How to Get Put On in the Music Industry
Some say, “Never judge a book by its cover,” but it’s the cover that
stimulates a viewer’s heart, mind and soul to open the book. If the
presentation isn’t captivating, then the book may never be opened.
With this in mind, always present yourself in the way you want to be
known and remembered. More often than not, your resume or demo package
is your first introduction to your new start/new life. I believe that if
you can learn to master the art of presentation, you will have the best
shot at any job you want or getting your demo heard out of thousands of
submissions.
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| www.PalaceMusicGroup.com |
Being the music executive that I am, I get countless demo submissions
daily. Even with the team I have, it is not humanly possible for us to
listen to them all. So, to weed through them quickly and effectively, I
look for packages that stand out.
You might be the illest lyricist, most creative with the dopest
delivery, but if you don’t know how to present yourself well in your
demo package, you’ll end up in the recycling bin—literally.
In my 10 years of being in this business, I can remember three very
distinct demo packages. All three vary different but they stood out for
some reason or another.
The first package was from a group called Sweetest Candie. They sent
a beautiful wooden Godiva chocolate box. Inside, the box was laced with
their pictures (which looked very professional), their CD (4
studio-quality tracks), a well-written and typed bio with contact
information and a bunch of chocolate candy that was wrapped in paper
saying “Sweetest Candie.” I couldn’t wait to hear what the music sounded
like after receiving my package.
The second package was a CD player and headphones with a sticker that
said press play accompanied by a bio and a picture. The presentation
made it effortlessly convenient to press play and listen…so I did.
The third package is memorable not for being great, but because it
became the laughing stock of my office. This brother decided to send me
Polaroid shots of him in his boxers, him on the beach in Speedos,
pictures of his kids, a hand written bio on copy paper, and a cassette
tape. Not even a regular cassette tape…a mini one. I saved that package
for a very long time…but for all the wrong reasons. LOL! Even now as I
think about it I can’t help but chuckle.
We live in a visual society, so the first assessment a person will
make of you will be based on what their eyes can see or what their ear
can hear (as in my field). At first glance, who you are, where you’re
from, and what you’re capable of doing counts for nothing if no one
else cares to find out.


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