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#289142 - 06/14/10 10:48 PM
O/T: Radiohead Frontman Warns Music Labels will Die Soon
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Senior Member
Registered: 03/28/02
Posts: 2815
Loc: Xingyi, Guizhou (China)
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Thom Yorke, Radiohead Frontman, warns young musicians should avoid getting tied with record labels, as they remind him of sinking ships, and says the world wont notice their loss. Thom Yorke is long known for criticizing the entertainment industry excesses, and now he comes with addressing to emerging musicians in his new textbook for GCSE Citizenship Studies students, where he shares advice not to get too entangled with collapsing music industry.
In fact, record studios have been sinking since music became digital and this form of it undermined the stranglehold on methods of distribution. So music labels turned out to be bad marketing companies that found themselves not corresponding to a modern digital world where the artists are allowed to both market and distribute themselves without record labels participation and almost for free.
Radiohead has always been the pioneer among the new music industry trends, starting with shocking the public 3 years ago when the band released its new album In Rainbows in the Internet directly to their fans, allowing people to choose the price they are ready to pay for the CD. This of course made music labels nervous, alongside with some industry members holding the conservative position, like U2 band manager calling the plan backfired, and Kiss frontman saying Radiohead is on crack.
Fellow bandmate Ed OBrien, the member of the Board of Directors of the Featured Artists Coalition, joins Tom Yorke, believing that it will be just a matter of time (and most likely months rather than years) for the music labels to sink like holey ships.
Featured Artists Coalition is dedicated to assisting artists take control of their future and works, and profit from the possibilities presented by digital world. In other words, they are trying to create a reality where musicians would finally get paid for their works, but they feel themselves disagreeing with the self-protecting interests of the entertainment industry.
What Yorke is trying to deliver to the artists is that record labels are a distinct entity of the industry with their own aims, which are most often profits. In these terms they only see a musician as a source for making revenue. Thats why Yorke is sure that the collapse of music labels wont be a big concern for fans who rather care about the quality of music.
------------------ Bo pen nyang.
_________________________
最猖獗的人权侵犯 者讨论其他国 家的人权局势而忽略本国严重的人权 问题是何等伪善。
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#289143 - 06/15/10 12:44 PM
Re: O/T: Radiohead Frontman Warns Music Labels will Die Soon
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Senior Member
Registered: 03/02/06
Posts: 7143
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#289145 - 06/15/10 07:26 PM
Re: O/T: Radiohead Frontman Warns Music Labels will Die Soon
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14294
Loc: NW Florida
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The problem becomes, though, if the sale and distribution of music becomes the sole responsibility of the artists themselves, where does the power to enforce legislation to prevent theft and copyright infringement come from? At the moment, the labels are the ONLY people with enough clout to try and pressure legislation and influence link sites to prevent wholesale theft of music (which is ALL digitally distributed and prone to theft, nowadays). I fail to see how any of you buy into the 'big, bad label' theory. Let's face it, if a label COULD afford to pay the artist what they think they deserve, surely one of these musicians would have started one by now? It's a LOT more expensive to do than you all think. If it wasn't, there would be NO 'predatory' labels. No-one would sign with them... It's called the Music 'Business' for a reason... it IS a business. And, if there's one thing that history has shown us time after time, musicians make TERRIBLE businessmen! Look at the Beatles and Apple... I'm sorry to burst anyone's bubble, but the labels aren't the monster we WANT to make them out to be. They are no more 'evil' than the boards of any large corporation, and we aren't espousing that the means of manufacture be placed in the hands of the worker, are we? Look how well that worked in the Soviet Union! Capitalism allows any of us, if we think we can do a better job than current businesses, to start our own. And, if we do a better job than they, we succeed and they fail. This has been TRIED in the music industry. And the inevitable result is either failure, or turning into what we reviled in the first place (because the bottom line demands it). Look at A&M Records, or any other musician started label... Someone, somewhere, HATES them as much as Sony or any other big label! But with the world addicted to free music, stolen from those who worked long and hard for it (whether by themselves or with a label), who is going to stand up for the artist? Artists NEED labels, now more than ever... Unless fame alone, with little monetary compensation, is all they should now expect. Seems to me that the general public is shafting musicians more than any label EVER did...
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#289147 - 06/16/10 10:47 AM
Re: O/T: Radiohead Frontman Warns Music Labels will Die Soon
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Senior Member
Registered: 03/02/06
Posts: 7143
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Originally posted by Diki: The problem becomes, though, if the sale and distribution of music becomes the sole responsibility of the artists themselves, where does the power to enforce legislation to prevent theft and copyright infringement come from? At the moment, the labels are the ONLY people with enough clout to try and pressure legislation and influence link sites to prevent wholesale theft of music (which is ALL digitally distributed and prone to theft, nowadays).
I fail to see how any of you buy into the 'big, bad label' theory. Let's face it, if a label COULD afford to pay the artist what they think they deserve, surely one of these musicians would have started one by now? It's a LOT more expensive to do than you all think. If it wasn't, there would be NO 'predatory' labels. No-one would sign with them...
It's called the Music 'Business' for a reason... it IS a business. And, if there's one thing that history has shown us time after time, musicians make TERRIBLE businessmen! Look at the Beatles and Apple...
I'm sorry to burst anyone's bubble, but the labels aren't the monster we WANT to make them out to be. They are no more 'evil' than the boards of any large corporation, and we aren't espousing that the means of manufacture be placed in the hands of the worker, are we? Look how well that worked in the Soviet Union!
Capitalism allows any of us, if we think we can do a better job than current businesses, to start our own. And, if we do a better job than they, we succeed and they fail. This has been TRIED in the music industry. And the inevitable result is either failure, or turning into what we reviled in the first place (because the bottom line demands it). Look at A&M Records, or any other musician started label... Someone, somewhere, HATES them as much as Sony or any other big label!
But with the world addicted to free music, stolen from those who worked long and hard for it (whether by themselves or with a label), who is going to stand up for the artist?
Artists NEED labels, now more than ever...
Unless fame alone, with little monetary compensation, is all they should now expect. Seems to me that the general public is shafting musicians more than any label EVER did...Lets see... now artists make a few cents for every CD they sell... Imagine Artists selling half the CD's they sell now because of more illegal copies and such, but making $7 a CD... No way that artists need record companies... Artists currently make 90% of their money from concerts, merchandise and addvertiements... and not from the CD's they sell.
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