THE RECOMMENDER 2010 REVIEW

We wish to bid farewell to 2010, which turned out to be a bumper year for this music blog, with many highlights, in a year in which our visitor numbers improved, our network grew like never before, we received more comments per post, our credibility as a music commentator grew, and our reach continued to stretch around the globe.

The single biggest thing that we experienced was the blog’s full redesign. A wonderful job was completed by Andy Nelson, a full-time web designer, who also happens to be the excellent lead guitarist from one of Brighton’s most joyful bands, :Kinema:. “Slick” was the word most commonly used by the many people that mentioned it on Twitter and in our comments section.

Our editor, Mike, was interviewed on radio stations both here in the UK and in the US, as well as getting decent mentions, such as ‘Website Of The Week‘, on major music websites around the world. Cloud Speakers.com and Musformation.com Q&A’d us and they have been known to quote our tweets to help inform professional musicians.

Our Twitter account has grown month by month and as we close the year we are about to hit 2000 followers. We put a lot of effort into throwing out our opinions on there, alongside some decent updates and genuinely useful links, to make sure it’s rewarding and providing additional information (that you won’t find on the main blog) to our followers. As a consequence, the large American website, Flavourwire, put us in their ‘top 10 music critics to follow on Twitter‘.

We were also made a proud ‘Charter Member’ of the all-too-brief global blog collective Strangers In Stereo, which launched in style at SXSW, before it’s untimely demise only a few months later, but the creator Will Hines informs us that he plans a return, so it’s not over, just due for a full re-launch in 2011. One of the best things to come out of it was being fully integrated with an expanded network of high quality music bloggers.

We covered this year’s SXSW Festival like never before, as we sent our contributor and Austin local, Olivia, around the town to hunt out the giant festival’s highlights. Meeting up with many fellow bloggers, chatting with Anthony the creator of the Hype Machine, and reviewing what seemed like a million bands. You can read that coverage here.

The music industry continued to interact with us on a greater scale in 2010, with A&R employees, record labels and booking agencies picking up on The Recommender’s popularity and ability to help discover new music. We were fortunate enough to be lavished with free drinks, dinners and a multitude of guestlist shows by a handful of these companies, allowing us to feel a sense of appreciation and respect.

PR companies were kind enough to hand our blog a selection of exclusives throughout the year, which is always appreciated. This was alongside being sent many new albums, EPs and single releases, both in the post and digitally, with 2010 being a year that physical promo copies were replaced more and more by digital ones.

In February we launched The Recommender’s parties, a monthly get-together, based at venues in central Brighton, showcasing some of the finest cutting edge talent from around the world. Every show seemed to produce exceptional performances, which we hope is partly due to the effort we put into making it feel like a proper party, rather than a standard gig. The Phenomenal Handclap Band, We Have Band, Velo, Young Empires, The Foreign Office and King Charles, all stated that they had experienced their best ever gig in the UK at the close of their amazing sets.

One major highlight from our promotions was the packed out after-party that we organised for The Great Escape Festival back in May, alongside the magazine that we continue to proudly write for, Brighton’s ‘going out bible‘, The Source Magazine. Five amazing bands were on show, with King Charles stepping in at the last minute, after Velo sadly had to pull out. The venue is probably still trying to repair the roof, which was duly removed by all five thunderous performances.

During November, we were once again asked to vote in the annual BBC ‘Sound Of 2011‘ poll, amongst just 165 of the UK’s nominated tastemakers, with two out of our three votes making the list. The final winners of this will be announced in the first week of January.

As the year closed we provided our large, annual posts, that always turn out to be among the most popular of each year, with Everything Everything scooping ‘Track Of The Year‘, with ‘Suffragette Suffragette‘, and Sleigh Bells’ ‘Treats‘ earning ‘Album Of The Year‘.

EVERYTHING EVERYTHING – SUFFRAGETTE SUFFRAGETTE

SLEIGH BELLS – A/B MACHINES

Since the blog’s re-design we’ve dipped into new areas with our editorial too, as we tried our first forays into reviewing, rather than our typical previewing. This allowed us to write the occasional negative piece – how else can you do it if you’re being honest – about some of the worst music on show this year, and more recently with the post titled, ‘The Most Disappointing Albums of 2010‘. Although we fully intend to remain a largely positive site, who’s intention is to make your lives better with amazing music, this other style of editorial always stirs up debate, which is also healthy.

One successful, new idea was to hold a peers-only vote for ‘The Best Music Blogs Of 2010‘, where we invited everyone on our network of music bloggers, from around the world, to nominate their three favourite music blogs. The response was enormous, with the post receiving more visitors than any other posts this year, as well as getting mentioned all over the web and the social networks. Votes arrived in their hundreds and the overall winner was announced as the very friendly Sunset In The Rearview.

Looking ahead to next year we will certainly do the vote again, alongside all of our other successful, annual posts. We plan to do a 2011 preview on our next piece, which seeks to point out and predict the year’s hotly anticipated releases, so make sure you head back here soon for that.

All that is left to say is a MASSIVE thank you to all of our contributors, all of the industry professionals who have interacted with us this year, all of the music bloggers in our network, all of the bands that have played absolute blinders each month, but most of all to our readers. Without you all we wouldn’t exist. Music is one of those things that serves to make life that little bit better, so we wish to raise a glass for all those people that enjoy searching it out.

See you in 2011…
Mike (editor)

MUSIC BLOGGING – A TRANSATLANTIC CONVERSTATION

We thought it worth posting about this as it’s an insightful industry talk about music blogs at this year’s In The City Festival, currently residing in Manchester, plus they give our blog a mention, but before you consider us a bunch of self-serving wankers, please note that they genuinely raise many talking points that The Recommender is interested in. They gathered a quality selection of online folk for the panel, including Pitchfork‘s Ryan Schreiber, Drowned in Sound‘s Sean Adams, Hype Machine‘s Dev Sherlock, My Band’s Better Than Your Band‘s Oliver Clueit and Rawkblog‘s David Greenwald.

photo by http://mabvision.com

Sean was supposed to be the moderator but he was stuck in traffic, so for the initial period Rawkblog’s David covered. Topics on the table included the transatlantic difference between music blogs in the UK and USA, the evolution and history of music blogging which proves particularly interesting with veterans of the game like Pitchfork’s Ryan involved, the style of blogging and what makes a blog successful, the relationship between labels/PR and music bloggers, the filters like Hype Machine and the exhaustion of finding those truly enjoyable blogs and ultimately the influence that music blogs have on the industry and it’s audience.

We particularly enjoyed the issue of creating blogs with a genuine voice – which is something The Recommender has always stood for – to actually give a fuck about what you are doing and not just hand out mp3s. As they mention, “The blog’s I really admire are the ones out there looking for new stuff…that really have a ‘voice’, because there’s a lot of blogs out there that are just like bulletin boards…those that actually take the time to write about the subject…and give the reader something a bit more nourishing“. It’s great to hear others talking about the endless list of “shortsighted” blogs that seem to care less, or post “everything”, or “chase hits”.

photo by http://mabvision.com

On this blog we are a strong believer in good editorial, interesting features and developing relationships with the readers, however, with so many millions of music blogs all over the world it’s a very noisy environment, but Oliver from My Bands Better Than Your Band talks of how there’s a natural filtering that will go on. “It’s still very much in it’s infancy…the good blogs will rise to the top…if you’re not reading the content of a blog then people are going to realise“, before he states that this will also in turn help the relationships between the industry and the tastemaker bloggers.

As a blogger who feels very well networked with others, it’s great to have these discussions and connect the dots that we see on a daily basis. There’s an evolution that’s occurring online and it’s important to not just be in it, but be a part of it. Have a listen and let us know your thoughts. In the mean time, ahem, we’re off to write up that latest remix of Lady Gaga.
(MB)