Deadlines/Brief

Music videos are so 80s/90s, right? They belong with the era when MTV screened wall-to-wall vids instead of 'reality' TV? Try telling that to the millions who bought Gangnam Style; were they really simply loving the music? 1.6bn (and still climbing) have viewed the video on YT, not to mention the many re-makes (school eg, eg2), viral ads + celeb link-ups (even political protest in Seoul) - and it doesn't matter how legit it is, this nightmare for daydream Beliebers is making a lot of money, even from the parodies + dislikes. All this for a simple dance track that wouldn't have sounded out of place in 1990 ... but had a fun vid. This meme itself was soon displaced by the Harlem Shake. Music vids even cause diseases it seems!
This blog explores every aspect of this most postmodern of media formats, including other print-based promo tools used by the industry, its fast-changing nature, + how fans/audiences create/interact. Posts are primarily written with Media students/educators in mind. Please acknowledge the blog author if using any resources from this blog - Mr Dave Burrowes

Sunday 3 April 2011

Covergence - albums via magazine + papers + iPad apps

The post on Caliban points up examples of convergence - a music act effectively with its own TV [online] output.

Here's more egs, again flagging up the fast-changing nature of the music biz as the digital revolution grips every facet of the media industry in its binary teeth, of the music industry converging with the print industry.

MY NAME IS PRINCE
If you're unaware of who Prince is, try the wiki...
Lets start with an interesting vid, blending faux-news report ('Vanessa' is actually famed Cheers actress Kirsty Ally)

Prince giving away his 2007 album with the Mail on Sunday - a frankly bizarre choice given the ultra-conservative nature of the paper, and much of its readership - is one early example; the newspaper effectively became a music publisher, record label! Here's the Mail's announcement.

One music store executive described the plan as "madness" while others said it was a huge insult to an industry battling fierce competition from supermarkets and online stores. Prince's label has cut its ties with the album in the UK to try to appease music stores.
The Entertainment Retailers Association said the giveaway "beggars belief". "It would be an insult to all those record stores who have supported Prince throughout his career," ERA co-chairman Paul Quirk told a music conference. "It would be yet another example of the damaging covermount culture which is destroying any perception of value around recorded music.
"The Artist Formerly Known as Prince should know that with behaviour like this he will soon be the Artist Formerly Available in Record Stores. And I say that to all the other artists who may be tempted to dally with the Mail on Sunday."
More on this:
Prince's CD giveaway another nail in the album's coffin
Why Prince's Free CD Ploy Worked

Prince was reportedly paid $500,000 over and above the royalties for each CD — typically around 10%. Considering that his last album, 3121, sold only 80,000 copies in the U.K., this deal may have earned him more than eight times as much. Plus, Planet Earth — which has gotten fairly good reviews so far — is now in the hands of thousands of people who may never have thought to buy it. Maybe they like what they hear ... and maybe they want more. They'll have to settle for buying up his back catalog, because the 21 shows he's playing in London in August and September are already sold out. Naturally, he's giving away a copy of the album with every ticket (a trick he pulled with Musicology back in 2004).
...
There's no ignoring this bigger, stronger breed of freebie, but there's also no reason it has to signal the death of the music industry. Thanks to the rise of digital distribution, the business of making and selling music has been in flux for years, with labels, lawyers and retailers constantly forced to adapt. "In the record industry, you can barely hear yourself think for the sound of the business being dismantled and the paradigms being broken," says Conor McNicholas, editor of music weekly the New Musical Express. Those who can't keep up are flailing — last month, HMV reported its annual profits have more than halved — or already fallen: last year, retail giant Tower Record sclosed its stores and in June the U.K. music chain Fopp shut up shop. Meanwhile, record labels are looking for solutions in mergers and takeovers — any day now, British firm EMI could be bought out by investment group Terra Firma. Says McNicholas: "With the pace of change, you just have to be very quick on your feet and rework your business model every six months — that's the challenge."
But the free CD has been around for decades. Smash Hits gave away flexi-discs in the 1980s and modern music magazines such as NME, Mojo and The Word have long been including CD compilations with their issues.
Music shop in London
The industry is feeling the strain
It was recently estimated that 10% of CDs produced in the UK are covermounts. But most of these are to plug new artists and therefore have the blessing of the industry, because fledgling acts reach new audiences.
There are fears, however, that the Prince deal marks a new phase in which established artists will cut record companies and traditional retailers out of the equation.
[Q magazine have reduced the frequency of their covermounts, fearing being seen as a CD with a mag] ... In 1997, Q's first free CD - a high quality, best of the year - increased sales of the magazine by 325%, and the production cost was shared by the record company. But the returns have fallen since and the cost is now £150,000, fully absorbed by the magazine.
The broader issue of the Prince deal is how the function of albums has changed, says Mark Ellen, editor of The Word magazine.
"Five years ago people toured in order to sell records and called the name of their tour after their recording, and probably lost money in order to promote and extend the life of the album.
"That balance has shifted and now people put out albums to justify going on tour and charging more to go on tour."
As Prince might say, a sign o' the times.
Thats a point I've made often, thus the subtle highlighting - its useful to have this direct quote.

PRINCE DOES IT AGAIN: 2010 GIVEAWAY
Prince came up with the clever ploy of giving away an exclusive album with concert tickets, which has been widely repeated since and looks set to be an increasingly important means of music distribution henceforth. The vociferous condemnation of the music industry didn't stop the symbol, who went about for some time with "slave" on his forehead in protest at his record contract, from repeating the process in 2010, this time using a tabloid, The Mirror. I have to say I bought it. And it was about as good as the paper itself.
Although details for only two territories have been released so far, 20Ten, the singer's 27th studio album, will be issued in Germany and Belgium as a magazine cover mount. In Germany at least, 20Ten will not be available in record stores or as a download.
... Since Prince's 2007 experiment, artists such as Paul McCartney and McFly have tried the model out.
Prince in 2006
Sign of the times ... Prince gives away his latest album free with the Mirror
 
As a Prince fan, I bought the Mirror for the first time on Saturday to get a copy of his latest album, 20Ten. As a musician, I was puzzled by why he felt the need to give away his music with a UK tabloid that costs 65p. I was equally perplexed by his decision to snub iTunes because it doesn't pay advances.
ALBUMS WITH SUPPORTING MAGS
This is different from the idea of a covermount; in this case we're looking at artists' albums having an entire magazine commissioned to flesh out the package, and help encourage sales. The image below is from http://www.myfavouritemagazines.co.uk/classic-rock-presents-whitesnake-forevermore/
This is Future Publishing's (mag publisher) mag subscription sales site.

The same has been done for Motorhead, Jimi Hendrix (compilation, not new material!), plus Blondie:
The Blondie Fan Pack includes 'Panic Of Girls', the band’s brilliant new studio album, plus a 132-page magazine.
Fans who buy the Blondie Fan Pack will be able to hear Panic Of Girls weeks before it goes on sale in the UK record stores.  What’s more, the Fan Pack version of Panic Of Girls comes with two bonus tracks – that will not be on the record store version of the album.
The Fan Pack magazine is 100% Blondie-approved and contains major, all-new interviews with Debbie Harry, Chris Stein, Clem Burke and all the other members of Blondie, as they talk us through the making of the album and look back over a history that has seen them sell 40 million albums and break new ground in the worlds of pop and fashion.
The magazine is packed with a wealth of exclusive, never-before-seen pictures of Blondie – including rare treasures from Chris Stein’s own archive. A must for all Blondie fans!
(From http://www.myfavouritemagazines.co.uk/blondie-panic-of-girls-classic-rock-fan-pack/)

Future, of course, is far from a print-only publisher these days; rare indeed is the paper or magazine that doesn't offer some online content. iPad apps are another multimedia offering demonstrating convergence. At http://www.myfavouritemagazines.co.uk/music/guitarist-magazine-subscription/ you can see this:

I'm sure bands (Radiohead?) won't be far behind in tapping into potential new sources of revenue with Ipad apps - let me know if you come across any

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