From: Tres F. <tre...@gm...> - 2014-04-24 00:25:54
|
Stian is right, videos are best for tutorials. Podcasts have their own culture. A podcast should still be interesting if -- for example -- walking the neighborhood, riding the train, etc. In US, the National Public Radio has a decent album review segment where the reporter describes the music, plays some and interviews the artist. The interviews and music cut in and out as appropriate in the conversation. I would recommend recording the audio from a Hangout with Red Ambassador (for example). Have a canned set of questions such as "What inspires your music?", "How long does it take for you to finish a track", "Describe your studio to me", "Have you ever played live before?", "If there was one thing you'd change about ____ what would it be?", "What is your favorite track?", "Have you done any collaborations?". Feel free to spill off into off-topic discussion, just make sure to bring it back on topic and have a timer that reminds you how long you've been talking. Focus on the human element around music and the listeners will really enjoy it. That's my 2c :) -Tres |