350 likes | 511 Views
Sound media. records . Music as a Mass Media . The recording industry brings music to mass audiences About $5 billion in sales in the U.S. market annually About $125 billion in sales in the global market annually. Revenue Streams. Sales Record Stores
E N D
Sound media records
Music as a Mass Media • The recording industry brings music to mass audiences • About $5 billion in sales in the U.S. market annually • About $125 billion in sales in the global market annually
Revenue Streams • Sales • Record Stores • Retail Outlets (Target, Wal-Mart, Best Buy, etc.) • Paid downloads • Licensing • Radio Stations • Live Music Venues • Any business that uses recorded music
The BIG Four • The recording industry is dominated by four major labels: • Sony • Universal • EMI • Warner • These labels occupy 84% of the US market and 75 % of the world market
2009 World-Wide Digital song sales • Of the top 10 digital songs sold worldwide, U.S. artists accounted for 100 percent. • 1 Lady Gaga Poker Face • 2 Black Eyed Peas Boom BoomPow • 3 Jason Mraz I’m Yours • 4 Lady Gaga Just Dance • 5 Black Eyed Peas I Gotta Feeling • 6 Taylor Swift Love Story • 7 Beyonce Single Ladies (Put A Ring On It) • 8 Soulja Boy Tell ‘Em Kiss Me Thru The Phone • 9 Kanye West Heartless • 10 Britney Spears Circus • Source: IFPI
Scope of the industry • Due to the file-sharing “crisis” of the early 21st century, the scope of the music industry landscape changed • Sony merged with German-company Bertelsmann • Time Warner sold Warner Music • Warner Music and EMI have attempted to merge twice only to be stricken down by regulation
Indie Labels • Indie labels claim 15% of US sales • Motown is the most famous indie label • Later absorbed by Universal Music for a $61 million price tag • Indie labels put out much more music than majors • Majors play it safe
A&R: The Foundation • Artists and Repertoire • Responsible for finding talent and artist development • Artist Development consisted of creating pop culture; A&R executives decided what would be recorded and marketed
Power Shift • Sometimes successful artists leave majors to start independent labels • More control over their art • Cheaper, better recording equipment • Social Networking Sites (SNS) becoming popular for self-promotion and building fan bases
File Sharing: The Case of Napster • Technology developed by Shawn Fanning • Allowed for free file-sharing between users • Why pay for a CD? • Metallica v. Napster (2000) • Victory or too little too late?
RIAA’s Response to File Sharing • Sue illegal downloaders • Pressure schools to crack down • Seek help from ISPs • Upload decoy files • Copy-restriction software
iTunes: A Viable Business Model • Steve Jobs (Apple) • Sample & Download Songs • Pay to download singles or albums • Exceptional Sound Quality • Compressed Format • Fast downloads, Less Disk Space • Clean System • Not filled with viruses
Objectionable Music • Parents Music Resource Center • Explicit Records v. Artistic Freedom • Record companies voluntarily add warnings
Objectionable Music • Radio a different ball game • FCC fines licensees after the fact • Most stations prefer songs like this
Sound media radio
Influence of radio • Ubiquity: Radio is everywhere • 520 million radio sets in the US • Radios outnumber people 2:1
Scope of the industry • 13,000 Radio Stations • $16.1 Billion Industry • Reached its growth? • Declining profits
Radio content • Entertainment • News • Talk Radio
Radio Formats • Programming tailored to specific audiences • Demographics, lifestyles, buying behavior, opinions, etc • Arbitron collects most of the data
Origins of Radio • Vaudeville • Sitcoms • Soap operas • Variety shows • Quiz shows • News • Not much music until ASCAP accepted blanket licensing fees and the arrival of TV
entertainment • Music dominates radio • Popularity of genres and public interests always in flux
News • Was much larger before the 1990s • Many stations dropped News departments • No longer required to operate as public service for license renewal
Talk radio • Live listener telephone calls • Advice programs • Sports • Mostly AM stations • Average listener is white, male Republican at above average income level
Trusteeship concept • Broadcast is regulated by the government • Public Airwaves • Justified regulation • Established Federal Radio Commission • Awarded licenses to broadcasters
FCC • 1927 • Founded as the Federal Radio Commission to regulate the public airwaves • 1934 • Renamed Federal Communications Commission with expanded powers to TV, telegraph, telephone
FCC Powers • Assign Frequencies • Approve, Deny, Revoke Licenses • Regulate signal strength and hours of operation • CANNOT: control content, but can impose fines after the fact for obscenity, profanity, or indecency • Watch this
Local roots • Radio began as a local format • FCC licensed stations to local service areas with local ownership
National programming trend • Brought about a transition from local programming • By the 1930s, CBS and NBC were piping programs to affiliate stations throughout the land • Mutual Broadcasting System (1924) • Allowed any station to pick up any or all of its programming • Local Stations became conduits for a powerful, emerging national culture
Marketplace concept • Telecommunications Act of 1996 • Deregulated radio • Removed limits on how many radio stations a single company could own (previously 40) • Conglomerates • Clear Channel (over 1,200 stations in 2003) • CBS
Corporate radio • Chain Ownership • Consolidation of properties • Computerized Scheduling and Playlists • Voice Tracking • Profit Motive • Efficiency
Corporate Radio • Telecommunications Act of 1996 • Clear Channel – Biggest radio chain • Radio, while still profitable, is competing with: • Satellite radio • Internet radio • MP3 players • Podcasting • Demand programming
Public Radio • Non-commercial broadcasting • Corporation for Public Broadcasting • Channel money into noncommercial radio and television • NPR
Satellite Radio • SIRIUS • XM • Merged in 2009 • FCC does not regulate content; only technical parameters • Subscription-based
Bright spots • HD radio • Digital Signals: Improved clarity • Bundled transmission • Can carry several signals on one frequency • Can store programs for playback
The Future • Future of the Music Industry • What next?