
In an effort to educate artists and bands that still think signing a record
label contract is the be-all and end-all of their existence, this month's column
is about the challenges of staying in the label's good graces once they have
signed you. In past columns I have written about the huge risk so many aspiring
artists are willing to take to get the almighty recording contract. This month
I take you on a journey inside the mysterious world of becoming a priority release
at a label, once the label has decided to release your recording.
By Christopher Knab,
MusicDish Network Sponsor
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Just because an artist or band gets signed to a record label doesn't
automatically mean that they will be treated well by their label. Once a record
has been scheduled for release, a number of factors will determine if it becomes
a 'priority' at the label in terms of the amount of attention it receives. The
term 'priority' is used to designate which of the hundreds of records a year
a label releases will get the most promotion and marketing attention.
The reasons why one artist's new release may be more important
to a label than another are varied and often hard to understand. The major labels
-- and many independent record labels -- juggle a lot of apples and oranges
when they go about the business of trying to sell records. There are a number
of circumstances that contribute to the sometimes irrational decisions being
made regarding what records will become a 'priority' and what records will not.
Some of these reasons have to do with cold, hard business realities. Others
are quite emotional and complex.
When it comes down to deciding when a record will be released,
and deciding whether or not to spend very much time and money to help sell it,
there are some complex issues that come into play, but the biggest one is this:
music, after it has been created, becomes a product.
To sell music you must put it in a physical container of some
kind. (Even in a digital world, a compressed audio file will still have to deal
with this reality. That is why the recording industry has been so concerned
about how these files will be used by consumers.) That container today is usually
still a CD.
It is at this point that art enters the world of commerce. When
a product containing an artistic creation becomes something people can buy,
art encounters commerce and the two worlds collide. In today's music business
environment, the party that pays for the creation of the artistic product usually
wins any arguments about how the art contained within the product will be marketed.
Music is an emotional product, and because of that there will
always be issues that come up during the recording of the songs, the marketing
of the record, or in the personal relationships that are developed that can
deeply affect the success or failure of the project.
Music is not the same kind of product that a shoe is. You don't
sell a shoe the same way you sell a CD. If you want to sell a shoe, the shoe
itself will not object too much about how you sell it. Not so with music. The
artists and bands that make music have an emotional investment in their creation.
As 'artists' they concentrate more on the creative side of music, and rarely
are they well versed in the intricacies of the business world. So, as creative
creatures they can easily develop conflicting opinions on how their 'art' should
be marketed.
Songwriters may write songs as a creative expression. Musicians
and singers may record a version of that song, but a record label pays the bills
for the recording, and then has to find a way to convince listeners of the song
that owning it will bring some kind of pleasure to their lives. (Devising a
plan to do that is called marketing.) Business people usually know more about
commerce than art, so the tensions that exist because of this dynamic can lead
to misunderstandings, and misunderstandings can lead to disappointments for
all parties involved.
Many solo artists and bands that get signed to record labels get
themselves into trouble with record label executives because they think the
only thing that is important is the music itself, while the record label executives
and their team of promotional representatives have very little emotional investment
in the songs they promote.
From their point of view, it is the responsibility of a record
label to find a business way to sell the recording they invested in. They may
try to preserve the emotional investment their acts have in their songs as
best they can, but they will stop at nothing when, for example, a promotional
opportunity comes up that may be at odds with the image or ethics that the artist
may hold. If the label executives see a potential profit coming from some controversial
promotion campaign, they will usually do what they have to do to take advantage
of that marketing opportunity. However, at the same time, if the artist is creating
such a nuisance to them, they may sense a threat to their investment or even
their egos, and decide to cancel a promotion campaign at a moment's notice.
It would take a book to fully explain the strange dynamic between
the fragile emotions of aspiring musicians and the egos of materialistic record
company executives, but let's take a look at some fairly common situations that
come up in the complex world of record labels, marketplace realities, and artist
relations.
Factors That Determine Priority Releases
Major labels often find that they have over extended themselves
by signing too many acts within a short period of time and scheduling too many
releases to come out at the same time. So, when they discuss which scheduled
records have the best chance of success in the marketplace, they may simply
push back a release 6 months to a year. (Regretfully, depending on an act's
actual contract, there may be no guarantees that a label has to ever release
their record.)
Another situation surrounding priority records is this. If a label
signs an act because they play a genre of music that is currently hot on the
charts, but the negotiations for signing the deal, or the recording process
took too much time, they may have missed their opportunity to cash in on a current
popular music trend, and realizing that fact, simply decide not to make the
record a priority release, but to 'sit on it' and wait to see if another time
of year for releasing the record would be more opportunistic.
To complicate matters even more when it comes to what records
will be given the most attention by a label, a label executive may sign an act
only to stop a competing record label executive from signing them to his label,
and when the record is released any interest in promoting the record takes second
place to the personal satisfaction of having 'one-upped' a competitor -- and
the act is left out in the cold.
But the ego issue can also work positively for a recording artist.
A label executive may sign an artist in order to impress and influence the manager
of another similar hot act, with hopes of getting the band on their label someday.
So, when the record of such an artist comes out, the label executive may pull
out all the stops promotionally, to show the manager what a great job the label
can do. If the label shows it can do a good job with a newer artist on that
manager's roster, perhaps the manager will send one of his established stars
over to the label, when the existing record contract with the established artist
runs out.
Here's another reason why a record might become a priority at
a label. We're constantly hearing about corporations downsizing, and companies
reducing their staff with every new merger or corporate buyout. At the same
time, many major labels are merging with other large labels -- and increasing
the workload for the remaining staff. It can be important for a label executive
to demonstrate to the shareholders of the corporation and to staff at the label
that the downsizing issue is not a concern, so a particular act's new release
is given a stronger push to impress all concerned parties.
Be forewarned, however. When downsizing occurs, an artist's record
may be shifted to a different priority level. Key personnel who were excited
about and instrumental in "breaking" a new label act may be fired, or asked
to take early retirement. When it comes time to release the new record, a different
person may be assigned to work the act; someone who may not care much about,
or even like the music or the artist. Will that record remain a priority? There
are no guarantees that the new employee will be excited about that act's music.
They may have their own pet projects to put ahead of any previous arrangements.
"Bidding wars" also affect priority status. Bidding wars occur
when a new band is the hot topic of the industry grapevine. One label makes
an offer to sign the band, another label hears about it and ups the bid, a third
label offers even more money. The winner of this bidding war will probably be
forced to make that act's initial release a priority. The label will need a
sizeable return in sales dollars from the new band's recording to recoup their
large investment. Interestingly, no band or act signed from any bidding war
has ever gone on to major stardom.
Music trends come and go. In the early and mid '90s Grunge came
and went. What followed in the late '90s, and into this new millennium, was
young boy bands and young, blond girl ingénues. When a hot new music style comes
on the scene, any act that is signed to take advantage of a new popular music
trend will usually become a priority at the record label that signed them.
By the way, usually, all new releases by superstar acts are automatic
priority records because of their star status and the simple fact that they
sell a lot of product consistently.
So, take heed. Many people think signing a recording contract
with a record label means automatic stardom. That is not the case, and musicians
approached by a label for a deal would do well to research that label's track
record and reputation for making their releases priorities. Take my word for
it though, if you are perceived as a troublemaker by the label executives, or
if they decide that your record shows no signs of being accepted at radio, other
media, and music retailers, that piece of paper you have in your possession
called a recording contract may be about as valuable as a sheet of Kleenex.
The issues I have discussed here have come up often enough to
contribute to a change in the attitude of many musicians toward working with
record labels. Over the last two decades more and more musicians have taken
charge of their own business careers, and the list of artists and bands releasing
their own records and marketing them themselves grows longer every day. Perhaps
the level of success these entrepreneurial musicians reach may not equal the
success of major superstars, but at least when they wrestle with the dynamics
created by art meeting commerce, they are wrestling with themselves, and are
dealing with the business realities of the music industry on their own terms.
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