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Also in the same universe, the Byzantium space station series:
amazon - B&N - Smashwords - Kobo |
amazon - B&N - Smashwords - Kobo |
amazon - B&N - Smashwords - Kobo |
amazon - B&N - Smashwords - Kobo |
amazon - B&N - Smashwords - Kobo |
Plan for Success - A Series Continued Winston Churchill
was the one who said. "He, who fails to plan, plans to fail".
These are wise words to live
by for anyone, in any business. Does this mean that if you have a plan you
will automatically succeed;
certainly not. However,
there are rules that govern when it's time to take the next step, and having a plan will help
facilitate that next step. You will know when you know.
Something I convey
to new clients in the very first session, no matter where
they are in their journey,
I tell them -
And everyone has something they don't know. It usually
comes in questions
like these: Do I really need a voice coach? What genre
best suits my sound? Who can I write songs with? Where do I record?
Who should produce the music? Who should play on the project? Does the sound fit a radio format? What's a radio format? How do I
brand my product? How do I register my songs? When do I need a publisher? When do I need a lawyer? Can't
I manage myself?
Can I just make YouTube
videos and get discovered? Can you tell me how to be
famous? And on and on....
There are so many factors,
circumstances experiences that
contribute to the path and outcome of an artist. Every lesson, session,
consultation, jam and performance has the ability
to become a pivotal
moment in an artists' development. The answers to the questions provide the
sequence of the plan.
Some details of the plan can be executed simultaneously whereas others may need a more focused attention.
This requires
a disciplined work ethic and a thirst
for knowledge.
Find out what you don't know, and you will find out what you need. Keep asking questions.
• Intrinsically:
Singers, Sing, Songs.
• They tell stories
again and again.
•
The expedition begins with a voice.
Good singers have
technical ability to go to required notes and
maintain consistent resistance levels with ease and grace. They possess dynamic
qualities to provide power when needed or the ability to release without
letting go to be subtle or subdued.
And these are all fabulous, necessary qualities but,
Great singers
feel! They know what the song is about. They've experienced the pain, or the joy
and they can emotionally relate to the lyrical content. They give the listener
a reason to believe what they're singing about as if it was happening
to them right now, in that very moment. The song is theirs. And their
passion, honesty and vulnerability take the listener to a place beyond
understanding. In that place they
swallow lumps, cry or stand with fists held high in agreement. It can be
magical.
When a singer sings a song without emotional
value to the lyrical content,
this is a strong
indication that they don't know what the song is about. If they
don't know what the song is about, it's going
to be difficult for them to tell the story.
It could be that they've
never experienced, or they are too
young to have experienced the theme and topic of the song.
So, in order for the singer to make the song
believable they have to be able to relate to the content. The performance is
more than just notes and melody, more than words and rhythms.
Below is an ephemeral check list. This is an example of the artist
development process. Each point in the list will become a topic
for expansion and retrospect.
A typical chain of events
for an artist
in development
Every circumstance and outcome will be varied
from artist to artist. That is pretty
much guaranteed!
Study with a voice coach and music influence you can relate
to. One that understands you, one that provides you with results.
• Learn as many songs as you can.
•
Work through
them with your voice coach.
• Perform them in front of anyone who will listen
Can be any genre, any style, of any influence!
Tear apart your favourite songs
and determine what the attraction is for you. Is it the melody, beat, chord progression, key,
lyric or genre? What specifically gives your that "this is it"
feeling?
Don't wait. Just write. Author a short story. Take in a Wendy Parr workshop.
Paraphrase the story. Use as few words as possible
to tell the same story. Use a key, chord progression and style that move you. Complete
a verse and a chorus and call it done for now. Move on to the next song and after you've collected a few you'll begin
to see a pattern emerge.
Record these songs
on your iPad or phone and listen to them. Share them with others in the industry. Get an opinion
before doing anything with your ideas.
Perform:(this is a series in itself)
Put together a list of songs that make sense musically.
Don't be too scattered genre wise. Play covers
that compliment your originals. Play covers that people want to hear. Add your own music. Reach
out to your audience. Develop a rapport.
Book house concerts, coffee shops, clubs, bars, private
parties, contests and local events Build a
social network:
Everyone needs a webpage-doesn't have to be huge. Start
with a squeeze page. Experience a photo shoot with a photographer that knows
what he's doing. Use a shot that represents who you are. Get a second opinion
from someone in the industry,
(not family and friends). From your web page link to
only the social networks you will utilize. Stay active online and provide
useful information only.
This process is a big one. You can't do it too cheaply
and you don't need to break the bank. You need
to discover your sound. Everything you've done to this point will influence
the recording process. From here you should be able to
determine who you are becoming as an artist.
Know your intentions before selecting a studio, producer,
session players, producer
and the like. If
you're only creating demos you can record just about anywhere...
If your intention is to create
product to release
on-line and/or to radio this raises the bar on
every decision
you make. Everything you release will then be direct competition with every other artist in your genre. If you want to see growth
and success you must have a plan of action that involves some
market research, strategic alliances and usually a team of people to work toward
reaching your goals
and intentions.
..... Repeat the steps above over and over. If it feels like work-it is!
If it also feels like you are not complete unless
you are creating this way, and you can't sleep thinking about the next song - then
its passion................. keep going.
As this series
continues I will begin to explore and uncover details
of these topics I've listed.
Ill share experiences I've personally encountered and knowledge I've
collected from many industry professionals around the world.
I'll finish with a quote from an article
I read by Dave Stroud.
"Create a system, and then go find Chaos"!
Brilliant.
Most importantly - Don't fail to plan.
Is anyone else dealing with post-Olympic withdrawal?
Tuning into televised coverage can be a dangerously-addictive rabbit hole to poke one’s head down, particularly on lap two of a 10,000-metre final. You know you’re going to be there for the duration and probably spin off into gymnastics or beach volleyball on a different network.
Perhaps its truly, diverse global nature, the biggest bragging rights on the planet, and the fact it only comes around once every four years make it so fascinating.
It was hard to pick out a single highlight from Team Canada’s record-setting results. Who knew we’d own the hammer throw? That our soccer women would overcome scandal with an epic pool play performance. Or one would be as impressed with Marco Arop’s intelligence and quiet grace as with his 800-metre silver medal.
Well beyond the 27 medals won, there were memorable finishes that didn’t reach the podium, personal bests representing the culmination of years of training.
But one could be forgiven for celebrating Summer McIntosh’s incredible power in the pool, Phil Wizard’s athletic b-boy artistry, Skylar Park’s tenacious dedication to taekwondo, and Andre De Grasse’s anchor leg in the men’s 4-by-100-metre relay.
You knew Andre’s hamstring wasn’t anywhere where it needed to be, and the 100 and 200-metre events had been disappointing for him. But when teammates Aaron Brown, Jerome Blake and Brendon Rodney put that baton in his hand with a lead, he found one more golden performance within.
Andre, Skylar, Phil and Summer competed in very different events, but their final destination atop an Olympic medal podium contained shared elements. Each had put in the hard work to get there, staying consistent to what they needed to do to make their dream happen. And each had a compelling backstory.
Skylar comes from a family where achieving taekwondo black belts are part of growing up, her father also her coach. Summer completed her own mother’s Olympic journey, dominating the 200-metre butterfly race her mom competed in years before. Phil was a kid who would ask permission to go to the washroom while in school, instead practicing moves that would lead to an Olympic gold medal in the hallway.
And Andre was a skinny kid who first got noticed when he showed up on a track in a pair of basketball shorts and running shoes, taking off from a standing start. He didn’t enjoy the competitive advantages in equipment or training his running mates had.
But gosh, he was fast.
It’s those backstories, motivation and personal challenges that take Olympic and other competition beyond simple recording of times and judged totals into must-watch territory.
It certainly is a stretch to compare an author’s journey to that of an Olympian. It’s impossible to overemphasize the gap between tapping on a computer keyboard and the dramatically-dangerous artistry Ellie Black creates on a balance beam.
But there arguably are parallels. A novel is more marathon than sprint, requiring a level of tenacity and dedication to complete. And well beyond plot development, it’s the richness of the characters, their motivation and often challenging journies that turn mere words into what one hopes is a compelling reading experience.
That in a similar way to Andre De Grasse overcoming trials and tribulations in the 100 and 200-metre events, Sherry Strong, a young accountant, scarred and shaped by personal tragedy and poverty, may find her laser-focussed career plans derailed by finding love in the most unexpected of places.
And that as Andre’s journey allowed each of us to share in Olympic gold in some small way, a novel also offers a break from the mundane challenges of everyday life into a space where even the happiest of endings are indeed possible.
Jeff Tribe is a career journalist whose passion project, ‘Accountant With Benefits’, is scheduled for release March 1, 2025.
After writing ten historical romance novels and three contemporary western romances, I am itching to try my hand at writing a cozy mystery.
So why change horses in mid-stream? Much sage advice has been written about whether an author should change genres. Although I have enjoyed every bored lord and feisty heroine in my historical romances and sexy ranchers and their ladies in my contemporary westerns, my go-to reading for light relief has always been mysteries and, more recently, cozy mysteries.
Part of building an author brand is promising your readers sure-fire content and delivering it, so for an author, changing genres might be the kiss of death as there is a chance of losing readers. In the past, it was almost a must-do to have a pen name for a separate genre—think Nora Roberts writing mysteries as J.D. Robb—which might mean a workload that would daunt many authors. Two names might require two websites, newsletters, e-mail addresses or whatever media platform the author prefers.
However, this isn’t always the case. Jude Devereux
writes historical romance with a side of paranormal and mystery under her name.
Carolyn Brown and Alyssa Cole both write historical and contemporary romances.
In these instances, and I’m sure there are many more, the author is the brand. If
readers like your work, I think they will follow you out of curiosity, if
nothing else.
Whether romance, paranormal, YA, sci-fi and more, every story contains the who, what, why, where, and when writing principle of journalism, which carries over into all fiction. Who are the leading characters? What are they doing, specifically what is being done to whom? Why is it being done? Where does that old road lead, or where will the spaceship land? When did XYZ become a vampire, or did ABC know FGH was a werewolf?
The classic cozy mystery format is that a body is found, often on the first page but usually in the first chapter, an amateur sleuth investigates and reveals the murderer.
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It sounds simple, but starting with the problem is like working backwards compared to my previous books. What I like most about cozy mysteries is that there is no bloody description of gunshot or knife wounds or other causes of death. Sometimes, there is no description at all, only the information that someone has been found dead. This cuts out much research into weapons and the feasible wounds they produce—likewise, any police or legal protocols. A cozy mystery is not a police procedural, so there is little need for more than a detective on hand or a detective inspector and his sergeant, as in the Midsomer Murders TV series.
I have several more historical romances that I could write, but thankfully, my publisher has accepted my proposal for three cozy mysteries. I have my characters, the victims, and the plots, and I've created the village where all the stories take place. Now, I'm ready to start writing. It remains to be seen if my readers will enjoy them. I could lose some, but on the other hand, I could gain a new following. Time will tell.
Victoria Chatham