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Sunday, May 19 2013 @ 08:27 PM CDT

Good-bye Corporate Pop

News ArchiveSubmitted by j1o2n3a4s5:

Good-bye Corporate Pop

1) The future of the online music business doesn't belong to the major labels: it belongs to the independents

2) For the first time, recording artists can control their creative works and, have a direct and interactive connection with music fans from around the world.

3) Europe will eventually usurp the US in online music sales to become the world leader in online music sales.

These are the three central themes in a new DEMO ( Digital & Electronic Music Organization) report from founder Andre Gray, a Johannes Gutenberg Inventor Prize award winner and the recipient of the Central American Science Association's Visionary Award.

Now read on >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

The DEMO Report 2004

By Andre Gray - Digital & Electronic Music Organization

When Tim Berners-Lee created the web, he envisioned a decentralized medium that would allow individuals to become independent publishers and approach art, science and commerce as distinctive but related fields, thus unleashing their unadulterated creativity. When musicians discovered the web in the early 1990's, it was apparent to them that they had finally found a medium that could quite possibly liberate them from the shackles of the music industry parasites. It did! For the last seventy years, the music industry has basically the same business model that allowed them to control the manufacturing and distribution of music. And the old adage in Hollywood concerning distribution is true: whoever gets their hands on the money first keeps most of it. For the very first time in music business history, the recording artists could have total control over their creative works and, at the same time, have a direct and interactive connection with music fans from around the world. This is, by far, the single biggest change the music industry has ever seen since the creation of rock 'n roll and the emergence of youth culture itself. It is also the end of an era for the music business as we know it. And for musicians the world over, this is an excellent epoch. Because of the advent of both legal and illegal digital music, the music industry will no longer be centralized. The decentralization of the music industry is perhaps the greatest thing that can ever happen to musicians. It will also mark the end of superficial, corporate pop music as liberated musicians create music from their hearts, not for the sake of fleeting commercial success.


Many media and industry analysts have produced their year-end reports in which they praised the success of online music sales in 2003 and go on to make outlandish predictions for 2004 and beyond. And every time they make predictions about future growth of online music sales, most of them are missing a major point: the future of the online music business does not belong to the major labels; it belongs to the true independents led by pioneers like CDBaby.com, Garageband.com, IUMA.com, and hundreds of thousands (eventually millions) of other independents. It's easy to see. Instead of signing with a major label, aspiring musicians will opt for selling their music over the web and they do not necessarily need to go to a major player in order to do so. There are quite a few alternatives available on the web that allow musicians to create their own stores for a nominal fee. The major labels all have excellent catalogs to ensure strong online music sales. But, let's face it, independent musicians can and will create their own catalogs as time goes by.


Even though the United States of America is currently leading the world in online music sales, it is Europe who will be the eventual and perennial world leader in online music sales for many decades to come. No one company, or hand-full of companies, will control Europe; rather, she will have several different major players in each country and hundreds of thousands independent musicians collectively outselling the majors. Unlike North America, Europe will also offer a greater selection of genres and subgenres of music, not only from their own continent but from around the world.


This will cause major players to make serious attempts to transmute their cartel practices from bricks and mortar to the Internet by seeking to form unions, useless industry trade groups, and ultimately, try to have laws passed that would make it cost prohibitive (if not illegal) for independent musicians to sell their music over the web.


The digital music revolution could also spell the end of the album as an art form and the return to singles as a significant seller. In fact, online singles sales for 2003 in North America outsold singles sold through bricks and mortar by a ratio of five to one. The global music industry is also in its third consecutive year of CD sales decline forcing many independent record distributors and record store chains to file for bankruptcy. Mergers and acquisitions is not the answer for surviving the music business in the 21st century. Embracing technological change as a necessity, treating musicians fairly and valuing the music buying consumers is an excellent starting point.
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Good-bye Corporate Pop | 6 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
comment by Reverend Chuck0
Authored by: Anonymous on Wednesday, February 04 2004 @ 03:39 PM CST
To the person who submitted this story: You consistently leave off the source and/or attribution of these stories. These are interesting stories, but we just can\'t approve content that isn\'t sourced properly. Please remember to include the source/author of these stories in the future.
comment by
Authored by: Anonymous on Wednesday, February 04 2004 @ 04:28 PM CST
i have always sourced, i just didn\'t put the name figured you could follow the source if you were that interested.
comment by Reverend Chuck0
Authored by: Anonymous on Wednesday, February 04 2004 @ 05:22 PM CST
The author of the story has to be included. We\'ve already gotten complaints in the past from authors whose names were left off of your posts. We really appreciate your submissions, but we wanted to communicate this minor thing. Thanks!
comment by
Authored by: Anonymous on Wednesday, February 04 2004 @ 07:10 PM CST
ok will do , what about that focus on file sharing thing we talked about before? can we move forward on the organization of that?
comment by Reverend Chuck0
Authored by: Anonymous on Wednesday, February 04 2004 @ 08:14 PM CST
I have that in my inbox somewhere. If you drop me an e-mail, I\'ll be able to find it and add that information to the page. Believe me, it\'s been on my mind to do.
comment by Otis
Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, February 05 2004 @ 09:51 AM CST
I\'m very excited about what\'s happening to the music business. Five years ago, HMV was one of the most-visited stores among people I know... now, it\'s probably near the bottom of the list. Major labels and retail outlets have been screwing everyone (artists and audiences) for so long, and all of a sudden they\'re just outright fucked... I used to steal major label music, but now I almost exclusively download independent stuff, put out by the artists themselves... it\'s much higher quality music, too. The stuff being pushed as rock these days is pathetic, mainstream rap is as terrible as mainstream rap ever was, and mainstream electronic music isn\'t even worth talking about.