Episodes

  • Episode 90: How Tech Start Up 'Release Assist' Guides Independent Music Launches
    Mar 25 2026

    Your song is done. The artwork is perfect. Now what? We sit down with Adriano and James, the creators of Release Assist, to unpack a smarter way to launch music without drowning in choices. Their goal-led approach replaces vague hopes with a clear plan: define what success looks like, connect your data sources, and align every touch point—timing, metadata, pitching, distributor strategy—to the audience you actually want.

    What makes their vision refreshing is the mix of human guidance and practical tech. Think of it like lane assist for your release: forecasting the best window by genre and season, highlighting metadata fixes that help algorithms recognise your track, and nudging you toward consistent storytelling across platforms. They push back on the idea that ads are the only answer. Paid media can work, but real traction shows up when your visuals, captions and cadence speak to a listener’s values, not to “everyone.”

    We also explore a bigger mission: cutting through opacity in music. From royalty confusion to shifting gatekeepers, too many decisions are hidden from the artists funding their own careers. Adriano and James want to give independents the same quality of tools labels use—and to build a community layer that connects artists with collaborators, sync routes and mentors without the usual gatekeeping. The long-term vision is bold yet practical: an operating system for independent music careers that starts at release day and expands outward.

    If you’re tired of releasing into the void, this conversation will help you turn chaos into a plan you can execute. Subscribe for more practical music business insights, share this episode with a friend who’s about to drop a single, and leave a review to tell us what you want Release Assist to solve next.

    https://www.releaseassist.com

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    40 mins
  • Episode 89: What Music Creators Need To Know About Fintech
    Mar 18 2026

    Money talks in music, but the language is changing—and fast. We dive into how fintech is rewiring artist funding, why streaming didn’t fix the economics, and how data has quietly turned songs and catalogues into investable assets with predictable cash flows. From real-world catalogue deals to creator-first banking tools, we unpack what’s happening on the finance rails beneath the industry and what it means for your next release, tour, or campaign.

    We start by tracing the arc from the CD boom to the streaming era, highlighting the core problem: subscription prices set too low to sustain healthy payouts across the ecosystem. That’s where fintech steps in. Instead of judging artists by credit scores, new platforms evaluate streams, fan engagement, and merch velocity to underwrite advances and revenue-sharing deals. We explore the strategic upside of these options for independent and mid-tier artists, including how modest annual earnings can unlock funding when the underlying data is consistent.

    Then we zoom in on catalogue financing and why investors are hungry for rights. Better analytics reduce risk, streaming creates durable income, and targeted marketing can lift revenue post-deal. We also address blockchain’s practical wins—smart contracts, automated splits, transparent ownership—beyond the hype cycles. Throughout, we keep labels in the conversation: their expertise and infrastructure remain valuable, while fintech expands choice, speed, and clarity for creators who need runway without surrendering their entire future.

    If you’re weighing ownership against growth, or wondering how to use your data as leverage, this is your field guide to the new money map of music. Subscribe, share with a friend who’s planning their next release, and leave a review telling us what funding path you’d take and why.

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    19 mins
  • Episode 88: Understanding Music Supervision With Drew Sherrod
    Mar 11 2026

    What if the song that makes a trailer unforgettable could also launch an artist’s career? We sit down with music supervisor, consultant and sync creative Drew Sherrod to unpack the craft behind placing music to picture, the business mechanics that keep rights and royalties flowing, and the hard choices that separate a long career from a loud moment. From Nashville mornings to Los Angeles edit bays, Drew traces a path through publishing, his time at BMG, and a pioneering run in trailer music that helped push artists like Moby and Kanye West into new light.

    We walk through the nuts and bolts of legacy catalogue strategy: auditing masters and compositions, untangling old deals, reclaiming rights, and turning dormant songs into sync-ready assets. Drew explains why clean splits, fast approvals, and clear metadata win briefs—and how understanding musical function can be a superpower for composers and sound designers. For artists, he makes the case for trusted teams, a coherent identity, and a catalogue that editors can actually cut with under pressure.

    The role of the supervisor has changed. With streaming at everyone’s fingertips, temp tracks arrive earlier, tastes are louder, and the job often becomes part-therapist, part-librarian, part-diplomat. We talk candidly about YouTube rips, watermark workarounds, and cue sheet pitfalls, and why none of the tools remove the need for judgment. The thread connecting it all is ethics: knowing when to hold or fold, who to trust, and how to choose art over expedience when it matters most.

    If you care about sync licensing, trailerisation, music publishing, and the day-to-day reality of getting songs into film and TV, this conversation is a field guide. Subscribe, share with a friend who’s chasing their first placement, and leave a review with the one question you want us to ask Drew in part two.

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    37 mins
  • Episode 87: How Artists Define Genre, Message, And Sound
    Mar 4 2026

    Identity isn’t a vibe—it’s a system. We dig into the practical steps artists can take to define who they are, where they fit, and how that clarity turns into real momentum. From choosing a primary genre and useful secondary tags to shaping a sonic identity you can reproduce live and across records, we share a toolkit that makes your music easier to find, understand, and support.

    We talk about the evolution from influence to originality, and how scenes, culture, and technology leave fingerprints on your sound. You’ll hear why Auto‑Tune can be a pillar, how TikTok subtly rewires structure, and why the “bedroom pop” aesthetic still echoes in today’s hits. We unpack message and values—how artists like Taylor Swift and Oasis align behaviour, lyrics, and community to project a clear promise fans can believe in. Authenticity becomes more than a buzzword when your music, conduct, and visuals agree.

    Sonic identity gets special focus: production choices, vocal delivery, repeatable chains, and the role of collaborators. We dig into producer‑artist chemistry—think Quincy Jones and Michael Jackson, 40 and Drake—and how the right partnership can reveal the strongest version of your sound. Finally, we translate audio to visuals with branding: colours, textures, type, and styling that make you recognisable at a glance. When your identity is clear, metadata, playlisting, PR, and partnerships stop being guesswork and start working together.

    If you found this helpful, follow the show, share it with a fellow creator, and leave a quick review telling us your primary and secondary genres—let’s see where you fit.

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    21 mins
  • Episode 86: An Interview With Catalogue and Rights Specialist Robin Maddicott
    Feb 25 2026

    What if the biggest lever on your music’s success isn’t a new single, but the data behind it? We sit down with music catalogue specialist Robin Maddicott to unpack the hidden systems that decide where your tracks land, who discovers them, and how the money finds its way back. From artist-page mapping to remixer credit strategy, Robin shows how small metadata choices create outsized results on Spotify, Apple Music, and beyond.

    We also lift the hood on catalogue as an asset class. Clean data isn’t just tidy admin; it’s enterprise value. Robin explains why verified splits, consistent identifiers, and transparent collections command better multiples, and how deep audits can surface black-box income in neglected territories. For buyers, broken data can be opportunity. For creators, discipline at the point of creation is the cheapest way to protect long-term value.

    Then we confront the AI frontier. Can provenance standards like C2PA embed authorship into audio and make attribution machine-readable? Where do detection tools work, and where do they fail when a human re-records an AI seed? Robin maps a path toward fair licensing of training data and recognition of reused “music DNA” without stifling creativity. Finally, we talk campaign strategy: why integrity is the new scarcity, how catalogue storytelling (like the José González anniversary) expands audiences, and why the pendulum may swing from always-on posting back to crafted, seasonal moments that restore a bit of mystique.

    If you care about discovery, royalties, and future-proofing your rights in an AI-driven market, this conversation gives you a playbook and a compass. Subscribe, share with a fellow creator, and leave a review with the one metadata fix you’ll implement this week.

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    39 mins
  • Episode 85: In Conversation with Primetime TV Composers George Warren and Nico Pacella of Bleeding Fingers
    Feb 18 2026

    Big‑league scores don’t appear out of thin air—they’re built through craft, collaboration, and choices that balance art and business. I sit down with George Warren and Nico Pacella; two composers from Hans Zimmer's award winning Composer Collective, Bleeding Fingers, to trace how high‑impact music for TV and film gets made. From spotting sessions and temp tracks to the custom sounds that turn a scene into a world; Nico and George break down when they write to picture and when they build suites in advance, how they bank ideas for later, and why sound design has become core to storytelling rather than a post‑production afterthought.

    We dig into the tools that keep them fast and focused: Cubase for composition, Pro Tools for picture chase, and an iPad running TouchOSC to surface articulations and track groups at a tap. One bends a saxophone through Serum’s granular engine to craft pads and pulses you can’t buy in a pack—clean, licensable textures that stand out in a saturated market. The other anchors cues at the piano, moving quickly from harmony to emotion while staying out of the menu maze. Along the way, we talk about temp love, clearing samples, and how Extreme Music handles registrations and global royalty collection so the writing can stay front and centre.

    Their paths show how education, mentorship, and humility shape a modern composer. Classical performance gave technique and taste; graduate training added hybrid orchestration and scoring workflows; assisting seasoned composers delivered the lessons that only deadlines can teach. The advice is candid: build a reel that proves your range, network with genuine intent, be the collaborator people want in the room, and treat your career like a marathon. Diversify across libraries, games, ads, and series, protect your headspace from social media comparison, and create sounds no one else owns. Subscribe, share with a composer friend, and leave a review telling us the ideas you've gained for your next cue.

    https://bleedingfingersmusic.com

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    46 mins
  • Episode 84: How Duetti Are Enabling Music Creators To Unlock Capital And Control
    Feb 11 2026

    Money changes the music you can make, and control changes the way you make it. I sit down with Duetti’s Head of Growth, Elliot Bahmoul, to unpack how music creators can sell a slice of their catalogue for upfront cash and pair that capital with genuine marketing muscle. Instead of waiting on a label advance, we explore how creators can fund albums, tours, and studio upgrades while choosing their own collaborators and keeping their options open.

    Elliot breaks down why music IP has matured into a credible asset class, how streaming stabilised royalties, and why catalogue deals aren’t just for superstars. We dig into Duetti’s toolkit: building owned playlist networks optimised for Spotify search, running targeted Meta and TikTok ads that convert short-form spikes into streams, and using data to identify which tracks deserve spend. He also shares how genre-aware remixing—think Brazil’s baile funk—can reinvigorate catalogue songs and unlock regional growth that compounds over time.

    Beyond funding, we talk brand building and the wider creator economy. With no-strings cash, artists can invest in products, content, and experiences that increase lifetime value per fan, rather than chasing short-lived playlist highs. We also look ahead: planning for AI voice models, derivative works, and long-term rights, so today’s choices support tomorrow’s autonomy. If you’re weighing a publishing deal, eyeing independence, or simply need a smarter way to finance your next move, this conversation offers clear, practical paths forward.

    If this helped you think differently about music funding and growth, subscribe, share the episode with a fellow artist, and leave a quick review to support the show.

    https://www.duetti.co

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    25 mins
  • Episode 83: How Ryan Dickinson Creates and Curates Music For Global Brands
    Feb 4 2026

    Great music doesn’t have to start from scratch every time. We sat down with Ryan Dickinson, Creative Director at made by ikigai, to unpack how he creates brand-defining music for Adidas, Nike, Samsung, and beyond—without losing the human spark that makes a piece unforgettable. Ryan’s approach starts with clarity: deep questioning, grabbing storyboards, and, when possible, a quick call to surface what clients actually mean. Then he puts sound to picture early. By cutting rough edits that hit narrative beats, he replaces guesswork with evidence and turns subjective taste into a shared decision.

    The heart of his system is a modern, composer-led production model. Instead of vanishing into playlist rabbit holes, Ryan works from a curated in-house music catalogue sourced from top composers worldwide. If a track fits, he adapts it. If it inspires, he briefs the same composer for a targeted custom version. That flexibility is a lifeline when more options are needed, timelines shrink, and teams still need music that feels intentional. It also keeps deals simple and fair: evenly splitting the licence fee with composers, recognising that half the value is the art and half is placing it where it belongs.

    We also dig into AI—where it helps and where it falls flat. Ryan treats AI like a drum machine preset or a sample pack: useful for seeds, never the song. Taste, restraint, and curation remain the difference between generic and great. His next chapter focuses on giving the catalog its own brand and building tech that speeds up search and auditioning without diluting human craft. If you care about sonic identity, creative process, and fair outcomes for composers, this conversation offers practical ideas you can use today.

    Enjoyed this conversation? Follow the show, share it with a friend who makes or licenses music, and leave a quick review to help more creators find us.

    https://www.madebyikigai.com

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    33 mins