Musings: Crafting Mixtapes in a Digital Age

At the end of each month I make a mixtape and send it to a small group of friends. It’s a mix of new, old, and remixed music, with some fun rarities like unreleased b-sides or cover songs thrown in for good measure.
15 years ago I made mixtapes using a different methodology – cassettes. I taped songs from the radio or dubbed songs from other tapes or CDs. To my friends’ dismay I would cut in and out of songs, looping bits, chopping about to create my own customized mix. I decorated the CD case with felt-tip markers and distributed the batch from a tattered, blue plastic Gap bag that weekend or whenever I saw someone next (In other words they didn’t receive the mix right away. You can see where I’m headed with this).
Technology has made it innumerably easier to create and distribute a digital mixtape. However, these mixtapes are frowned upon by the powers-that-be because rights for each song need to be cleared prior to streaming them.
In a digital age of advanced marketing and cross-promotional tactics – why can’t a mixtape become a promotional vehicle, a flipped funnel so to speak – rather than totally shut out as a viable way of sharing music?
Hyperdistribution can work for an artist, not necessarily against.
15 years ago an optimal distribution method would be me sharing a song that I’m crazy about with, let’s say, 10 friends. Great case scenario, 5 of those 10 friends go out and buy the CD and even tell another friend or two about the band. Fast forward to now and this translates to quick dedications, sharing, tagging, and embedding with hopefully the eventual intent to buy the single or album.
I understand the popularity of widgets to share and track music. But I think there’s a need for something even more nimble; a universal technology that can allow a song to travel further by becoming directly associated with the content.
Perhaps something along the lines of an embed code could travel with each song, containing an accompanying click-thru link for users to purchase the content. The code could incorporate tracking so promos intentionally leaked to blogs could be followed and music could become legitimately spread by fans on a viral level. The code could be user or label assigned and registered in a database somewhere, like a Gracenote vox populi.
By tracking content but allowing it to travel freely everyone wins. The artist gets marketing feedback, promotion, potential sales and recognition, and I can safely put together a mixtape that rocks, all the while knowing that I’m not only telling my friends about this cool artist but also making it super-easy for them to buy the work or tell someone else about it.
This kind of technology could potentially legitimize sites like Muxtape, a playlist-building site that allows users to upload their playlists and share them with friends on a streaming-only basis.
Playlist building sites like Imeem are great because they clear rights from the labels up front – allowing users to stream, share, and embed content hassle-free. But what about us die-hard music fans who want to share the remixes, rarities, and b-sides – stuff that’’s just not out yet?
DJ’s and music fans have been clamoring for decades to be the first to drop that unreleased promo or song that is bound to make everyone go nuts. The digital age hasn’t changed that. if I get my hands on a hot new song, I want to tell everyone I know about it. That’s the job of the DJ. It’s the job of a music fan. And that won’t change now or 15 years from now.
No trackbacks yet.
DJ Mixing: Hip Hop Stylee No. 1
about 2 weeks ago - 1 comment
Hip Hop is like comfort food to me. I love it so much and always have. I go on my long, weird, late-night runs listening to hip hop mixtapes (and R&B oldies – see the Atlantic 60th Edition for starters). It totally gets me going every time.
I started off the evening working on a Teen More >
dj mixing: 20 years of Warp
about 3 months ago - 1 comment
This year, the seminal independent record label Warp Records celebrates 20 years of releasing cutting-edge electronic music.
In honor of their 20th anniversary I’ve put together a mix highlighting a few favorite tracks.
When creating a mixtape I usually start with a playlist of anywhere from 40-60 songs and shape it down from there. It ’s always painful More >
dj mixing
about 4 months ago - 3 comments
I’ve been a fan of electronic music as far back as I can remember. When I moved to Boston and especially LA, I started going to more shows and listening to all kinds of music. It really opened my mind to different styles and genres.
I had already been DJ’ing electronic music (mostly tech-house and electro) More >
Mining Moof
about 4 months ago - No comments
Moof.com is one service of many that’s a step closer to granting us an all-access portal to our iTunes music collections from off-site.
A simple .xml export/import from iTunes allows Moof to quickly assess your library, referencing all tracks and playlists located there.
Moof currently pulls content from YouTube. Often, it pulls live versions of songs rather More >
I want to Spotify
about 9 months ago - 1 comment
Spotify, a music service currently only available outside of the US, is a social streaming site that allows instant listening to specific tracks or albums.
Users can easily share their library with friends and collaborate on playlists.
Although ownership of music is important to users in general a more pressing issue is accessibility. Sites like Hype Machine More >
New Music: Nosaj Thing
about 9 months ago - 1 comment
For this year’s Coachella Music Festival – a holiday of sorts for Los-Angelenos in the music industry – I chose to forgo the long lines, blistering heat and nutty ravers to spend a weekend of leisure in the desert area. And of course hit some pool parties along the way.
I think the decision to sit More >
Singing About Songbird
about 11 months ago - No comments
Note: This article is syndicated at made this for you.
When it comes to media management, iTunes is a staple for handling my music library. A self-professed music junkie, I need a library that’s seamless to navigate, highly organizable, and can accommodate a limitless amount of files in a variety of formats.
I don’t infrequently tie my More >
New Music: We Have Band
about 1 year ago - No comments
Ok-ok, so these guys really ARE from the UK (see previous post). The song Hear it in the Cans first grabbed me on a Daily Swarm mixtape and the sixth Maison compilation from parisian label Kitsune. I found myself driving around listening to it over and over again. Oh yes, one of those.
If you’re headed to Austin next More >
New Music: Hearts of Palm UK
about 1 year ago - 2 comments
I first heard these gals a few years ago and automatically assumed from the name that they’re from the UK. Alas, they’re local – to me at least – the band is from the Los Angeles neighborhood Echo Park. Which is fabulous because it means I can hopefully catch them live at some point in More >
slinging, streaming, and sharing content
about 1 year ago - 2 comments
The beta of Sling.com’s video site is pretty awesome. And smart.
After streaming a full clip or episode, the viewer is given the ability to leave a comment, purchase the full episode, or buy the entire season. You can also create a subscription feed that provides updates on your friends’ activity along with the shows you’ve More >

about 1 year ago
hello
how are you?
about 1 year ago
I love your mixes! And I totally agree. It’s hard now to share music in the same simple way we used to. In the sense of owning a song. We can listen to music online all the time, but there is nothing like having music recs from a friend and plug it into your workout mix.
about 10 months ago
Great post Nicole!
I think the problem is that people just plain ole expect music to be free these days.
So, unless you make the song only play for a week once someone clicks on it – there is no incentive or urgency to buy it…