SXSW profile project FAQ
UPDATE 2/10 We've got the first hundred or so profiles back. They are great. And we've started publishing them on Spinner. You can read them here: http://www.spinner.com/tag/sxswseed.
UPDATED 2/4
This is a page specifically meant for the people working on our project to interview and write profiles of the musicians playing at the South by Southwest festival in March 2010. If you are interested in joining the project, read this post on Spinner, our indie music site.
Thank you for choosing to work on a profile of a musician scheduled to play at the South By Southwest music festival this march. This document is meant to offer some tips and guidance for you.
If you've got a question, please ask it in the comments below. We'll respond promptly so all the other writers can see it. Please feel free to post your own tips about this project below too. If you would rather, send your questions to SXSWSeed@aol.com.
Here are an example interview and biography.
PREPARATION
UPDATED 2/4
This is a page specifically meant for the people working on our project to interview and write profiles of the musicians playing at the South by Southwest festival in March 2010. If you are interested in joining the project, read this post on Spinner, our indie music site.
Thank you for choosing to work on a profile of a musician scheduled to play at the South By Southwest music festival this march. This document is meant to offer some tips and guidance for you.
If you've got a question, please ask it in the comments below. We'll respond promptly so all the other writers can see it. Please feel free to post your own tips about this project below too. If you would rather, send your questions to SXSWSeed@aol.com.
Here are an example interview and biography.
PREPARATION
- Contact the band's publicist or manager to arrange an interview.
- Don't wait, because you only have a week to conduct the interview and submit the article. If we have contact information, we have included it in your assignment e-mail. If not, search for the band's MySpace page and its own Web page. You should find a manager or press contact. If you're stumped, contact us atSXSWSeed@aol.com.
- Ask the manager or publicist to e-mail you a photograph of the band that will run with the article.
- Research the band. Listen to the band's songs you find on the Web. Read what you can about them.
- Prepare to record the interview if you can. Your local RadioShack or office supply story, has gadgets that can hook up a telephone to a recorder. Another option is to conduct the interview on speakerphone, so a recorder can pick up the conversation.
- While recording the interview is a very good idea, it's not required. Just be prepared to take very good notes.
- If you do record the interview, be sure to tell the person you are talking to. In many states, that's the law.
- Interviews must be conducted by telephone (or in person, if you happen to be where the band is.) E-mail interviews are not acceptable. The only exception is if the band doesn't feel comfortable in English. If you do conduct an e-mail interview in this case, feel free to e-mail back follow up questions in the (likely) case the initial answers are too terse.
- In the interview, be sure to ask the questions on our list below. Feel free to add a few of your own. Be polite and curious.
- If the person you are talking to doesn't really answer the question in a colorful way, ask a follow up to draw more out. You need more than a few sentances for each question.
- If you haven't already, sign up for an account on at www.seed.com/signup. Please use the same e-mail address you have used to apply to write for Seed.
- Go to the "Dashboard" (the first page you see after you sign in). Under "Recommended Assignments," choose the "Arts & Entertainment" category from the drop down menu.
- Look for the assignment called "SxSW Artist Profile." You may need to skip forward by a page or two.
- Click on the title of the "SxSW Artist Profile" assignment. Then click "Claim This."
- You will see a page that allows you to enter and edit your article. Put the band name as the Article Title.
- If you have a photograph of the band, click on the "Click to Add an Image" button. Press "Upload." Then insert the filename of the photo the band sent you. (Don't use photos from other sites that may be copyrighted.)
- Click "Save." Whenever you return to your dashboard on Seed, you'll see the article listed under "works in Progress."
- Go through your notes and recordings to extract the most sharp, interesting and informative quotes.
- Write a two or three sentence introduction to the article that simply sets up the band, where it's from, and a general description of the sort of music it plays. Make sure the tone is that of a reporter describing the band (with style), but not a critic or a publicist. It's not your job to say whether the band is good or not.
- The rest of the article is simply the questions you asked in bold face, followed by the answers.
- No single answer should be more than 200 words. And the entire article cannot exceed 1,000 words.
- Be sure to include all four of the core questions and at least four other questions.
- The answer to each question should be a direct quote. You can add additional information to make things clear [in brackets]. You may skip parts of the quote using ...ellipses to indicate that words were skipped. Of course, do not in any way alter the meaning or emphasis of what the artist said.
- Use the information you learned from the interview, along with what you learned researching the band in advance.
- Use reliable sources, including your own interview, the band's publicity information and web site, the site of their record label, and mainstream publications such as Rolling Stone. Wikipedia is often a handy starting place, but verify any information you find there.
- A chronological structure is usually handy for a biography. Again, your job is to describe the band, not to offer opinions about its music.
- Write 300-500 words.
- Link to all your external sources, and identify for us any other sources you have that aren't Web links.
- Be sure to use your own words, not copy those of others.
- It's best to write your article, using the editor on Seed.com. There are buttons, however, that allow you to paste text into the Seed editor and to paste formatted text from Microsoft Word.
- Simply append the biography to the end of the interview in the Seed. Put the heading "Biography" at the beginning.
- When you have finished writing your article in Seed and proofread it article, press "Save & Next." Write a short summary of your interview on the next page.
- Press "Preview" to see your article one last time. Then press "Submit."
- We will read it and get back to you within seven days.
- If we like your work, we may offer you the chance to write more SxSW interviews.
- When speaking to the band and its representatives, you can describe yourself as on assignment for AOL Music and Spinner.
- You may not describe yourself as working for us in any other context.
- Do not approach SXSW, or any other organization, and ask for press passes, tickets or any other favors.
- Do not write about any band if you have a personal or professional relationship with any people or companies connected to it in any way.
- Do not accept any tickets, goods, meals or anything else with a more than a nominal value from anyone connected to the band.
- You must use your full real name as the byline of the article.
- If you have a general question, ask it in the comments below. That way we can share our answer with the rest of the SXSW writes. Feel free to discuss the project amongst yourselves. Also you can e-mail us at SXSWSeed@aol.com with any questions or concerns.
Reader Comments
(page 1 of 2)Very informative material for interviewers to use to complete the interview process productively. I really feel like I'm learning here. Thumbs up
Besides being informative as it is related to the business of actually preparing, conducting, and submitting interview material, the information also gave me a degree of satisfaction concerning interview styles. Even though I knew somewhere in the back of my mind that all interviews were not face to face encounters, I felt satisfied to know that another interviewer or writer would not always be getting face time with certain people of interest, and that really comes from being an ordinary person that's trying to accomplish things while finding certain ones who have accomplished things interesting and inspiring enough to just be a fan or an admirer of a type of work or creation. How it happens a lot of times is, suddenly you see people rise to the top, and yes you know there was work behind it, but they get performance time, face time, and the privilege of being near and dear to the same people who have touched and changed your life in some type way and that is irritating even when you have enough understanding to realize that you should be content with what you have while pressing forward toward a goal. Thanks for giving me that satisfaction.
The band I was assigned is from Israel and it doesn't look like they are currently touring in the United States. Are email interviews acceptable or should I just find the cheapest way to call Israel and give it a shot over the phone?
Thank you!
Ben
Ben- Thanks for writing. We would very much like these to be telephone interviews. There are lots of ways to make a cheap international call, such as Skype and many calling cards. If this is a problem for you, send an e-mail to SXSWSeed@aol.com and we'll be glad to find you a U.S. based band.
Best
Saul
Saul,
Thanks for your quick response and for offering to reassign a U.S. based band. I kind of dig the band I was assigned though, so I will make it happen. I just thought I would check on how you feel about email interviews, so I would know my options when contacting the band's publicist.
Thanks again!
Ben
I submitted my first interview this morning. I am not sure if it is okay to add a writer's perspective but I did do it. Normally, when I receive rejection letters from Seed, they are not very detailed. I would like the opportunity to continue with more interviews but I hope that if there is a rejection, there is specific feedback as to why, so that I can learn from my mistakes.
a) the link provided in the "help" documents for SXSW went to the help document, and not the festival itself. If there is a preferred link to use for this tag, please list it so everyone is using the same or appropriate ones.
b) I'm still learning what sites are and are not ok to use, if linking is the reason for a rejection, please help me work through it.
Thanks, K
This may seem like a severely stupid question, but in the initial e-mail, a list of questions to ask were included, replete with explicit instructions that the first four bolded questions MUST be asked and included in the interview. One of the questions, however, is "How did you come up with your band name?" I've been assigned a solo musician, however, whose stage name is her birth name. Is it permissible to omit this question in this instance and substitute it with another question from the list or another question I formulate?
Thanks in advance.
The artist I was assigned states on his MySpace profile that any interview requests can be made through a MySpace message. My profile is private and does not contain anything embarrassing, but it doesn't exactly strike me as meeting the "professional standards" mentioned in the e-mail I received from SEED. Is it fine for me to contact him with a MySpace message?
Thanks,
Victor
For the record, I did my best to find an e-mail or phone number anywhere else to no avail.
Victor-
You are welcome to use your MySpace profile for this purpose. I've done it myself. MySpace is in fact often the best way to reach a band. But if you're having trouble, e-mail us and we'll do our best to help you.
Best
Saul
It looks like the group I have been assigned can only be contacted through Myspace. I have looked to see if I can find the name of representation elsewhere and haven't had luck. I do not have a Myspace account, nor do I plan on creating one. What, if any, are my options here.
Thanks in advance,
Linda
Linda, Maybe you can find someone who has a Myspace account if there is a problem setting up your own for some reason.
I tried to register on seed.com, but was unable to drill down to claim a specific band assignment, as indicated in Step 4 of your instructions. It appears that one can only claim the "SXSW Artist Profile" assignment in general, without further subdivisions. Did I miss something?
Darci-
That's right. Just claim the generic assignment, and put the band we assigned you as the headline. That seemed easier than putting 2,000 assignments in for people to scroll through.
Please write here or e-mail if you have any more questions.
Saul
I was having trouble uploading my story at first and the mix of it all the bio got left off the bottom of my interview. Is there a way I can still attach this?
If you submitted an article on Seed and it hasn't been accepted yet, you can still edit it. Go to the Dashboard and you'll see your completed articles on the bottom right. Click on the one you want to edit and then push the edit button. Be sure to click through the screens to submit it again.
If you have more questions, feel free to e-mail us.
Saul Hansell
My first band profile was just published, and I'd like the opportunity to work on more, as well as any assignments that may be available in Austin for SXSW. Will Spinner contact me if I'm considered for other assignments, or do I need to do something to explicitly express my interest?
Jason- We are reaching out to people who have contributed asking if they want to do more profiles. Feel free to e-mail SXSWSeed@aol.com to ask for another band to interview as well.
Saul Hansell
in your instructions, you said that the interview itself can be no more than 1000 words. my interview is 999 words, but with the introduction, it is 1123. is this ok?
Don't sweat an extra 25 words. But don't send us 1500 words total either.
Saul