Jeff Carey on 25 Jul 2000 00:32:19 -0000 |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
[Nettime-bold] RE: <nettime> Terror in Tune Town |
It should be noted that recording/performing artists don't make much money on a release of their music by most labels - major or minor. An awesome deal for a young band might be to get 8 percent of profits on their record (after the label recoups its investment). Many times the label wont recoup its investment and the artist doesn't get paid. Another tricky thing for labels to put in contracts is to shoulder the artist/band with the risk. In these cases the artist will actually be taking a 'loan' that they have to pay back when the record sales aren't high enough to recoup the manufacturing and production costs. Why do people think that bands make money on records? Even the mega-radio play bands will concede this point: records are for exposure to get people to come to concerts. Concerts are where the money is. Bands on major and minor labels alike make the most money from their loyal fans who show up to their concerts and pay $10-50 at the door and another $10-30 on a t-shirt (enterprising bands will come up with a whole line of merchandise to sell). Money from the venues and merchandise sales goes directly to the artists in most cases. Of course there is often a overhead for agents/managers/roadies etc. But for the most part a large chunck of that money actually makes it to the artist. If you are lucky enough to write music that somehow appeals to 80% of the world and a record company knows it, you will have more bargaining power with your record company. You also get a little more bargaining power when several labels are interested in putting your music out. Even still you might get a deal where you get 10% of profits on record sales and ownership of your music after a certain period of time - after which you are free to reproduce the release yourself. At this point you will see the profit from the record if the market hasn't already been saturated with the release and people are still interested in buying it. You can bet that the label is going to exhaust every last dollar of disposable income it can though. Good luck if you think that you are going to be discovered making recordings in your basement studio. There are at least 100 bands out there doing what you do. They are also trying to get the attention of the same labels and audience. The bands that make money from working with major labels are rare. Like 1% of bands get radio airplay and subsequent income from the exposure. After your record goes triple platinum the percentage of the profits becomes significant. Then you can write an album and demand ownership of the music and a bigger cut of the profit. But, that is for a rare bunch of bands. For Metallica, Foo Fighters, U2, Maria Carey, Madonna, etc - they are going to have to find another way to get that extra couple million from somewhere other than record sales. However, lets not forget the killing that they are making selling tshirts, books with half naked pictures of themselves, other merchandising, and - oh yeah - touring. I don't think that digital reproduction is going to make a lick of difference to anyone but the recording industry as far as profitability is concerned - and even that is debateable. Lets take a stroll down memory lane to see some of the existing models: Audio Cassette, Beta/VHS video, CDR technologies. The audio cassette was going to encourage wholesale pirating of music and the music industry was going to collapse - record labels still exist and traditional distribution methods are still intact. Home video was going to put the film industry and movie houses out of business - people are still going out to see movies on large screens - even bad movies. CDR technology threatens both CD audio and DVD/VCD video production and distributions but we are still gobbing up music and movies as fast as we can buy them. Its not like the recording/distribution industry didn't hear the age of network technology coming. I can remember hearing about the digital distribution of recordings directly to record stores for manufacture and sales as far back as 1990. If I can get wind of this via industry channels working as a clerk at Tower Records - you've got be kidding me if the rest of the industry hasn't known that change was coming. ...but now I'm arguing a secondary point - sorry, I'll stop. Artists have always been starving. Remember? Now that we have digital distribution, there will be a larger audience at any given locality to pay to see a performance. Then maybe artists can reclaim some of the profits on their hard work, because often times they aren't being paid well, if at all, by their record company. Jeff http://www.radiantslab.com > > But what about the artists? > > Who, after all, really gets screwed when no one is able to make a living > from their art? The lawyers and MBAs who run the record companies won't > have a problem getting another job. But the musicians and performing > artists will see a hard living become even harder when a primary source of > support is removed via widespread theft. > _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold