
CEOs at record labels probably aren't sleeping too well these days. Not because
they're having second thoughts about rejecting your demo... again. Not because
Clear Channel has a lock on radio playlists. Record label execs are now counting
sheep due to a new wrinkle in their marketing plans: Consumer Choice.
Of course, this is mostly due to the MP3 revolution, and it's
a beautiful thing. Those of us who love music can now listen to music of our
own choosing. What a concept! No more spending your hard earned dollars on albums
with only one decent song. No more lamenting over long lost records that are
out of print because the band was dropped from the label when their LP didn't
sell 500,000 copies. Now we can go online and create cool soundtracks for our
lives. Because we have easy access to MP3s, we can find live performances of
a favorite band doing obscure covers that their label would have never allowed
them to release in a million years. One can argue that consumers always had
the power of choice. But record labels have employed their marketing machines
to blanket radio airwaves and other mediums with their chosen songs since the
dawn of this business. Before we knew any better, can we really say that we
were immune to their persuasion?
By Carla Hall,
MusicDish Network Sponsor
|
Historically, one thing that the record industry has always done
well is put consumers into little boxes. If you're a girl under 17, labels know
how to market a teen pop star to you, a la Britney Spears or Christina Aguilera.
If you're a college-aged guy, they also know how to market Maroon 5 to you.
The problem for the labels starts when consumers get to choose for themselves,
via alternate means, and that has the record industry just a wee bit spooked.
Without a new business model for success, the record industry is scrambling
to regain a foothold. But as fans have other ways of hearing music from new
artists, the industry's old ways no longer fit.
For example, I'm a black woman with copper red dreadlocks that
reach down my back. Do I look like a musician? Perhaps. Can my music purchases
be predicted by the cashier as I enter her store? Not likely. Just because I'm
black doesn't guarantee that I'm looking for something by P. Diddy or Usher.
Even if I look like a female singer/songwriter, it doesn't mean that I'm looking
for Sarah McLachlan. My wide range of tastes may be hard for a focus group to
pinpoint, but I'm not the only person out there with eclectic tastes. I'd bet
my last guitar pick that your music collection has lots of things on it that
defy standard "convention."
As a musician, songs on my new CD Supernova can range from
soul to country to jazz and still find a home in that huge category called "pop."
As a consumer, my tastes can range from XTC to Beethoven to Van Halen to Stevie
Wonder, sometimes over the course of a day. And lots of music fans feel the
same way. Due to the success of digital music websites like Rhapsody, Napster,
and even iTunes, we can own the songs we really want without buying the crap
that we don't. That's democracy at its best.
To this day, I still have not seen an episode of American Idol,
only because I've chosen not to have a TV in my house. But I'm a fan of it anyway,
because the audience has the power to choose. Idol winners like Ruben Studdard
or Clay Aiken did not make the record industry short list of superstars before
they won, or we would have heard of them before now. But to win on Idol, they
had to handle intense competition and immediate public opinion. Their talent
has been honed over the years by rejection and persistence. A so-called "loser"
like William Hung also gained a place on Billboard charts because his fans love
his underdog status. American Idol became another way to sidestep the industry's
mandates. Ruben and Clay couldn't get in through the front door, so they used
the window. This kind of "out of the box" thinking will take an aspiring
musician far, and closer to the success they seek.
Since the early days of this industry, record labels had (and
still have) the ultimate power to determine what we heard on the radio. They
have the money to put the machine in motion, and there is lots of money to be
made. That means that labels look for recording acts who they, in their collective
wisdom, believe will make money. That's well and good, but this also means that
many great and worthy musical talents have been overlooked if they were unable
to prove their potential to a label.
So my question is: What if we take record labels out of the equation?
Online, we can find cool artists that a label would never touch
-- not because they weren't talented -- but because a label didn't know how
to market them. Some of you have had music rejected by labels for that reason,
so you know what I mean. We also have the opportunity to personally connect
to those artists, to reach out and tell them that their song meant something
to us. You can't do that with Britney, or any major artist on a record label.
There are too many hands involved.
I bet a lot of you reading this right now have amazing music.
You may be a solo performer shredding on your guitar for hours in your room,
or maybe you have a strong regional following with 5,000 email names in your
fan database. Or maybe you're somewhere in between. Regardless of where you
are, marketing your music on the web can level the A&R playing field.
Please get a website, or even two. Learn about marketing your
music on the web, and do it right. Go ahead and give away MP3s from live shows.
The potential of music of the web has the record industry shaking in their boots.
Go ahead and start a revolution.
Let your music be heard, and keep the music industry awake.
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It 2004 - Republished with Permission