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April 18, 2008

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I feel this is an amazing opportunity for all artists. it reminds me of the Beatles, the Stones and other great bands making incredible music on a 4 track recording machine. It's the same thing, raw, inspired and beautiful. Please check out my album "Conventry" on Tunecore. If you like cool, if you don't cool! Peace, Paul

Jeff, what is your opinion on 3 out of 4 of the majors having an equity share in the new MySpace music?

I am emphatic about the fact that more power is coming into the hands of us artists and out of the fascist hands of destructive corporations that care nothing about music and world self expression.

Well I think the record labels are just simply in a different position to those of many artists. In the end they are just making money and doing their jobs. But the problem is, this is not selling soap. This is selling music and there is a danger always that if an artist or art gets exposed with too much money (as with anything else in life) it can potentially ruin it.

I actually wrote more about this in my recent blog so check it out:

I am so excited about this and the fact that i am not the only one with these thoughts.

This article is correct and I have read several similar assessments by music industry executives.
I feel that promotion will continue to play the important role it always has, and perhaps live performance will become more and more important for the stage artist.
The most significant factor is the huge numbers of artists now involved in self publishing and the huge quantities of tracks available in all genres and at all quality levels. This may reduce the industrial, profit-making potential of music for all but a few first-to-market online retailers and enhance it as a cultural activity, but we need filter systems to allow public taste to develop. There is still a place for discerning DJs and music magazines. The danger is that the audience will be swamped by the sheer quantity of music, to the detriment of the best talents. Shows like American Idol are a positive sign, showing the public's love of good tunes and appreciation for good performances, As with sport, there is also an unhealthy over-obsession with winning...

This does a great job of summing up the current state of the music business, however, labels big and small remain relevant on the marketing and promotional side of things with a deep well of contacts within the industry intact that comes only from years of experience and hard work. Everyone is so quick to point to the now practically effortless distribution of music, but there is still much more than a good recording, MySpace page and getting on iTunes. People still have to know why they should care, which is arguably the toughest part of all.

On the one hand you´re completely right. The opportunities are so large in these days and it could bring the most lovely sounding arts to the last corners of this world. Yes in theory this is as you describe it. And you can mention one or two winning examples of 3 millions of artists who fight! seriously with all means (awesome sometimes) for example on networking myspace to grab attention. Are they the forgotten loosers in this game?? I ask you because maybe the old structures change slowly. The artist will sometimes be beated today as in the past from several institutions. Radio isn´t often much interested when you´re a smaller act. The fans try out to make their funny laughs on you and don´t hear exactly to your music, until you´re the "big spender". It is critical therefore and the musicians sit on their idealism alone staring to the stars. O.k. but that´s the game i´m full of hope that not only the surface decides this battle. But it is life that you make it (citation from famous talk talk in the 80´s)

I still think TuneCore took a tank and drove it through the phony wall of "Record Labels" signage. It was sorely needed a long time ago like at the end of the 1980s.

Being your own record label is very difficult work to say the least. You have to have a hawk eye on your merchandise every single day or you can be misinterpreted and look very foolish when they make a mistake etc. 10 to 20 stores worth!
If you make decent money best to hire a few people but then you're a record label yourself.
Resrtictions from the real world are not totally removed yet I can say, Yes, the door has been torn down in trade once again as it was too snobbish and restricted. You used to be able to make allot more money locally because resources were limited but that has changed so we need the Internet.

TuneCore is great but they need to still comptete with other distributers.

This is a breakthrough for great independence and culture. There
aren't 4 or 5 opinions who control what music gets out there. But
what the next step is to eliminate this payola or bribery scam for
who gets on the local and national radio stations. That's where new
artists will make it or break it - level the playing fieldcompletely in
this great time so we can expand our choice of what we desire to
listen to.
Also we need to be protected from illegal sharing and downloading
- that's what brought down the record industry and will destroy this
new system too. Remember our songs are our livelihood and if a
person steals a car they are put in jail - I didn't spend years on
recording just to keep working a dead end job.

i loovvve tunecore !!

this is all great...i agree with much of what your saying, but whether or not artists are smart enough to take control of their careers is a totally different story. we find ourselves at a point in time where the artist, if he chooses to and works hard, can release their own records, do their own promoting, play shows, and make a living. but artists don't always want to work hard. so record labels will capitalize on this fact, and find new ways to exploit artists...this is already happening, as many labels (including some indie ones) are asking their artists to pay percentages of their live earnings and money made off of merchandise. WOW! it's clear that many labels are just bloated machines with too many overpayed cushy job folks, and a whole army of young interns that work for little if any money so that they can feel the glam.

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