|
|
libcats.org
Dirty Little Secrets of the Record Business: Why So Much Music You Hear SucksHank BordowitzFor more than two generations the music industry behaved as if they had us all by the short and curly. They controlled the source, the prices and the demand. Then all hell broke loose - and they are still running.
It had been always easier and more profitable to promote untalented signers or groups bootstrapped together with a lot of image and little else than having to deal with really talented artists. Real artists last long enough to start making demands and if they are not met they can always take their talent elsewhere. In contrast, untalented posers are a dime a dozen. And are all willing to waste their lives for fame, maybe some drugs and some short-lived adoration (p.237). Promoting far lesser talents was never a problem as the music industry has always been hand-in-hand with most radio producers. Payola-and-plugola scandals never seem to go out of fashion, from the 1960's in California to some years ago with SONY-BMG in New York. Ever wondered why most radio stations play the same drivel over and over and ignore both indie groups and older songs? And how exactly did you think "hits" are made? Not ..."listeners' requests" I hope! (p.105) It was like the Cola Company controlling both our taste-buds and our thirst center - and then going on selling watered-down soft drinks for the price of a four-course meal. So, the geniuses running the music industry kept picking stars-to-be from the lazy-yet-ambitious crowd and paid them close to nothing ("sure, you bring in millions son, but all that money goes to production and promotion expenses, see. I hardly break even myself"). When their shooting stardom faded, they simply discarded them and moved on to the next star-system victim. It was a well-oiled machine. It made billions - just not for the people we thought it did (p.259). Then, in the early-90's a group of inventive Germans came up with the mp3 sound-compression and the sky fell in. Even with the first slow internet connections, downloading a song of quality comparable to that of a CD took about 10minutes. Sure, it was not exactly kosher but what was worse: downloading a song you could hear on the radio for free or asking half a day's wages for a CD that was not only half empty but it also contained only a single good song - the rest was known as filler? NAPSTER, GROKSTER, KAZAA and then torrents - there was simply no closing the flood-gates once they had burst open. So what did the music industry do? First thing they came up with was the "let's make our customers pay for the same music again and again" policy. They lobbied for (and, being a wealthy industry, of course got) draconian "intellectual property rights" that make any form of sharing or reselling illegal. The long arm of RIAA in effect, is run just like a shakedown (p.277). Now, try to imagine Chrysler getting second-hand car sales to be illegal only to enhance its own sales - would that make any (legal or moral) sense? They also discovered TV talent Shows. Enter the clowns - and make them run faster. Talent shows not only equate "success" with slave-labor contracts but they also provide the music industry with numerous fresh pools of semi-trained singers. No more need for the Milli-Vanillis of the world to lip-sing. Their new boys and girls may still be ephemeral but they can more or less sing by themselves. But it's a battle already lost. When an industry makes more money from suing its former customers than from selling its product (that becomes more irrelevant every day), you just know they are way past the point of no return. Intrigued? Well, this book tells the whole story with far more details and far juicer tidbits. The writer is a music industry insider and has no qualms backing his claims with a lot of inside information. It is an easy read and it even has a chapter on Amazon. A MUST READ FOR ANY MUSIC BUYER! (and any PC Gamer I am afraid, as the Gaming industry is following in exactly the same footsteps)
Скачать книгу бесплатно (pdf, 2.97 Mb)
Читать «Dirty Little Secrets of the Record Business: Why So Much Music You Hear Sucks» EPUB | FB2 | MOBI | TXT | RTF
* Конвертация файла может нарушить форматирование оригинала. По-возможности скачивайте файл в оригинальном формате.
Популярные книги за неделю:
Проектирование и строительство. Дом, квартира, садАвтор: Петер Нойферт, Автор: Людвиг Нефф
Размер книги: 20.83 Mb
Система упражнений по развитию способностей человека (Практическое пособие)Автор: Петров Аркадий НаумовичКатегория: Путь к себе
Размер книги: 818 Kb
Сотворение мира (3-х томник)Автор: Петров Аркадий НаумовичКатегория: Путь к себе
Размер книги: 817 Kb
Радиолюбительские схемы на ИС типа 555Автор: Трейстер Р.Категория: Электротехника и связь
Размер книги: 13.64 Mb
Только что пользователи скачали эти книги:
Павел Пречесный. Рюкзак из левого Петербурга (путешествие из Петербурга в Москву-2)Автор:
Размер книги: 42 Kb
Систематика простейших и их филогенетические связи с низшими эукариотами. Труды Зоологического института АН СССР. 1986. Т. 144Автор:
Размер книги: 1.48 Mb
Negotiations: 1972-1990 (European Perspectives: a Series in Social Thought and Cultural Ctiticism)Автор: Gilles Deleuze, Автор: Martin Joughin
Размер книги: 10.15 Mb
Information Hiding: Third International Workshop, IH'99, Dresden, Germany, September 29 - October 1, 1999 ProceedingsАвтор: Andreas Pfitzmann
Размер книги: 7.42 Mb
Public Finance and Public Policy in the New Century (CESifo Seminar Series)Автор: Sijbren Cnossen (Editor), Автор: Hans-Werner Sinn (Editor)Категория: Экономика
Размер книги: 3.25 Mb
US Foreign Policy and the Horn of Africa (Us Foreign Policy and Conflict in the Islamic World)Автор: Peter WoodwardКатегория: Общественные науки прочие, Политика
Размер книги: 973 Kb
The Soul of Classical American Philosophy: The Ethical and Spiritual Insights of William James, Josiah Royce, and Charles Sanders PierceАвтор: Richard P. Mullin
Размер книги: 1.02 Mb
|
|
|