When it comes to the role of the manager in the studio, the first question to ask is: should managers be in the studio at all?
At the end of the day, it depends on whether the artist is comfortable with their presence. Forgetting the manager’s professional role for a moment, an artist’s good performance in the studio depends on many factors and that includes whether they feel comfortable expressing their creativity in front of those certain individuals they’re with at the time. This is a personal matter, not a professional one.
This article was previously published on the AudioJungle blog, which is moving on to a new format in 2010. We’ll be bringing you an article from the AudioJungle archives each Sunday.
I think it’s important that you do feel comfortable to be yourself around your manager. If it’s an awkward relationship like the one you might have with your accountant or lawyer, they might not be the best fit for your band.
If the manager is in attendance at the session, it’s best that they act as though they’re guests, simply present to enjoy the making of an album they’re devoted to getting out to the public. If the band is definitely comfortable with receiving suggestions on a musical level, then it’s okay for the manager to make them, but he or she should be unobtrusive.
What is not okay – and this doesn’t just happen in the studio - is when the manager decides that it is their right to demand that something be done differently, whether it is because of their personal preferences or because they think it’d sell more albums.
Albums that are made with selling albums in mind, well… they suck. And they don’t sell.
Albums that are made with true creativity and love for the craft have a much better chance of succeeding in the marketplace, and that means the artist has to take control of the creative process.
That said, there’s a trend of the words “creativity” and “experimental” being used to apply to terribly unaesthetic noises mashed together to create “groundbreaking new genres.” In this case, it goes without saying that any of the commercially polished stuff will do better!
As a manager, it is your responsibility to talk to the artist in advance and find out whether they’re genuinely comfortable with their presence at the session. Making the most of that session is in the manager’s best interests, so if their presence will stifle performance, they shouldn’t ever push the issue. If the artist is comfortable with your attendance, you should find out what level of input would be appreciated. If the answer is none, you need to respect that whether or not you think it’s a good idea.
As an artist, take the initiative to make your manager aware of what you’re comfortable with. They might not bother to ask. If, in the studio, your manager is getting in the way of creative production, you should always politely but firmly deal with the situation and ask them to stop. This can be difficult to do at first since many musicians put their managers in a position of power and authority internally.
As the producer in the room, you might be asking if should you step in when the manager is obviously frustrating the artist and their creative process. Remember the musician and the manager have a relationship both personally and professionally that you probably don’t share, so stepping in can be seen as butting in. That said, musicians may not be used to giving a manager a firm “no,” so they may look to you as the professional to give them some assistance and back them up on a creative decision.
Bottom line: a good manager is an excellent thing to have. They look after the business of your band. That said, you, as the artist, look after the creative production. Businessmen do not, and should not.
This concludes our look at the roles of various industry professionals within the studio. You can go back and read the other articles in this series at these locations:


Live My Life only $14.00
“Albums that are made with selling albums in mind, well… they suck. And they don’t sell.”
Well, this is where I think otherwise. Your opinion is idealistic, most modern pop music (and this fills the charts) is written to make money. The “artists” are just faces on the TV, sometimes having a good voice, a cover up for the industrial process of making money that hides before them.
I agree these albums suck, but oh, do they sell like crazy. Sadly.
This is something I have probably changed my opinion about somewhat since this article was written well over a year ago (these are reprints)–though I still believe that the greatest selling albums of all time are visionary artistic works, whereas popular music written to sell may sell a bunch of albums now, but will fade into obscurity (which is not good for long-term passive income for the artist).
I have to say,
It took me about 10 years of hearing music professionally to understand the beauty of pop music. The big money in music is in pop music, thats not a secret and I guess everyone agrees on that. With big money comes big productions with highly qualified musicians doing that thing they do the best and thats music. In my opinion, pop tracks could be divided into 3 – The good, the bad and the ugly ones.
We hear the good tracks on the radio all the time. It took me some time to get over of my musician ego, but I find out that these music pieces aren’t so bad at all.
In my opinion, there no such thing as bad music. But it’s like eating the same diner for some time… it’s just lack of “re-freshness” thats drives us mad. To prove my point lets say, for example, that you will hear a pop track that was consider as “bad” in the 70s, now. Is it that really “bad”?
The ugly ones are the one we didn’t adopted to our ears yet. These, in my opinion, are the ones which are the most interesting because they are outrages and maybe years far more advanced for us to get used to.
for example: Nirvana in early 90s (“bunch of drugged kids doing shity loud music”, some may say), Bjork in the late 90s (“who the… w..hat tha… what is this thing?!”, it just was years ahead of it’s time).
Currently, I don’t discriminate any kind of music. In my opinion, it’s just a meter of time that a person will adapt or will “grow-up” to understand the beauty in it. And as a musicians – artists – we must not judge a book by it’s cover even if the cover worth a million dollar and the text itself does not.
Elad
I wrote a piece on how much control a producer/engineer/studio manager should have over the artist on any given recording. My final opinion is that the artist should always have the last say in the matter, however big the producer may be.
http://emusictips.com/2009/03/creativity-in-the-control-room/