On The Record »

  • When times get tough, the tough get innovating

    February 3, 2012 @ 9:44 am | by Jim Carroll

    Innovation comes in many different forms. When you’re a record label operating at a time when sales and revenue are on the slide, you have a couple of options. You can do what the big boys are doing: sit on your hoop, hire legal eagles to commence court actions and give out yards about your situation. Or you can actually do something which recognises that the world and your business model have changed.

    Los Angeles-based Stones Throw are not the first or last label to come up with the idea of a subscription model, but their offering is one we can expect many others to imitate.

    For $10 a month, you’ll get every new release from the hip-hop label which has released records in the past by Aloe Blacc, Mayer Hawthorne, J Dilla, Madlib, The Stepkids and many more. Upcoming releases which will soon be hitting subscribers’ in-box include an EP from Homeboy Sandman and an album from Quakers, the hip-hop project from Portishead’s Geoff Barrow.

    It’s a great deal on many different levels. The price is a snip for those label obsessives who know Stones Throw will always produce the goods, while the casual fan is also likely to be enticed at that price point. The label are probably making better dough from the deal than they’re getting from eMusic or the streaming sites. The acts will attract new fans. Everyone’s a winner.

    All of which begs the question why more labels don’t move in this direction. Some have, in fairness, worked up similar plans – for instance, there’s the Friends of Richter Collective scheme from the Irish label – but not as many as you’d expect. While the majors seem to be caught in a permanent state of inertia, perhaps we’ll see more indies heading for the innovative side of the street.

  • The news from MIDEM

    February 1, 2012 @ 10:04 am | by Jim Carroll

    Some interesting bits and pieces from the MIDEM conference, aside from our old friend Paul fuming about stuff, as the folks with the expense accounts head home from the south of France.

    Saatchi & Saatchi boss Kevin Roberts delivered a ton of zingers when he spoke on Monday, mostly along the lines of “stop whinging and start doing stuff”. Our favourite line, which we’re going to start using from now on, was “we live in a ‘VUCA’ world – a world that is volatile, a world that is uncertain, a world that is complex and a world that is ambiguous.” He also declared that marketing is dead while he had the microphone in his hand.

    Another thought-provoking presentation was The Sky Is Rising! from TechDirt blogger Mike Masnick and Floor64’s Michael Ho. The report makes the point that the global entertainment industry grew by 50 per cent in the last decade despite all the huffing and puffing over piracy and lost sales. More analysis of the report here, including findings like “rather than consumers just wanting to get stuff for free, they have continually spent a greater portion of their income on entertainment — with the percentage increasing by 15% from 2000 to 2008″

    “Piracy may not be a bad thing, it may get us more business”. Not the words of Kim Dotcom, but rather Angry Birds’ dude Mikael Hed from Rovio, who believes piracy can lead to paying customers down the line.

    MIDEM regular and music business smartie Emmanual Legrand is always a reliable go-to guy for meaty, punchy reports from the conference. Read his overview on MIDEM 2012, analysis of plans for pan-European licensing and report on the move to a global repertoire database.

    Spotted in Cannes: Moses

    Why Facebook love Skrillex

    And finally, the ultimate “that would be an ecumenical matter” question: does MIDEM still matter?

  • Coming soon to a venue or field near you

    January 30, 2012 @ 8:56 am | by Jim Carroll

    You know it’s MIDEM weekend when the newswires are full of Paul McGuinness giving out yards about the internet. Yesterday, McGuinness used the annual gathering of record label big-wigs in Cannes to do some fuming and feather-spitting about Google. We have been here before, so there’s little new to see or hear. It would be far more interesting if McGuinness talked about U2’s future plans on the back of their ker-ching tour.

    But if the MIDEM-going sector of the record industry has long since ceased to be a relevant cog in the wheel, you also have to wonder about the current state of the live music beast, U2’s performance aside. Remember that old chestnut from a half-decade or so ago about how the live industry would take up the slack and replenish the lost profits from the record side? While there’s some spotty gloom and doom around the festival sector – the decision to cancel The Big Chill in the UK, for instance (though Big Chill’s change in direction probably contributed to that state of affairs), or Oxegen sitting out 2012 at home – such a downcast forecast has to be seen in the greater context. And that ain’t a pretty picture.

    Let’s start with something you may already have noticed: it’s damn quiet out there in venues at the moment, isn’t it? Sure, there’s lots of action at entry-level as bands attempt to squeeze through and make a splash, but go up a few levels and it’s tumbleweed time. Acts just aren’t breaking through in the same numbers as before which is causing a shortage further up the line. I’ve never seen a gig calendar as quiet at the one on offer from the various promoters at present. Something is rotten in the state of Denmark and we don’t just mean the O2 sitting largely dark down on the docks.

    When you delve a little deeper, you can cop some reasons for the malaise. Promoters are worried. Promoters are looking at the changing trends in gig-going habits and don’t like what they see. As punters leave it later and later in the day to get their tickets (bar for those event gigs which sell out in the blink of an eye – pace Azealia Banks at Whelan’s in Dublin), promoters are beginning to wonder how much distressed ticketing inventory they’re going to have left with on their hands when the doors open on the night.

    They’re setting mounting costs – costs which include many acts now seeking payment in sterling or dollars rather than the euro – against the fanbase’s shrinking disposable income (even a shrinking fanbase, as emigration continues) and are deciding to sit some shows out. You may wonder why Ireland is missing out on many touring acts at present and it comes down to the promoters deciding that the audience just isn’t willing any more to take a chance on some acts at those ticket prices. The fact that the acts are still demanding fees which have not descreased significantly since the good old days is not helping matters either. The days of promoters pushing fees up by wildly and blindly bidding against each other are well and truly over (for now). No-one has the spare cash for that aul’ rubbish any more.

    And yet, there are still some gigs on the calendar which have you scratching your head wondering what is going on. Guns N’Roses may once have had a dedicated rural-metal fanbase, but are they really going to see the Axl Rose pantomine after what happened the last time? Does anyone out there really think Roxette are worth (or were ever worth) a night at the O2? And while Aslan playing Tallaght Stadium has all the makings of an event show in this, the Dublin band’s 30th year of operations, it’s still a bit of a stretch (though the band don’t seem to have as many hometown shows booked between now and then as is usually the case).

    There are also, of course, some gaps on the calendar which require filling. There’s been a surprising lack of annoucements for MCD’s Phoenix Park jamboree but we’re still hearing Florence & The Machine, Rihanna and Lady Gaga as possibilities. There will be – you may need to sit down for this – a Coldplay show in Ireland this summer, though the venue for this yoyos between the Aviva Stadium (the band’s crew have ran the rule over the old Lansdowne Road), Phoenix Park and Slane. There is also mention of Foo Fighters for the latter gaff. And, as we wrote last week, you’ll have The Cure heading to Stradbally and Wilco taking a stand in Kilmainham. Plus, of course, the huge number of Irish fests which have become firm favourites in the last few years like Sea Sessions, Castlepalooza, Indiependence, Vantastival, Body & Soul, Knockanstockan, Dublin City Soul Festival, Belsonic et al will be returning in 2012 (one early change to note is that Cork X Southwest is moving to the August Bank Holiday weekend).

    There will be plenty of events to go round this summer, yet there’s anecdotal evidence that even more Irish fans will be heading abroad for their festival kicks in 2012. Sources at the Benicassim and EXIT festivals have noted a marked increase in Irish ticket sales and we know what that’s down to. With no Oxegen on the agenda for 2012, those who want to go to a multi-day, multi-stage festival with camping in July are heading to Spain and Serbia. While no doubt some of that post-Oxegen audience will hang around for the Electric Picnic, most want to go to a festival with their mates in the weeks after they finish their exams and, as there’s no Oxegen, they’ve decided to decamp abroad. Live music business nerds will note a sweet irony in all of this as Dinny Desmond’s decision to shutter Oxegen means a bump in sales for his longtime rival Vince Power’s Spanish hop.

  • Why legal actions and blocking access won’t stymie piracy

    January 27, 2012 @ 9:39 am | by Jim Carroll

    It hasn’t gone away, you know. Most of us thought that the debate around music piracy would have been done and dusted by 2012. Yet years after the record industry ran the original Napster out of town but never got around to properly plugging the gap, piracy remains something to fume about.

    Already this month, we’ve seen the Megaupload takedown, huge online protests against controversial copyright enforcement bills in the United States, lots of musing here about the introduction of secondary legislation in relation to copyright law and Irish record labels lining up to sue the government.

    We’ve also had Sweden’s decision to recognise the Missionary Church of Kopimism, whose most sacred tenet is a belief in peer to peer file-sharing, as a legal religion. Yes, it’s been a busy few weeks for those in the piracywatch business.

    Piracy and copyright protection have become huge, contentious, multi-faceted issues. Legislative moves tend to be heavyhanded and vague, open to a wide range of interpretations depending on the legal eagles you engage and the counsel they tender. It’s not just about record labels ensuring that they get paid for U2, Coldplay and Jay-Z albums.

    Writing in media and technology newsletter the Monday Note, Frédéric Filloux makes the case for piracy to be considered part of the digital ecosystem. Instead of “endless legal actions” and “legally blocking access”, it’s only the creation of “legitimate commercial alternatives” which will stymie piracy. Filloux admits this is not new, but he makes the point that such a service without a country zoning system has yet to be tried.

    “Today we have entertainment products, carefully designed to fit a global audience, waiting months before becoming available on the global market. As long as this absurdity remains, piracy will flourish.”

    And there’s the rub: piracy doesn’t recognise borders or boundaries or statutory instruments. Something tells me this will still be on the agenda a decade from now.

  • It’s not dead (yet), but MySpace badly needs a makeover

    January 20, 2012 @ 9:38 am | by Jim Carroll

    The cool kids may have abandoned MySpace, but that doesn’t mean it’s gone the way of Bebo (yet). The once mighty music social networking site has been on deathwatch since the advent of newer, brighter and snazzier sites Twitter and Facebook, which have come along and usurped all its buzz.

    Not even a changing of the guard and figureheads from Rupert Murdoch and News Corp (who recently used his new-found love of tweets to remark that they “screwed up in every way possible” with MySpace) to Justin Timberlake and Specific Media has arrested MySpace’s slide.

    Yet figures last week indicated that MySpace is still getting clicks. In fact, the site founded by Tom Anderson and Chris DeWoulfe back in the internet middle-ages (or 2003) is pulling more traffic than Google+ or Tumblr, according to the latest ComScore social media stats.

    Even though MySpace still scores highly on Google search results – it’s usually the first or second result for any band, for instance – it’s still a turn-up for the books.

    But even if MySpace is getting traffic, what the hell is there to see and do on the site when you get there to make you stick around? MySpace’s biggest problem is that it simply hasn’t evolved. Every single function the site once had to attract users has been bettered elsewhere. Soundcloud and Bandcamp have better media players, Twitter is prefered for chirpy interaction and Facebook is now the go-to guy for messing with your privacy options.

    At last week’s CES convention in Las Vegas, Timberlake debuted MySpace TV, which looks as bland and predictable as it sounds. Time for some better, smarter makeovers or the $35 million spent by Specific on acquiring the site will follow News Corp’s $580 million purchase price in 2005 down the plughole.

  • Sleep Thieves get big buzz from online but little else

    January 13, 2012 @ 9:30 am | by Jim Carroll

    There are many acts out there who will nod their heads in recognition when they read Wayne Fahy from Dublin band Sleep Thieves’ latest blog post.

    In December, the band discovered that their debut album “Heart Waves” had been illegally uploaded onto some file-sharing sites. Instead of reaching for a legal eagle to issue huffy cease and desist letters, the band watched the stats as their online profile surged.

    Per Fahy, Sleep Thieves saw a huge increase in “search results, recommendations on regular folks’ blogs, Twitter accounts and Facebook pages as well as far more views of our Youtube videos…our Soundcloud plays have shot up, plays on Bandcamp have increased, but the best barometer is LastFM”.

    But the online buzz didn’t lead to loads of sales and they recorded just two sales on Bandcamp after the album went rogue. “Even with all these listens, and our music now getting out there internationally on a scale we’ve not seen before”, writes Fahy, “we’re still in the proverbial band poor house.”

    The new music ecosystem may mean acts gets traction from tweets, likes, recommends and streams, but the big issue is how does a band turn these attributes into cash. Increased buzz and profile may lead to lucrative offers and tours down the road – look at the success of The Weeknd in 2011, for instance – but as the Sleep Thieves have discovered, it doesn’t necessarily see people turning listens into purchases.

    Many will argue that this shows that fans now don’t want to pay for recorded music. Yet bands’ merchandise stalls and recent sales figures from industry bodies indicate that this is not necessarily the case. The state of flux continues and you can expect many more bands to do some pondering like Sleep Thieves before this one is resolved.

  • Tapping geeks to make more money from ticket sales

    January 6, 2012 @ 10:00 am | by Jim Carroll

    It’s not just baseball managers like Billy Beane who have the hots for data-mining. The news that the world’s biggest live music company Live Nation has acquired media metrics analysts Big Champagne shows that even seasoned music business veterans see value in Moneyball methods and machinations. Promoting a show isn’t about putting up posters or sending out press releases any more.

    The deal will see Big Champagne’s products leveraged to help Live Nation analyse the data it acquires from ticket sales to give the company an extra competitive edge.

    While there’s a lot of talk from the lads in the suits with no ties about how this will create “the leader in Artist to Fan data”, it’s really about trying to make more cash from consumers. Astute reading of the data tea-leaves could lead to more opportunties for a company like Live Nation with interests in so many areas of the entertainment business.

    But Live Nation aren’t the only music biz people who could benefit from geeks. As we saw in Moneyball, one of 2011’s best films even for those with no knowledge of baseball, data-mining can demonstrate trends which can turn zeroes like the Oakland Athletics into heroes by exploiting market inefficiencies.

    Traditional music A&R has always worked on gut instinct and filters (for instance, acts get more interest if they have a permanent establishment manager), but there are ways to game the system using metrics. Look at a label like Cooking Vinyl, for example, home to heritage acts and distressed inventory like The Cranberries, Underworld, The Prodigy and others. While no longer new or hip, all have established fanbases which can be tapped for sales of new releases.

    Given the macro-economic problems the music business faces, expect even more executives to tap the geeks for more than just an all-singing, all-dancing website.

  • The festival wishlist for 2012

    December 16, 2011 @ 9:00 am | by Jim Carroll

    The year may be winding down, but the plotting and planning for next summer’s Irish music festivals is in full swing. With early bird tickets already on sale for a rake of fests – including the Electric Picnic, Castlepalooza, Body & Soul and the Sea Sessions – we can expect announcements early in 2012 about who will be playing these events.

    There are, though, some elephants in the room. The first is Oxegen. While there has been no confirmation of any sort about dates or venues for next year’s event – we’re still waiting patiently for promoters MCD to respond to our tweeted query a few weeks ago– there is little doubt that there will be some class of Oxegen-like camping festival last year.

    Even though Oxegen is not as good or as popular as it once was, there are always a couple of thousand kids each year eager to pop their festival cherry. To add grist to the mill, a number of UK agents have indicated that they’ve received queries from bookers about acts for such a festival.

    Another elephant in the room is Ireland’s involvement in Euro 2012. If the team have a good run, this will have an effect on gigs and events in June, with people leaving ticket purchases later and later.

    The third elephant in the room, up to this morning, was the one wearing a pair of flares and a floppy hat. But we now know that The Stones Roses will play Phoenix Park on July 5 next with tickets going on sale next Tuesday at a pricey €65.50 plus Ticketmaster charges per ticket. That puts paid to the rumours and hearsay about the band playing Oxegen and Slane.

    Add in the ongoing recession and the slump in live ticket sales and you’ve the makings of another interesting year.

    Feel free to tell us what acts you’d like to see playing Irish festivals in 2012 below.

  • The moral of 2011 for bands, acts and musicians: it takes time

    December 13, 2011 @ 9:24 am | by Jim Carroll

    If new bands and acts are to take one lesson from 2011, it’s should be the one about time and patience. I know, it’s a strange moral to take from a year when it seemed, yet again, as if accelerated culture was all that mattered. In a world of Twitter and internet memes, instant gratification and low attention spans and going from zeroes to heroes to zeroes again in a few months, it seems weird to be putting time and patience in the frame.

    But as this year went on, it seemed to me that the art of creating music with bite and substance was something which was well worth spending time on and taking time over. The alternatives are rarely palatable or sustainable. Think about it. Does the world really need another eager new band to emerge with songs which were semi-formed or tunes which were more ideas and textures rather than something to really hang your hat on? Are we really going to think well of acts doing in public what they should have done in private? Are we going to continue to have to tut and sigh over acts who come on strong with one or two decent tunes, but who don’t have anything else to offer when you go to see them live for the first time? Do paying punters really have to subsidise you as you try to decide if you need three or six players in your band?

    The problem for many acts is that they think if they don’t strike now that they’re damned forever. My in-box overflows with bands hawking their wares, trying to get mentions and previews for upcoming gigs or online releases. There’s a pang of desperation to many of these missives, especially acts who emerged six months ago who feel that they’re now overlooked as another batch of bright new things enjoy some profile.

    Of course, there are some of you who will be going “pot kettle black” at this stage. At On the Record, we champion new music every single week of the year. We tell you about new acts and we highlight new tunes. But it’s not our job to ensure these bands are ready for the floor and going to be around for years. Our new music spots are about spotting potential and it’s up to the act who do the rest. We’re not their parents, you know. We’re also not the A&R department of their record label, an expertise which is sorely missed when it comes to developing and building an act.

    But it is well worth taking the time to get things right, as a couple of examples from 2011 show. At Hard Working Class Heroes 2009, we saw We Cut Corners for the first time. Between then and 2011, the band never registered on our radars. Sure, they were around and doing stuff, but it was on the downlow and any noise was exerted on rehearsals and songwriting rather than hussling hacks to write about them. When they played at HWCH 2011, they were a totally different band and, as their fantastic debut album “Today I Realised I Could Go Home Backwards” shows, they’ve squared the songwriting and songcraft circle over the last two years. They’re a band you could see still in the game five or ten years from now, which is a goal most acts want to achieve.

    Another example is James Vincent McMorrow. As he explained in a Ticket cover story in October, he spent four or five years working away on songs and techniques in a room at home before he ever went near a recording studio. He spent a year in London where he found out that he wasn’t ready to engage with the industry, before finding his mojo in a house by the sea in Co Louth. He released “Early In the Morning” in February 2010 and it’s an album which is still finding its legs nearly two years (indeed, McMorrow will spend the second anniversary of the album’s release on another UK tour). Further proof that it takes time.

    Finally, there’s The Black Keys, a band enjoying the best press and sales of their career on the back of new album “El Camino”. But as you see again and again in interviews with them (like this one), such success didn’t happen overnight. I remember seeing the band at SXSW in 2003, a year after they formed, and being wowed by their sound. Eight years and many albums on, they’ve found their feet and the rest of the world has caught up with them. That they did so in public and over the course of putting a deep catalogue together is down to the ability to gig again and again across America, an asset which Irish acts sorely lack due to geographical limitations.

    All three of the above show the virtues and values of taking time. Sure, they may have wondered down through the years if the work and patience would ever pay off – and hindsight is a wonderful thing – but it’s obvious what the acts have gained from actually having a developmental arch. No need to throw out a new track every other week. No need to do anything until you were ready to do it and happy with what you had. No need to rush into anything just because you thought there was a demand for it. Memo to all: the world is not impatiently waiting for your new EP or album. Take the time to get the basics right and everything else flows from there.

  • The French way of doing things

    December 9, 2011 @ 9:34 am | by Jim Carroll

    Why aren’t there more winter music festivals? While no-one is obviously hankering for music gigs in the open air or tents on nights like these (unless you’re a reindeer or a polar bear), it’s a surprise that more promoters don’t go for city-based multi-venue, multi-night affairs later in the year.

    Of course, there are a few which buck the trend – such as Eurosonic, which will be taking over Groningen in Holland again in January with the cream of new European acts, including nearly 20 Irish ones – but there’s still room to maneouvre for any promoter looking for an angle and a competitive advantage.

    Anyone intending to hit that road should first head to Rennes in France to sample Trans Musicales. Established in 1979, Trans Musicales has been pulling punters from far and wide with a bespoke, smartly curated selection of French and international acts ever since. It’s been going this long because they know what they’re doing.

    What’s remarkable about Les Trans is that there’s not a headline act on the bill to pull in the punters. Instead, 30,000 people pay their cash and trust in the curatorial abilities of the bookers who, in turn, have spent their budgets on new acts and superb production instead of overpaying some superstar act.

    OTR came back from Rennes with a long list of acts to check out (see Now Playing and New Music for some of these), a few extra pounds in weight thanks to the city’s many crepes’ cafes and a new-found appreciation for festivals which go against the grain.

    As the queues outside Rennes’ city-centre venues by day and the happy hordes who roamed between the various halls in the Park Expo outside the city by night demonstrated, audiences sometimes appreciate festivals which go against the grain.

  • OTR’s music story of the week: Metallica, Red Hot Chili Peppers and the euro crisis

    December 8, 2011 @ 9:57 am | by Jim Carroll

    Sometimes covering the music business beat is a bit like Groundhog Day with the same old issues coming up in new guises. You’ve technology stories, record-labels-are-bad-lads stories, record-labels-are-numpties’ stories, live music bandit stories, Ticketmaster stories and artists getting huffy stories. There are a couple of other regulars but, really, that’s how the cookie crumbles.

    Three cheers, then, for Metallica, Red Hot Chili Peppers and especially their manager Cliff Burnstein for providing us with this fascinating insight into how the euro crisis is causing very rich rock stars to panic about their European tours. If you and I are worried about whether the euros in our pockets will actually be worth anything once this weekend’s extraordinary events are over, that’s nothing compared to Metallica and the Chili Peppers, who believe that the impending gloom and doom in the old world may mean ruin for their pension plans.

    Both bands were originally not scheduled to tour in 2012, but brought forward their plans when the euro crisis began so ensure that the money they got paid would actually be worth more than a hill of beans. Which is why you have the Chili Peppers playing Croker next summer (how’s that one selling, Dinny?) and Metallica’s “European summer vacation” calling at Germany’s Rock Im Park and Rock Am Ring festivals (no sign of the band bringing Lou Reed with them, which is a good thing).

    Per manager Burnstein, “over the next few years, the dollar will be stronger and the euro weaker, and if that’s the case, I want to take advantage of that by playing more of these shows now, because they will be more profitable for us. We’re a US export the same way Coca-Cola is. We look for the best markets. And you have to ask yourself, what’s the best time to be doing what, when and where”.

    Those Yanks really do fear anything that’s not the dollar – and with good reason. The piece mentions former Guns N’ Roses bassist Duff McKagan who “once unwittingly spent $40,000 on expensive suits in Italy because he didn’t realize how much his purchases—then in Italian lira—were worth in dollars”. McKagan now runs Meridian Rock Capital Management, a wealth-management firm for rockers. At least, he’ll be able to advise clients if we go back to the lira, drachma and punt.

    It’s not the first time that rich rock stars have mused on the economy in recent times. Three years ago, Counting Crows cancelled an European tour, with the band blaming the credit crunch and currency fluctuations. Sadly, few promoters seized the opportunity to use “credit crunch” instead of “unforeseen circumstances” as a reason for cancelling poor performing shows.

  • Hands up who is using the Eircom Music Hub?

    December 7, 2011 @ 9:19 am | by Jim Carroll

    We talk a lot about streaming services at OTR. You’ll find a story most weeks here about Spotify and we also mention services like We7, Grooveshark and even Deezer, which launches in Ireland tomorrow, with services ranging from free to €9.99 per month for unlimited streaming on your computer and all handheld devices, on or offline.

    But what about the Eircom Music Hub, the domestic streaming service launched with great hubbub (and some smart TV ads) about a year ago? How many OTR readers are actually using the service on a day to day basis? Or, is it the case as with a couple of people I spoke to about this in the last couple of days, that you registered, poked around for an hour or so and never went back again? It’s time to find out.

    Our interest in Eircom Music Hub was piqued by a few things. The first was Spotify’s recent announcement and the all-singing, all-dancing additions to the streaming world’s big kahoona and a thought that perhaps Eircom Music Hub were doing similar things. There was also an email from reader Brian Casey who was wondering how the service is doing. Given that it’s nearly Eircom Music Hub’s first birthday, we went off, found our user name, did our best to remember the password and had another look at Eircom’s big music offering.

    The first thing that caught our eye was The Black Keys’ “El Camino” album, which was strange as the band have refused to give the album to a ton of streaming services due to, uhm, issues. But when you click on the album, you find that you can’t stream it. You can download it (Eircom Music Hub users can download a certain number of tracks per month depending on what package they’re on), but you can’t stream it and there’s a couple of angry user comments on the page along the lines of “If I can’t listen to new releases on the hub then there’s not much point being on it”.

    I searched for 10 albums released in 2011, from Nicolas Jaar and Wild Flag to SBTRKT to Paul Simon, and all bar Jaar were present and correct, so the service’s millions of tunes does have a wide and deep span. You press play and, like Spotify, the tune plays quite quickly. You can also link to tracks – here’s one of the tunes of the year, Wild Flag’s “Romance”, for instance – but you need to be a registered user (free to Eircom customers and €6.99 a month to non-Eircom users) to hear the tune, which is probably why I rarely see people linking to Eircom Music Hub albums, tracks or playlists. And whatever happened to the apps they were promising a year ago to help them “battle players like Spotify and Last.fm in the digital music market”? No sign of any Eircom Music Hub app in the iTunes store this morning.

    The more you dig around the service, the more frustrated you become at what it could be and what it’s not. Developed in the wake of a lengthy court case with IRMA, the Music Hub really looks and feels like a contractual obligation, a “sure it’ll do the job” service. Yes, all the music you could want is there, but the presentation and navigation are not hugely attractive (the bland band biographies which are used to fill the content gaps are just one example of this). While I’m sure people are using the Music Hub, the service is too limited right now to appeal to anyone beyond the casual user – that said, the casual user is probably the Eircom Music Hub’s target audience. It’s a pity because, having gone to the trouble of negotiating those deals and uploading all that material, the final product just doesn’t seem to match the effort which has gone into the set-up. Luckily for Eircom, though, there is still no sign of Spotify entering the Irish market and, until that happens, they’re not going to have to up their game. Right now, the Eircom Music Hub sadly looks like a lost opportunity.

  • The punk rock way

    November 29, 2011 @ 8:43 am | by Jim Carroll

    There will be many bands looking enviously at Fugazi right now. The Washington DC band always did things their own way and profited hugely from this approach in terms of long-term sustainability. There was little or no interference from third-parties as the band got on with the task of making fantastic, vital music and forming a bond with their fanbase. From their Dischord label to the tours which kept the lines of communication firmly open with that fanbase, Fugazi were a band who had ideas and notions which were light years ahead of their peers and which many of those peers are only catching up with now.

    Case in point: the Fugazi Live Series, a massive collection of live recordings from the band’s career. Fugazi recorded almost all their live shows (their soundman Joey Picuri remarks that he was lucky to be “working with a band that was able to afford the price of a cassette for every show”) so the series will feature some 800 performances from 1987 to 2003, with 130 shows going live on December 1. The cost of the download is down to the user, but there is a suggested price of $5 a show, with all money going to maintain the site, which has been two years in the works.

    As the New York Times notes, such a project puts Ian MacKaye, Guy Picciotto, Joe Lally and Brendan Canty in the company of acts like The Grateful Dead and Phish when it comes to chronicling their archives. But unlike many acts, Fugazi actually owned the rights to their own music and didn’t have to deal with record label politics and negotiations to acquire the rights to the tapes in the first place.

    In recent years, there has been a more co-ordintated move by all involved to archive an act’s activities with a view to deluxe editions and comprehensive audio and video releases down the road. Some bands with a fervent live following might well follow Fugazi’s lead in the future, but they might encounter a lot more trouble getting the material together in the first place to sell on.

    Of course, not every Fugazi fan will want to pore through all the recordings so it will be interesting to note how the site’s crowdsourced ratings work and which shows get a collective thumbs up. Irish fans will naturally be interested to hear how the band’s shows in Dublin’s McGonagles and SFX now sound all these years later – and five bucks to relive those memories is a pretty good deal.

  • Can Moneyball work for the music business?

    November 28, 2011 @ 8:51 am | by Jim Carroll

    You don’t have to be a baseball fan to enjoy Moneyball. The film of Michael Lewis’ excellent book casts Brad Pitt as Billy Beane, the manager of the Oakland Athletics, a team who lack the cash of their league rivals to hold onto quality players or attract the box-office names they need to replace their stars when they’re poached by other clubs.

    Beane needs an edge and he finds it in the unlikely shape of Peter Brand, an economist working in the Cleveland Indians’ backroom. Brand (played by Jonah Hill) has never played baseball, but he has a firm belief that metrics and statistics are just as important when it comes to building a winning team as recruiting someone who has the talent to keep slugging home runs. You get your edge from data-mining as opposed to sticking with tradition. You get your edge from recruiting players who can give you specific incremental advantages. And because other clubs undervalue these players, you can get them on the cheap.

    It’s totally contrary to how Beane’s talent scouts work – these gnarly ex-pros keep talking about the importance of how a player looks and the wisdom of crowds, like all insiders – but he decides to go with it. Beane starts using Brand’s metrics and complex formulae to build a team which makes the talent scouts despair, but which eventually put together a long winning streak.

    In an afterword in a later edition of the book, Lewis recounts what happened after Moneyball was published. “The Oakland front office had calls from a cross-section of American business and sporting life: teams from the NHL, NBA and NFL; Wall Street firms; Fortune 500 companies; Hollywood studios; college and high school baseball programs. There was even a fellow who ran a chain of hot dog stands who found a lesson for his business in the experiment occuring inside the Oakland front office. Every nook and cranny of American society, it seemed, held people similarly obsessed with finding and exploiting market inefficiences – and the Oakland front office inspired them”. The only people who weren’t enthused were the club’s major league baseball-playing peers – they still thought they were doing things right and Beane’s success was a fluke.

    The problem with insiders is that they wear blinkers. When you’re inside a bubble, you’re unable to see beyond that bubble because you’re surrounded by people who are all thinking the same so you stick with the wisdom of that crowd. Look at the recent presidential election here and how long it took the pol corrs to wake up to the fact that Sean Gallagher’s campaign was gaining huge traction countrywide. The pol corrs didn’t see Gallagher as a potential danger until the latter half of the campaign, whereas those outside the bubble were seeing a huge upswing in support for the soft Fianna Fail candidate.

    It’s not as if we don’t have the data to work with. We produce so many data in every business sector that it’s inevitable that you can gain an edge and advantage from mining these numbers and details to see what they throw up. You can see how number-crunching works for tech companies and other early adopters and Moneyball shows how it can work for a cash-poor baseball team like the A’s, but what about the business we write about here day in and day out?

    Data-mining already happens at various music companies, though it’s probably not be as sophisticated as how Beane and Brand worked at the A’s. Live music promoters don’t just suck their thumb and rely on their gut reaction to pick a venue for an act they’re booking – they talk to the labels, check the sales figures, look at airplay and then make the call.

    Some record labels like Cooking Vinyl, who have signed acts like The Cranberries, Underworld, The Prodigy and Marilyn Manson, show that you can build a business by investing in acts who are no longer on major labels, but who have an established fanbase who will purchase their new releases. There’s always profit to be made from distressed inventory like this who have a following – it’s like those euro shops who sell stuff you don’t realise until you walk in. You can also parse a new music festival like CMJ or SXSW using non-numerical metrics to pick out which acts are going to make a splash.

    But beyond these examples, we don’t seem to see much evidence of music executives hiring a geek like Brand to help them get ahead. Sure, there may be individual acts and managers who can point to how they have used metrics to build a successful tour or campaign. But as an industry, we still rely on instinct and experience, like those talent scouts working for A’s using those age-old gut feelings which worked in previous generations.

    Like the baseball business, there’s almost a fear of moving beyond the tried and tested. There’s a fear of the geek. During the recent Hard Working Class Heroes convention, one of the panels I chaired was Meet the Geeks to show acts the importance of having a pet geek as part of their team. Yet most acts and music business insiders still see the geek as someone who will build them a website which won’t collapse in the middle of the night. The possibility of going beyond this is never considered or explored. It’s as if fresh thinking or new approaches are frowned on and what worked for the old music business will still do the job. Memo: this is not the old music business.

    And the data is largely there. Labels have their Chart Track, Official Charts Company and Soundscan figures to pour over and exploit because people are still buying music (for now, anyway). Promoters can see from Ticketmaster dailies which gigs are hot and cold at different stages of a campaign, which might be a guide to how dynamic ticketing could work. Acts should be able to guage what effect ticket price could have on their long-term career. Indeed, all could take a leaf from the commercial radio stations’ playbook where research dictates what works on air (yes, just as you thought, you can blame the people who listen to radio stations for what you hear on those radio stations).

    But the problem, as Beane and Brand encountered when they set out to revolutionise the A’s, is a fear of trying out something new holds people back. Just because something worked for years doesn’t mean it will continue to work in the future because other factors chip away at whatever competitive advantage you once had and disrupt your business model. In the case of the A’s, they didn’t have the cash to keep the bright stars they were developing and lost out to better funded clubs. In the case of the music industry, every sector is under attack from socio-economic changes, yet there is still a residual fondness and affection and enthusiasm and ardour for music, both recorded and live. It’s up to the players to exploit using all means necessary – and that includes some premier league number-crunching and data mining.

  • Time for music to downsize to a cottage industry?

    November 25, 2011 @ 10:00 am | by Jim Carroll

    There’s one area of the future of the music business debate which rarely gets aired and that’s the question about if there is actually a future for the industry.

    The recent huffing and puffing about Spotify payments brings realities about future revenue streams to the surface. Put bluntly, no-one is going to be able to afford a Los Angeles pad on the back of streaming royalties alone.

    Add in the slump in revenue in other sections – and there is a slump, despite the regular spin from industry bodies to the contrary – and you’ve an industry desparetely looking for new options.

    One possibility is downsizing and becoming a cottage industry again. When Wired magazine asked some observers for their views on what was to come, CD Baby founder Derek Silver predicted that the “’music industry’ will become an unusual phrase, like ‘poetry industry’. Making music is as easy as writing poetry. There’s no money in it.”

    While acts earning the sums of money which powered the lore of the dirt-rich rock star may be rare, there is still a viable possibility of making a living from music. It all comes down to realistic expectations. Those dreamers who expect the big record deal and everything that comes with it may have to keep on dreaming, but there is definitely still room for those who are pragmatic about what they’re doing and what they can earn.

    Such downsizing can be energising. As we’ve seen with the retail sector, from new boutique stores like Elastic Witch and Plugd to the upcoming 7s-Eleven one-day record label market in London, it’s all about fresh thing and new approaches. The old days may be over, but why dwell on them when there’s future potential to be tapped?

  • Spotify and the blame game

    November 23, 2011 @ 8:56 am | by Jim Carroll

    There are some rows which are destined to run longer than a Broadway show. Just as we think some music business memes are coming to a close – we haven’t heard anything from IRMA about piracy in a while, you know – another version of the same argument crops up in a different place and we start all over again. It’s like trying to get rid of ragwort from a big field with a slash-hook – there are always more weeds popping up behind your back.

    Last week, it was the turn of Spotify to get a kick in the goolies as the state of the music business argument turned on the popular streaming site. It began when distributor STHoldings became the latest indignant company to remove all the music released by the labels it represents from Spotify and other services due to its unhappiness with terms and conditions (and payments – its iTunes sales had dropped over the last few months and it’s blaming Spotify for this).

    As the fuss began to die down from that palaver, Jon Hopkins tweeted about his royalty statement – “Got paid £8 for 90,000 plays. Fuck spotify” – and we were off again. When something like this happens, you don’t need to read “The Shallows” to know how the interweb is messing with your brain and your attention span.

    In truth, scuffles and skirmishes like this are part and parcel of progress. In the case of the music business, technology has disrupted its once cosy core business model beyond recognition and we’ve had nothing but whinging and fuming and whining for years from the players who’ve been hit by these changes. Actions like those outlined above are attempts to put the genie back in the bottle and you don’t need to be a regular OTR reader to know how that one goes. Memo for those at the back: we’re not going back to record shops and CDs ever again. Get over it. Spotify revenue is never going to replace the money you used to make back then. Get over that one too.

    Of course, it’s human nature to give out when things don’t work out the way you think they should and when you feel shortchanged. Before Spofity came along, an artist like Hopkins and labels repped by STHoldings would be carping about something else to do with the business.

    But the thing about Spotify boycotts (Coldplay were also in that game) and giving out about getting eight quid for your music (would Mr Hopkins have sold 90,000 copies of his music had Spotify not existed, perchance?) is that it misses the point completely. The record industry has been changed forever by forces beyond its control, yet many involved still persist in thinking that they can dictate the same terms and conditions as used to be the case. This largely doesn’t hold sway in any other sector which has been disrupted by technology so why should we expect music to be be different? Yes, artists need to get paid for their work, but to expect the same rate of payments as they get from other channels when there’s a different cost base and user experience is never going to wash.

    To be fair to Spotify, there are some players who are quite happy (or perhaps “happy” is not the right word – see comment number 19 below) with what it has to offer. Kudos Distribution managing director Danny Ryan points out that “streaming services are very long tail” and “it takes time for consumers to discover your music, add it to playlists, favourite it, and share it with friends” and thus increase your revenue. Ryan also links to reports from Sweden, the home of Spotify, and the US about the positive effect of services like Spotify on piracy (which doesn’t actually pay the artist a red cent),

    But it’s the public who decide in this new age and perhaps this is the elephant in the room which the music side don’t want to mention. Let’s remember that Spotify is a big deal because people use the service. Yes, you could say it’s popular because they have millions of (legally acquired and paid-for) tracks from artists but there are lots of services who can say the same thing. Spotify is popular because it’s damn fast and is easy to use and people like it. People have said yes to Spotify. People go to Spotify to hear music. And if your music is not there, well, they won’t be able to hear it. You might want them to go elsewhere but chances are they’re not going to go with you. In the words of the Wu, consumers rule everything about music right now. Artists might think they’re entitled to big pay-days for their music but consumers, most of whom realise that when you’re getting your music for free that no-one gets paid a whole lot, seem to think differently.

    Some of those who’ve removed their music from the service will shrug and go “fine”. Other fish to fry, other places to go, other people to see. Some labels know that the bulk of their audience aren’t currently on Spotify to begin with – most of the labels repped by STHoldings are dance labels with healthy vinyl sales, for instance – so their absence isn’t going to hurt them unduly.

    But streaming services like Spotify are not going away. They’re on the rise and are going to attract more and more traffic in the years to come. And the terms and conditions were hammered out between the techies and the labels, just like the deals that were done with Apple for iTunes in the past. No-one can say that there wasn’t some negotiations done before someone spat on their hand and sealed the deal (or whatever the corporate boardroom version of that cattlemart deal is). Everyone know what was going on.

    More than anything else, this whole fandango demonstrates the lack of trust and understanding between the music side and the tech side. The music side knows that the tech side has the upper hand and knows that new business models are going to decimate old revenue streams and are trying their damndest to stop it. The tech side know that consumers are changing their music listening patterns and are responding to that by providing services which music fans are embracing. While there are still some who shoot first and answer questions about payments later (cough), the vast majority of tech players in the music game have copped on and do the meetings they’re supposed to do and pay the cash they’ve agreed to pay. Of course, the music side want the same deals as ruled the roost when everyone bought CDs but, sure, like Robbie Keane, we all have dreams.

    Next week, Spotify wil be unveiling a “new direction” which will, per a statement from the company. answer the quesion “what’s next for Spotify?”. It’s unlikely, much to the chagrin of many, that it will involve the service paying the same amount of cash to artists that they currently get from national radio stations. Time for this particular blame game to come to a close.

  • Heritage acts and a question of scale

    November 22, 2011 @ 2:21 pm | by Jim Carroll

    Two recent gig announcements prompt some headscratching round OTR’s way. Firstly, there’s Elvis Costello & The Imposters. Originally mooted for the Grand Canal Theatre, his Revolver show (featuring a Spectacular Spinning Songbook big wheel along the same lines to the one which EC had when he played the Olympia back in 1986) will now be pulling up to the O2 on May 9, with tickets ranging in price from €64.95 to €49.65 (plus TM charges). Then, there’s Simple Minds. They play Dublin’s Olympia on March 4 with a setlist focused on their first five albums (the good stuff before they got stadiumitis). Tickets for this one are €44.05 (plus TM fees).

    Even though the capacity of the O2 will be “limited” to 4,000 (“an intimate theatre setting” which will hopefully mean you won’t be wondering why three-quarters of the venue is empty), is there really that sort of demand to see Costello in Dublin in 2011? Previously, he has played venues like Vicar Street (2010), National Stadium (2001), National Concert Hall (1999) and Olympia (passim). While the Revolver show has been getting rave reviews in the United States, it’s hard to see how he’s going to pull in the numbers to make this one work. Even the Grand Canal Theatre, a venue which many are still unsure about when it comes to its suitability for live music, would have been a bit of a stretch, seeing as his last Vicar Street show was not sold out.

    By contrast, I’d say the Olympia will be hopping for Jim Kerr and co. There’s a bit of a Simple Minds’ revival at present – dude, go listen to The Horrors or Wu Lyf albums again – and they, like EC, seem to realise that the audience want to hear the old stuff. The Olympia is just right to accommodate the current fanbase (like the Sisters of Mercy the other week, you don’t have to do any work to appeal beyond the heartland) and a barnstorming gig in downtown Dublin will generate enough postive word of mouth to ensure an upgrade on a future visit. Sure, Simple Minds have played bigger gaffs in the city – they filled Croke Park back in 1986, for instance – but they seem to recognise that those days are over.

    It will be interesting to see what happens with the Costello show. Maybe I’m wrong and there are 4,000 people out there willing to shell out for those tickets and see Costello play the hits. Maybe there’s a Lenny Cohen-like moment about to happen for EC (Lenny has a new album coming out in January so what chances another visit by him here in 2012?). But unlike Cohen, there have been ample opportunities to see Costello of late (he played Sligo and Belfast earlier this year, after all). It’s a weird call, EC at the O2, so we’ll watch this space with interest and prepare to be proven wrong. At least, the dude isn’t trying to shift any VIP Experience tickets for this one (yet).

  • Takes more than a tweet to get new music fans motivated

    November 18, 2011 @ 10:00 am | by Jim Carroll

    So where do you go discover new music in 2011? At a time of infinite choice for new releases and acts, and where discovery of new sounds is the meme of the moment, it’s a question which pops up again and again, as all involved seek to hone in on the filters which matter.

    You might think, for instance, that a social media shining star like Twitter would be top of the pile when it came to music recommendations. Hence, why so many bands use their Twitter feeds to bombard people about their every move.

    Yet the recent survey by NPD/NARM on consumers and music discovery showed that Twitter is way down the list of reliable sources behind word-of-mouth recommendations, radio, TV, iTunes, YouTube and others.

    It’s not news which will please the kool-aid drinkers in the social media cabal, but it won’t surprise astute observers who realise it takes more than a tweet to get people motivated. It’s also not surprising that a majority of respondents aren’t terribly interested in new music to begin with, unless it’s new music from acts they already know about.

    But it’s obvious from the survey’s findings that it’s not just acts who find wading through the new rules of music discovery to be an onerous task. Music fans too are overwhelmed by all the channels to choose from. Add blogs, websites and traditional media to the pot and you’ve a stew of sources to filter before you even begin to find new bands you like.

    It really comes down to trust. Most new music fans and writers have a reliable list of online and offline sources and those recommendations are their first port of call. The trick for acts and labels is working out how to influence these. Time, perhaps, for another survey?

  • Google Music enters the fray

    November 17, 2011 @ 9:07 am | by Jim Carroll

    We have a new player on the digital music pitch. Google Music unveiled its wares yesterday as it crossed its fingers and hoped to win over users from the plethora of other download and streaming services already making merry – and money – in the market.

    Currently only available in the United States (it will probably reach Ireland at the end of the decade if the previous long delays encountered with the iTunes store and Spotify are any guide), Google Music offers streaming, a music store and – natch – social media. Users can upload up to 20,000 tunes to the Google Music cloud and stream them to all their devices from there. The Google Music store, which has been incorporated into the Android app market, already has a couple of million tracks thanks to deals with Universal, Sony and EMI, the Merlin indie network and a number of independent distributors. There’s also couple of exclusive live EPs and albums from The Rolling Stones, Pearl Jam, Dave Mathews Band and Coldplay to mark the launch if you’re into that sort of thing.

    For acts, there’s the opportunity to set up bespoke pages using the Google Music Artist Hub (there is an one-off $25 registration fee) and upload, stream, sell direct to fans and set the price while they’re at it, with 70 per cent of each sale going to the artist. And if you’re on Google+ (hands up if you are please, because it doesn’t currently seem to have much traction from where I’m sitting), you can share purchased songs with friends who are also on that social network.

    Google Music is entering a crowded, diverse market. While they have the big advantage of name recognition from the gargantuan Google machine, they are playing catch-up from the start not just against the big guns like Apple and Amazon but also other services like Spotify, Pandora, (the slightly maverick) Grooveshark and hundreds of others. But just as there were once hundreds and thousands of High Street record shops, it’s inevitable that we’ll have more online outlets too.

    It means another channel for artists to exploit and try to make some cash from, so it will be telling to see if it becomes a big revenue source for acts, especially those disgruntled with what’s on offer from other services. Given the disquiet many are showing about the cash they’re getting from Spotify, for instance, (over 200 techno, dubstep, grime and electronic music labels distributed by STHoldings quit the streaming service yesterday citing “poor revenues” and a “detrimental affect on sales”), Google Music gives them the chance to set their own prices.

    However, it also means that the consumer will now have the chance to choose between players like the market leader iTunes, the upstart with the big mo Spotify and the new kid on the block. While labels might feel that they’re not getting enough cash from Spotify compared to what they get from paid-for downloads or used to from physical sales, this is now the way of the walk and, as we know, there’s no going back to how things were. Now, it’s the customer who is king and who has an a la carte menu of music services to choose from. Expect surveys in about six months’ time about why punters are going with one service over the other and keep a look out for whether price or ease-of-use is the bigger consideration.

  • The big 3 – or why EMI to UMG means SFA

    November 15, 2011 @ 8:21 am | by Jim Carroll

    The deal has been done and now, there’s just three major labels stalking the landscape. It’s like a scene from one of those dinosaur films – first, there was five, then there was four and now there is three! – and we all know what happened to the dinosaurs in the end (Who’s next? Will the Warnermusicsaur fail to keep pace and end up getting eaten by the Sonyopod?) Anyway, back to the boardroom. Universal Music Group has paid £1.2 billion to Citigroup to acquire EMI’s recorded music divisions. The publishing side of the EMI house has gone to Sony for $2.2 billion. We’re waiting for the regulators to run the rule over the deal – legal eagles to the left, legal eagles to the right – and there will be a ton of questions to be asked and answered by the analysts about the value in all of this. But it’s fair to say that everyone (bar those EMI employees who are probably going to lose their jobs in the shake-up to come) is happy. Right? Of course, there’s always one….

    Really, it’s the kind of deal which makes me do a Vinnie Browne and sigh a bit because the emphasis is all wrong. These transactions are from the mergers and acquistions playbook, a case of a big swinging dick acquiring a catalogue because there’s cash on the balance sheet to throw around and make their bottom line look larger. No talk of spending that money on some kind of creative R&D. No chance of using that cash to nurture and develop new talent. No way that money will be used to create new opportunities. Nope, just another step down the inevitable road to major labels as catalogue pimps, a bunch of fast-talking spivs in bad suits flogging their warehouse of recordings to anyone who wants to do a deal with them. You want The Beatles, Coldplay or Lily Allen for your new-fangled iPadymajig? You want to go back to giving away CDs with newspapers? You want to give us some cash for your new streaming service? Come to UMG, baby! We’ve got big love for you, pappy.

    The real creative work, as is now the norm, happens way beyond what happens at the top of the major universe. There are still labels and players in the game – and better still, getting into the game – who realise that the major label model stopped functioning in October 1999 (or was it 1998?). There’s no imagination or insights to be had at major labels any more, no mavericks seeking to cause some mischief, no weirdbeard flights of fancy because it’s a music company and that’s what you’re supposed to do at a music company. All of that carry-on is discouraged. Instead, the bean-counters have won the culture wars and anyone who wants to make a difference goes to work somewhere else (or work for themselves). Best for sharp players to think of the majors as a giant ATM machine, which will occasionally take you out for a swanky lunch in a one-star Michelin restaurant or snazzy sushi place.

    But there will always be a place for the major labels because they have their hands on the collateral in the shape of back-catalogue and still have some seed capital to invest on pre-proven talent like Real Madrid in their galactico pomp. Yet for all this, these labels will increasingly not be the ones who will produce and develop the next megastars. When the question is asked about where these stars are going to come from, the answer won’t be the major labels. Oh sure, they’ll fluke the odd Lady Gaga due to sheer marketing muscle, but the real sustainable careers won’t come from that quarter because the majors have lost the mojo to develop talent into long-term careers. See, moulding talent takes time and the majors in general, despite the fact that there are still some very fine people working there who do know what has to be done, just don’t have time to give that time. It’s about shareholder value, short-term gains, quarterly values and getting the first album in the shops (well, “shop”) for Christmas. The act? Do they really care about the act any more?

    You have to hope that the act care enough about themselves to realise the major label game is up. It used to be part of an act’s gameplan to get the big record deal and live happily ever afterwards. Now, you wonder if an act who have that paragraph in their plans know what they’re on about. Why sign to one of the Big 3 and give up all your freedom and control? Why do a development deal with one of these lads when the chances are it will come to nowt?

    Sure, it’s good to have someone else paying the bills and you may think it’s free money but remember (a) you have to pay back that cash before you turn a profit, (b) the bill-paying does come to an end at some point and (c) if you’re serious about having a long-term, sustainable career, you don’t really want to be in hock to a major label’s accounting department. The major label deal is really for those jokers who are just looking for a bit of fun before they go off to become auctioneers or accountants or, worse, those numpties who have hired permanent establishment advisers who only know the major label route to market. Those who want to have a career out of making music won’t be going down that road. Maybe an one-off licensing deal in time when the money is required to up the ante, maybe a nice dinner when you want one, but sign away your work to the catalogue pimps? Think about what happened to the dinosaurs.


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