you can't download a concert.


On Mon, 11 Oct 2004, Cobert, Gwendal wrote:

> Basically, there would be record sales in competition with DVDs, video games, 
> mobile phones, concert tickets... Actually had a talk with a guy 
> (professionnal classical musician) who sees the same happening in his field, 
> he records less and less, but tours more and more... The interesting effect 
> being less power to the big record companies, more power to the tour 
> companies.
> Gwendal
>
> -----Message d'origine-----
> De : Cyclone Wehner [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Envoyé : Thursday, October 07, 2004 8:25 PM
> À : 313 Detroit
> Objet : Re: (313) Is this the new Swayzak sound?
>
> Yes, that is very true for Australia, but I have no figures.
> Alicia Keys' latest record is considered a commercial failure (to BMG's 
> dismay, many of the staff believed in what is an extraordinary record) yet 
> her Australian shows have sold out.
> I think people - young people - are putting money in mobile phones and so 
> don't have as much money for records. They download. Also people spend money 
> on live shows and download music. Many a musician says that touring, not 
> record sales, is their main source of income these days.
> Australia has always had a strong live circuit though.
>
> ----------
> >From: "Cobert, Gwendal" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >To: "313 Detroit" <313@hyperreal.org>
> >Subject: RE: (313) Is this the new Swayzak sound?
> >Date: Thu, 7 Oct 2004 7:03 PM
> >
>
> > On the "music doesn't sell as much as it used to..." tip - I've read
> > that while record sales are going down, tickets for concerts are going
> > up very fast... Is it the same in the US and Australia as well, or
> > just some European cultural exception ?
> > Gwendal
> >
> > -----Message d'origine-----
> > De : Cyclone Wehner [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Envoyé : Wednesday, October 06, 2004 6:19 PM À : 313 Detroit Objet :
> > Re: (313) Is this the new Swayzak sound?
> >
> > Music isn't selling as it used to, period. The market is in transition
> > and no one knows where it's heading. I think it's some kind of
> > technological revolution that we don't completely understand as of yet.
> > There does seem to be a trend for underground acts to set themselves
> > up as bands, get a singer, and make something more organic, perhaps
> > less 'faceless'. I don't think it's necessarily cynical as after all
> > most grew up with bands like Depeche Mode or whatever (many techno
> > types here are old goths, weirdly, who are rediscovering their love of
> > bands like The Cure) and that's a genuine avenue of exploration for a
> > maturing producer. But at the same time I hear a lot of tracks with
> > vocals, not songs, and when the music is like that it's not especially
> > memorable, doesn't stand out, doesn't click. I'm not sure what I'm
> > trying to say - I'm not a slave to pop structures, but... I think
> > Technasia make brilliant techno 'songs' with hooks and the vocals and 
> > everything - superb.
> > The songs with Charles Siegling and their instrumentals are first-rate.
> > I am sure with a different marketing strategy (and some money for
> > videos, ha
> > ha) they could have become a techno Daft Punk without changing their
> > music at
> all.
> >
>
>
>

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