Re: ASCAP Assails Free-Culture, Digital-Rights Groups

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On 2/07/2010 1:07 AM, ailo wrote:
On 07/01/2010 03:09 PM, Louigi Verona wrote:
Hey guys!

And while I am preparing my answer to some very excellent points made
here (some of which made me rethink several particular situations), I
want to give you some food for discussion - do we really want more
professionals in the field of arts? Is it an unquestionable good that
musicians make a living out of music?

Or, more obviously, writers? What would a writer have to say if all he
sees is his writing desk? So many creative people, both musicians and
writers, changed many professions, received lots and lots of life
experience before they started to seriously create stuff, reflecting
on their experiences.

But so far the law assumes that if someone makes a living off of his
creativity, it will necessarily make him more fruitful. But I've seen
several cases when the effect was the opposite. And that was actually
in the field of music, when a musician would loose his originality and
touch once he got a contract and started to pump out professional cds.
Something did not work out.

Yes, a very big change for a lot of artist who one day are totally
unknown (doing everything by themselves) and the next day having tons of
pressure because of all the people involved: managers, producers, fans,
etc. And suddenly a lot of people are trying to get you to do things
their way (all in the interest of making some money). This of course
usually only happens to artists who make music that CAN make a lot of
money.

Also, when the professional scene is not so dominating, people tend to
be more musically educated. And in general more people know how to
sing and/or play an instrument. It is actually a statistical fact that
folk music has deteriorated with the rise of professional music and
that the active involvement of people into music has decreased very
significantly, since it became uncommon to compete with highly trained
professionals. A lot of music today is passive entertainment, not
active. This does have an indirect connection to copyright, since
songs written yesterday were written for everybody to sing (even if
they take money for the performance). Nowadays songs are written to be
listened.

Louigi.
At least I would say that people's listening habits aren't as polarized
as they used to be (remember the times when there were only two music
styles: hard rock and synth?). I don't even know if music has the same
effect on people anymore, since there's so much else on the internet
these days. This may be a very subjective observation, though.

Regarding copyright, have you guys heard of Spotify? It can be used for
free (but with annoying commercial breaks). I've heard that artist are
beginning to earn some money from that now (it was a bit slow in the
beginning).

It's a nice idea, but the money flowing back to the artists from these streaming services is depressingly small:

http://www.informationisbeautiful.net/2010/how-much-do-music-artists-earn-online/

I could imagine having a system like Myspace, where anyone could set up
an account, and earn money from the traffic amount. Sort of royalty
based income, no middle hands needed. This would at least ensure total
freedom from the artists perspective (especially if one has a lot of
freedom with the web design, using both audio and video). The artist
that wish to make it into an enterprise will no doubt keep working with
producers and managers, even without the traditional record company.

It doesn't give you any freedom with the web design, but Youtube does this to a degree -- if your video gets enough plays you can begin to get a share of the revenues it brings in. I don't know a lot about this though, so it's entirely possible that the revenues are just as depressing as the streaming music services! I'd assume it would also depend on just how annoying you decide to allow the advertising on your videos to be.

The problem is of course restrictions. What sort of restrictions and who
decides them?
There was an idea that everyone who pays for Internet would also pay a
fee to access any kind of media. All the media you want, for a fixed
price, like taxes. The money would then be distributed to artist in the
form of royalty.

I've always wondered how these schemes work -- similar things already exist for blank media (CDs, etc.) in some places. Where does the money go to, and how does it get distributed to the artists? Who decides each artist's share?

Thanks
Leigh
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