The CD is dead! Long live the tour!

F

fmw

Audioholic Ninja
And yet the price of CD's is still 3 or 4 times what needs to be and could be. For some inexplicable reason, the businessmen in the record industry haven't learned the lessons that businessmen in all other industries have.

They are just content to milk the market for what they can as they ride it to its death. It is truly astounding.

I agree, it was an interesting article. Thanks for posting it.
 
S

stato

Junior Audioholic
An interesting read Nestor. The price of recorded music has been too high for too long. The record companies still dont get it and as the article says they will ride it into the ground. They will get what they deserve in the end.
 
davidtwotrees

davidtwotrees

Audioholic General
What do the artists have to say in all this?!

And yet, as someone who doesn't really download songs, and doesn't feint at the $15 price tag for a cd, I feel I am pretty objective about the whole quandry. So, this is the umpteenth article I've read on here that beats this same horse. It uses many convincing numbers to tell how evil the record co's are and how impoverished the musicians become under the evil empire and how the downtrodden consumers are getting taken. What I sense underneath it all is people who get much of their music for "free" trying to justify that behavior. Have the record companies behaved perfectly through all this? Probably not, they are acting like big corporations and beauracracies do-they are protective of the status quo and act in their interests. They tend to be bloated with layer after layer of employees, all trying to protect their slice of the pie.............just once I'd like to hear how the artist's feel about all this. Put up an article from the artist's perspective and let's hear what they have to say. They are the important cog in this wheel, imho. I can't sing, and I can play about 5 chords on a guitar......so I am motivated to buy musician's services. Things like amazon, myspace, youtube, and artist's personal websites are all things that are good about the industry, things I like about the industry. Frankly, I could care less about what happens to big corps like Sony........I do care what happens to artists and musicans as they make my world a bit better place to be.......can the musicians make a living the way things are going? Since the big beef here is that the record corps get $10 and the musicians get 50 cents on each disc, would you pay $15 a disc if the numbers were reveresed- the artist got $10 and the record co gets 50 cents?!
 
agarwalro

agarwalro

Audioholic Ninja
Interesting take on the music - recording company discussion. While most articles today compare sales of digital vs non-digital media, this is the first I read about live performances becoming the main stay for artist and record labels.

In fact, the last part where ticket costs from a decade ago have been compared to costs today is a real eye opener. Made me realize that I used to go to a lot more live events ten years ago than I do today. Mind you its not about the face value, since my earning capacity too has gone up considerably compared to a decade ago, its just not worth the money. The last concert I went to was Tool at The Gorge and it was awesome, but performances like that are rare.

Last but not the least, when you can get the DVD for $15 - 30 and enjoy it at home without having to deal with the crowds... mayby, I'm just getting old :(.
 
N

Nestor

Senior Audioholic
And yet, as someone who doesn't really download songs, and doesn't feint at the $15 price tag for a cd, I feel I am pretty objective about the whole quandry. So, this is the umpteenth article I've read on here that beats this same horse. It uses many convincing numbers to tell how evil the record co's are and how impoverished the musicians become under the evil empire and how the downtrodden consumers are getting taken. What I sense underneath it all is people who get much of their music for "free" trying to justify that behavior. Have the record companies behaved perfectly through all this? Probably not, they are acting like big corporations and beauracracies do-they are protective of the status quo and act in their interests. They tend to be bloated with layer after layer of employees, all trying to protect their slice of the pie.............just once I'd like to hear how the artist's feel about all this. Put up an article from the artist's perspective and let's hear what they have to say. They are the important cog in this wheel, imho. I can't sing, and I can play about 5 chords on a guitar......so I am motivated to buy musician's services. Things like amazon, myspace, youtube, and artist's personal websites are all things that are good about the industry, things I like about the industry. Frankly, I could care less about what happens to big corps like Sony........I do care what happens to artists and musicans as they make my world a bit better place to be.......can the musicians make a living the way things are going? Since the big beef here is that the record corps get $10 and the musicians get 50 cents on each disc, would you pay $15 a disc if the numbers were reveresed- the artist got $10 and the record co gets 50 cents?!

The article's main subject was the flipping of the traditional music business model.

The most significant point I took away from the article was that artists are relying less on the traditional business model to make money from their music, and are shifting to a new model where the cd is more of a promotional tool. Case in point: Prince. The author also mentions a number of other artists to support the story.

It's nice to see that some artists are looking to the future (like Prince and Robbie Williams) instead of the past (like Lars Ulrich).

I have trouble finding the parts of the article that justify illegal file downloading.
 
C

chris92346

Audioholic Intern
You know... I wouldn't be particularly concerned about album prices IF the artists recieved most of it BUT most of it goes to the recording companies. The record companies screw the consumers and the artists.
 
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