The iTunes store has changed the way listeners judge music by putting a 30-second time limit on their attention spans. Songwriters may cringe, but it’s now unavoidable. The hard truth is if a song doesn’t deliver in this short window of time, it simply won’t sell.
Working out how to sell product with 30 seconds of sound has been our focus at soundlounge for nearly 3 decades. Since commercials rarely use more than 30 seconds of music, we have to find songs or parts of songs that “sell” (i.e. make a memorable, emotional impression) in a very short amount of time. How?
1. Get to the hook quickly. Whilst romantic composers like Mahler and Strauss had the privilege of fans with hour-long musical attention spans, today’s songwriters have no such lattitude,. The 30 second sample must have a memorable ‘hook’ – a catchy guitar riff, a clever lyric, a killer beat. A good hook sticks in your head for weeks and compels you to listen to the track again and again. That’s the kind of song that spreads online like wildfire and gets chosen for that next Apple iPod commercial.
2. Create a distinctive sound ‘snapshot’. Advertisers and bands have at least one thing in common – they both need to be heard above the noise. In this area, advertisers can actually learn a thing or two from popular bands who have worked hard to consistently stand out from the crowd. Having a unique sound is part of the solution. But what if your listener doesn’t even give you 30 seconds? Many impatient listeners take an ‘audio snapshot’ of the first few seconds and judge a song based on its production quality and instrumentation.
3. Take us on a journey. Music moves us when it moves. Great songs give us something to anticipate from start to finish. They lead us along through imaginative melodies, chord progressions, and lyrical stories. 30 seconds might be short for a musical journey, but that may be all you’ve got so even a hint of oncoming change will go a long way. If your 30-second sample sounds stagnant, try varying the dynamics, instrumentation, or harmony to keep your audience wanting more.
Charlie McCarron, Sound Consultant
Ruth Simmons, CEO
soundlounge
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Posted December 29th, 2009. Categories: Music Composition, Music Supervision.


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