Or have the time for thatCasey H wrote:They are not in the business of giving critiques-- don't need the arguments.

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Or have the time for thatCasey H wrote:They are not in the business of giving critiques-- don't need the arguments.
Casey H wrote:I'm surprised you got that much direct feedback from music libraries. Most of the time it's yes or no. A few will give you a bit of info as to why your tracks aren't a fit, but usually that's not the case. They are not in the business of giving critiques-- don't need the arguments.DesireInspires wrote:Any criticism here pales in comparison to the things that have been told to me by music libraries.
Casey
So what did you do to change your approach to your music so that you went from almost all rejections to getting placements? How many months or years did that take?DesireInspires wrote:Casey H wrote:I'm surprised you got that much direct feedback from music libraries. Most of the time it's yes or no. A few will give you a bit of info as to why your tracks aren't a fit, but usually that's not the case. They are not in the business of giving critiques-- don't need the arguments.DesireInspires wrote:Any criticism here pales in comparison to the things that have been told to me by music libraries.
Casey
I didn't get critiques like Taxi gives.
I was told by one library that I should "pursue other avenues..." and told by another library that "we do not think you are a good fit. Please do not submit any more music". I have also been rejected by another library that I got forwarded to by Taxi. That was awesome!
I have contacted over 100 libraries by email and have even cold called a few. It helps to actually talk to people from time to time. I have had a molehill of formal rejection and a mountain of no responses. But I never really felt like quitting. This is why I am getting songs placed. I create my own luck.
I did one thing: I kept submitting music to libraries!Casey H wrote:
So what did you do to change your approach to your music so that you went from almost all rejections to getting placements? How many months or years did that take?
Casey
Wow, 100 songs submitted through Taxi at 5 bucks a pop plus the 199 fee? 700 bucks in a year just to try to get a song in a library? You're tenacious, I'll grant you that.DesireInspires wrote:I did one thing: I kept submitting music to libraries!Casey H wrote:
So what did you do to change your approach to your music so that you went from almost all rejections to getting placements? How many months or years did that take?
Casey
I knew that my songs would get better if I kept on going. I have read posts here of people spending a lot of money, asking a lot of questions, and making a lot of assumptions. But rarely do these things turn out to bring success. Why? Because composers do not constantly make music and submit it.
I know that I sent in around 100 submissions to Taxi when I was a member. The reason I did get the forwards and the deals I got is because I kept on sending in music. I knew that a handful of submissions a year would not lead to anything. I kept that same attitude when I left Taxi. I just had to find libraries, contact them, and submit music. I figured that if I submitted music to every library, production house, and music publisher on Earth, I could get at least one song placed!
Those songs are not going to submit themselves.
fusilierb wrote:Wow, 100 songs submitted through Taxi at 5 bucks a pop plus the 199 fee? 700 bucks in a year just to try to get a song in a library? You're tenacious, I'll grant you that.DesireInspires wrote:I did one thing: I kept submitting music to libraries!Casey H wrote:
So what did you do to change your approach to your music so that you went from almost all rejections to getting placements? How many months or years did that take?
Casey
I knew that my songs would get better if I kept on going. I have read posts here of people spending a lot of money, asking a lot of questions, and making a lot of assumptions. But rarely do these things turn out to bring success. Why? Because composers do not constantly make music and submit it.
I know that I sent in around 100 submissions to Taxi when I was a member. The reason I did get the forwards and the deals I got is because I kept on sending in music. I knew that a handful of submissions a year would not lead to anything. I kept that same attitude when I left Taxi. I just had to find libraries, contact them, and submit music. I figured that if I submitted music to every library, production house, and music publisher on Earth, I could get at least one song placed!
Those songs are not going to submit themselves.
I think I'm reading one of those "a lot of assumption" posts right now. What make you think that other composers and/or Taxi members don't write and submit a lot of music? Taxi is certainly not the end all be all to getting music placed but there are some tremendous opportunities that Taxi provides. Yes, having many submissions can be good but forwards happen because the music was right and it was good enough. You could submit 10,000 tracks and never get a forward. I'm not really sure why you keep making these wide generalizations about Taxi members and composers. There are a lot of us around here that spend a lot of time writing music. Better yet, there are a lot of us around here who even make money from it tooDesireInspires wrote:I did one thing: I kept submitting music to libraries!Casey H wrote:
So what did you do to change your approach to your music so that you went from almost all rejections to getting placements? How many months or years did that take?
Casey
I knew that my songs would get better if I kept on going. I have read posts here of people spending a lot of money, asking a lot of questions, and making a lot of assumptions. But rarely do these things turn out to bring success. Why? Because composers do not constantly make music and submit it.
I know that I sent in around 100 submissions to Taxi when I was a member. The reason I did get the forwards and the deals I got is because I kept on sending in music. I knew that a handful of submissions a year would not lead to anything. I kept that same attitude when I left Taxi. I just had to find libraries, contact them, and submit music. I figured that if I submitted music to every library, production house, and music publisher on Earth, I could get at least one song placed!
Those songs are not going to submit themselves.
rpittelman wrote:
I think I'm reading one of those "a lot of assumption" posts right now. What make you think that other composers and/or Taxi members don't write and submit a lot of music? Taxi is certainly not the end all be all to getting music placed but there are some tremendous opportunities that Taxi provides. Yes, having many submissions can be good but forwards happen because the music was right and it was good enough. You could submit 10,000 tracks and never get a forward. I'm not really sure why you keep making these wide generalizations about Taxi members and composers. There are a lot of us around here that spend a lot of time writing music. Better yet, there are a lot of us around here who even make money from it too
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