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Over the next few weeks, I plan on compiling my knowledge, both first and second hand, on (as the title suggests) guerilla / punk rock marketing for modern composers.  The information I’ll be given is freely available on the internet, but it’s either hard to find or adapted from other sources not intended for composers.

Also, this information can easily be adapted to any other field, creative or not, within reason, so please don’t feel like this is just for composers.

Finally, this series of entries will be updated as I do, and learn, more things.

So you fancy yourself a composer, huh? Or you want to be?  Awesome.  I’m not going to ask you why, or try to deter you in any way.  What I am going to tell you is it’s going to be hard. Movies are relying less and less on original music. it’s getting harder and harder to break into the video game industry, and as home recording is becoming more accessable, the independent music and sound category is getting saturated with people who want the same thing as you.  To write music.  So, it’s going to be hard.

Now, I can’t make you a better composer.  But I can show you where to start, and point you in the right direction.

Step 1: Establish an Online Presence

What, you expected some thing different? Maybe some thing that actually involves music?  Well, that’s coming, but as search engines base your ranking on the age of your site, the longer you’re online, the better.

  • Get your own domain. (Yes, that’s an acting blog, but the principals apply here.) You shouldn’t use MySpace, SoundClick, or any other social networking site as you only contact info.  Why? First off, not everyone has an account on those sites, and most of them require an account for contacting you. If you expect all of your potential clients to use MySpace to contact you, you’re shooting yourself in the foot.  Second, it’s unpforessional.  Think about this: which sounds more like I’m serious about my craft? “My website is MySpace.com/DaveMatney” or “My website is DaveMatney.Com“  Easy pick, and at less syllables and characters, it will flow off the tongue easier, and fit better on business cards and things like Twitter.  Also, my final thought on this is to pick something only you will have, like your name or a nickname you will ALWAYS use.  Once you set up this site, you should NEVER pull it down, as long as you’re trying to market yourself.
    • Build the best site you have access and ability to.  If you’re not comfortable with web design, graphic design, or photography, ask around; chances are, someone you know is and will be willing to help you for cheap or free.
  • Set up an email address with your new domain.  This is you business email. Use it for nothing else. Even if you have it redirect to GMail, hotmail, or something else, anyone that contacts you should send emails to, and recieve emails from, your business email.  Why?  Again, it just looks more professional.  Also, over the phone, explaining your email address is “Dave at Dave Matney dot com” is WAY easier than “Dave dot Matney dot UT at GMail dot com.” (the second email address doesn’t exist, but Dave.Matney@gmail does, and it isn’t me.)
  • Join every social networking site, and related internet forum, you come across.  Stick with a single username (I suggest the same one you used for your domain), link you own domain from them, and at least post a hello in the introduction threads.  Why?  Search Engine Optimization, first off. The more sites that link to your site, the higher you ranking.  Second, personal Search Engine Optimization.  What’s that?  Google Dave Matney.  At the time of this writing, all but two of those links were related to me. What does this do? When I introduce myself to someone, it becomes easier to find me.

Step 2: Prepare to Make Your Music Digital

Yeah, you’re right; this isn’t “write music,” either.  Why not?  One simple reason: people aren’t going to wait for you to “get ready.”  They’re going to want your music, and they’re going to want it immediately. They’re not going to wait for you to purchase software, hire musicians, record, digitize, and send it to them. In most situations, they’re not even going to pay you up front for your work; they’re going to expect you to have everything you need to make music for them, and get it to them.  That includes access to funds to print the score, hire and record an orchestra, if that’s the method you’re expecting to take.  For most of us, that’s not the kinda scratch we have laying around, so we’ve gotta figure something else out.

If you already have a system that works for you, then feel free to skip this step.  If you don’t, I’m not going to explain the absolute nitty gritty when other people already have. I am going to say that you don’t HAVE to write and record all of your music on a computer if you’re more comfortable with a piano, manuscript, and have access to a multi-track recorder.  Going that route may be easier or cheaper, given your experience and the amount of gear that you already have. But, if you’re totally new to this, start digital.

Also, whether it’s on a Mac or a PC doesn’t matter, anymore.  So stop arguing.

Step 3: Build Your Portfolio

This is the stage of the game I’m currently at.

Finally, you’re writing music!  So, what should you write?

Well, whether or not you’re planning to write music for role playing games, I don’t feel like it’s a stretch to say roleplaying games require the most musical versitilty. And, lucky for us, Patrick Gann, at RPGFan, has made a list of the types of music all RPGs have.

  • Overture (Opening)
  • Castle
  • Town
  • Field
  • Dungeon
  • Battle
  • Final Battle
  • March (Ending)

So, write that.

If you’re not the type to just write without a project, you’re not out of luck, you’re just out of easy options. Ask around for leads on independent films or video games that may need music, and check places like Craigslist, GameDev, and IndieGamer.  Contact them, offer to write music for them for free (explain you’re looking to build a portfolio), and hope.  You’ll send out far more emails than you’ll recieve replies, and you’ll recieve more replies saying they don’t want you to help them than you will people that are willing to accept a blind offer for free music (go figure).

This is the stage I suggest linking any and all previous band experience you have, if you have any.

A few things about building your portfolio:

  • The average person doesn’t hear beyond sound quality.  No matter how good your songs are, if they don’t sound good, people won’t think they are good.  Write the best quality music you can, using the best sounding microphones and VSTs you can afford (there are tons of great, free, VSTs that sound awesome, even if they’re somewhat limited.  I personally recommend Native Instruments’ Kore Player and Compilation Vol. 1.)
  • At this stage, never ask someone to pay you for your work. They’re doing you a favor, not the other way around.  In fact, offering to people to write music for them forever, for cheap or free, if they give you this one chance isn’t a bad negotiation tool. But, if they offer money, don’t turn them down.
  • Be appreciative.  No one owes you anything, so treat everyone fairly.  Be honest and up front about your skills, how fast you work, and your limitations. You’re not trying to sell anything, you’re just trying to build a portfolio and a reputation.
  • Ask for testimonies about working with you, and the quality of you work; it will give your website and portfolio credibility.

In closing, I hope this helps.  If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions, please contact me or leave a comment.

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This Entry by Dave Matney, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Breathe.  I can finally breathe again.  And sleep, at least for a little while.

I don’t remember much of this weekend, to be honest; starting Thursday at 7:00, I spent almost EVERY waking hour on music.  Fifty three hours, to be exact. Seven to ten Thursday at practice, ten to one after that on composing, six thirty Friday morning ‘til ten playing guitar behind my friend Perko for a local news show (we played probably less than 5 minutes on air, and even then the sound was pretty awful; we sounded great live, and on air you couldn’t tell), then after a quick lunch I spent the next six or seven hours troubleshooting my computer so I could then stay up ‘til one again working on music.  Saturday was straight through; seven AM to one AM.

Sunday I played guitar at church, then went home and had an unplanned break (my wife –who was in Idaho 2 hours away from me– was in the ER the night before, nothing major, and she was pretty much dead to the world in pain and on pain meds, so I hung out with my son. Then I was so exhausted I couldn’t stand up from laying on the floor; I don’t remember going to bed.)

Back to work on Monday, at 8 am, and when I got home at six thirty, I started pounding away at music, until 3 am. 3 out of 5 songs finished, and that’ll have to do.  1 song completely scrapped, and rewritten twice in the previous week, the last time started just before one am.

That was last night; back to work at 8 am this morning, and I think my body realized when I was done with my morning appointments that, hey, I don’t have an immediate deadline looming.  I don’t have anything that’s forcing me to keep going, so now I must rest.

And rest I will, just not yet.

So… what all came from this?

Churches – New York

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This track, I feel, is the best track of all the ones I worked on this weekend.  I feel I need to clarify that this isn’t the production track; I cut apart and spliced together a different version to go below the film, and later I’ll clean this up for my portfolio. Just not yet.

I wrote, programmed, and recorded everything in this track.

Churches – Florida 2

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This track was built over the weekend, using an idea I started six or so months ago.  Everything within it was written by me, except the drum march;  I don’t remember which Gershwin tune I took it from, but I found a few MIDI files of Gershwin marches, took one, cut up the snare part into a loop that I liked, layered another snare part on top of it, and threw a kick below it.  So… TECHNICALLY Gershwin wrote the march… but only as much as the original photographers design elementary school collages.

Churches – Florida 1

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With Brandon throwing out ideas left and right, I wrote and recorded this song in two hours, with the first notes being struck just before 1 AM.  It’s intentionally sloppy.  The drum parts are Midi loops by Groove Monkey.

To write these, I used Sonar LE, various parts of Native Instrument’s Komplete and their Kore Player, Line 6′s PODFarm, and Make Music’s Finale.

Please, critique these.  And I’ll let you know when the videos that they’re for make it online, if they ever do.

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Creative Commons License
This Entry by Dave Matney, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Things this last week have been hecktic, and as a result, I haven’t been able to get much music written.  Fighting my computer was just the icing on the destraction cake made of building a fence and getting sick.

To be honest, I’m pretty nervous I won’t get these done in time.   It’s my fault; I knew about the deadline for quite awhile, and should have been writing for it, but it’s tough to write for something without knowing what Brandon wants.  Stll, it’s my fault.

Anyway, to keep up with the trend of posting progress tracks, here goes:

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The previous version of this felt a little weird, so I tightened up the timing; less emphasis on the swing.  Also, I changed the bass, added a second drum track, layered the piano track with a honkytonk piano, and added a bridge of sorts.

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This one’s taken up most of my time, lately, ’cause I want it to be amazing.  The previous version had a solid foundation to build on, so I did.  I’ve added what I call “indie drums”, which I think work well but need a bit of refining, as well as strings.  Most importantly, I added a bit of random-seeming sound effects (it’s the sound of a ZIP drive rewinding layered over an old toy robot) that I think will add something, if only I can get them mixed right.

Anyway, let me know what you think; I’m always up for critiques.

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Ah, first entry. Unless you’re one of my personal friends, or find me incredibly interesting –assuming I’ve written more than just these few words– I’m honestly surprised you’ve stumbled across this page. It’s not that I find myself boring, but as the unspoken rules of the blogosphere go, reading the first few posts of a new blog is about as taboo as wearing nothing but a pink corset to a business meeting. (It flies in some circles, but most it’s just unheard of.)

So, how did I get here? Passing all the nitty gritty that gets us all here (it’s not that kinda blog!), my story sounds pretty similar to just about every other non-prodigy musician’s, writer’s, designer’s, or composer’s story. I started at a particularly young age, producing absolute drivel, but I have a supportive family that felt lying to me was a good idea. They said “I love it!” and told me to keep it up, and I did.

Piano lessons, public school band classes, Dungeons and Dragons with friends, an overactive imagination, various jobs to pay the bills, various bands to build my musical arsenal… I didn’t write much, not traditional writing anyway; that was my brother’s area. For those of you without siblings, that means I never considered writing as an option, but that didn’t mean the ideas never came, only that I never learned to polish them.

I started writing music for short films, church projects, and that lead me to sites like indiegamer.com, which lead me to PARPG.net, a project that I’m currently working on. I signed on to write music, and when the other composers started moving in, each with more experience, I opted to move into sound design. Being so early in the design process, and hanging out in the forums, I started contributing story ideas, with people taking note and seeming to enjoy what I was putting out.

I began reading game design blogs, hoping to find some direction I could move in PARPG, and I came to realize that all of my D&D games and overactive imagination were priming me for this.

This blog will serve as a progress report for everything I’m learning, and doing, concerning music, sound, writing, and design.

Here’s to moving forward.

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