Archive for September, 2008
Wii Music
Sep 19th
Nintendo has just announced the launch of Wii Music in October of this year. They are hoping that “blue Ocean” lightning strikes thrice after the successful Wii Sports and Wii Fit llaunches. According to the press release this game hopes to bring music to the “not good at guitar hero” set. The game will feature more than 60 instruments and more than 50 (bad) songs.
I do not see how this can be successful. I may stand to be corrected, but this simply cannot compete with the likes of Guitar Hero and Rock Band. I think that demographic is already maxed out on the music making games… Perhaps this will find a way into the old folks homes and even possibly into music therapy circles. That could be a very interesting proposition… digital Orff instruments. I have definitely heard of weirder things. Perhaps my friends over at Mustech.net will be able to comment on the actual use-ability of this product within the realm of music education… Now that would be an interesting thesis.
Musical Gaming’s Hall of Shame: Some other lesser-known games that attempted to bring music to the masses.
R.I.P T.R.L. – Why MTV’s TRL was doomed anyways
Sep 17th
The news has finally broken. MTV is canceling TRL for good. This news comes as bitter sweet to me since after all, 10 years ago when it launched, I actually watched TRL. Albeit between classes while I was attending University… This also strikes home with me because of the fact that in my short tenure with Viacom / MTV as a production assistant, I actually worked TRL while it was filming on location in Miami. (Carson Daly is a lot taller than you’d think!)
The loss of TRL is directly associated with the networks move AWAY from music. Music Television was after all the original name of the network before it reduced itself to MTV. Lets face it though… have any of us actually seen a music video on MTV in the recent past? I certainly have not. MTV’s focus has completely changed to Reality based television. TRL was really the last holdout from the good old Music days. Obviously the change in format was due to increased pressures from Advertisers… Reality based programming means repeat customers. Episodic television almost guarantees a regular audience while simply airing videos does not guarantee any audience retention.
I think it is sad that this great bastion of the 1980′s.. “Music Television” has moved so far away from it’s original format. I look back on my years as a teenager watching MTV in the afternoons because it was literally that or Soap Operas with great joy. I think it is sad that generations to come wont get to enjoy such great afternoon entertainment.
While TRL is dead, they are planning on keeping some sort of conceptualized version of it alive with a Friday night show hosted by Fall Out Boy’s Pete Wentz. FNMTV will be the “new” TRL… I guess this is a good thing although I didn’t like the Videos that TRL replaced.
I want my (old) MTV.
How the Music Business Spent the Summer Killing Itself… r.e.c.a.p.
Sep 12th
Sorry.
Hello World. I owe an apology it seems. In the past two whirl-wind months, I have been an absentee landlord with “Is This Binding?”. Work has been killing me it seems and when I haven’t been at work, I have been out at the lake enjoying what is left of my summer.
To anyone who cares, I must say I’m Sorry.
Now on with the good stuff..
I just received this off of the “Pho” mailing list… really good stuff from “Advertising Age” of all places… The title says it all and Simon Dumenco really is beating a dead horse with his commentary here… but it is nice to hear someone else say it in a new venue… Hopefully, Muxtape will find a way through the RIAA BS in time to actually come back and do some good things. God knows they had a great underground following. As for Pandora, I am afraid I am going to miss it quite a bit once it is gone. I dont know how they can possibly hang on with the terms of the licenses they will need looming overhead.
http://adage.com/mediaworks/article?article_id=130766
So Without further adieu:
How the Music Business Spent the Summer Killing Itself
Labels Pull Albums off iTunes, RIAA Goes After Internet Radio — When Will They Ever Learn?
By Simon Dumenco
Published: September 08, 2008
A few weeks back, as I was having dinner with a media-industry colleague at a trendy restaurant in a trendy New York neighborhood, I realized that the music coming over the sound system was transporting me to another time — specifically, 1986. As song after song by various “it” bands of the moment, such as Black Kids and the Virgins, played, it was as if we were listening to a time-warped or parallel-universe version of the “Pretty in Pink” soundtrack. Because really, the “it” sound of the moment would work seamlessly in just about any John Hughes movie circa the mid-’80s.
‘Pretty in Pink’: Today’s ‘it’ bands would fit right in.
‘Pretty in Pink’: Today’s ‘it’ bands would fit right in.
In fact, I suggested to my dinner companion that there might be a niche market in this: Somebody should create a soundtrack titled “Pretty in Pink 2: The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack to the Movie That Never Got Made.” (Same deal with “The Breakfast Club” and “Sixteen Candles.”) Of course, in the iTunes Age, the conventional wisdom is that nobody buys albums anymore — but they do buy compilations. (Witness the continuing global success of the “Now That’s What I Call Music!” franchise; the latest U.S. “Now” compilation, the 28th in the series, was released in June and went platinum last month.)
As it happens, my colleague ended up buying “Partie Traumatic,” Black Kids’ debut CD, on iTunes. He doesn’t really read music criticism, so he didn’t know — and wouldn’t have cared — that Rolling Stone and The Guardian loved the record or that Pitchfork hated it. He just really liked the Black Kids song we heard over dinner (“I’m Not Gonna Teach Your Boyfriend How to Dance With You”), got hooked and became a customer.
All of that got me thinking about the economics of music discovery, whether by hearing new music in a restaurant, in a movie theater or on the internet. Speaking of which, the deeply troubled music industry, rather astonishingly, has been spending its summer making it harder for music fans to encounter new music online. Last month, for instance, Muxtape, which I raved about in this column when it launched earlier this year, went dark. Created by former college-radio DJ Justin Ouellette, the hipster favorite made it simple for music fans to create virtual mix tapes — short lists of songs your friends (and other Muxtape users) could listen to but not download, because Muxtape used streaming technology. (Muxtape, in fact, offered links to Amazon’s MP3 store to make it easy for users to buy songs they had just heard.) But now, a simple, sad message appears on the Muxtape home page: “Muxtape will be unavailable for a brief period while we sort out a problem with the RIAA” — the Recording Industry Association of America. A brief period? We’ll see.
Likewise, the hugely popular internet radio station Pandora is “approaching a pull-the-plug kind of decision,” as founder Tim Westergren told The Washington Post, because the federal government, prompted by the music industry, doubled the “performance-royalty” rate that internet radio stations must pay (to record companies) to stream music — twice as much as satellite radio. Traditional terrestrial radio stations, mind you, don’t have to pay performance royalties: They pay only publishing royalties to songwriters. The new internet-radio royalty rates kicked in as of July, and they threaten to kill not just Pandora but the rest of the fledgling internet-radio market.
Meanwhile, we’re seeing artists and labels pulling music from iTunes in hopes of juicing album sales. Warner, for instance, just pulled Estelle’s entire album “Shine” from iTunes because it didn’t want fans to be able to buy just its ubiquitous hit single, “American Boy” (featuring Kanye West). It’s kind of sweetly principled that Estelle — and/or the suits at Warner — think that “Shine” is a complete work of art that must be purchased in its entirety and then presumably listened to from start to finish. Principled but idiotic — and the proof is that “Shine” and “American Boy” are both now in freefall on the Billboard charts. (Your neighborhood drug dealer wouldn’t do so well either if he forced all his customers to buy in bulk.)
All in all, it’s been a depressing summer for the delusional record industry. We’re seeing a total disconnect between labels’ unrealistic, old-school revenue expectations and what the market can bear. On the streaming-music front in particular, the sad reality is that advertising revenue isn’t, and may never be, there to fully support the music industry’s wishful-thinking profit margins.
As Advertising Age Editor Jonah Bloom said to me last week, labels “can’t help looking at what they used to earn from a big band’s latest release and wondering why they can’t score that. … The trick is to get your costs in line with your anticipated sales based on current revenue rather than former revenue.”
But the music industry, stuck obsessing about exactly that — former revenue — would prefer that you only listen to music when and where they want you to. And that’s no way to figure out the path to future revenue.
In lieu of the usual Media Guy’s Pop Pick giveaway, this week I’m randomly giving away one copy each of Black Kids’ “Partie Traumatic”; the Virgins’ eponymous debut; and, for old times’ sake, the “Pretty in Pink” soundtrack. To be eligible, send me an e-mail with “Black Kids” or “The Virgins” or “Pretty in Pink” in the subject line on or before Oct. 8. You must be at least 18 and have a valid U.S. mailing address.
~ Ciao for Niao


