Wednesday, March 23, 2005

Elvis Declares the Industry Dead

Elvis Costello, that is.

From The Washington Post (free subscription required):

The Who declared that rock is dead, so long live rock. Elvis Costello named the murderer -- high-speed Internet.
Liverpool's second-most acerbic pop star isn't the first person to make this observation, but after nearly three decades of paying the rent on vinyl, tape and silicon, he is familiar enough with the way the music industry works to know when the vital signs are off. Costello, who made his remarks at the just-concluded South by Southwest (SXSW) music festival in Austin, Texas, said the end was nearer than many think.
"As soon as broadband is big enough, the record (retailing) business is over," Costello said, according to the Hollywood Reporter. "They will have to change or die ... It's going to be about five minutes to the end. All bets are off." Costello also said that "music chains like Tower Records had 'let the spirit go out of it.'"


snip

[T]he U.S. Supreme Court prepares to hear oral arguments next week about whether Internet music-swapping services like Grokster and Morpheus break the law simply by existing.

Music is changing. There's no doubt about that. The technology of digital music, of mp3 players and computers and broadband access, means that my music is your music and yours is mine, if we only want it to be so. I guess that's been true since the age of the cassette, the first easily reproducible technology most people had in their homes. But making a cassette for someone required the input of time, at least of the length of the cassette, and contact with the recipient (or his or her mailman). It meant mixing up music in your own mind. (Who can ever forget Alfred Molina's brilliant performance of the cokehead rant against the tyranny of the album in Boogie Nights? "Ricky Springfield! He's a friend of mine!") It meant sharing. Does anyone remember whether or not the industry tried to limit cassette technology? Now, of course, you can pass along a song instantaneously, permanently.

One of our favorite bloggers, NTodd, does digital security for a living. Here's what he said recently:
When I discuss broadband technology, the first thing I do is break out the iPod and play something like Hey Ya by Outkast (gets the blood pumping when you're talking about boring techno stuff). My students think it's just a time wasting thing at first, but as we discuss how MP3s changed the music industry, it starts to dawn on them that it isn't just a lark but that there is indeed a method to my madness. We talk about compression, bandwidth, business models, how all this can be a lesson to the movie industry, etc. I note that my relationship to music fundamentally changed when it became possible to fit my entire collection into a shirt pocket.

In the midst of the discussion I talk about (the lack of) encryption and how the inventors of the CD never imagined a time when harddrive space would be so cheap that one could store thousands of songs on a computer. I also observe that the reason CDs have the storage capacity that they do is because Sony wanted to be able to fit all of Beethoven's Ninth, which had required multiple vinyl platters before, onto a single disc.


Plus, he's an amazing photographer and a fun guy.

I don't do P2P; I'm paranoid about giving others access to my hard drive. But I frequently exchange music with others, some of whom I've never actually met. I started with a woman in Colorado who contacted me after I won a Shoes CD off EBay; we discovered a fair amount of common ground and started burning discs to send back and forth. My greatest current resource is an incredibly generous Texan whose musical tastes correspond so closely to my own it's a bit unsettling. Other friends from other blogs, musicians who send me unreleased and demo stuff--there's a lot of music in my life. Some of it is probably illegal, technically. This impedes my enjoyment not one whit.

[Worth noting: if I'm any indication, EBay and Half.com are probably not doing the industry any good, either.]

The industry claims to be defending the rights of artists, but we know artists are fucked roundly by record companies, charged back for every little thing. (e.g., XTC's fight with Geffen) If artists are covertly smiling over the damage digitization has wreaked upon the big record companies, one can't really blame them. Big record companies are no longer necessary for wide distribution: we've got iTunes. Artists can find their fans online; fans can find artists they like the same way. Is this a positive development? I don't know. I think so, but I might be missing something. Thoughts?

UPDATE: Interesting set of reflections here.
Recent developments in technology have made an amazing amount of legal, illegal, and questionable activities possible for music fans. As always, the new technology has been liberating to some, frightening to others, and confusing to nearly all. As the music industry, consumers, lawyers, and just about everyone else grapple with the new abilities to copy, send, and work with music, record labels are putting out an increasing number of CDs containing technology to limit access to the music. Amid the lawsuits, piracy, and debate, PopMatters thought it was time to chime in. Here we present views from an analytical specialist, a frustrated writer/consumer, and a pissed-off whore.


UPDATE 2 (3/25): I got my iPod back! Yay!

10 comments:

refinnej said...

I don't think the industry is dead so much as it's changed. And while it may be too soon to say if it's positive or negative, there certainly seem to be a lot of postivie aspects. Especially if the artist gets to keep more of what they earn and the fan has access to it. If it means that people like Justin Timberlake go away faster, then I will worship the iPod like a god. I tend to like the trend towards internet and satellite radio because there seems to be less corporate whoring.. plus you actually get to hear music, if that's what you are into, which I am.

But there is something to be said for the days when you had to go to the Villiage to hear cool music and find the cool stores that sold music you couldn't hear anywhere else. I'm hoping that ready access to all kinds of music via the internet does not turn the world into a giant mall.

ntodd said...

Atoms have left the building. It's all bits, baby! Well, okay, not all, but the disc retailing industry is looking a lot like Terri Schiavo because it has consistently refused to adapt until it's too late. They could've adopted the new technology and used it as another cheaper and more effective distribution channel, but they see everything as a threat--they fear not only theft of intellectual property but the natural disintermediation that this e-commerce model enables.

It took an outside visionary like Steve Jobs to do the math, and that's saved Apple's ass. RIAA is stuck in a time warp and suffers for it.

While some artists, like the fucking sellouts in Metallica, hate MP3, you've got a lot of indies and even big timers like Prince who have totally embraced this stuff.

PS--thanks for the plug and nice words and stuff!

Rmj said...

Allow a grumbling old audiophile to point out that it's now all about bandwidth and hard drives and encoding.

And precious little about the sound.

Sure, I can fit my whole record collection into my shirt pocket, but it still sounds like shite on tiny earbuds. I have a CD by an Austin artist I acquired years ago. Last visit to Austin, I stumbled upon her in live performance (at the Armadillo Xmas Bazaar), and was blown away. The record was nice, the live performance was amazing.

And I've never listened to that CD on ear buds.

Can we get back to talking about the sound someday? Or is it all about possessing the data bits?

NYMary said...

Well, RMJ, it's actually mostly about the sound for me, too, but issues of ownership and rights and possession are surely important.

When Atrios got his iPod, every third commenter wrned him to ditch his earbuds. I use mine though, I admit. More than thet, though, I listen in my car. But I do know a few people who swear by the docking stations through which you can broadcast the sound throughout the house.

ntodd said...

Can we get back to talking about the sound someday?

No, let's talk about application. For you sound is important. Jolly good. For me, a road warrior, I worship at the altar of portability, and nothing sounds good at 19kft in a Dash-8.

charley said...

i saw that elvis costello concert (on tv.)

well, ntodd knows how i feel about this, and jeffers is right. sound is not as good, but i can live with that. 'cause i don't care that much about music but i'm telling you digital is ruining photography. qaulity does matter if you're an artist.

i compare it to instant coffee vs. java beans.

having said that i've known many a fine musician who just would never get a record contract, now they can just hook up to the net and put it out there. i would mention though that it is important for and artist to generate revenue.

also interesting that almost all my favorite bands have a song written in protest to the recording industry. "spin the black circle" "this is not for you"

Dave said...

Does anyone remember whether or not the industry tried to limit cassette technology?

Weren't the attempts to pass a "blank tape tax" back in the 80s related to this debate (sans broadband, etc.)? I remember it also being linked to the PMRC debacle. Being a young 'un, I don't exactly remember this whole unpleasant episode, but I'm pretty sure the recording industry was pressuring Congress on cassettes, too.

Anonymous said...

I'd like to know (regarding the thread on cassettes) something more about this. I'm probably one of the last-adopters of MiniDiscs because, tho' the reliability is occasionally an issue, I was never computer-literate enough (as a PC user and not an Appleite like kid sis) to get into digital music over the Net. And most MDs one can get now are only blanks, not the pre-recorded ones. (My only pre-rec is Fatboy Slim's "You've Come A Long Way, Baby": the following one I got on CD.)

Also, how does the Betamax case impinge on this whole sitch? It's the most quoted by the techies and filesharers.

Anonymous said...

Does anyone remember whether or not the industry tried to limit cassette technology?

other than the whole "home taping is killing music" marketing campaign, no.

Anonymous said...

What if the music industry as we know it fell apart?. What if it became impossible to make a living selling albums. if the only way an artist could get paid was from live events, t-shirts etc and I guess commercials.
If you wanted to make a record, you made it yourself, put it online, and if people liked it you got to play live. Would that mean no more millionaire musicians? No more cribs?
A level playing field where you actually have to be good to get noticed?
I think it is impossible to stop file sharing from taking down the music industry (first, then film, then video games etc). Have you ever seen a computer literate teenager's computer? Today's kid's can get around any kind of security, and it gets easier every year.

In a few more decades, every city will have wireless broadband and every cellphone/PDA/kitchensink device will have terabytes of space and fit in a wristwatch. Anything that can be digitized will be free.

But, even though the recording and film industries are where I make my living, I can't help but look foreword to that new world.