Welcome to P2PNET.net - The original daily p2p and digital news site. Always First!
Register | Login
RIAA News
Cool Stuff
MPAA News
Games / Consoles
News
Music
Movies
TV
Open Source
Mobiles
Advertising
Product News
P2P
Off Topic
Freedom
Politics
Interviews
Security
DRM
Links
Kids and Kartels
Search: 
Search
 
Web P2PNET   
Search: 
Search
Torrent Site Tracker
Teksavvy
 
Add real-time p2pnet headlines to YOUR site ! Click here to download our newsfeed code
p2pnet - rss feed: http://p2pnet.net/p2p.rss | p2pnet celebrities: http://p2pnet.net/celeb.rss | Mobile? http://p2pnet.net/index-wml.php

The CD: headed for extinction

p2pnet.net news:- “Everyone in the industry thinks of this Christmas as the last big holiday season for CD sales,” Mr. Sinnreich said, “and then everything goes kaput.”

Love it or hate it, the “New York Times” is the paper of record. If for no other reason than most news organizations no longer DO any reporting, they just rely on wire services and print commentary/opinion. “The New York Times” sets the agenda. And when they go on a story, it has legitimacy. Wall Street, the business community, they now know what active music consumers know, that the CD is headed for extinction. With everybody clued in, its death will be hastened. THEN what?

1. Indie Retail
Survives. Just like vinyl has never gone completely away, there will be people who will want to own discs in the future, whether they be CDs or vinyl. Most of the indie stores that have weathered the crash will continue in business, assuming their owners still want to keep the doors open. Most have diversified, they don’t rely solely on music to make money. They will be kept alive by collectors. But they will not matter. Just like vinyl doesn’t matter. Disc sales will be a sideshow. If you make a business out of it, more power to you, but most people just won’t care.

2. Big Box Retail
Best Buy and its brethren are going to kill the CD. They’re gonna shrink floor space and titles and one day they’re just going to stop selling discs completely. This will happen long before record labels desire to give up on the physical format. Retail is in tune with its customers’ whims, it has to keep moving forward to survive. Soon CDs will be evidence of the past, and these stores want to be the future. Big box retailers will kill the CD the same way the industry killed the cassette and vinyl. They’ll just stop stocking them, and the consumer will go elsewhere.

I think Aram Sinnreich’s prediction is right. After this Christmas, big box retailers will start folding their tent. Oh, maybe they’ll sell a few titles. But so do supermarket chains.

3. Radio
Radio hasn’t given a shit about CD sales for years. Radio exists in its own little backwater, where the advertiser is king and the music is just part of the sausage. Hey, so many of the records that zoom up the chart are not available at ANY price! With indie promo essentially gone, radio groups are not worried about losing the relationship with labels, there are no more perks left to acquire. As for radio station shows and other give-backs, you don’t need the label for that, just the manager. The manager will be more powerful than ever before.

4. The Promoter
When the CD dies, Live Nation is going to be in even deeper shit.

Oh, AEG will be too, but they tend to only want to be in the blockbuster business.

You see forever, the road took its clues from the labels. The labels signed the acts, promoted them, created DEMAND! Now the promoter has to create demand himself, and so far, he’s shown no talent for it. Oh, he could cede this development process to Net radio and other developing exposure media, but that just means he’ll have to settle for smaller shows, and less revenue. Doesn’t bode well for your stock price.

5. The Agent
Will have to work in concert with the manager to help create demand. This won’t solely be the province of the promoter. The label did the heavy lifting for seemingly EVERYBODY in this business, what happens when the label goes KAPUT!

6. The Manager
It starts with the manager. He creates the original demand. But the goal used to be to sell to the highest bidder, to get the label to COMMIT! And that commitment yielded exposure, which could earn you money on the road, and in the old days, royalties. NOW WHAT?

The manager has to piece together all those new media strategies, to try to get his band traction. MySpace, music blogs, it’s not about grand slams anymore, not even home runs, but BUNTS! Spreading the word, building demand, is like starting at the bottom of the minor leagues, working your way up to AAA, and then entering the bigs. First in KC. Or Seattle. Some secondary market. It’s gonna be tough. And the manager is going to be starving all the while, because fifteen or twenty percent of nothing is nothing. Which is why the established managers only want established acts, and a vacuum has been created for new managers to develop new acts. But there will be starvation along the way, and only the fittest will survive.

7. The Act
Has to get a manager. That should be your goal, to create enough noise to get someone to commit their money, time and effort to growing your act. You can only go so far by yourself. After all, you’ve got to write the music and play it! So, the act lights a fire, which burns up through the manager, agent and promoter. As for the label?

8. The Label
There will be no labels if you can’t get paid.

The online business presently doesn’t deliver what the consumer wants, which is ownership of a ton of unrestricted music for a low price. Those wishing to sell recordings only have six months to solve this problem.

It ain’t iTunes. Even Steve Jobs says most people who buy iPods buy almost no music at the iTunes Store (http://www.apple.com/hotnews/thoughtsonmusic/).

It’s not Rhapsody or Napster… You’ve got to get a new player, when iPods rule. And the public is not ready for rental.

So…

The only solution is some kind of legal P2P. But the labels and publishers are not ready for such. Therefore, stasis and infighting will kill the recorded music business.

Sad, if you think about it. People should pay for music. But the owners won’t LET THEM! Not in the way they want to.

It’s not about mergers, or laying people off, the solution is on the other end, delivering a lot of cheap music. But no one is prepared to do this. It’s fascinating watching the movie. As fat cats inured to an old way of doing things proceed to destroy their business.

9. Publishers
Will survive. And thrive.

10. The Public
We haven’t had that spirit here since… Well, if not 1969, then 1979, or ‘89 or even ‘99. But 1999 was almost TEN YEARS AGO! The public thinks that most mainstream new music is crap. And if the labels die, GOOD RIDDANCE! In other words, most people just aren’t paying attention. They’re not only not buying discs, they’re not going to overpriced shows with exorbitant ticket fees either. In an era where it’s about getting the masses involved at a cheap price, the music industry has catered to an ever shrinking few willing to overpay for crap.

Joe and Jane Public want music. But they’ll just steal it. Or listen to the radio.

As for new stuff? You’ll hear about it from your friends, if you’re INTERESTED! Otherwise, you’ll just fire up your home theatre and watch one of the 500 channels or a DVD.

Music has turned itself into a second class citizen. Via greed, via an inability to wake up and admit we’re living in the future.

It’s not like this inevitability, the impending death of the CD, was sprung upon the executives in the middle of the night. It was obvious at LEAST seven years ago, when the original Napster gained serious traction. The only person who saw the light? Steve Jobs. And he made his money from selling iPods, and now iPhones. If the iTunes Store never goes ga-ga, he just shrugs his shoulders and moves on. As for the music industry??

There will be a new music industry. But it will not look like the old one. It will be run by youngsters, with different values, spreading the word amongst their peers. They won’t sell out to Madison Avenue because Madison Avenue won’t have any idea what they’re doing. When the new acts do get traction, will advertising even LOOK the same? Will anybody be watching the commercials on television? Will we live in a Google ads world?

Google, Microsoft and Yahoo are duking it out online. Even AOL. You wonder why AOL went free? For the EYEBALLS! There wasn’t enough money in selling online access to compete with the big boys focused on ads.

Same deal in music. By catering to a select ignorant or addicted few, willing to overpay for discs, the music business ignored the mainstream, failed to see what the people wanted and where they were going.

The people are digital savvy. It’s in their DNA. Selling McCartney discs at Starbucks is the last Hail Mary left. Whether it’s successful or not, you won’t be able to do it during Christmas ‘08, Starbucks won’t be able to stand the hit to its credibility, its customers will LAUGH at them, DISDAIN them.

The disc is dying, are you prepared?

Bob Lefsetz - The Lefsetz Letter

Slashdot Slashdot it!

If your Net access is blocked by government restrictions, try Psiphon from the Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto’s Munk Centre for International Studies. Go here for the official download, here for the p2pnet download, and here for details. And if you’re Chinese and you’re looking for a way to access independent Internet news sources, try Freegate, the DIT program written to help Chinese citizens circumvent web site blocking outside of China. Download it here.


rss feed: http://p2pnet.net/p2p.rss | | Mobile - http://p2pnet.net/index-wml.php | | And use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site

Tired of being treated like a criminal? They depend on you, not the other way around. Don’t buy their ‘product’. Do bug your local politicians. Use emails, snail-mail, phone calls, faxes, IM, stop them in the street, blog. And if you’re into organizing, organize petitions, organize demonstrations and then turn up on your local political rep’s doorstep, making sure you’ve contacted your local tv/radio station/newspaper in advance. Don’t just complain. Do something!

HOME

9 Responses to “The CD: headed for extinction”

  1. Reader's Write Says:

    they’ve started to make RECORD PLAYERS ___AGAIN___!!!…WITH, CD players and Cassette Decks included in some ‘packages’. :|

    So, _MAYBE_ the CD will take a hiatus, but it will NEVER “die” just as vinyl has NEVER died…

  2. Reader's Write Says:

    to read: Vinyl has been so “unimportant” that…

    [body of msg]>…they’ve started to make RECORD PLAYERS ___AGAIN___!!!…WITH, CD players and Cassette Decks included in some ‘packages’. :|

    So, _MAYBE_ the CD will take a hiatus, but it will NEVER “die” just as vinyl has NEVER died…

  3. Reader's Write Says:

    I think the CD will die the same kind of death as 8 tracks and cassettes.
    Vinyl is different because it comes wrapped in large graphics which continue to be collectible. Fans will hang on to this format and even add to it.

  4. Reader's Write Says:

    as my grandson would say,YEAH RIGHT.It wasn’t until last year that wal-mart dropped the recorded cassette. How many years?

    jack

  5. Reader's Write Says:

    This babbling dickhead is so full of shit it comes out of his FUCKING EARS………….

    The SACD format never caught on.

    There is not that many sacd players out there.

    You can’t rip a SACD disc.

    I quite sure this is going to go over well when people can’t rip mp3 files on their computer with their wave cds.

    To the author of this article:

    SHUT THE FUCK UP !!!!!!!!!!!!!

  6. Reader's Write Says:

    Very true. No forumat ever “dies”, and the whole “most people just won’t care” thing is, quite simply, what’s WRONG with the world in the first place.
    “Most people” are stupid cattle, content to be led around by the nose by whatever “authority” (like the NY times, for example) they’ve designated as the “paper of record”. The “mainstream” is for stupid cattle, which pretty much explains why Britney Spears is actually interesting to them.

    More to the point, participatory culture is ABOUT whether we “like” something or not; it’s not about taking the word of whatever designated “authority” we’ve been trained to mindlessly obey. This article is the type of shit that makes me hope that John Newton ends up as a hopeless, penniless drunk in a flophouse somewhere. P2pnet has been going downhill for MONTHS….starting with that bullshit PR-move of “I’m going to have to sell it!” — way to drum up readers, dude…..if only you could bother to put GOOD articles on here anymore.

  7. Reader's Write Says:

    Redbook CD audio standard is VERY much easier to use/work with/produce than ANY of the previous formats (including vinyl and cassette.) It’s non-volatile, in that it doesn’t “wear” over time to any appreciable extent, the ability to build the things is goddamn near ubiquitous, there’s very literally NO savings to NOT offering it.

    Cassettes: harder to mass produce, took specialized equipment to get good sound-quality.
    Vinyl (Even harder to produce.)
    CD blanks/burner technology: goddamn near ubiquitous, with NO quality difference remaining between “real” CD’s and “Roms”. Data is data.

    There is very literally no cost-savings to NOT offering it.
    Data is data, after all, and most sound-files do NOT start out as mp3 or some other compressed/lossy format.

    Dumbfuck “predictions” like this SHOULD get the author beaten severely and electrocuted via jumper cables to the balls.

  8. Reader's Write Says:

    I think the CD is dying, but the author is jumping the gun in his prediction of it’s imminent demise. Vinyl took a few years to fade away after the CD was introduced; the CD will be around for a few years yet.

  9. Neurottica Says:

    the c.d is alive and well, just not the way we are used to. It is not pumped out by corporate piglets anymore. you are your own record industry now. You decide who and what is on your c.d. Who would want to see that become extinct?

Leave a Reply

    Advertisments
MP3rocket