The Enigmatic Amish


A Lesson in Bad Ideas
February 13, 2010, 11:56 pm
Filed under: Marketing, Music | Tags: , ,

Warner Music Group LogoWarner Music Group, one of the big four major record labels, announced this past week that it will no longer be licensing its music to free streaming sites.   According to the brilliant minds at WMG these streaming sites are “clearly not positive for the music industry” to quote a BBC interview with CEO Edgar Bronfman Jr.  This is quite simply an absurd reactionary position for a major music label to hold in the new era of music.

Ever since the advent of Napster and even more so since the growth of legal digital music sites the face of the music industry has been changing.  Gone are the days that bands needed record labels to get anywhere, the only way to purchase music was in album form, and the only way to find new music was the radio.  Its been proven that bands can use the internet to gain enough fans to become chart-toppers.  Digital stores allow consumers to pick and choose the songs they buy (encouraging artists to make each song that much better!) And its been shown that the internet is a great place for fans to find new music!

In order to find new music fans need to listen to it.  In order to listen to it they have to play it.  Why would they pay for music they’ve never heard?

It would appear that WMG does not understand this concept.  Instead they blame these free streaming services for declining revenue.  They apparently have yet to realize that the age of printing money in the form of CDs is over.  The digital era will simply not be as absurdly profitable as the last. Get over it.  The goal has changed.  The way to earn as much money as possible these days is to make contact with fans and to encourage them to explore as much new music as possible.  Something these sites that WMG is kneecapping do very very well!  I’ve found more bands through Pandora than any other method and thats including a lot of very music oriented friends!  It would seem as though I shall no longer be discovering WMG bands if they continue with this.

One of WMG’s problems with these streaming sites is that they don’t pay enough to make them worth the label’s while. Ars Technica has a write up on the situation wherin they make the great point that the radio is a free streaming source, that doesn’t pay royalties… So apparently the money being paid to WMG from streaming sites like Pandora is somehow worth less than the nothing they’re paying paid by the radio stations.  Interesting.

My last point, but my favorite one, shows that not all is lost.  Only weeks ago the CEO of Universal Music Group said that Spotify ( a free streaming service) was a “very sustainable financial model.” I would be very interested to see a break down in numbers showing how what is not good financially for one label can be great for another.  Although I am very happy with UMG, this just goes to show how messed up the current industry is.

Currently, WMG has given little information as to how they will begin the process of “not licensing.”  Still, it seems that unless this policy is changed WMG bands will begin disappearing from sites across the web and will instead be behind subscription walls, safe from fans and new consumers alike.

Now, I should say that I’m not necessarily against subscription models.  There are some that have promise.  All I am saying is that they are not currently working well nor do they seem to be the future.  This seems more like WMG needing something of a scapegoat to explain why they’re not earning as much as they want.

I’ve heard its dangerous to startle an ostrich with its head in the sand so I guess I will now leave this one alone. Warner: thanks for the memories and you just go ahead thinking that this is a smart move.

In the mean time I’ll be sampling and buying music from Universal.



the White Stripes Fell in Love with a Girl
February 11, 2010, 7:10 pm
Filed under: Intellectual Property, Music | Tags: , ,

So I like to think of myself as up on all things musical.  Following artists, labels, reviewers, and a slew of music publications seems to give me a good idea of what’s going on in the world of music.  However, I must admit I haven’t always been this way, which is probably why and how I missed the White Stripes’ music video for “I Fell in Love with a Girl.”

This is possibly the coolest music video I have ever seen. Someday I need to compile a list, but whenever I do this will be on it.

In other, related news, the White Stripes are complaining that the Air Force re-recorded this same song for a recruitment ad. The band’s complaint is not so much that it is for the military (which they support) but that it was an ad designed to recruit during the current wars (which they do not support). The musician responsible claims that he doesn’t listen to the White Stripes but I have to go out on a limb here and say it sounds pretty suspiciously close to the original.

The Huffington Post has the story and here’s the White Stripes’ original complaint.  I’m gonna have to side with the Stripes on this one.



NME Shockwave Awards Contestants Announced
February 3, 2010, 5:08 pm
Filed under: Awards | Tags: ,
They aren’t the Grammy’s for pomp, circumstance, and media obsession but what the NME Shockwave awards don’t have in glitter they make up for in substance.  Contestants for this year’s set of awards were announced a few days ago and the lists of artists and songs are promising.  These are British awards aimed particularly at British artists so there are some missing bands if we’re going to talk overall awards.  Still, there are some pretty good bands on the lists that do deserve the attention.

The Grammy’s have sadly become a place for the old industry to prop itself up and to pat itself on the back.  Which is truly sad because there is definite talent displayed and, sometimes even, awarded.  Here I’m looking at the Kings of Leon, Phoenix, and, yes, even Lady Gaga and Taylor Swift.  But the overall way that the Grammy’s are decided and awarded really just takes away from those awards to those who really earned them.  The Grammy’s biggest problem is that it tends toward spectacle and big names rather than true talent.  Luckily, every so often the two collide.

Looking over the announcement there’s a lot of good talent displayed, examples being: Muse, Arctic Monkeys, Vampire Weekend, Radiohead, and Kasabian.  The list for best British band is an awesome collection of artists. However,  I’m a bit disappointed in the list for best international band, as much as I may like them, I’m really not sure that Paramore or Green Day should be on there.   Still, it shows better promise than having Beyonce or the Black Eyed Peas  up for every award…

It’s not without its own problems.  There are some fairly serious contradictions.  For instance, the Arctic Monkeys are up for the Best British band as well as the worst album.  Not really sure how that math works.  But this is not anything new to the Shockwaves though, so I’ll take it in stride.I don’t think any award system will ever be perfect but its nice to see some of these bands get some recognition.  Looking forward to seeing how this plays out.

You can vote here.



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