Here’s a very interesting video from The Economist that looks at the new dynamics of the record business and whether an artist really needs a record label these days. It’s a veiled advert for Kobalt, but frankly, that company is way ahead of the game when it comes to not only collecting artist royalties, but reporting them as well.
I had a personal demonstration from founder Willard Ahdritz a few years ago and it was indeed impressive in that an artist could see in real time how much he was making. This, of course, beats have to wait until the end of the quarter or even the end of the year to see a statement to see how much you’ve earned.
As the video correctly points out, Kobalt is perfect for an established artist, but the company has yet to break a new artist, and this is where record labels traditionally excel. Major labels are also able to take a successful artist and boost her to superstar status because of the infrastructure they have in place, something that can’t be easily replicated.
So there is a place for the record label in today’s Music 4.0 world, but there’s also a place for a rights management firm like Kobalt. Check out the video as well as this interesting article to learn a lot more.
Beetles Do Beatles: Music Coup for an Animated Netflix Show
Josh Wakely is working on an animated children’s series for Netflix that is based on Beatles songs.
If Josh Wakely was feeling a little fried, it was understandable: He had quickly become one of the busiest young writers and producers in television — with a little help from the Beatles, Bob Dylan and Motown.
Jet-lagged from repeated trips between New York, Los Angeles and his native Australia, Mr. Wakely, 35, sported a dark stubble and had an errant shirt button undone one afternoon last week at his publicist’s office in Lower Manhattan. But he excitedly tripped over his own syllables as he talked about his three new shows, each of which uses classic pop songs as inspiration, raw material and organizing theme.
“Beat Bugs,” an animated children’s series on Netflix based on Beatles songs, begins its first season on Aug. 3. The show features performances of songs like “Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds” and “Help!” by Eddie Vedder, Pink and Regina Spector.
Also on the way, with air dates yet to be set, are two other shows Mr. Wakely created: “Time Out of Mind,” a dark drama for Amazon with characters based on songs by Mr. Dylan; and another animated show for Netflix, still untitled, that makes use of the Motown catalog. Smokey Robinson is its executive music producer.
As Mr. Wakely described it, his template began with “Beat Bugs,” which he conceived of as a way to extend the current “golden age of television” into children’s programming. He created the show and also has directing, writing and producing credits.
“I realized that these extraordinary melodies would make sense for children, but also the full level of imagination and visual imagery that the Beatles had in their songs,” he said. “What is it to go into a strawberry field forever? What would it be like to actually be inside that yellow submarine?”
So far, the buzz around Mr. Wakely’s shows has centered on the licensing deals he struck to draw on iconic — and closely guarded — song collections in unusually extensive ways. For each show, Mr. Wakely and his team have access to vast catalogs not only for musical performances but also for plot devices and characters, extending the reach of the shows into the songs’ most fundamental elements.
Mr. Wakely said he chose the music catalogs partly for their storytelling potential, but beyond “Beat Bugs” he provided scant details. “Time Out of Mind,” he said, would feature characters from Mr. Dylan’s songs “colliding” in 1960s America. The Motown show follows an 8-year-old African-American boy named Ben who discovers magical powers that let him bring graffiti to life.
“Banksy for children as done by Pixar,” Mr. Wakely said of the Motown show. “That was my pitch.”
Music licensing in film and television is nothing new, and the jukebox musical has been a Broadway standby for years. (For instance, “Motown: The Musical” debuted on Broadway in 2013.) But the kind of rights that Mr. Wakely sought are rarely granted, and the deals were all the more remarkable given his relative inexperience. He had just a handful of credits to his name as a writer and director when he began the process half a decade ago. Securing rights to the Beatles works — including more than 250 songs by John Lennon and Paul McCartney — took three years; the deal is estimated at nearly $10 million.
“I had no idea how complicated or how ambitious an idea it was,” Mr. Wakely said. “I’m glad I was so naïve, because I wouldn’t have pursued it otherwise.”
Mr. Wakely grew up in Newcastle, Australia, an industrial hub north of Sydney. He said he had been struggling for years as a screenwriter, working on scripts that often went nowhere, before he decided to set up his own production house, Grace: A Storytelling Company.
Among his earlier work was “My Mind’s Own Melody,” a short musical film in 2012 in which he worked with Daniel Johns of the Australian rock band Silverchair. Yet Mr. Wakely remained well below the radar of the Hollywood press until making the Beatles deal two years ago for “Beat Bugs,” which features five childlike insects living in the tall grass of an overgrown backyard who learn a valuable life lesson — and a catchy Beatles tune — in each 11-minute episode.
Like the most enduring animation series, the writing in “Beat Bugs” is crafted to appeal to children as well as to their parents, with plenty of allusions to lyrics. In the “Help!” episode, Jay, a headstrong beetle, gets trapped in a glass jar and needs his friends to come to his rescue.
“I thought you never needed anybody’s help in any way,” says Kumi, a ladybug.
“I’m sorry,” Jay replies, “but those days are gone, and now I’ve changed my mind.”
For Sony/ATV Music Publishing, which represents both the Beatles and Motown songwriting catalogs, the shows are a way to reach a generation of very young potential listeners. Still, Sony/ATV was typically cautious in approving the deal for “Beat Bugs.”
“As a company, we say no more than we say yes,” said Damian Trotter, managing director of Sony/ATV in Australia, who said he has known Mr. Wakely since the beginning of his career and encouraged him to develop ideas for projects using music. After an initial meeting, Mr. Wakely began to sketch out “Beat Bugs” in detail, and Mr. Trotter said the result impressed Sony/ATV enough to give the green light.
“He demonstrated the power of a great idea,” Mr. Trotter said. (Sony/ATV also controls the Motown catalog, and administers Mr. Dylan’s songs in Australia; the Beatles themselves were not involved in the “Beat Bugs” deal.)
Mr. Wakely, who splits his time between Los Angeles and Sydney, said at the time the Beatles deal was finally signed in January 2014, his funds were nearly exhausted. He could afford just six weeks of rent in Los Angeles and was prepared to return to Australia. “I would say to my wife, ‘I don’t want to be the guy that nearly got the Beatles rights,’” he said.
On Wednesday, Netflix announced that “Beat Bugs” had been confirmed for a second season, to begin Nov. 18, with Beatles songs to be sung by Jennifer Hudson, Rod Stewart and Tori Kelly, among others. Mr. Wakely has his hands full, but he said he was already thinking of more music-focused shows.
“It feels like beautifully uncharted territory,” he said.
Jazz musicians Liang Ying, Nathaniel Gao and Zhang Ke (left to right) perform at East Shore Jazz Cafe, in Beijing. Source: Terence Hsieh
Beijing’s underground music scene has been heralded as an epicenter of creativity in China: you can find everything, from dark noise, to grunge, rock, hip hop and avant garde jazz. Lately, however, I’ve been getting the impression that people believe that the Beijing music scene is dying, for lack of a better word. Jonathan Kaiman at the LA Times accredits the closure of venues and festivals, and denial of visas to President Xi Jinping’s anti-foreigner campaign, citing reports of increased pressure by local artists and venue owners to affirm the pro-socialist movement being carried out by the state.
I’ve been a jazz musician in Beijing for nearly four years now, and it’s hard for me to see the scene as “dying” here. In fact, I’ve had the privilege of seeing and even sometimes performing with some of the most amazing jazz headliners in Beijing, over the past few years: The Yellowjackets, Herbie Hancock, Kurt Rosenwinkel, Robin Eubanks, Jaleel Shaw, Snarky Puppy, Richard Susan just to name a few.
Ami Lee, managing editor at City Weekend Beijing recently posted an op-ed in which she criticises this “decline narrative” that’s been used to describe the arts scene in Beijing– that is, it’s convenient to wrap up all the venue and festival closures, arrested artists, deportations and canceled concerts within this simple idea that political forces have it out for Beijing’s music scene.
This notion of a convenient narrative is important to better understanding of Chinese society. First of all, it highlights a double standard leveled against Chinese artists: that they are (or should be) eternally locked in a black-and-white struggle against the iron fist of the Communist Party, although this expectation doesn’t exist for western artists. Second, this narrative doesn’t account for the increasing financial pressures on venues and artists in 2016: rising rents, an ageing artist demographic and skyrocketing back-of-the-house costs like beverages and food.
That aside, political forces have always played a role in determining how large shows or festivals with international acts are allowed to play out, here in China. In 2008, Bjork got herself famously banned for performing her song “Declare Independence” and shouting “Tibet! Tibet!” and even jazz icon Harry Connick, Jr. wasn’t allowed to play with his band due to an unapproved set list.
“The main difference now I think is just that music festivals are getting harder to operate, and I guess more and more bands coming from abroad are getting cancelled, but that’s different from the local scene,” says Nathaniel Gao, a jazz saxophonist who’s been in Beijing on and off for 10 years now. Indeed, it’s important that one separates the politics involved with booking international acts, which ARE decidedly political; and the local scene, made up of primarily musicians living and working in Beijing, who perform their own art, mostly independently. For the most part, the politics of art have largely stayed out of the local scene with a few notable exceptions. There’s crossover, especially when it comes to these large festivals, but for the most part, artists are free to do what they want. I recently saw an album released by a rapper known as MC Da Wei in which I heard him drop some of the most scathing political criticisms to date, at a club called DaDa.
Let me bring this back to what I’m most familiar with: jazz. Jazz musicians are privy to a special seat at the table of music in Beijing: we’re largely ignored by both the expat and the greater music community. Maybe it’s the lack of accessibility to the music we play: listening to jazz shows is hard, especially if you’re not familiar with the conventions of the music.
Maybe it’s the lack of stereotypical behaviors that people expect from jazz musicians: you won’t find the musicians here doing drugs, getting rowdy or doing crazy performance art on stage, like historical tropes of jazz. But maybe it’s also the lack of exposure: while the gigs we play are advertised in magazines and websites, they’re not easily found, often tucked away in the back section of weekly events, if at all in print. My point is not that we are neglected, but rather, that the jazz scene here is comprised of a small, but growing group of both Chinese and international instrumentalists who are dedicated to producing creative instrumental music in the jazz tradition despite being paid the equivalent of $50 a night or less.
There’s creative jazz music nearly every night of the week in Beijing: from jam sessions, where musicians congregate to play jazz standards and talk shop and network, to international headlining acts, where world famous musicians come to share their craft with the community. Last week, New York saxophone legend Antonio Hart, who spends time in China every year, quipped, after a workshop at Beijing’s East Shore Jazz Cafe: “Beijing cats don’t mess around!”
Scott Sawyer has been playing drums in Beijing for nearly as long as rock and jazz music has existed here. “From the jazz scene perspective, it’s far from dying,” he says. “I’d say if anything, it’s thriving more than it ever has: we’ve got these new venues that are opening, though some of them come and go, and I’m not aware of any political pressures that are placed on the jazz scene. If anything, the scene is thriving and growing more than it ever has but it just doesn’t get the attention that a lot of that other stuff does.”
Zhang Ke, Source: Terence Hsieh
There’s also a sense of authenticity that resonates with many of the musicians here: “There’s a strong sense of Chinese culture and authenticity in Beijing, being a foreigner here you really experience that,” says Anthony Vanacore, a drummer from New York who’s been in Beijing for just a year. Traditional Chinese melodies infiltrate into the jazz idiom: musicians like guitarist Liu Yue and pianist Xia Jia have written modern jazz arrangements that include such melodies, reharmonizing and reworking them for piano trio with bass and drums, and even with horns and traditional Chinese instruments.
But most importantly (and concretely), there seems to be a community in Beijing that forms around jazz music– one that doesn’t necessarily exist in other music scenes in other places in China. On any given Tuesday, a crowd of jazz musicians descend on the jam session at Jiang Hu bar, an old traditional courtyard house that’s been converted to a performance space. It doesn’t feel like a New York session where the musicians are there to prove a point and call each other out, but a place where people are trying new ideas, patterns and concepts they’ve been practicing on their own, over jazz standards with a live band. Sometimes there’s a great crowd. Other times, the house is practically empty, but the band plays just the same.
Despite the fact that they make about $30 a night, you’ll find the same guys coming back week after week. Do they need the money? Probably, but they’re also in it for the musical work out. Perhaps it suggests that a creative music scene can exist not just in spite of, but because of a lack of mainstream support. When you can make a lot of money playing a particular style or even song, it can affect your aesthetic judgment. In other words, it allows us to keep the main thing–theart–the main thing.
The YouTube-Music Feud, Part 1: Why '$3 Billion To Rights Holders' Means Nothing
AUSTIN, TX – MARCH 17: A view of the stage at YouTube At Coppertank during the 2016 SXSW Music, Film + Interactive Festival on March 17, 2016 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Neilson Barnard/Getty Images for SXSW)
This is part one of a series that discusses missing narratives from the music industry’s fight against YouTube. The posts are meant to be objective–siding neither with YouTube nor with artists, but rather highlighting and unpacking important data points that both sides of the debate are leaving out.
Today marks the one-month anniversary of over 180 musicians signing an open letter to Congress, protesting Section 512 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). According to the letter, Section 512 directly diminishes songwriters’ and artists’ earnings by allowing “major tech companies to grow and generate huge profits by creating ease of use for consumers to carry almost every recorded song in history in their pocket via a smartphone.” While not mentioned by name, YouTube is the dominant scapegoat in this complaint.
Today also marks the ten-day anniversary of GoogleGOOGL -0.02%’s response to these complaints, in the form of an update to “How Google Fights Piracy.” The 62-page report highlights how Google has actually enabled creators to build more sustainable careers, from using SEO techniques to hide piracy websites to helping artists gain insight into their ever more distributed audiences.
Both stances remain impassioned, yet unconvincing. The music industry’s larger argument of “pay us more” is vastly oversimplified, and has prompted a similarly oversimplified response from Google.
For instance, YouTube often cites how it has paid out over $3 billion to music rights holders to date, 50% of which has been monetized through ad placement with Content ID (a proprietary technology that identifies copyrighted work in user-generated content). Both of these statistics are weak because they give no clarity to how that money is distributed, nor to whether that distribution is fair—questions that should stand at the center of discussions around YouTube’s utility to the music industry.
Yes, the larger music value chain is partly to blame for why artists receive pennies for their YouTube streams. Unlike with native YouTube creators like Pewdiepie or Michelle Phan, a vast and complex ecosystem of labels, publishers, songwriters and other stakeholders often engulfs a musician’s work, leading to a similarly fragmented split of revenues.
However, YouTube’s Content ID seems inherently biased toward celebrities and against independent and emerging artists. Only around 8,000 rights holders currently have access to the technology, a portion of whom work in the music industry; this leaves hundreds of thousands of musicians unable to monetize their work. While qualifying for Content ID sounds simple—based on an “evaluation of each applicant’s actual need for the tools”—the service seems to have been reserved for a lucky and unrepresentative few, many of whom are probably associated with major labels.
Furthermore, contrary to the minimum rates that audio streaming services like Spotify are required to pay, Content ID’s value fluctuates over time in tandem with the value of the host channel, the health of the larger global ad market and other factors. YouTube is a fundamentally ad-driven business that interprets play count as a proxy for value, so the cost of ad inventory decreases for most user-generated videos. Unfortunately, these videos account for a small percentage of YouTube consumption: according to MIDiA Research’s recent report “The State of the YouTube Music Economy,” 91% of music video views are concentrated on the first page of results, usually dominated by verified channels like Vevo.
These fluctuations and winner-take-all dynamics give much-needed context to Google’s claims that the music industry chooses to monetize 95% of videos identified with Content ID, and that accuracy rates are as high as 99.7% (which in itself has been disputed, as the IFPI recently claimed that Content ID fails to identify as much as 20-40% of songs on YouTube). Regardless of what the correct numbers are, Content ID is only as valuable as the videos it identifies, and the technology is still unavailable to an alarming number of musicians.
Monetizing user uploads is a costly endeavor—Google has invested over $60 million in Content ID—and the $3 billion figure at least suggests that the technology is working. However, a gap still prevails in which most independent creators cannot monetize their content on YouTube. An artist’s ability to send a DMCA takedown notice seems more and more dependent on relationships with corporate third parties; ironically, the fact that only Taylor Swift-level stars are speaking out in this debate further silences the independent sector. Both Google and the music industry need to look beyond public spectacle, realize who is missing from the discussion, and take them into account when building a sustainable strategy for distributing their resources.
Electronic music artists are always exploring new ways of creating their music. The XOXX composer is the product of Royal Academy of the Arts student Axel Blume's experimentation. The device has eight spinning magnetic discs, that create a beat based on the placement of attached magnets. You have to hear it to believe it.
YouTube is capable of making people stars, and while that happens to exceptional content creators, most of them are not music artists. One of the reasons that artists don’t fall into the YouTube star category is that their general mindset is still set in the past. Here are the 4 places were artists go wrong on YouTube, which leads to far less success on the platform than they’re capable of.
It’s not about the views. YouTube is actually not optimized for total views, contrary to popular belief. It’s all about watch time and channel subscriptions, according to industry analyst Mark Mulligan. Most artists get most concerned about views, which takes their focus away from what really counts.
Major YouTube stars constantly drip content. They’re constantly posting on a schedule that their subscribers know and trust. Music artists, on the other hand, post an average of 3 videos every 18 months. The big problem is that even if these videos rack up some big numbers, the advertising revenue is lower because there’s not much inventory on the channel so the income is far lower than possible.
Releases are too far apart. Most artists are still on an album cycle, where they work on an album for months or years and only release singles (and therefore videos) when that album is complete. The world that we live in today has moved way past that. In order to keep an audience, constant engagement is essential and that means the release of more content in a more timely fashion, just like the native YouTube stars.
The video doesn’t have to be slick. If there’s one thing that we know from watching YouTube stars with huge followings is that production quality isn’t anything to get hung up on. A quick backstage video on an iPhone or impromptu acoustic jam can be far more effective than that big expensive music video. Like anything else, it still has to be entertaining, but with a little thought, a cheap video can still be very effective.
Artists and bands have a love/hate relationship with YouTube but the fact of the matter is that it’s still one of the most effective ways of getting your music out to both fans and non-fans alike, and growing an audience. That said, the techniques that worked in the past are no longer valid. Luckily, there are some very good models to look at for guidance, but few of them are from the music business.
Martin Guitar Tries Long-Form Branded Content With 40-Minute Documentary
Many companies now consider themselves “publishers,” increasingly investing in branded video content to push out online through their websites and social media accounts for marketing purposes.
It’s rare that such creations receive significant artistic recognition—let alone be selected for a major film festival.
Guitar manufacturer C.F. Martin & Co. released a 40-minute documentary short in May, titled “Ballad of the Dreadnought,” in recognition of the 100th anniversary of its influential “dreadnought” guitar shape.
The film, which was created with advertising agency Lehigh Mining & Navigation, has received Official Selections at six film festivals including the Newport Beach Film Festival, Canada International Film Festival, New Hope Film Festival, SouthSide Film Festival and the Annual WorldFest-Houston International Film Festival.
“I saw this as an opportunity to educate people who may know a little bit of the story behind the guitar shape,” said Martin’s chief executive, Chris Martin IV.
The film features interviews with well-known guitar players including David Crosby, Steve Miller and Stephen Stills.
All of the interviews with the musicians and Martin guitar enthusiasts were provided at no cost, Mr. Martin said, which he described as a “huge honor.” The documentary was even narrated by actor and Martin enthusiast Jeff Daniels in exchange for two Martin guitars.
“The cost was in the production, not in the content,” Mr. Martin said.
It’s relatively rare for companies to invest in “long-form” branded content of this nature. Marketers typically favor shorter clips, which they hope might capture a few moments of users’ attention as they scroll through their Facebook or Twitter feeds.
For “Ballad of the Dreadnought,” Martin had initially set out to create a relatively simple 5-minute video. But as it began collecting video interviews and archival footage for that project, it decided to be more ambitious.
“It was a little idea that started as something else, and turned into a bigger project that really exceeded all of our expectations,” said Amani Duncan, Martin’s vice president of brand marketing.
“We’re really proud of the outcome. It’s both a marketing tool and about the legacy,” Ms. Duncan said, adding that the film is intended to appeal to existing Martin guitar owners, potential guitar owners and general guitar enthusiasts alike.
Since being published on the Martin Guitar website, “Ballad of the Dreadnought” has received over 30,000 views and has also been screened at various events across the country, often in partnership with Martin’s retail and distribution partners.
Although the film was conceived as a piece of marketing, it was also seen as a way to preserve the company’s heritage.
“Because of the importance of keeping our history alive, we’re able to do these types of initiatives that are a little more brand-centric, and don’t necessarily have hard return-on-investment associated with them,” Ms. Duncan said.
According to Joe Iacovella, director of account services at Lehigh Mining & Navigation, the documentary approach might be a better way to reach potential customers than more traditional forms of advertising anyway.
“We could easily have put together a few ads that said ‘Hey! The Dreadnought is 100 years old.’ But this way we’re telling the story to existing enthusiasts and emerging audiences as well. Those guys aren’t necessarily engaging with brands the way they used to,” Mr. Iacovella said.
One limitation of the film, however, is that it can’t currently be posted to social networks and video platforms such as Facebook and Google, due to licensing limitations with some of the video footage it includes.
“If it takes off and really appeals to people, perhaps we’ll look at broader distribution,” Ms. Duncan said, who floated the possibility of licensing it to TV networks or online streaming services. “Licensing this would be beyond our expectations,” she said.