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To Tweet or Not to Tweet

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Conversations about whether musicians should use social networks tend to be completely polarised, and usually take no account of the fact that there are about as many different motivations for writing music as there are people writing it.

In this recent article, we see Universal Music suggesting that they are disinclined to work with acts who aren’t knee-deep in social media tech…

There may be some indie hipper-than-thou artists who want to let the music speak for itself. They are probably not for us. We believe an artist has a responsibility to communicate with their audience…We embrace the world of technology and the vast improvements in communication

While there may be some validity to this, (after all there are far too many people in music who labour under the delusion that ‘if you build it they will come’), I think that the use of this sort of technology must necessarily come down to a question of temperament.

We, (Blu Mar Ten), are pretty sociable people and we’ve always enjoyed talking to people who like our music, and other music in general for that matter. We’ve been chatting with ‘fans’ ever since this guy sent us our very first email of support some time back in the mid-nineties. Many of these people have stayed with us for a long time and some have become firm friends both on and off line, giving us access to a globally connected network of nice folk who all enjoy more or less the same things. As time has moved on we’ve embraced all the new forms of social media, not because we think we should but because we enjoy basic human interaction.

However we recognise that it’s not something that everyone likes, or should be involved in. There’s nothing worse than seeing someone trying to engage with their fans when they clearly don’t really want to be doing it. It’s as awkward as watching someone who’s been forced to go speed-dating trying to muddle through and make the most of it but ultimately cocking it all up. Engaging with people in a disingenuous fashion is as easy to spot in the virtual world as it is in the real world, and is just as repellent.

There’s an argument to say that artists shouldn’t get involved with their fans because it destroys any sense of mystique and distance that serves people like Prince so well. I think that’s probably true, but then when I look at the state of the music industry and the way in which avenues of compensation are being shut off to musicians on a virtually daily basis, (sales collapsing, sync opportunities being eroded, live work diminishing), it seems a shame to close off something that gives you pleasure. There’s little enough reward in this game as it is.

It’s my feeling that you should use these tools if you’re already predisposed to a sociable sort of behaviour, (many musicians are), and avoid them if you aren’t, (many musicians prefer being private). In either case you should accept that there will be benefits and disadvantages as a result of your (in)actions, but for anyone to suggest that musicians should do one or the other displays a woeful lack of understanding regarding artistic motivation.

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11 total comments on this postSubmit yours
  1. I didnt like Twitter at first but as time goes on people get better at it. Twitter seems to give the artist a str8 shot to the fans (if they want to follow.) I am amazed at how much I’ve learned from the people I follow. In conclusion, Twitter is another way for all of us to communicate, should we decide to. Its a tool to be used.

  2. Well put. A different rhythm for every musician.

  3. I guess another issue is it’s just hard to keep your privacy when you use ‘official’ networking for your private networking as well… :)

  4. I actually love that musicians use twitter, especially dnb artists because a lot of them don’t have websites to let you know where they’ll be playing or when their new album is dropping. I see it as an indispensable medium for marketing and promoting the music they worked so hard on creating. Keep using twitter blumarten, let me know what your up to and I’ll keep supporting your music. Great article.

  5. Social networking is all good, I get why some people don’t like it but

    “…he said that he chose not to sign a promising new group after they expressed apathy about social networking.”

    I didn’t like that part at all. Not signing a band because they don’t like to use myspace or facebook etc. is this where it’s at these days? Isn’t a band or an artist *supposed* to be signed for the music they make rather then computer skills?

  6. Depends if you see connecting with people as ‘computer skills’. That’s like describing a person who’s sociable in real life as having ‘mouth skills’.

    It may be unpalatable to people who enjoy the romantic image of the lone artist, hacking away at his craft until his brilliance is ‘discovered’, but the reality is that from the Renaissance onwards those who were good at things like hustling (*as well as being good at their art*) have always been the people who achieved greater success.

    The artist as an outsider is a pretty modern notion, and not necessarily a reflection of the true state of affairs.

  7. Interesting, and well put. What are ‘sync opportunities’?

  8. Placing music in games / films / tv etc..

  9. That’s true, social networking can only be a good thing if you use it well… and choose to use it. What suprised me is that such thing can have an effect on whether you get signed or not, I always considered it a personal choice rather then something you need to get picked up by the label. I would assume picking up a band/artist that knows how to utilize their web presence is a good thing for both but discarding them based on it is something I’m coming across for the first time

    Cool read man

  10. Oh, yeah it sucks that these opportunities are diminishing. I think at least two ways to entice people to buy a physical copy aren’t optimized in the music world. 1. videos, software and other extra features. 2. enhanced ‘fetish value’ of the object. A good example are the beautifully designed ‘objets d’art’ by raster-noton. Their website too. It is like a museum catalogue:
    http://www.raster-noton.net/

  11. Think, it depends on the statement you would to provide to your fans. If a artist would like to propagate some sort of mystical character, maybe then is socialising useless.
    I rather enjoy to get in touch with your process of creating music. This gets me (and for sure also other fans) the feeling of being part of the creativity and also be part of the music. So I have a more personal touch to your tracks.
    So it’s not just twitter, it’s about all social media (facebook, as well as the blog).
    Btw, the first track I got was Simon and Lisa in the game Midnight Club II. Since then I’m a little bit obsessed in your music.

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