Live Performance Interview Tips

From KDHX Production
Jump to: navigation, search

Overview

The best interviews are intelligent, witty, interesting and enjoyable conversations. If you sound interested and excited about the topic, your subject will respond in kind.

Interviews can be conducted live on air, but the strong recommendation of the media and production departments is to pre-record any interview intended for broadcast. The big reasons relate these things we've seen:

- the guest potentially endangering the license with prohibited language
- dropped or fumbled call or connection due to cell phone, travel, or host's lack of tech experience
- overly insider, long or uninteresting responses that can be hard to back out of
- missing mark on content due to nerves, or other outside factors

Target length for an interview intended for air should be no longer than 10 minutes. This allows a recorded work to be presented in conjunction, before, after or both. More air time is pushing into overt promotion. If the guest is a big star or super important get, feel free to go long, but seek support to edit down to the proper air length, if needed. Longer interviews can be great when the intent relates to publishing on a KDHX podcast Collector's Edition or The Way We Sound with sample music worked into the segment . Check with the Chief Production Officer for guidance.

Top Level Interview Tips:

-Avoid yes or no questions.
-Questions about influences can be effective, but avoid general questions about influences. If you know the artist has a surprising influence or experience, ask a specific question about that.
-Most of all, it is critical to listen. Instead of jumping back to your list of question, listen to your interviewee as they speak, and consider about your audience. Ask the next question on their behalf by imagining what they would want to know, and what is a logical follow up to the point your interviewee just made?

Preparation and Research

The key to a good interview is preparation and research.

- Listen to the artist's music, as much as you can.
- Forty-five minutes of Google research will provide a lot of great topics.
- Come prepared with questions written down. Refer to those questions during the interview, but don't just read them off of the list.
- Always introduce yourself and mention that you are with KDHX in St. Louis.

Technical

- Check the recording equipment before the interview, including the batteries.
- Make sure that everything is working properly before you begin the interview.
- For phone interviews a land line is preferred, but a cell phone is OK. (Cell phones can drop calls, land lines are more reliable.)

Questions

In general, try tailoring your questions to specifics about the artist's music, career and recent news.

Avoid the questions that they answer at every interview. Be sure to have read the latest interview and their wikipedia page, and use that detail as exposition for the audience. IF there is a looming question, elephhant in the room, such as a strange titling choise, fidn out why prior. It will endear you to the artist, and will get the basic need out of the way for the sake of the audience. Here are some basic starter examples when interviewing a musician:

- Can you talk about the recording process for the latest album?
- What was it like to work with X as a producer?
- Some critics have pointed out X about your music. What’s your view?
- How did you get started playing piano/guitar/banjo or writing songs?
- You have a unique approach to songwriting/singing/playing. How has that changed over time?
- Tell me what inspired that song.
- You’ve had some interesting collaborations with X and Y. Talk about working with X or Y.

Editing Interview Transcriptions for a KDHX.org article

Be gentle and careful in editing your transcription. The goal is to reflect the natural speech and responses of the interviewee. That does not mean capturing "ums," "ahhs," garbled sentences or phrases, or inserting a lot of "(Laughs)," but rather giving natural and readable responses.

That said, if an interviewee speaks in an awkward, hard-to-read fashion, frequently using expressions such as "like," "kind of," "sort of," "you know," you may need to edit some of these out for readability.

The main thing is to not distort what the interviewee says. There is a fine line between including too much of the verbatim transcription, and not enough. Use your better judgment, with your goal being faithful expression of meaning and intent. The rule of thumb is to transcribe accurately, but clearly, what the subject says. If you need to make dramatic edits, within sentences or within a single train of thought, insert "..." where the edit happens. If you need to insert a word to clarify meaning, use square brackets. "[ ]"

If the material deleted forms a complete sentence, consider punctuating like this:

- The songwriter said, "I don't follow rules. ... I hate rules."

You do not want to slice and dice interviews up too much, resulting in dozens of ellipses or insertions. With a few minor grammar infractions, or missing words, you may gently edit, but be gentle and don't change the meaning or intent of the comment.

If a response is really long, say over 200 words, and there's a natural break in the response -- sort of like a paragraph -- and what comes after that pause or break is non-essential or redundant, you may excise.

In other words, you do not have to include everything the interviewee says. Instead, look for natural places to edit, without distorting or leaving out vital responses or contexts.

Furthermore, if you asked a question and the response just didn't go anywhere interesting, or you feel like it could be cut, just leave out both the question and the answer completely. Again, so long as the transcription flows and the meaning is not distorted, such gentle editing is appropriate. You don't want to overwhelm the reader with marginal, boring or redundant quotations.