What Is Latency? And How to Record Without Losing Your Groove
Making a Scene Presents - What Is Latency? And How to Record Without Losing Your GrooveWritten for indie musicians who just want their tracks to sound right without fighting their gearIf you’ve ever tried to record vocals or guitar and felt like your timing was weird, or you couldn’t stay in the pocket no matter how hard you focused, you’ve already met the enemy. That enemy is latency. Latency is one of those home-studio problems that doesn’t care how talented you are. When it’s bad, it throws off your groove in a way that feels like someone moved the beat a few inches to the left.
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Turning One song Into 30 Pieces of AI-Generated Content
Making a Scene Presents - Turning One song Into 30 Pieces of AI-Generated ContentHow Indie Artists Can Turn a Single Track into a Month of PromotionThe New Reality: One Song Isn’t Enough AnymoreIf you’re an indie artist trying to grow your fanbase today, you’ve probably already felt the pressure. You drop a song, you post about it once or twice, and the whole thing sinks into the feed like a stone. It feels unfair, but this is the world we’re in now. The truth is that the platforms don’t promote your release just because you’re talented. They promote you when you give them steady content that keeps people watching.
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Touring 2035: Why Your Next Fanbase Will Come From a Wallet, Not a ZIP Code
Making a Scene Presents - Touring 2035: Why Your Next Fanbase Will Come From a Wallet, Not a ZIP CodeThe touring world you know is collapsing. That old-school strategy of drawing lines on a map, circling major cities, and hoping enough people show up to cover gas is fading fast. For decades, touring was built on guesswork and geography. But the next era of touring won’t be about cities at all. It will be shaped by something far more powerful and far more honest: blockchain wallets. These wallets hold tokens, smart tickets, digital credentials, and little pieces of fan loyalty that tell you exactly where your true community lives long before you ever pack a van. The touring map of 2035 will be drawn by clusters of fans who have already proven they care, not by the ZIP codes a promoter says might be “good markets.”
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Interview with Kamel L King Entertainment Lawyer and Artist Management
Making a Scene Presents an Interview with Kamel L King Entertainment Lawyer and Artist ManagementKamel L. King was born and raised in Jackson, Mississippi. He studied at American University in Washington, D.C., before returning home to attend Tougaloo College, where he graduated with honors and earned a bachelor’s degree in Political Science and International Relations. He later received his law degree from Mississippi College School of Law, focusing on intellectual property and entertainment law.
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Why Web3 Touring Collectives Will Replace Booking Agents
Making a Scene Presents - Why Web3 Touring Collectives Will Replace Booking AgentsHow Indie Artists Can Use DAOs, Fan-Powered Ticketing, and Community Spaces to Build Tours Without GatekeepersThe music industry likes to pretend that touring is some kind of secret science only insiders understand. Booking agents act like they hold magic keys. Venues act like they own every path to a stage. Promoters act like they decide who deserves to play. But if you talk to indie artists long enough, you learn the truth. The system isn’t complicated. It’s controlled. And Web3 is about to tear that control down to the foundation.
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