Collaborating online
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- Rob Lorenzo
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Collaborating online
One of my personal objectives over the next few years/forever is to collaborate more, globally and remotely. This is an incredible opportunity.
Having enjoyed many years of rehearsing, writing, recording and playing out loud with many (often local to where I am)folks I am very used to collaborating and love the results collaboration brings.
Nowadays I'm loving the DIY musician, recording and writing at home approach and would love to explore and exploit the opportunities technology and TAXI are giving us.
So what are peoples experiences/thoughts of collaborating online, for example?
I'm interested to know people's experiences with, for example, esession.com
Are you on it? Have you used it and how did it work for you? What other resources can we use?
What other approaches have you tried?
Appreciate your thoughts and ideas!
Having enjoyed many years of rehearsing, writing, recording and playing out loud with many (often local to where I am)folks I am very used to collaborating and love the results collaboration brings.
Nowadays I'm loving the DIY musician, recording and writing at home approach and would love to explore and exploit the opportunities technology and TAXI are giving us.
So what are peoples experiences/thoughts of collaborating online, for example?
I'm interested to know people's experiences with, for example, esession.com
Are you on it? Have you used it and how did it work for you? What other resources can we use?
What other approaches have you tried?
Appreciate your thoughts and ideas!
- Fullertime
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Re: Collaborating online
I personally do most of my "co-writes" via email.
However, all of the people I collaborate with are friends of mine that I have at one time or another done a physical session with. I haven't used a "service" or "forum" for this process yet but I'm not opposed to it.
I just think with songwriting, it's important to have a relationship with the other person so you can be honest and understand the artistic intricacies involved in the process.
I know it works for some people so if you're adventurous, go for it!
Fuller
However, all of the people I collaborate with are friends of mine that I have at one time or another done a physical session with. I haven't used a "service" or "forum" for this process yet but I'm not opposed to it.
I just think with songwriting, it's important to have a relationship with the other person so you can be honest and understand the artistic intricacies involved in the process.
I know it works for some people so if you're adventurous, go for it!
Fuller
"Vision will get you where you want to go, values will determine if you like yourself when you get there!"
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- Rob Lorenzo
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Re: Collaborating online
Spot on, Fuller. That's where I'm going with this. It's a delicate process that involves a strong degree of trust and lots of understanding. That chemistry thing and compatible tastes.Fullertime wrote:I personally do most of my "co-writes" via email.
I just think with songwriting, it's important to have a relationship with the other person so you can be honest and understand the artistic intricacies involved in the process.
Fuller
I'm intregued to know how that chemistry works online in people's experience.
I guess it works for you, Fuller, from what you said having worked with the folks in person previously.
Have you hit any hurdles e.g. with folks not getting back to you or ideas getting 'lost in the post'?
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Re: Collaborating online
I'm loving the DIY musician thing too. There's nothing like artistic freedom (within the limits of commercial requirements, that is
). It's very demanding to learn the ropes of all aspects in the process, though, so collaborations can be a good idea.
Besides the standard talking into each other in the start, it's also a very good thing to have the record straight about your goals and your focus. But also, I think it's important to be clear about WHY you want to engage in collaborations. If you are clear about your gains, it's easier to give other things up, and a collaboration IS a give and take. Being too strategic about it doesn't work, you have to have a positive motivation, in my experience, and not just do it because you see that's what other writers do. Otherwise you'll be holding things back and can't communicate sufficiently to get the job done.
In fact, the ability to write on your own, is above the ability to cowrite, in the publishers list over qualities they look for in an writer (see Ralph Murphys list http://www.ascap.com/nashville/murphy/murphy2.html). When you consider cowriting from a business point of view, as a new writer, you'll actually need to prove that you can write on your own, and then when you can bring craft and fresh ideas to the table. From a business point of view co-writing is mostly done because it increases the shopping odds when you have two publishers involved, or is done directly with new upcoming artists, before they are released on a major label, and thereafter are unavailable for outside writers.
The worst thing about cowriting is that you inevitably give up some of your artistic freedom. It's compromize or the highway!
You just can't do what you want, you have to communicate the things that are self-evident in your own mind, but needs to be agreed upon when a cowriter is involved. If you are working with lyricists, they are often very specialized, and doesn't understand the other aspects of finishing a song from a musicians point of view, so that requires a LOT of communication. DIY'ers work with lyrics, composing, get coaching on the raw song, arranging, recording, mixing and marketing.
The thing about collaborations is that all of these processes needs constant attention and (re)evaluation throughout the production process. This requires a lot of communication as well as expertise, which often is in favour of the DIY'er because of the research and training involved to get there. And it slows things down. It's a great puzzle, and the workload are often very uneven, so it's often better to collaborate with another DIY musician, so you not only share the evaluations but also the actual producing, and the workload.
I've done a bit of long distance cowriting, primarily email exchanges and Skype sessions, and if you're anything like me, I hate writing things that's more easily said face-to-face, so Skype sessions are really the way to go, unless you like to be in endless mail exchanges that leads to nothing but trouble. Face-to-face sessions even better, if you at all can.
After trying the long distance cowriting for a while, I'm inclined to less co-writing now. I'll work on the craft and my own portfolio, and try to get some stuff through with publishers/libraries, before engaging in more cowriting. Not to say, it won't happen, it's just not that high on my priorities list as it used to be.
On the positive list, co-writing can really improve your work, you can make great new friends, you can get contacts you'd never dreamed you would get, and it can help you come out of a rut and motivate you to learn new stuff.
Just some of my thoughts about it.

Besides the standard talking into each other in the start, it's also a very good thing to have the record straight about your goals and your focus. But also, I think it's important to be clear about WHY you want to engage in collaborations. If you are clear about your gains, it's easier to give other things up, and a collaboration IS a give and take. Being too strategic about it doesn't work, you have to have a positive motivation, in my experience, and not just do it because you see that's what other writers do. Otherwise you'll be holding things back and can't communicate sufficiently to get the job done.
In fact, the ability to write on your own, is above the ability to cowrite, in the publishers list over qualities they look for in an writer (see Ralph Murphys list http://www.ascap.com/nashville/murphy/murphy2.html). When you consider cowriting from a business point of view, as a new writer, you'll actually need to prove that you can write on your own, and then when you can bring craft and fresh ideas to the table. From a business point of view co-writing is mostly done because it increases the shopping odds when you have two publishers involved, or is done directly with new upcoming artists, before they are released on a major label, and thereafter are unavailable for outside writers.
The worst thing about cowriting is that you inevitably give up some of your artistic freedom. It's compromize or the highway!

The thing about collaborations is that all of these processes needs constant attention and (re)evaluation throughout the production process. This requires a lot of communication as well as expertise, which often is in favour of the DIY'er because of the research and training involved to get there. And it slows things down. It's a great puzzle, and the workload are often very uneven, so it's often better to collaborate with another DIY musician, so you not only share the evaluations but also the actual producing, and the workload.
I've done a bit of long distance cowriting, primarily email exchanges and Skype sessions, and if you're anything like me, I hate writing things that's more easily said face-to-face, so Skype sessions are really the way to go, unless you like to be in endless mail exchanges that leads to nothing but trouble. Face-to-face sessions even better, if you at all can.
After trying the long distance cowriting for a while, I'm inclined to less co-writing now. I'll work on the craft and my own portfolio, and try to get some stuff through with publishers/libraries, before engaging in more cowriting. Not to say, it won't happen, it's just not that high on my priorities list as it used to be.
On the positive list, co-writing can really improve your work, you can make great new friends, you can get contacts you'd never dreamed you would get, and it can help you come out of a rut and motivate you to learn new stuff.
Just some of my thoughts about it.
Ceo of my own life
- Rob Lorenzo
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Re: Collaborating online
Magne,
Thanks for taking the time to share your thoughts and experience, you've given a lot to consider - excellent!
Whilst reading, it occurred to me that my idea of collaboration is actually two separate streams:
i - collaborating from a writing perspective
ii - collaborating from a session perspective
For example, whilst historically I've co-written music and vocals either separately or collaboratively, nowadays I'm writing a lot of music, mostly complete bar perhaps a more inspiring bass or vocal line.
So; exploring the idea of using something such as eSession to 'hire' a bass player to add a bass part for an otherwise written track. For a different track it maybe a live drummer or a drummer to re-program what I've got.
It's a lot less co-writing and more session work now I'm thinking more deeply about it.
By the way, great idea on using Skype, I can see the value in that. I heard in esession they have a live video/control room type plug-in too which sounds interesting.
Thanks for taking the time to share your thoughts and experience, you've given a lot to consider - excellent!

Whilst reading, it occurred to me that my idea of collaboration is actually two separate streams:
i - collaborating from a writing perspective
ii - collaborating from a session perspective
For example, whilst historically I've co-written music and vocals either separately or collaboratively, nowadays I'm writing a lot of music, mostly complete bar perhaps a more inspiring bass or vocal line.
So; exploring the idea of using something such as eSession to 'hire' a bass player to add a bass part for an otherwise written track. For a different track it maybe a live drummer or a drummer to re-program what I've got.
It's a lot less co-writing and more session work now I'm thinking more deeply about it.
By the way, great idea on using Skype, I can see the value in that. I heard in esession they have a live video/control room type plug-in too which sounds interesting.
- cardell
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Re: Collaborating online
I've enjoyed collaborating at Kompoz.com before.
Stuart

Stuart
- Rob Lorenzo
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Re: Collaborating online
Thanks Stuart, looks like a fun and alternative approach - will take some time to investigate 

- mojobone
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Re: Collaborating online
Here's a new one; haven't used it yet, so I can't report on its efficacy or ease of use: http://www.readwriteweb.com/start/2010/ ... dWriteWeb)
I like http://soundcloud.com ;their player allows comments to be placed at specific points in a track, which should be helpful. I think many Taxiites simply trade files using http://box.net
There's also this: http://www.indabamusic.com/
I like http://soundcloud.com ;their player allows comments to be placed at specific points in a track, which should be helpful. I think many Taxiites simply trade files using http://box.net
There's also this: http://www.indabamusic.com/
- Rob Lorenzo
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Re: Collaborating online
Thanks for the links Mojobone. Will take a proper look.
The last link looks good, nice 'feel' to the site and good testimonials. Great
The last link looks good, nice 'feel' to the site and good testimonials. Great

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