PodcastsMusicMaking a Scene Presents

Making a Scene Presents

Richard LHommedieu
Making a Scene Presents
Latest episode

860 episodes

  • Making a Scene Presents

    Why Direct-to-Fan SMS Marketing Is Beating the Algorithm

    09/03/2026 | 17 mins.
    Making a Scene Presents - Why Direct-to-Fan SMS Marketing Is Beating the Algorithm

    Your followers are not your audience until you can reach them without asking a platform for permission.

    There was a time when building a following on social media felt like building a community. You posted. Your fans saw it. They liked it, shared it, showed up, bought a shirt, streamed the new single, and maybe brought a friend to the next gig. It was never perfect, but it felt like the work and the reward were connected.

    That deal is dead.

    In 2026, the big feeds are no longer built mainly to help you reach the people who already chose you. They are built to keep users scrolling through an endless stream of AI-ranked recommendations, trend tests, cold discovery, and behavior-driven guesses. Meta says Facebook Feed Recommendations are selected, ranked, and delivered by AI, TikTok says its For You feed is built to help users discover new interests and creators, and Meta has expanded personalization of content and ads using interactions with its AI features. Meanwhile, organic reach keeps sliding into low single digits. Sprout Social says typical Instagram posts now reach roughly 3 to 4 percent of followers, and WordStream says Facebook page posts average about 2.6 percent organic reach. That means the audience you worked to earn can be standing right there and still not see what you made.

    For independent artists, that is not just annoying. It is a business problem. If your next house concert date, vinyl drop, ticket presale, Patreon push, or direct merch offer depends on an algorithm deciding whether your own fans deserve to see it, then your business is sitting on rented land. And rented land is fine for discovery, but it is a terrible place to build a future.

    That is why SMS is winning.

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

    Stop Chasing Virality and Start Building a Sustainable Micro-Label Ecosystem Today

    09/03/2026 | 22 mins.
    Stop Chasing Virality and Start Building a Sustainable Micro-Label Ecosystem Today

    There is a scene happening in bedrooms, garages, basements, back rooms, and half-finished home studios all over America right now. An artist finishes a song, posts a clip, refreshes the numbers, waits for the spike, gets a little bump, and then starts over again. The song is real. The work is real. The hope is real. But the business model is still a slot machine. In 2026, the biggest platforms openly frame discovery as something you can campaign for inside their system, with tools like Spotify Discovery Mode, Marquee, and Showcase. At the same time, Spotify’s current royalty rules say tracks below 1,000 streams in the previous 12 months are not included in the recorded music royalty pool calculation. Streaming is enormous at the industry level, but the structure still rewards scale, leverage, and platform dependency more than artist ownership.

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

    The Living Room Circuit How to Book House Concerts

    09/03/2026 | 22 mins.
    Making a Scene Presents - The Living Room Circuit How to Book House Concerts

    Turn Them Into Touring Infrastructure

    The van pulls off the highway just after dark. Not into a club alley. Not behind a theater. Not into the sad side lot of a bar that promised “great promotion” and forgot to mention the Tuesday trivia crowd. This time the GPS leads you into a quiet neighborhood. Porch lights glow. A dog barks once. Somebody opens the front door before you even knock.

    Inside, the chairs are already set. There is a rug in the corner where you will play. A couple of lamps throw warm light over the room. Someone is slicing cheese in the kitchen. Someone else is carrying in folding chairs from next door. By the time the audience settles in, there are thirty people in the room and every one of them came to listen. Not to drink through your set. Not to shout at the TV over your quiet song. To listen.

    That is the first shock of a good house concert. The second shock is the money.

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

    Why Micro-Sync Licensing Should Be Part of Every Independent Songwriter’s Business Plan

    08/03/2026 | 20 mins.
    Making a Scene Presents - Why Micro-Sync Licensing Should Be Part of Every Independent Songwriter’s Business Plan

    There was a time when independent songwriters were told to build a career around a miracle.

    Write the great song. Record the great track. Get it in the right room. Hope the right person hears it. Maybe a publisher. Maybe a supervisor. Maybe a label-connected gatekeeper who still pretends the industry runs on taste instead of leverage. Then, if the stars line up, maybe that song lands in a TV show, a commercial, a trailer, a game, or a film, and suddenly everybody acts like the system worked because one person got through the wall.

    That story still gets told because it sounds romantic. It also keeps a lot of songwriters broke.

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

    Interview with Eliza Neals

    08/03/2026 | 1h 18 mins.
    Making a Scene Presents an Interview with Eliza Neals

    Eliza Neals is a Detroit-born blues-rock force, and on her 13th studio album, Thunder in the House, she leans fully into the elements that have always made her sound hit different: grit, soul, spirituality, and the unmistakable heartbeat of the city that raised her.

    Growing up on Acacia Street on the outskirts of Detroit, Neals absorbed a wide “musical gumbo” from the start—shaped by the revolutionary sounds of the so-called “Paris of the Midwest,” and grounded in her indigenous Armenian heritage. That mix of cultures, church-and-street reality, and Detroit’s hard-earned swagger became the foundation of her voice as both an artist and songwriter. Armed with a Bachelor of Arts in Music from Wayne State University and deeply influenced by her friendship with the late songwriting legend Barrett Strong (known for work with artists like Marvin Gaye and The Temptations), Neals developed the kind of musical discipline and emotional truth that can’t be faked.

    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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