Hi,
(long and somewhat detailed)
The reason I want this discussion out in the open is to get us past the idea that today’s musician needs to concentrate on fan purchases for financial support. It’s certainly one way to survive as a musician, but not the only way.
I am not sure that this is stated correctly. In some ways, this is sort of like saying that all the bands and music before only existed because of the fans, and we know that is not correct ... as specified ... but it is also specifying "fan" as a person that would spend money to help the record company, or corporate entity, and not eexactly the "fan" that goes to the jazz bar every Saturday night and hears great music and purchases it.
... Just as it is possible to couple your music with non-music goods and services to generate income, it is also to possible to decouple your music from non-music sources of income...
Agreed. However, defining this can be hard. I remember Gong's first tour in the US in 1995 and I was telling them ... you gotta have a web site with all your CD's and stuff ... can not wait for a record company. And the following year, they had GAS up there and it is still going and selling fairly well, or their bands would not be able to do as much as they do and go different places. It has also allowed and provided for them to be able to release even more material than before, specially now that CD's are so inexpensive.
... Think of successful rock bands from the 90s, and imagine that they lacked the funds to circle North America and Europe four or five times within a couple of years. Without that funding, without the essential groundwork of developing an audience, most of the successful 90s bands just wouldn’t be around...
Bullpuckyand selffullfillingmerde!
If you look at Marillion, they were broke one time and they got their fans to put up the money to get their next album done ... they have not had issues since and their website has been major in helping them. If you look at Porcupine Tree, they started on cassettes, graduated to website (Steven Wilson is a major geek and then some!) ... and took off from there ... they did not need a "record company" and Steven did not go after one ... why should he ... he was selling three to four times more and bringing money in from his garage venture alone! Dream Theater made their money off their own website and selling their own ... they did not need a record company.
Pretty much ALL of the "metal" and "prog" (as it is called today the stuff like Dream Theater) made their money on their own and they were not waiting for a record company to come and ki$$ their lovely bummies!
... Summary: be solo, or a duo, because a full band is financially untenable; work much, much harder, under much more stressful conditions, than bands of earlier generations had to. Be very young, or have the ability to take the broke-ness, the physical and emotional knock-around, that very young people can....
I disagree. It all depends on what you all together focus on and how you present it ... if you are going to reinvent the wheel again and do a copy of the Sex Pistols, or Nirvana, or Dream Theater ... and call it "bruhaha metal" with a different sound effect as the only separation between you and the next band ... good luck ... you are not going to be around a lot. But I would like to dress the Coffee House Band in Devo outfits and play a couple of metal pieces in their live show and make fun of this commercial stuff ... complete with visual effects and nekkid dancing girls ... and I bet you this will get more attention than these other copy bands do!
Again, it all depends on your own inner constitution, and how far you dedicate yourself ... nothing else! It doesn't matter if you make a nickel or a million, if you are into it because it is what you love and that's that ... you either love your child or kill it ... what is your choice? ... be a man and be honest, not a jerk!
... Studios have reduced production costs by paying stars only a fraction of their official “quote” or asking fee ...
WRONG ... the software world has made most of these studios redundant and stupid and over expensive nobodies!
... The entirety of Western culture hates old people. And classical music thinks it’s being revolutionary by trying to go along with this. Just what we need — one more cultural entertainment arena that disdains anything and anyone with grey hair and acts like you might as well crawl into the grave when you’re 40....
There is a valid comment here. The "old" establishment is no longer in "charge" of the money that made the "music" ... the folks that decided that the Beatles and Rolling Stones were not worthwhile music and such ... check out the worst business decisions ever made!!!!!! The real problem is that those "richies" and these "corporate" groups are no longer being the ones making the most money and they are trying to figure out why ... how to make money ... from the hits ... not how to improve their chances of making money from artists ... MORE artists ... specially today when things can be so cheap to put together.
And, in case that goon has not noticed it, there are many bands in gray hair that are making a lot more money off his stupidity than otherwise!
All in all, articles like this are about kissing the corporate thing, and making sure that you do not enter the music business and take away their valuable dime. Or, it is sort of like ... here ... it's just fun ... and some people love to tell me once in a while that they are doing this for fun, not for "serious" ... and if you can tell that difference, I will gladly die now and leave the earth all the better for you!
You either do it or you don't ... because it is what you love to do ... you might or might not make it ... but if that is the difference in the quality of your work, it will be hard to "make it" ... but if that is who and what you are, far be it for me to define and say that you can not do that.
But you have to make a call on your "art" ... and perhaps that is the point ... if you "elevate" what you consider your work to be, the likelyhood is that ... you will try a bit harder!
Not a great article, but it is certainly written by someone that is trying hard to make sure he can make some money since he no longer has a cushy job in a record company doing nothing ... ohhh excuse me ... delivering goods to a radio station! Hahahahaha!