Why
Record Execs Don't Call You Back
by
Michael Laskow, Jun 2006
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One of the most common
things I hear from our members is, "TAXI forwarded me to Capitol
Records, but I never heard back from them."
I understand the frustration it causes to know that your music is
sitting on the desk of the V.P. of A&R at a company with which you'd
love to sign a deal, and they don't call you. I get it! When I was a
producer, I sometimes developed acts, sent them to A&R people, and
experienced the same thing.
Here's
WHY it happens:
1) They're overwhelmed with work.
2) They have many more responsibilities, other than listening to music.
3) They know that they'd be stuck on the phone for at least fifteen
minutes if they called the artist.
Like everybody else these days, A&R people have too much to do. And what
is critically important to you and I, may be number twenty-seven on
their "to-do" list today. It might minimize your stress a little if you
force yourself to realize that what is absolutely CRUCIAL to you, is
probably NOT as crucial to them. It doesn't give a lot of solace, but it
helps a little to know that.
There is a preconceived notion that A&R people get paid a ton of money
to sit in a cush office and do nothing but listen to music all day long.
It's simply not true. Read that again -- it's NOT true!
What A&R people REALLY do is mostly take care of the details regarding
the acts they've already signed, and are currently in the studio. They
got to make sure the act is happy (and productive) with their producer,
the studio, the engineer, the song choices, the progress being made, the
internal politics at the record label, and a dozen other things.
And that's just for ONE act. Chances are they have a few acts to deal
with at the same time. Most A&R people actually spend less than 10% of
their time listening to music.
And this brings me to my last point: the reason they are hesitant to
talk to you. Admit it, if an A&R person called you and said, "Tom, I
heard your CD today, and I'm going to take a pass on it," you'd ask why.
You'd be nuts if you didn't!
"So what didn't you like about it, Andy A&R Dude?"
"Well, it just didn't sound that compelling to me."
"Why not?"
"I don't know . . . it just didn't."
"So, you can't tell me why?"
"I don't know . . . maybe it sounded a little dated, and it didn't have
a kick-ass chorus."
"Well, the people who come to see me play in the club think it rocks!"
"I'm sure they do, but I've got to go with what I hear on the CD you
sent me, and not rely on your impression of what a bunch of beer
swilling fans think."
"Well, I think you're wrong!"
"Maybe I am, but I've got to go with my instincts, and I'm sorry I can't
offer you a deal right now."
"I've written some other songs that are more commercial."
"Why didn't you send me those?
"Because I just finished the CD I sent you, and I thought it was my best
work."
"But you just said, you've got material that's more commercial. It's my
job to find hit songs and hit artists. We're in business to make money.
If I sign you, wouldn't YOUR goal be to sell a few million albums?"
"Yes, of course!"
"Then why didn't you send me the material that has the highest
probability of that?"
As you might expect, this conversation could last for a very long time.
If you were the A&R person, you'd be fearful to make ANY calls to
artists because each one would be very much like what you just read.
If you called twenty artists per day and spent fifteen minutes on the
phone (conservatively!), that would be three-hundred minutes or FIVE
HOURS per day!
That's why there's an unwritten law that says, "If I don't fall out of
my chair and LOVE your music, I'm not going to call you back."
One of my closest friends has been a major label A&R person for the last
ten years. Our families are close, he and I golf together, and in all
regards, he's just like your close friends are to you. But even HE
doesn't call me back when he doesn't LOVE what I send him. I get it, and
I want to you to "get it" so you're not crushed when you don't get a
call from somebody your music was forwarded to.
It doesn't mean that you suck or that they're jerks. They're just as
busy trying to keep up with the workload at their jobs as you are at
yours.
Check out the Taxi
Newsletter for more music biz realities. As Stephen Colbert often
says, "I'm all about 'truthiness'!"
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Michael Laskow is the
founder and CEO
of TAXI - the world's
leading independent A&R company.
An experienced engineer/producer, he's worked with Crosby, Stills,
Nash &Young, Eric Clapton, Cheap Trick and many
others. An excellent writer, he also contributes articles and reviews
for magazines such as Recording
and Electronic Musician.
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