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sorry, bregez, you are putting the cart before the horse - what you are hearing on the "billboards top 100" is cuz that's what the recording industry wants from the "artists" they are promoting. if you're an artist not doing what the recording industry wants - no big record contract for you.doug s.
This chart says it all ... the future is in digital ... at least for now ...
The argument of recording music onto a tape medium does not hold water, at all. Of all my friends at the time, I was the only one recording, and what I was recording was my own LPs, so I could keep them in as new condition. The time it took to record an album was about an hour, so I figure most people are in fact, lazy, so there collection of recorded tape was small.Digital music is easy to copy and spread, like a disease. It's easy. Copying a CD to a CD-ROM is easy. Downloading a music file is easy. So easy come, easy go. Anyone that has spent anytime recording music onto tape knows this to be true.What makes me ill, is people "demonizing" every industry, because the price of anything isn't a like when they were young. Tough hop. Have you ever paid for a doctor visit?Wayner
What makes me ill, is people "demonizing" every industry, because the price of anything isn't a like when they were young. Tough hop. Have you ever paid for a doctor visit?
Diamond Dog and the link posted by nathanm really brought home some points to ponder beyond music piracy. If you steal music you will be part of the problem when the free exchange of information across the internet ends. Major "powers that be" want very much to end the ability of the common man to have access to all of this info and these "radical" ideas like free expression and individual rights. Why else is there this synchronized worldwide push for this legislation? Music piracy is one of their most powerful arguments.Back to music and art, for those who didn't read nathanm's link, the comic Louis C.K. produced a video for $170,000 and sold $1 million worth of internet copies, with very little if any piracy by simply asking for people not to steal it and selling it for a reasonable $5 a copy. This compared to (his facts) being paid $200k by a producers who would sell it for $20 a copy and prolly have a bunch of it pirated. The author of the piece posits this is the way to market today, eliminate the middlemen. I quote: Here is my list of lessons from the success of Louis C.K.’s self-released video:Build relationships with customers using an approach that is engaging, personal, and honest.Work toward long-term relationships with your customers so that they will trust your brand as long as you deliver high quality content and products.Create a reasonable price. When the price point is attainable, both fans and people on the fence are willing to pay for the product rather than hunt for a pirated version.Read up on the Stop Online Piracy Act. Stay informed when the bill returns to the House of Representatives this year.
I get it alright Doug. I think you are out in left field. You don't think you need the big record companies? Try get your new music exposed to the masses. You can go the "little band" route, but you wont make any real money, because you wont get any exposure. Name me a top 100 band from a tiny record label. There simply isn't one.Your idealist dreaming and demon creating wont change a thing in the record industry. Try get a radio station to play your music. Good luck. You must also have the same opinion of the movie industry. What big movie came from a little tiny studio? Blair Witch? It's the same guys in that business, too. Sony owns lots of music and movie studios, along with a couple of other business "Titans". Time/Warner, Capitol, CBS are the big players. They are the ones that can take a gamble on an unknown band. We see and hear the success stories. We do not see the losers in the fallout. How many bands that get recorded, make money? I heard once that over 250,000 albums are made every year. How is your band going to stick out of the crowd? By marketing and exposure. Yes, the big evil record companies are experts at it. They've been doing it for decades.Wayner
The record industry will probably never go away, so get over it. They use the music studios to make music for the movies. Again, Doug, you miss the point. There may be less in the long run, but the control will never go away. Too much money at stake, and too much infrastructure. Can bands make an album without a contract? NO.Do we need attorneys to get a record made? YESCan small record companies fund a year long recording session? NOCan big companies fund long drawn out recording sessions? YESDo small recording companies have producers, quality engineers, mastering engineers, all the internal BS required to make a quality product and get it distributed? NOIs Target, Walmart and any other chain going to deal with "dougies small recording emporium" recording company? NOAnd while the previous graph showed the ups and downs of various mediums for music, it did not show which music was from a large recording company and which was from a small, tiny erecord company. I'll just guess that the ratio is probably 100,000 to 1.Wayner
It's not just the music industry. They are just another example of end stage capitalism. As it progresses, capitalistic commerce moves inevitably towards consolidation of wealth and power.Before anyone complains, let me posit that this is economics and sociology, not politics.Collapse is coming. I see and believe this but I can't see how to prepare. One thing I do know, however, is that you will be missing a lot of other things more than the access to recorded music that you now enjoy. Massive food shortages combined with ridiculously heavy public armament should raise the excitement level beyond whatever tragedy Hollywood has concocted for us this week. I'm glad I'm getting old.
wayner, your response is an anachronism - completely irrelevant. hardly anyone will be buying music from chains.totoro, thank you for your succinct, more detailed explanation of what i said, only i said it in a much less detailed manner. doug s.
Yeah, I can be long-winded. But I wanted to nail the point home.