Posts Tagged ‘Major Labels’
Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Grooveshark, the Florida-based streaming music startup that grappled with EMI earlier in the year, has reportedly inked a deal with the major label.
A Webware 100 Winner, Grooveshark allows its users to stream music for free from an aggregate selection of 15 million tracks. No download or registration required. The service is supported by online advertising or through a $3/month premium plan which eliminates the ads.
Developed by a group of music enthusiasts from the University of Florida, Grooveshark boasts one million registered users to date.
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Tags: EMI, Grooveshark, Major Labels, Music Streaming Service
Posted in Grooveshark, Music Business, Music File Sharing, Music Industry News, Music Labels, Music Law, Music Tech
Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

Labels aren’t doing very well at the moment. In fact, they’re darn right horizontal on their deathbeds.
People don’t want to pay for music anymore.
Children are being sued for copyright infringement.
Every digital music startup in the last three years has flopped.
It’s grim.
Yet there’s never been a better time to start a label.
Go ahead, sign a few acts – no one else will.
Nobody expects an advance or a fat tour bus. It’s budget airlines all the way.
Invest in talent while it’s cheap and ubiquitous.
Don’t know how to do it? Plenty of executives out of the job. Go talk to one.
Four tips to get you started:
1. Quit your day job. Nobody will take you seriously if you’re doing something else 9 to 5.
2. Stick with what you know. If you lack people skills, avoid public relations. Focus on your strengths and, when you can, develop or outsource your weaknesses.
3. You’re in business. Act that way. Get organized. Lots of stupid people own hugely successful businesses. You too can create a successful business.
4. Pick great acts. Treat them well. Work hard for them and they will show you returns.
Music is a safe bet. There will always be money in it.
Now go make some!
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Tags: Getting Gigs, Getting Signed, How to make money from music, How to start a label, Independent Label, Independent Labels, Indie Label, Indie Labels, Major Labels, Music Industry, Music Industry Guide, Music Label, Music Labels, Record Industry, Record Label, Record Labels, Selling my music, Starting a label
Posted in Independent Artists, Music Business, Music Labels, Music Managers, Music Marketing, Music Publishing, Record Industry
Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

Universal Music Group International and its joint venture company, All The Worlds, are hitting the track by joining forces with Formula One Administration Ltd. to create F1 ROCKS, a new global entertainment initiative. F1 ROCKS will combine racing’s most glamorous and spectacular sporting event with A-list stars at international F1 racing locations.
“The partnership between the world’s most thrilling sport and the world’s biggest music company is one of the most exciting entertainment initiatives to be launched anywhere. The combination of music, megastars and motor sport will create a groundbreaking, all-new entertainment spectacular, channelled through the multiple platforms open to our two global brands.” — Lucian Grainge, Chairman/CEO, Universal Music Group International
Tags: Bernie Ecclestone, F1 Rocks, Formula 1, Formula One, Major Labels, Universal
Posted in Advertising & Branding, Live Music, Music Industry News, Music Labels, Record Industry
Sunday, March 22nd, 2009

On demand music streaming service, Spotify, has been on my radar since the company announced a distribution deal with CD Baby in the first week of February. CD Baby, the leading force in independent music retail and digital music distribution, represents more than 175,000 artists which account for over one million tracks, all of which are now available through Spotify’s lightweight music streaming application. This licensing deal marks the ‘long-tail’ trend in music availability and consumption, and celebrates the access independent artists have today to mass audiences through pioneering music services, many of which had treated indie talent as nothing more than an afterthought after securing major label catalogues. Under the aphorism of “access not ownership”, the Luxemburg-based company has been growing exponentially since its €15.3m venture capital injection in October 2008 and, in turn, joining an elite group of legal music experience providers such as Pandora, Last.fm, TheSixtyOne, and others, which have found success in catering to music consumers through a balanced and worldly music library whilst reserving significant real-estate for up and coming artists: a pop-culture and grassroots music mix that appears to be paving the way for a new industry. A spot in Spotify’s limelight is not yet available directly for small acts and labels but CD Baby has certainly lowered the barrier of entry. Thank you Derek or, rather, Disc Makers for making this possible…
Related Post: Jango AirPlay
Tags: CD Duplication, CD Replication, CDbaby, Chris Anderson, Daniel Ek, Derek Sivers, Digital Distribution, Discmakers, EMI, Future of Music, Independent Artists, Indie Artists, Internet Radio, Jango, Major Labels, Music Licensing, Music Promotion, Music Retail, Music Streaming Service, Online Radio, Sales, Sony BMG, Spotify.com, The Long Tail, The Orchard, Universal, Warner
Posted in Digital Distribution, Independent Artists, Music Licensing, Music Tech
Saturday, March 21st, 2009

YouLicense, the first online music licensing marketplace, released a product update last week detailing the launch of Private Label, a new service catering to YouLicense’s target customer base comprising of independent labels and enterprising artists. Private Label is essentially a branded storefront, specifically developed for the streamlined procurement of synchronization and master use music licenses. This is a major turning point for YouLicense which, until now, has very much operated as a destination site and, arguably, the only standalone open marketplace for music licensing. The company has already converted noteworthy distributors and labels including INgrooves, Big Fish Media, AWAL, MBop Digital, Dashgo, and Cyberset Records. Private Label is currently in closed beta but interested parties can request an invitation here.
Related Post: Christmas Playlists from YouLicense.com
Tags: Attribution License, Branded Label, Digital Music Distribution, Film Placement, Getty Images, Independent Label, Independent Labels, Indie Label, Indie Labels, INgrooves.com, License Music Online, Licensing Music Online, Licensing Sites, Major Labels, Maor Ezer, Music Community, Music Labels, Music Licensing, Music Placement, Ohad Ezer, Private Label, Pump Audio, PumpAudio, Record Label, Record Labels, Synch License, Television Placement, You License, YouLicense.com
Posted in Digital Distribution, Independent Artists, Music Business, Music Industry News, Music Licensing, Music Tech
Friday, March 20th, 2009

SpiralFrog, the highly profiled ad-supported download service, has shut its doors after a lukewarm reception in the UK and endless content licensing and upper management strife in the US prior. The company was the first to deploy a ‘feels-like-free’ music download service in 2006 and secured both Universal and EMI, with competitors Qtrax and We7 following suit with similar ad-supported download services, before spiraling to its demise.
Tags: Ad Supported Free Music Downloads, Ad Supported Model, Digital Distribution, Digital Music Distribution, EMI Music, EMI Music Publishing, Feels Like Free, File Sharing, Free Download, Major Labels, Music Discovery, Music Licensing, P2P, Peter Gabriel, Qtrax, Spiral Frog, SpiralFrog, Universal Music, Universal Music Publishing, We7
Posted in Digital Distribution, Music Industry News, Music Tech
Saturday, February 28th, 2009

Music search engine, SeeqPod, that has already indexed (but not stored) 12 million songs, has been handed a formal complaint from EMI following a lawsuit from Warner last year. Unlike Pandora and Imeem, the company has not pursued licenses to provide “playable search results” maintaining that they are not responsible for content sources and, therefore, free from any obligation to the copyright holder. Legally questionable, Seeqpod has become very successful and the two major labels are probably going after it to settle on a mutual business model rather than to shut it down. The news prompted me to play with the system a little and I enjoyed learning about their artist-centric advertising progamme that’s highly targeted and cost competitive. Providing 5000 “exposures” (i.e. impressions) a month for $19.95, SeeqPod Echo is a nicely put together search-oriented advertising interface which may very well generate some relevant traffic for artists and music promoters who wish to tap into SeeqPod’s massive music listening community. I’m curious to learn how the conversion rates stack up.
Tags: Artist Promotion, Band Promotion, Casian Franks, Copyright, Deezer, EMI, Gimado, HypeMachine, Imeem, LaLa, Major Labels, Music Advertising, Music Industry News, Music Licensing, Music Marketing, Music Search Engine, Pandora, Qtrax, SeeqPod, Singing Fish, SkreemR, SpiralFrog, Streamzy, Warner Music Group, We7
Posted in Advertising & Branding, Independent Artists, Music Business, Music File Sharing, Music Industry News, Music Labels, Music Law, Music Licensing, Music Marketing, Music Tech, Record Industry
Monday, February 23rd, 2009

Ad-supported music service, Qtrax, hopes to differentiate itself by offering downloads previously only available as bootlegs. This move may position the company atop of 25 million tracks under this category alone, assuming that that copyright clearance hurdles can be overcome. In the mean time, Peter Gabriel’s competing ad-supported music service, We7, has announced a partnership with NME.com. The strategy is geared toward increasing the value of advertising real estate by diverting traffic to the popular British indie music zine which is likely to improve the combined user time spent online and, resultantly, drive more ad revenue. The two music services have been in the works for some time now and have faced great difficulty in both securing all the major catalogues and financing their operations through advertising alone, a model that will meet further challenges during the present economic downturn when advertisers are being particularly frugal.
Tags: Ad Supported Free Music Downloads, Ad Supported Model, Allan Klepfisz, Bootlegs, Digital Music Distribution, Major Labels, Music Licensing, Music Retail, NME, P2P, Peter Gabriel, Qtrax
Posted in Digital Distribution, Music Business, Music Industry News, Record Industry