_____________________________
Guest post from BytaHow We Listen is an interview series where Byta interviews artists, their teams, and everyone else working in music about how they find and listen to music, new and old.Who are you?Amber HorsburghWhere are you based?Los Angeles, USAWhere do you work? What do you do?I’m an independent marketing consultant helping major artists with brand strategy and content creation. I write about music strategy for label marketers and artists through my newsletter, Deep Cuts (subscribe). Prior to that I was SVP of Strategy at Downtown Records (NYC), Senior Strategist at Big Spaceship (YouTube, Samsung, Sonos, Google Play) and MTV.What are you listening to?Sharon Van Etten, Tommy Cash, Jessica Pratt, Jeff Tweedy and a healthy amount of Gaga.How do you find new music?The boring old ways, blogs (Pitchfork, Noisey, NPR, Dazed), podcasts (Song Exploder, Pop Shop), friends and whatever is overhead at the office.What formats do you usually listen to? LP, CD, Cassette, Digital, Streaming Service and why?Me personally, streaming mainly. I recently threw every single thing I owned out to go backpacking around the Middle East, Eastern Europe, and Africa for a year so went and sold all the last remaining CDs or vinyl I owned.The formats people prefer is all down to how they listen to music.Vinyl is often an active listening experience where the listener very intentionally picks out the piece and listens to it as an activity, whereas digital is more passive. There isn’t the same time or monetary investment as with physical formats so the listener is often less committed. Vinyl is an artist’s premium product, whereas digital is more utility, both are important from a marketing perspective but satisfy different uses. I did Vinyl Me, Please’s Cameron Schaeferwho has great insight on vinyl listening behaviors and respective marketing.Where do you do most of your music listening?If an artist I care about releases something new I’ll sit down with it properly at home and listen top to bottom, but otherwise most of my streaming happens at work and the gym.How do find and listen to pre-release music?I get sent pre-released music through my work and friends if they want an opinion on anything, but I don’t seek out pre-released material.#HowWeListen: Amber Horsburgh/Deep Cuts [INTERVIEW]
In their interview series "How We Listen" Byta sits to to chat with artists and other music industry professionals about their listening habits, and how they discover music both new. Continue reading [https://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2019/03/howwelisten-amber-horsburghdeep-cuts-interview.html]