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m3rck closing...
 

offline fleetmouse from Horny for Truth on 2005-10-05 19:21 [#01742293]
Points: 18042 Status: Lurker | Followup to esaruoho: #01742290



I notice one of your albums is available on Emusic. Have you
gotten any money from Emusic downloads?


 

offline esaruoho from helsinki (Finland) on 2005-10-05 19:24 [#01742294]
Points: 577 Status: Regular



not consciously, i have gotten i think 40ukp for itunes and
bleep from showcase. i realize that there are probably
some people who have statements of sales mailed to them
every month, or at least half a year.. or all that - but
that hasnt happened in 4 years..
to be honest, i dont really think that all of these emusic
etc places sell a significant amount of anything. but i
can trust merck - if anything out of those trickles back to
him, it'll find its way to me.



 

offline fleetmouse from Horny for Truth on 2005-10-05 19:39 [#01742297]
Points: 18042 Status: Lurker | Followup to esaruoho: #01742294



I pay Emusic 20 bucks a month for 90 downloads. It's a good
deal for me but maybe not for the musician unless he has an
album with lots of short songs - it works out to about 22
cents per track.

Other places sell digital songs and albums for near-CD
prices which I think is ridiculous. I might consider it if
they sold in lossless format like Flac. Though Beatport has
320k mp3s and some of the out of print Monolake looks
tempting...


 

offline ka on 2005-10-05 20:03 [#01742311]
Points: 425 Status: Lurker



The people who put in their time and labor into making a
book / album / film / software program, etc from which you
choose to benefit by reading / listening / watching / using,
etc have to live in the same world as everyone else.
Esaruho is an example of that, but so is anyone else like
BOC, Autechre, whoever.

People who produce intellectual property are not subsidized
by some higher power, and are forced to sell the product of
their time and energy just like everyone else in order to
live.

So why should any of us benefit from this without paying for
it? By "benefit from it" I don't mean that it will
necessarily make you a better person or that you will even
enjoy it, but that you have chosen to consume it.

Any smart seller should provide samples of their product to
minimize buyer risk and allow the buyer to make an informed
decision about buying something, but this doesn't mean that
you should be able to consume the entire product and decide
whether you would like to pay for it later on.

I would rather live in a world where people with something
creative to contribute can continue to do so. If no one
buys their album it should be because no one likes their
album, not because the market decided to download it for
free.

The lure of "free" things is hard to resist but it certainly
is a real shortsighted mentality. You've got to give back
if you receive something, and our free market system is the
most practical way we have found to do that.


 

offline esaruoho from helsinki (Finland) on 2005-10-05 20:11 [#01742314]
Points: 577 Status: Regular



theres 2 remixes i made on beatport, under cobalt
recordings.. and hopefully container/spaces/showcase will
end up on beatport, also, but who knows. im not really
ready to do a mp3-shop-sale-only ep or an album, because i
have no proof that the actual promotional machine is
there.. thats why the 3 album test-of-the-waters.
suppose more will be known in about a year.. whether it was
a working possibility, etc.
meanwhile, i tried to get on bleep as a private artist - but
no go, i'm guessing too low a profile / not knowing them
personally would contribute to that.


 

offline virginpusher from County Clare on 2005-10-05 20:51 [#01742328]
Points: 27325 Status: Lurker | Followup to esaruoho: #01742314



I apprciate the fact that you took the time to write that
all out. Its rare that we hear about the actual artists
because most of them overlook the community with the
exception of Johnny Hawk who has been one of the most
accessable artists in the world.

You see now that i see a human behind the name. A man who
struggles day to day like me it makes me think more about my
actions (downloading music). It makes me more compassionate.
I mean hey if i had money to give I'd want to help you out
based on your complete honesty. I've never heard your music
but i hate to hear about someone struggling. But hey i am in
it myself.

I forgot where i was going with all of this but i appreciate
you showing your human side and sharing your thoughts with
us!

Good Luck! :)


 

offline gl0tch from www.gl0tch.com     on 2005-10-05 22:00 [#01742347]
Points: 2708 Status: Lurker



I was just wondering... for all the "boo hoo, you don't pay
for mp3's" people out there, how much kracked software are
you sporting on your machines at the moment?

I mean, doing the math, assumming the average xltronic'r has
about 5 to 10 g's in pirated information on their machine,
this board has probably saved over a million dollars. If
said amount was spent "paying back" artists, labels, and
programmers, do you really think we'd be writing these
messages under different circumstances?

(I don't have the answer for that, its just a brain twister
to ponder. Though ultimately, I dont feel like I am going to
hell over this any time soon... )


 

offline hellinterface on 2005-10-05 23:53 [#01742361]
Points: 187 Status: Lurker



merck are no great loss to the great scheme of things


 

offline gl0tch from www.gl0tch.com     on 2005-10-06 00:09 [#01742368]
Points: 2708 Status: Lurker | Followup to hellinterface: #01742361



please, do elaborate...


 

offline E-man from Rixensart (Belgium) on 2005-10-06 03:08 [#01742390]
Points: 3000 Status: Regular



if people realised that what is happenings with music (and
movies, books, ... it's spreading fast) could prevent them
from having GOOD things to read/listen to/watch, they'll
stop promptly

how do you think things evolve/improve? you need money for
everything in this world (sad fact, but a fact nonetheless)
people are not going to work their asses off to make some
masterpieces for a couple of bucks because you can't eat
then... (there are but they're few)

the great artists of before all had "mecenes"(in english?)
who paid for their lives because they recognised the genius
in them...
now we have a working system (working, not perfect) for
compensating artists and if it goes away and everything is
"free" you can be sure everything will turn to shit quickly

and the argument that this kind of music spread thanks to
p2p is certainly true to an extent, but warp didn't wait for
soulseek to have comercial hits and worldwide recognition...


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2005-10-06 03:44 [#01742407]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to gl0tch: #01742347 | Show recordbag



Again, that's based on the assumption that:

a) The person could actually afford to buy it.
b) The person would buy it, were it not available for free.

I remember talking to someone here about buying a licenced
copy of Reason and he explained it was something like 2
months wages in his country and he had hardly enough money
to cover his rent, so buying it wasn't an option.

Yes, you could say "you can't afford it, you can't have it",
but that's really being a dog in the manager. How does a
label benefit when a person who wouldn't buy it anyway has a
copy? If anything, the person with a copy will spread news
of the release/have friends who will hear it and go on to
buy it. Unlike traditional theft which deprives someone else
of the item that is stolen (ie you steal a bicycle, someone
else can't have it), piracy is making a duplicate, without
damaging the original.

As someone else said, without P2P etc. labels like M3rck
wouldn't of gotten so far. I lost a lot of respect for
Ulrich Schnauss (particularly as he claimed to have
communistic leaning in an interview) when he complained
about his stuff being shared on soulseek. He became famous
precisely because people were saying "check out this guy..."
and people were then going off to Soulseek to have a listen
and then went on to buy his releases (myself included). This
is no different to using a listening post in store. We don't
all read The Wire and then buy blind...

The argument that we should (which it sounded like Rf40 was
making earlier) is ludicrous and it's the artists who'd
suffer if we all bought blind and always had. If you have
£50 disposable income a month and spend £20 of that on
music, should you not be able to pick what you spend it on?
If I had to buy blind (at regular prices), I'd only
consistantly buy releases by: Aphex twin, Boards of Canada,
Portishead, Chemical Brothers and Prodigy. Those are
literally the only acts. So, Ulrich Schnauss, etc. and all
the other IDM B-listers, let alone people like M3rck,
wouldn't get


 

offline esaruoho from helsinki (Finland) on 2005-10-06 05:07 [#01742465]
Points: 577 Status: Regular



maybe something else will have to change for this to sort
itself out.
honest question now. dont get stuck in the 'how's that
supposed to happen' or 'yeah right thats utopia'.. if you
can.

would you be buying more records, and supporting artists,
and going to gigs, and maybe even sorting out gigs yourself,
if the majority , or at least - a significant sum, of your
money wasn't going into any of these things:
rent
electricity
heating
water
taxes based on owning a piece of land - and or any other
taxes
gasoline to power your car /anything else
internet connection fees
tv license

?



 

offline Taxidermist from Black Grass on 2005-10-06 05:16 [#01742470]
Points: 9958 Status: Lurker | Followup to virginpusher: #01741342



I really hate the idea of adding to this discussion, but I
just had to say, I wasn't really critisicing this site in
general, but it strikes me as wrong when people on a music
messageboard make a point of talking shit about a label that
is run out of love for music, and not out of money or ego.
The guy(s) behind merck are releasing a specific kind of
music because they want people to hear that kind of music,
and wanted to make another avenue for people to hear it.
Esaruoho had one story, but I am sure that there are a
couple other instances of generosity that merck have shown
other artists on their roster. Thats a cool way for a label
to be run, and its shitty to see people so easily throwing
around disrespect for a label that obviously warrents their
respect, even if they don't like their music. And thats what
I meant by losing its soul. There used to be more of that.

Oh well. Its the internet :(


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2005-10-06 06:10 [#01742493]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to esaruoho: #01742465 | Show recordbag



"would you be buying more records, and supporting
artists,
and going to gigs, and maybe even sorting out gigs yourself,

if the majority , or at least - a significant sum, of your
money wasn't going into any of these things:..."


A very valid point. For me, in spite of music being probably
my favourite hobby/recreation, it still remains that: a
hobby- something I do for fun (I'm including making,
collecting and listening to in this).

Whilst it's very important to me and I'd far rather have a
well equipped studio than pay tax, it's out of my hands and
a large chunk of my money goes on tax. Similarly, I need
somewhere to live (no point having a huge record collection
if it's stored under a bridge and looted, right?), which
again costs money. On top of that, there are a whole raft of
things (transport, clothes, food, bills, tuition fees, etc.)
that I have to spend money on. By that, I mean they
are a neccessity, rather than just things I really really
want.

So, I have a limited amount of disposable income which is
actually quite a small percentage of what I earn (probably
around 7%). This money goes on going out to pubs/clubs,
parties, videogames, cultural trips (theatre, cinema,
museums), my holiday fund, motorcycling, etc. as well as
music.

The sad fact is that music is not essential to our
survival (yes, even those who subscribe to the theory, "life
without music would be a cruel joke") and consequently will
never be as important as food, shelter, drinking water,
etc.

I know a lot of big music stars make a lot, because they
appeal to popular tastes, but if you make niche music, like
IDM, you're vying for a small percentage, of a a very small
number of the populace's income, which other IDM
labels/artists are aiming for. Unsuprisingly, only a few big
artists make a good living out of it, a few dozen more
scrape by, some people do remixing/djing to make up enough
money to live on, a lot have to resort to day jobs.

Why is this such a problem?


 

offline qrter from the future, and it works (Netherlands, The) on 2005-10-06 06:36 [#01742506]
Points: 47414 Status: Moderator | Followup to esaruoho: #01742465



yes, I would. gladly. I buy what I can now and I've bought
numerous albums and records because I've heard mp3s of those
records beforehand, which I otherwise wouldn't have bought.

I would imagine this works the same for a lot of people.

there are ofcourse cretins who just download and burn to
cd-r and that can kill an industry, but I wonder how many of
them listen to the smaller labels.

you also see a trend of sites offering whole cds up to
listen - you can't download the music, but you can listen to
the complete thing. a Dutch broadcast corporation (yet again
the VPRO) has their own music site, 3voor12.nl and they have
an online listening post, on which there are about 16 full
albums you can listen to, changing each week. most recently
I've been listening to Broadcast's new venture on there, for
example.

which means that these smaller labels also use a kind of
'download mp3s' system of their own choice - it is a wide
variety of small to tiny labels that have albums showcased
on there - they see it as a tool to promote their music, as
a lot of people have already been doing by downloading mp3s.


 

online big from lsg on 2005-10-06 06:40 [#01742513]
Points: 23729 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



in not too long a time i imagine it's very easy to dl full
albums (as wave or flac)..


 

offline dog_belch from Netherlands, The on 2005-10-06 07:22 [#01742556]
Points: 15098 Status: Addict | Show recordbag



I get worried that, whilst I work pretty much full time, all
my hilarious posts on this message board get read for free.
Everyone, all over the world can come on here and enjoy my
wry take on life, and I don't get a penny, whilst some
arsehole writes lame gags for "Everybody loves Raymond" and
gets paid billions. I was thinking that, say with the
Premium Membership we pay for XLT, what if, in place of
being able to post pictures, that membership enabled you to
read the posts of the Top Quality Posters, like me. You
could have bands of subscriptions. Silver level gives you
access to Ecnadniarb, Gold - qrter, Platinum - Fleetmouse,
Uranium - Me. It's just another way of looking at the
economic model.


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2005-10-06 07:27 [#01742562]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to dog_belch: #01742556 | Show recordbag



Does the "wooden spoon" level of membership, awarded to
trolls, get you acess to WMW's posts?


 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2005-10-06 07:27 [#01742564]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker | Followup to dog_belch: #01742556



i'm pretty sure that people would find a way to steal the
premium posts without paying for a membership. also, i
think that plumbum would be a more appropriate element to
represent you, d_b.


 

offline pf from Finland on 2005-10-06 07:43 [#01742586]
Points: 3316 Status: Lurker



I dont have anything bought or downloaded from M3rck, so
dont blame me. But I do listen to theyr webradio, and it has
some real nice tunes on it.


 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2005-10-06 07:45 [#01742591]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker



all in favor of blaming pf, say aye.


 

offline dog_belch from Netherlands, The on 2005-10-06 07:56 [#01742599]
Points: 15098 Status: Addict | Followup to Ceri JC: #01742562 | Show recordbag



"Wooden Spoon" membership would mean you could only
read wMw's posts. It's kind of like B7, but worse. But yeah,
as plaidzebra says, it'd only take one bright spark with
über level membership to copy and paste my posts for
everyone to distribute for free. So I guess the only money
is to be made by live appearances, actually going
round peoples' houses and haranguing them about "the good
ol' days" of electronic music.


 

offline pf from Finland on 2005-10-06 09:02 [#01742640]
Points: 3316 Status: Lurker | Followup to plaidzebra: #01742591



I kinda regret not buying any of those tunes that I listened
to in theyr radio, as I dont like the fact that a label like
that is closing.


 

offline qrter from the future, and it works (Netherlands, The) on 2005-10-06 09:07 [#01742645]
Points: 47414 Status: Moderator



did merck actually say they're stopping because of low
sales?

I haven't read that anywhere.

seems there are other reasons, especially based on
rarndaraki's post.


 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2005-10-06 09:14 [#01742653]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker | Followup to qrter: #01742645



it's already been acknowledged that there may be other
reasons, it's just that the hot button issue is file sharing
and the implications for labels like merck.

nobody's interested in the fact that the merck people want
to spend more time working on crochet cozies to cover their
facial tissue dispensers.


 

online big from lsg on 2005-10-06 09:17 [#01742661]
Points: 23729 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



hm, you couldnt have hometaped this obscure music


 

offline qrter from the future, and it works (Netherlands, The) on 2005-10-06 09:29 [#01742667]
Points: 47414 Status: Moderator | Followup to plaidzebra: #01742653



and there's me being all weird and on topic..!


 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2005-10-06 09:33 [#01742674]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker | Followup to qrter: #01742667



"file sharing and the implications for labels like merck" is
on topic, mostly.


 

offline virginpusher from County Clare on 2005-10-06 10:15 [#01742759]
Points: 27325 Status: Lurker | Followup to Ceri JC: #01742407



Thats mostly my point and i think you summed it up quite
well. Even though i havent had the money to buy certain
releases i have opened my friends up to artists which have
bought the albums


 

offline virginpusher from County Clare on 2005-10-06 10:17 [#01742765]
Points: 27325 Status: Lurker | Followup to Taxidermist: #01742470



I understand where you are coming from. To be honest i
havent heard much of anything from them. Maybe 1 album at
the absolute most. I havent really seen their artists
discussed let alone the label. Thats where the quality issue
comes in i guess.

But i do understand what you are saying.


 

offline ka on 2005-10-06 11:43 [#01742839]
Points: 425 Status: Lurker | Followup to Ceri JC: #01742407



"Unlike traditional theft which deprives someone else
of the item that is stolen (ie you steal a bicycle, someone

else can't have it), piracy is making a duplicate, without
damaging the original."

Hey Ceri JC, Just want to point out that with intellectual
property, the physical component is usually considered only
a delivery means. That is to say that the value of the item
is not really attached to the physical material that houses
it. When you consume a duplicate, you still end up
consuming the part of the product or property that is
considered valuable, without paying for it. Let's not have
any illusions about that.

So, the issue with intellectual property theft is not that
you are depriving someone else from having it (even though
on a large enough timescale and with enough occurrences, you
prevent the creator of the product from producing more), the
issue is that you are reducing the paying demand for that
property in consuming a copy and potentially allowing more
copies of it to exist out there on the internet which will
be consumed without equal compensation to the artist.


 

offline virginpusher from County Clare on 2005-10-06 16:34 [#01743084]
Points: 27325 Status: Lurker | Followup to esaruoho: #01742465



I want to be honest with you here because perhaps a
different perspective will help here......

This is a small genre! Wake up! Johnny Hawk just got a
fulltime job! IDM is not fruitful unless you are a top dog.
There are so many labels/net labels it is hard to tell the
difference unless you put out ultra quality!

Thats the music industry for ya! You cant just expect to
make a living off of it and especially for such a small
genre. There is pressing costs, distribution costs etc etc.


I mean can this really be a shock?

Knowing you browse other message boards and perhaps noticed
the spam of users you may have noticed that there is alot of
quality material from many artists that arent signed. Just
about everyone at these boards had their stab at trying to
make music and just about everyone is a critic.

What you are doing is not unique here. Once again i must
reiterate that this genre is small. You will spend more
money on making your music, distributing your music .....

perhaps you are in a position where you must ask yourself
"Is this worth it" and or "Can i make a living off of this
hobby". Sure it would be nice but it seems unrealistic in
your situation.

I dont want to come down on you here or be a stumbling block
but there are certain things one must keep in mind
especially if you are having troubles making rent and
relying on others in this position.



 

offline Taxidermist from Black Grass on 2005-10-07 03:00 [#01743304]
Points: 9958 Status: Lurker | Followup to virginpusher: #01743084



Well, I used to be in the same situation as him, except I
was scoring films for students. You rarely ever got paid,
although a lot of people would give you packs of cigarettes.
Although two days worth of work for 15 minutes of audio
didn't justify the two packs you would usually get. Most
sound designers get paid $100 per minute of audio (minimum)
for contract work (unless they do commercials, where then
they get paid per commercial).

If he wants to make money at this, he is sending demos to
the wrong places. Eventually you have to choose between
homelesness and music. However, things might be different in
finland.


 

offline Taxidermist from Black Grass on 2005-10-07 03:01 [#01743305]
Points: 9958 Status: Lurker | Followup to Taxidermist: #01743304



sorry, I mean you have to choose between homelesness &
music, or working more hours


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2005-10-07 04:26 [#01743319]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to ka: #01742839 | Show recordbag



I agree that the media is merely a means of transmission of
the IP (hence why it's acceptable that even large
corporations regularly use CD-r copies of software for
convenience, rather than "offical media" and just pay the
licencing based on the number of copies used).

However, the point that you're not depriving someone else of
an actual copy by pirating it remains. Yes, you're consuming
it without paying for it and if you would of
bought it otherwise, you're depriving the developer of the
fee for doing so. But, if you wouldn't of bought it
otherwise and don't distribute it to someone who would of
(who doesn't because of the copy you've provided them with),
I still fail to see where the "loss" has occured.

I'm not advocating piracy, I'm simply trying to clarify that
despite what Ms. Spears et al say, piracy is not
"exactly the same as walking into a store and walking out
with a CD without paying for it", because it isn't.


 

offline qrter from the future, and it works (Netherlands, The) on 2005-10-07 04:41 [#01743323]
Points: 47414 Status: Moderator | Followup to Ceri JC: #01743319



would of.


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2005-10-07 05:30 [#01743332]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to qrter: #01743323 | Show recordbag



"Would of" what?


 

offline qrter from the future, and it works (Netherlands, The) on 2005-10-07 05:34 [#01743333]
Points: 47414 Status: Moderator | Followup to Ceri JC: #01743332



you use "would of" instead of "would have".


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2005-10-07 05:53 [#01743336]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to qrter: #01743333 | Show recordbag



Fair point.


 

offline hellinterface on 2005-10-07 06:46 [#01743343]
Points: 187 Status: Lurker



is it really that hard for the guys at merck to do their
maths.

they have struggled to sell 1000 copies of most of their
releases since inception, now their stuff is available thru
itunes & bleep there is the potential for more hard copies
being left unsold.

piracy is not to blame, piracy has always existed and always
will.


 

offline esaruoho from helsinki (Finland) on 2005-10-07 06:59 [#01743348]
Points: 577 Status: Regular



sending demos to wrong places - maybe, but, just givin up
and getting a job is hardly the solution to that - where's
the impetus to find the right place, if you're already
keeping your head above the water yourself?
besides, once things work themselves out, any which way, at
least it'll feel justified after the relatively easy work
done - its never been that hard, and even if it were to
become harder, it'd still be worth more to me than stacking
consumer products onto shelves.
i'll stick by this through thick&thin - and nowhere does it
say that it can't work out - except maybe people around
you, and people on the internet.

i'd rather be goin around with expectant "anything at all
could happen the next second" positivity than hopeless "oh
nothing'll ever happen better get a job and start saving for
a house" negativity.



 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2005-10-07 07:09 [#01743350]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker



and now it seems like a good time to point out yet again
that merck did not report that they were going to fold
because of piracy or financial problems.


 

offline qrter from the future, and it works (Netherlands, The) on 2005-10-07 07:16 [#01743370]
Points: 47414 Status: Moderator | Followup to esaruoho: #01743348



there is a place inbetween the positivity and negativity you
describe - it is called reality.

you have brought out music that doesn't sell very well, even
within the parameters of the IDM genre (whatever that is),
as I understand it and it could be because of people sharing
mp3s of your music and not buying hard copies, but it could
also be because people do not like the music (not trying to
be mean here, just realistic).

you keep saying things like "once things work themselves
out" but the thing is things won't work themselves out -
you'll have to do it.

nobody is saying you should stop making music or stop trying
to live off of your music, you could perhaps get a parttime
job and still keep working on the music, you could go on as
you are doing now, it's your choice ofcourse.

you seem to think too much in 'black and white' terms, it's
either the one or the other. being passionate does not
necessarily mean spending all your time on something.


 

offline Blicero from Ann Arbor, MI (United States) on 2005-10-07 07:17 [#01743371]
Points: 85 Status: Lurker



i'm not sure if anyone has thought of this yet, but perhaps
this is a brilliant way to make piles of cash.

if "there will be no more represses" than people will
probably start buying up soon to be out-of-print releases
(especially vinyl) like mad.

eh?


 

offline qrter from the future, and it works (Netherlands, The) on 2005-10-07 07:20 [#01743376]
Points: 47414 Status: Moderator | Followup to hellinterface: #01743343



beside the question whether piracy is or is not to blame -
yes, piracy will always exist, but that doesn't make it
okay.

and there is certainly a difference with piracy in the past
- it is much more easily and readily available.


 

offline hellinterface on 2005-10-07 07:26 [#01743386]
Points: 187 Status: Lurker | Followup to qrter: #01743376



hey, i didn't say it was okay either. but it still exists
and a small record label has to take that into account.


 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2005-10-07 07:33 [#01743396]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker | Followup to Blicero: #01743371



yes, it may be a brilliant ploy to make piles of cash.

i think lackluster, in the grand scheme of things and given
the vast quantity of electronic music being produced,
probably sells a greater than average quantity of records.
but there is such a huge volume of music being produced and
released, 99% of releases (some good, some bad) are lost in
the shuffle. too many artists, too much music, not enough
time or money or demand. piracy hurts but its just one
problem among many facing small electronic labels. it
probably is unrealistic to believe that one can support
oneself entirely by making this music.




 

offline virginpusher from County Clare on 2005-10-07 08:16 [#01743435]
Points: 27325 Status: Lurker | Followup to qrter: #01743370



Yeah absolutely. I can also appreciate the passion here from
the artist. See esaruoho you may actually have it easier
doing it where you are as opposed to where i live. In the
states there is a smaller crowd for this genre as opposed to
the UK area (or overseas for that matter).

But my whole point here was.. even you said that you noticed
that people were not discussing your music. Before this
thread i havent even heard of your nor have i really looked
into this label.

As much as one can gig and attempt to play live you have to
step back and look at the scene as a whole. Ask yourself
questions like "what kind of crowd am i aiming at?" and or
"How big is the actual fanbase in relation to the possible
turn out in a given area?".

You say and i quote "and nowhere does it say that it
can't work out - except maybe people around you, and people
on the internet."


Do you realize that you are a small percentage of artists
trying to make it as an artist. This is not a unique
situation. Therefore realistically not everyone can make it.
By "make it" i mean support ones self from the fruits of
their hobby.

I know you dont want to work a crummy 9 to 5 job it sounds
like but dont go through half of your life setting yourself
up for something that may not benefit you and then all of a
sudden you are like 29 broke and realize you need a actual
job. "Artist/Musician" doesnt really look that good on a job
application. I mean what contacts could a possible employer
find? What kind of information and or conclusion would they
come to upon seeing this.

Just some ideas and thoughts... dont rule out anything and
always be prepaired.



 

offline virginpusher from County Clare on 2005-10-07 08:21 [#01743441]
Points: 27325 Status: Lurker | Followup to plaidzebra: #01743396



It could but that only seems to work with labels like skam,
warp, rephlex because they already have established artists
on there and some of their fanbase are hardcore collectors.
Collectors would just get something because its of limited
press. I think that our fanbase is becoming more aware of
this cheap marketing ploy and its loosing value. I mean if
this were the case then you would see more labels doing a
limited number of presses (100-300) and making more money
and selling out.In the end it still comes down to quality
and word of mouth for the label.

As for the rest of your post i think you are totally dead
on! I really cant disagree with it

but there is such a huge volume of music being produced
and released, 99% of releases (some good, some bad) are lost
in the shuffle. too many artists, too much music, not enough
time or money or demand. piracy hurts but its just one
problem among many facing small electronic labels. it
probably is unrealistic to believe that one can support
oneself entirely by making this music."


 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2005-10-07 08:24 [#01743444]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker | Followup to virginpusher: #01743435



have you considered a career as a career counselor?


 


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