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From:
Rick Strom
To:
Date:
Wed, 11 Jan 2006 00:41:26 -0800 (PST)
Subject:
[idm] why small labels die
Msg-Id:
<33236.68.171.55.65.1136968886.squirrel@68.171.55.65>
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<BFEA6DF4.19304%enquiries@eleventhvolume.com>
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quoted 3 lines anyone thought about there being a connection between>> anyone thought about there being a connection between >> mp3 downloading and inability (by labels) to sale >> physical product ?
I'm really surprised no one has pointed out that a lot of these dying labels have absolutely horrid business sense, and in many cases had become so incestuous it was ridiculous. Hardly an album pressed and offered up for sale anymore isn't by the label owner or one of his former schoolmates. I had typed up a long analysis for this list of the current state of things, back around August or so, but I ended up just sending it off to a friend instead. But among the things I griped about were a number of the labels we expect to bring us great music we'd probably not otherwise be privy to instead delivering the masturbatory crap they or their friends put together. Simultaneously, I saw an audience who had fallen into the same label-lust that the old big labels used to profit from endlessly, and still do I suppose. Discussion on this list and elsewhere seldom involved an artist who wasn't released on one of those precious labels, even though the artists who couldn't get a Merck or Neo Ouija or Skam or certainly Warp to hear them were doing great great stuff. What I predicted was that at some point it would have to give. At some point, the audience would get tired of it, and the labels, too swolen with "god damn we're k3wl" ego would fail to adjust. Want to hear that new XX Records release? Fuck it, their last 5 sucked, I'll download it first. Why take a chance? That's not a very clever prediction. That's exactly what happened with Big Music, just on a much smaller scale. Have a listen to some of the netradio you know about. Sistrum System has gotten really, _really_ good lately, and it didn't surprise me to see that something like 95% of the playlist is coming from netlabels -- free music that couldn't, for whatever reason, find a label to get behind it. Even the Russian music is blowing away the officially released stuff. Russian music! Who would have guessed? Cliqhop has been great too, too. Glowdot is the only one playing the label shit, and its old stuff, and even then that's only because I haven't updated it in 6 months, maybe more. There just hasn't been anything of interest to me. And the netlabel stuff is out there for download, so why stream it really? (especially when Systrum is doing such a good job). The short point is, I guess, let's not fall into that "mp3 killed..." excuse. Its no more true of idm than it was of Brittney Spears. If you feel like the labels are putting out quality albums, you want to support it. You buy it. I always have. If its shit, though.... I'm just done paying for so-and-so's friend's new album. No more. (I am sad to see Merck go, though) -- V, ~Rick Strom Glowdot Productions On Glowfoto: http://users.glowfoto.com/Strom ============================ Photo: http://www.glowfoto.com Music: http://www.glowdot.com Strom: http://www.rick-strom.com Code: http://www.stromcode.com --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org