PodcastsMusicMaking a Scene Presents

Making a Scene Presents

Richard LHommedieu
Making a Scene Presents
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889 episodes

  • Making a Scene Presents

    The Suno-Warner Deal: When Big Music Stops Fighting AI and Starts Designing It

    07/04/2026 | 22 mins.
    Making a Scene Presents - The Suno-Warner Deal: When Big Music Stops Fighting AI and Starts Designing It

    Something important just happened in the music business, and indie artists need to pay attention.

    Warner Music Group and Suno announced a partnership built around licensed AI music. Under the deal, the companies will work on next-generation licensed models, Warner artists can opt in to AI experiences using their names, images, likenesses, voices, and compositions, and Suno will make major product changes in 2026, including phasing out its current models, requiring paid accounts for downloads, limiting downloads on paid tiers, and keeping unlimited downloads inside Suno Studio. As part of the same broader agreement, Suno also acquired Songkick from Warner.

    That sounds like a product story. It sounds like a legal story. It sounds like one more AI headline in a year full of AI headlines. But for independent artists, it is really a power story. The Suno-Warner deal is one of the clearest signs yet that major music companies are moving from trying to fight generative AI from the outside to trying to shape it from the inside. Warner itself said the partnership is meant to forge a “blueprint for a next-generation licensed AI music platform.” Reuters also reported that Warner settled its infringement case with Suno so the company could move toward licensed models.

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

    The Artist-Owned Ecosystem: Replacing the Label, Distributor, and Platform

    06/04/2026 | 20 mins.
    Making a Scene Presents - The Artist-Owned Ecosystem: Replacing the Label, Distributor, and Platform

    The night the old deal stopped making sense

    It usually happens after the show.

    Not onstage. Not in the comments. Not when the playlist adds hit. It happens when the room is half empty, the drummer is packing hardware, somebody is folding shirts at the merch table, and the artist is looking at a phone full of “engagement” that does not pay tomorrow’s hotel bill. That is the moment the old music business starts to look less like a dream and more like a machine built to turn artist momentum into platform traffic, label leverage, and somebody else’s data.

    For years, the industry sold one big fantasy. Get signed. Get distributed. Get promoted. Get placed in front of the audience. Then the money will come. But the modern version of that deal has a nasty twist. Even when artists do get attention, they often do not get ownership. The fan relationship lives on someone else’s platform. The audience data sits in someone else’s dashboard. The checkout happens inside someone else’s system. The artist becomes the fuel, while the infrastructure belongs to everybody else. That is not a career. That is a dependency. And dependency is not the same thing as growth.

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

    Interview with Alexis P Suter

    06/04/2026 | 1h 1 mins.
    Making a Scene Presents an Interview with Alexis P Suter

    Alexis P. Suter is a three-time Blues Music Award nominee—recognized in major categories including the Koko Taylor Award and Best Soul Blues Female Artist—and one of the most commanding voices in modern blues and soul. Raised in Brooklyn in a musically gifted family, Alexis grew up with the belief that music is not just entertainment—it’s an emotional and spiritual experience. That idea still sits at the center of everything she does on stage.

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

    AI-Driven Fan Journeys: Mapping Every Step From First Listen to Lifetime Fan

    05/04/2026 | 20 mins.
    Making a Scene Presents - AI-Driven Fan Journeys: Mapping Every Step From First Listen to Lifetime Fan

    There is a quiet tragedy happening in the modern music business, and most independent artists have been taught to call it normal.

    A stranger hears a song in a playlist. They like it. They tap through to a profile. Maybe they watch a clip. Maybe they save the track. Maybe they even tell a friend. Then the trail goes cold. The artist never learns who that person was, never learns what caught their ear, never learns what city they live in, never learns whether they wanted a vinyl copy, a ticket, a livestream pass, a membership, a behind-the-scenes demo, or just a reason to come back tomorrow. The fan showed up. The system shrugged. The moment passed.

    That is the real leak in the independent music economy. It is not just low streaming payouts, though those are part of the problem. It is not just social media reach, though that is rented land and always has been. The bigger problem is that most artists still do not control the road between attention and income. They get discovery, but they do not own the journey. They get a listen, but they do not build a relationship. They get noise, but they do not get memory.

    AI changes that if you use it the right way.

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

    Gerry Casey's Interview with Aleksandra Josic of Here and Everywhere

    05/04/2026 | 30 mins.
    Making a Scene Presents Gerry Casey's Interview with Aleksandra Josic of Here and Everywhere

    Fronted by Aleksandra Josic, a vocalist audiences regularly describe as “one of the most powerful and emotional live voices in the world today,” the band has earned a reputation for performances that feel raw, immersive, and unforgettable. There’s a rare kind of honesty in what they do—no posturing, no manufactured drama—just a fearless voice, a band that knows how to build tension and release, and songs that hit like they were written to be felt in a room full of people.

    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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