“Shhhh-it!”: Idolator’s Super-Secret Music Interview Talks Shop

Lucas Jensen | February 12, 2009 11:00 am

Every week in the “Shhhh-it!” AnonIMous Super-Secret Music-Biz Interview Series (S-I!AS-SM-BIS for, uh, short) we interview a grizzled music industry veteran via the meat grinder world of instant messaging. As many of you out there may know, I’m a recovering publicist with nearly a decade of experience in promotion and PR. Don’t hold that against me. This week I sat down with RecentlyDownsized, a long-time publicist and old industry bro/competitor who, like everyone in the music biz today, is moving into other realms of PR as a means of staying alive. Both Downsized and I worked primarily independent artists. We experienced the rise of so-called “New Media” and have watched as the focus of our jobs transitioned from more traditional PR work (getting reviews in magazines) to cross-promotion and marketing:

RecentlyDownsized: It’s been my frustration that online, radio and publicity are being morphed into one clusterfuck function RecentlyDownsized: so not only are there too many cooks in the kitchen, but blogs and mags are being spammed 3 times as much all for the same projects. RecentlyDownsized: no wonder they increasingly ignore me, ha-ha StumpyPete1975: yeah StumpyPete1975: I noticed my functions changing over the last five years StumpyPete1975: at first it was “Can you get me in Magnet?” StumpyPete1975: by the end, it was “Can you get me on the iTunes front page?” StumpyPete1975: and I always thought that was marketing, not PR work RecentlyDownsized: for me, it was “can you get us on a couple of blogs?” but now it’s “can you set up interviews in every town on the tour and make sure we have a sold out show in Boise, Idaho and merch bundles with Urban Outfitters?”

If it sounds like it was a gripe session, well, you’re right. More shop talk and self-reflection after the jump!

RecentlyDownsized: I’m trying to stay anonymous here…I could tell you many stories about the demands of particular clients to be noticed when they have nothing new to say, or even WAY too much to say and want a play by play press release, repeatedly, for all of it. RecentlyDownsized: In any case, with the economic climate in the world of media the way it is, these are but small complaints compared to the effort it takes to make a living in these times. Doing more and making less. My brain is swimming these days. No attention span at all. Too much noise. StumpyPete1975: so much noise out there RecentlyDownsized: I imagine other people feel the same way, which is why I have always resisted the top heavy information overload of too many press releases. RecentlyDownsized: It actually makes me resentful. RecentlyDownsized: Mostly it’s managers that want this (a zillion press releases) as if a band’s success will hinge on it. RecentlyDownsized: and I think that people tune them out eventually StumpyPete1975: I know I do StumpyPete1975: it starts to look desperate (and sometimes it is!) RecentlyDownsized: I have seen a big change in the relationship between myself as a PR person and blogs and sites. It used to be that people trusted me in a way, but so much ill will has built up by information overload and the totally entitled attitude of “tastemakers” that it’s just not such a fun place to be anymore. StumpyPete1975: no, it’s not StumpyPete1975: it used to be “thanks for the MP3” StumpyPete1975: and now it’s “um, where is my CD and guest list” RecentlyDownsized: It’s a chore, actually. And I LOVE music, which is how I got into this thing in the first place. StumpyPete1975: I do, too, but I started to take the lesser-successful projects more personally StumpyPete1975: some records I just loved and when they struggled StumpyPete1975: God, it killed me StumpyPete1975: and it affects you RecentlyDownsized: Oh well, I’m looking forward to actually enjoying music again when I don’t have to think about writing reports on it and whether it got on Gorilla vs. Bear or not. StumpyPete1975: HAHA oh man StumpyPete1975: that guy StumpyPete1975: we used to be pally StumpyPete1975: and then one day I wasn’t cool anymore for whatever reason StumpyPete1975: but let’s face it StumpyPete1975: every site/blog/mag has their pet PR people RecentlyDownsized: well, to be fair, he’s got promo people rummaging through his trash at this point. No wonder he can’t answer his email. StumpyPete1975: a quarter of Forkcast seems to come from one publicist StumpyPete1975: but I know that I didn’t work exclusively crappy stuff StumpyPete1975: sure, we all have our ups and downs, but it’s not like one day you are terrible, you know? RecentlyDownsized: If I had to work stuff I didn’t like, I would have left long ago. This job under those circumstances would be torture for anyone who thinks of themself as sincere. StumpyPete1975: oh yeah exactly StumpyPete1975: in my position, compromises were sometimes made StumpyPete1975: but usually I rationalized it by saying I liked the people StumpyPete1975: I liked what they were doing StumpyPete1975: their philosophies, etc RecentlyDownsized: or the label StumpyPete1975: yeah, exactly StumpyPete1975: and I passed on plenty of things from people I like StumpyPete1975: that’s hard to do RecentlyDownsized: not every band on a label is good, even if you love the label overall and most of their artists. Or if you throw them a bone and work on a tougher project with the hope of landing the one you REALLY want to work. RecentlyDownsized: …only to be pitted against a shitload of increasingly desperate promo companies who will do it cheaper. Good times. StumpyPete1975: the economy has really affected things RecentlyDownsized: ya think? RecentlyDownsized: (I jest) StumpyPete1975: at first I didn’t notice StumpyPete1975: but I started to see projects for cheaper StumpyPete1975: slowly creeping in StumpyPete1975: less and less money per project StumpyPete1975: and then you have to take on more projects, which hurts everybody RecentlyDownsized: exactly. Not fun. StumpyPete1975: what’s funny is that I never had a shortage of projects StumpyPete1975: because I think clients realize that in this crowded marketplace, everybody else has PR StumpyPete1975: and if they don’t they have NO chance StumpyPete1975: unless they get super-duper lucky RecentlyDownsized: I think a lot of what is happening will, in the end, come back down to reasonable expectations and hiring people based on their relationships with their network of outlets. This “jumping through hoops” phase of adding anyone who claims to have a blog to the label’s mailing list will have to stop. It just doesn’t make any sense. RecentlyDownsized: as I typed this, several bands I have never heard of spammed me. Probably via myspace. RecentlyDownsized: …poor bloggers. StumpyPete1975: haha StumpyPete1975: you bring up expectations… StumpyPete1975: managing client expectations is such a huge part of it StumpyPete1975: I learned my lesson early when a client, nearing the end of the campaign StumpyPete1975: said, well, I kinda wanted to sell 20k copies and get in Rolling Stone StumpyPete1975: and I was all WHAT? StumpyPete1975: I never would have taken it on then! RecentlyDownsized: I’ve always been very careful about that. RecentlyDownsized: it’s tough when you have a good band getting no traction. StumpyPete1975: oh man, getting no traction StumpyPete1975: you can just feel it when people don’t care RecentlyDownsized: You are right, and you can’t MAKE people care. Hopefully if you have some kind of personal relationship beyond using contacts as targets of spam, there can be some influence, but it’s really increasingly difficult. StumpyPete1975: particularly since the majors got into it in the online world StumpyPete1975: that changed things RecentlyDownsized: don’t get me started on them. RecentlyDownsized: they are trying so hard not to succumb to reality (that mp3s exist) it gives me a headache. The promotions have to be so convoluted to avoid this reality and pretend it isn’t happening. RecentlyDownsized: contests, and games and ecards and video snippets… RecentlyDownsized: people just want to hear the fucking song. Without the gimmicks. Hopefully they will buy the record. StumpyPete1975: oh man StumpyPete1975: and digital watermarking StumpyPete1975: what a joke StumpyPete1975: one copy leaks StumpyPete1975: boom it’s over StumpyPete1975: you just wasted a couple grand! RecentlyDownsized: when I think of how much money is spent avoiding the reality of the mp3, it just makes me shake my head and sigh. StumpyPete1975: I had clients always wanting to release snippets StumpyPete1975: I wouldn’t do it StumpyPete1975: I flat out would not work a project without a promo mp3 RecentlyDownsized: until this changes, the whole music business is going to be increasingly desperate. StumpyPete1975: the elbo.ws chart is lousy with major acts now StumpyPete1975: coldplay StumpyPete1975: kanye StumpyPete1975: etc. StumpyPete1975: I remember when I had some tiny bands on the top 10 StumpyPete1975: now it’s less interesting than the college radio top 10 RecentlyDownsized: I think they just get taken down and the blog posts start disappearing. The only company enriching themselves is Web Sherriff StumpyPete1975: hey, they figured something out StumpyPete1975: created a niche for themselves RecentlyDownsized: What a shitty way to make a living, ha-ha. StumpyPete1975: yep StumpyPete1975: what do you think about managers? StumpyPete1975: I heard you mention them before StumpyPete1975: I met very few I liked StumpyPete1975: and had some who were absolutely detrimental to their bands RecentlyDownsized: Tough question…I really have a few I love, probably because I am on their good side. I don’t want to be on the bad side of a manager. They can make your life hell. (see “Moving Goalposts”) StumpyPete1975: I find that a lot of them have no idea what we do RecentlyDownsized: I think the inherent problem is that they are as emotionally involved as the band, but have to be thinking about the business side of things. RecentlyDownsized: So it’s hard to give them bad news. StumpyPete1975: and often their requests have no bearing on the campaign or are just unrealistic RecentlyDownsized: I find bands can accept it more than managers who tend to think of themselves as indespensible figures in the success of the band. RecentlyDownsized: (which is NOT usually the case) StumpyPete1975: some of the requests you get from them StumpyPete1975: Jesus StumpyPete1975: they are about piddly squat stuff RecentlyDownsized: they’re like helicopter parents RecentlyDownsized: always hovering StumpyPete1975: haha StumpyPete1975: true story StumpyPete1975: we got a top-of-the-page news story in pitchfork StumpyPete1975: with a huge pic StumpyPete1975: and the manager called up furious StumpyPete1975: because Pitchfork ran a photo with the artist with blonde hair RecentlyDownsized: I’ve had that happen many times StumpyPete1975: not hey THANKS for that RecentlyDownsized: promo is a thankless position RecentlyDownsized: which is why you really have to be sincere, or it would suck beyond belief. StumpyPete1975: you are paid to be the goat in the end StumpyPete1975: the fall guy StumpyPete1975: another typical story StumpyPete1975: a label mailed off the mailing almost TWO months late StumpyPete1975: switched release date three times StumpyPete1975: and then said we had screwed up the initial part of the campaign StumpyPete1975: we sent out press releases with no record out there StumpyPete1975: thinking they were gonna be out RecentlyDownsized: that happens to us all the time StumpyPete1975: date switching StumpyPete1975: with long lead times=failure RecentlyDownsized: …or a long-lead publicist who sends records to online sites 4 months in advance of release…hello? StumpyPete1975: haha StumpyPete1975: sometimes we had to do that StumpyPete1975: because online people are getting slower and slower StumpyPete1975: like, I consider Pitchfork long lead time now StumpyPete1975: but, yeah, blogs? no way! RecentlyDownsized: Personally, I don’t attribute it to that, but rather a mentality that they are so fucking important they need it far ahead of everyone else. And everyone else is getting it before release date. To be really super duper important, a blogger must have the record before it’s even in the hands of the label. StumpyPete1975: what disturbs me is the paucity of voices out there, individual ones StumpyPete1975: I like a lot of blogs, but I read about the same 20 artists over and over on so many of them StumpyPete1975: and the press-release repeaters…I mean, you take the post and put it on the report StumpyPete1975: but does it help? RecentlyDownsized: only to the bean counters I suppose StumpyPete1975: I always looked at it as rather it be me than someone else StumpyPete1975: terrible to get competitive like that but that’s how it is! RecentlyDownsized: When I see a band crack into the non-music-wonky world, I know that makes a difference, but at that point the blogs have ceased to care about it. I always find it kind of funny that the top selling track from most albums on iTunes is the one that is put out there for free on the blogs. That is kind of illustrative about cracking into the mainstream I suppose. RecentlyDownsized: Most people in the world don’t give a shit about music blogs StumpyPete1975: I know! RecentlyDownsized: but they serve their purpose. RecentlyDownsized: and bands and labels have started to invest so much energy in them RecentlyDownsized: and money RecentlyDownsized: for the past few years RecentlyDownsized: and it’s not everything StumpyPete1975: to me, a well-rounded publicity campaign has a bit of everything StumpyPete1975: quantity and quality StumpyPete1975: some big write-ups RecentlyDownsized: a tour StumpyPete1975: and small stuff wherever you turn StumpyPete1975: god, and, yes, a tour StumpyPete1975: tours are so helpful RecentlyDownsized: without some live dates, it’s really hard. StumpyPete1975: well, it’s the easiest way to justify a press release RecentlyDownsized: and it’s really tough for unknown bands to get booked. RecentlyDownsized: another important reason for labels StumpyPete1975: nothing against Sub Pop StumpyPete1975: they don’t have a monopoly on good bands StumpyPete1975: but their credibility brings them so much StumpyPete1975: that you would think they do have a monopoly given the press they get StumpyPete1975: being on Sub Pop, Merge, Beggars, etc. StumpyPete1975: it helps RecentlyDownsized: Agreed StumpyPete1975: I think we have seen some Horatio Alger stories recently StumpyPete1975: some CYHSY StumpyPete1975: etc. StumpyPete1975: that makes people believe it’s a meritocracy StumpyPete1975: but it ain’t RecentlyDownsized: (from what I understand, CYHSY had a publicist as a manager, so they didn’t fly out of nowhere) StumpyPete1975: oh yeah totally! StumpyPete1975: listen, it never happens out of nowhere RecentlyDownsized: Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon played with Rosebuds for a few years prior to his breakout RecentlyDownsized: so he know the lay of the land as well. RecentlyDownsized: there is always some reason StumpyPete1975: yep StumpyPete1975: and whenever a band seemingly jumps out of nowhere StumpyPete1975: Vivian Girls, etc. StumpyPete1975: I guarantee you they are a) from Brooklyn StumpyPete1975: or b) have a good PR person StumpyPete1975: or both RecentlyDownsized: agreed StumpyPete1975: the New York cabal continues StumpyPete1975: people act like it isn’t there, but it SO is RecentlyDownsized: like a big fetid stew of promotion StumpyPete1975: do you think that the Vivian Girls go anywhere if they are from Wisconsin? RecentlyDownsized: I doubt it RecentlyDownsized: unless they were really hot StumpyPete1975: maybe StumpyPete1975: let’s talk hotness factor and stuff StumpyPete1975: how much sexism have you encountered? StumpyPete1975: I’ve seen it pretty bad StumpyPete1975: with female artists and the way that male writers slobber on them RecentlyDownsized: I think female artists really get the short end of the stick in this business, especially in terms of age (but also level of hotness) StumpyPete1975: agreed StumpyPete1975: I have guys comment on pictures of female artists StumpyPete1975: but male artists never get that RecentlyDownsized: unless they are iconic like Chrissie Hynde or Aimee Mann StumpyPete1975: yeah, been around for a while StumpyPete1975: you always get the aside “(and she ain’t so bad-looking, either)” StumpyPete1975: and I found myself hoping that the women in bands would be attractive StumpyPete1975: because it would help my campaigns! RecentlyDownsized: I don’t know, I ‘ve seen the “I’d hit it” comment attached to boys, girls, animals, objects on Brookyn Vegan, ha-ha. RecentlyDownsized: Sad to say, I have had to ask about a female artist’s hotness factor as well. It’s an unfortunate reality in the world of entertainment, unless there is a freak element. StumpyPete1975: so lame StumpyPete1975: also gayness StumpyPete1975: but that is different because it opens up some new pubs RecentlyDownsized: we have a whole list of gay friendly outlets RecentlyDownsized: but not one for “homely yet talented chicks” StumpyPete1975: yeah exactly StumpyPete1975: and some artists don’t want it out there and some do StumpyPete1975: but gay mags? StumpyPete1975: they aren’t exactly down with the uglies, etiher StumpyPete1975: I had to send over pictures of a few artists so they could vet the hotness of them StumpyPete1975: some passed StumpyPete1975: some didn’t RecentlyDownsized: oh man, that’s horrible. Yet I can relate. RecentlyDownsized: I usually only ask about it if I am sitting on the fence as to whether or not I think their sound will fly within our network of outlets. I know that if a female artist is good looking (or a freak) it can move the needle, particularly in the blogosphere. StumpyPete1975: yah it’s true StumpyPete1975: look at Joanna Newsom or St. Vincent, etc. StumpyPete1975: all talented StumpyPete1975: but all lookers, too RecentlyDownsized: I am hating myself as I read this interview, by the way. StumpyPete1975: hating yourself? RecentlyDownsized: for being a party to it StumpyPete1975: I know RecentlyDownsized: (not the interview…the judging of people’s artistic talent as it applies to their looks) RecentlyDownsized: I guess we have a similar issue with old dudes. Not ugly per say but old. StumpyPete1975: haha StumpyPete1975: yeah, old guys RecentlyDownsized: Hipsters are such ageists StumpyPete1975: guys with names StumpyPete1975: it’s hard to be Justin Vernon StumpyPete1975: better to be Bon Iver StumpyPete1975: make a fake name for yourself RecentlyDownsized: 3 names is the kiss of death! StumpyPete1975: indeed StumpyPete1975: man, we could go on forever StumpyPete1975: getting paid StumpyPete1975: that’s one of the things that I think people don’t realize is such a big part of our job StumpyPete1975: everybody is hunky dory until payday comes StumpyPete1975: and then they cry poormouth StumpyPete1975: and you did a bad job StumpyPete1975: you ever have that? StumpyPete1975: where all of a sudden you did a bad job because you are asking for money? StumpyPete1975: (like it matters…our contracts say pay up either way) RecentlyDownsized: we have usually resolved that by continuing to slave on, unpaid, for a longer period of time, since they have been so unhappy (note sarcastic tone). StumpyPete1975: comped months…I’ve done it, too StumpyPete1975: and yet it’s never appreciated StumpyPete1975: it’s what’s expected! RecentlyDownsized: sadly yes. StumpyPete1975: and, to be honest, I feel like the big publicity places StumpyPete1975: they wouldn’t play with that RecentlyDownsized: Often, if I feel I haven’t been able to deliver for a band in a given amount of time, I will work longer for the campaign of my own accord and because I want them to be happy with what we do. But it sucks when the client plays these games to blame it on something. StumpyPete1975: it’s never on them RecentlyDownsized: the big publicity places are going to HAVE to deal with that coming up. competition is so brutal and a lot of talented peole are out of work. RecentlyDownsized: they know it. I’ve seen it in the proposal process of late. StumpyPete1975: well, I will say this StumpyPete1975: big, small, whatevs PR companies StumpyPete1975: I see them fail on things as much as anybody StumpyPete1975: all of the money in the world can still not make a record a hit StumpyPete1975: majors flop just as much as indies RecentlyDownsized: totally StumpyPete1975: with even higher stakes StumpyPete1975: and I would tell potential clients this StumpyPete1975: you can go to Big Publicity House X for their cheap deal StumpyPete1975: but you will be last in importance for them StumpyPete1975: and 9 times out of 10 they were ignored StumpyPete1975: at least with me they could have been ignored for cheaper! RecentlyDownsized: haha RecentlyDownsized: I think some of the bigger places take less important clients (who pay) and just deal with them in aggregate with other paying clients they don’t really care about. It’s sad when that happens. StumpyPete1975: yes RecentlyDownsized: I’ve seen it happen a bunch StumpyPete1975: me too.

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