Chris Brooks said:Wow, hats off to Wes. I'm gaining more respect for that guy by the day. He's speaking from as someone in the industry, and an artist at that. I'll take his reasoning over some punk who rationalizes his/her stealing by pretending they're fighting for some noble cause by battling the labels that their favorite artists signed with because they wanted to make and album and wanted their fans to buy it.
Theli said:Isn't the sales for Metal CD's improving?
The miracle of internet promotion in general isn't hurting, nor is the revival of Headbanger's Ball.ffanatic said:They sure. I think I read somewhere that metal sales have increased by something like 300%. And it's all thanks to the miracle of file sharing.
All very valid points. I especially like the last one, which is something I've been thinking about for a long time.. Why do/should "we" even care about the "industry"? IMO, as far as anyone with a brain of his/her own is concerned, there is no need for corporate radio or large "record companies." They are already obsolete, and have been for years..speed said:...Lets face it, the music industry sucked before Napster- laws regarding coroporate ownership changed- ...only bands that the record companies ...would get on the air and become popular.
Furthermore, the record industry will be forced to drastically change the way they do business because of file sharing. Eventually they will figure out better ways to release music on the internet- money is involved.
*heh heh* You go, boy.. I got your back.Scurvy said:Borland is scaremongering or at the very least ignorant.
While, yes, the radio always sucked (I'd always had a problem with over-saturation of songs I never liked in the first place and the complete absence of any deep album cuts, but that was before I understood "how it worked."), I do remember a period from mid 1984 (the beginning of my collecting phase) through 1988 or 1989 when I could go into the local Waxie Maxies, Kemp Mill, Penguin Feather or either of a couple of local resellers, and browse a commanding section of independent metal *VINYL*, which was a favorite passtime for me in the day. That, of course, became completely scarce by the eraly '90s, and I pretty much gave up on "our music" because I had no idea anyone was still creating, recording or releasing it.. My brother kept mentioning ads in guitar mags for new CDs by some of the stalwarts like Running Wild, but until I got online in '95, I saw no evidence.. Now, I have no patience for shopping brick & mortar. I'd rather surf online while drinking a frosty ale in the comfort of my own (home) office chair..Scurvy said:Before filesharing, most good metal was always hard to come by in large CD shops while we were deluged with crap music on the radio and in the charts.
but at the same time their bands are getting much more exposed to more ppl around the world....food tastes good said:i download music because i just simply don't have money to buy it. if i don't download the music then i won't hear it at all. i'll try to go to a band's show though and buy a sticker or something if i can.
but seriously, filesharing has had quite a negative effect on many more underground indie labels. i'm not talking about the mega labels like century media but the smaller diy ones. they're already tight on budget and working their asses off to sell enough records so they can release more music for our enjoyment. filesharing is making it much worse for them.
hibernal_dream said:Wrong. The decline of music as a business is imminent. Since music will no longer be profitable, record labels will disintegrate to dust and only the artists dedicated to their art will continue producing music, and thus, no more Justin Timberlakes.
NocturnalSun said:Wow, this thread's got a ton o replies in one day... haha well anyway I have a few questions for some of u. I've heard one or 2 ppl bash big-time labels for simply being big. Suddenly being big implies that you automatically market meaningless bullshit. hahaha you couldn't be more wrong (in relation to big-time metal labels). for one, Century Media puts out bands like Dark Tranquillity, Sonata Antarctica, and Children of Bodom. That stuff is far from shit in terms of pure skill and creativity. In terms of personal preference, you may disagree and you're hella welcome to. Century Media and Nuclear Blast are 2 of the biggest metal labels.. shit? hardly