Collin Marx: Bandcamp-First Releases, DIY Zines, and Why Cheap Rent Creates Great Art
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In this episode of Pivot Points, Seth sits down with Nashville-based independent artist, songwriter, and producer Collin Marx to talk about the pivots that shaped his journey—from growing up in the Chicagoland scene and playing scrappy church-basement shows, to crafting gritty, late-night garage rock on his latest album, Something Wicked.
Collin breaks down why he’s intentionally gone Bandcamp-first (and why the full record lives off streaming), how he tracked a full album in a single day with trusted collaborators, and what inspired the handmade zine + physical release experience. The conversation goes deeper into radio as a community force, the role of tastemakers, and why affordability might be the foundation of every thriving music scene.
Chicago roots + the move to Nashville
Church-basement shows and the DIY scene “economy”
Bands vs. releasing under your own name
Recording 10–11 songs in a single day
Mixing your own record + embracing imperfections
Why Collin chose Bandcamp over streaming (and what changed financially)
The zine/CD bundle and creating a physical “world” for the album
Radio as discovery + shared community
The “music ecology” problem: algorithms, monopolies, and fractured audiences
Why cheap rent fuels creative scenes (and what cities might be next)
Sponsor
Discovr Radio — helping independent artists get their music onto mainstream radio.
Check it out: discoverradio.com