PM@CH Journal 2016 | Page 6

The Swiss Project Management Journal The Creative Project How difficult is it to secure the resources you need to record a CD? It is very difficult nowadays as record labels don’t sign artists anymore that aren’t already "happening". You have to create your own hype today and THEN you get a contract. That used to be a labels job in earlier days. In 1998 my band sent out demo cassettes and we had Virgin EMI and Warner and Sony knocking at our doors offering us all deals - so money to pay for a production. 17 years later, having quite a large fanbase already, having had several number one hits in the swiss charts, having sold platinum and gold with previous records I tried to get a deal but didn’t get one. The music business is broken. Everybody is scared. If an AnR (Artist and Repertoire those were the guys who in earlier days used to listen to demos sent to them and go to see concerts to find new artists to sign) signs somebody today and the record company loses money with this artist (which is very likely to happen since nobody buys CDs anymore) the AnR of course will end up fired. So what happens now is: they wait and see, check what’s being searched on Shazam (so what kids listen to in the disco and want to know what it is…) check Twitter follower numbers etc. So you as an artist have to market yourself and be already „happening“, and being a Hype before they’d even consider signing you which is totally twisted and stupid, but that’s the way it is. So many artists nowadays ask their fanbase to help them out via crowdfunding. When is the CD recording project actually considered as being finished? When you’re lucky enough to have found a distributor: when it’s on Itunes and the CDs are in the shop. If you’re doing it yourself… once you sell the CDs on your website or after your shows. I’d say. What typically goes wrong during a CD recording project? What's the worst thing that has gone wrong? Project Management Institute SWITZERLAND Chapter The producer forgot to do backups and the computer crashes and work of weeks is gone. Or the responsible person for that job sends out the demos (or the wrong artwork file or whatever) instead of the master to the manufacturing company and you’ll end up having thousands of copies of something you’ll have to pay for but can’t sell. How do you deal with quality control? Does everything have to be 100% perfect or is there a point where you say now it’s good enough? I am a perfectionist, so yes, I wouldn’t be able to sleep if I put something out there I am not 100% sure about. If you’re exposing yourself as much as you do as a musician you know from the beginning there are gonna be MANY people who will tear you to pieces anyway. So if you’re sensitive - make sure YOU love your work, because then it’s easier to put up with criticism. Of course a record is NEVER finished. So you have to draw a line and be aware that this is a RECORD. So „recording“ a STATE… you might wanna change stuff in two months, but that’s okay. For NOW it’s done. Does the CD have to be finished by a certain date? What happens if it takes longer? If you have a record deal, they might give you a deadline. I prefer not to work with one for the reasons mentioned above. It’s finished when I feel it’s finished. It happens quite often that releases get postponed because of several reasons. Has the move to your solo career, after being the front woman of a band, changed the way in which you collaborate to make music? Yes quite drastically since I was working with a producer and as a band we produced ourselves. Also I fired my manager and my booker so am doing everything on my own now. Also I don’t have a record deal so I am dealing with distribution company and promotion company and marketing plans etc. all on my own. It’s fun and exciting but a lot of new things for me so I had to do my „homework“. It makes much more sense for me though since I Photo: T-ingénierie is already pretty clear: take a band like Franz Ferdinand or Coldplay - you can put any producer in front of them and they’ll still sound like themselves. 6 know all the people in Switzerland that I need to know, so I don’t have to give away 20% of my income for somebody who is literally just forwarding calls to me because people prefer to talk to me directly anyway. How do you see the music industry going? Do you see the future as streaming subscription, crowdfunding, recordings being only free adverts for live-shows? I am afraid that might be the case yes. But there is also an optimist inside of me saying people will never stop to cherish reading a book or listening to a CD. But maybe that is just because I am like that. Today kids are very used to treating music as something that comes free. It makes me quite sad sometimes how everything is becoming quicker and less valuable. Nowadays DJs are the rockstars and music festivals are just a get together for getting drunk. Haha, I probably sound like a 100 year old person, but yes the music industry is in a very bad place at the moment indeed. As an independent artist carrying your own projects, how do you approach time management, any useful techniques? Do you set yourself working time limits? I do yes … but being VERY flexible about them. Akmal Faruqui 2016 Edition