miércoles, 24 de marzo de 2010

John Peel OBE: + 50 years of service to UK's music industry

Music in the UK has changed over the last century, for each genre there has always been an icon; someone that made a change in the industry in one way or another. These people can be artists, producers or artists becoming producers and even promoters of their own music. These people have stepped beyond everyone else and have developed a new way of seeing the music industry over the years.
If I can think of someone that has touches all the grounds and put his finger in all of the pies, that would be for excellence: John Peel.
Naturally I go and google Mr. Peel, first is a really complete Wikipedia article where it explains everything about him, from his beginnings until his death.
“John Robert Parker Ravenscroft OBE, (30 August 1939 – 25 October 2004), known professionally as John Peel, was an English disc jockey, radio presenter and journalist. He was the longest-serving of the original BBC Radio 1 DJs, broadcasting regularly from 1967, until his death in 2004. He was known for his eclectic taste in music and his honest and warm broadcasting style. He was one of the first broadcasters to play psychedelic rock, reggae and punk records on British radio, and he is widely acknowledged for promoting artists working in various genres including alternative rock, indie rock, pop, hardcore punk, death metal, British hip hop and dance music.” (Wikipedia)

Quite a broad person is it not?

****** this article is under construction******

martes, 2 de marzo de 2010

New technology and change in UK’s music industry development



It is a fact that new technology has affected many Cultural and Creative Industries; in the case of music the repercussions have been really bad mostly in the copyright field regulations.

The UK music industry used to work in a very different way before the digital era came; all the regulations from production, content, copyright and access had a whole singular approach.

Now all these regulations are changing due the overwhelming bad usage of new technology; before, people used to go to the disco store and buy records, now you can download the same records, sometimes with the same quality, for free.

This is a fact and it has affected a great majority of Featured Artists which are the responsible for most of the income in the music industry and has caused an incredible amount of waste of money, as artists have to pay (in the majority of cases) for the studio and all the production process to finally have their album released and then for people to download it for free.

In the UK there exist some regulatory bodies that are trying their best to solve this big issue that piracy is, but at the end of the day people from every part of the world were, are and will be downloading files and files of music illegally, it’s a reality and we have to learn how to take advantage of it or either develop a really strong regulation that would stop piracy for once. As I posted couple of entries ago, in the UK, 7 of 10 people in the UK downloading music ilegally would start paying for the service if their ISP (Internet Service Provider) told their so. That is quite a number! But is this the solution? It wouldn’t either way affect the artists’ income because many people are so used to download for free that they wouldn’t be bothered to pay?

In a recent article written by Mark Mulligan for www.paidcontent.org, he explains that there can be 3 possible approaches to illegal downloading music in the UK:

- Adapting digital music to New Media in the form of advertising. For each track there will be a certain amount of ads before, or during the downloading process. The average revenue per unit (ARPU) wouldn’t be too much but it would cover the largest segment of the industry.

- Premium membership. People will have a limited access to music for free, like samples and if they want full access and HQ (High Quality) they will have to pay. This would cover the smallest sector of the industry but the higher ARPU.

- Subsidized by the ISP (Internet Service Provider). This would make the perfect balance of ARPU and industry segment coverage.

I think in the digital era we are all living in, it will be impossible or at least it will take loads of time and money to make people stop downloading music for free.
However, with these 3 approaches working together, we can make the most of illegal downloading music in the UK and bring back all the lost income and copyright to Featured Artists and renew the way producers and regulation bodies look at the music industry or any other CCI.

Interesting links on this issue:

http://newsblog.thecmuwebsite.com/post/CMU-Review-Of-The-Year-2009-The-music-business.aspx

http://www.ukmusic.org/news

http://www.featuredartistscoalition.com/showscreen.php?site_id=161&screentype=folder&screenid=2984

http://www.timacheson.com/Blog/2009/sep/landmark_deal_between_youtube_and_prs

http://www.pro-music.org/Content/questions/FreeMusicMyths.php