[opendtv] News: The Album, a Commodity in Disfavor
- From: Craig Birkmaier <craig@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: OpenDTV Mail List <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 26 Mar 2007 09:11:46 -0400
Could this be the REAL reason that CD sales are dropping like a rock?
Craig
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/26/business/media/26music.html?th=&emc=th&pagewanted=all
The Album, a Commodity in Disfavor
By JEFF LEEDS
Published: March 26, 2007
LOS ANGELES, March 25 - Now that the three young women in Candy Hill,
a glossy rap and R&B trio, have signed a record contract, they are
hoping for stardom. On the schedule: shooting a music video and
visiting radio stations to talk up their music.
But the women do not have a CD to promote. Universal/Republic
Records, their label, signed Candy Hill to record two songs, not a
complete album.
"If we get two songs out, we get a shot," said Vatana Shaw, 20, who
formed the trio four years ago, "Only true fans are buying full
albums. Most people don't really do that anymore."
To the regret of music labels everywhere, she is right: fans are
buying fewer and fewer full albums. In the shift from CDs to digital
music, buyers can now pick the individual songs they like without
having to pay upward of $10 for an album.
Last year, digital singles outsold plastic CD's for the first time.
So far this year, sales of digital songs have risen 54 percent, to
roughly 189 million units, according to data from Nielsen SoundScan.
Digital album sales are rising at a slightly faster pace, but buyers
of digital music are purchasing singles over albums by a margin of 19
to 1.
Because of this shift in listener preferences - a trend reflected
everywhere from blogs posting select MP3s to reviews of singles in
Rolling Stone - record labels are coming to grips with the loss of
the album as their main product and chief moneymaker.
In response, labels are re-examining everything from their marketing
practices to their contracts. One result is that offers are cropping
up for artists like Candy Hill to record only ring tones or a clutch
of singles, according to talent managers and lawyers.
At the same time, the industry is straining to shore up the album as
long as possible, in part by prodding listeners who buy one song to
purchase the rest of a collection. Apple, in consultation with
several labels, has been planning to offer iTunes users credit for
songs they have already purchased if they then choose to buy the
associated album in a certain period of time, according to people
involved in the negotiations. (Under Apple's current practice,
customers who buy a song and then the related album effectively pay
for the song twice).
But some analysts say they doubt that such promotions can reverse the trend.
"I think the album is going to die," said Aram Sinnreich, managing
partner at Radar Research, a media consulting firm based in Los
Angeles. "Consumers are listening to play lists," or mixes of single
songs from an assortment of different artists. "Consumers who have
had iPods since they were in the single digits are going to
increasingly gravitate toward artists who embrace that."
All this comes as the industry's long sales slide has been
accelerating. Sales of albums, in either disc or digital form, have
dropped more than 16 percent so far this year, a slide that
executives attribute to an unusually weak release schedule and
shrinking retail floor space for music. Even though sales of
individual songs - sold principally through iTunes - are rising, it
has not been nearly enough to compensate.
Many music executives dispute the idea that the album will disappear.
In particular, they say, fans of jazz, classical, opera and certain
rock (bands like Radiohead and Tool) will demand album-length
listening experiences for many years to come. But for other genres -
including some strains of pop music, rap, R&B and much of country -
where sales success is seen as closely tied to radio air play of
singles, the album may be entering its twilight.
"For some genres and some artists, having an album-centric plan will
be a thing of the past," said Jeff Kempler, chief operating officer
of EMI's Capitol Music Group. While the traditional album provides
value to fans, he said, "perpetuating a business model that fixates
on a particular packaged product configuration is inimical to what
the Internet enables, and it's inimical to what many consumers have
clearly voted for."
Another solution being debated in the industry would transform
record labels into de facto fan clubs. Companies including the Warner
Music Group and the EMI Group have been considering a system in which
fans would pay a fee, perhaps monthly, to "subscribe" to their
favorite artists and receive a series of recordings, videos and other
products spaced over time.
Executives maintain that they must establish more lasting connections
with fans who may well lose interest if forced to wait two years or
more before their favorite artist releases new music.
A decade ago, the music industry had all but stopped selling music in
individual units. But now, four years after Apple introduced its
iTunes service - selling singles for 99 cents apiece and full albums
typically for $9.99 - individual songs account for roughly two-thirds
of all music sales volume in the United States. And that does not
count purchases of music in other, bite-size forms like ring tones,
which have sold more than 54 million units so far this year,
according to Nielsen data.
One of the biggest reasons for the shift, analysts say, is that
consumers - empowered to cherry-pick - are forgoing album purchases
after years of paying for complete CD's with too few songs they like.
There are still cases where full albums succeed - the Red Hot Chili
Peppers' double-CD "Stadium Arcadium," with a weighty 28 tracks, has
sold almost two million copies. But the overall pie is shrinking.
In some ways, the current climate recalls the 1950s and to some
extent, the 60s, when many popular acts sold more singles than
albums. It took greatly influential works like The Beatles' "Sgt.
Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" and the Beach Boys' "Pet Sounds" to
turn the album into pop music's medium of choice.
But the music industry's cost structure is far higher than it was
when Bob Dylan picked up an electric guitar. Today's costs - from
television ads and music videos to hefty executive salaries - are
still built on blockbuster albums.
Hence the emergence of scaled-back deals with acts like Candy Hill.
Labels have signed new performers to singles deals before, typically
to release what they viewed as ephemeral or novelty hits. Now,
executives at Universal say, such arrangements will become more
common for even quality acts because the single itself is the end
product.
With Candy Hill, Universal paid a relatively small advance -
described as being in "five figures" - to cover recording expenses.
Ms. Shaw, who formed the group with Casha Darjean and Ociris Gomez,
said the members had kept their day jobs working at an insurance
company and doing other vocal work to be able to pay the rent at the
house where they live together.
If one of their songs turns into a big hit, they hope to release a
full album, and to tap other income sources, like touring and
merchandise sales.
But turning a song into a hit does not appear to be getting any easier.
Ron Shapiro, an artist manager and former president of Atlantic
Records, asked, "What are the Las Vegas odds of constantly having a
'Bad Day?' " - referring to a tune by the singer Daniel Powter that
sold more than two million copies after it was used on "American
Idol."
While music labels labor to build careers for artists that are suited
for albums, he added, "You have to create an almost hysterical pace
to find hits to sell as digital downloads and ring tones that
everybody's going to want. It's scary."
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