sorry its so long, i wasn't given a link...(relates to the discussion on
rome burning & rock stars falling, etc.)

Facing the Music
Rock stars and music-industry execs once ruled the earth, but now -- in
terms of size and profit margins -- the music industry is becoming the book
business (minus the literacy).

BY MICHAEL WOLFF

Hemingway had rock-star status (and even impersonators). Steinbeck was
Springsteen. Salinger was Kurt Cobain. Dorothy Parker was Courtney Love.
James Jones was David Crosby. Mailer was Eminem. This is to say -- and I
understand how hard this is to appreciate -- that novelists were iconic for
much of the first half of the last century. They set the cultural agenda.
They made lots of money. They lived large (and self-medicated). They were
the generational voice. For a long time, anybody with any creative ambition
wanted to write the Great American Novel.

But starting in the fifties, and then gaining incredible force in the
sixties, rock-and-roll performers eclipsed authors as cultural stars. Rock
and roll took over fiction's job as the chronicler and romanticizer of
American life (that rock and roll became much bigger than fiction relates,
I'd argue, more to scalability and distribution than to relative influence),
and the music business replaced the book business as the engine of popular
culture.

Now, though, another reversal, of similar commercial and metaphysical
magnitude, is taking place. Not, of course, that the book business is
becoming rock and roll, but that the music industry is becoming, in size and
profit margins and stature, the book business.

In other words, there'll still be big hits (Celine Dion is Stephen King),
but even if you're fairly high up on the music-business ladder, most of your
time, which you'd previously spent with megastars, will be spent with
mid-list stuff. Where before you'd be happy only at gold and platinum
levels, soon you'll be grateful if you have a release that sells 30,000 or
40,000 units -- that will be your bread and butter. You'll sweat every sale
and dollar. Other aspects of the business will also contract -- most of the
perks and largesse and extravagance will dry up completely. The glamour, the
influence, the youth, the hipness, the hookers, the drugs -- gone. Instead,
it will be a low-margin, consolidated, quaintly anachronistic business,
catering to an aging clientele, without much impact on an otherwise thriving
culture awash in music that only incidentally will come from the music
industry.

This glum (if also quite funny) fate is surely the result of compounded
management errors -- the know-nothingness and foolishness and acting-out
that, for instance, just recently resulted in what seems to be the final
death of Napster.

But it's way larger, too. Management solutions in the music business have,
rightly, given way to a pure, no-exit kind of fatalism.

It's all pain. It's all breakdown. Music-business people, heretofore among
the most self-satisfied and self-absorbed people of the age, are suddenly
interesting, informed, even ennobled, as they become fully engaged in the
subject of their own demise. Producers, musicians, marketing people, agents
. . . they'll talk you through what's happened to their business -- it's
part B-school case study and part Pilgrim's Progress.


Start with radio.

Radio and rock and roll have had the most remarkable symbiotic relationship
in media -- the synergy that everybody has tried to re-create in media
conglomerates. Radio got free content; music labels got free promotion.

Radio's almost effortless cash flow, and mom-and-pop organization (there
were once 5,133 owners of U.S. radio stations), made it ripe for
consolidation, which began in the mid-eighties and was mostly completed as
soon as Congress removed virtually all ownership limits in 1996. A handful
of companies now control nearly the entirety of U.S. radio, with Clear
Channel and its more than 1,200 stations being the undisputed Death Star.
(Clear Channel is also one of the nation's major live promoters, and uses
its airtime leverage to force performers to use its concert services, as
Britney Spears and others have charged.)

Radio, heretofore ad hoc and eccentric and local, underwent a transformation
in which it became formatted, rational, and centralized. Its single
imperative was to keep people from moving the dial -- seamlessness became
the science of radio.

The music business suddenly had to start producing music according to very
stringent (if unwritten) commercial guidelines (it could have objected or
rebelled -- but it rolled over instead; what's more, in a complicated
middleman strategy of music brokers and independent promoters, labels have,
in effect, been forced to pay to have their boring music aired). Format
became law. Everything had to sound the way it was supposed to sound.
Fungibility was king. Familiarity was the greatest virtue.

Once Sheryl Crow was an established hit, the music business was compelled to
offer up an endless number of Sheryl Crow imitators. Then when the Sheryl
Crow imitators became a reliable radio genre, Sheryl Crow was compelled to
imitate them. (Entertainment Weekly, without irony, recently praised the new
Moby album for sounding like his last.)

But then, just as radio playlists become closely regulated, the Internet
appears.

"Suddenly there was another distribution avenue offering far greater product
range," notes my friend Bob Thiele, who's been producing, writing,
performing, and doing A&R work in L.A. for twenty years (and whose father
was Buddy Holly's producer), and who, in my memory, never before talked
about avenues of distribution. "And then, before anyone was quite aware of
what was happening, file-sharing replaced radio as the engine of music
culture."

It wasn't just that it was free music -- radio offered free music. But
whatever you wanted was free (whenever you wanted it). The Internet is music
consumerism run amok, resulting not only in billions of dollars of lost
sales but in an endless bifurcation of taste. The universe fragmented into
sub-universes, and then sub-sub-universes. The music industry, which depends
on large numbers of people with similar interests for its profit margins,
now had to deal with an ever-growing numbers of fans with increasingly
diverse and eccentric interests.

It is hard to think of a more profound business crisis. You've lost control
of the means of distribution, promotion, and manufacturing. You've lost
quality control -- in some sense, there's been a quality-control coup.
You've lost your basic business model -- what you sell has become as free as
oxygen.

It's a philosophical as well as a business crisis -- which compounds the
problem, because the people who run the music business are not exactly
philosophers.

"They're thugs," says a former high-ranking music exec of my acquaintance,
who is no shrinking violet himself.

Such thuggishness, when the business was about courting difficult acts,
enforcing contracts, procuring drugs, paying off everyone who needed to be
paid off, may once have been a key management advantage. But it probably
isn't the main virtue you're looking for when you're in a state of
existential crisis. Being street-smart is not being smart.

In a situation of such vast uncertainty, with the breakdown of all prior
business and cultural assumptions, you don't necessarily want to have to
depend upon, say, Tommy Mottola to create a new paradigm.

For a long while, the management response at the major labels had a weird
combination of denial and foot stamping: putting Napster out of
business-then sort-of/sort-of-not buying Napster -- all the while being told
by everybody who knows anything about technology that, no matter what the
music industry does, or who it sues, music will be, inevitably, free. Duh.
There is, too, a management critique -- perhaps most succinctly put by Don
Henley in his now-famous post-Grammy letter wherein he quoted Mel Brooks in
Blazing Saddles: "Gentlemen, gentlemen! We've got to protect our phony
baloney jobs!" -- that sees record labels as generally engaged in the usual
practice of ripping off anyone who can be ripped off while remaining
oblivious to the fact that Rome is burning.

But for the most part, denial, and even the reflex to just keep squeezing
the last dollar until there is nothing left to squeeze, is passing (labels
have even recently awoken to the problems of dealing with the radio
behemoths and are frantically, and way too late, trying to find reasons to
sue the radio guys and gain back a little leverage).

I had a very nice sushi lunch in the Sony dining room the other day where I
heard about the generally gallows mood at Sony Music. The recent past was
very bad; the future was likely to be worse. All money earned from here on
in would be harder to earn. This felt like acceptance to me: We simply don't
know what to do.

The truth is, there might not be anything much to do.

Here are the choices:

If you're providing free entertainment, which is obviously what the music
business is doing, then you have to figure out some way to sell advertising
to the people who are paying attention to your free music. But nobody seems
to have any idea how that might be done. Or you can provide stuff that's
free, and use the free stuff to promote something else of more value that
people, you hope, will buy -- now called the "legitimate alternative."
(Putting video on the CD is one of those ideas -- though, of course, you can
file-share video too.) Or sell the CD at a level that makes it cheap enough
to compete with free (free, after all, has its own costs for the consumer).

It's a spreadsheet solution. There will continue to be a market for selling
music, however diminished -- but it will have to be cheaper music. Margins
will shrink even more. Accordingly, costs will have to shrink. Spending a
few million to launch an act will shortly be a thing of the past. (The
formal catalyst of the beginning of the end of big development costs may be
the Wall Street Journal's story a few months ago that precisely accounted
for the $2.2 million launch costs of a singer named Carly Hennessy, who went
on to sell 378 CDs.) A&R guys making half a million are also history (in the
future, they'll start at $40,000 and max out at $150,000). And no more
parties.

And then there is the CD theory. This theory is widely accepted -- with
great pride, in fact -- in the music industry. It represents the ultimate
music-biz hustle. But its implications are seldom played out.

The CD theory holds that the music business actually died about twenty years
ago. It was revived without anyone knowing it had actually died because
compact-disc technology came along and everybody had to replace what they'd
bought for the twenty years prior to the advent of the CD.

The music business, this theory acknowledges, is about selling technology as
much as music. From mono to stereo to Walkman. It just happens that the next
stage of technological development in the music business has largely
excluded the music business itself.

The further implication, though, might be the more interesting and painful
one: You can't depend on just the music.

Rock and roll is just an anomaly. While for a generation or two it created a
go-go industry -- the youthquake -- it is unreasonable to expect that
anything so transforming can remain a permanent condition. To a large
degree, the music industry is, then, a fluke. A bubble. Finally the bubble
burst.

But not with a pop. It's an almost imperceptible, but highly meaningful,
alteration in context. Alanis Morissette becomes Grace Paley. Bono becomes
John Hersey. Fiona Apple is Joyce Carol Oates. Moby is Martin Amis.

This is not so bad.

And best of all, our children -- all right, our grandchildren -- won't want
to become rock stars.

>From the June 10, 2002 issue of New York Magazine.


Copyright ) 2002, New York Metro, Llc. All rights reserved.

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