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Record Labels: Change or Die

I have been saying this for a long time. A LONG time. And glad to see the debate continues. The interesting thing is that I think there ar massive parralels in the photography industry – of which I am currently part – its just that the lessons of music are not making their way over …. so meanwhile Lady Gaga (she of the music industry) – is now spokesperson for Polaroid (they of the Photographic Industry)


Record Labels: Change or Die – record labels – Gizmodo

But at the end of the day, the saving grace of record labels might be a lot more basic than who gets what percentage of merchandise or who deals with distribution. The big question is this: do bands really want to try to make it completely on their own? As Bonacci says, “I don’t necessarily want to have all that nitty-gritty stuff to worry about. I’d rather just worry about making music. I don’t want to worry about numbers or distribution or marketing or publicity or anything like that. That sounds like a desk job. I used to have a desk job, that’s why I’m playing music. Now look at me. I sleep on couches.”


Passed on – with thanks to : John P (the other one)

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The Business Of Music

You can see I have got a little behind on my posts … so pardon me if I give you a few more links. This series are al tied into the changing nature of the music industry – some old – some new – but now grouped together for posterity.

Shawn Michael is the bass player for the Vince Esquiree Band ANF Kanekoa – BOTH well worth listening to – and Shawn is a superb bass player. Anyway – this link is to facebook, rapping about the changing business models in music. You can readily see where Sjhwn hangs.

Alabama 3 – great band – Sopranos theme tune – and definitely have a position on record companies.

The Manifesto – per Alabama 3

A replay of an earlier post by David Byrne – but always a good read

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Trent Reznor Urges Musicans To Ditch Labels

JP (the other one) – sent me this link – I concur – GREAT ARTICLE

Click here for the full article …

I particularly liked this quote :

“One of the biggest wake-up calls of my career was when I saw a record contract. I said, ‘Wait – you sell it for $18.98 and I make 80 cents? And I have to pay you back the money you lent me to make it and then you own it? Who the f**k made that rule?”

I am also reminded of some recent articles I have been seeing around Associated Press and Murdoch – and the demise of the Publishing Industry … this not about music – about publishing – but it kinda seems like ‘deja vu’, with a ‘search and replace’ algorithm applied : search ‘music industry’, replace ‘publishing industry’

TechCrunch – reporting that AP didn’t know they had their own You Tube channel

Business Week – talking of the demise of the publishing industry

Bottom line to both and others is that ‘the powers that be’ are taking the same approach of suing people and trying to force their business model on other as the music industry did – rather than looking at things differently.

It didn’t happen then. It won’t happen now.

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Manifesto from the 'Ministers at Work'

Alabama 3 are a band I am in the process of discovering – not sure who exactly put me on to them

[UPDATE, as a message from Mr T - thankyou sir]

“That will have been me then…..I saw them do a blinding gig last year. You should also be listening to the ‘fleet foxes’, ‘Seasick steve’, The killers new album.’day and age’ and although i know you are not a fan…ac/dc – ‘black ice’.”

Stephen x

I hadn’t listened to them until today. Good stuff. So I looked around a little at their web site … interesting. Thought you might be interested in this small item – kind of goes back to this debate on JGM – which in turn references this article

From Their Web Site :


MANIFESTO
Let’s talk business. Let’s talk about the MUSIC business, and let’s talk about DEATH.

There’s been a lot of talk recently about the DEATH of the CD, the DEATH of record shops, the DEATH of record companies (hurrah!), while the record companies themselves have been talking about the DEATH of MUSIC (by which they mean the DEATH of profit margins). Anybody who remembers Peter and the Test Tube Babies- you know who you are- will call to mind that mordant slogan: ‘Home Taping is Killing Music’. And anybody who remembers our screamingly camp and fiercely intelligent friend Jeff, God rest his soul, will remember the patch on his leather jacket which said ‘ Home Fucking is Killing Prostitution’.

Digital downloads and file – sharing have made shiny pieces of plastic virtually redundant; prices for CD’s have been slashed by 50% and the companies are still hemorrhaging money. Groucho Marx historically said ‘ he who controls the means of production controls pop music’ but the technology for pressing, playing, recording and distributing music is now within reach of anyone with a PC and a broadband connection. The average asbo-dodger from Chiswick now has the technology now to record and disseminate an album with all the production values of Phil Collins’ ‘In the Air Tonight from his bedroom. Which begs the question ‘What exactly are record companies for?’.

Previously, these loan sharks justified their racket on their purchase over the hardware of manufacture and distribution, but, like the mercurial policeman in Terminator three, the machine has gone soft, melted through their fingers, and stabbed them in the arse. Late, and unfashionable gatecrashers at the digital party, Sony et al have been desperately trying to pimp and police the shadowy domain of Cyberspace. They might as well try to set up a Neighborhood Watch scheme in Narnia.

Now we have a hoo – ha over Arctic Monkeys, Lily Allen and Kate Nash going supernova from their bedrooms, the entire apparatus of the Industry replaced by a webcam, a Myspace page and a couple of guitars. On closer examination, however, we find that these cyber -anarchists have had considerable promotional assistance from their labels. The spectacle of democracy has once again been carefully stage – managed; The devil’s best trick was convincing people he didn’t exist.

What is to be Done? Is it possible to circumvent the Industry, and short-circuit the Machine? We’re going to find out…

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Slice The Pie

Now here is a fun little web site that we all might enjoy :)

What is Slicethepie?
Slicethepie is a place where artists can raise money direct from their fans to professionally record and release an album. We do this by turning every music fan into a record label. The existing industry model is based on a few record labels providing a lot of money to 100′s of artists. Slicethepie enables a model where millions of music fans each provide a little money to 1,000′s of artists.

Check It Out

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Trent Reznor Knows How to Distribute Music

I know we know this already …. but thought I would post the post !!!

Apple Matters | Take Note, Apple: Trent Reznor Knows How to Distribute Music

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Music industry gets Byrne'd

For the more business-minded amongst us, Wired is running a great series of articles on the changing nature of the music business, stemming from interviews with David Byrne and Thom Yorke. This one in particular is quite rich in content and sets forth six “models” for music distribution that are the best and most accurate way of classifying the few standing structures in the junkyard of busted business paradigms that litter the industry today. Tons of excellent little audio snippets sprinkled throughout, worth listening to.

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What the hell happened?

Lately I haven’t derived the same pleasure from my music collection, or even music in general, that I’ve been accustomed to my whole life. I’m trying to figure this out.

It used to be simpler, I think. You would reach an age – let’s say 30 on average – and pretty much drop out of the current music scene. Your record collection would begin to age like fine wine. You’d stop going to gigs and reading Rolling Stone and Down Beat, and the station presets in your car were no longer college stations playing the wide range of emerging new stuff, but the major commercial channels playing bands who are all 6 months away from being featured in a Lexus commercial. There was a clear dividing line between the stuff the kids and the grown-ups listened to that has faded, blurred and, finally, today, disappeared.

Leaving aside the impact on today’s teenagers of not really having a musical outlet for those rebellious impulses, where does this leave us? What are our options as we mature in our lifestyles? Do our musical tastes change, or, as I’m beginning to suspect, does the time pressure we’re under in the push for ever-greater productivity at work, quality time with family, expanding our educational horizons and seeking new experiences in our recreation hours force us to rely more and more on commercial filters for access to new music?

Typically we proceed down one of two paths. The first is to go deeper instead of wider. We stick to the same bands that we listened to in our youth, kidding ourselves that we’re still at the bleeding edge. Somehow we allow it to escape our notice that the bands we once thought would lead the revolution and bring down the establishment are now peddling mobile phones. The other route is that we conscientiously seek out new sounds, but we do it in tightly defined context – the “Emerging Artists Block” on KLLC Tuesday nights at 8:00pm – surrounding ourselves with the familiar, grounding the experience just as firmly in our past. This exposes us to bands that are perhaps a year away from the TV commercial breakthrough, but still clearly well established successes, hardly bands that need our sponsorship, our interest or us.I think it mostly comes down to time.

Certainly the world is a busier place, and cell phones, laptops, Internet access, Blackberrys, pagers and PDAs don’t help. Sometimes technology does us a disservice, and as much as the perpetually connected nature of our modern lives enhances our productivity and responsiveness, I miss the time I used to have alone with my stereo system.

In high school, I spent 80% of my disposable income on my stereo system, Infinity Reference Studio monitors, Marantz receiver, Thorens turntable, and a Nakamichi cassette deck. After school, I would make compilation tapes while doing my homework. I miss lowering the stylus into the record groove, counting the seconds from the end of the previous song and allowing for the delay in engaging the tape deck, winding up the input volumes for smooth transitions between songs and volume-leveling wildly varying album recordings by ear. Today, I can drag-and-drop 10 hours of music into my MP3 player in about 8 seconds. I can save virtual playlists, creating, modifying and deleting compilations instantly. It’s certainly more convenient, but it’s nowhere near as engaging.

In college, I spent 80% of my disposable income on records. Living in a dorm and in an off-campus apartment with roommates, we shared our record collections and commented actively on each other’s musical tastes. My friends collectively listened to a wide variety of music, and I eagerly devoured every new artist, new style, and new sound in my quest for great musical experiences. Today, I have less time for that, less engagement with my friends in purely recreational activities like listening to music. I miss that.

One nice thing about record albums was that they had two sides. Again, it’s certainly more convenient to have all the music on a CD that can play straight through. And even more so to have them all recorded digitally on the PC. But having an album side that lasts 20-25 minutes forces you to pay attention. You have to get up and turn the record over, which reengages you. Having hours of music queued up, it’s easy to let your mind wander back to the ever-present to-do lists. These days, I too frequently put a new CD on, start listening to it, and realize some time later that the CD is over and I can’t remember anything beyond the first song.

Today, my primary listening venue is my car. It’s not by choice, as it certainly isn’t an ideal listening environment even with the very best automotive stereo equipment. This is the only block of time that I have, however, that is long enough to listen to an entire CD at one time. In the car, though, I inevitably wind up spending ½ my time on the cell phone. And there’s simply no getting around the fact that your attention is going to be demanded by your driving, and the insanity of other drivers trapped in the 90 minute commute to Silicon Valley – flying down I-280 at 90mph – mandates focused attention.

Nor am I alone in this. I was over at a friend’s house last weekend doing some dedicated music listening – something that has happened all too infrequently of late. I have been thinking about these issues for a while, and decided to reach out and see if I could force some engagement. Miguel and Diana are from Brazil, and I brought up Brazilian music and they volunteered to play some of their collection for us. So we packed up some food and joined them for a musical lunch on Saturday. We heard Oswaldo Montenegro, Milton Nascimento, Chico Buarque… all great stuff. Miguel had, of course, ripped all the songs to his computer, and we were listening to it over some pretty crappy computer speakers. Hardly ideal. I complimented him on the selection, though, and his response was “yeah, you should hear it in my car!” This is just wrong.
So now, understanding the issues a little better, I see a clear need to reengage my musical sensibilities. I think, for me, this means two things.

First, I need to plan some dedicated music time. It can’t be an after-thought any more, because my free time for ad hoc recreational activities is asymptotically approaching zero. If it’s a priority, it needs to be reflected in my calendar. I need to put some thought into that, too, because I’m going to have a hard time defending hours of just sitting in the Lazy-Boy listening to CDs. I need to be doing something with the music. Maybe it’s time to develop a digital archiving system. Maybe wire the house for sound, including the patios outside. Maybe some stereo equipment upgrades are in order. Maybe I need to spend some time classifying my current music collection, and expanding it into new areas. Maybe write some music reviews I can share with friends or even wider audiences.

Secondly, it’s also clearly time to get back into concert mode. I need to find the local clubs with live music, watch the major venues for show announcements and plan my calendar around some key concerts. And there needs to be a focus on new music. Nothing gets the blood flowing like watching the band hit their zone on stage, rocking out and feeling the music flowing through the crowd, that sense of being there that not even the finest stereo equipment can reproduce.

Music is too important to me to let it simply fade into the background of my life. It’s a part of who I am and who I want to be, and it deserves some attention. We’re going on a quest to get reacquainted. My foray into Brazilian music my friends last weekend was the first conscious step on this journey. I’ll send you some notes from the road from time to time.
Lately I haven’t derived the same pleasure from my music collection, or even music in general, that I’ve been accustomed to my whole life. I’m trying to figure this out.It used to be simpler, I think. You would reach an age – let’s say 30 on average – and pretty much drop out of the current music scene. Your record collection would begin to age like fine wine. You’d stop going to gigs and reading Rolling Stone and Down Beat, and the station presets in your car were no longer college stations playing the wide range of emerging new stuff, but the major commercial channels playing bands who are all 6 months away from being featured in a Lexus commercial. There was a clear dividing line between the stuff the kids and the grown-ups listened to that has faded, blurred and, finally, today, disappeared.Leaving aside the impact on today’s teenagers of not really having a musical outlet for those rebellious impulses, where does this leave us? What are our options as we mature in our lifestyles? Do our musical tastes change, or, as I’m beginning to suspect, does the time pressure we’re under in the push for ever-greater productivity at work, quality time with family, expanding our educational horizons and seeking new experiences in our recreation hours force us to rely more and more on commercial filters for access to new music?

Typically we proceed down one of two paths. The first is to go deeper instead of wider. We stick to the same bands that we listened to in our youth, kidding ourselves that we’re still at the bleeding edge. Somehow we allow it to escape our notice that the bands we once thought would lead the revolution and bring down the establishment are now peddling mobile phones. The other route is that we conscientiously seek out new sounds, but we do it in tightly defined context – the “Emerging Artists Block” on KLLC Tuesday nights at 8:00pm – surrounding ourselves with the familiar, grounding the experience just as firmly in our past. This exposes us to bands that are perhaps a year away from the TV commercial breakthrough, but still clearly well established successes, hardly bands that need our sponsorship, our interest or us.I think it mostly comes down to time.Certainly the world is a busier place, and cell phones, laptops, Internet access, Blackberrys, pagers and PDAs don’t help. Sometimes technology does us a disservice, and as much as the perpetually connected nature of our modern lives enhances our productivity and responsiveness, I miss the time I used to have alone with my stereo system.

In high school, I spent 80% of my disposable income on my stereo system, Infinity Reference Studio monitors, Marantz receiver, Thorens turntable, and a Nakamichi cassette deck. After school, I would make compilation tapes while doing my homework. I miss lowering the stylus into the record groove, counting the seconds from the end of the previous song and allowing for the delay in engaging the tape deck, winding up the input volumes for smooth transitions between songs and volume-leveling wildly varying album recordings by ear. Today, I can drag-and-drop 10 hours of music into my MP3 player in about 8 seconds. I can save virtual playlists, creating, modifying and deleting compilations instantly. It’s certainly more convenient, but it’s nowhere near as engaging.In college, I spent 80% of my disposable income on records. Living in a dorm and in an off-campus apartment with roommates, we shared our record collections and commented actively on each other’s musical tastes. My friends collectively listened to a wide variety of music, and I eagerly devoured every new artist, new style, and new sound in my quest for great musical experiences. Today, I have less time for that, less engagement with my friends in purely recreational activities like listening to music. I miss that.

One nice thing about record albums was that they had two sides. Again, it’s certainly more convenient to have all the music on a CD that can play straight through. And even more so to have them all recorded digitally on the PC. But having an album side that lasts 20-25 minutes forces you to pay attention. You have to get up and turn the record over, which reengages you. Having hours of music queued up, it’s easy to let your mind wander back to the ever-present to-do lists. These days, I too frequently put a new CD on, start listening to it, and realize some time later that the CD is over and I can’t remember anything beyond the first song.Today, my primary listening venue is my car. It’s not by choice, as it certainly isn’t an ideal listening environment even with the very best automotive stereo equipment. This is the only block of time that I have, however, that is long enough to listen to an entire CD at one time. In the car, though, I inevitably wind up spending ½ my time on the cell phone. And there’s simply no getting around the fact that your attention is going to be demanded by your driving, and the insanity of other drivers trapped in the 90 minute commute to Silicon Valley – flying down I-280 at 90mph – mandates focused attention.Nor am I alone in this. I was over at a friend’s house last weekend doing some dedicated music listening – something that has happened all too infrequently of late. I have been thinking about these issues for a while, and decided to reach out and see if I could force some engagement. Miguel and Diana are from Brazil, and I brought up Brazilian music and they volunteered to play some of their collection for us. So we packed up some food and joined them for a musical lunch on Saturday. We heard Oswaldo Montenegro, Milton Nascimento, Chico Buarque… all great stuff. Miguel had, of course, ripped all the songs to his computer, and we were listening to it over some pretty crappy computer speakers. Hardly ideal. I complimented him on the selection, though, and his response was “yeah, you should hear it in my car!” This is just wrong.So now, understanding the issues a little better, I see a clear need to reengage my musical sensibilities. I think, for me, this means two things.

First, I need to plan some dedicated music time. It can’t be an after-thought any more, because my free time for ad hoc recreational activities is asymptotically approaching zero. If it’s a priority, it needs to be reflected in my calendar. I need to put some thought into that, too, because I’m going to have a hard time defending hours of just sitting in the Lazy-Boy listening to CDs. I need to be doing something with the music. Maybe it’s time to develop a digital archiving system. Maybe wire the house for sound, including the patios outside. Maybe some stereo equipment upgrades are in order. Maybe I need to spend some time classifying my current music collection, and expanding it into new areas. Maybe write some music reviews I can share with friends or even wider audiences.Secondly, it’s also clearly time to get back into concert mode. I need to find the local clubs with live music, watch the major venues for show announcements and plan my calendar around some key concerts. And there needs to be a focus on new music. Nothing gets the blood flowing like watching the band hit their zone on stage, rocking out and feeling the music flowing through the crowd, that sense of being there that not even the finest stereo equipment can reproduce.Music is too important to me to let it simply fade into the background of my life. It’s a part of who I am and who I want to be, and it deserves some attention. We’re going on a quest to get reacquainted. My foray into Brazilian music my friends last weekend was the first conscious step on this journey. I’ll send you some notes from the road from time to time.

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