. . .
Seth Meyers of Saturday Night Live recently called MySpace “the Internet’s abandoned amusement park”. How right he was. Bands are increasingly serving notice that they’re no longer checking email on MySpace, often due to spam. Often that spam is other bands asking one to join them on Twitter or Facebook.
Meanwhile, MySpace looks as janky as it did five years ago. Pages take forever to load, the streaming player is rickety – if one can even find it amongst the thicket of widgets – and the “Music-Only” browser plug-in is often a necessity if one wants to hear actual music. MySpace is a hindrance, not a service.
There are some MySpace competitors, like ReverbNation and PureVolume. But does any music fan actually visit bands’ pages on those sites? ReverbNation and PureVolume pages are simply too cluttered to be functional.
Bandcamp is much better as a competitor. It is all (well, almost all) of the good stuff of MySpace, without the bad stuff. MySpace’s good stuff is (1) streaming player, and (2) social networking. MySpace’s bad stuff is (1) hardly works (unreliable streaming player, primitive email functionality), and (2) ugly as hell (ads all over the place, template virtually impossible to improve). The bad stuff cancels out the good stuff.
. . .
Here’s what Bandcamp offers: streaming audio, access to lyrics and artwork (if a band offers it), and direct sales capability of music in all file formats – MP3, FLAC, AAC, etc. That’s all a band needs, really. Social networking? Use Twitter and Facebook for that. Just drive people to your Bandcamp page, and they can stream and buy music instantly – with no intermediary like Amazon or iTunes. The interface is clean and simple. It invites one to stay. With Bandcamp, labels don’t get to sign bands just by looking at profile views and play counts. That’s a good thing. Maybe labels can sign bands based on what they actually sound like! Imagine that.
Here are five Bandcamps I recommend. I don’t know of many more, since Bandcamp doesn’t have (a) a directory (though it does have genre and location tags), or (b) the “everyone has one” ubiquity of MySpace. But Bandcamp’s popularity will rise. It’s that good. In the meantime, check these out.
. . .
I told Kelly from Embers to get a Bandcamp. That let you guys download the band’s tracks from its latest split for free. (I talked about those tracks here.) The Bandcamp has a link to buy the 12″ with its awesome artwork. You can also download the band’s 2007 debut for free. It’s worth it. (I reviewed it in Decibel’s demo column for the March ‘10 issue (Fear Factory cover).)
The Unnamed EP (reviewed here) is available for download for $5. You can also buy the 7″ from the band’s Big Cartel site. (Big Cartel is a simple store interface for selling physical product.) Stream all the tracks, look at their production credits. If only we could preview vinyl like this back in the day.
This is a new label that’s a metal offshoot of the redoubtable Balkan label Moonlee. The label’s Bandcamp has three bands up. My pick is True, a death metal band featuring tamburica, a traditional Croatian stringed instrument. Three euros get you the album as a download, and the artwork as a PDF.
Oskoreien is a folk/black metal act that’s appearing on a compilation soon alongside the like-minded Agalloch, Fen, and October Falls. Fen is probably closest in sound. This two-track demo is quality stuff, and is available for free (or whatever price you choose).
I’ve waited for new material from Spain’s Wormed for years. (I wrote about their Planisphaerium album in the early days of the site here.) Their technical death metal values “strange” as much as it does “finger-wiggling”. Gorguts meets Origin, maybe? Now they have a two-song EP out, with graphics straight out of a rave flyer circa 1998. Their Bandcamp states, “All the money going to Wormed directly, no intermediaries”. Ain’t that great?
If you know of any more worthy Bandcamps (or want to plug yours or a friends’), please leave them in the comments box. And tell your musician friends who don’t have one yet to get one. We need to get bands off this MySpace Titanic and onto this Bandcamp boat.


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I agree 100,000%. I’ve already used Bandcamp to buy mp3’s directly from several artists, and downloaded a number of demos or albums for free there as well, and I’ve been SUPER impressed with the site’s ease of use every time. An excellent resource, indeed.
petrychor.bandcamp.com
This is a great one man black metal band from California that mixes in post-rock but with actual songwriting and talent. Their EP is on there for free.
I was going to post about Petrychor. So, “+1″, as the kids say.
And yes BandCamp is great.
Hah, damn. I actually dropped by to mention Petrychor as well.
Definitely check them out.
I also agree. Bandcamp is awesome! and flexible. You can create download codes to put in vinyl or CD releases, and use custom DNS if you want.
It’s the first website my band signed up for.
Wormrider: http://music.wormrider.com/
I also have to agree. Bandcamp is much better and offers all the services Myspace became famous for without having to sign up and ignore all the damn friend requests from crappy bands (and the odd rapper). Also, plug!
mouthfulofacid.bandcamp.com
Why not?
an awesome bandcamp: http://www.cutyourteethworldwide.com
Totally agree. I’ve written about this before, but bandcamp is the only place I’ll buy digital music online. I want to have the music in FLAC so I can losslessly burn it to CD, or convert it to my preferred portable format (OGG).
Bandcamp is the reason I got into
Flaming Tusk: http://music.flamingtusk.com/
and
From Exile: http://fromexile.bandcamp.com/album/monolith
Cut Your Teeth pretty much totally rule. I wish I could download more than just the one song. Good job, Patrick.
Bandcamp does look like the (near) future for bands. I’m personally excited about it. I have several projects that are either in production or just need to be compiled that will all be up on Bandcamp. Finally, an easy way to make all this catalog available without hassle.
Unfortunately, Myspace is still a necessity for the time being, but the page will primarily serve as on of the many funnels to bandcamp…
Also, one of my favorite things about Bandcamp is that the band can post lyrics aside the tracks. I love having the lyrics, it’s an essential part of the package for me.
For example, I just listened to the absurd and awesome new Wormed material (Thanks!). There really wasn’t any way I’d be able to decipher these lyrics from the mic-gargling vocals:
“Rotating about the minor axis of this hole
Tried to find the area under the curve a paradoxical navigability
The number of vectors is equal to the dimension
A new geodesation operation under the influence of gravity ”
Excellent.
Thanks Anwar, you can get the full EP on itunes!
ax.itunes.apple.com/us/artist/cut-your-teeth/id366141003
Yes, totally agree with you on this. My favorite thing about Bandcamp is the embeddable player. There are several iterations of it, the smallest is the coolest one. If anyone wants to check out my metal band No Gang Colors’ Bandcamp site it’s here: http://nogangcolors.bandcamp.com/
I still have a use for myspace: Fenriz’s band of the week blogs.
Other than that, after checking out bandcamp through this site’s referral for the Embers EP, I support this 100%.
I’ve been using bandcamp since december and have been tyring to push it on all the bands I know, its a great service. Great to see it getting some press and recognition. Aside form the mentioned features i really like that the staff respond personally to suggestion and such like
Shameless pluggery
http://www.hesperpayne.bandcamp.com
http://www.theaxisofperdition.bandcamp.com
http://www.minethorn.bandcamp.com
http://www.haloofthesun.bandcamp.com
http://www.irradiant.bandcamp.com
so on and so forth
Totally agree. BandCamp is definitely the best site out there for streaming and making your music available to the world.
Red Vienna – http://redvienna.bandcamp.com/
here’s another potential myspace killer:
http://www.nimbit.com/
hmmm…
why does it seem that for everysite that is deemed “clean”, the back ground is white? examples are the facebook references in a earlier article from invisable oranges.
just throwing it out there guys….
Thanks for opening my eyes to this. I have been meandering around the site most of the day and have found all sorts of great new music.
I’m not sure if anything gets better than “catcore” though.
http://mojothecat.bandcamp.com/
musicalsnob – Bandcamp pages are customizable in terms of look. Oskoreien’s, for example, has a dark background.
http://oskoreien.com/
Bandcamp’s corporate site has a white background, but that’s to be expected from a corporate site.
@invisible oranges.
thanks for clearing that up, will do research next time.
damn, bandcamp really has no flaws…
i think it’s cool that they have that feature, cuz i think the whole “white background trend” in other social neworking sites are just bland.
hey maybe this will help us determine who need the economic support, because dosn’t a cluttered background equal low income stature?
FUCK YES NEW WORMED
(Add to the chorus of “this bandcamp stuff is cool”)
my only complaint with bandcamp is that there is no way of posting tour dates (unless somebody clever figured it out), but I guess thats what twitter or facebook is for.
Reverb Nation is a great site for bands/labels as well.
http://www.reverbnation.com
I just started setting mine up.
I can highly recommend the following:
I’ll Eat Your Face
The Sequence Of Prime
Iron Thrones
All three have their albums available for free on there.
http://kekal.bandcamp.com/ was the first band I enjoy that I noticed using bandcamp, great site.
There is also muxtape.com which is somewhat similar and very new.
Petrychor is good, reminds me of Velvet Cacoon, which is a good thing from my point of view.
Great suggestion
http://blackseptember.bandcamp.com/
Looks like I should check out Petrychor.
I’ll reiterate CM’s link, as Black September is a band worth hearing.
http://blackseptember.bandcamp.com/
Danny – Muxtape used to be a streaming mixtape service, until the RIAA shut it down. It’s interesting that it’s come back as a MySpace competitor.
Totally agreed on Bandcamp, just like all the folks above. Discovered through a friend’s band last year and like the ease and the emphasis only on music. They rule!
Plug:
http://dirtcommunion.bandcamp.com
Guys of Graf Orlock have their own Bandcamp but it’s represented by their own label.
http://vitriolrecords.bandcamp.com/
Yeah BandCamp is awesome and for artists it’s a pleasure to use. I couldn’t recommend it enough.
We’ve got our album on there and our acoustic demo. You can also link to other band’s music on there so on our index page we’ve got our stuff plus a friend’s release as well. Very powerful for supporting music you like.
http://trippywicked.bandcamp.com/
I love it!
My black metal project: http://eldjudnir.bandcamp.com/
I’ve seen a few Bandcamp pages in the last few weeks, and have been tempted to set one up for my band, Poison Dwarf – this glowing endorsement is the kick up the backside I need to get it done. I like how its set up and what it places the emphasis on – good stuff.
I’m not even sure how many people regularly check our MySpace page any more – a lot of our promotion has been on Facebook and word-of-mouth lately. MySpace is clunky at best and I wouldn’t mind seeing what the alternatives are.
My recommendation is National Sunday Law – checked them out recently and downloaded their EP, ‘The Fifth Ape’. Very much enjoyed it
http://nationalsundaylaw.bandcamp.com/
shameless plug (!)
http://vastum.bandcamp.com
@Patrick, this band page has show dates in the top banner. It really just links back to her site but it’s there.
@Patrick, this band page has show dates in the top banner. It really just links back to her site but it’s there.
http://amandapalmer.bandcamp.com/
@Rob
That’s fine if you have an official site to link too. I just wish bandcamp had an integrated tour dates section like myspace so that everything is on one page and you don’t have to jump through various internet hoops to get the information you need.
The first time I heard about bandcamp was when you posted about (the excelent) Embers, but I definitely agree with what’s being said, it’s a great, no bullshit vehicle of promotion.
I think this guys are very good, check them:
Utopium
http://utopium.bandcamp.com/
I see your point.
I wish Band Camp had some kind of better search system rather than what they have now. Browsing for bands by tag gets tedious especially when ‘hardcore’ is being used for mulitple genres and everyone seems to want to think of themselves as ‘punk’.
Neat site, will be checking it out more… BUT… I’m really digging the Wormed tunes; but why in the hell are they charging upwards of $2.60 per song?
According to Bandcamp’s FAQ, they’re working on adding features, including listing upcoming shows.
http://bandcamp.com/faq#integrate
Great thread here folks — finding all types of new and interesting stuff here!
The very minor’est of minor complaints w/ bandcamp: a volume slider would be handy.
Anyway, thanks all for all the great posts. BRB, I’m off exploring.
//TB
Awesome – I wasn’t aware this site existed… its really an great format for fans and bands…. This is why I check out IO! Keep it up.
This one looks like a bandcamp, but I can’t tell
mothersusurrus.com
I still check myspaces because one can tell a lot about a band based on their layout.
The best example of this I can think of off the top of my head is Hinder’s godawful myspace. You needen’t know anything about that band to know just what the deal is with them
@ ickyzor
because of your comment I checked out Hinders page, it is indeed terrible and they sounded as I imagined, how on earth did they get over a hundred million page views and nearly as many listens? very depressing.
I mailed bandcamp a while ago with some of the ideas that have now been suggested here and things like label accounts or ways for people with multiple projects (like me!) to administer everything from one account a chap mailed back telling me such things where all being worked on.
Try Soundcloud.com
I like the way they handle everything.
Myspace is a dead horse.
I think most people have been waiting for something better to come along. It would be great if this was it.
Man I’ve just had the displeasure of using the new MySpace event listing thing. It really just couldn’t be worse.
Hopefully some of these others like BandCamp and SoundCloud will introduce gig listings or allow you to import them from last.fm or Eventful.
Here’s my shameless plug for my band, One Car Motorcade.
http://onecarmotorcade.bandcamp.com
For fans of Radiohead, The Beatles, Muse, The Killers, Morrissey, U2
Might as well be shameless too:
Khaki Fibre
Great post. Not many bands know about bandcamp but it is great. i wil not sell a download without an email to follow-up on, thank, etc. so iTunes is out. Our downloads are available at bandcamp and revernation for that reason.
Mario
the Projections
TONIGHT I’M GONNA PARTY LIKE ITS 1982! – the CD and digital download re-release of our 1982 collector punk 45 is available at http://www.theprojections.bandcamp.com.