In the growing market for digital music downloads and related services, the companies who can provide the tech have to pay huge sums of cash to get label support. In the last year we have seen the music industry more forward by providing music downloads without Digital Rights Management (DRM) and to back services that allow users to consume music for free with advertisement support.
However, ... [ read the full article ]
Please read the original article before posting your comments.
Originally posted by above hyperlink:SONY BMG MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT, one of the world's leading record companies and owner of a number of major record labels, has agreed to stop making payments and providing expensive gifts to radio stations and their employees in return for "airplay" for the company's songs.
Originally posted by above hyperlink: "the big infrastructure of the music business has not addressed the way artists communicate directly with their fans. In fact, they seem to basically get in the way. Not only do they get in the way, but they take all the cash."
Originally posted by above hyperlink: Look at the information on SoundExchange.com (RIAA created SoundExchange) and see how it works. The RIAA has secured legal authority to administer a compulsory license that covers all recorded music.
SoundExchange (the RIAA) considers any digital performance of a song as falling under their compulsory license. If any artist records a song, SoundExchange has the right to collect royalties for its performance on Internet radio. Artists can offer to download their music for free, but they cannot offer their songs to Internet radio for free.
So how it works is that SoundExchange collects money through compulsory royalties from Webcasters and holds onto the money. If a label or artist wants their share of the money, they must become a member of SoundExchange and pay a fee to collect their royalties. But, and this is a big "but," you only get royalties if you own the sound recording copyright. If you are signed to a major label, chances are you don?t. Even if you do own the copyright to your own recording of your own song, SoundExchange will collect Internet radio royalties for your song even if you don?t want them to do so.
Originally posted by above hyperlink: The musician T-Bone Burnett once explained to me that the standard record deal gives artists seven percent royalties on sales and fifty percent royalties on licenses. However, when artists get paid by their labels for iTunes downloads, they're only paid the seven percent sales royalty, despite the fact that the record companies keep telling courts, Congress and customers that a download is not a sale, it's only a license, and don't you dare try to resell your music, loan it, or give it away -- all stuff you're allowed to do with purchased goods.
boycott their anti consumer, talentless, auto-tuned, manufactured crap! Please ppl i implore you to stop these four big companies making all the rules and blocking talented works from getting air play, don't let them establish their greasy hands on the internet and become the total gatekeepers once more by blocking indie music from air play.
Millions paid to carry the music. Millions more to sell it. No wonder P2P still lives. No new company can get started AND stay in business with these rates. And on top of it, the artists don't even get much of it like nobrainer says. It's all wrong.
these racketeers have to be stopped.
this is more of the same attempts to stomp out the new format they don't like.
i personally boycott their music.
every now and then i hear something i like and pissed
when i find out they're on an riaa member label so i can't buy.
really, i'd like to pay money to a couple of such artists.
i seek out good music that is independently produced/distributed.
i'm not very good at it, but that's the point; it shouldn't be that difficult.
everyone by now should know that there are far more talented artists than the top 40.
they may not know is that now independently produced music is often very well-mastered.
in other words, in my experience, independent productions are of comparable quality,
if not better quality, as riaa-member-produced recordings.
The only remorse I feel is towards those that started the business under "false pretenses" which inevitably would wind up in a legal battle that the labels would lose, and therefore, probably not happening that often. You start a business knowing the details and having done market and industry research. If you didn't, well then lesson learned! Don't try to be a "big business" just because everyone else is "doing it" and get into something you weren't really looking to get into just to be a part of the "music downloading group". Spiral Frog is a prime example of a follower and not a leader.
Personally (and I think many would agree) just let the already-established big boys continue on doing what they're doing and the remaining consumers that DON'T partake in "pay for what you download" will most certainly continue to to take advantage of the Torrent networks, Bearshare, etc. Those are really the only two industries now.................pay for it or use your GOD-given knowledge to circumvent.