PDA

View Full Version : NO SUIT REQUIRED - RIAA read and weep


View Full Version : NO SUIT REQUIRED - RIAA read and weep


Krell
August 25th, 2006, 09:34 AM
Follow up from Soulxtc article in March

http://www.zeropaid.com/bbs/file-sharing/t-nettwerk-music-group-urges-industry-to-loosen-control-36543.html/?highlight=McBride


Terry McBride has an idea. Another idea. A good – no, a great idea. McBride, CEO of Nettwerk Music Group, is sitting in his Vancouver, British Columbia, office with his local marketing staff discussing strategy for the release of a new album by Barenaked Ladies. The marketing departments in three other cities are conferenced in. The conversation ping-pongs from Nascar promotions to placement in a Sims videogame. McBride is on a roll.

"This one's a real wingdinger," he says, leaning into the speakerphone so New York, Denver, and Los Angeles won't miss a word. "Let's give away the ProTools files on MySpace. Vocals, guitars, drums, and bass. We'll let the fans make their own mixes." The room falls quiet. Musicians usually record their instruments and vocals on separate tracks; the producer and mixer combine those tracks into a finished product. McBride wants to make the individual files available so that amateur DJs can use them like Lego bricks to create something all their own. The record industry likes control. McBride is proposing unfettered chaos.

A voice from LA breaks the silence: "For the single, you mean, right?" McBride's features screw up in concentration, then quickly expand into a grin. "What I'm proposing," he says, "is that we make all 29 songs available as ProTools files. In two weeks." The Internet marketers in Vancouver look worried. "But," he adds, "we'll get the files from the single up on MySpace by Monday." Libby White, a member of the department, shoots McBride a skeptical look. Can they make it? McBride asks. White sighs. "We'll make it," she says.

Complete Story (http://wired.com/wired/archive/14.09/nettwerk.html)





.

Unsueable Davey Brown
August 25th, 2006, 10:22 AM
It will be so cool if McBride is right, and this kind of thing is successful. It will go a little ways to proving the filesharing arguement was the correct one all along. It suggests filesharing can be about promotion. From the beginning filesharing was kind of the first baby steps of the new radio. It was never about stealing from artists. It was about the music industry evolving into something where artists could one day own, and promote their own works, and fans could collaborate in the experience.

RACKnRAIL
August 25th, 2006, 10:26 AM
I like this idea. It is a sign of the future of music to come.

Twodeer
August 25th, 2006, 12:05 PM
It's nice to see people looking at the solution instead of staying in the mess!

soulxtc
August 26th, 2006, 02:32 PM
Look who makes an appearance...............hope all's well Krell............nice post BTW.