Are you marketing a raw song (i.e. that someone else will record in their own style) or trying to place your own recording? Even in the former case, you've still got to do something in the ballpark of what the artist you want to cut your song would do.charlie2 wrote: ↑Thu May 07, 2020 4:51 pmI was'nt in particular referring to the taxi business when I made this thread. If taxi tells you they want it a particular way then do it that way.
I'm just questioning why things got so anal. Like if someone says that drum fill or keyboard is dated I'm kind of saying..."who gives a flying f...? Isnt it about the song? What the song makes us feel?
I'm sad that the music is kind of taking a back seat in this business.
If you're trying to market your recording, though, that has to stand on its own. I think it really just depends what you're doing it for. If you just want to put music out on your own, have it fit wherever it fits, reach whoever it reaches, touch whoever it touches, etc., go for it. That's what I'd consider artist songs and artist recordings.
However, if your goal is some sort of commercial success, be it on mainstream pop radio, sync placements, mainstream country radio, music for massage parlors, or whatever, then it's got to at least come somewhere in the ballpark of what is being used in that context. This is more the craft side of things, where something is more functional than art for art's sake. Even if it is the song you're marketing for others to record, you have to at least give them some impression it could fit them (or at least not distract from getting that impression in cases where the listener can actually hear through a stripped-down demo).
Of course, the ideal might be doing art for art's sake and having it fit somewhere that also provided enough business potential to make a living. But there's nothing to say you can't try both. (I do, independent of any success or lack thereof.)
Rick