Design > Digital & Interactive Design
FIG, New York / SPOTIFY FOR ARTISTS / 2020
Overview
Credits
Background
When Spotify created Spotify for Artists, it sought to empower creators, allowing them to easily upload, monetize and receive data on their music. Their latest creator innovation is Canvas, enabling artists to attach short-form videos to each of their songs, reinvigorating the lost medium of album artwork. Spotify wanted to make the US launch of Canvas a much buzzed-about industry event. Plus, we needed to catch the attention of industry professionals, a group that suffers from networking burnout, often opting out of PR-driven events.
Describe the creative idea
Our guest list was an invite-only selection of high profile members of the recording industry, including managers, reviewers, and artists themselves—a group that has been to innumerable nondescript cocktail mixers. Our idea was to immerse them in a space that evoked a local record store, giving our event a unique environment of authenticity; a simple “we know music” quality. The record store concept also allowed us to fill the space with physical touchpoints, helping make Canvas immediate, tactile, and undeniable. We decided to fill “Canvas Records” with custom record sleeves, each featuring a screen in the middle, playing real Canvases from the Spotify platform on a loop. The physical object would be intriguing enough to engage guests, while special, scannable codes on the back would link the physical experience to the digital platform.
Describe the execution
We designed a record store from scratch, gutting an existing building and crafting custom, minimalist furniture in an arrangement designed to subconsciously move guests through the space as new pieces of design caught their eyes. Our shelves were full of custom-designed record “sleeves,” each with a built-in screen playing an actual Canvas video or animation from the Spotify platform. Each sleeve’s housing featured a bespoke piece of graphic design, surrounding the screen with a wax-coated paper stock that evoked a classic 12-inch LP sleeve. The final product was a flowing, tactile browsing experience--shelves upon shelves of battery-powered records that could be picked up, handled, moved, and stacked. We complimented the record shelves with hundreds of posters and flyers, each inspired by a different genre of music.
List the results
We saw an industry-wide expansion in awareness and curiosity about Canvas as a medium. We also saw multiple uses of our custom event hashtag, and the crossover of the hashtag from the Industry side (the majority of our guest list) to the consumer side.
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