[Dixielandjazz] CD Sales Woes - Paul McCartney's response.
Marek Boym
marekboym at gmail.com
Wed May 30 14:45:18 PDT 2007
Hello Steve, listmates,
As regards "burnt" CDs, they might prove unstable. Some time ago, a
friend gave another friend a CD. I borrowed it and tried to play it
the other, and it just wouldn't! Moreover, the dispaly indicated a
blank disk. Until then, I didn't even realize it was "burnt," as he
printed all the information, and the cover, so that it looked like an
original commercial one.
in 1996, I asked an Edinburgh cornet player whether he had any CDs to
sell. He said yes, and gave me one. As I already had the material on
a commercial cassette I had bought from him a few years earlier, I
gave the CD to a friend. Apparently, the band had copied the cassette
on writable blank CDs; my friend tried it a few weeks ago, and it not
only would not play, but caused trouble with the CDplayer: it would
not react to the "open" command, and the only way to get it out was to
turn the CD player off, and then on again.
So, while copying CDs is spreading, it is likely to leave the jazz fan
disappointed after a while (I do not lknow whether that cannot happen
with commercial CDs).
Cheers
On 29/05/07, Steve Barbone <barbonestreet at earthlink.net> wrote:
> "It's a new world" said Paul McCartney when announcing his new CD album
> would be released (June 5th) via Starbucks rather than EMI.
>
> Especially with CD sales down 20% year to date vs. 2006. Besides digital
> downloads, file sharing and/or duplicating CDs for one's friends on a
> computer is the prime cause of the decline. It appears that 50% of the music
> heard or collected by the audience today was acquired at no cost.
>
> It trickles over to OKOM CD sales also. How many band leaders (besides me)
> have heard from fans that they copied your CD and sent them to friends?
>
> Cheers,
> Steve Barbone
>
>
>
> Plunge in CD Sales Shakes Up Big Labels
>
> NY TIMES - By JEFF LEEDS - May 28, 2007
>
> ³Sgt. Pepper¹s Lonely Hearts Club Band,² the Beatles album often cited as
> the greatest pop recording in music history, received a thoroughly modern
> 40th-anniversary salute last week when singers on ³American Idol² belted out
> their own versions of its songs live on the show¹s season finale.
>
> But off stage, in a sign of the recording industry¹s declining fortunes,
> shareholders of EMI, the music conglomerate that markets ³Sgt. Pepper² and a
> vast trove of other recordings, were weighing a plan to sell the company as
> its financial performance was weakening.
>
> It¹s a maddening juxtaposition for more than one top record-label executive.
> Music may still be a big force in pop culture ‹ from ³Idol² to the iPod ‹
> but the music business¹s own comeback attempt is falling flat.
>
> Even pop¹s pioneers are rethinking their approach. As it happens, one of the
> performers on ³Sgt. Pepper,² Paul McCartney, is releasing a new album on
> June 5. But Mr. McCartney is not betting on the traditional record-label
> methods: He elected to sidestep EMI, his longtime home, and release the
> album through a new arrangement with Starbucks.
>
> It¹s too soon to tell if Starbucks¹ new label (a partnership with the
> established Concord label) will have much success in marketing CDs. But not
> many other players are.
>
> Despite costly efforts to build buzz around new talent and thwart piracy, CD
> sales have plunged more than 20 percent this year, far outweighing any gains
> made by digital sales at iTunes and similar services. Aram Sinnreich, a
> media industry consultant at Radar Research in Los Angeles, said the CD
> format, introduced in the United States 24 years ago, is in its death
> throes. ³Everyone in the industry thinks of this Christmas as the last big
> holiday season for CD sales,² Mr. Sinnreich said, ³and then everything goes
> kaput.²
>
> It¹s been four years since the last big shuffle in ownership of the major
> record labels. But now, with the sales plunge dimming hopes for a recovery
> any time soon, there is a new game of corporate musical chairs afoot that
> could shake up the industry hierarchy.
>
> Under the deal that awaits shareholder approval, London-based EMI agreed
> last week to be purchased for more than $4.7 billion by a private equity
> investor, Terra Firma Capital Partners, whose diverse holdings include a
> European waste-conversion business. Rival bids could yet surface ‹ though
> the higher the ultimate price, the more pressure the owners will face to
> make dramatic cuts or sell the company in pieces in order to recoup their
> investment.
>
> For the companies that choose to plow ahead, the question is how to weather
> the worsening storm. One answer: diversify into businesses that do not rely
> directly on CD sales or downloads. The biggest one is music publishing,
> which represents songwriters (who may or may not also be performers) and
> earns money when their songs are used in TV commercials, video games or
> other media. Universal Music Group, already the biggest label, became the
> world¹s biggest music publisher on Friday after closing its purchase of BMG
> Music, publisher of songs by artists like Keane, for more than $2 billion.
>
> Now both Universal and Warner Music Group are said to be kicking the tires
> of Sanctuary, an independent British music and artist management company
> whose roster includes Iron Maiden and Elton John. The owners of all four of
> the major record companies also recently have chewed over deals to diversify
> into merchandise sales, concert tickets, advertising and other fields that
> are not part of their traditional business.
>
> Even as the industry tries to branch out, though, there is no promise of an
> answer to a potentially more profound predicament: a creative drought and a
> corresponding lack of artists who ignite consumers¹ interest in buying
> music. Sales of rap, which had provided the industry with a lifeboat in
> recent years, fell far more than the overall market last year with a drop of
> almost 21 percent, according to Nielsen SoundScan. (And the marquee star 50
> Cent just delayed his forthcoming album, ³Curtis.²)
>
> In other genres the picture is not much brighter. Fans do still turn out (at
> least initially) for artists that have managed to build loyal followings.
> The biggest debut of the year came just last week from the rock band Linkin
> Park, whose third studio album, ³Minutes to Midnight,² sold an estimated
> 623,000 copies, according to Nielsen SoundScan data.
>
> But very few albums have gained traction. And that is compounded by the
> industry¹s core structural problem: Its main product is widely available
> free. More than half of all music acquired by fans last year came from
> unpaid sources including Internet file sharing and CD burning, according to
> the market research company NPD Group. The ³social² ripping and burning of
> CDs among friends ‹ which takes place offline and almost entirely out of
> reach of industry policing efforts ‹ accounted for 37 percent of all music
> consumption, more than file-sharing, NPD said.
>
> The industry had long pinned its hopes on making up some of the business
> lost to piracy with licensed digital sales. But those prospects have dimmed
> as the rapid CD decline has overshadowed the rise in sales at services like
> Apple¹s iTunes. Even as music executives fret that iTunes has not generated
> enough sales, though, they gripe that it unfairly dominates the sale of
> digital music.
>
> Partly out of frustration with Apple, some of the music companies have been
> slowly retreating from their longtime insistence on selling music online
> with digital locks that prevent unlimited copying. Their aim is to sell more
> music that can be played on Apple¹s wildly popular iPod device, which is not
> compatible with the protection software used by most other digital music
> services. EMI led the reversal, striking a deal with Apple to offer its
> music catalog in the unrestricted MP3 format.
>
> Some music executives say that dropping copy-restriction software, also
> known as digital-rights management, would stoke business at iTunes¹
> competitors and generate a surge in sales. Others predict it would have
> little impact, though they add that the labels squandered years on failed
> attempts to restrict digital music instead of converting more fans into
> paying consumers.
>
> ³They were so slow to react, and let things get totally out of hand,² said
> Russ Crupnick, a senior entertainment industry analyst at NPD, the research
> company. ³They just missed the boat.²
>
> Perhaps there is little to lose, then, in experimentation. Mr. McCartney,
> for example, may not have made it to the ³American Idol² finale, but he too
> is employing thoroughly modern techniques to reach his audience.
>
> Starbucks will be selling his album ³Memory Almost Full² through regular
> music retail shops but will also be playing it repeatedly in thousands of
> its coffee shops in more than two dozen countries on the day of release. And
> the first music video from the new album had its premiere on YouTube. Mr.
> McCartney, in announcing his deal with Starbucks, described his rationale
> simply: ³It¹s a new world.²
>
>
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