I heard this on Radio 4 and the World Service. Its a half hour programme discussing the music industry, which you should be able to hear via the 'Listen Again' facility:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b03mj272
Or there's a world service podcast at:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/.....s/worldbiz
I've copied the synopsis below. It may not say anything you don't already know, but at least it is delivered in Peter Day's beautifully modulated English accent
Hope this is helpful
Deb x
It has been long established that the music industry has changed irrevocably over the past decade, with the internet disrupting the status quo as it has many other sectors. But the story has moved on from an industry dying from dwindling record sales.
The traditional way of releasing your record has changed thanks to new publishing companies, companies that gather music statistics and the streaming services such as Spotify and Deezer. Now these companies are disrupting the industry once again. Peter Day speaks with the key businesses involved such as Spotify and Musicmetric and the traditional, established players such as Sony Music.
Yet streaming services have also caused controversy because their payments to musicians are seemingly minuscule. Radiohead's lead singer Thom Yorke has battled against Spotify, calling it the 'last fart of a dying corpse' ; how can musicians make money now? Peter hears from a band just starting out, Yossarian, to Moby who has sold millions of records and singer songwriter Billy Bragg. We compare how much musicians receive from different sources of revenue.
But others see the streaming services as saviours and the future of the music industry. Is the problem of small returns from songs streamed actually a clash between a new way of listening to music and the traditional way the industry has been run? Sony Music explain how they are writing their record deals with musicians and that they are thinking about changing this for the new digital age.
Thanks Deb,
Sounds really interesting. I am downloading it now.
I personally am not a fan of Spotify or any of those platforms that want to be middle men for independent artists. In my opinion they do little to help a new artist sell any music, and when they do, you see very little in return. The only path for indie artists that makes any sense to me is direct to fan. But I'm really interested to hear the different takes.
PS - Sorry for the slow response. I've been traveling and have been uncharacteristically off line for a few days. Back at the desk now.
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