FEATURE: The Open Diary of a Music Journalist, Aged Thirty-Four-and-a-Sixth

FEATURE: 

PHOTO CREDIT: Sam Liddicott

The Open Diary of a Music Journalist, Aged Thirty-Four-and-a-Sixth

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THIS piece is a way of updating people on my…

PHOTO CREDIT: Sam Liddicott

approaching articles (or procrastinations) and a little bit of guidance to any fellow/upcoming journalists. In the approaching weeks, I will be putting out a fair few pieces and reviews. I shall update you regarding reviews and interviews when they come back to me – suffice to say; they cover various genres and nations. It is the features that are, perhaps, the most intriguing. At the weekend, I want to come back to the Mercury Prize – having just put a piece out about the shortlisted artists – and whether it has the cachet and true spirit to represent the best of new and established British music. Many are divided over the nominated artists this year and wonder whether the emerging artists included are being overshadowed by the ho-hum ‘more-established’ acts – if you are including bigger acts; the quality needs to be up there and firm. It seems there is a polemic argument and desire to, in a sense, redefine and rebuild the foundations on which the Mercury Prize was built. Also, and perhaps, more controversially – if that is at all possible – I will talk about Eminem’s career-defining (in my view), The Marshall Mathers LP. As Eminem has a prestigious spot at Reading and Leeds very soon: I wanted to evaluate this album and whether, in a way, it is a record that needs to be replicated – given the energy, genius lyrics and huge command. It has controversy: homophobia, misogyny and domestic violence; a terrifying thrill-ride of guys, blood and spit; a chasm of dark and shafts of light – wit, jokes and impressions all throw in. Merely backing and providing laudatory support to such a record will provoke criticism and disapproval – that, in a way, is what Eminem wanted to happen. The album has grown into a teenager and, given the seventeen years since its creation; I argue whether any modern act has reached it dizzying and dangerous heights.

PHOTO CREDIT: Sam Liddicott

Alongside the intense and deeper pieces will be some light and less provocative. It has been a hectic and whirlwind past few months for me. The last weeks, especially, have been really dizzying and rushing. I have put up more articles in this time period than any other time – the productivity rate is huge and the fingers are getting sore! Long-term, I want to develop my Jeff Buckley documentary and start getting that kicked-off. I will launch a Kickstarter campaign and ensure people are recruited – get production staff hired and begin planning. From there, I want to spend time developing my long-planned music website and making that a reality. It will a huge undertaking but one, when done, that draws decades of sensational music to one site; all the software, streaming services and social media a music-lover/musician could want and endless options and avenues. I am pumped imagining it so will ensure there is something more tangible on the plate before too long. Alongside this, time-willing, getting my interview series going, too. It is a filmed series, Acoustic Vinyl, that puts me into a space (I hope to book the Nightjar bar in London) with various artists, music people – D.J.s/producers/writers and creative talent – and launch a relaxed, unique series that digs deeper but has a lot of fun and relaxed vibes in it. These all seem like lofty and expensive realisations and, in a lot of ways, they are. It will take a fair bit of revenue ensuring these visions are made physical: I am prepared to work for it and, where needed, crowd-source and hope the people will assist. I want to write a lot and keep those features, interviews and reviews flowing…

PHOTO CREDIT: Unsplash

The ambition, going forward, it to ensure this work ethic and commitment leads to something. I want to – he says; with his head in the clouds – work as a producer/music news journalist for BBC Radio 6 Music, one day. I think that is the ideal for any self-respecting music-lover. To work for an esteemed and reputable station: one that delivers the hottest new artists and best-quality older sounds has a lure and attraction that one cannot resist. I’d love to balance that with my blog duties – expanding the site and having more filmed/elements; getting a YouTube channel together and looking more into the business side of things. Going back to BBC Radio 6 Music and who wouldn’t want a weekly show there – like Jarvis Cocker’s Sunday Service, perhaps?! This, yeah, is pretty far-off but I feel I am more qualified than I was a couple of years back – maybe a few months ago, in fact! Essentially, London is the first place I want to move to – that need to get to the city and its wonderful, finer humans, is more nagging and desperate than ever! Manchester is attractive and, if I could commute and work in both cities, that would be bliss. Many might scoff and say it is all pie-in-the-sky-thinking and someone with their head somewhere less fragrant and open-aired as the clouds. I have been writing on my blog for almost six years so this has not come overnight! I would urge anyone with an interest in music to start a blog and get something started. Music is one of those industries whose growth will never slow. Unlike ‘normal’ sectors; the employment rate, as it was, will rise without abatement and discipline. More and more folk are coming into music: all of them will need a review and feature at some point!

PHOTO CREDIT: Bigstock

Music journalism is not lucrative and it might take a long time before you can monetise your work. I will touch on this over the weekend – I am writing a piece about money in music and whether survival is guaranteed for musicians/writers – but would always encourage wannabe writers to get a blog started. If you are an aspiring writer; get a blog on WordPress or wherever and start contacting bands/artists you like. It might only be as simple as conducting a small interview – I send questions and type my interviews; which makes it easier and more flexible for me – and that is a good start. You share that on social media and people see it. The musicians’ followers and contemporaries find your work and will, if you are lucky, contact you. I cannot tell you the buzz I get from seeing my inbox full of interview/review requests. Sure, it is a lot of work – and my hands are pretty sore most of the time (joking aside: it is not that bad) – but the rewards outweigh any aches. Bit-by-bit, the reputation builds and you get bigger names coming your way. It may be a while before I ascend the stairs to a desk at BBC Radio 6 Music but I feel, the more work I put out, the more likely something like that will crystallise and focus. You have to start small but that is where I came from: I am not ‘big’ yet but feel I am growing and becoming more confident with every month that passes. I may not get the same rush a musician gets when they are on the stage: conversely; I do not get the same stress when it comes to finding money and sustainability. Journalism is a vital part of music. Without it, musicians could not exist and get their music shared; they would struggle to promote themselves. Making that connection – and building those relationships – is a wonderful thing and can lead to some wonderful opportunities. It has enriched my life and I am sure, anyone who wants to go down the same path, come my way and I can advise. Making a small step is important and, the sooner you do that, the sooner…

PHOTO CREDIT: Unsplash

A wonderful career will begin.