RapReviews.com Editorial - Adam M. Levin: Industry Practice #4,081 Author: Adam M. Levin
EDITOR'S NOTE: Adam M. Levin was a regular contributor to RapReviews.com
a couple of years back. He wrote the following editorial for HypeNews.org and after consulting with
them and submitting it to us we've offered to reprint it here in its entirety.
So today I'm gonna vent a little bit. Back in high school, I began checking
out RapReviews.com, a great website and resource for Hip-Hop
criticism run by Steve 'Flash' Juon and began inquiring
as to how I, being a huge smack-talker and smug, holier-than-thou
opinionated Hip-Hop head myself, could get a job writing for him.
His staff hiring guy, Matt Jost (also a good critic) responded telling me I
was too young to work there. Fast-forward a few years and I'm in college in
need of a sideline gig. Who better to hit up than my favorite site? They
gave me a job and I worked there for about a year and a half until I left
for a country whose mailing practices were a bit... unreliable.
While I enjoyed most of the job's process (as a cool little bonus, one of my
reviews was quoted on Wikipedia), I was relatively lazy. I reviewed what I
wanted when I wanted, and Flash kept sending me exceedingly polite e-mails
about albums he'd taken the time to send me that I had yet to review. That
may have been the point at which I realized rap criticism wasn't a good
career choice for a kid with ADD and a penchant for slacking. (Okay,
"penchant" may be understating it a bit. "Addiction" is more accurate.)
There was only one real downside to this process: mailing lists. Foolishly
enough, I believed that the e-mails I'd get would be from either grateful
readers and artists... or angry readers and artists depending on the review.
Instead, I'd have to say that a good 98% of the RapReviews-related
correspondence I received were from promo companies trying to push their
clients' music.
Now, for those not in the know, promo companies are evil conglomerates bent
on spamming your e-mail inbox with as much mediocre music as they possibly can.
Every now and then I've seen something that's piqued my interest, and by
"every now and then" I mean twice.
While I won't name any of these companies, I will say that every morning
since about a month into my term at RapReviews that I've woken up to about
three or four e-mails whose header read like this:
From: GETTINHAMPROMO
Re: RISING RAPPER LIL BILLYJON'S NEW "BLACK & YELLOW" FREESTYLE!!!!!!!!!
Then should you open these e-mails, you will find the world's most
exaggerated press kit, complete with about 5 YouTube clips, 12 mp3
attachments and an average of seven exclamation points per sentence. (Note:
I'd foolishly told Flash to post my college e-mail account—with limited
storage—as a contact for me. BAD DECISION.) It turns your e-mail inbox (and
eventually they find you on Facebook, too) into an online light post.
The only difference is that I'd be ten times more willing to read every sign
on a light post than I would any of the e-mails I'm sent from these
promotional companies.
Now, here's the thing: as an artist that's trying to eventually find a way
to parlay my talents into a career (or at the very least a string of shows
and music that could loosely qualify as a career), I understand impatience
and the strong desire to take a shortcut sometimes. When I was a reviewer, I
never really complained about it: nobody makes music to go unheard, so I get
the concept.
However, I've also made this mistake before myself. I've also learned that
if you want people to listen to your music, be proactive, but also make sure
to take the time to write a personal message to the people you're sending
the music to. It indicates that the recipient isn't just a contact in an
e-mail listserv that they were kidnapped into in the first place.
Music promotion has its role, but when it's done incorrectly, it tends to
have a repellant effect as opposed to a magnetizing one. Thus, if you're an
artist trying to find an open ear, make sure YOU put the time and effort
into working for YOUR success, and don't pay someone to annoy your potential
fanbase instead.
Oh... and don't get me started on Facebook.
Have a great week, y'all.
PEACE
Adam
P.S. Here are some of the more talented RapReviews staffers. Spam them if
you want... but only with love:
Steve 'Flash' Juon: http://www.twitter.com/angrymarks
Jesal 'Jay Soul' Padania: http://www.twitter.com/JesalTV
Adam Bernard: http://www.twitter.com/AdamsWorldBlog
Emanuel Wallace: http://www.twitter.com/MannyWallace
Originally posted: February 8, 2011
source: RapReviews.com
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