April music / band / artist promotion news and views
April Update: music / band / artist promotion news and bits
Hey all been so busy recently just a quick round up of some of the most interesting commentary on the digital promotion and digital music front
Awesome new blog series warming up from our very own kiwi online music guru, Andrew Dubber at http://www.newmusicstrategies.com
Answers to 100 questions he gets asked about music and the internet regularly . . . looks like it’s gonna get good, so check it out.
BOB BAKER ON THE JAY-Z / LIVE NATION 150M deal:
Ask yourself these questions …
- Where is there an intersection between my style of music, my fans, and the supporters of a business or organization?
- In what way could I use my music to help a company connect more with its customers?
- And how might they help me in return?
It’s an amazing era. So ask the right questions … and you might get some amazing answers!
BOB LEFSETZ ON THE MYSPACE MUSIC DEAL:
If this had happened even one year ago, it would be considered a big deal. But at this point, with iMeem streaming music, with music available free, with major labels having less power than ever before, it merits little more than a shrug.
Now Mark Zuckerberg [Facebook] may have been revealed to be a barely pubescent money-hungry twerp who doesn’t really care about his users . . .
For those who haven’t heard, Myspace Music will be relaunched in a few months all kitted out to make money selling stuff – downloads etc,and through ads etc. the point is that all the majors are on board and common dissent suggests, everything that once was great about myspace being a place where little guys still had an opportunity will be compromised as fox network, Myspace’s parent company, plays to the majors desire to head off Apple Itunes domination of the download market and online revenue.
I think what we’ve got to be ready for is that the computer industry could swallow the music industry whole at any point, and that’s what I’m preparing for!
Things could totally change very quickly if Apple or other Tech companies decide they want to play hard ball with the music industry. Vodafone is now selling more singles in New Zealand than anybody else and bloggers around the world are talking about it . . .
Which should be proof enough that changes are underway and yet the government agencies, established local labels, artist platforms such as amplifier and the artists themselves lag behind in their efforts to create a dynamic online environment for New Zealand music.
This obviously doesn’t concern me a GREAT deal because over 80% of my client based is overseas.
Here’s another exceprt. I’m sorry. I know I should be working harder to credit my sources!!!!
“Whenever writers try to explain the collapse of the music industry, they inevitably blame the labels themselves; they point out how wasteful and inefficient the corporate structure was at places like Elektra and Chrysalis, and how unfair it is to charge kids so many dollars for a disc that costs pennies to make, and that modern consumers have come to the realization that ‘music longs to be free.’ This may all be true, but I’m not sure it’s a viable explanation for things like huge layoffs at Def Jam. Lots of industries succeed despite being poorly modeled. What happened is this: Young people needed more money to pay for their rising levels of self-imposed debt, so they unconsciously gravitated toward the first technology that provided a cost-saving alternative. Because four-minute digital-song files are relatively small (and thus easily compressed), ripping tracks for free became the easiest way to eliminate an extraneous cost. It wasn’t political or countercultural, and it had almost nothing to do with music itself. It was fiscally practical. It was the first, best solution.
People didn’t stop buying albums because they were philosophically opposed to how the rock business operated, and they didn’t stop buying albums because the Internet is changing the relationship between capitalism and art. People stopped buying albums because they wanted the fucking money. It’s complicated, but it’s not.”
This is why at kurb im always on about alternative revenue. Things are going to get real sad for parts of the industry soon, all the money caught up in the sale of copies is just going to disappear.
A lot of businesses that don’t adapt will go bust and people are going to lose their jobs. I’m not sure whether or not many music industry bloggers know it, but they sure don’t mention it.
I make CD’s and DVD’s for a living. I know all about CD’s, I know I will still make CD’s for a few years yet, but there will be no success stories about bands that sell lots of songs. Downloads, CD’s or otherwise.
The success stories will be about the bands that found some other way to create value and get out there. And the musicians who eat will be the ones who found a hundred different ways and things to sell to make a dollar.
interesting feature at Portfolio.com
Future Pop by Jeff Yang
Mar 27 2008: CDs are dead, and Korean impresario Jin-Young Park knows it. American music labels could learn a thing or two from the model he’s built in South Korea.
Highlights
“In meetings with music labels here, they talk to me about releasing albums,” says Park. “They can’t accept that there’s no such thing anymore. Where I come from, CDs are nothing—they’re just souvenirs. I tell them, ‘Wake up!’”
“In South Korea, where Park is building a new kind of music-business model, 80 percent of households have a broadband connection; downloads via both PCs and cell phones make up an overwhelming share of the nation’s music market. Download revenue there has soared 422 percent since 2000, to $366 million, while CD sales have declined 83 percent over the same period to just $70 million in 2007….”
Read this and say YES:
“It’s the artist as brand: In Korea, consumers don’t buy music; they buy a product relationship that reaches across every media platform and entertainment genre…”
“Fans of the group can buy tickets for their live concerts at $110 a pop; purchase a growing array of their merchandise (the names and faces of top K-pop stars adorn everything from $5 phone cards to $500 cell phones and music players); download ringtones featuring their songs ($2); and even make bids on a charity auction for a dinner date with the girls on the popular social-networking site CyWorld (five fans paid between $3,800 and $6,000 for the privilege last year). And if all that’s not enough, fans can always tune in to the Wonder Girls’ reality TV series, now in its third season as one of MTV Korea’s top-rated programs…”
CHEEEERSS
Kurb is a New Zealand based media promotions company providing a regular blog on digital promotion, marketing digital content and creating revenue from new media online.
Kurb also provides online promotion and revenue management services for musicians and artists internationally.CD / DVD duplication and poster services. Our physical media services come with free graphic set up and support, free delivery, and free promotions advice and support for musicians.
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April 14, 2008 - Posted by Matt Turner | New Zealand related, artist management, monetizing, music promotion, myspace promotion, online promotion, web 2.0 | artist promotion, band promotion, Bob Baker, Bob lefsetz, digital products, digital promotion, downloads, jay z, live nation, music industry, music promotion, myspace music, New Music Strategies | No Comments Yet
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MUSIC MARKETING @ KURB
Kurb is an online promotion company specializing in digital music marketing and artist management.
We've moved! Follow our Music, Marketing and Management Blog here for cutting edge web promotion, putting artists in control of their online marketing and revenue management.
Within New Zealand we also provide low cost and hassle free CD DVD duplication as well as poster design print and placement in Auckland.
kurbpromo@gmail.com
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