CopyLike.Org – Music is Free!

Check out this Organization:
http://copylike.org/
https://www.facebook.com/copylike

People often tell us: 
“Find other ways of making money!
Music is free!”

Would you do your job for free? Why should musicians make
their music for free and then find “other ways” to make money?

Would you throw a plumber out of your house without paying?

Would you tell him, “Hey buddy you should sell some
t-shirts instead! I’m not paying for this plumbing, plumbing
is easy! You’ve even got a van, you’re probably rich! No go and
do all my freinds’ plumbing for free!”

No, you probably wouldn’t say that.

Defend Copyright.
It’s All We Have Left.
COPYLIKE.ORG

A Brief History of Artists’ Control of Their Product by Jonathan Segel

by Jonathan Segel
(re-posted by permission, copyright in the author)

I would like to start out by saying that I am writing in a completely subjective voice—this is opinion!— with annotation from other similar voices. This isn’t an academic paper, but I will try to cite others ideas – hoping that I can remember where they came from!

I’m writing here about the current situation that musicians find themselves in with respect to economic and the ability to sustain any sort of career as a musician. There are, of course, numerous ways in which people who are musicians can make money or have a career doing such. The ones that interest me are the type that are based in the creative process of composing or performing one’s own music, including making recordings thereof. I am not so interested presently in discussing the economics of performing other people’s compositions (as classical musicians do, as jazz “standards” players do for, for instance, hotel lounges, nor as cover or wedding bands do), but I would like to touch on this briefly later. I am mostly interested in how a composer or writer can make a living, and in this variety of musician I do include all live improvisers and performers of their own music.

It seems that historically, composers have had about a 200 year stretch of time in which they were able to control their own economy, based on a salable item that was a representation of the music. Of course, one cannot sell the music itself, it exists in real time: “when you hear music, after it’s over, it’s gone in the air, you can never capture it again” as Eric Dolphy said. Prior to around 1800, professional composers in general relied on either a royal or church patronage to pay them for composing. It is unlikely that prior to, say, 1400, composers were kept alive by the royalty to write music—with the exception of perhaps court jesters or griots as part of a royal entourage. However, with the age of reason and the restructuring of many governments, opportunities opened up for the composers to be in control of the licensing of their works themselves. While Mozart wanted freedom from his employer (the Archbishop Colleredo) to be able to receive performance fees, when he was finally “fired” in 1781, though his fame continued to spread, he only made money when he himself was performing, despite writing some of his greatest pieces in this time (and most musically intense, apparently difficult for audience and players), so he went back to a part time gig from a royal employer, Joseph II in 1786. Despite this, he never made enough money to get out of debt, even with rich admirers pledging yearly amounts. It is thought that he made *some* money from the sales of sheet music that he had written for Joseph II, but nobody knows the exact deal. He died, in debt, in 1791.

A landmark in this history is available to us in the form of a receipt from Ludwig Van Beethoven in 1805, where he is promising several piano pieces to be written for a London based publisher for an advance of 5 pounds. I say this is a landmark, as this is the first instance I have heard of where a composer is directly selling representations of their compositions (in the form of sheet music) and doing so in advance of their having been written!

To run through this quickly, the 19th century managed to upgrade composers’  abilities to market a product themselves (or with the aid of agents and management, that is to say, not necessarily with the aid of royal patronage) by means of selling scores of their works for people to play at home or in concerts, or by performing or conducting their own pieces. A side effect of this in the art music world meant that large scale pieces were simpler and more crowd-pleasing, while the pieces performed in small salons were the ones that were more adventurous in terms of developing the musical language.

The 19th century also gave us industrialism and thus a population moving toward urbanization. By the late 1880s people had developed an analog means for reproducing actual sound waves, it didn’t take long for this to become commercialized. The commercialization of recording music produced vast changes in the musical horizons of most people in the western world, and had major effects on the music itself. By the start of the 20th century there were three major differences: 1) composers and performers could sell their recordings (to record companies, of course, if not directly to listeners), 2) people in general could have music anywhere they had the device to play back a recording, and 3) the technology of recording limited the length and dynamic range of the music being recorded.

The music that became popular initially was loud and short, in general. Prior to World War I, many brass band pieces were produced on recorded media, and many of these were military style, which had two lasting cultural effects: 1) some sort of militarism and patriotism was common in urban environments enabling the US to easily conscript people for war when the US joined the World War fray, and 2) John Philip Sousa himself demanded payment for being the composer of the pieces on the recordings, and being so important a patriot he actually petitioned congress to enact laws regarding “royalty payments” to composers for recorded media.

Here begins the great story of recorded media. It goes through many changes over the course of the century, wax cylinders, 78rpm shellac records, 33 and 45rpm vinyl records, tape, multitrack tape, cassette tape, digital tape, compact discs, and finally the digital information freed from the physical media and stored and passed back and forth between peoples’ hard drives.

So. Let’s talk then about the value exchange. What is the value that is being translated into a monetary currency here, when composers sell music? Since a person can’t actually “own” music itself, I understand that the value is in the hearing of it. Music, indeed art in general, has an intrinsic value that gives an audience some form of pleasure or meaning when it is being heard or viewed. The performer of music can sometimes charge people money to hear them play. The composer of music had more limited options, unless they themselves performed it, until the rise of physical media, which gave them a physical object that could serve as the currency for the value exchange (albeit additionally laden with the ideas of mechanical and artistic royalties to enable this.) I would like to point out as well that with the development of the recording arts themselves, a huge compositional aspect to recorded music came to exist within the recording itself, perhaps more akin to sculpting sound. The final product, the “sculpture” would then be the final mastered version of the piece.

So here is where our current problem arises. When the recorded piece of music is made, the information is now able to be digitized and copied with no degradation from the source media (from a compact disc—a vinyl record can be copied when played, but as it is played it plays an analog representation of the piece, and a copy is degraded by another generation.) Of course, when a digitized file is made, it can be copied into other digital file formats that may degrade the original (e.g. MP3 or AAC+ file formats, which purposefully lose some of the information.) Regardless, the inherent value of a piece of music is in the listening, and that value does not disappear.

Adherents of what we now call “Media Piracy” claim that “Copying is not theft. Stealing a thing leaves one less left. Copying it makes one thing more”. What is happening here seems to be a willful ignorance that the inherent value is still there, not being paid for in the distribution of additional copies. These same individuals would certainly make the claim that they are copying the music in order to listen to it, (though there have been studies that suggest that the hard drives of the biggest illegal downloaders are full of unviewed or unheard media!) but are refusing to admit the relevance of the social contract that says that that inherent value is what is used in the exchange rate with monetary currency. I see this as a hypocrisy: either music has no value at all, (in which case why copy it to begin with?), or it has value and the copiers are refusing to admit that it does, simply because it is a copy. There is no way that a piece of art can have value and exact copies of it cannot. There is no way that anything can both have a value and not have a value at the same time (in our physical universe.)

I also see this as the main problem with the Creative Commons licensing formula. The strictest license allows anybody to “download your works and share them with others as long as they credit you, but they can’t change them in any way or use them commercially.” The idea here is that there would be no economic exploitation. This, however, ignores the fact that the value is there so any copying whatsoever is in fact economic exploitation.

I think that this sort of breaking of the social contract of value exchange is becoming more and more common. However, we don’t have people breaking the social contract of paper currency’s value as often, simply because there are extremely restrictive laws regarding counterfeiting.

Similarly, paper currency (and coinage to a large extent) is really only worth the cost of the paper and part of our societal systems allow it to represent value by means of a social contract. Listening to a copy of a piece of music would be like taking somebody’s currency and then claiming that it is only paper and therefore valueless, …and then spending it!

A willing disbelief of any inherent value of anything can lead to the acceptance of the idea that a copy of a piece of art has no value (even when the same person is utilizing the cultural value of this copy.) The morality that allows this hypocrisy is one that sees such conflicts as anachronistic. Jennifer Egan’s latest novel, “A Visit from the Goon Squad” has some very funny chapters set in the near future involving children who have grown up in the current media environment who refer to this sort of moral dilemma as a form of “Atavistic Purism” (though, the use of atavism in social sciences should refer to an actual previous state and there is no morally pure previous state of society. Perhaps it should be “Atavistic Puritanism”.)

Indeed, more and more younger people becoming adults (in the legal sense) are seemingly oblivious to any morality involving copying others’ intellectual property. See, for example, this New York Times article on plagiarism. Many believe that things available on the web are fair game and “authorless”. One German teenage apparently even plagiarized most of her novel and when caught, said: “There’s no such thing as originality anyway, just authenticity.”

Additionally, many people in the “sharing culture” believe that artists and musicians are either overpaid to begin with or are somehow untrustworthy enough to pay for what they do, or that the creative class’ output has little value to being with—all the while benefiting from this same output. See this Salon article. Or, they somehow believe that supporting intellectual property rights is somehow opposing free speech! As if supporting workers rights were somehow different.

It’s easy to see this same mindset in much of the popular music of today—a lot of it is made out of other music. I recently watched a video interview with a famous DJ, (Theo Parrish ) who claimed that he favored “artistry over convenience” in his milieu, denigrating the use of computers in favor of playing vinyl records on turntables, even going so far as to compare the “artistry” of finding old records and playing them as a DJ versus using a computer playlist to painting with oil paint and brushes versus using photoshop. I was incredibly taken aback by the narrowness of this focus, where he was willfully ignoring the basic fact of this essentially bourgeois use of the labor of others by making music from other peoples’ recordings of music! In essence a selector DJ is the very paradigm of capitalist use of the labor of others, where one is paid for their taste, the choices they have made of in others’ music being their talent. But this view of intellectual property or ownership of music is clearly not even part of the mindset of such an individual.

I would even go so far as to say: perhaps it is no longer OK to use samples of other peoples’ music to make music that you claim is your own, or represents you. This is an unpopular viewpoint, I know, and one that has been fermenting in me for a long time. I admit freely that when “sampling” started in Hip Hop in the 1980s, and was then used as parts in so many other musical genres, even so far as plunderphonics, I believed in the idea that when a sample of one music is taken from its initial context and used in an entirely different context, it bore an almost surrealist element of juxtaposition, which made, to my mind, interesting forms of semiotics, unintended meaning made by the juxtaposition of contexts.

Unfortunately, this has developed into a culture of music making where the idea of juxtaposition is no longer in use, where the context of the sample is the same context of the music it is used within. It is not only no longer interesting, it has nothing to say. When Apple made Garageband, an application that by their very advertising tagline needs “no musical talent” to make “music”, I think it basically ended the game. Yes, those loops are lacking any rights other than the one Apple sold you with the software, equivalently McDonalds is selling food with no nutritional value.

The Pirate Parties that are infiltrating government in Europe are additionally opposed to copyright, basing their argument on some economic model of “blockbuster” entertainment releases (e.g., “The Avengers” opened with a $200 million weekend, therefore after a year, it should be free,) completely ignoring the facts that 1) most artists are dependent on the “long tail”, that is to say that the project either will never recoup its investment or may make it back if sold over a great length of time, and 2) somehow it is alright for people in other professions to save money to provide for their children but when that savings is in the form of intellectual property it is somehow unreasonable.

If an author writes a book and it sells well, what argument can you possibly make that she isn’t doing it to provide for her children or grandchildren, that it should be free after the first five years in print?

The entire Pirate Party basically comes off as a bunch of self-centered teenage boys in their views on what they want and why and their severe lack of human empathy.

This is not a pretty picture of the future. If you combine these ideas with the veneration of popular idols who do nothing, (“What does a Kardashian do?” “Kardashes…?” ) we become a society that is easily manipulated by media and thus easily controlled. In western culture, even into the 1970s, people were interested in intelligent and artistic people in society. As education in America began to suffer in the Reagan era, and continued a 30 year slide toward a population of people who are convinced by the pyramid scheme of Republicanism, we have found ourselves in a society that produces more vacuous media than any other, at the expense of the minds of the audience, enabling the current generation controlling the thrust of pop culture to be willfully ignorant of any political or cultural history that came before them.

Many people think that the music industry also started its artistic decline in the 1980s even as it began an economic upswing into the 1990s. I have heard anecdotes that say that the reason was of course the wholesale introduction of organized crime who saw the 13 million copy sales of “Frampton Comes Alive” and made some quick calculations. Of course, we’ve been fed crap for years, but in the past decade, or decade and a half, a huge percentage of media made is either directly using older media (i.e. sampling, so-called, though entire pieces are lifted piece by piece) or referring older media or authors, not merely as quotation but as if a particular album or artist was a genre unto itself that newer artists could be part of. (I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: I’m tired of indie-pop bands who just discovered “Pet Sounds” and think that they can be part of it as if it were a genre.) The idea of venerating a DJ based on their expression of “who they are” is as intensely bourgeois as veneration of a king because of their choice of composer for their court dances.

Some people have written that this is simply a market demanded “supply versus demand” situation, where music is now devalued and seen as overpriced. I somehow don’t doubt that it is devalued in the minds of the consumer (why pay when we can get something for free?) but I don’t believe this changes any inherent value. I think the perceived value is lowered due to ubiquity, that is to say, music is everywhere and with the advent of personal listening devices has become almost obligatory background information. This leads to a new problem of perception of music, let alone the value of music: most people are constantly “hearing” music. How many are listening? The iPod has changed our culture, there are even sociology courses in these changes that make us “alone, together”, and we all know the “why, when I was a kid…” stories of listening to LPs and looking at the album cover in a dedicated session, something that compares to dedicated classical music audiences (those that aren’t sleeping) listening quietly and intently to the music in a small auditorium or salon. I offer this comparison to bring me back to the idea of the development of the western musical language over the course of the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries. “Listening” allowed a forward momentum. “Hearing” seems to have allowed a stagnancy in development. (Though in this article the author believes that people are indeed listening, and that this is an modern urban attempt to control personal space in crowded environments. I would tend to think that the intention is listening, I certainly use headphones for critical listening myself, but I still bet that for most people it’s just background music for their current endeavors.)

So, it’s 2012. We now have a culture that has been distrustful of intellectuals since before eggheads won the war with their atom bombs and cryptography, a culture gradually educated less and less, taught to worship “cool” by a media culture that sells it to us, taught to idolize the rich by the rich themselves, a culture where media necrophilia is the norm (why remake movies that were good to begin with, anyway?), where new and creative art is made less and less, where an artist cannot survive economically due to these factors combined with the lack of control of the currency exchange of their art.

Combine this with our current economic and political situation, the wars based on control of energy production and fueled by religious positions (don’t even get me started on this!) Where can this end up if not a culture that falls, as did Rome?

Ok, that’s sort of a bummer.So where can we go? Can we rebuild some sort of society that values art and music? It’s unknown. Can we ever make a way for artists and musicians to gain some sort of value for their work? This could be possible, but it will be difficult. For one thing, there is no such thing as “sustenance level capitalism”, only growth-oriented capitalism.

The pundits who claim that the internet “leveled the playing field” for musicians got just that: a level field. A whole lot of mediocrity (yay, we won the DIY revolution!) Unfortunately, the modern fan-based patronage hasn’t panned out the same way the old Royalty-based patronage did, it’s still a situation where the rich (corporations, usually) pay and everybody else listens for free—to those who get the production paid for by advertising!

For most artists it’s a case where they pay for their own production costs themselves and then a few people buy the music and everyone else listens for free. There are of course a few lottery winners in the fan-based patronage, touted as examples by tech writers in various blogs of course, but there are as many of these as actual lottery winners—and certainly those are the ones to garnish the media attention, why wouldn’t they be?

We can try to educate people, not only in the realities of being a musician/composer/artist/dancer/whatever, but also in general. I do believe that more education in general is necessary for the world at large. It can only help. I’ve been a teacher of music for several years, and while of course I am teaching musicians, I always do try to include, for example, social relevance into music history and mathematical relevance into music theory as a way to get people to think. I can see that it works, to some extent, to get students thinking around the present idea instead of trying to memorize.

Economically and technologically, I’ve heard a few decent ideas. The best of which so far seems to me to be Paul McGuiness’ article in GQ where he points out that the ISPs are the ones making the money here, and how it should not be difficult, in fact is possible, to know exactly which bits have been downloaded by whom when. It’s pretty easy. Oh no, you say, I don’t want anybody spying on me! Well, tough, it’s already happening.

If you’re on the internet, your privacy is compromised. In fact, as Jaron Lanier points out repeatedly in his excellent book “You Are Not a Gadget”, the anonymization of one’s presence on the internet has only worked out for the worst, bringing out the troll in everybody. If we all had to be ourselves publicly, we might have to back up our various statements in real life, idiotic or not.

It occurred to me recently while trying to find a decent mobile phone plan (I recently moved to Sweden) that the real winners in the entire streaming radio/cloud based collection services are your phone companies as much or more than the ISPs. Apple, Google and Amazon are all chomping at the bit to get everybody’s music collection’s uploaded, and Spotify, Pandora, MOG, etc, are all deep into mobile app development. (note: I worked for Pandora for 3 years, until April 2012, so it’s iffy what I can actually talk about w/r/t the company in a legal sense. Leave it at: we had a bad breakup.)

Recently, for example, Verizon removed the unlimited data plans, to the glee of the wall street pundits. The more you stream, the more money they will make. I know how much Pandora pays in royalties, and I know somewhat how little Spotify does (very confusing, when they have made individual deals with major labels) but as all the spreadsheets show, that means zillions of plays per before a composer earns U.S. minimum wage! As Paul McGuiness noted, it’s certainly an easy matter of digital bookkeeping to know what’s being played. Why not have the phone companies chip in with their immense data charges? I mean, they even charge people for sending SMS texts… that must cost them absolutely nothing. I’m betting the data usage is near a 1000% markup.

Other possibilities have included the more idealistic ideas presented in forums, such as caps on value for music, wherein once that cap is paid it become freely accessible (this in response to my musings that potentially value can be calculated by the number of listens to a song: if you bought a CD and listened once, would the tracks then inherently be more valuable than if listened multiple times, as each listen spreads out the cost of the CD…?) Or ultimately the idea that there will be no more professional artists or musicians and the art forms will lapse to the era of folk music or folk art.

Personally, I like recording music, manufacturing music in the studio. As long as I have a job that can keep me alive (which I do not at the moment…) I will continue to do so, regardless of the ability to “sell” the music. As a solo artist, I’ve basically been priced out of performing with a band: I can’t afford to pay other musicians nor even rehearsal time if the band isn’t popular enough to earn more than $400 for a gig, and that just doesn’t happen.

So I’ll see you on my front porch in a few years?

Breaking News!! Band Embraces New Technology and Business model.

by Bob Regan
(re-posted by permission, copyright in the author)

Our band was heading out for a 6-week tour of the Northwest. We had gigs booked in Portland, Seattle, Vancouver, Spokane, and lots of points in between.  We’d spent the past month hunkered down, recording new songs (recent advances in technology had made it possible for us to cut great sounding tracks without breaking the bank). We had them pressed up on our own indie label to sell at gigs and to promote ourselves at radio. We’d had a few hundred T-shirts designed and printed up, (although a homeless guy had stolen a box of 50 out of the back of our truck. When we saw several worn by his buddies downtown, we wrote ‘em off and called it exposure). We used all the latest technology to connect with and expand our fan base. We tried to think outside the box to come up with new and different income streams, anything that would help us do a little better than break-even.

The year? 1977. The more the music business changes, the more it stays the same.

I know, I know, I’m out of date and out of touch. How can I have a valid opinion if I’ve been doing this for 35 years? (Copyleft types may insert demeaning comment here, I can take it. I have, as Thom Schuyler once said of song writers, “the skin of a rhinoceros, the soul of a dove.”)

Like most bands, then and now, we never hit the big time. When we called it quits, I pushed on alone to L.A, signed a solo major label record deal, had one chart flop, then got dropped (the evil bastards did put up a 100K to make the record—red ink from which I walked away).

As it turned out, I, like a lot of young musicians who survive by touring, was pretty good, but not great. I was an OK singer, not a bad guitar player, but I wasn’t a star, didn’t have the ‘it’ factor. After my stint in LA made that clear to me, I bailed on my artist dreams and, along with my wife and two babies, moved to Nashville to see if I could find a niche behind the scenes. I played guitar in studios and on the Grand Ole Opry, while I pursued my real calling, songwriting. I eventually wrote one hit, then another, then several more for some of the biggest acts in Country Music.

I now made my living solely from royalties from licensed, legal uses of my songs.
I no longer had fans. (Well, maybe my publisher and the artists who recorded my songs, but they expressed no desire to buy a Bob Regan T-shirt.)

I bet it all on Article 1, Section 8, of the Constitution, which gives authors the “…exclusive right to their respective writings….” I wish.

These days, when I read articles about the ‘new’ music business in technology oriented magazines, sites and blogs, (most recently the “Emily from NPR” dust-up, where she stated she had 11K songs on her Ipod, but had only purchased 15 CD’s in her lifetime.) I’m invariably told that it’s now all about the ‘artist/fan’ relationship, not about sales or royalties. I’m instructed that if you have good content, an ability to connect with fans, and a good business model, you’ll succeed. I’m presented with examples of successes of forward thinking DIY (do it yourself) bands. Types like me are scolded for not emulating them. Hmmm.  Thought I’d already been there, done that.

Folks, here’s the reality of the music business I inhabit. It is made up almost entirely of former DIY artists and band members who beat up the road for God knows how long, honing unique talents that eventually led them not to stardom and the stage, but through the side door into the studio, the vocal booth or the writers room. Here, they no longer have a direct ‘artist/fan relationship’. Here, they use their talents to support the ‘stars’ that do. Their days are mostly spent using those talents, not amassing facebook friends, stapling flyers on telephone polls or promoting a Kickstarter fund.

Maybe it’s a drummer who has killer time and chops, maybe a guitar player who looks like a bridge troll but who can come up with licks that make other’s songs come alive. Maybe it’s a songwriter with a tin voice but a golden pen, maybe a former sound guy who now sits behind a recording console because he can hear the difference between a 10 and a 20 millisecond reverb pre-delay. It’s the programmers, producers and background singers, all of the amazing talent who make a living, not a killing, in an incredibly competitive corner of the music business, the one that helps create 90%+ of all music heard, purchased–and stolen. When songs are P2P’d, stars still have gig and merch $. We get zip.

Yes, I receive an advance from my publisher, and studio guys and girls get paid by the session, but since revenues from music sales are down by over ½ in the last decade, there are correspondingly less dollars and far fewer opportunities. Royalties are in the tank. In Nashville there has been a 2/3 reduction in staff writer positions over the same period. If our music were not desired or if it were bringing in less money overall, I’d say it’s time for us all to pack it up and go home, but that’s not the case. The desire and demand for music has never been greater, (Think Emily and her 11K songs) but a large % of the money it generates is now diverted to entities that have no stake in the creation of that music, who have no interest in seeding the next generation of artists and the talent that supports them. Think Kim DotCom.

Does anyone reading this remember or realize that the Beatles gave up touring in 1966 to be a ‘studio band’? With their time freed up, they went on to create Revolver, Sgt Pepper, The White Album, Abbey Road, etc.? Would that happen in a model where it’s all about tickets and T-shirts? (I would pay top dollar for a George Martin beer cozy.) Maybe the animators who worked on Avatar, the most P2P’d movie of all time, should go audition for bit parts in summer stock, get with the new fan-based model.

I’ll bet that as I type this there is a tech savvy, DIY band embracing the new model, gearing up for a tour of the Northwest. I hope they make great music, great money and lots of new fans. I also hope that if, God forbid, their band eventually breaks up, one or two of them has the audacity to keep going, to see if there might be a place for him or her off the road, out of the spotlight, where they might make a living using their unique skills while being home often enough to coach a T-ball game or two. If I’m still around, I’ll welcome and encourage them, and do all I can to make sure they are compensated in accordance with those skills and contributions, even if, especially if, they don’t have a facebook band page.

Thanks for your time. This DIY-nosaur is going to lumber off to the tar pit…er I mean studio. Crazy as it seems, some still mistake me for a fleet-footed, highly adaptable mammal.

Bob Regan
Nashville Tn

 

You many also enjoy reading : If The Internet Is Working For Musicians, Why Aren’t More Musicians Working Professionally?

Making Music You Like by Maia Davies

by Maia Davies
(re-posted by permission, copyright in the author)

Artist and Repertoire. How relevant are the tried & true industry opinions on an artist’s choice of material? Nowadays, we will find most artists and bands penning their own songs and sound. But in pining for the prize of popularity, many start considering shifting their creative focus in order to fit in more. Can’t play it on top40 radio.  Too commercial for college radio. Can’t put pedal steel on a pop record. Can’t be political in a country song. These are phrases we know to be tossed around so liberally, we seem as an industry to dismiss their implications, ones especially relevant in today’s changing context. I played with the mighty ensemble Broken Social Scene this last weekend at Ontario’s Northern Lights Festival, and here is what I have learned from them.

A rich creative collective, they have engineered a unique sound and genre that’s both enchanting and commercially successful, and this seemingly based on one simple principal: they make music that they like. It neither tries to conform nor subvert accepted formats in my opinion. They are merely inspired and empowered to enjoy what they do, a model which they’ve proven can work. I believe they make great records that people buy, put on a great show that sells tickets.

I’m not implying there aren’t a few dozen more reasons that account for the success of such musically honest groups (like BSS or the Black Keys), but it seems to me that making great art that is a true representation of your artistic expression is a damn good place to start. Especially in a climate that shows poor sales using established marketing and A&R practices. I will be sure to follow my own advice. Wish me luck.

The Trichordist Random Reader Weekly News & Links Sun Jun 24

Grab the coffee!

We are humbled and overwhelmed as without a doubt the biggest story of the week for Artists was the debate inspired by David Lowery’s “Letter To Emily” in response to a post by an intern at NPR’s “All Songs Considered.” What followed was an out pouring of support by musicians, artists, creators of all kinds and music fans. We are grateful to everyone who took the time to read David’s thoughtful words, discuss, retweet and repost on Facebook. In a few short days the voice of artists sharing the response resulted in attention from major media news outlets such as Time Magazine, USA Today, The LA Times, The NY Times, MSNBC, Forbes and countless others. The point is not so much whether these outlets agreed or disagreed with David in part or in whole, but rather that the voice of artists uniting on the issue of fair compensation became unavoidable as a mainstream topic of conversation. Probably our favorite report of the week came from Digital Music News who stated, “Our Digital Innocence Just Died. And David Lowery Killed It…“.

We also want to thank all of the artists who also spoke their minds in the comments, Tweets and other posts.  We want to continue to support you and invite you to suggest posts if you’d like to write on the Trichordist as many of you have.

Of course there were some who disagreed, but that’s why it’s called debate, right? At least this time both sides were heard.  Although we had no idea that so many of you guys would pass it forward to your friends and fans—hundreds and hundreds of thousands of you—we were really impressed by your efforts and the overwhelmingly positive support you gave to David.

MORE NEWS!

Hypebot and WhoSampled present information and an inforgraphic on 30 years of Sampling which appears to directly contradict claims made by anti-artists rights groups about the benefits of innovation in copyright when all stakeholders are compensated fairly.
http://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2012/06/stats-and-figures-on-30-years-of-sampling-infographic.html

Interesting reports from Japan passing a law that would jail illegal downloaders:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/22/japan-passes-jail-for-dow_n_1618479.html

Pirates really don’t like going to Jail…
http://www.forbes.com/sites/parmyolson/2012/06/21/pirate-bay-founders-pin-their-hopes-on-human-rights-court/

Pirates and Jail part two… Appears that Judge in Germany favors Fair and Ethical Internet:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/kinoto-founder-dirk-b-jailed-337795

Digital Music News reports on how Major Advertisers appear to support YouTube Piracy:
http://www.digitalmusicnews.com/permalink/2012/120620video

In related news Hypebot reports Google/YouTube to take legal action against YouTube to MP3 sites:
http://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2012/06/google-looking-to-shut-down-youtube-to-mp3-conversion-sites.html

Amanda Palmer signs a distribution deal with the Cooking Vinyl Record Label:
http://www.billboard.biz/bbbiz/industry/indies/amanda-palmer-partners-with-u-k-indie-cooking-1007385352.story

Most artists sell less than 100 Downloads per year, probably not what TuneCore and Jeff Price want to hear. Digital Music News reports on the economic reality for most musicians:
http://www.digitalmusicnews.com/permalink/2012/120618download#YPz6TGC-qHVGRC1NdT04lw

CopyLike.Org – We Do This For The Love

Check out this Organization:
http://copylike.org/
https://www.facebook.com/copylike

We do this for the Love,
But unfortunately the supermarket
doesn’t accept love, they want money.

You might have heard that music is very cheap to make these
days and computers make everything easy, and you don’t even
have to be able to sing.

That’s partly true. Big businesses have made a lot of money
selling cheap crappy junk to you. But that’s not our fault,
we’re real artists, we make real art.

Art takes time, its not easy at all. If you don’t believe us
try writing a song or directing a movie.

We all need to eat and keep warm. If we want to charge
anyone for our work, why should we feel any shame?

Defend Copyright.
It’s All We Have Left.
COPYLIKE.ORG

The Trichordist Random Reader Weekly News & Links Sun Jun 17

Grab the Coffee!

This past weeks posts on The Trichordist:
* The Wall Of Shame Continues…
* CopyLike.Org – Pay Creators Like You Pay Everyone Else
* FarePlay.Org – An Open Letter
* Launch & Iterate, Google’s Permissionless Innovation
* Google Launches “Hot Trends”, The Pirate Bay Tops News Items…
* Artists Deserve To Be Compensated For Their Work by Mark Isham (Guest Post)

The biggest story of the week is no doubt the Pro-Creator/Copyright win in the court of public opinion which has the pro-piracy crowd tongue tied. Oatmeal Versus FunnyJunk is no doubt a case study for creators when looking at the illegal exploitation of their work. We applaud Matt Inman for turning the tables on those illegally exploiting his work in such a profound way. There’s much to be found on the Web this week about this story, and it deserves it’s own in depth post, until then this brief overview from Copyhype is our favorite:
http://www.copyhype.com/2012/06/oatmeal-v-funnyjunk-a-brief-observation/

21 Cents per stream? We’re watching this one with interest. New music streaming service Arena says, “101 Distribution has announced the launch of 101 Arena, the first and only free streaming music service to pay 100 percent of all advertising revenue generated directly to artists and film makers.” To put this in perspective, Spotify is only paying out .005 Cents per Stream according to most published accounts. More info at this link from PR Newswire:
http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/next-generation-streaming-app-puts-focus-on-artist-profit-148672305.html

Independent film distributor Kathy Wolf has launched a legal and legitimate online movie distribution and sharing platform. We’re always excited to see new models evolve that respond to the marketplace while respecting creators rights. The Huffington Post Reports:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kathy-wolfe/movie-file-sharing-goes-l_b_1575233.html
http://wolfeondemand.muvies.com/

Here’s a fun little post we found from Moses Avalon this week following a panel at the Music and Entertainment Industry Educators Association Summit. Nice plugs for both Robert Levine’s “Free Ride” and David Lowery’s “New Boss / Old Boss”. More here on the StumbleUpon Blog of Moses Avalon:
http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/18AuPZ/mosesavalon.com/free-ride/

There is a lot of debate over how search engines operate, including the filtering and ranking of search returns. The way search engines operate is suggested to effect everything from consumer choices to the aiding in the illegal exploitation of copyrighted works, SearchEngineLand.Com reports:
http://searchengineland.com/a-letter-to-the-ftc-regarding-search-engine-disclosure-124169

Think Social Media is a game changer? Maybe… Digital Music News Reports 93% of Americans still listen to Broadcast Radio…
http://www.digitalmusicnews.com/permalink/2012/120612radio#ipynIIM25jAuEyVZl53zA

Will Apple, Amazon and Google own .Love and .Music? Forbes is calling it the greatest land grab in history as tech and internet companies battle for the next generation of root level domain addresses.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/kashmirhill/2012/06/14/facebook-is-ignoring-the-greatest-internet-landgrab-in-history/

One of our favorite thinkers, Jaron Lanier gave a fantastic speech at the Personal Democracy Forum titled, “How to Not Create a New Cyber Plutocracy.” You can read more about Jaron and the Personal Democracy Forum at the link below, the YouTube video of his talk follows.
http://personaldemocracy.com/media/how-not-create-new-cyber-plutocracy

 

[ THE 101 ] [NEW BOSS / OLD BOSS ] [ SPOTIFY ] [GROOVESHARK ] [ LARRY LESSIG ]
[ JOHN PERRY BARLOW ] [ HUMAN RIGHTS OF ARTISTS ] [ INFRINGEMENT IS THEFT ]
[ THE SKY IS RISING : MAGIC BEAVER EDITION ] [SF GATE BLUNDERS PIRACY FACTS ]
[ WHY ARENT MORE MUSICIANS WORKING ] [ ARTISTS FOR AN ETHICAL INTERNET ]

The Trichordist International Translations – Deutschen, Français, Italiano, Español

Four international translations via Google Translate.

https://thetrichordist.wordpress.com/international-translations/

In German Via Google Translate : The Trichordist – Artists For An Ethical Internet
In der deutschen Via Google Translate: Die Trichordist – Künstler für eine ethische Internet
http://bit.ly/TrichordistGerman

In French Via Google Translate : The Trichordist – Artists For An Ethical Internet
En français Via Google Translate: Le Trichordist – Artistes pour un Internet éthique
http://bit.ly/TrichordistFrench

In Spanish Via Google Translate : The Trichordist – Artists For An Ethical Internet
En español a través de Google Translate: El Trichordist – Artistas para una Internet Ética
http://bit.ly/TrichordistSpanish

In Italian Via Google Translate : The Trichordist – Artists For An Ethical Internet
In italiano via Google Translate: Il Trichordist – Artisti Per Un Internet etica
http://bit.ly/TrichordistItalian

Artists Deserve to be Compensated For Their Work by Mark Isham

By Mark Isham for ibuymymusic.org
(Copyright in the Author, Posted with Permission)

Music is something that used to have a manageable business model, but with new technology appearing everyday, manageable isn’t even close. When Shawn Fanning decided to take a crack at technology and created Napster in 1999, the largest file sharing program in the world, he revolutionized the way in which music reaches its audience, changing the entire meaning behind the word “consumer.”

Illegal exploitation of the artists work is now a learned behavior. Artists’ popularity is now based on ticket sales, tweets and Facebook Likes, but not on music sales. Michael Jackson, the King of Pop, and Katy Perry, arguably the new Queen of Pop, both tied five number one singles off of one album by the Billboard Hot 100 Charts, Bad (1987) and Teenage Dream (2010). Yet, compare the sales of these two albums; that is a whole different kettle of songs.

Although music consumption is at the highest it has ever been, the majority of it is being consumed illegally. Steve Jobs had the right idea with the invention of iTunes, making music more accessible than ever. But even with success such as his, illegal distribution is the market owner. Digital music consumption has hit a plateau, only increasing by 13% in 2009. The reason why these sales are so low is that with just a click of a button, type in “Telephone” by Lady Gaga (the most illegally distributed song of 2010) and you will be lead directly to the first site in which you can get that song for free, thanks to Google. So Google profits from the illegal exploitation of the artists’ work, but not the artist themselves. This is the real problem: companies and corporations profiting by illegally distributing the artists work.

Employment numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics show a drop of 45.3 percent between August 2002 and August of 2011 “musical groups and artists”.  Music piracy hurts both the music producers and the music consumers. I’m not the only one affected by this; most, if not all, professional artists have taken a slump in recorded music sales due to the illegal distribution and leaks.

Michael Jackson’s Bad has sold over an estimated 30-45 million copies worldwide. Katy Perry’s Teenage Dream, combining digital and physical sales, has sold 5.5 million total album copies worldwide, a mere fraction of Jackson’s total sales. However, she has tied him with being the only artist to have five number one singles on the Billboard Hot 100 Chart from one album. Her total sales should represent her lasting power on the charts, but they don’t, proving further that the majority of listeners are gaining access to music illegally. Ask any teenager how they access their music — most will tell you they download it illegally.

I Buy My Music (www.ibuymymusic.org) is a new campaign I’ve launched with the hopes of making the realization that obtaining music illegally is taking away more than just money, it’s taking away art — an expression of feeling and power. I Buy My Music is a way of bringing awareness to the quality of life music brings to everyone — taking pride in buying art and supporting our artists and fellow man by reveling in his or her expression.

An artist is only an artist because of the music they produce — it’s their existence. Each song is an individual masterpiece, and the illegal exploitation of the artists work violates this human respect of art. We all love music and should be able to enjoy it. I would like us all to recognize that the artist can only continue to create music from our show of support by purchasing their music, rather than stealing it from them. With the continuation of illegal downloading, artists will be incapable of producing more high quality music that is representative of dedicated, committed and highly trained professionals. I admire and respect musicians, wanting them to continue with the creation of great music, and I encourage all of us to do the same before it’s too late.

Mark Isham, John Morton, Paul Williams