Posts Tagged ‘Rhapsody’

Could streaming services be the new record labels?

Monday, October 18th, 2010

They aren’t now, obviously, and I don’t know if anyone is even considering it, but after reading the most recent study about streaming services and mobile networks, I think there’s a (pardon the word) synergy that can’t be denied. There are already a number of established and fairly successful streaming services, each with it’s own demographic, and their impact is growing by the day. Once iTunes, Google, and eMusic join the streaming throng, the sheer weight of the movement will carry itself along.

Most streaming services already have some sort of licensing agreement with the major labels, so in terms of what’s available there isn’t much difference between them. The only real distinctions are ease of use, opportunities for the audience to discover new music (even though that’s not always what the audience wants), social network capabilities, and price (though there’s not much difference there, either). The only real opportunity for distinction in the future (besides, in the case of iTunes and Google, sheer size and brand recognition), will be exclusivity. Since profit margins for streaming are so small, though, it’s doubtful that the major labels would be willing to give an exclusive deal to a service, unless there were a guarantee that the services would find exorbitant. At the moment, it makes more financial sense for the major labels to spread their product through as many different services as possible.

Imagine, though, if an already successful, independent band, such as Radiohead (which would have little to lose in such an experiment), were to sign an exclusive deal with a streaming service, even if it’s for only one album. Physical product would still be available, of course, but perhaps not until after a delay of a month or two, much the way In Rainbows was released online or many albums are now released digitally before appearing in stores. Something like this has already been going on at Rhapsody, where they will occasionally have exclusive rights to stream an album the week prior to its release. Although there will always be other ways of getting a hold of music once it’s been made available in any form, it’s hard to imagine that such a scenario wouldn’t result in a boost in the subscriber base of whatever company was lucky enough to make the deal.

From there it might be only a matter of time before services started signing bands directly, both established groups who have untangled themselves from the majors or new bands willing to work for a pittance in order to get the exposure that a service with a few million subscribers might give them. It would mean lower profits for everybody at first, but it would also mean lower expenditures, and might ultimately turn into a steady revenue stream for everyone involved (it might even make theoretical nonsense like the long tail seem feasible).

Because the established labels would undoubtedly be resistant to such a plan (possibly even to the point of killing their agreements with certain services), and also because the services themselves aren’t set up, for now, with all the things necessary to be a record label, the majority of the acts on streaming services, at least at first, would be those independent bands who are unencumbered with contracts but also self-sufficient enough to put their own material together and do their own publicity. No doubt in the early days, the services would be willing to give these bands far more freedom than they could get from the majors, or even from some independent labels. In other words, while having almost complete artistic freedom, they would also be immediately connected to a distribution network that would give them instant access, plus essentially free promotion, to a potential audience of millions.

It’s possible—and excuse me if this sounds like either wishful thinking or sheer fantasy—that the result would be, for a brief time, a kind of golden age, where bands would find themselves given both a freedom and access to audiences they’ve never enjoyed before, and that even the audience would tune in in ways they haven’t for years. It will all fall apart in the end, of course. Once real money is being made, corporate conglomeration will set in, the audience will fragment (since it often seems that the more monolithic the source of access is, the more fragmented the audience becomes), and the whole thing will fall apart again, only to be reformed as something else altogether. I’m not making predictions, just suggesting one possible scenario. Stranger things have happened.

Thank you, Masaru Ibuka

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

Tim Quirk’s wonderful EMP presentation on personal listening devices from the Walkman to the present (Masaru Ibuka was the Sony exec who started the ball rolling) is now available on the Rhapsody blog. It’s somewhat self-serving, personal listening being Rhapsody’s bread and butter, after all, but Quirk is too honest, and too cynical, to do nothing but toot his company’s horn. The clincher for me is the graph showing how broad many people’s personal listening habits are, and how little service they get from radio, or even a lot of the streaming recommendation services (including Rhapsody). If someone could come up with an algorithm to fill that niche, they’d take over radio and the internet in a matter of months. My instinct tells me, though, that not only is such a a thing not possible, but it’s better for all of us that it isn’t.

Indie Pop–So Easy Even the French Can Do It

Friday, May 15th, 2009

I’m finding it difficult to understand all the blog fuss over Phoenix. The singles are catchy enough, but they’re also limp and twee, and the album drags. To me they sound like Spoon without the brashness, as if Britt Daniel had decided to ape The Cowsills instead of Motown. I was willing to give them the benefit of the doubt, though, until the Rhapsody blog posted this tracklist of a mixtape the band put together. Has there ever been a more cliched indie mix? You’ve got your ironic pop-metal band (Kiss) leading off, followed by all the usual suspects: your mid-sixties punk, your ’60s soul (The Impressions sure, but no Motown at all?), your glam, your ambient electronic, your new wave (but, really, Costello’s version of “Shipbuilding” over Robert Wyatt’s?), punk uncles Iggy and Lou, some power-pop, your semi-pop avant-gardests like Red Crayola and Dirty Projectors, and the newest entry in the indie pantheon, early ’70s Brazilian psychedelic. Plus the required Dusty Springfield and Beach Boys related stuff (I love them both, but the indie genuflection has been too much to take for a while now). The closest thing to modern R&B or hip-hop is D’Angelo. All that’s missing is Bollywood and lounge. Well, besides African, rap, J-Pop, and any form of techno or synth-pop (and no, Tangerine Dream doesn’t count). Great records all, I suppose, but in indie terms safe and predictable. Indie may still not be mainstream, but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t have a mainstream of it’s own, and Phoenix sails right down the middle of it. Even Disney pop is wilder than this.

Just as a postscript, the thought of French artists imitating British and American pop music made me think of one of my favorite French pop records: Michel Polnareff’s “Tout, Tout Pour Ma Cherie” (at least Polnareff had the good taste to sing in French–which reminds me, why isn’t there any Abba on that mixtape?). The video, which unfortunately isn’t embeddable, is actually a TV performance of France Gall’s “Les sucettes” (the original is here) with Polnareff’s track laid over it, but its oral suggestiveness fits perfectly with Polnareff’s catchy little ditty. If nothing else, I’d like to thank Phoenix for leading me to this bizarre gem (and lots of others). So merci beaucoups, guys, I could be lost for hours watching stuff like this: