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Music - Articles |
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Managers:
Can’t Live With Them…But Can You Live Without
Them? |
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By Sheena Metal
You can’t throw a rock in any metropolis on
Earth without hitting someone claiming to be a
manager. Where musicians go, managers
follow. It’s as accepted and expected in the
entertainment industry as an out-of-control
cocaine habit or a failure to pay taxes. When
you tell people you’re a musician, one of the
first things they’re going to ask you is: Do you
have a manager? However, those in the throws of
the music business know to ask an even more
accurate question: Do you have a good manager?
“What’s the difference?” you may ask. Isn’t any
manager better than no manager at all? While it
would seem that the answer to that question is
unequivocally, “Yes”, in reality it’s a bit like
asking, “Isn’t having a herpes-ridden prostitute
for a girlfriend better than being single?” In
truth, bad representation is far worse than a
lack of representation. While, it’s a fact, that
there are things your band will probably never
achieve without the aid of a manager, agent,
entertainment attorney, etc., bad representation
can stagnate a career…stop it dead in its
hurling climb to the ranks of superstardom or
even worse…undo some of the hard work the band
has already done.
Sad but true, a bad manager can take a perfectly
good band and turn them into a thing so foul
that old gypsy women covering their faces with
rags will spit and give your band the evil eye
as you pass. Ok, that may be a bit dramatic, but
seriously…all your band really has is its name
and its reputation, so why would take a chance
on either of those by putting the whole of your
band into the hands of someone that you’re not
100% sure has your best interests at stake?
The following are a few tips that will help
you to decipher whether or not your manager can
take you to the top or turn your band into a
flop:
1.) The Drummer’s Girlfriend Is Not A
Manager---Sure, she may get names for your
mailing list, invite her girl’s beach volleyball
team to all of your gigs and post your latest
pictures on your website photo gallery, but
she’s not really your manager. She’s a helper,
she can be the president of your fan club, the
head of your street team and the world’s sexiest
roadie but she probably doesn’t know how to put
together a press package and make the calls that
will get you into an A&R rep’s office for a
meeting. This also applies to: boyfriends,
wives, husbands, booty calls, one night stands,
moms, dads, cousins, aunts, uncles, neighbors,
nieces, nephews, grandparents, grandchildren,
pets and the homeless guy who roots through your
trash at midnight. These people may all be
well-meaning and you can accept their aid in
dozens of ways (it takes a village to build a
popular unsigned band) but don’t give them the
label or the powers of a manager.
2.) Treasure Your Fans But Don’t Let Them Manage
You---This should be a given but you’d be
surprised how many over-eager, slightly-obsessed
fans move from semi-stalker to mega-manager in a
few simple weeks. I cannot stress how simply
wrong this entire concept is for two dozen major
reasons the most important of which is: fans
need to be kept at a distance. There is a reason
why that same person comes to all of your shows
no matter how many you play, gets there early,
sits up front seemingly paralyzed starring at
you enraptured. Either they’re in love with
someone in the band or they’re insane. These may
be reasons to get a restraining order but
certainly not reasons to make someone your
manager. A band’s manager knows every secret of
each musician, every person in each member’s
personal life, where you keep your money, where
you live, and who’s in your fan/contact
database. This is not information that you want
someone who has 450 cut-out pictures of you on
their bedroom ceiling having at his/her
disposal. Enough said?
3.) Don’t Sign A Contract Unless It’s Worth
It---Manager’s like control. That why they
choose to be managers and not people who macramé
wall hangings with the mane hair of ponies.
Thus, most managers will try and evoke you into
signing a contract. In the entertainment
industry, contracts are like marriage
certificates…before you sign one be sure your
band wants to be tied to the same person for
long time (a year, two years, five years, etc.)
because they’re much easier to get into than to
get out of. For example, if you sign a contract
with an efficient, but somewhat green manager,
who is helping all he/she can to get you
everything possible from what little resources
he/she has and then Gwen Stefani’s management
team approaches you after a big gig and wants to
put you on tour with John Mayer. Do you think if
you tell them, “We love to take your tour but
we’re under contract with someone else for the
next five years, can you hit us up then?” the
offer will still stand? Not so much. So, if you
must sign contracts, keep them short and make
sure they give you room to act, think, play and
communicate with others without getting
clearance from your band warden (manager). And
make it includes an exit clause. Read up on it.
4.) Sometimes Bigger Is Not Better---Although
it’s a huge ego stroke to brag to all of the
other musicians backstage at the Whiskey A Go-Go
that your manager works with Grammy
award-winners and stadium sell-outs, sometimes
an unsigned band can get lost in a huge
management firm. While Mr. Big Stud Manager is
busy picking out Madonna’s dress for the
American Music Awards, he may forget to ask
Quincy Jones to attend your bass player’s
birthday gig at Billy-Bob Wang’s Tofu BBQ Shack.
The problem with huge managers is that their
focus often goes the acts that are making them
15% of 100 million dollars a year. Your 15% of
$45.75 a year after expenses is probably not his
highest priority now or ever, and what good are
his super amazing industry contacts if he never
remembers to invite them to your gigs?
Having a manager is great but only if they
provide more benefit to the band than the sum
total of your band members and band helpers can
do for yourselves. If you find someone who can
open doors, take your music places it cannot go
on its on and has your best intentions at heart,
then grab that contract, sign it and enjoy the
benefits. If not, you may find yourself: conned,
stalked, ignored and/or legally bound to someone
that puts their own agenda (well-meaning or
otherwise) and their own ego above what’s right
for you band. And whatever you do, don’t sit
around waiting for Mr./Ms. Right to wisk your
band off its feet and carry it off on his/her
white horse to the Fairyland where everyone gets
a record deal. You, as its members, know more
than anyone, how to do what’s right for your
band and nothing will attract the perfect
manager faster than seeing musicians who are out
there, doing their thing, and making headway in
a very difficult business with a great attitude
and terrific music.
Sheena Metal is a radio host, producer,
promoter, music supervisor, consultant,
columnist, journalist and musician. Her
syndicated radio program, Music Highway Radio,
airs on over 2,400 affiliates to more than 126
million listeners. Her musicians’ assistance
program, Music Highway, boasts over 10,000
members. She currently promotes numerous live
shows weekly in the Los Angeles Area, where she
resides. For more info:
http://www.sheena-metal.com.
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