5 South African Musos I wish on Twitter
Mar 11, 2009 Social Netoworking
5 South African Musos I wish on Twitter
Tweeter has become an important instant messaging tool for me. If you have not heard of tweeter before, where have you been? I see Tweeter as a crowd sourcing tool that can be used to keep in touch of others. You do not need to be crowd sourcing of course. It allows me to be a “follow” of people that interest me socially and in business too.
I have found use twitter more often than I use email, and lately more often than I use Google search. Actually more searches that I do on Google these days are a result of some info that came via Tweeter.
I also love music and lately I have been feeling that I should be going to more live performances by South African music artists. But which one should I go to? Ideally this exercise would require me to go to computicket and do a relevant search on live performance acts.
However times have changed and I have become used to my way of life. Why should I be chasing after artists, and why should I be going through obstacles to get to the information about artist that is relevant to me. I would rather prefer that the information about artists be pushed to me than seek it out. I like the convenience.
This is an application that is perfect for Tweeter. If all the artists that I like had a Tweeter profile it would make things so much easier, all I would do is ‘follow’ them and every time that they want to tell their followers about their next performance, they would just push that info out as an instant message with the relevant link to book the show.
So, here is my top 5 South African Artists that I wish had a Tweeter Profile.
What began as an article for Tweeter profile ended up sounding like a review of South African music artists web presence review.
1. Lira
She is my favorite artist singing good music that hard to catagorise. She does jazz some pop and generally the kind of music you can listen to every single day.
Her social network marketing strategy includes the use of MySpace, Facebook and well as a service I know very little about called ReverbNation. They appear to be a one stop service for management of your social network presence
2. Thandiswa
I think Zabalaza is one memorable album that I will never forget. I have been following her music since the days of Bongo Maffin and when the Zabalaza album was released, that became a signal to me that a new level of maturity in her music has been achieved.
Sadly, at the time of writing this, her site has no content all. She must be working on her site or something but it does help to put a little note. I have found a closed profile on Facebook but since there isn’t a direct link on her site I couldn’t be sure the profile i was looking at was hers.
3. Hip Hop Pantsula
I think the name says it all. Hip Hop and Pantsula, two distinct genres of music with a good historical background that stretches many years back. This dynamic artist has put the two together the two genres in a mixture called MOTSWAKO that makes listen to Hip Hop such a rewarding experience.
I think he could use some Search Engine Optimisation. His online profile is all over the place. Perhaps that is not a bad thing however leaving a major part of your online identity to a resource you have little control over, can be frustrating.
His social networking strategy involves heavy usage of MySpace. Not a bad choice with a following of close to 2000 people. However MySpace has an image about it that feels a little less professional in my Opinion. MySpace feels a little patchy and more of an afterthought. He has only made only one blog entry made 3 months ago!
I could not find on Facebook a profile I can positively identify has HHP’s profile. There are at least three so one gets confused in determining which one is managed by the artist or his PR representative. This illustrates the need to have your own web address presence (www.hiphoppantsula.co.za). Once could refer to the site to find the proper Facebook profile.
Much like Thandiswa, hiphoppantsula.co.za has no content or whatsoever.
4. Pro Kid
I am not proud to say I have not listened to much his music. However a few songs that I have listened to such as “Soweto” have impressed me much and i think he brings a style of rap with strong assertive assertions that could only have come from Soweto. He is by no means the biggest Hip Hop artists out there but certainly one I would like to see perform.
I have found no website for Prokid but instances all over the web that are either discographies or small online startups that wish to capitalize on ringtones and lyrics from his music.
5. MXO
Another brilliant artist that can rap as well as sing. He hails from the Eastern Cape and at the risk of sounding like a biography; his music is really fresh, does not conform to anything you have heard coming from the eastern cape and still compelling to keep his music on the cd tray for a while.
I think our local artist really need help. He has no .co.za that I could identify. Mxo.co.za has been taken over by a cyber squatter and so had mxo.com. The flavor of music artists; MySpace has a profile that points to another site (mxfunk.com) that does not resolve to any site at all.
I found a Facebook group profile called MXO music however, this appears to be yet another group profile probably created by a fan. It does not appear to have any information regarding performances and has all of 15 members.
What began as an article for Tweeter profile ended up sounding like a review of South African music artists web presence review. Of all the artists I reviewed here, Lira is still on top. I think it says something about her marketing team and herself as a professional. No wonder she is my favorite artist. All she needs to do is get a Tweeter profile organised.
5 South African Musos I wish on Twitter
March 11th, 2009 at 11:09 am
Nice selection. I think you will find that most artists and their management are not clued up on Twitter.
They only went as far as Facebook, which sorely still lacks the 1-on-1 realtime quality of Twitter.
I suppose they heard of twitter but they had expectations of it working the same way as Facebook (i.e “what’s so special about a website that only serves status updates? I can do that and a lot more on Facebook!”).
I suppose most people have not realised that it’s the wide selection of applications built around the twitter api that have made it so valuable (e.g twhirl, tweetdeck, etc.). I think that’s where a bit of education is needed.
Let’s hope that in time everyone will wise up and realise what they are missing by being twitterless.