✘ What is a label? Why do you need it? How is it changing its purpose?
And: What do artists want?; A look at Epic Games' assets; The Crypto-revolution and the book industry; Using techno parties to rebuild villages in Ukraine; The creator economy's dark side
Hi all,
A short note from me to start off today. I’ll be on holiday for the next two weeks so my next newsletter will drop on 18 August.
Hope you’re all able to enjoy your summers!
Love,
Maarten
Labels often get a bad rep. Moreover, labels often get pushed together into one bucket, as if they all have the same role to play. This is, of course, false. There’s many ways to label and to label has developed and evolved in both purpose and meaning over the past one hundred years or so. So what is a label? Why sign to one as an artist? There’s so much beauty in staying independent and keeping control of your rights. But the success stories are also few and far between. The reason we’re still talking about Chance the Rapper as a beacon of independence is because there’s not many other major artists who’ve been able to pull this off. For sure, Web3 is changing this to some extent, but again we’re talking about a small percentage of the total number of music creators out there who ‘are making it.’ So, do you need a label as an artist? And, what kind of artists would you sign to your label? Let’s quickly move to the major label model and then move on to the indie label and emerging label and artist team structures.
The bird’s eye view
Not that long ago, there was a specific type of artist that major labels would sign. But the advent of streaming and the rule of the playlist has pushed what was once the purview of the more leftfield labels into the path of the major - and acquisitions have also helped flatten this playing field. And speaking of M&A, we don’t have to go back much further in time to find five instead three major labels. Power seems to be centralizing in the label world and the changing nature of pop music - not as a genre but as the music that is popular - creates an arena where more of the same is the closest thing to risk-free success. What we see here, is how the VC model and the major label model resonate in a similar tune [albeit there’s much to unpack there that could lead to its own article]. Both put a lot of money into a lot of potentially valuable assets where the few create the success to sustain the majority. To decrease this risk model, it’s easy to tap into things which are already successful - whether that’s on TikTok, Soundcloud, or elsewhere. What this major label as VC model misses is what a label actually does. It’s about more than that upfront pay check - a label should create value from the music that artists create. It’s their job to create that valuable asset, not the artist/band but the IP, the music.
Historically, the majors take a large proportion of, if not all of the copyright involved in the music. Very successful artists and bands recoup their advances and get nice pay checks for the rest of their lives. But so much music doesn’t make that. So much music needs help to find its niche and thrive there. This is where the indie label comes in. Without the capital of the major, but with the knowhow, passion, and access to find those niches.
But even for the indie labels, times are changing. In the face of pureplay distributors like Distrokid or Tunecore a lot of what seems like the core work for an indie label - distribution - becomes much cheaper to access for artists. But these labels do so much more, they think about the artistic framework music sits in; they create a brand around the music; they develop fanbases together with their artists; and so much more.
Tuning into non-traditional revenue streams
Since streaming is now the dominant form of revenue for recorded music, it’s important to think about how you can access that and create success from it. And yet, it’s also more important than ever to think about other revenue streams and other models to reach specific niche fanbases and communities. A great example is the active integration a label like Monstercat pursues with the gaming ecosystem. This allows their artists to tap into the increasing revenue streams that come out of the sprawling world of gaming. But there’s so much more and it’s not always necessary to be a label to offer the support and access to solutions. Moreover, you can offer services that will allow you to work together with a variety of artists and labels. Take a look at what Rareform does in the form of digital strategy. They basically redefine the old - and misunderstood - term of label services into our current digital age. So not a label, but being really good at one part of what would traditionally have been part of a label’s work. Basically, the digital realm is so encompassing it requires specific skills and experience to navigate any campaign or release within it.
As an artist, but also as a label, it’s necessary to think about what you want to achieve and what kind of team can help you get there. Within the indie ecosystem, this now means that the artist team can consist of any number of different roles. It’s almost impossible for a label to offer a full holistic approach to a release strategy. But that doesn’t mean that labels are fast becoming relics. There’s much value to be found, and as always for indie labels this value is in access to a niche. Whether this niche exists through the brand of the label, or whether this niche exists through the knowhow of how to find a fanbase and thus revenue for a song or album doesn’t matter. It simply comes down to a specific set of credentials, drive, an abilities that can help create value for music.
More and more, this value is found in non-traditional revenue streams. This could be through a membership like a Patreon, a reimagination of the artist-fan relationship on Web3 rails using things like a social token or NFTs, or via an exploration of the metaverse and world-building exercises. Each example has its own challenges and upsides. Moreover, each example will require a label to rethink the regular IP-based revenue models. One way, then, that an independent label can keep providing value is to become a partner in exploring new and upcoming revenue streams.
Quick shout out to Jess Page, Nick Sylvester, and Sam Valenti for providing the inspiration for this piece in a panel for Water & Music’s Summer School on The Artist Team - Today & Tomorrow.
LINKS
🤌 What do artists want? (Abhijit Nath & Prarthana Sen)
This is an excellent companion piece to the above actually and goes into what we can learn specifically from the gaming industry’s free-to-play model.
“This raises an important point for the consumption of music- streaming platforms are more or less giving the music away for free to the people who’ll listen to artists casually, but why aren’t there models for monetising other things that artists can offer?”
🖇️ Epic Games Is At The Center Of The Metaverse: A look at their assets (RE3W)
“There are many public reports covering the history, formation, and foundation of Epic Games as one of the most important web2 gaming and 3D technology companies on earth. What seems to be lacking in many reports is the understanding of how Epic Games is currently the most important metaverse company by default and how its assets work together as a metaverse tooling ecosystem.”
Unfortunately, the part about Bandcamp is quite succinct, but it’s very important that someone has put together this overview of assets and some prompts on how they interact.
📕 The Crypto Revolution Wants to Reimagine Books (Elle Griffin)
While this isn’t about music, there’s a lot of parallels here surrounding issues of ownership and the potential for Web3 to upend a whole market. Elle Griffin provides an thorough overview of the state of Web3 in publishing through a broad array of start-ups who are actively trying to change the way that industry functions.
“This is the future an emerging number of publishing startups are after—aiming to change the value of a book from a $10 Amazon purchase to a $100 investment opportunity, while creating a market of readers excited to see the books they love succeed. It might not work—finding readers (and investors) will be a challenge—but if they succeed, their vision could bode very well for the author who, in this scenario, could retain a percentage ownership of these “stocks” and earn value alongside their investors—just like Jeff Bezos retains a percentage of Amazon stock and grows richer as his company’s shares gain value.”
🇺🇦 Young Ukrainians use techno parties to rebuild villages (Justin Spike)
“Shovels in hand, the volunteers tackle the remnants of a village cultural center that was destroyed in March by a Russian rocket strike, tossing piles of debris onto a tractor’s loader. A DJ, his turntables mounted on a stack of ammunition boxes, spins techno and house dance music as the volunteers work. Some even take a break from their labor to dance.”
🌑 ‘Influencer’ is now a popular career choice for young people – here’s what you should know about the creator economy’s dark side (Nina Willment)
I guess we all know this, but it’s necessary to keep talking about this and bringing more visibility to the travails of being an influencer. Musicians are struggling in the same attention economy!
“In her work with Instagram influencers, algorithms expert Kelley Cotter highlights how the pursuit of influence becomes “a game of visibility”. Influencers interact with the platform (and its algorithm) in ways which they hope will be rewarded with visibility. In my research, I found that influencers shared increasingly intimate and personal moments of their lives, posting relentlessly in a bid to stay relevant.”
MUSIC
I love Legowelt and his music, he’s always remained this weird figure with an obsession for synthesizers. As such, this walkthrough of his studio is both informative, funny, and musical.