music

You are currently browsing articles tagged music.

I found this quick 15 minute video of Mike Masnick from Techdirt doing a presentation on future business models for the music business, with Trent Reznor (from NineInchNails) as an example (via the Swedish blog Opassande):

This is a must see for any aspiring musician, music producer or record label manager. Or anyone else for that matter.

First of all, everything he says make sense. It’s just so beautifully simple.

Second, even though I’m in an industry that heavily relies on presentations that sell this is one of the best I’ve seen so far. Only “bad” thing about it is the speed he talks with, but I’m guessing he had to do that to go through ~280 slides in 15 minutes ;)

Third, the points he are making are really chilling from a business perspective if you consider what the recording industry is doing today (threat, disconnect, sue, etc.). What they are doing is the same thing as Bethlehem Steel did in 80-90’s, and that is failing to adapt to a new market.

From an article by Jim Collins, the author of Good to Great:

Compare Bethlehem Steel and Nucor, for example. Both steel companies operated with hard to differentiate products, and both faced a competitive challenge from cheap imported steel. Both companies paid significantly higher wages to workers than most of their foreign competitors. And yet executives at the two companies held completely different views of the same environment. Bethlehem Steel’s CEO summed up the company’s problems in 1983 by blaming the imports: “Our first, second, and third problems are imports.” Meanwhile, Ken Iverson and his crew at Nucor saw the imports as a blessing: “Aren’t we lucky; steel is heavy, and they have to ship it all the way across the ocean, giving us a huge advantage.” Indeed, Iverson saw the first, second, and third problems facing the American steel industry not in imports but in management. He even went so far as to speak out publicly against government protection against imports, telling a gathering of stunned steel executives in 1977 that the real problems facing the industry lay in the fact that management had failed to keep pace with technology.

Anyone seeing the same pattern again? Spot on.

If I was a shareholder in any recording company (which I’m not) I would demand change in management or strategy. Now.

Tags: , , , , , ,

Spotify - www.spotify.com

Got an invite to the free beta program of Spotify from my co-worker Sebastian (last one ;) ) and I must agree with him when he says this is a great application.

For those of you that have not heard of Spotify, read up on it here. In short, it’s an application that let’s you stream any amount of music for a monthly fee (about 8€). Later on you will also have the option of not paying, but having the app show banners etc. That option is only available right now if you have an invite.

Not only is the application extremely slim graphically, but the performance looks very good as of yet (approx 12MB of ram consumed).

This is the kind of thing that could solve the piracy problem for a lot of companies. This is adapting your distribution methods to a new generation (instead of suing it).

I’m not really surprised that it’s a new entrepreneur that developed this, but it’s kind of sad. If this will be the future and replace many other methods of distribution, what the f*ck was all the legal litigation good for? Why did they not spend the money developing new technology minimizing their “time to market” and other factors instead of ruining ordinary peoples lives. Makes you wonder…

Well well. Spotify is great though ;) Try a “day pass” (about 1€) and see if you like it!

UPDATE: Article at TheLocal.se about Spotify here!

Tags: , , ,

Meadow MP3 blog

As an example of the free and diverse nature of the internet the MP3 blog “Meadow Music” has now launched an english version of their site complete with free (free for real, hard links) downloads.

I previously linked to them in this post.

From Meadow Music:

There is no longer any higher authority who decides what music should be presented to the public and how. Those who write the terms of the world of music, are no longer the record companies, the newspapers, the TV channels, the publishers, the radio channels or any other single participant.

Then who does?

Well, it’s you and me, all of us that listen to music, create music, sing, dance and love music. Everyone can be a part of creating the world of music we want, by ourselves or together.

And you just got to love some of the bands presented ;)

Tags: , , ,

Image from meadow Music. Originally from Martin Bentancourt Myspace page (guessing, but it's the same picture).

Excellent music and an illustration of the wide involvement all over Sweden.

Found the news over at Meadow Music (sorry, it’s in Swedish) and you can also download the song “Nytt land” (A new country) from them free of charge!

See also:
Martin Bentancourt’s MySpace page
David Silva’s MySpace page

Nice with some positive vibes for once ;)

Tags: , , , ,