SPEA-A 236 Final Review
Celebrity Economy
'Engineered' celebrity lives in the public eye, followed and hyped by celebrity media based on the principles of Barnum and Colonel Parker
Acuff-Rose
(1942)Publishing Company founded by Fred Rose and Roy Acuff in Nashville; very powerful, blacklisted the Everly Brothers for working with songwriters not signed to their company
Statue of Anne
1710; foundation of copyright law; vested all ownership rights to authors
Soundtrack albums
1938 release "Songs from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs", 1997 "Men in Black" features unique content, can be additional income
Barry Fey
1965 - 90s, Colorado independent promoter of festivals and tours, successful and visionary at staging Rock'n Roll events
Pre-1972 sound recordings
1976 revision of copyright established federal protection for sound recording, pre-1972 sound recordings are under individual state laws - continued cause for legal battles
Rise of streaming music services
1999 TuneTo.com is launched, later Rhapsody, by 2002 first full streaming service with monthly subscription fees, now paired with Napster
C3
2007; Charles Attal, Charlie Jones, and Charlie Walker; revived Lollapalooza, intense awareness on branding and sponsorship
Rolling Stones
A British rock group who cultivated an image as "bad boys"; equally exploited income from touring, recording, licensing and merchandise, structured as a partnership between the 4 of them with 4 subsidiary companies
Bristol Sessions
A recording session run by Ralph Peer in 1927 in Bristol Tennessee; the session provided the first commercially successful recordings of the Carter Family - creating the country music style
MP3
A standard format for music files sent over the Internet that compresses music; 1982, Karlheinz Brandenburg
Digital Performance Right in Sound Recordings Act of 1995
Added digital phono record delivery to mechanical licensing, and established the 3 payment tiers
Scott Joplin
American composer who was the first creator of ragtime, but was denied opportunities and recognition because racial tensions
P2P
An abbreviation of peer-to-peer. Software (often free) which allows you to download files directly from a single computer anywhere in the world that also has the same software installed. Sometimes known as P2P, this is a commonly used way of accessing music, software and films.
work for hire
An agreement specifying an employer's right to own any works of authorship produced for the company during working hours.
iTunes
Apple-owned online retail site for recorded music, now subject to cultural shift away from buying music
Piracy
Appropriation of things that don't belong to you that damage the industry and require legislation
What are the 3 forms of value?
Artistic, social, and economic
Digital Audio
Based on taking a large number of discrete samples of a sound wave, quality depends on sampling rate and determines the size of the file
H.C. Speir
Blues fan and music storeowner that referred local blues musicians to labels and made demos for them - earliest A&R
Talent shows
Chance for audiences to cross into the spotlight, hear the (non-)quality of peers, and put the A&R process into public hands - puts the traditional backstage process on stage with making-off, painful personal stories etc, ex. American Idol, America's Got Talent, X-Factor
Culture Business
Commercial success shapes cultural perception, see impact on pop culture
Promotional clip and music videos
Commercials as opportunities to align a brand with music to reach potential costumers and for musicians to reach new audiences, became promotional clips for songs and then music videos defined by MTV
Wired and wireless communications
Communication among distances, initially telegraph, wireless technology eliminates time lapse and costs of transmission
Stephen Foster
Composer of popular minstrel show tunes; He wasn't a performer, so his income balance sheet could not be achieved from publishing royalties alone
Mechanical License
Copyright Act of 1909; permission to record a composition for further reproductions, established royalties at $0.02/reproduction
Toby Keith
Country star that leverages all brands by promoting them through music and owning stake in their business, artist becomes their centerpiece
Thomas Edison's effect on the music industry
Created prototype of recording and playback device - eventually acquired by Lippincott for musical purposes
Madonna
Created single-name music star and supplements music offerings with brand lines
Collaborative aggregation
Deals struck with major music companies and large aggregators such as Youtube, negotiating terms in their favor and to the disadvantage of smaller, independent companies such widening the gap
Record charts
Define categories, also open up the barriers for success for those who cross over
Chet Helms
Devoted to the musicians and their art, believed in the importance of community, started with basement shows promoting psychedelic music with the psychedelic poster
Crossover
Disruption of defined categories for music and listeners that opens the opportunity for new styles and economic possibilities
Commercial concerts and musical entertainments
Economic viability requires appeal to many casual listeners over and over again, hence the need for popularity and rise of the artist/entrepreneur
Edison Records
Edison Speaking Phonograph Company 1878; focused on building playback and recording devices (the actual recordings themselves were side products)
Artist/Employee
Employed traditionally by aristocrat, now by company to produce for the employer
Producerism
Empowering aspiring producers of goods as customers of services, i.e. talent shows, broadcasting on youtube, become regular buyers and participants
Digital Millennium Copyright Act
Established royalties to performers and labels for digital rebroadcast and allowed SoundExchange to negotiate and collect royalties
"Pay what you like" pricing
Example: In Rainbows release by Radiohead 2007 - success has not been replicated, principle of access and convenience overrides most other factors
Billboard
Founded in 1894 as trade magazine for Billboard signs, the sales charts defined musical categories
Crowdfunding
Going to the public to find financial backers for a creative project (Patreon)
Musical services and goods
Goods are tangible and transferred from person to person. Services are intangible and are provided through actions, not transferable and are unique to the moment
Music on Demand
Initially only by live performance, limited by availability and offerings until development of recording and broadcasting technology
Theme songs
Initially over open and ending credits, it's the music used to promote and brand the film and can become immensely popular and profitable and vice versa make a film popular
Aggregation
Institutions have the capacity to aggregate listeners and consumers on a larger scale than individual musicians
Celebrity Capital
Interaction of celebrity, media, public, and celebrity industry - also the components of branding - being known drives value as much as being talented
Guglielmo Marconi
Invented the radio in 1896
Audiam
Jeff Price and Peter Wells; a collection service for royalties from artist- and user- generated content
Spotify
Largest streaming service but still not profitable - debated for low royalty rates for artists
TuneCore
Launched 2005 by Jeff Price as service to empower bands to manage their own distribution while keeping all publishing rights
protective organizations (MPA, ASCAP)
MPA 1881, ASCAP 1914 - Performance Rights Organizations to compensate creators for public performance of their work
Scale and scalability
Managing a successful performance career depends on right scalability, meaning moving from the best suited small venues to larger venues and larger audiences, classical and jazz music needs subsidy, pop and rock is market driven
Owner / Producer
Many directors transition to owners/ producers of venues for year-round variety programming, often exploiting artists and ensembles
360 degree deal
Multi-rights contracts beyond traditional recording deal based on Motown structure in the 1960s, mostly skewed towards company rather than artist benefits
Blending "serious" music and showmanship
Music halls develop as centers for socialization and familiar music, developing music scenes; serious music > pop music; impresario > showman
Dramatic Rights
Music incorporated in the plot or to advance the narrative in a dramatic work - negotiations with publisher and/or composer
Murray "The K"
New York Rock'n Roll DJ, 1958-67, produced shows during school holiday breaks at Brooklyn Fox and Brooklyn Paramount theatres
What are the 3 Digital Sound Recording payment tiers?
Non-subscription broadcast (radio), non-interactive Internet transmission (Pandora), and interactive Internet transmission (non-compulsory)
Independent labels (Sun, Chess, Vee-Jay, etc)
Often are more connected to local music culture and are able to capture a particular sound and flavor of music
SoundExchange
Organization that issues licenses and collects fees for digital performances of sound recordings and distributes collections to artists, record companies, musicians, and BGVs
Hill and Range
Owner Julian Aberbach connected Elvis to Colonel Parker and signed him to an exclusive publishing deal retaining 50% of all royalties
What are the 3 socioeconomic concepts?
Ownership, access, and capital
What are the 3 transactional frameworks?
Performance, composition, and education
Synchronization Rights
Permission to synchronize video with the music - negotiations with owners of songwriting and recording copyrights
What was the first device to introduce the music recording era?
Phonograph
Director/ Entrepreneur
Professional manager - develop strategies for performance repertoire and presentation, often exploited artists and worked with various performers/ composers/ productions, ex. Frederick Gye
Bill Graham
Promoter/producer at the Fillmore in San Francisco; one of the most influential and successful promoters of the 20th century
Concert/ performance TV shows
Promotes records, tours, upcoming albums (Soul Train, American Bandstand, etc)
Piano rolls' affect on the industry
Provide bridge from amateurism to playback culture of recording era and are the reason for mechanical licensing
Ford Foundation
Provides funding support to support classical music and other fine arts organizations; prime business model for philanthropy
Tin Pan Alley
Publishing district in NYC in 1885 with songwriters on staff as work-for-hire; dominated popular music at the time
Early media conglomerates
Radio networks took everything from popular stage and concert hall and broadcast it, created new business paradigm as aggregator for live performances and selling recordings. Content was free to the public and radio exempt from paying for use of sound recordings - still in place (not for online radio). Unions rise to protect rights of performers: AFM, AGM, AFTRA)
Border blasters
Radio stations with powerful (illegal) transmitters placed outside the US Borders and broadcasting regional/ country/ Mexican music - also called clear channel stations
Major Labels
Represent more artists, have more resources, and have the relationships and the means to handle international distribution - function as massive aggregators and distributors of content
Performing Rights
Similar as radio, monitored and distributed by PROs ASCAP, BMI, SESAC
What are 3 examples of cultural convergence in the music industry?
Social migration, record distribution, and broadcasting
What are the 4 forms of capital?
Social, cultural, celebrity, and economic
Describe the 4 forms of capital
Social: size of social networks and resources from that network Cultural: enduring attitudes of feelings, physical artifacts, and forms of recognition (Grammys, degrees, etc) Celebrity: superstar society, creates fans, audience-performer relations Economic: assets convertible to property rights measured by sales figures and value of copyrights (all capitals are convertible into economic capital in limited ways)
Hybridity and commercialization of musical styles
Song collectors, such as Alan Lomax, searched out traditional music styles, labels commercialized those styles in order to reach new audiences
TV theme, montage, and closing credit songs
Standard now in TV as display of all credits; promotes artist recognition
what part of a composition cannot change when a compulsory license is issued?
The basic melody or fundamental character cannot change
P.T. Barnum
The famous and unscrupulous showman, opened the American Museum in New York in 1842, not a showcase for art or nature, but a great freak show; The Jenny Lind tour created the blueprint for performance payments based on percentages beyond fee
Music Supervisor
The individual who selects and secures the rights for songs to be used in films and TV
Payola
The practice of bribing someone to use their influence or position to promote a particular product or interest
Music Genome Project
The project by Pandora uses algorithms to focus on an individual's unique taste of music
What are the 3 performance transaction models?
Touring, tourism, and patronage
The "Bigs"
Universal, Sony, and Warner
Master Use Rights
Using a specific sound recording - to be negotiated with Master rights owner, mostly record label
Alan Freed
WJW Cleveland DJ who presented first rock concert, Moondog Coronation Ball on March 21, 1952, but his career came to an end when he was guilty of payola
Artist/ Entrepreneur
Willingness to invest into public activities in order to generate income
Live Nation
World's largest concert promoter, over 20,000 events internationally, more than 140 venues, owns Ticketmaster
AEG Live
World's second largest concert promotion organization - Anschutz Entertainment Group - 35 state-of-the-arts venues, Coachella, New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, subsidiaries manage 4,500 musical events, merchandise, multi-media platforms, some Las Vegas-based acts
why did patronage end?
growing middle class
Middle class social and economic implications for music
growth of concert opportunities, publishing, teaching, and diminished patronage
Cost-benefit factors in performance models
success depends on skill of leveraging cost of production against revenue generated
First Streaming Service
tuneto, latter rhapsody