Hi
there,
The
last coupla blogs have been concerned with getting music onto the all-important
community radio networks in Australia. Don't worry, I know you want the
low-down on commercial radio in Australia - that's coming in the next blog. But I thought I'd attack the more achievable stuff first.
Internet radio is everywhere on the, uh, internet nowadays. So how do you pinpoint which stations to target in the vastness that is cyberspace?
They
have listings by genre and indie/unsigned sections as well
as the typical music genres. It's a matter of filtering down to the ones that are
right for your style of music and visiting the websites individually - it may be a long process
but you've got a pretty good chance of airplay if your targetting is good.
iTunes is also useful - there is a Radio link under the Library header in your iTunes navigation menu. Click on that for a catalogue of hundreds of internet radio stations, categorised by genre. While you're there, don't forget the podcasts.
iTunes is also useful - there is a Radio link under the Library header in your iTunes navigation menu. Click on that for a catalogue of hundreds of internet radio stations, categorised by genre. While you're there, don't forget the podcasts.
Here are a few of the net radio stations worth singling out:
Pandora. Apparently it has more than 50 million listeners worldwide. It uses the Music Genome Project to delivers customised radio to each one. Once the Pandora system learns someone's musical preferences, it serves up a continuous stream of music the listener should actually like. Check out Pandora’s not-exactly-straightforward artist submission guidelines here: http://submitmusic.pandora.com. It's free to join.
Jango customises radio for its users too. "Jango Airplay" is a promotion service that gives emerging artists guaranteed airplay on Jango's stations, as "similar artists" alongside the popular artists of their choice. Packages start from about $10 for 250 plays. www.jango.com
Pandora. Apparently it has more than 50 million listeners worldwide. It uses the Music Genome Project to delivers customised radio to each one. Once the Pandora system learns someone's musical preferences, it serves up a continuous stream of music the listener should actually like. Check out Pandora’s not-exactly-straightforward artist submission guidelines here: http://submitmusic.pandora.com. It's free to join.
Jango customises radio for its users too. "Jango Airplay" is a promotion service that gives emerging artists guaranteed airplay on Jango's stations, as "similar artists" alongside the popular artists of their choice. Packages start from about $10 for 250 plays. www.jango.com
Last.fm also matches new music to users'
tastes. It's free for artists and labels to register but Australian listeners
have to pay a subscription fee. http://www.last.fm/
Radar Music is an Aussie music site that
features interviews as well as streaming music. Upload your music for free. www.radarmusic.com.au
One of
great things about a lot of internet radio is their ability to link your tracks
directly to iTunes or Amazon - and that's pretty hard to do from a stereo!
See you
next time - I'm going to be talking about getting onto Commercial radio in
Australia...
Cheers,
Amanda
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