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Guest post by Dave Kusek of New Artist ModelIt’s the start of a new year, and that means new goals, new music projects, and a whole lot of potential to grow your career. So today, I want to help you tackle that licensing goal and go through some best practices for submitting your music to production libraries. Music libraries are probably the easiest first tentative step into the world of music licensing. If you have a few solid tracks with quality recordings you can jump right in and get started. AND you don’t even need an established network of industry connections. All you need is your music, your computer, and a dedicated mindset. If you want more music licensing tips to jumpstart your career in 2018, I’m giving you a special invite to join me and licensing expert Joyce Kettering in a free webinar on Monday, January 8th at 1PM EST. Joyce will be sharing all the licensing tips that she uses every day licensing her own music.What are Music Libraries?Before we get into the best practices, let’s just quickly talk about exactly what music libraries are. Music libraries are essentially platforms that curate music specifically for licensing. Artists, songwriters, composers, producers, and beat makers submit their music which then goes through a selection and curation process. If your song meets the library’s standards and fits with their catalog, it will be added to the library. Music supervisors, ad agencies, videographers, YouTubers, and anyone else who needs music for a visual production can then search through that library and license tracks for their production. They will usually pay a synchronization fee to the music library which is split with you, the artist (usually 50/50). Audiosparx, Production Trax, and Songtradr are just a few examples of music libraries. That’s about all the foundational knowledge you need. Granted, there are some things you should do to prepare your tracks before submitting to music libraries, but for now let’s cover some general best-practices to get you started. Focus on Non-Exclusive Libraries at FirstThis is mostly relevant if you’re just digging into the world of music licensing. Especially as you’re just figuring everything out, going in on a bad exclusive deal can be a shot in the foot. In licensing an “exclusive deal” means that no other library can license that track. So if you put a track up in a music library that wants exclusivity, you cannot add that track to any other music library. So what are the cons? If you add your track to an exclusive library and nothing comes out of it or it sits on their shelf, you’ve essentially lost one song in your catalog. The income potential for that song is 100% dependant on its success in that library. Of course, it’s not always a bad thing. If you have a high-quality track and you take a lot of time to add detailed and relevant metadata to that track so it’s found and gets a lot of traffic in that library it can certainly pay off. If you’re more experienced, have a good understanding of deals and the library, and feel like it’s a good investment, you can certainly pursue exclusive deals. Just know the pros and cons and weigh your decision accordingly.Find the Right Library for YOUBest Practices For Your Getting Songs Into Music Libraries plus a FREE WEBINAR INVITE
Music licensing is one of the income streams always touted for musicians working to build steady income and a career, but it's also one of the most mysterious. In this. Continue reading [https://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2018/01/best-practices-for-getting-your-songs-in-music-libraries.html]