Tom Robinson| 03:00 UK time, Sunday, 27 February 2011
This weekend Bethan Elfyn sat in for Tom with plenty of Introducing favourites. Her guests were the Welsh supergroup Jonny, with a session track from Huw Stephens favourites Chailo Sim.
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KILL IT KID - Pray On Me
YOUNG LEGIONNAIRE - Chapter, Verse
ALEX WINSTON - Locomotive
STANDARD FARE - Suitcase
INTRODUCING ROULETTE TRACK CAT MATADOR - The Address
WYE OAK - Civillian
TROPHY WIFE - The Quiet Earth
VVOLVES - Vvolves
INTERVIEW GUESTS JONNY - Bread
BEAT MILK JUGS - Dvina
PANDA SU - Alphabet Song
SESSION TRACK CHAILO SIM - Latch
DENUO - Infidelity
STRANGE NEWS FROM ANOTHER STAR - Solomon
HOT CITY - Go Bang
BENJAMIN FRANCIS LEFTWICH - Pictures
CONQUERING ANIMAL SOUND - Wasp
LLEUWEN STEFFAN - War Var'ch Dair Mor
SEERAUBER JENNY - Avalanche
DORIAN CONCEPT - Her Tears Taste Like Pears
TOM WHALLEY BLOGOSPHERE TIP 1 SOUND OF RUM - Slow Slow (SEAHAWKS SLOW SUNSET REMIX)
TOM WHALLEY BLOGOSPHERE TIP 2 MEAN LADY - Far Away
Tom Robinson| 03:00 UK time, Monday, 21 February 2011
Here's what we played on Monday's show - which included an exclsuive track specially recorded for thr show by LA's Family Of The Year, and our first-ever track swap Breakfast show hostson Sydney's world famous Triple J station - Tom Ballard & Alex Dyson. We gave them Raven Beats Crow and they gave us The Jezabels but which is better? There's only one way to find out - click on the links below and have a listen!
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THE HYPE - Hold On https://www.myspace.com/thehypescotland
Tom Robinson| 03:00 UK time, Sunday, 20 February 2011
This was what we played in the small hours of Sunday morning. My interview guests were longstanding friends of this show the Leeds trio MonMon whose album Garage Rock has just been released, while our sessions came courtesy of Vic Galloway at 主播大秀 Scotland Introducing featuring the excellent Recovery Club....
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THE SNAP ELECT - Good In The Middle
STEALING SHEEP - The Mountain Dogs
HANDSOME PANDA - Better Than Before
YUNIOSHI - CTRL
INTRODUCING ROULETTE THE SAND BAND 鈥 Set Me Free
CHINSTRAP - Happens
FROM THIS WEEK'S PODCAST ZOE KONEZ - Tell Me Your Name
Tom Robinson| 14:18 UK time, Monday, 14 February 2011
"How to make the best of a dying industry despite being a shy and unremarkable fellow: The Jamie Halliday Story."
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I run : Specialists in Commercial Suicide (//) and was kindly invited by Tom Robinson to write a guest blog about running an independent label. It's debatable whether someone who has lost as much money and achieved as little industry recognition as I have is in any position to map out your business strategy but I've made plenty of mistakes and some you can avoid. Hopefully by writing them down I'll learn from them too.
This is a mix of firsthand experience, common sense and tales I've been told by people who know better, presented in a list of Do's and Don'ts. DO release THE record you love and do it the first time (it could always be the last time). The first is the most fun, after that you just think, 'man, I hope I don't bungle this as badly as last time.'
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DO plan your next releases.
DON'T release your first two titles on the same day because it'll save you postage. Trust me.
DO feel free to discard the rules of the industry. It's dying, full of people with dated experience and your bedroom operation does not fit in with its requirements.
DON'T receive stock on a Friday and release your record on a Sunday. 6-8 weeks planning time is essential if you want a chance of some high profile press and radio. I always get this bit wrong.
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DO look for the smallest pressing available. Most manufacturers insist on a 500-1000 run and you won't know how many this is to sell and store until 10 boxes show up. Try someone like for small runs
DON'T cop out and go for 鈥減rofessional looking鈥 CDRs, unless you really have to. Shops rarely take them and CDRs eventually rot and die, do you want to put a sell-by-date on your artist's legacy? This is mostly a pet hate but you've got to do these things for love and pride.
DO utilise digital. It isn't my favourite format either but it will bring you closer to paying your artists, which should be your priority. Plus, digital singles cost next to nothing and will allow you to re-present your releases to radio.
DON'T release a physical single. The 90s may well have been the greatest decade ever but those years are gone. The cost of a disc with 7 minutes audio on is the same as the cost of a disc with 60 minutes audio on, you just can't charge as much.
DO sign people you get on with. You're both going to bungle things and you'll want one another's support. Plus you're going to have to talk to one another a LOT, so while Oasis might be worth your time for a cut of 95 platinum discs, you wouldn't pay for the privilege.
DON'T be too good a friend. If you're interested enough in music to start a label you probably know a lot of musicians (and most of them aren't very good) don't water down your catalogue with favours for friends. It's awkward but essential.
DO keep active. You can't release a record every month but you can generate content and updates. Use twitter/facebook/blogs/newsletters and give away free songs. One thing I did to keep active was 鈥淎udio Antihero's Never Say DIY! Radio鈥, it wasn't a runaway success but it kept a few people coming back, it also rocks.
DO consider dealing direct with indie record shops on a sale-or-return basis, don't bend over backwards for a physical distribution deal in your early days. I've independently got a 95 albums into retail but I've known 鈥榙istributed titles' to see six sales.
DON'T ever think that 鈥榞ood music sells itself'. New music is so easily found now that people need to actually want to like it. PROMOTE! HYPE! SPIN! DISGUISE!
DON'T think that the world is watching. If you've made a big claim on twitter only for it to turn sour then don't feel you have to proceed because you've 鈥榓nnounced it'. Chances are your 296 followers aren't all that bothered. Similarly, if you've done a great record in 2011 but cannot find a suitable artist in 2012 don't feel you have to press something just to keep busy, it'll only hurt you. You aren't a reality TV-star, you don't need to stay in the headlines for your previous work to be appreciated.
DON'T release physical records from artists who don't gig (a rule I constantly break). Reviews don't sell many albums and nor does radio on our level (indie artists are lucky to receive a one off spot play). You need bands to take a couple of boxes of stock and gig. Even if they sell 3 copies every few nights that could easily be more than you manage that month.
DON'T believe retail prices. High street shops are lying to you. 拢10 is too much for your web-shop. Only people who love music will be aware of an independent release, these people buy a lot of music and can't afford to spend 拢10 on everything. Least of all something untested like your debut. Audio Antihero's first full-length album was 拢5.99, people still wanted to download it for free.
DO take advice from other labels to get a realistic idea of what to expect.
DON'T believe everything you're told. Least of all by me.
Tom Robinson| 03:00 UK time, Monday, 14 February 2011
Monday being February 14th we brought you a My Bloody Valentine's Day special of love songs from the gushy and twee to the bitter & twisted. Our studio quest was ALICE GUN - who knows a thing or two about twisted love songs - while our session tracks came from those incurable Liverpudlian romantics STEALING SHEEP who also release a new Valentines Day single today called The Mountain Dogs via
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JESSIE WARE & SAMPHA - Valentine
ZOE KONEZ - Tell Me Your Name
TOM COPSON - Treehouse/Prayers For Benjamin
THE CAEZARS - You Can Love Me
ALICE OSTAPJUK - Samuel's Secret
THE BIG NOWHERE - I Got Love
TIM GILVIN - Gongga Shan
INTERVIEW GUEST ALICE GUN 鈥 Not In This World
THEE INTOLERABLE KIDD - Strange Idea Of Love
LO AND THE BEHOLDS - Greatest Love
HUW STEPHENS TIP SWIMMING 鈥 Sun in The Island
LIAM DULLAGHAN - Radio Verona
SESSION TRACK STEALING SHEEP 鈥 Sleep
SPARE TRACK RECURRENT BARK BARK DISCO - Song For The Lovers ;
SPRING OFFENSIVE - A Stutter and a Start
THE DAYDREAM CLUB - The Affair
BOBBY FRICTION TIP NIROBI - Your Failure鈥檚 Gone To Your Head https:// www.tru-thoughts.co.uk
OBVIOUSLIES - Wish For You
BECOMING REAL - The Thing
AMERICAN WEREWOLF ACADEMY - Goodnight My Pumpkin Pie
RUTH BARNES TIP 1 MITTENS - Deer Park Mirage
RUTH BARNES TIP 2 MARINA GALLARDO - Climbing the Walls
Tom Robinson| 03:00 UK time, Sunday, 13 February 2011
Below is a clickable list of all the tracks and artists we played on the show this Sunday morning. Our session tracks were recorded live on my Friday show by . Our studio guests were听 the LA quartet who also gave us this exclusive video of Joseph and Sebastian from the band performing their classic Summer Girl:
TRACKLISTINGS:
SOMA HIGH - Flashback Tuesdays ;
WHALES IN CUBICLES - 100 Years Of Solitary Franchising
WE ARE KNUCKLE DRAGGER - Tom Ryder
CARA McPHILLIPS - Be Only Mine
INTRODUCING ROULETTE UNCLE ACID AND THE DEADBEATS- I鈥檒l Cut You Down ;
TAKE AIM FIRE - The One Thing
SHARKS TOOK THE REST - Restaurant
BLACKHATS - Blood and Space - 3:59
INTERVIEW GUESTS FAMILY OF THE YEAR - Summer Girl
RIOTEERS - These Dark Dreams ;
YER BEAUTIES - Come on All the Darlin ;
BETHAN ELFYN TIP HAIL! THE PLANES - Brother ;
LEFT CHANNEL - Food ;
SESSION TRACK JUKEBOX COLLECTIVE - Lost & Found
THE HYPE - Hold On - 4:13
JAMES CLEAVER QUINTET - Chicken Sh*t (For The Soul)
SPEAKER SAYS - On Horses
DJ TARGET TIP PRIME 鈥 Techtronic ;
VIOLET BONES - I Feel The Need
MELODRAMAS - Elephant
LAIL ARAD - Winter
TOM WHALLEY BLOG TIP SCHOOL KNIGHTS - F*** The Beach
TOM WHALLEY BLOG TIP NATURAL CHILD 鈥 The Jungle
SIRENS AND US - Raise The Violent Flag
STANDARD FARE - You Can Wait ;
LET'S TALK DAGGERS - Raina
SESSION TRACK JUKEBOX COLLECTIVE - The Rise And Fall Of Billy The Kid
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