Tag: Record label

  • Buckle up: Amazon in spending crazy money on entertainment. And it hasn’t even started on music…

    All Is BrightA few months back, MBW suggested that a tide was turning in terms of rights ownership: Amazon and Apple were morphing into content creators, and the natural next step was for both leviathans to become record labels.

    This was incorrect.

    Because Amazon is already a record label.

    There was no grand launch, it required a mere modicum of investment and it’s largely a by-product of its other activities.

    But the fact remains that ‘Amazon Content Services’ (the online giant might want to work on the sexiness of that brand at some point) has been directly commissioning, funding and distributing recorded music projects for over a year now.

    The first prominent effort was the soundtrack to its Golden Globe-winning series Transparent; a US black comedy which tells the story of a family readjusting to life with a transgender father.

    The second was a little more traditional; a one-off playlist called ‘All Is Bright’, which saw recording stars such as Liz Phair, Yoko Ono, The Flaming Lips and Beth Orton lay down original versions of traditional Christmas songs – all on Amazon’s dime.

    A light dabble in the world of music ownership, or is Amazon getting a taste for it?

    Interestingly, if you visit the US Amazon homepage today, you’ll find a big fat ad for a newly-commissioned original playlist – like All is Bright, heavily branded with Amazon’s own streaming service, Prime Music.

    Amazon Acoustics features ‘some of our favourite artists getting intimate… with unplugged covers and originals’.

    Once again, this appears to have been bankrolled, label-style, by the e-tail giant.

    Which all makes yesterday’s big news in the world of TV much more intriguing.

    If you haven’t heard, Amazon Prime Instant Video has snaffled the exclusive rights to one of traditional broadcasting’s biggest global brands: team Top Gear – aka Jeremy Clarkson, Richard Hammond and James May.

    This was a serious bidding war – and Amazon trumped all-comers.

    The FT reports that Amazon paid $250m (yes, a quarter of a billion dollars) for the rights – beating both traditional broadcasters and fierce rival Netflix to the signature.

    For comparison’s sake, that’s $50m more than Sony paid to buy out The Orchard.

    Meanwhile, Amazon is also busy creating its own theatrical movies via Amazon Studios – a production house which aims to finance 12 films in 2015.

    “Filmmakers too often struggle to mount fresh and daring stories that deserve an audience,” said Amazon when announcing its move into movies in January.

    Aka: We have loads of money, and we’re willing to back interesting projects that will become ‘catalogue’ sellers – not just blockbuster popcorn fodder.


    Bezos“A company shouldn’t get addicted to shiny, because shiny doesn’t last.”

    Sitting still is not in Amazon’s DNA.

    This quote, from head honcho Jeff Bezos, speaks volumes: what is new and exciting right now can become drab and moribund in no time. Beware.

    The music business knows how it feels to crash and burn in this rodeo. The CD era was, quite literally, shiny as hell.

    Now we’re being bedazzled again: streaming is glimmering everywhere you look in this business – and magpie eyes are hungry for the prize.

    But Bezos is no feet-first buffoon.

    His 21 years at Amazon have been marked by a balancing act: launching cool new things, and having the patience to work out how he can win at them.

    Amazon Prime Music is a perfect example.

    While the music industry has been transfixed by the Spotify/Apple Music dust-up, Amazon has been plotting a truly mainstream roll-out.

    Signing up to its music streaming service comes with a host of side benefits – including one-day Prime delivery, Prime Video, an e-book rental service, a photo cloud storage locker and much more besides.

    It does so for $99/£79 a year. That’s more than a third cheaper than an annual Spotify subscription.

    “OUR CUSTOMERS LOVED [AMAZON’S ORIGINAL MUSIC RELEASE]. KEEP AN EYE OUT FOR WHAT WE GET UP TO NEXT.”

    As covered earlier this week, Prime has an estimated 40m-50m paying customers… more than double the people currently paying for Daniel Ek’s service.

    The benefits of funding and delivering original entertainment content to this huge audience is not lost on Paul Firth, Head Of Music at Amazon UK.

    Asked about Amazon’s own ‘All Is Bright’ playlist, he says: “Our customers loved it, and it was a completely original production.

    “Keep and eye out for what we get up to next.”

    Firth confirms that this project was made feasible through “direct deals with the performers”, but is tight-lipped on who owns what rights.

    He points out that Amazon’s ability to bankroll music doesn’t end at audio, either.

    “About a year in advance of us launching Prime Music in the UK, we started working with Prime Instant Video to film a few gigs,” he says.

    “These included Paul Weller, Ed Sheeran the Kaiser Chiefs live and a Christmas Carol concert at Abbey Road.

    “Prime Instant Video becoming somewhere people expect to watch music is hugely exciting.

    “The opportunity in time to perhaps use Prime Instant Video for music discovery with a video focus is very interesting.”

    You heard the man. Watch out Vevo.


    Amazon PrimeWhat about Amazon Prime Music, though?

    So can Amazon really do battle with Spotify and Apple Music – whose catalogues hover around the 30m mark – with a comparatively puny selection of just one million?

    MBW understands that the reason Universal Music Group continues to refuse to license the service – now over a year old in the US – is because it’s holding out for a revenue share deal.

    Yet the majority of current Prime members are not yet engaging with the shiny (there’s that word again) new streaming Music addition.

    As such, sources tell us, Amazon believes that deals based directly on streaming usage are more appropriate.

    That’s what it’s agreed with Warner and Sony, whose artists make up the vast majority of the million tracks on the platform.

    “The truth is we don’t need to be No.1,” says Firth. “This isn’t a zero sum game for us.

    “We don’t need other services to fail for us to succeed.

    “THIS ISN’T A ZERO SUM GAME FOR US. WE DON’T NEED OTHERS TO FAIL FOR US TO SUCCEED.”

    “We are targeting, we think, a different group of consumers.”

    Over to Jeff Bezos, and another telling quote about Amazon’s market strategy – one that will repulse those business affairs battlers at UMG:

    “There are two kinds of companies, those that work to try to charge more and those that work to charge less. We will be the second.”

    Adds Firth: “We have 15 years of experience selling music in the UK, so we really know our customers.

    “And we know from our own sales history that for many of them, who clearly love music, £120 a year is a lot of money.

    “We always aim to give customers choice, convenience and value.

    “Prime is great value, and when you think about choice, we’re the only people to offer the choice of buying it on vinyl or CD – both with [instant free mp3 service] AutoRip, of course – plus downloading or streaming.

    “Again, through our experience, we know there aren’t a lot of customers who will shop beyond a catalogue of a million songs.

    “That Prime Music catalogue will grow in future, just as it has done in the US – where it’s a good deal bigger a year after launch.”


    AmazonOne way to ensure that catalogue grows, of course, would be to commission many more original Amazon music productions.

    Amazon doesn’t necessarily have to rival record labels to achieve this aim.

    Apple Music recently funded music videos for the likes of Pharrell Williams, Drake and Eminem – in exchange for a bit of exclusive distribution.

    Just as with Amazon Studio’s pledge to back “fresh and daring” creators, one artist whose video was subsidised by the bank of Apple was Madisen Ward & The Mama Bear.

    Signed to US indie Glassnote, a video for their track ‘Silent Movies’ was funded and hosted exclusively by Apple Music last month.

    Screen shot 2015-07-31 at 12.40.00“Apple’s commitment to supporting these artists has been great,” Glassnote founder Daniel Glass tells MBW.

    “Madisen had a specific vision for this video and Apple’s involvement really helped.”

    This kind of activity is clearly not top of the agenda for Amazon Prime Music just yet – which is concentrating on making a splash with the catalogue it’s been permitted to license.

    Firth is keen to express his excitement for labels in the wake of Amazon’s decision to push Prime Music hard on its homepage, which reaches 175m+ people a month.

    “The visibility that Prime Music’s UK launch has been given by Amazon says everything,” he comments.

    “It is bringing new customers to music in all of the ways we offer it.

    “About two thirds of active users on Prime Music in the US have also purchased [music] from us in the past year.”

    “THE [TEAM TOP GEAR DEAL] SHOWS THE SCALE OF AMAZON’S AMBITION. IT’S A HUGE ACQUISITION.”

    But Firth, like all good Amazon employees, won’t just remain satisfied with a positive start.

    After all, things only remain shiny for so long.

    Echoing Bezos’s philosophy, Firth says that for Prime Music, “Growth is our primary focus. We know there’s a large addressable audience out there.”

    What about that megabucks Team Top Gear deal, then?

    What does it tell us about the possibilities for Prime, its monetary power and, potentially, Amazon’s role as a music financier, in the years to come?

    “It really shows the scale of Amazon’s ambition,” he replies.

    “Whether you love or loathe Top Gear, you can’t argue against the fact it’s a huge acquisition.

    “I’m really excited about the statement it makes – and what it shows we’re capable of delivering.”Music Business Worldwide

  • Jac Holzman: From vinyl to apps to what comes next (Q&A)

    Jac Holzman: From vinyl to apps to what comes next (Q&A)

    Jac Holzman, founder of Elektra and Nonesuch Records.(Credit: Getty Images)

    Jac Holzman is legit.

    His track record in the music industry stretches back nearly 65 years — that’s the lifespan of about 12 iTunes — to when he founded Elektra Records out of his college dorm room in 1950. He went on to sign acts like the Doors, Carly Simon, and the Stooges, but don’t mistake him as a label exec lost in a bygone era.

    As waves of technological change have washed over the music industry, Holzman worked to stay ahead of the break, testing how the conjoined worlds of music and technology could enhance each other. He was served as the chief technologist at Warner Communications (later Time-Warner) and developed Warner Music Group’s e-label, Cordless.

    His latest project is an encyclopedic app delving into the history of the Doors, something he built with a small team from scratch over the last 16 months. Having harnessed the popular consumer technology of today to rekindle the fanbase of a band formed half a decade ago, Holzman looks back at the music industry’s response to other technological changes and discusses the changes he’d like to see in the future.

    The following is an edited Q&A.

    Q: What is in the Doors app? 
    Holzman: This is the new box set. The idea was to tell the story of a group, whose audience has been growing rapidly — 6 months ago, the Doors’ Facebook friends were 10 million; it’s now up over 15 (million). A lot of this is younger generation. We have assembled the entire Doors story, which you can approach from many different angles. There are over 1,550 pieces, and this is really about an experience. But there are other reasons to do this. Music has become terribly commoditized. We’ve essentially lost the album. In most cases, that’s not a real loss. But there are artists who have been incredible album artists. The album is a matching of context and content, and you’ve got to get them both right for those albums to be magic.

    In general, apps are tough, and they’re tough because to do them well costs real money. Sometimes what it would cost to do a standard album, but there’s no way in today’s “music should be free” climate that you can ever recover that. One of the things that encouraged me to do the app, and encouraged Rhino and Warner Music Group to support my little team, was to see what it would lead to. If you don’t start somewhere, you don’t get anywhere.

    You mentioned before that the Doors app — now that you’re at the other side of it, 16 months later — has been successful. How have you seen that success?
    Holzman: There was a kind of a dynamic flow to these things. While all of the so-called marketing is going on, you’re selling a lot of apps. Two weeks after the marketing is up, you’ve dropped considerably, but you stay steady. It’s not like it ever goes dead, because what you have then is the effect of people turning on other people. When we did the first update, we sold almost as many apps as we did originally. That was really interesting.

    But the Doors adding 5 million fans from the end of 2012 until today, is unheard of. And I think that we’re showing that enthusiasm in the streaming services.

    Jac Holzman at his 2011 induction to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame(Credit: Getty Images)

    The anniversary of the Beatles’ first appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show is Sunday. I was curious about your perspective on these iconic groups like the Beatles — the Beatles catalog known for being more inaccessible than other classic groups — on the streaming services. What do they have to gain and have to lose by not being on a streaming service, by having an app or by not having an app?
    Holzman: Streaming services are part of the process of ephemeralization that Buckminster Fuller spoke about years ago. If you take a look at what technology has brought us, we used to have to listen to music at home or have it programmed for us on radio, then the iPod came and we could carry it around. Then iTunes made it possible to buy just individual tracks, further ephemeralization. Now you’re in a situation where you can hear whatever, wherever you are at a fixed price per month. That is probably the ultimate aspect of the ephemeralization. Do I think we’re going to stop selling physical product? Not for quite a while. Take a look, physical product is still greater than digital in many countries in the world. No, we’re going to have all of these mixed up.

    I think where streaming services have been weak is in introductions to new music. We need more trusted first filters. Interestingly enough, we used to have them, we had them on radio in the form of disc jockeys, in the early days of FM when the disc jockeys were more eclectic. We lack first filters, we lack first filters who we really trust. I think Beats has a real opportunity there to pick up on. Because Beats has structured itself and is proud of itself as a curated type of service. They launched it probably at the right time. It’s a work in progress but Ian and his people are really first rate so I have high hopes for them. Pandora was designed to sort of average out the things that you listen to and come up with things you might like, I must say that has that has never worked for me. They come up with some of the oddest stuff that has no relationship to anything I like. I gave up on Pandora, but I still use Spotify. I will audition a record, or two or three tracks from a record before I purchase it — but I still purchase a number of records.

    But the best first filters are friends, people who know your musical taste and talk to you about music. We need more of that circulating.

    You’ve talked about how as people pay less but have more access to more music, that’s a win for music.
    Holzman: It’s a win for everybody. It depends upon how you look at it. If you look at it from the vantage point of 1999-2000 when Napster was launched, it’s a disaster. If you look at it and say I am a record label, it’s not so hot either. Look at it and say: My role has changed, the role of this company has changed, and we are now a music rights management entity. We will manage our assets, and we will restructure our company so as to do that as efficiently as we can. Take honey. Pour some honey out on a flat surface and it’s a definable glob, but add heat to it, see how it spreads. That’s what’s happening. I don’t know what the numbers are going to be, but need to you spread it wider, you spread it thinner. The scalability and width is the important thing here, how big can you spread it, that’s what counts because the catalog becomes more valuable. How you call people’s attention to the catalog is another matter.

    You’ve also talked about opportunities missed during the Napster era, when it was such a fractious time. What other opportunities are the music industry taking of advantage of or missing?
    Holzman: It’s not an industry. It’s really not an industry and they’ve been fooling themselves for years. Napster was a wonderful opportunity to build a viable singles market over time because the loading speeds at that time were embryonic. Put aside the business proposition Napster offered the labels, instead of saying no to that, somebody should have said — and I would have I think if I had been working with Warner at that time — there is something in here. Look at what we’ve got, people can trade singles back and forth, we can monetize that modestly, it all goes through a central server so we can account for it. Had a couple of record companies made overtures to it and seen how the service could be worked, that was an opportunity.

    The Doors app(Credit: Screenshot by Joan E. Solsman/CNET)

    I don’t know how much further you can ephemeralize beyond streaming except maybe a yearly implant some place in your body that has all the collected music and is the size of a pinkie nail. I think streaming, you may find different uses for large companies or new companies. I don’t understand, for instance, why a label like Alligator hasn’t picked up on streaming just blues music for the blues fans. The people of Alligator are very smart, I just don’t know, but that would make sense to me, that’s where labels and label name has value today: if they’re particularly good on genre music. I think that that’s probably an opportunity in streaming, but again if the streaming services are going to do this they’re going to have to get the right people there to help them do it. And I think being able to do genre music intelligently probably will bring more people, more quickly to new music than in a general service.

    So you would advocate that streaming music services…
    Holzman: Tailor themselves for what the audiences are out there. If you’re not a 42 Long, don’t send a jacket that’s 42 Long. You can tailor it, and that doesn’t mean people can’t jump across these things. If I were doing a streaming service, I would tailor the material. I’d have a general thing and then I would have maybe different programs done by very good people on a monthly basis. Now there is some of that beginning to happen, but I would like to see more of it, especially since, for people to come, they find an entry point, I found an entry in folk music, it led to electric blues, it led to world music, it led to rock ‘n’ roll. All of these paths end up leading you to a larger musical feast.

    This touches on the ongoing discussion about man versus machine. How valuable is data, raw data, on a large scale about how people are listening to music and where does that value just falls short.
    Holzman: They tried to formulize it. There was a company in Scandinavia that tried to formulize it, and they had these charts and graphs and emotional peaks and stuff. “If you build a song this way, it’ll be a hit.” Music that works touches people generally in ways that are unexpected, they hear something and they go wow. The wow factor is wonderful, the sheer joy that you can take a limited number of notes, and you hear songs that you never would have dreamed could have been written before. A piece of music may affect you more rapidly than any other entertainment, or informational form. Music is like a carom shot in pool, you know, where you go banking off the side of the table to hit another ball, that’s how music works. That’s how it works with me anyway. There are those that you hear where you don’t want them to stop, you’re in an emotional bubble with the song, or with that piece of music, and those are incredibly moving experiences. And I think have a great deal to do with what makes us human.

    “All of the technology is a means to an end. We are the end. And we just have to pay attention..”
    –Jac Holzman

    What is music if you look at it in the context of this day and age, of being such a technologically embarked upon process — I mean it’s always been that way, you’ve always needed technology to hear music and to make music, but today it’s more wires and batteries than it has been in the past.
    Holzman: That’s just a means to an end. All of the technology is a means to an end. We are the end. And we just have to pay attention. And surrender to it, let it take over, you don’t have to be on top of everything all the time. Music is best when you surrender to it, especially when you find something great. If you find crap, turn it off, but if there is something that intrigues you, give it another listen. Some people come to music from the lyrics, some people come from the melody or the arrangement or how it was recorded, but the more you listen, the more you appreciate, so listen to lots and lots of music, even if you’re only paying half attention. Something will seep into your system that you can use. And sometimes music can get you out of a really bad spot.

    But that’s another conversation.

     

    originally posted at CNET.com

  • Will.i.am ‘did not seek permission’ to use sample, says label at centre of ‘Let’s Go’ controversy

    Will.i.am ‘did not seek permission’ to use sample, says label at centre of ‘Let’s Go’ controversy

    william

    The record label that owns the master rights to the song Rebound – allegedly sampled by Will.i.am for his new track with Chris Brown, Let’s Go – has made a public statement on the matter.

    Will.i.am ackowledged last week that he had used Rebound, originally recorded by Arty and Matt Zo, as the basis for his collaboration, which appears on his new album #willpower.

    The artist credits Russian DJ Arty in his sleeve notes, and told the Associated Press this week: “You can’t steal if you credited somebody. He and I communicated. … It’s not my fault he didn’t tell me about the other guy. So who is to blame? I didn’t know.”However, in a statement sent to Music Week, Arty’s UK label Anjunabeats said today:

    Anjunabeats is the record label behind Arty and Mat Zo and owns the master recording rights to their collaboration “Rebound.” Mat Zo and Arty have been important members of the Anjunabeats family for a number of years and “Rebound” was one of the label’s most popular releases in 2011.

    As has been widely reported, a large section of “Rebound” was sampled on Will.i.am’s track “Let’s Go featuring Chris Brown” and this took place without the permission of Anjunabeats or Arty & Mat Zo.

    Although Arty (but not Mat Zo) was credited in the sleeve notes, this is not the same as obtaining permission. To present someone else’s work as your own, you need to seek permission, agree terms and file paperwork, which has not happened in this case.

    We’ve remained silent on this issue until now but as a record label it is our obligation to protect our artists’ interests and we felt it was necessary to respond to some of the inaccuracies that have been reported following Will.i.am’s recent comments to Associated Press.

    Meanwhile, the management company for Mat Zo, Involved Management, has confirmed that US label Astralwerks has signed the young British producer for North America.

    2013 will see him release his debut artist album on Astralwerks (Anjunabeats in the UK) – which will cover everything from glitchy hip-hop and electronica to UK garage and big room club bangers. May 7th, 2013, will see the US release of Mat Zo and Porter Robinson’s collaboration, “Easy”.

    Source: Music Week