Thursday, 2 September 2010

The State of Internet Music on YouTube, Pandora, iTunes, and Facebook


"More people are engaged with music than ever before," said Tom Silverman, founder of Tommy Boy Records and the New Music Seminar. "It's a hockey stick going up; it's an incredible opportunity that so far has eluded us." Silverman was speaking this morning at the New Music Seminar in New York City, where he and Eric Garland, CEO of Big Champagne (who also unveiled the Ultimate Chart today), gave a State of the Music Industry address. Even if you aren't a player in the industry and only an avid music listener, the figures that Silverman and Garland culled will surely surprise you. Here are a few of their key findings.
A shift from albums to singles
Of the some 100,000 albums released last year, 17,000 of them sold only 1 copy; more than 81,000 albums sold under 100 copies. In fact, just 1,300 albums sold over 10,000 copies, an astonishing figure given that these numbers combine physical and digital album sales. And for physical sales alone? According to Garland, only 2% of new albums on Soundscan sold over 5,000 copies--that's a skydiver's plummet from the golden era of the music industry. This chart shows you how much the industry has changed:

"The music business historically has been built around albums," explained Silverman. "This album-centrism is like saying the sun revolves around the Earth. We don't listen to albums now; we listen to collections of songs."
Of course, the reason for significant single-growth and slowed-album sales is due in part to iTunes hawking every song as a single for 99 cents. "Historically, the price of an album was five times greater than a single," said Silverman, who believes setting the price at a tenth of an album's cost was a mistake and that even $1.29 is too low. "It should've been a $1.99, and then we would've seen higher digital album sales because it would've been a bigger discount for buying an album." But both Silverman and Garland agreed that this is changing, citing the fact that about 14% of all of Universal Music's digital sales are for iTunes "Complete My Albums," a program where you receive credit for having already purchased the single, but have the option to upgrade and purchase the full album. This suggests the $9.99 price-tag is becoming approachable for consumers.
Facebook, Myspace, and Twitter: Track your FFF number
According to Garland, industry folks today are obsessed with "FFF numbers"--that is, an artist's friends, fans, and followers. "It's a race, but to what end?" he wondered. Garland showed through a series of charts how Twitter and especially Facebook are ballooning in popularity for artists like Lady Gaga, while once popular Myspace's numbers are stymied.
However, Garland points out that Facebook recently forced most users into converting their profile favorites into "fan" data, which arbitrarily inflated the social network's numbers. For example, Garland tells the story of how when Susan Boyle's performance first blew up, a friend of his added the YouTube star to his Facebook profile. When Facebook imported this data though, he instantly became a "fan" of Susan Boyle. "[He] had no interest in it--[he] liked her for like 30 seconds, once!" Garland relates. "It doesn't really indicate any consumer activity--it's automated," added Silverman.
Garland's story serves as an indicator of just how difficult it is to figure out the influence of an artist through his or her FFF number. After all, even if Lady Gaga starts losing friends on Myspace, that's less of an indication of her popularity, and more a sign of Myspace's falling use.
Google and YouTube more important than iTunes?
Interestingly, it wasn't Apple that Garland viewed as the most important name in music, even though the company's iPods, iPhones, and iTunes indicate otherwise. "YouTube is increasingly the category killer," argued Garland. "When people ask me what is the biggest name in music in my opinion, they want me to say Apple. I usually answer: YouTube."
Garland told audiences that if you actually look to where people are listening to music--not even just looking at videos--consumers are turning more and more to YouTube, which he calls the "largest catalog of on-demand music on the Internet." If only Google could make this service profitable, right?
Internet radio: Pandora
Garland and Silverman pointed out that Pandora is now the most popular Internet radio service, with a 52% market share, close to 60 million registered users, and more than 1 billion stations.
And in a sign of just how much the Web has impacted music, Silverman told the crowd that Pandora now represents 1.7% of all radio listening--really a shocking figure to think about. Obviously, traditional music media is going away. But is the music industry ready for the change?
Austin Carr @'Fast Company'

A sign of the times...

Obama’s Commerce Secretary Talks Tough on Music Piracy

Wednesday, 1 September 2010

Ky MelbourneBitter Wow. My iPad's auto correct thingy changes 'cunt' to 'Cynthia'. Glad my name's not Cynthia.

German Court Says Google May Have To Police Videos On YouTube For Infringement

Double HA!

 Ironic as this was tweeted by M.I.A. whose self owned record company was particularly heavy handed with its DMCA notices when her new album leaked recently!

HA!

(Thanx Stan!)

♪♫ The Duke & The King - Shaky

Frightening!

Sarah Palin the Sound and the Fury

How to grow a Rainbow Rose

Yoko Ono teams up with Gaga, Iggy Pop, RZA for LA dates

Under the banner “We Are The Plastic Ono Band”, Yoko Ono joined forces with the likes of Eric Clapton, Paul Simon, and members of Sonic Youth for a special one-off performance in Brooklyn last February. This coming October, Ono will reprise her massive concert for two dates in Los Angeles, and the guest talent will be equally brilliant.
Set to perform at the Oprheum in Los Angeles on October 1st and 2nd, Ono will backed by Yuka Honda and Cornelius (Keigo Oyamada, Shimmy Hirotaka Shimizu and Yuko Araki), with son Sean Lennon handling musical direction. She’ll also welcome a number of special guests: Iggy Pop, Lady Gaga, Mike Watt, Wilco’s Nels Cline, and Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore and Kim Gordon are each confirmed for one date, while Wu-Tang Clan’s RZA, Perry Farrell, Carrie Fisher, Vincent Gallo, Haruomi Hosono, tUnE-yArDs, and Harper Simon will appear at both performances. You can find a full list of who plays when below.
Tickets for both dates are currently on sale and prizes range from $60.00 – $150.00. Click here for more info.
10/01:
Iggy Pop
RZA
Perry Farrell
Nels Cline
Carrie Fisher
Vincent Gallo
Haruomi Hosono
Harper Simon
Tune-Yards
10/02:
Lady Gaga
Mike Watt
Kim Gordon
Thurston Moore
The RZA
Perry Farrell
Carrie Fisher
Vincent Gallo
Haruomi Hosono
Harper Simon
Tune-Yards

SBTRKT - WaiTiNG GaME

   

Square Grouper (Trailer)