How To Be UNFORGETTABLE as a Music Artist
FULLSTÄNDIGT TRANSKRIPT
If you want to build a real fan base for
your artist project, today I'm going to
explain exactly how to do it with a key
element that most artists completely
miss. Because the truth is, if you're
trying to grow your community as an
artist, which has everything to do with
gaining attention and being memorable,
then understanding the game of exactly
how to be memorable is key. Now, I've
been blessed over the last two decades
to work with some of the world's most
well-known music artists and fashion
brands. And through that time, I've been
obsessed with one question. Why do
certain brands stick with fans for life
while others vanish from memory forever?
And what I found is that the answer
actually lies in psychology and how the
brain is wired and how we respond to
emotion, story, sound, and identity.
When you combine well-told stories with
incredible music and you understand how
memory really works, you don't just get
streams, you build community, and that
community can change your life. So, in
this video, I'm going to give you the
full secret sauce, a simple, easy method
for making sure that your artist brand
will never be forgotten. and also how
you can be the first thing a fan
remembers when they go to put on music.
Because being unforgettable has almost
nothing to do with talent. It's not
about your song. It's not about how good
you are. It's about how the brain
processes identity and logs memories.
So, by the end of this video, you'll
have a checklist on how you can
literally apply this today and start
making your artist brand unforgettable.
And wait till you hear how artists like
Fredigan and Anima are actually hacking
your brain without you even realizing
it. We'll break that down in the second
half. So, let's get into it.
[Music]
Section one, how memory works. So simply
put, memory works in three stages. Stage
one, encoding. The brain notices
something and converts it into a memory
trace. Stage two, storage. The memory
gets stored in various regions of the
brain, short-term versus long-term. And
stage three, retrieval. Later, a Q
brings that memory back to
consciousness. I won't go super in the
weeds with the science, but basically
the preffrontal cortex helps with the
attention and the meaning essential for
the encoding process. It's either
triggered or it's not. Every single day,
all day, every day, while the brain's
awake, it's constantly asking this
question. Does this matter to us or not?
So then the hippocampus is your brain's
memory assistant. It decides what gets
filed in your memory after the encoding
process. The hippocampus also decides
where it gets filed and potentially if
it goes in the trash. Think of your
brain's memory as a giant warehouse. And
the hippocampus is an assistant that
arranges the files in that warehouse.
Filing someone's name who you met once
from a party you went to years ago is
likely in the trash. And if it's not,
it's way in the back of your warehouse.
other moments from your life, your first
moment of real independence or your
first love or if a close family member
passed away. Those files are right up
front and they're filled with all kinds
of specific details. And finally,
there's the amygdala, which handles
emotion. It tags certain memories as
important if they were emotionally
intense. If something was emotionally
intense, it gets tagged and it gets
filed closer in the warehouse. So to be
easily remembered and filed upfront, you
need three things to happen. First, and
most important, you need to get noticed
and grab the attention of the prefrontal
cortex. Second, you're going to want to
be filed, which comes from the emotional
relevance or the emotional intensity.
And then third, you need to repeat this
as each time you do your file becomes
bigger and is stored closer. Section
two, uniqueness, the von restorf effect.
So flat out, the brain remembers what
breaks the normal patterns of the day.
This is called the von restorf effect.
When something stands out from its
surroundings, it's more likely to be
remembered. It's genetic and it's
biological. Our brains evolved to notice
the tiger waiting for us in the grass.
The one thing that was different. The
reason we notice a break in pattern is
it's tied to our survival as a species.
Pattern breaks cause the brain to go
into primal wiring. It's asking itself,
is this safe? Does this help us meet any
of our basic human needs? Or can we
derive pleasure from this? So, here's a
couple visual examples of this in the
music world. So, when Billy Eyish first
arrived on the scene, her dark gothic
street style stood out in a world of
bubblegum pop. Post Malone has his face
tattoos. Anima has the large-scale
futuristic visuals. Lady Gaga showing up
in her meat dress. Marshmallow literally
becoming a cartoon character. and
Steveoki throwing his cakes. These all
may seem like gimmicks, but they're
actually neurological hooks for the
brain. And when you're in the beginning
or the middle phase of your artist
project, being better than someone isn't
enough. You need to be different. The
brain filters out average and it flags
pattern breaks. This is why jumping on
the bandwagon of something popular,
copying another artist's sound or look,
it's not a great way to get that initial
attention. A good question to ask
yourself might be, what are people
expecting from the genre world that
you're in? Now, how while still being
yourself, could you break that
expectation and create a mental flag for
the brain? And whatever you do here
needs to be aligned to you and your
taste as an artist, but you're asking
the question, what's missing here?
What's missing from this scene? And then
having that meet the things that you
love and your art. Section three,
repetition, spacing effect, and neural
pathways. It's a fact that the brain
forgets by default. To make something
stick, you have to repeat it, but not
all at once. This is how people learn
any skill in life, from playing an
instrument to learning a language.
Repetition and space. So, this is
considered the spacing effect. Repeated
exposure over time helps information
move from short-term memory into
long-term storage. And how the actual
neuroscience works behind it is every
time you repeat something, neurons fire
along a specific pathway. The more it
happens, the more melanin wraps around
the neural pathway, making it faster and
more permanent. This is why advertising
works. It's not brainwashing, it's neuro
reinforcement. So, as an artist, this
means repeating story through emotional
messages. And that can be in interviews,
shows, merch, even in your captions.
You're repeating your visual language.
You're repeating your sonic language or
your sonic identity. And you're wrapping
all of this in a consistent, cohesive
package so the person, the audience
that's experiencing it remembers you.
And you'll define the cadence for this,
but you'll want to continually be
posting consistently across the
different platforms that you're on. And
this is important because social is the
new television and you exist in the
different channels that this
generation's audience is watching. So as
an example, imagine if there was an
ongoing show that you've been watching
every day and then that show goes off
air for a certain amount of time because
it's gone. It's no longer top of mind
and it's no longer the first choice to
watch. And depending on how much it
moved you emotionally and how your brain
looked at the emotional intensity around
it, that will define if you actually
come back to the show once the show
comes back on. Think about watching a
LÅS UPP MER
Registrera dig gratis för att få tillgång till premiumfunktioner
INTERAKTIV VISARE
Titta på videon med synkroniserad undertext, justerbart överlägg och fullständig uppspelningskontroll.
AI-SAMMANFATTNING
Få en omedelbar AI-genererad sammanfattning av videoinnehållet, nyckelpunkter och slutsatser.
ÖVERSÄTT
Översätt transkriptet till över 100 språk med ett klick. Ladda ner i valfritt format.
MIND MAP
Visualisera transkriptet som en interaktiv mind map. Förstå strukturen med ett ögonkast.
CHATTA MED TRANSKRIPT
Ställ frågor om videoinnehållet. Få svar från AI direkt från transkriptet.
FÅ UT MER AV DINA TRANSKRIPT
Registrera dig gratis och lås upp interaktiv visning, AI-sammanfattningar, översättningar, mind maps och mer. Inget kreditkort krävs.