Eleven Years of Making a Scene: Still Independent, Still Publishing, Still Building the Future
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A Milestone Worth Making Noise About
On May 1, 2026, Making a Scene celebrates eleven years of continuous publication, and in the fast-moving world of independent music media, that is no small thing. Websites come and go. Blogs burn bright and disappear. Social platforms change the rules. Algorithms bury good work under noise. But Making a Scene has kept showing up, posting new content virtually every day and building one of the most active independent music archives on the web.
The Myth of “Exposure” in the Modern Music Industry
The Most Expensive Free Thing in Music
There is a word that has haunted musicians for decades. It shows up in emails from promoters, club owners, playlist curators, content creators, brands, festivals, podcasters, bloggers, and random people with ring lights who say things like, “This could be great exposure for you.”
That word is exposure.
Exposure is the unpaid intern of the music industry. It is always excited to be there, never has gas money, and somehow keeps promising it knows people.
The AI Feedback Loop: Using Fan Behavior to Train Better Marketing Over Time
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Your Marketing Should Get Smarter Every Time a Fan Clicks
For years, indie artists were told to market their music by guessing.
Guess what time to post. Guess what subject line sounds cool. Guess which city cares. Guess which merch item might sell. Guess whether fans want vinyl, shirts, livestreams, private songs, acoustic versions, behind-the-scenes videos, house concerts, VIP hangouts, or just a simple thank-you email that does not sound like it was written by a corporate intern trapped inside a coffee machine.
Stop Sending Your Fans Back to YouTube: How Indie Artists Can Embed Token-Gated Video Inside Their Own Website
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Your Website Is Not a Poster. It Is the Artist’s World.
For years, indie artist websites were treated like digital flyers. You had a homepage, a bio, some tour dates, a few press photos, a store link, and maybe a YouTube video dropped into the middle of the page. That was fine when the website’s only job was to prove you existed. But that is not enough anymore.
Today, an indie artist’s website should be built like a self-contained ecosystem. It should not be a dead end. It should be the place where fans listen, watch, join, buy, collect, comment, support, and come back. The artist’s website should feel less like a brochure and more like the artist’s own private venue, merch table, fan club, video room, record store, email hub, and community space all living under one roof.
More followers means more opportunity. More opportunity means more growth. More growth means more money. That is the fantasy.
Panning Strategies: Creating Width Without Losing Focus
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Panning is one of the most powerful tools in mixing, but it is also one of the easiest to treat like an afterthought. A lot of indie artists open a mix, throw the vocal in the middle, push a guitar left, push another guitar right, maybe slide a hi-hat somewhere off to the side, and call it a stereo image. That is not really panning. That is decorating. Real panning is arrangement, storytelling, and space management. It decides where the listener’s attention goes. It decides whether a mix feels wide and exciting or blurry and disconnected. It can make a small home studio recording feel like a real record, not because it magically fixes bad tracks, but because it helps every part of the song find a job and a place to stand.
Don’t send your fans to other platforms. Capture their data with the Making a Scene WordPress Plugin and automate a 4-email follow-up series from your own website.
Andra Suchy is a North Dakota native with a voice that stops people in their tracks. Classically trained and a veteran of musical theater, she grew up in a talented, music-filled family and developed the kind of vocal control and emotional range that only comes from years of disciplined performance. Over time, that foundation has made her one of the most in-demand singers in the Midwest and beyond—an artist equally at home on a grand stage, in a studio, or harmonizing beside legendary names.
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“Breaking Chains” is a timely and insightful exploration of how decentralization is reshaping the music industry. Richard L’Hommedieu draws on deep industry knowledge to examine the shifting balance of power between artists, labels, and digital platforms. The book offers both a critique of the traditional music business and a roadmap for musicians seeking independence in a rapidly evolving landscape. With clear explanations and practical strategies, L’Hommedieu empowers readers to understand blockchain, streaming economics, and new models of ownership. More than just a guide, it’s a call to artists to reclaim control of their work and careers. A must-read for musicians, managers, and anyone curious about the future of music."