It isn’t breaking news to hear how drastic of an impact the
Internet has been to music industry, much less to the world. As Jay Cooper, a music lawyer, puts it,
“We’re in the biggest sea change ever in the music business”. It is important
to understand, not only know of, the digital age and its effects in the music
industry.
After Napster, the decline on CD purchase took a plunge.
Less and less music videos were being played on MTV, the “Music” television.
Labels, artists, songwriters, producers, engineers, etc. were no longer being
paid, but the demand of music was, and still is, at an all time high. Everyone
is watching videos, listening to music and downloading songs for free. It is
easier and cheaper to obtain, which is why music is consumed now more than
ever. The following is a chart from Digital Music News.
Click on the
image and watch its animated version.
When referring to music as a business, the digital age has
permitted unrestricted access to the product. If music is being downloaded
without paying a dime, how do the professionals and artists in the music
industry get paid? When asked what was the biggest challenge right now in the
music industry, Jay Cooper responded that the entire industry is concerned with
the economics portion. Labels and companies are desperately trying to create an
economic model to allow artists to survive.
Jay Cooper went on to describe the possibilities of the “ultimate
economic model”. Would music be paid for per stream? Download? A possible
combination of the two? Another idea he mentioned was a monthly subscription,
something similar to television. The fee for music will most likely be
discreet, but there will be one.
We will see in a near future if Jay Cooper’s ideas for the “ultimate
economic model” come to realization, or if something else will be innovated.
This is the digital age, and it has effected the music industry in major ways
besides economical. There is much more to discuss such as the discouragement of
technological sector
in the music industry, as well as liabilities such as copyright laws. The
digital landscape is massive, and this post barely scratches the surface.