Trends

August 27, 2007

Print and Digital Need Not Compete - eMarketer Reports

Interesting article on emarketer - whether this holds true for digital music I am not sure.

Link: Print and Digital Need Not Compete - eMarketer.

"There should be no distinction between online and offline," he said. "There is no conceptual reason these days why marketers wouldn't consider using multiple media with campaigns."

A real cherry for record labels is this graph, for sure (types of advertising that causes people to go to websites):  Search Engines and Recommendation lead the way.  Think about that for a minute. And then think widgets. Syndication. Social Networking.

Picture_5

August 20, 2007

Web Users Now Spend Half Their Time Visiting Content, Far Outpacing Time Spent with Search, Communications and Commerce

Good stuff from the OPA.
Link: Web Users Now Spend Half Their Time Visiting Content, Far Outpacing Time Spent with Search, Communications and Commerce.

"According to the OPA's IAI, conducted by Nielsen//NetRatings, communications accounted for 46% of consumers' time online in 2003. A dramatic shift has taken place since then, with consumers now spending 47% of their time with content, compared with 34% four years ago. The 37% gain in share for content is followed closely by a 35% gain in share for search. However the total time being spent with search remains relatively low, accounting for just 5% of Internet users online time in 2007*. "The IAI has identified a very significant and sustained trend in where consumers are spending their online time," Horan said. "The index indicates that, over the last four years, the primary role of the Internet has shifted from communications to content."

Clearly it's no longer about allowing online content use, or 'not', it is about licensing it and turning it into revenue. Exciting times.


August 19, 2007

Now, the Clicking Is to Watch the Ads, Not Skip Them - New York Times (Advertising2.0)

This is a good feature that talks about what I like to call Advertising2.0

Link: Now, the Clicking Is to Watch the Ads, Not Skip Them - New York Times.

Here are some high-lights:

"The difference between “watching a commercial on a Web site and in your living room,” said Michael Jacobs, executive vice president and executive creative director at MRM Worldwide in New York, is that online is “an opt-in audience; you’re choosing to be there."

The only reason we have any chance of being successful is transparency,” Mr. Droga said — that is, “if people know they’re being sold to, you can celebrate the sell.”

“It’s all about relevance,” said Chris McCumber, senior vice president for marketing and brand strategy at USA Network. “Consumers want to be entertained on their own time, on their own terms.”

August 17, 2007

Silicon Alley Insider: The Great Ad Share Shift: Google Sucks Life Out Of Old Media

Link: Silicon Alley Insider: The Great Ad Share Shift: Google Sucks Life Out Of Old Media.

My favorite quote:

"Traditional media executives are doing a superb job of milking cash flow out of shrinking businesses, but you can't save your way to prosperity".

Sounds kinda familiar, right?


July 27, 2007

Music Syndication - embrace the inevitable: Project Playlist, Seeqpod and... Sonific

Just as Sonific, my own company plying the Music Widgets turf, is about to release its new, shiny, fantastic, network-rattling music2.0- inspiring Playlist feature (check this blog to be sure not to miss that... next week!), this whole turf seems to explode (which is good for us, I think;): witness Fairtilizer, SoundPedia, Jamendo, Project Playlist, and now... Seeqpod

Apart from the rather odd name (hello, branding guys... what are you thinking?) it is quite an interesting app, see the players below; essentially searching MP3 files from whatever MP3 blogs are out there, and sucking the MP3s off them, and creating playlists that can be widgetized to anywhere.

Not exactly a new idea (see project playlist) but nicely ajax-ed and well-done.

So, I can't resist... here are 2 thoughts on this stuff:

1) this is essentially meta-distribution of MP3 files that have been embedded in 10s of 1000s of MP3 blogs around the world, i.e. it's feeding of their blog posts, their servers, their gray-zone legal status (and I say this with great appreciation - I love what they are doing!).

Currently, however, most of these MP3 blogs are kinda ignored by the actual rightsholders or shall I say the major record labels (since most of the indies do seem to like the mp3 blogs a lot), but THIS kind of super-distribution of those 'tolerated' MP3s will rattle their cages fairly quickly. Because, let's face it, this is essentially on-demand, interactive play of single tracks which they have always maintained is subject to a license fee.

I mean, yes, of course that idea is an illusion, too, but still: look at the recent Imeem - WMG lawsuit etc etc - and this is also, of course, the very reason why Sonific does not yet have a lot of current hit artists on Sonific.com.  We just don't feel like giving up a big chunk of our company, and some nice chunk of VC-provided cash (which we don't have, anyway) for the merely theoretical grant of rights to include some of their catalog that is  licensed based on a commercial deal that looks just about as bad as selling weekend trips to the moon (*no implied meaning that Imeem did suffer that fate - just talking about ourselves, here...)

But anyway, what do you think will happen if these guys (projectPL and Seeqpod et al) gain a real audience (meaning... millions of users and embeds in most social networks)?. Well, it's simple: the MP3 blogs that feed them - willingly or not - will get take-down orders; or rather, the top 3 blog services (blogger/ google, typepad / livejournal / vox / six apart, wordpress) that host most of them, will get take down orders for ALL MP3s that are hosted on their millions of blogs, and that will be the end of us enjoying things like fluxblog or hypemachine. I am not so sure these MP3 blogs should be, or are, so happy about stuff like Project Playlist or SeeqPod. Tell me if you know more.... (comment, below)

2) Now, as to the MAJOR LABELS, talk about facing a new reality: Super-Distribution of Music is HERE. NOW. You will not be able to plug these holes, and insist on up-front license fees for on-demand streaming or interactive radio applications like these. You can only PARTICIPATE and share revenues.  You need to fuel the fire not look for a firehose.  I am willing to bet you 100 copies of my book that if you were to actually license all those web-music-social-2.0 companies that want to use on-demand, interactive, streaming-only widgets for their music-driven social networks, you could start to generate some serious money from advertising revenue shares and e-commerce click-thrus, PLUS you could use them to market your music extremely efficiently (well... for free, really!). And NO, this would not replace your CD-Sales (ehem... if you still have some, within the next 12 months) or your digital sales (provided you'll be smart enough to finally get out of DRM before your tanker hits the cliff).

So, to end the pontification part of this post, here are 2 playlists: one with Pat Metheny who I really like, and the second one with all major label content - just to make sure you -maybe- get the picture ;)

Quantcast
SeeqPod Music beta - Playable Search

Quantcast
SeeqPod Music beta - Playable Search

July 26, 2007

7 Digital Media UberTrends | AlwaysOn

This is a very good essay by David Beisel- check it out.

Link: 7 Digital Media UberTrends | AlwaysOn.

"The digitalization of transportation experience. Our cars are transforming from motorized transportation into digital immersion experiences. With in-dash devices ranging from GPS, to satellite radio, to integrated telephone controllers, the place where many Americans spend much of their day is going digital. Also, other transportation experiences, namely public transportation, is being affected by a digitalization trend – everything from digital signage in subways to infomation touchscreens in taxis is modifying what we do when going from here to there"

My comment: indeed - this will mean huge changes for Radio. Once we are all on wireless broadband we can connect to net radio just like we connect to satellite radio, today.

"Digital information becoming increasingly personalized with greater user control and choice. While search as proactive information-seeking reigns today, the notion of passive personalized discovery which is already taking hold will become ever more important with an abundance of information. User control and choice in that process is becoming integral in the content consumption process."

My comment: "I like the 'widgetization of media' concept: everyone will fill-in their web properties with feeds of media and information -- like a canvas, NOT just like a newspaper."

July 02, 2007

The Internet leads a rise in most media usage (says Emarketer)

Not surprising but still good to get some stats on this.... Link: .

"The Internet is the most essential medium for consumers and newspapers are the least, according to an Edison Media Research study conducted by Arbitron in January and February 2007. Respondents were all from the US and ages 12 and older..."

Us_change_in_use_of_select_emdia

May 28, 2007

The plunge of the Major Music Labels (New York Times report)... the end of Music1.0 is near?

Good reporting from the NYT, as usual.

Some of my favorite morsels are below, plus my comments.
Link: Music Labels - EMI - New York Times.

NYT: "Despite costly efforts to build buzz around new talent and thwart piracy, CD sales have plunged more than 20 percent this year, far outweighing any gains made by digital sales at iTunes and similar services. Aram Sinnreich, a media industry consultant at Radar Research in Los Angeles, said the CD format, introduced in the United States 24 years ago, is in its death throes. “Everyone in the industry thinks of this Christmas as the last big holiday season for CD sales,” Mr. Sinnreich said, “and then everything goes kaput...”

Gerd says: guess there IS hope: once the pain is big enough, changing seems like a real option, all of a sudden - that is what we are seeing now. Maybe this ship really has to be steered into the cliffs first, after all?  Call me an optimist but I used to think there were other options ;). My 2 cents: if you have the guts CHANGE NOW, you can still own a good chunk of the market, and prosper.  But: band-aids are over - it's time for real, hard-core changes. Drop copy-protection (at least for now - until something can be used that is of super-value to the USER!), tell the users, fans & artists that you screwed up, go for flexible pricing and bundles, package music into other media, offer agency-type deals to artists, become completely transparent and drop the 'secret sauce' antics, and start using syndication as the prime vehicle of promotion, marketing and distribution. It's not the COPY - it's the ACCESS. It's not Prevention - it's Participation.

NYT: "For the companies that choose to plow ahead, the question is how to weather the worsening storm. One answer: diversify into businesses that do not rely directly on CD sales or downloads. The biggest one is music publishing, which represents songwriters (who may or may not also be performers) and earns money when their songs are used in TV commercials, video games or other media..."

Gerd says: ok, now, I have talked about this until the cows came home, but here is again: switch to music as a service. Again: never mind the copies - the next big thing is offering ACCESS. Brands. Experiences. Added Values. Stuff that only you can provide - together with the artists. Values and experiences can't just be downloaded.

Picture_3_2 NYT: "But very few albums have gained traction. And that is compounded by the industry’s core structural problem: Its main product is widely available free. More than half of all music acquired by fans last year came from unpaid sources including Internet file sharing and CD burning, according to the market research company NPD Group. The “social” ripping and burning of CDs among friends — which takes place offline and almost entirely out of reach of industry policing efforts — accounted for 37 percent of all music consumption, more than file-sharing, NPD said...."

Gerd says: sounds like an obvious problem - it's all out there for free so they stopped buying. But the thing is that this is not the real problem. 'Free distribution' is a blessing not a curse, and P2P / Super-Dustribution will emerge as the main mechanism for digital distribution in the next 3 years (and not just for music). Rather, it is - still seriously counter-assumptive, and beyond grasp of most of the incumbents of 'music1.0' - the unfailing desire to, at any cost (including self-destruction), want to control the ecosystem that the large music companies must keep in check - and then we can understand and monetize what people actually do with technology. They are doing this because they like the music and the artists, not because they want to  do as much damage as they can - YOU simply have not given them good enough options to act differently.

If the model of ueber-control over music distribution isn't working any longer, wouldn't it make sense to try to come up with a new model? Lesser control does not mean zero revenues. There is life after selling expensive copies of plastic, or indeed of 0s and 1s. Trust me.

Picture_2


May 24, 2007

The rise of the legal mashup - engage the user and sell your content! - Lucasfilm offers Starwars snippets for legal mashups via Eyespot.

To my readers from the Music Industry: READ THIS and LEARN!

The WSJ has a good article about Lucasfilm making 250+ short clips available on Starwars.com, tomorrow, for remixing by anyone, using Eyespot. Here are some morsels from the WSJ:

" Working with an easy-to-use editing program from Eyespot Corp. of San Diego, fans can cut, add to and retool the clips. Then they can post their creations to blogs or social-networking sites like MySpace. More clips will come out from time to time over coming months.

Picture_44...In essence, Lucasfilm is going to legitimize and streamline a pastime that has become increasingly popular on the Web..."

Gerd says:  very very very much spot-on. Instead of going after people that want to do this because they love Startrek but don't have permission, they make the footage available themselves, and in return harvest people's attention, and PULL them into the fold, make them happy, and sooner or later... you guessed it, sell stuff to them. Kind of a logical move, isn't it.  Now, music moguls, if George Lucas can do this... maybe you can, too?

"While Lucasfilm could fight what amounts to the theft of its property, it has now decided to take the opposite tack. In doing so, it is tackling an issue that faces all media companies today: how to keep some semblance of control over intellectual property in the digital age..."

Gerd says: that IS precisely the point: you give up some control, hand it over to your users, and get their attention and engagement back, in return. THEN you collect the cash. Just move that toll-booth down a bit.

"We see what's going on at YouTube," says Jeffrey Ulin, senior director for distribution and business affairs at Lucasfilm, who says the company began to think about allowing mash-ups last summer. "We see what's going on out there on the Web generally. And we wanted fans to come to Starwars.com as the center of fan activity."

Gerd says: yes indeed. People do what they do - the key is to invite them to do it WITH YOU and at some location where you can benefit from it. Engage not enrage!

And lastly:

"The mash-up project will come with rules, however. While it won't stop anybody from assailing characters or casting them in unexpected lights, Eyespot has set up a program to make sure none of the doctored clips contain nudity, pornography, and the like..."

Gerd says: the very definition of what I call 'Control2.0': give some, take some, but be a lot less upfront, take-it-or-leave it about it.

Picture_43 A tip: read Mashable every day, and you'll know what's coming. Mashing of media will be a major way to engage and pull the users into your offering. Cut back on the control obsession and you will receive attention. sales. revenues. Got it?



May 20, 2007

VentureBlog on The Widget Economy (monetizing widgets... or not)

This is a very good post on how, why, if and when to make money with widgets - thanks to David Hornik at August Cpital (one of the few VCs I know that actually bother to understand the space they are in - and even share their real thoughts... wow!). David is talking about how widgets can be symbiotic or parasitic which is a very crucial distinction and what it all comes down to. This is exactly where we are at with my new company www.sonific.com (we provide music widgets for blogs, social nets, and photo sites): on the one hand, having our SongSpots music widget available on your platform (such as Wordpress, Friendster, Typepad, Slideroll etc) really adds a lot of value (translating into a stickier site, higher retention, more users and higher overall traffic for the platform), on the hand, Sonific and our content providers also must eventually monetize the traffic (and streaming costs etc) in some way. Which leads to.... you guessed it, ADVERTISING, or rather, what I call Advertising2.0. Sonific currently does not run ads on / in / around the widgets but we will roll out some ad-loaded widgets with some select partners very soon - so this discussion is very relevant for us.  If you have any input on this... fire away!  Link: VentureBlog.
PS: Sonific will make a major announcement in about 10 days - make sure you are on my mailing list to get it before everyone else does (use the sign-up box on this blog or go to www.gerdsnews.com)

May 16, 2007

Add This! - Trends in Social Bookmarking etc

Good resource: Add This! - Trends.

May 15, 2007

Andrew Marr on curling up with a good ebook | Special Reports | Guardian Unlimited (ebook readers - a good idea?)

Good review of ebook readers - I think I need to get one ;) Andrew Marr on curling up with a good ebook | Special Reports | Guardian Unlimited Books.

May 10, 2007

Nine Inch Nails using viral marketing for its new album, Year Zero (how to use the web for music marketing)

Now here is a good example of using the web for some creative marketing. Once again, more evidence that online and offline differentiations will completely disappear very soon! The future of music marketing is in fully converged, pull-not-push, user-centric, viral, merit-based markeing campaigns. Way to go, NIN!  Be sure to check out their WIKI, too. n.sputnik � Nine Inch Nails using viral marketing for its new album, Year Zero.
More comments on NIN's 'Alternate Reality Game'

Yearzero_cover

April 30, 2007

Finally, the On-Demand, Online Garage Band Gets Real -

Eliot van Buskirk writes another good feature here:
Finally, the On-Demand, Online Garage Band Gets Real -.
A good list (also via Wired / Eliot)

eJamming: Live online music collaboration

Indaba: Online music making for pro and semi-pro musicians

JamGlue: Like YouTube for collaborative audio

LightSpeed JamNow: Online music creation with audience participation

Mix2r: Music collaboration for DJs and electronica makers

NINJAM: Near-real-time, glitch-free online music collaboration

Splice: Online music creation, remixing, and mashing

YourSpins: Your own remix in a matter of minutes

April 13, 2007

Phew! Tila Tequila isn't the future of music | The Register

A critical view on Tila Tequila's DIY celebrity efforts.
Me, I think that how she promotes herself is interesting, but the bottom line is that she lacks real substance. And that is a deadly problem to have in the age of digital meritocracy. But: there will be others that do, soon.

Phew! Tila Tequila isn't the future of music | The Register.

April 10, 2007

Investor's Business Daily: Hollywood Reeling From Illegal Movie, TV Downloads

Another nail in the coffin for the idea of a continued 'scarcity valuation'. Sooner or later we are heading towards a flat rate system - everyone uses everyone pays, or rather, everyone's use gets paid for. I think advertising2.0 will solve this problem: the first level of my media consumption will be paid for by synchronized, meaningful, non-interruptive advertising, and by sponsorship opt-ins. stand by. Investor's Business Daily: Hollywood Reeling From Illegal Movie, TV Downloads. "P2P (peer-to-peer) video only accounts for about 10% of file swapping right now, but it's growing at triple-digit rates," said Eric Garland, founder of Big Champagne, a Web tracking research firm."More and more people are getting their entertainment online without paying for it," Garland said. "P2P is more popular than ever before."Tech040307_2

March 26, 2007

Gerd Leonhard on "All Media is going PULL" (video)

March 07, 2007

Endemol and INgrooves Strike Partnerships With MySpace Superstar Tila Tequila (bypassing record industry traditions)

I think this one of many deals that will go into this direction, in 2007:
* base all activities on the artist's brand
* bypass the existing chains if licensing and distribution
* go direct to the consumer with the least possible friction in between

I'll be watching ;)

PR newswire: Endemol and INgrooves Strike Groundbreaking Partnerships With MySpace Superstar Tila Tequila;.

Internet Queen Signs to United Talent Agency for All Representation;
          MySpace and LiveVideo to Be Key Marketing Collaborators;
  TILA's Debut Single and Video 'I Love U' Set for Worldwide Digital-Only
                                  Release


January 30, 2007

The 36 hour day: emarketer on media multitasking . Ready for media overload 1.0?

Emarketer has a lot of good information on media, and this feature is no exception.  Reading this report, it does make you wonder how we will deal with the drastic overload challenges in the future. Will everyone suffer from CPA (continueous partial attention), and how will the Paradox of Choice be solved. Yes, being able to select from 100 songs is better than just selecting from 3, but what about 62 million songs? And all this while the TV is on, and my blackberry is buzzing...?

Us_other_media_while_online Get up. Radio is playing. Turn on the television. Log online. Check e-mail. Answer the phone. Text a friend. Join an IM conversation. Overload? Nope. It's the start of a 'normal' day in the year 2007.

January 29, 2007

Trends: Widget Mania

A good explanation of the current widget madness!

Marketing with Widgets - Interview with Lawrence Coburn � Online Marketing Blog.

January 17, 2007

Unsigned Band Enters U.K. Singles Chart on Downloads Alone | Digital Media Wire

Welcome to Music2.0:
Unsigned Band Enters U.K. Singles Chart on Downloads Alone | Digital Media Wire.

Witham, England - An unsigned band from Essex, England has become the first to break into that country's top 40 singles chart, following a rule change that for the first time allows songs available only as Internet downloads. Koopa's "Blag, Steal & Borrow" reached No. 31 on the U.K. singles chart last week. "It's almost like the boot's on the other foot and we're saying to the record labels: 'Well, you've got to come to us and impress us and make us want to sign to your label', rather than us going to them," 26-year-old Koopa singer and guitarist Joe Murphy told Reuters.

Related Links:
http://tinyurl.com/2q5t99 (Reuters)
http://www.myspace.com/koopa
http://koopatheband.com


July 31, 2006

BuzzMachine - Blog Archive - Waking up the Brigadoon book business

Jeff Jarvis / Buzz Machine - great essay on Book Publishers embracing digital. Reading this, I just can't help drawing parallels to the Music Industry...

BuzzMachine � Blog Archive � Waking up the Brigadoon book business.

Well, publishers don’t need to decide to be all digital overnight…. yet. They can still print books, especially beloved blockbusters. But they do need to realize that they are long-tail companies, that the more content and the more demand they can create and satisfy for it in for more niches with longer life and greater efficiency, the better off they will be. Is the business the same as the one they have now? No, of course not. It’s not the same business it was 25 years ago, either. So stop trying to just protect the old and figure out how to invent the new.

July 05, 2006

Up With Grups - The Ascendant Breed of Grown-Ups Who Are Redefining Adulthood -- New York Magazine

Link: Up With Grups - The Ascendant Breed of Grown-Ups Who Are Redefining Adulthood -- New York Magazine.

* Also known as yupster (yuppie hipster), yindie (yuppie indie), and alterna-yuppie. Our preferred term, grup, is taken from an episode of Star Trek (keep reading) in which Captain Kirk et al. land on a planet of children who rule the world, with no adults in sight. The kids call Kirk and the crew “grups,” which they eventually figure out is a contraction of “grown-ups.” It turns out that all the grown-ups had died from a virus that greatly slows the aging process and kills anybody who grows up.

June 09, 2006

LIFE CACHING | An emerging consumer trend and related new business ideas

Link: LIFE CACHING | An emerging consumer trend and related new business ideas.

good stuff!!

May 31, 2006

The Future Of Media Is In Content Aggregation, Not In Distribution - Robin Good's Latest News

Link: The Future Of Media Is In Content Aggregation, Not In Distribution - Robin Good's Latest News.

Good resource

May 11, 2006

Warner Music MERGES with SK Telecom in venture - :: International Herald Tribune

Link: Warner to join SK Telecom in venture - Print Version - International Herald Tribune.

Told you so: Telecom firms buying into music companies. This is a strong indicator for what will happen all over the world. Flat fee content deals require the pipeline owner to rope in the content producers! Next: Music Like Water

May 02, 2006

eMarketer.com - When Americans Buy…They Go Online First

Link: eMarketer.com - When Americans Buy…They Go Online First.

April 22, 2006

This illustration says it all

but I will still add some explanations later ;)
Picture_24

April 12, 2006

popurls.com | popular urls to the latest web buzz

Link: popurls.com | popular urls to the latest web buzz.

Great resource!

April 11, 2006

The N: Video Mixer. More online remixing and social media...?

The N: Video Mixer.Picture_1_7

More fancy flash stuff

March 23, 2006

ADS over CASH: Students now get their music for free (Ruckus versus Napster)

Link: Daily Trojan - Students now get their music for free.

Another example how ads will be more valuable $$ generators than Subscription Fees. Best quote:
"We had trouble marketing to students because there was a small fee," said Brad Vaughn, the vice president of campus sales. "We kind of came to the realization that it's really not the price of the subscription but that there was a fee at all."

Think about that!!Picture_2


March 17, 2006

The year of VIDEO

wow - check out this stat by Emarketer:
Video_sites_1







Very impressive stats for YouTube, indeed.  Is it all the (smirk) unlicensed content that drives the traffic, or the user's 'own' stuff?  And how long will it last - 12 months, 18 months? Twindle like Friendster or explode like MySpace? Will the average person get tired of user-generated content, and return to pro video and film producers... or will they end up putting their stuff on  YouTube, VMix, Revver etc etc?   One thing is for sure: 2006 is the Year of Video.  and I mean WEB-video, not webywood.







March 14, 2006

Blanket digital licence fails in France [printer-friendly] | The Register

Link: Blanket digital licence fails in France [printer-friendly] | The Register.

Speaking at the Digital Music Forum in New York a fortnight ago, flat fee advocate and former Geffen executive Jim Griffin said he could see why UMG opposed a blanket license.

My favorite quote:

"I agree with Larry Kenswil (http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/03/01/dmf_2006_slashdot_riaa_pie/) [UMG's digital supremo] - this would be bad for Universal. When you've reached 30 per cent market share, when you've pulled off the last big merger, when you've built up the barriers, there's not a lot of benefit from equalizing access," he said.

Thanks Jim!!

February 22, 2006

video flooding the web: WSJ feature (Brightcove)

Link: Sponsored by Brightcove and reprinted with permission 1-800-843-0008.

Good read!

January 12, 2006

eMarketer's Seven Predictions for 2006: All record companies should read this and ACT NOW

Link: eMarketer's Seven Predictions for 2006.

The world is indeed becoming a different place

November 12, 2005

The PASSION about music is back... in digital form. and retain the rights!

THIS is where it's going -- back to the early days of the record biz, albeit in digital form. The PASSION about music and the go-for-it attitude.

From www.digitalmediawire.com: "Warner Launches Digital-Only Label Imprint, Cordless Record. New York - Major record label Warner Music Group announced on Thursday the launch of Cordless Recordings, a new digital-only label imprint headed by Jac Holzman, the founder and former CEO of Elektra and Nonesuch Records. In an unorthodox move for a major label venture, Cordless will allow bands to retain rights to their master recordings, which will be distributed in "clusters" of three or more songs on digital services, rather than as full albums. Cordless will initially sell clusters from signed artists Jihad Jerry & The Evildoers, Breakup Breakdown, Dangerous Muse, Nozzle, Koishii & Hush and Humanwine, on iTunes, Rhapsody, Napster and new, legal peer-to-peer services like iMesh and the forthcoming Mashboxx. "When we started to think about Cordless, certain lessons from the past kept returning to me," said Holzman. "The close, creative relationship with artists and their fan base by frequent release of records, keeping costs low and having a methodology that would let us use our medium to introduce our material to more fans. Cordless is a community intended to give new artists their chance, and a process that connects an audience to our artists' creativity. This is who we are and that is what we have pledged to do."

Another good fit with this:
From www.fruktmusic.com (great newsletter btw!):  "Underworld are now selling new music via their own website in a significant departure from the traditional "album every three years"..... They are the latest in an increasingly long line of established artists who, now out of contract, are free to operate direct to consumer. The first 'track' on offer is a 28-minute piece of music which comes bundled with 177 photographs and artwork. The band says this approach will not mean "the end of traditional albums, remixes, tours, gigs. It's just a way of getting music to [fans] without the help of a multinational every time we feel inspired". ...  http://www.underworldlive.com/

Another clear path into the future: rapid departures from the old PRODUCT format; moving into SERVICES.  Good to see this happening.

November 04, 2005

BBC feature: US youths use internet to create

The BBC has a good feature on what US teenagers do online.

       
                            Image of a young person using a laptop                    
                                                         
69% bloggers (24% non-bloggers) shared own creations
35% bloggers (16% non-bloggers) remix other content for own creations
58% bloggers (14% non-bloggers) created personal webpage
                            
   

"A third said they shared their own work - artwork, photos, stories, or video - with others online. Girls were more likely to do so than boys - 38% compared with 29%...."

BBC feature: US youths use internet to create

The BBC has a good feature on what US teenagers do online.

       
                            Image of a young person using a laptop                    
                                                         
69% bloggers (24% non-bloggers) shared own creations
35% bloggers (16% non-bloggers) remix other content for own creations
58% bloggers (14% non-bloggers) created personal webpage
                            
   

"A third said they shared their own work - artwork, photos, stories, or video - with others online. Girls were more likely to do so than boys - 38% compared with 29%...."

October 20, 2005

Niche markets will rule: WorldSpace to Launch First 24-Hour Global Hip Hop Music Channel

Reports Yahoo news on WORLDSPACE offering this new service. 

"WorldSpace (Nasdaq: WRSP - News) is the world's only global media and entertainment company positioned to offer a satellite radio experience to consumers in more than 130 countries with five billion people, driving 300 million cars. WorldSpace delivers the latest tunes, trends and information from around the world and around the corner. ..."

I think we will see dozens of niche-music channel emerge in 2006, both audio and video, on IP networks, digital radio, wifi / wimax networks, and mobile networks. Entertainment is no longer a mass-market but a mass of niche markets.