PodcastsMusicMaking a Scene Presents

Making a Scene Presents

Richard LHommedieu
Making a Scene Presents
Latest episode

896 episodes

  • Making a Scene Presents

    Making Recorded Music a Product Again

    15/04/2026 | 21 mins.
    Making a Scene Presents - Making Recorded Music a Product Again

    There was a time when recorded music was the thing. The record was not the flyer. It was not the teaser. It was not the loss leader for a T-shirt, a tour, or a playlist slot. It was the product. Fans saved up for it, hunted for it, lined up for it, argued about it, and lived with it. The album sat on a shelf, in a car, in a stereo, in a stack by the bed. It had weight. It had ritual. It had value.

    Now a lot of indie artists are stuck in a bad joke. They make the most expensive thing in their business, then hand it over to platforms built to train listeners that music should feel endless, cheap, and disposable. The song becomes background utility. The album becomes content. The recording becomes marketing for the real business, which lately means touring, merch, and trying not to drown. And yet the bigger joke is this: the public still pays for music when music feels like a real object, a real event, or a real piece of access. In the U.S., streaming made up 82% of recorded music revenue in 2025, but vinyl still passed the $1 billion mark. Globally, streaming drove most recorded music income in 2025, yet physical formats also grew, pushed by strong vinyl demand. That does not say fans refuse to buy music. It says fans will not pay much for the plainest possible version of it anymore.

    http://www.makingascene.org
  • Making a Scene Presents

    Touring Used to Sell Records. Now Records Exist to Sell Touring. What Happens Next?

    14/04/2026 | 22 mins.
    Making a Scene Presents - Touring Used to Sell Records. Now Records Exist to Sell Touring. What Happens Next?

    The old deal is dead

    For a long time, the bargain in music was pretty clear. You made records so people would care. Then you hit the road and turned that attention into ticket sales, merch money, and a bigger audience. Before streaming ate the center out of recorded music, albums were not just art. They were products with real cash value. Touring was promotion, and the record was the thing being promoted.

    Now that whole machine has flipped. In 2025, U.S. recorded music revenue hit a record $11.5 billion, with streaming making up 82% of the market, while global recorded music revenue reached $31.7 billion. On paper, that sounds like a healthy business. But those big numbers do not mean the average artist is healthy. They mostly mean the pipes are full. The question is who controls the pipes, who gets the margin, and who is left paying for the van, the hotel, the crew, the ads, and the gas.

    http://www.makingascene.org
  • Making a Scene Presents

    Parallel Compression: Making Your Mix Punch Without Killing Dynamics

    14/04/2026 | 16 mins.
    Making a Scene Presents - Parallel Compression: Making Your Mix Punch Without Killing Dynamics

    The Trick That Sounds Expensive Even When Your Studio Isn’t

    There is a moment almost every home-recording artist runs into. You finish a mix. It sounds clean. It sounds balanced. Nothing is obviously broken. But when you play it next to a record that hits you in the chest, yours feels polite. The kick does not leap out. The vocal does not stay in your face. The song has emotion, but not enough muscle. So you reach for compression, push harder, and suddenly the life drains out of the track. The groove gets smaller. The singer sounds pinned to the wall. The whole thing is louder, but somehow less alive. Parallel compression is the move that solves that problem. It is one of those real studio tricks that sounds fancy, but it is built on a simple idea: keep your natural performance, then blend in a second, heavily compressed version underneath it. Done right, you get punch, thickness, density, and excitement without flattening the human feel out of the song. For indie artists, that matters because a mix that feels finished earns trust faster, holds attention longer, and gives your direct releases, live recordings, sync submissions, fan-club exclusives, and premium downloads a better shot at turning into actual money instead of just more content floating in the feed.

    http://www.makingascene.org
  • Making a Scene Presents

    Interview with Katy Vernon

    13/04/2026 | 1h
    Making a Scene Presents an Interview with Katy Vernon

    Katy was born and raised in London, UK, but over the past dozen-plus years she’s become one of Minnesota’s busiest and most recognizable musicians. Blending melodic pop-folk songwriting with the twang and drive of an Americana band, Katy delivers songs that are hooky, heartfelt, and built to connect—whether she’s playing an intimate room or a big outdoor stage.

    http://www.makingascene.org
  • Making a Scene Presents

    Content That Adapts: Using AI to Personalize Posts for Different Types of Fans

    12/04/2026 | 21 mins.
    Making a Scene Presents - Content That Adapts: Using AI to Personalize Posts for Different Types of Fans

    There is a quiet little lie baked into modern music marketing, and most artists have been trained to accept it. The lie is this: one post is supposed to do everything.

    It is supposed to hype the hardcore fans, introduce the new people, move tickets in one city, sell merch everywhere else, wake up dead email subscribers, impress the algorithm, and somehow still sound human. Then when it does not work, the artist gets blamed. Maybe the hook was weak. Maybe the image was wrong. Maybe the timing was bad. Maybe you just need to post more.

    No. The real problem is simpler than that. You are trying to talk to different people as if they are the same person.

    http://www.makingascene.org

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About Making a Scene Presents

Making a Scene is the #1 Resource for the Indie Artist and the Fans that Love them! http://www.makingascene.org
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