.
Music as a business is a heartbreaking affair. It's a road riddled not with bumps, but with huge gaping holes and mountains. Let's propose two hypothetic scenarios. For the first one, I'm going to venture a guess and say that you want to "make it" in music, and by "make it", you mean being able to depend economically only on income coming from your music work. There's only three ways this can happen: good connections (and money), super good luck, or really hard work.
The super good luck thing I think is kind of what happened with most of the famous brony musicians. Their work happened to surface at a right time and in a right place to grant them the spot they now hold in the community. It was all a combination of exposure to the right people, right timing, right content, and yes, why not, talent. Sadly, this kind of thing happens spontaneously, and nobody will ever be able to force that. I don't think many brony (or non brony) musicians will find themselves in this situation any time soon, and if they do, rest assured that it will be a happy accident.
The really hard work part is the most common of them all. It usually starts with a guy, some ideas in his head, and something he truly loves, and it's the measure of his love what will determine how far he gets. It's really freaking hard to convince people to invest even a little of their time on you, and more often than not people won't even care, but it's only through perseverance that you can build a circle of people who are interested in your ideas, and who will stay tuned to them.
If you have good connections and good money, you don't even need talent to make it. You're surrounded by people who can provide it for you, who can put your face and your work out there, and you're only a little nudge away from instant fame, and recognition, and serious cash. But then again, everyone in this situation is probably already dirty rich, so there might not be as much of a drive for money as for fame. But that's a thing for later.
I have a friend who is stuck between the last two scenarios I've mentioned. His family has some decent money, and he's already made some pretty good connections both because of his money, and because of his trying to get as involved as he can in the commercial music scene over here. He has tons of equipment, he know people who can help him polish his sound, he's a super talented musician, and he's got an incredible heart for it. Yet he still has trouble landing gigs. He hardly ever gets published anywhere. He's farther along than pretty much everyone I know, yet he still isn't close to making it, yet he will never give up, no matter how discouraged he becomes, because in the end he's still doing what he loves. He has many musician friends with worse luck than him, who are already in their late twenties, still playing local bars on Thursday nights, barely scraping to at least have something to eat, often working really lame jobs because they wouldn't have a roof over their heads if they didn't. But they haven't given up.
Now, let's go to the second scenario. I'll venture another guess and assume you're doing this because you want attention, which seems more likely, from what I've read. Let me ask you a question first; how are you going to know how much attention is enough? Would having the same amount of subscribers as Omni make you happy? If so, why? What happens after that, anyway?
Doing things without any motivation other than attention is a surefire way to get disappointed and frustrated fast. You may already be aware of this. On this front, I can't really offer any help, I can only advise you to rethink your motives, and what you expect out of this, and more importantly, why you want this, and what will happen after you get it, if you ever do.
I'm going to go on a little tangent here, and say that this reminds me a bit of something I was told a while back, about why there's so much corruption in regards to administration of money, at least here in this country. Ever since we're little, we're told from every front that we need to make money the thing we base our lives around. We won't get anywhere in life if we don't have a lot of money, we will never be anyone if we don't have a lot of money, our lives will be worth nothing if we didn't make as much money as we could. And some of us do buy into this idea. But the thing is, money is hard to get. So when money isn't handed to these people on a silver plate, they start looking for easier ways to get it, and it eventually descends into an "oh, so nobody will give me my money? Well, I'm going to take it anyway, no matter who I screw over in the process, because it's the thing I want the most in life" affair, and everything just goes to hell then.
Now, I'm not comparing you to these people, but you do seem desperate for attention. Unfortunately (or maybe fortunately?) for you, it's not something you can just go and seize.
To wrap this up. Your music is greatly enjoyed by a lot of people. You have a decent amount of attention, yet you don't seem to be happy with it. Furthermore, you seem to be doing music around MLP just to get an audience, but doing it doesn't make you happy, and it leaves you feeling even more unfulfilled when you don't get the response you expected. So when one approach isn't working, the most logical thing to do would be trying a different one, right? Yet it seems to me that in your case, a change of appreach in the music you make would not make a big difference (and that is what I tried to illustrate with this entire post), so it has to be something else that needs to be fixed.
I wish you the best of luck in finding a solution to this.
EDIT: looking back on this post, I realize that it may not have much to do with anything after all. Codeum, I apologize if I completely missed the mark. Oh well, if anyone can still take anything from this anyway, then it's all good.
Codeum wrote:I'm going to say it one more time; I just want to not have to worry about how I'm going to feed myself every night. I love music, it kept me sane when a lot of other people would surely have been reduced to attempting suicide. I like electronic music from Europe such as trance because of the feeling and the complexity and the amazing vocalists associated with it. I want to be able to make that kind of music and fill everyone else with the same kind of joy I feel when I listen to the music I love so much. I don't want attention, I'm not selfish, I want to share everything I can with everyone I can. Even now, when I have close to nothing, I still continue to give. I have a feeling I will continue to give no matter what happens to me. Is it too much to ask to have a large enough fan base that will allow me to live and continue to share my soul with all of my heart? I figured that by gaining popularity amongst bronies, somebody would notice me, from there on, I'd have enough support to let my music spread without having to be featured on that silly site. As soon as I start getting more than, say, 2,000 on a non pony track within a month of it being posted, I won't push so hard to make everything pony. Honestly, it was fun when I did flutterstep, it was fun when I did sparklehouse, and it was even still a tad fun when I did the smile remix. The dilemma is this; When you have nothing but sweet juicy chicken for every meal, after a couple of days you just want something else. You have nothing against the chicken, but it just gets old. Will I continue to write pony music even though it frustrates me? Yes, because I feel like I'm finally getting somewhere. I finally see a degree of people enjoying what I create with my own hands. Thats my spiritual food. the view count will just happen to help me eat physical food.
CommandSpry wrote:Early Brony musicians got very popular because it was new; fresh; and because they are very talented. But you can be as talented as you want in the Brony Community now, you won't get like, 5000 subscribers in a week. It's a much slower process, but I'm not saying you can't be a "famous" Brony musician even now.And almost all of us, if not all, do this for the love of the show and making music, and letting our music out to the brony community to give something back to it.
Codeum wrote:That last post.
AJTheEngineer wrote:Hey guys, EqD Prelistener head here. I was directed here after a coworker of mine was having trouble writing a rejection letter for the "Pink Guppy" track after seeing this thread. So instead I'm just gonna go over everything myself.
The EqD Prelistener system was established to lighten the load off Seth as well as to bring in system that contained some of the pros that are very knowledgable about music as well as unbiased and not afraid to turn something down if it doesn't meet the standards. We then make an attempt to write rejection letters to whoever we turn a song down from. Sometimes we don't get them all, we get submitted a lot of songs so it get's difficult. Anyways, there is a lot of info that I went over in another thread that was linked earlier in this thread. Check that out if you wish.
Anyways, on to the topic at hand. Bro, we all want people to listen to our music, but sometimes that just isn't the way it is. I've been at this for quite a while now and I've only got 2,000 subs. Omni on the other hand is getting close to 10,000. Am I jealous? No. Because I don't need fame to motivate me to do music. Becoming famous is possibly the worst motivation to make music because often, you will not get famous. And therefore you react to not getting famous by quitting. Wrong move. You just keep working at it and working at it until something happens. I joined this fandom in early October and didn't start to make music until the end of that month or so. So I came in much later while making music in a fairly unpopular genre.
However, I kept at it, didn't let any sort of non-fame get me down because I knew that there were a ton of musicians in the fandom and it was not gonna be easy to get attention. I can say that after having kept working at it for months and months and months, I finally have somewhat of an audience. I still don't really have much of an audience and I will never be as big as Omni or Archie because it's a genre based system. As sad as it is, bronies like certain genres more than others, and orchestral is nowhere near as high up there as most electronic music. So, I deal with it and keep making music because I enjoy it and I've met amazing people in the process.
Being rejected should not be a demotivating factor. Being rejected should be the best motivation to keep trying harder. If you get featured on EqD and you get some subscribers out of it, be thankful for each and every sub you get because that is one sub that many other people were not able to get. All in all, be thankful for what you receive, rather than demanding for more.
Codeum wrote:Pfft what makes you think I'm quitting? I"m just upset because I taught that bastard omni everything I knew about mixing and composition.I'm just wondering why I ain't good enough.
Lavender_Harmony wrote:*Stuff*
Return to General Music Feedback and Advice
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 13 guests