Who
Do You Sound Like? (And
Why It's Important)
by Bob Baker
Admit
it. Most musicians hate to compare themselves to other
artists. Does this describe you? If you feel you are a unique,
one-of-a-kind creative being, I wholeheartedly agree with you. But if
you think you shouldn't tarnish your musical identity with comparisons
to other artists, I ask you to reconsider.
Why?
It has everything to do with this crazy little hunk of matter called
the human brain. According to the Berkeley
Lab,
"Humans retrieve information best when it can be linked to other
related information." In other words, without a familiar reference
point, people have a tough time filing away and remembering new sights,
sounds, smells, etc.
Tapping Into
'The System'
In
an article
by Allen Barker,
he writes, "Memory is a dynamic process. It arises from reminders and
cues." The process that helps the brain sort out new stimulus is called
"associative memory." Barker continues, "An associative memory is a
memory system that takes an input 'key' and produces the 'closest'
stored memory that matches that key. If the memory had stored a picture
of a chair, for example, and were presented with a 'key' of half a
chair, it would fill in the remaining half of the chair."
If
you think this is all impractical mumbo jumbo, check out the work being
done by Pandora.
It's Music
Genome Project
is a system that analyzes music using "a set of attributes that capture
not only the musical identity of a song, but also many significant
qualities that are relevant to understanding the musical preferences of
consumers who browse the material. Each song is analyzed along 400
distinct musical attributes to create a complete musical analysis."
Sounds
deep, but in essence, the Pandora research works much like
Amazon's "customers who bought X also purchased Y" recommendations.
Making the
Mental Music Connection
Another
site that understands the importance of this concept is WeSoundLike.com.
The home page reads "Find new music like your favorite music! Just
browse for your favorite music artists and we'll tell you the new and
upcoming artists that are influenced by them!" To add your act, go to
the submission page at
www.wesoundlike.com/SubmissionForm.cfm.
Convinced
yet? Music fans need clues. People who enjoy your music
also enjoy other artists. And many of those artists are more familiar
to the masses than you are right now. So tap into the mental links that
already exist in the minds of fans who support other similar-sounding
artists.
Bob
Baker is the author of "Guerrilla Music Marketing Handbook," "Unleash
the Artist Within" and "Branding Yourself Online." He also publishes
TheBuzzFactor.com, a web site and e-zine that deliver marketing tips,
self-promotion ideas and other empowering messages to music people of
all kinds. Get your FREE subscription to Bob's e-zine by visiting http://TheBuzzFactor.com
today.
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