Clip: MP3 in Nashville

1999-04-08 Thread jon_erik

Money for No One, and your Discs for Free
MP3 is Quietly Wreaking Havoc on Music Row 
BY REBEKAH GLEAVES AND SNACKBAR JENKINS

Forget Y2K. What Music City needs to lose sleep over is MP3, a digital
audio compression technology that allows music to be posted on the
Internet and downloaded at near-CD quality – for free. Is the gravity of
this sinking in? All the music you want for free. Years of fat royalty
checks might have left some Nashville songwriters too content to pen sad
songs, but that hasn’t stopped MP3 from lightening the loads in their
wallets. If only the songwriters knew. 

While Al Gore was busy "inventing" the Internet, actual techies were
forcing the medium into uncharted territory. Most likely the veep did not
consider the effects of on-line pirating when he made his claims, but,
recognized or not, the Internet is full of hackers, each waiting to cash
in at Nashville's expense. 

Huh?

What this means is that any 15-year-old with a Dave Matthews Band CD, a
PC and a CD burner can perpetrate Internet piracy. In fact, the worst
offenders aren't even old enough to vote. 

After "sex," "MP3" is the most requested term on the Internet, and pop-up
ads on the most popular MP3 site offer links for those looking for
information on "depression," "acne," and, of course, "barely 18 babes"
and "teenage orgies." Gore presumably did not consider that the
information superhighway would wind through a pre-pubescent red-light
district. But that’s another story. 

For those of you keeping score at home, MP3 (short for MPEG Layer3) is an
audio compression algorithm that allows computer users to download free
CD-quality songs. It was developed by the Moving Picture Coding Experts
Group (MPEG) between 1988 and 1992, so it’s been around for a while. You
do not have to buy it or attach complicated devices to your computer. It
is something anyone can download at no charge. 

One year ago, 40 minutes of music required 400 megs of storage. Now, with
MP3, 40 minutes of music can be compressed into 40 megs, depending on the
translation. At that point, you burn a CD, clear the memory and start
again. Some users with CD burners can fit up to 20 albums’ worth of
material on one recordable disc. 

Taking Candy From a Baby

Picture royalties as the world's largest candy machine. There's a
never-ending line waiting to drop a quarter in the machine. But the
people in charge took the day off, just in time for a couple of kids to
knock the machine over, filling the streets with candy. Anyone with a
sweet tooth can fill her arms with free goodies. Do you think she’ll
leave a quarter when she's done? 

Many of Music Row's inhabitants hope so, but most remain wary. Even Tom
Petty gambled on MP3 recently when he posted his new single in the
format. Two days and 150,000 downloads later, Petty's single was yanked
off the ’Net. 

"There's a lot of opportunity with [MP3]," says Mindy White, a marketing
consultant with Thunder Call. "It opens up doors for non-traditional
promoting and music marketing. But, no matter how badly we want to
believe the opposite, the Internet is largely unregulated." 

This is something many industry types want to change. After significant
candy gathering, the RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America) and
some of the major labels gathered to announce the Secure Digital Music
Initiative (SDMI). Their goal was to protect copyrighted material in all
existing and emerging audio formats and through all delivery channels.
One such effort of SDMI is the incorporation of digital watermarking to
prevent second-generation copying of material. 

"We are looking for ways to watermark music so we can keep track of it to
insure that royalties are paid," says Page Kelly, senior director of
business and legal affairs for Arista Nashville. "We have not authorized
the release of tracks by any of our artists in the MP3 format to any
site. The majority of the stuff out there is bootleg, and the artists and
the recording companies are not making any money off of it. I don't know
if people downloading it will take the place of buying the album. It's
still too soon to tell." 

But is it? An annual survey commissioned by the RIAA reports that music
sales in the ages 15-24 demographic, a mainstay in the market, are down
about 4 percent since 1996. The report, issued just two weeks ago,
speculates that MP3 piracy could be behind the decline.

Blame It On Rio

Until last year, no one in the industry really worried about MP3. Not
until Diamond Multimedia Systems developed a device about the size of a
deck of cards (2.4 ounces) called the "Diamond Rio PMP 300." The Rio is a
shockproof, walkman-like musical godsend that everyone who reads this
will probably rush out to buy. It holds about one hour of music and
retails for under $200. The unit plugs into a port on the computer, which
then transfers MP3 files into the unit's memory, thus making it portable.


There are no moving parts to break and no CDs to skip. The Rio is

Re: Clip: MP3 in Nashville

1999-04-08 Thread Brad Bechtel

Number 4 on the top 30 downloads at http://www.mp3.com is "James Alley Blues" by Roger 
McGuinn.   He's really taken to this technology.



Re: Clip: MP3 in Nashville

1999-04-08 Thread Ph. Barnard

Go, Roger!! g.  Well, the man has always been into technology, 
that much is certain  He was also a fairly early emailer on one 
of those Byrds websites, as I recall.   When I first got hooked up 
the the web and started emailing and all, I remember being amazed by 
the fact that he'd replay to emails in a way that was rare 3 or 4 
years ago but has become much more common now

--junior



Re: Clip: MP3 in Nashville

1999-04-08 Thread Morgan Keating

At 11:40 AM 4/8/99 +, you wrote:
Go, Roger!! g.  Well, the man has always been into technology, 
that much is certain  He was also a fairly early emailer on one 
of those Byrds websites, as I recall.   When I first got hooked up 
the the web and started emailing and all, I remember being amazed by 
the fact that he'd replay to emails in a way that was rare 3 or 4 
years ago but has become much more common now


You're absolutely right...he was, and still is I gather, a big proponent of
Technology.  A buddy of mine is a gigantic Byrds head and had a dialogue
via email going between he and Roger some time back...  Damn, ain't this
world a cool place sometimes?

Morgan




Re: Clip: MP3 in Nashville

1999-04-08 Thread Debnumbers

In a message dated 4/8/99 12:41:38 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 Go, Roger!! g.  Well, the man has always been into technology, 
 that much is certain  

He's still emailing.  I emailed him the other night for something for my book 
expecting to give him a few weeks and he responded within 15 minutes.  He's 
got less of a life than we do g  Just kidding.

Anybody got the email addresses or web sites with email to other musicians 
(any genre) in the states of Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, 
Kentucky, and Tennessee.  I'm burning up the phone lines with publicists and 
fax machines.  Email is so much easier.

Deb Sommer