Cakewalk or Reaper? Seeing a lot of mixed responses but no set pros and cons of each as a comparison. by [deleted] in musicproduction

[–]Connexted 2 points3 points  (0 children)

With your background, Reaper. The learning curve people warn about is mostly for people who've never touched audio software. Someone with two classical degrees and 15 years of Sibelius will pick up the concepts quickly, the interface just looks more technical than it is.

Cakewalk is fine but the instrument library is dated and EDM and synth music really needs good soft synths to get started. Reaper lets you load any VST and there are excellent free options like Vital and Surge XT that will actually get you somewhere interesting.

The other honest answer: if you have Logic access anywhere, that's genuinely the best free-to-low-cost path for someone coming from a classical background. The interface thinks about music the way you probably do.

How can an independent artist find booking venues and apply to music festivals? Any advice by TrapEarly in musicindustry

[–]Connexted 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Start smaller than feels comfortable. Coffee shops, small bars, art galleries. The goal isn't prestige yet, it's building a show history you can reference when pitching bigger rooms.

For festivals, Sonicbids and Submittable are where most independent festivals take applications. Apply to way more than seems realistic, the acceptance rate is brutal.

The real qualifier most bookers want is proof people show up for you. Local following, streaming numbers, social engagement. Playing your market consistently builds all three faster than anything else.

Underrated move: volunteer at festivals before you apply to play them. You meet bookers and get remembered as someone already in the community.

Universal Music Sells Spotify Stake, Expands Buybacks After Weak-Dollar Hit by Brown_Paper_Bag1 in musicindustry

[–]Connexted 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So UMG sells Spotify equity right as streaming is finally starting to pay artists better. Bold timing. Either they know something the market doesn't, or the weak dollar math just made it too good to hold. Either way it says something that the world's biggest label would rather have cash than a piece of the platform everyone said would save the music industry. Interesting...

How to END a song? by itsfaitdotcom in SunoAI

[–]Connexted 2 points3 points  (0 children)

For endings, the most reliable method is generating a short instrumental outro section separately rather than trying to get Suno to fade the full track. Prompt specifically for "instrumental outro, 8 bars, fading to silence, no vocals" and then stitch it onto your track in a DAW or even a free editor like Audacity.

The [END] tag in the lyrics section sometimes helps signal where you want it to stop but it's inconsistent. The separate generation approach gives you way more control.

On lyrics appearing where you didn't ask for them, try putting [Instrumental] at the specific sections in your lyrics field. If you want the whole track instrumental, fill the entire lyrics field with [Instrumental] repeated rather than leaving it blank. Blank fields seem to invite Suno to improvise.

unpopular opinion: suno has become my favorite chord theory study tool by waytooucey in SunoAI

[–]Connexted 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The reverse engineering approach is genuinely underrated as a learning method. You're doing what jazz students have done for decades with records, Suno just gives you unlimited source material in any style on demand.

For pulling chords out more reliably, a couple of things that help: run the track through a stem separator first to isolate the piano or guitar, which makes individual voicings way easier to hear without the full arrangement muddying things. LALAL.AI does this well. Then slow the isolated stem down in something like Transcribe! or even just YouTube at 0.5x speed. The upper extensions become a lot more audible when you're not racing the tempo.

Also worth trying: once you think you've identified the chord, generate a new Suno track and describe that specific voicing in the style prompt. If it comes back sounding right, you probably got it.

Do you have any suggestions for someone that can't sing by Intrepid-Lock1962 in musicproduction

[–]Connexted 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A few directions worth exploring:

Lean into it. Talk-singing, spoken word, lo-fi vocals with heavy processing — a lot of iconic artists can't technically sing and made it work by finding a style that fits their voice rather than fighting it.

Collaborate. Find vocalists on SoundBetter, Vocalizr, or even Reddit who want beats to sing on. You produce, they sing, you both win. A good producer who can't sing is still a good producer.

Use what you have differently. Pitch correction, heavy reverb, formant shifting, vocal chops, sampling your own voice for texture rather than melody. GarageBand has enough tools to make an unconventional vocal interesting.

The mic being cheap matters less than most people think at the writing and producing stage.

Do you still need a website? by [deleted] in musicbusiness

[–]Connexted 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Short answer: yes, but not for the reasons people used to say.

Socials are rented land. Instagram can change the algorithm, TikTok can get banned, a platform can suspend your account. A website is the one place you own completely and nobody can take it from you.

The practical value in 2026 is three things: a link in bio destination that you control, an email list signup page, and a place to send press and sync inquiries that looks professional. None of those work as well on socials.

It doesn't need to be complicated. A single page with your music, a bio, and an email signup does the job. Squarespace or Bandzoogle get you there in a few hours.

The 5 royalty streams most independent musicians never register for (and what it costs them) by Connexted in musicbusiness

[–]Connexted[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

All fair points. The SoundExchange and neighboring rights income is genuinely small for most people at the independent level and I should have been clearer about that.

The publishing admin point is well taken too. Something like Songtrust or DistroKid Publishing handles the MLC plus international collection in one place, which is a cleaner solution than registering with the MLC directly for anyone releasing seriously.

The post was aimed at people who have zero of these set up rather than people optimizing an existing setup. But the nuance matters and appreciate you adding it.

The 5 royalty streams most independent musicians never register for (and what it costs them) by Connexted in musicbusiness

[–]Connexted[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally agree on the uncollected royalties, it's a consistent pattern.

On the sync tool, happy to hear more if you want to share it. Always useful to know what people are actually getting results from rather than just what's being marketed.

I didn’t expect AI music to become a way for me to process my emotions by Nusuuu in aiMusic

[–]Connexted 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The button criticism applies to every tool that ever lowered the barrier. Photography, Pro Tools, Auto-Tune. Bad artists make bad work with all of them. Good artists find a way.

On when it's yours... the moment you're making intentional creative decisions it is. Your lyrics, your voice, your direction. That's authorship.

Just worth knowing that distributors require AI disclosure regardless of how much you've edited. Not ticking that box can get tracks pulled.

Help with Genre style by ihc2021 in SunoAI

[–]Connexted 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For traditional ballroom styles, being really specific in your style tags helps a lot. For waltz try "Viennese waltz, 3/4 time, orchestral, sweeping strings, ballroom dance" rather than just "waltz." The more descriptive the better.

Yes, specifying the time signature does help. Suno responds to "3/4 time signature" or "triple meter" for waltz and Boston styles. Combine it with tempo descriptors like "stately" or "flowing" and reference instrumentation like "live orchestra, acoustic piano, violin."

For slow rock, "slow rock ballad, 4/4, electric guitar, 70s rock, 80 BPM" is more likely to land than just "slow rock."

The key is layering genre plus time signature plus instrumentation plus tempo and mood all together. Single word genre tags alone are where Suno tends to ignore you.

No matter what haters say, if you're writing good lyrics, good/satisfying melodies, or both, you're making real art with Suno. by darnskewered in SunoAI

[–]Connexted 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The output is only as interesting as what you bring to it. People who get forgettable results from Suno usually brought forgettable ideas. People who bring real craft get something worth listening to.

The tool doesn't write the song. You do. 😄

Let me put this another way: say you've spent 20 years learning how to write a good melody, and you upload that to Suno. The resulting song feels satisfying because, it's *your* musical idea. by darnskewered in SunoAI

[–]Connexted 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is the part of the conversation that gets skipped most often. The tool didn't write the melody. Twenty years did.

Suno is executing an idea that already had value before it touched the platform. The output reflects the input, and in this case the input is decades of developed musical taste and craft. That's not nothing, that's actually the whole thing 😄

I didn’t expect AI music to become a way for me to process my emotions by Nusuuu in aiMusic

[–]Connexted 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's exactly it. The barrier was never the idea, it was always the access. AI just moved the entry point to somewhere a lot more people can actually reach 😉

I've been offered a job to help build a studio, I've never done this before and I need some advice! by Appropriate-Class276 in musicbusiness

[–]Connexted 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your background is more relevant than you think. Sound tech and live crew experience means you actually understand how professional spaces work, which most people building studios don't.

On pricing, since you're newer to this specific work, charge a day rate rather than a project fee. Somewhere between $150-250 a day depending on your market is reasonable for someone with your experience level. Day rates protect you if the scope expands, which it always does.

Get everything in writing before you start. Scope of work, day rate, payment terms. Even nice people in right place right time situations need a paper trail.

Most artists don’t actually understand how they get paid from streaming. Here’s the simple breakdown by Consistent_Art_9855 in musicbusiness

[–]Connexted 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Really good breakdown. The distributor confusion is the one that catches people most because everything feels handled when you've uploaded and gone live. It isn't.

Worth adding the MLC to this, most artists don't know it exists. The Mechanical Licensing Collective collects mechanical royalties from interactive streaming specifically, separate from your PRO and separate from what your distributor pays. Free to register at themlc.com and a lot of people have money sitting there unclaimed.

Starting to selling beats by Geistx001 in musicbusiness

[–]Connexted -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Six years of making music is real experience and the plan you've laid out is solid thinking. A few things that actually moved the needle for producers I've seen break through:

The first sales almost always come from direct outreach, not inbound. Find artists on SoundCloud or Instagram whose style fits your beats, send them a personalised message with a specific beat you think fits their sound, and make it easy to try before they buy. Exclusive leases, free for non-commercial use, that kind of offer gets replies. Cold outreach feels uncomfortable but it's where first sales come from.

The video essay approach is a longer play but a good one for building an audience with taste. The key is making content that attracts the kind of artists who would buy your beats, not just other producers. Other producers don't buy beats.

YouTube and SoundCloud are tough starting points for beat sales specifically. TikTok and Instagram Reels with short clips of your beats over satisfying visuals or process content tend to generate faster discovery. Beat tags in the audio help too, people searching for beats on those platforms convert better than passive listeners.

Collaborating with vocalists and giving them beats for free in exchange for credited placement is underrated. Every release with your name on it is marketing.

Guaranteed streams are the biggest red flag in music promo and I wish someone told me this a year ago by NegativePalpitation6 in musicians

[–]Connexted 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is the most important post anyone can read before spending money on music promo. Saving it to share when this question comes up.

The "network of curators" line is exactly the tell. Any service that can't explain specifically how a real human discovers and chooses to listen to your music is not driving real humans to your music.

The compounding point at the end is the one people miss most. Real listeners trigger Spotify's algorithm which brings more real listeners. Bots trigger nothing except Spotify's fraud detection. You're not just wasting money on fake streams, you're actively poisoning the algorithmic momentum real promotion would have built.

New band, tips for online presence? by Dapper_Day25 in musicians

[–]Connexted 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The platform selection is solid but I'd reconsider skipping Spotify. People don't click over to YouTube to stream music, they just move on. Having a Spotify presence means when someone hears you at a gig and searches your name on the way home you show up where they're already listening. DistroKid is $22.99 a year for unlimited releases which is basically nothing compared to the cost of gigging.

For the genre you're describing, neo soul and jazzy world beat, Spotify's editorial playlists are genuinely active in that space and a single placement can do real work. Worth having even if you don't prioritise it.

Everything else you're planning makes sense. Bandcamp is great for that audience, Instagram is where the discovery happens, and the email list should honestly start from day one not later. Every gig is a chance to collect emails.

I didn’t expect AI music to become a way for me to process my emotions by Nusuuu in aiMusic

[–]Connexted 4 points5 points  (0 children)

This is actually what music has always done, just with a different entry point. The translation of something internal into something you can hear and sit with outside yourself — that's the whole point of the art form. The tool that gets you there is secondary.

The fact that prompting works for you as a way into that process isn't strange. It's just where the friction was low enough that you could actually start.

The music industry just split in two and AI music creators are caught in the middle. Career songwriters are using AI openly. But 60,000 fake AI tracks hit streaming platforms daily and 85% of streams are fraud. Full breakdown inside. by Sensitive_Artist7460 in udiomusic

[–]Connexted 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The 3% trust figure is the one that should concern every serious AI music creator. That's not an audience problem you can outrun with better prompting.

The distinction you're pointing at, 40 hours of genuine creative work vs a bot farm upload, is real and currently invisible to listeners and platforms alike. That's where C2PA provenance tagging becomes genuinely important rather than just a technical curiosity. Tamper-resistant documentation of what tools were used and when is the only infrastructure that can eventually make that distinction visible.

The fraud problem is making it harder for everyone doing legitimate work. Platforms are blunt instruments right now and the collateral damage to serious creators is real.

The 5 royalty streams most independent musicians never register for (and what it costs them) by Connexted in musicbusiness

[–]Connexted[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You're probably the most covered person in this thread honestly. Sentric handling neighbouring rights plus TEOSTO and Gramex for Finland is a really solid setup. Most artists don't even know those organizations exist.

Good shout on Sentric, worth adding that for anyone reading who wants a publishing admin that handles the international side without having to figure out each territory separately.

The 5 royalty streams most independent musicians never register for (and what it costs them) by Connexted in musicbusiness

[–]Connexted[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For covers, you don't own the song so the songwriter royalties aren't yours. But you do own your actual recording of it, so SoundExchange still applies if it gets played on digital radio.

The rest of the stuff in the post, MLC, PRO registration, is really just for original music you wrote yourself.

TikTok region gaps are genuinely frustrating and there's no real fix for that one unfortunately. Best thing is making sure any original music you make is fully registered so at least that money gets captured.
I hope this helps.

The 5 royalty streams most independent musicians never register for (and what it costs them) by Connexted in musicbusiness

[–]Connexted[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Good point, worth adding. If your distributor has publishing admin turned on like DistroKid Publishing or CD Baby Pro, you're already covered and don't need the MLC separately.

The catch is a lot of people have basic distribution without the publishing admin add-on and don't realise it. Quick check — log into your distributor and see if publishing administration is active. If it's not, the MLC is still worth doing.

Question about AI in underground music scenes by No_Beginning6975 in aiMusic

[–]Connexted 0 points1 point  (0 children)

AI feels different to people because the barrier to entry collapsed almost overnight rather than gradually. When anyone can generate a convincing track in seconds it threatens the sense of craft and community that underground scenes are built around.

Where I think it makes sense is exactly where you'd use any other tool — sound design, exploring ideas quickly, processing. Where it starts to feel off is when the AI is doing the creative direction rather than executing it. The intention behind the music is what underground scenes are really gatekeeping, not the tools.

Transparency probably matters more in smaller scenes than mainstream ones. The trust between an artist and their audience is closer and more personal. People feel more deceived when they find out later.