AeonicSlumber
srs
- Aug 14, 2008
- 4,893
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Isnt it odd that you can get an entire album, unbundles, for LESS in MP3 format?
I have a theory… and that’s all it is. Using the history lesson above, could the industry be feeding off of consumers like us who are NOT moving away from CD’s?
I just checked the new Halcyon Way on the torrent site I go to.
Times downloaded: 5
so unless that site is strictly anti-HW, I don't believe the figure for a second.
All I feel like adding at this point is that, aside from building the studio to record in, if an indie band is paying $20,000 to make an album on Pro-Tools with a good engineer then they're getting ripped off.
Aye, I'm with you on this one. Your production quality should be competitive in this day and age to turn some heads. Plus, working with a name producer, a name artist and so forth gives you a nice thing called "leverage" which may not pay off immediately, but could be a very valueble asset in the future.Now as to having my own rig, we probably saved $7500+ in studio rental by tracking guitars, vocals, and bass on my rig. So anyone that says that an indie band got ripped off if they spent $20k on a CD is flat wrong, they simply haven't called around to real players in the business to get rates for making an album at a high level. Is it the cheapest way to do it? Definitely not. But it's not a ripoff. It's the difference between doing it "indie" and doing it the way the big boys do.
They still sell hundreds of millions of CDs a year (that they can count) they'd be nuts to wipe it out...if anything, they should be cheaper now...why did CDs cost $15.99 15 years ago and STILL cost $15.99??
Not really. Do you go for a name producer, or Joe Schmoe down the street? It's a value call, and you have to decide as an artist of you're wanting to compete with the best in the business or be content with a product that could have been better. Since we're talking about your legacy as an artist here, to me it's pretty simple....you put out the best product possible at the time, without compromise.
For me, the cost of my studio is a sunk cost....I'd already spent the money and recorded an album in it, and done the preproduction for the new one. So it was a question of either DIY, with likely sub-par results, or a local guy that maybe had the skills but not the ear for what exactly we wanted, or do it 110% and get the guy we wanted.
As far as what we spent on our new album....I won't go into details on our costs or on individual expenses because it would be unfair for the people we hired to have their rates on a forum, and its not anyone elses business either, but we spent money on the following, and you can decide if we "got ripped off".
Art: Travis Smith
Producer: Lasse Lammert from Germany, requiring airfare to the US and expenses, plus his fee.
guest Musicians: Pamela Moore (hourly rate + airfare and expenses), strings, keys, choir tracked on location
Drums: 16 songs tracked over 5-6 sessions in a top Atlanta studio with a well known engineer on vintage gear with high end mics and pres
Various gear rental (Neumann u87 especially for vox, this is a $4k mic)
Now as to having my own rig, we probably saved $7500+ in studio rental by tracking guitars, vocals, and bass on my rig. So anyone that says that an indie band got ripped off if they spent $20k on a CD is flat wrong, they simply haven't called around to real players in the business to get rates for making an album at a high level. Is it the cheapest way to do it? Definitely not. But it's not a ripoff. It's the difference between doing it "indie" and doing it the way the big boys do.
Unlike you, I don't think CDs are going obsolete anytime soon, at least with the failure of the industry to develop a high def (SACD, DVD-A) format.
As an aside, I have to chuckle at all the disbelief over the numbers myself and Lance have posted here about our torrent numbers. Is it so hard to believe that NMR and HW have gotten our respective names out there beyond Atlanta (for HW) and this forum? Both of us work our asses off to promote our brands. =)
When the latest Blind Guardian album only has 14.5k downloads on one of the largest torrent sites, yes, it is hard to believe that Halcyon Way has 85k downloads. It's not a knock at your band...I really enjoyed the last album actually...but if you had 85,000 people downloading your album, you'd be able to tour the states with more success than most touring bands currently have.