Thursday, June 7, 2012

Quality Is A Moving Target

Today I read a good article by Stephen Carmichael on Music Think Tank called "How Google And Search Engine Optimization Changed The Music Industry." In it he puts forth the premise that search engine optimization has changed music because it emphasizes good SEO technique as a means for high search ranking, which in turn means that "quality music" usually takes a backseat to what happens to be currently popular.

One of the examples he shows is how Rebecca Black's viral hit video/song "Friday" still ranks highly on a innocent search of the word "friday." If you were living in a cave last year, "Friday" became a huge hit mostly because it was so bad that you had to experience it at least once. Unless, you were a 13 year-old girl. Then you probably thought it ranked right up there with Justin Bieber in the pantheon of greatest music of all time.

And that's the problem when we try to define "quality music" (or quality anything for that matter). As the saying goes, "One man's trash is another man's treasure." Skrillex's music might be nirvana if you're into EDM, but it might be the depths of audio hell if you're into Nirvana the band. And likewise if you're a big dixieland fan or marching band fan, or classical music fan, or hip-hop fan....... you get the point.

In fact, Frank Sinatra is regarded as one of the greatest singers and musical icons by most of the world (take a look at this footage of Ol' Blue Eyes in the studio), but I had a very knowledgeable and well-thought-of music professor from a major university write me about his poor technique and phrasing and how it crushes him that the masses over-rate him so. Quality is a moving target.

That's one of the reasons that I try to never make blanket statements like "This is bad," "This is good," or "This is mediocre" when doing the weekly song analysis on my Big Picture production blog. What I consider good or bad is probably exactly the opposite of someone out there, and who am I to say that they're wrong?

Music is something that you can't touch, but it can touch you. It's all about how it speaks to you and makes you feel. It might be a hook, an arrangement, a melody or lyric that has that special spark that only you hear, even if the rest of the world doesn't. It's your special connection that takes you to another dimension that maybe only you can get to, and only from one particular song. Who is any one else to dare comment on that connection?

That's why it's so important for an artist to keep searching for an audience, because regardless of what kind of music your doing and your proficiency level, your audience is out there. It may be just a dozen people, but they're waiting for you to find them. The music you make will be really important to them, even if the rest of the world doesn't get it.

Making a hit is really, really hard, even for the best hit makers. When a song becomes a "hit" (meaning that some group of people immensely dig it), it's happened for a reason. There's magic that's involved that should at least be appreciated, even if you can't get your arms around it. Any music that touches the heart of another is special. The smartest in our business know enough to learn from that and apply it to their own work. Because in the end, music quality is a moving target. Hitting the bulls eye is the tough part.
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2 comments:

Jef Knight said...

Very nice look at this subject.
And quite nicely written I must say.

I fall into the category of having unusual music that requires me to keep searching for my audience.

Locally I have a few solid fans, but it's a hugely conservative mindset around here that is certainly "walking backwards into the future". They want Neil Young, John Prine etc, but certainly don't play any original music unless it's country or folk.

So I perform for fans right here at my home, "Rockingham" where I built an area on my patio to put bands. Plus there's the internet. I enjoyed >123,000 downloads of songs from my last album. I also sold 350 CDs without playing a single show.

I've been composing and recording for 35 years and not a single one of my friends or family like any of the hundreds of pieces I've produced. How I kept going is a story in itself.

Thanks to the internet, and people like you who are both informative and inspiring, I feel that my next album will really reach a much larger group of people who actually like my, as my friend called them, "chartreuse melodies that would bug most people" and "earworms".

Cheers

Uranus Recording Studio said...

This is a good article. It is been getting harder to find good music. Popular music is not always the best....

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