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Making a Scene Presents

Richard LHommedieu
Making a Scene Presents
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985 episodes

  • Making a Scene Presents

    How AI Can Turn One Song Into a 30-Day Marketing Plan

    17/07/2026 | 23 mins.
    Making a Scene Presents - How AI Can Turn One Song Into a 30-Day Marketing Plan

    Your Song Is More Than One Release-Day Post

    Independent artists are often told that they need more content.

    More videos. More posts. More stories. More emails. More reels. More reasons to dance in front of a phone while pointing at words floating over their heads.

    The pressure never stops.

    The problem is not that artists have nothing to say. The problem is that most artists do not have a system for turning what they have already created into a steady flow of useful stories, fan conversations, and income opportunities.

    A song may take months to write, record, mix, master, and release. Then the artist posts the cover art, drops a streaming link, asks everyone to listen, and moves on three days later because the algorithm has already developed the attention span of a caffeinated squirrel.

    That is a terrible return on the time, money, and emotion that went into the music.

    One song can support a full month of marketing without the artist repeating the same sales pitch thirty times. The song contains lyrics, emotions, production choices, personal stories, visual ideas, fan questions, live-performance moments, merchandise ideas, video clips, and reasons for people to join the artist’s journey.

    Artificial intelligence can help uncover those pieces. It can organize them, rewrite them for different platforms, create variations, suggest visuals, draft emails, outline reels, and build a working calendar.

    But AI should not become the artist.

    The artist supplies the truth, personality, music, feelings, and point of view. AI helps turn that raw material into a usable plan. Think of it as a fast assistant who never gets tired, but occasionally says something ridiculous with complete confidence. You still need to be the boss.

    Most important, the goal of this campaign is not simply to create thirty days of social media activity. Social media should be the doorway. The artist’s own website, email list, store, fan community, and permission-based fan system should be the destination.

    A like is nice. A direct relationship is better.

    A view may disappear into a platform report. An email signup, direct purchase, ticket buyer, Fan Passport follow, or membership can become part of the artist’s real business.

    That is how one song starts doing more than collecting streams. It begins building the music industry middle class.

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

    Fan Data Is the New Currency of the Music Industry—and Why Are Artists Still Broke

    16/07/2026 | 21 mins.
    Making a Scene Presents - Fan Data Is the New Currency of the Music Industry—and Why Are Artists Still Broke

    The Gold Rush Nobody Told the Artist About

    Every time a fan streams a song, skips a song, saves an album, watches a video, buys a ticket, clicks an advertisement, follows an artist, visits a website, or abandons a shopping cart, something valuable is created.

    Data.

    That data may reveal where the fan lives, what music they enjoy, which device they use, when they listen, what they buy, how much they spend, which advertisement caught their attention, and what action they are likely to take next.

    The modern music industry runs on this information. Streaming services use it to recommend songs. Social networks use it to decide which posts appear in a feed. Advertisers use it to target possible customers. Ticketing companies use it to promote future events. Record labels use it to decide where to spend marketing money.

    Everyone appears to understand the value of fan data except the person who created the reason for that data to exist.

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

    The Breakthrough Myth Has a Cash-Flow Problem

    14/07/2026 | 22 mins.
    Making a Scene Presents - The Breakthrough Myth Has a Cash-Flow Problem

    A viral moment can make an artist look successful. A durable mix of shows, merch, direct sales, publishing, licensing, fan support, and useful technology can help an artist stay successful. Week One of The Artist-Owned Middle Class replaces the lottery-ticket version of the music business with a system working artists can actually build.

    The Music Business Still Sells Lottery Tickets

    The music business loves a breakthrough story. It is simple, dramatic, and easy to sell. An unknown artist uploads a song, the right person hears it, the algorithm catches fire, the crowd arrives, and life changes before lunch. Roll the credits. Somebody call the documentary crew.

    There is only one small problem with this story: it skips the part where a career has to pay its bills. Attention is not a checking account. A packed comment section cannot pay for a van repair. A playlist placement does not automatically create a merch customer. A huge view count may look wonderful in a screenshot while the artist is still moving money from a day job to cover rehearsal space.

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

    Interview with Brigitte Purdy

    12/07/2026 | 1h 7 mins.
    Making a Scene Presents an Interview with Brigitte Purdy

    Brigitte Rios Purdy is a Los Angeles-born singer and songwriter whose voice carries the warmth of classic soul, the emotional depth of the blues, and the smooth elegance of R&B. From an early age, Purdy understood that singing was more than simply having a gifted voice. For her, music became a way to translate inner feeling into sound, turning personal emotion into songs that connect with listeners on a deeply human level.

    Raised in Los Angeles, Brigitte was drawn to the power and honesty of soul, blues, and rhythm and blues. Her pure, silky vocal tone quickly set her apart, earning her opportunities to perform alongside respected artists including Walter Trout, Sugaray Rayford, Tim Bogert, Dionne Warwick, and Dolly Parton. She has also contributed background vocals for major artists such as The Who and Paul Rodgers, experiences that placed her in the company of some of rock, soul, and blues music’s most recognizable names.

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

    Gerry Casey's Interview with Stone James of Hollis Dorian

    12/07/2026 | 40 mins.
    Making a Scene Presents Gerry Casey's Interview with Stone James of Hollis Dorian

    Hollis Dorian is an award-winning country singer-songwriter whose music blends country roots with rock and pop energy. His sound is built on strong hooks, honest storytelling, and a modern country edge that reflects the wide range of influences that shaped him.

    The title track from his debut EP, Country By Birthright, earned major recognition at the 2023 Josie Music Awards in Nashville, winning Country Song of the Year (Multiple Writers). Hollis accepted the award while standing inside the legendary Opry Circle at the Grand Ole Opry House, a milestone moment that marked an important step forward in his career.

    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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