_______________________________
Guest post by Chris Robley of DIY MusicianMusicians: a lack of credit can hurt our collaborators’ livelihoods. Let’s make up for that.
When it came time to record my first solo record — shortly after moving to Portland, Oregon, where I knew very few people in the music scene — I just flipped through the CD jackets of two local albums I loved, and what do you know, they were both engineered by the same person. That was easy!I emailed him, introduced myself and my music, and two months later we were in his studio finishing mixes.Producers, engineers, session players, songwriters — they all get work this way. You see their name in the credits of some piece of music you adore and ask if they’d be interested in your project. Hopefully they say yes.But in a digital music world, “credits” are harder to find.
You’d think it’d be just the opposite, right?So it’s up to us, the artists, to share credits online for the following collaborators:
- songwriter/s
- producers and beat-makers
- engineers
- arrangers
- session players
- band members
- featured soloists not already included as “featuring” in the artist name
Here’s a list of places we can post full credits:
- YouTube and Vimeo video descriptions
- Song or album notes on CD Baby, Bandcamp, etc.
- Your website
- Wikipedia entries for albums
- Any blogs, email newsletters, or social posts detailing the creation of a particular track
It’s not a perfect solution, but it’s a courtesy you can show for those that helped you create your music.[And speaking of credit, the liner notes in the picture above come from Jeff Daniel’s 2014 album Days Like These, available on CD Baby.]Chris Robley is the Editor of CD Baby's DIY Musician Blog. I write Beatlesque indie-pop songs that've been praised by No Depression, KCRW, The LA Times, & others. My poems have appeared in Poetry Magazine, Prairie Schooner, The Poetry Review, & more. I live in Maine and like peanut butter chocolate chip cookies, a little too much.
Related articles







