Guest Post by Dave Kusek, Founder & CEO of The New Artist Model
Every single day you’re improving as a musician and as a writer, so there’s always something else you’ll be able to develop if you hold on to that song for another day, another week, or another month. As you can see, the cycle can be endless.Aside from just your creative judgement, there are time and budget constraints to deal with. That song could sound perfect if you just save up for 6 months to go into a studio and hire an awesome producer. A music video could be incredible if you could afford to buy an awesome video camera, light set, and hire a photographer.In the past, this is how the industry worked. Record labels spent big bucks and months making a track perfect before it was released the the world. But indie musicians today are living in a completely different environment. You don’t always have access to top recording gear, and if every musician today waited until they could afford studio time before putting out their first song, they would never get started.There comes a point where you just need to push the button and put your music out there. That being said, you shouldn’t release a song you whipped together in a few minutes or a recording you’re really unhappy with. The point is to get them as you as you can with the tools and skills you have available and then send it out.
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