MusicRowPics: Dan+Shay

dan+shay11Pennsylvania native Dan Smyers and Arkansas native Shay Mooney, better known as Dan+Shay, recently stopped by the MusicRow offices to perform songs from their upcoming debut album.
Together, the duo’s career has risen at lightening speed. Dan+Shay have been performing together for barely a year; in that time they have been signed to Warner Bros. Records, released the debut single “19 You + Me” that currently sits at No. 22 on the MusicRow Country Breakout chart, and will soon hit the road with Hunter Hayes and then Blake Shelton‘s Ten Times Crazier Tour, which also features The Band Perry and Neal McCoy.
Smyers and Mooney first met at a house party in a run-down area of Nashville, where Smyers lived at the time. “We had no heat and needed to keep warm, so we bought sheets and put them up in the living room,” Smyers recalled. Mooney added, “They had draped all these sheets everywhere so it looked pretty cool. You can imagine my surprise the first time I walked in.” The next day, Mooney and Smyers penned their first song together.
During the visit at MusicRow, Dan+Shay performed “19 You + Me,” their first single on Warner Music Nashville; Mooney and Smyers co-wrote the song with Danny Orton. They also offered a soulful cover of Tom Petty’s “Free Fallin’,” and the original tune “First Time Feeling” which was co-written with Ben Hayslip. “Getting to go into this room with songwriters whose songs you have listened to all your life is an accomplishment in itself,” said Smyers.
The duo’s forthcoming album was produced by Smyers and executive produced by Scott Hendricks.
[slide]

MIDEM Blog—Mark Geiger on The Future of the Music Business

Mark Geiger

Mark Geiger discusses the future of the music business.


Sunday, Feb. 2, 2014:
It’s grey, windy and chilly in Cannes, but at MIDEM inside the Palais, there are heated discussions.
Mark Geiger, Global Head of Music, WME (USA), presented the fascinating and informative talk “20 Years of Pain. No More Fooling Around: The Definitive Future of the Music Business.” This was, by far, the most enlightening presentation at MIDEM.
Geiger stated that the record industry had a “chasm” when digital caused the industry to lose millions of dollars. “Part two of that chasm is coming. Change is already happening,” he said. “In the past, artists had it easy. Labels did the work of radio promotion, publicity and marketing, but now the artist is the marketer.”
Artists often bad-mouthed labels and some openly cheered when the power of labels was diminished, but artists must be careful what they wish for.
Geiger noted that “music files are a terrible experience” stating that “streaming is taking off. Files eat up computer memory, they cost a consumer and you can’t organize files.”
Geiger noted that the current “giants” like Facebook, Amazon, Google, Yahoo, iTunes and Pandora “reach 500 million to one billion people,” an unheard of reach a decade ago. “Access models are big. Future music models are subscription based, like Beats, Spotify and Pandora. Files are dropping, physical CDs and DVDs are dropping. Music Service Providers (MSPs) are here and the labels must participate.”
If labels participate, noted Geiger, “a customer paying $10-15 a month—and these fees will increase over time—will generate more money than album sales and MSP money will dwarf past monies and the new music industry will be bigger than the old music industry.” An advantage of streaming product means the label will “have no packaging or return costs, customers can curate a library and there will be big earning with a high margin with catalog revenue.”
“It used to cost about $15 for an album and not many fans bought an album every month,” he continued. “With the MSP model, over a billion consumers could be paying that much each month.” The key, according to Geiger, will be “integrating billing with cell phone bills. It could be part of ‘added benefits’ for cell phone customers.”
Geiger noted that sales of CDs have gone from $40 billion to three billion during a period when iTunes has gone from $5 billion to $25 billion in revenue, premium radio from $1-2 billion, artist channels from $1-2 billion and music access from $54 to $135 billion.
“It is not a good future for files,” said Geiger. “Labels must believe there is more money from streaming.” Geiger noted that the new service, Beats, is “the first time that industry insiders said ‘This is the future.’ In the past, tech companies have guided the future. Companies that don’t know about music are leading the music business. They think in terms of customer access. We think in terms of artists.”
Geiger advised labels to “license music and engage in digital streaming” because the future of music is “access, access, access.” He said that labels must “make sure the metadata is in order and stop slowing down the music industry” and, if this is done, “we could have a $100 billion plus music industry.”
• • •
The panel “Fueled by Video Success” was hosted by Andrea Leonelli with Digital Music Trends (U.K.) and featured Jordan Berliant, head of Music Management with The Collective Music Group (USA); Brandon Martinez, CEO of INDMUSIC (USA); Tom Pickett, Vice President of YouTube Content (Google, USA), and Geoff Taylor, Chief Executive of BPI and the BRIT Awards (U.K.).
Berliant stated that “there’s a huge change in what video is and what it represents. During the 1980s videos were to promote an act and their song but today a video is ‘The Thing.’” Martinez stated that “it is no longer an album cycle for acts, it’s a 12 month content cycle. Video must take fans behind the scenes because they want to know more than just a song.”
Tom Pickett from YouTube stated, “Seven or eight years ago, we made a big bet on the music industry. Video was almost dead then and we brought it back with a whole new model. Now, anyone can make and upload a video. We are all-in on music.”
Jordan Berliant stated that acts should ask of video, “Is it a promotion vehicle or a money maker? There are things we should be making money on that we’re not making money on. Videos can be a source of money but they’re not. I don’t blame Google or YouTube, it’s people making videos who don’t understand the consumer.”
Martinez noted that “Every new view of a video is going to lead to that viewer sharing that content.”
Pickett answered the charge that no one is making money from video stating, “In order to reach billions, the ad supported brand will reach that with the ad supported model so the brand can be built to monetize,” adding that “YouTube has paid over a billion dollars for video airplay.”
Berliant countered that “We’ve done too good a job teaching the consumer that it’s free.”
Pickett stated that “The paid subscription model has only worked in Scandanavia with Spotify because the charge is bundled with phone service.”
Addressing the idea of live streaming, Geoff Taylor stated that “We are going to stream the BRIT show. We found that most of the views are coming from outside the U.K. In the live stream we’re going to let fans watching voted on an award.”
The issue of streaming proved to be a contentious one, with YouTube’s Pickett noting that “60 percent of viewership comes from outside the market,” noting that a problem with live streaming is the different time zones around the world.
Berliant said, “We’ve done live streaming in the part with a Linkin Park show, but we face a problem because somewhere in the world it’s three in the morning while the concert is being held. The model that would work best is to have the live stream archived so fans can watch it when they want to.” The idea that fans don’t necessarily want to see something “live” but would rather watch it on their own time has proven to hold true.
During open questioning, an audience member confronted YouTube’s Pickett because Google has failed to take down pirate sites where consumers can download music for free. Geoff Taylor confirmed that the British Phonograph Industry (BPI), the trade organization for the U.K., sent 50 million notices to Google about pirate sites, including two million for a particular site and Google has failed to act. “When you know something is illegal, you should take it down,” Taylor said to Pickett. “If Google is going to have a productive relationship with the music industry, you need to do something about that.”
• • •
Lyor Cohen and

Tom Silverman (L) and Lyor Cohen.


Lyor Cohen, former head of Def Jam and Warner Bros. Records, was the keynote speaker to discuss his new venture, 300. Tom Silverman, head of Tommy Boy Records, hosted the event.
Cohen worked for a bank before he discovered rap music. He became a partner in Rush Management with Russell Simmons, then in 1984 joined Def Jam. In 1985 Rick Rubin, one of the founders of Def Jam, left for CBS and Cohen eventually filled the top seat there. From CBS, Cohen went to Warner Bros., where he headed the Interscope/Def Jam label. For the last 32 years, Cohen has lived each day “hoping I’ll meet the artist who will change my life and change popular culture. I’m really interested in watching an artist grow from nothing to successful.”
Cohen’s philosophy is: “Understanding magnificent is magnificent, but good is good. Good tricks you. You think you can make good great. But magnificent doesn’t happen that often and when you screw with good you get pulled out of position, and you miss the opportunity to find magnificent. Sign stars and don’t dust bums off.”
Cohen used the opportunity to announce a new partnership between 300 and Twitter.
• • •
The panel for “Who’s Investing In Music” was hosted by Allen Bargfrede, Executive Director of Rethink Music; with panelists Benji Rogers, CEO of Pledge Music (USA); and Mike Tunnicliffe, Chief Growth Officer of GroupM/WPP, the largest marketing company in the world.
Rogers noted that fans who donate to fund music projects fall into five levels: the casual fan donates about $68 per project, the next level is $182, followed by $344, the Digital Aficionado give about $402 per project, and those who want significant involvement give about $1,004. Rogers stressed that investing in bands with crowd sourcing entails the band involving fans in the “journey,” not just asking for money.
“You must give fans who source something to do,” said Rogers, “not just ‘attend my concert and buy my stuff.’ Most artists are creative but don’t think how their music will get to an audience and the impact it will have on them.” Rogers said that for bands involved in crowd sourcing, they should ask every day, “What have I given my fans to do today?”
Rogers also warned that “a business has a thousand moving parts and having thousands of investors could cause problems.” A single large investor—or several large investors—could cause problems if the investors want to dictate what the band should record or how they present themselves.
Tunnicliffe stated that marketing companies invest in music because “it is an opportunity that can produce content and promotion for the millennial market,” who “will spend $10 trillion during their lifetime.” This involves “moving away from the traditional. We’re looking for an authentic way of reaching the market, a way to organically get engaged.” In terms of Return on Investment (ROI), “we measure that by sales, shifts in image of the brand, and how it affects the millennial audience. Brands are not in the business of becoming an artist, they’re in business to promote their brand.” In terms of a business wanting to create a label or financing the development of a band, the business does not want to be involved “because it’s not what we do.”
“The labels have traditionally dis-enfranchised themselves from fans because they ‘fear’ them,” said Rogers. “The connection to fans used to come from retailers” but, with the decline of retail outlets, “the label now has to connect with fans.”

MIDEM Blog—Artists Still Need Label Services

Indie panel at MIDEM featuring

Indie panel at MIDEM featuring Tommy Boy CEO Tom Silverman, Martin Goldschmidt with Cooking Vinyl Group, Kenny Gates with PIAS recordings, Emmanuel de Buretel with Because Music, and Colin Daniels with an Australian indie label.


Sunday, Feb. 2, 2o14
The International Association of Entertainment Lawyers held seminars all day on Sunday. The group is busy with legal wranglings over anti-piracy efforts.
In the United States, the major issue is the consent decree granted to ASCAP and BMI, which allows for blanket licenses to represent all of American song publishers. The issue has been contested because several publishers, starting with EMI, withdrew their new media rights from ASCAP and BMI and negotiated directly with iTunes. Others followed and then Pandora filed a motion against ASCAP to lower their fees. That has gone to court and a ruling could invalidate the earlier publisher withdrawals.
What is at stake is whether music publishers “can cherry pick what rights to license,” explained Deborah Newman, an attorney with MusicStrat, who spoke at the morning session. “The issue is now in freefall.” She said a possible outcome could be “the publishers give whatever rights they want to whoever they want.”
The other major legal issue facing American music publishers, according to Newman, is whether downloads from iTunes are sales or transfers.
Attorneys from around the world gave brief overviews of the major legal issues in their countries. Those issues tend to coalesce around anti-piracy, the taking down of web sites violating copyright law, and whether the consumer, the infringer or the intermediary (like the ISPs) should be the target.
• • •
A seminar on Independent labels was moderated by Tommy Boy CEO Tom Silverman (who also serves as Executive Director of the New Music Seminar) and featured Martin Goldschmidt with Cooking Vinyl Group in the U.K., Kenny Gates with PIAS recordings in Belgium, Emmanuel de Buretel with Because Music in France and the U.K., and Colin Daniels with an Australian indie label.
The panel confronted the belief that “artists don’t need labels,” and explained that musicians need “Artist Enabled Services.” Case in point, said Silverman, is Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, who won a Grammy and proclaimed from the stage they did it without a label. Macklemore had an entire team working with them because “you can’t achieve that level of sales and success by yourself,” said Silverman. “They say they don’t need a label but they needed partners to provide marketing, promotion and publicity and those are things that a label does. Now, the perception is that they did it all by themselves so every artist will believe they can do it on their own.”
The role of a label has changed a great deal, and an independent label “does what an artist doesn’t do, can’t do, or doesn’t want to do,” said Colin Daniels. “We do everything an artist needs done. We even promote concerts and handle merchandise.”
“We’re not a record company now,” echoed Silverman, “we are a music company.” Some who call themselves a record label are actually companies that provide services such as promotion, publicity, or publishing administration for a fee.
“At the end of the day,” said Kenny Gates, “it’s all about relationships. For a while everybody talked about DIY and you don’t need a label. But you need a partner. These artist and label services are partners—and that what a label does. You DO need a label!”
The indies are proud of the fact that they stick with an artist longer than the majors. “It takes five to seven years to break an artist,” said Emmanuel de Burstel with Because Music. “Major labels spend three or four months working an artist and if they don’t hit, they go on to someone else. They have so many artists and so much to do so if an artist doesn’t hit quickly, they drop them.”
Silverman touched on changes at the annual conference: “MIDEM used to be the center for licensing music all over the world. People came with headphones to listen to music for licensing deals. Now, labels make deals for multiple territories by striking a deal with iTunes… People now think that distribution is marketing, but unless you have a partner to help break an artist in a territory, you have nothing.”
Colin Daniel noted that “People used to come to MIDEM once a year to get licensing and distribution done. Now I travel all around the world during the year to get license and distribution deals.”
Daniel also told the story of an indie artist who is “the hardest working artist I’ve ever been involved with.” The artist used to busk wherever he played a show. Years later, the act sells out venues, has sold almost two million albums—but still busks in whatever town he’s in. “The difference now is that we have to hire security,” said Daniel.
Silverman noted that “tech companies are looking for content, not music.” Colin Daniel said he was comfortable dealing with Beats and Spotify “because they’re music people. Google isn’t music people. Spotify wants to work with us but Google just wants to use us.” Martin Goldschmidt with Cooking Vinyl Group, noted that YouTube is the fifth largest revenue stream at major labels so Google is paying for the use of music. Still, Google often comes up as the bad guy in many discussions. “Google monetizes attention—how many eyeball are watching—but they’re getting that attention from our music,” said Goldschmidt. “Facebook is using everything we do.” He also noted a decrease piracy in recent years because “people don’t need to pirate any more—they can get everything streamed or on YouTube.”
There have certainly been major changes in the music business during the last decade, but Colin Daniels insisted that “it comes down to music. That hasn’t changed and it never will.”

Artists Set for 'Hear & Now: Live From Blackbird Studio'

Eli Young Band with Stokes Nielson and Butch Waugh

Eli Young Band with Stokes Nielson and Butch Waugh


Country Now, the first original Country music and lifestyle-dedicated YouTube channel will launch the new program “Hear & Now: Live From Blackbird Studio.” Intimate performances will be recorded live from Nashville’s historic Blackbird Studio. The first taping kicked off Jan. 28 with Casey James, followed by weekly episodes from Love and Theft, Frankie Ballard, Craig Campbell, Brandy Clark, Will Hoge and Eli Young Band set for Feb. 27. The performances, combined with artist commentary, will be posted weekly.
“Eli Young Band’s music connects with their fans in a live setting,” said John Zarling, SVP/Partnership Marketing & Promotion Strategy, Big Machine Label Group. “The team at Country Now knows how important it is to document moments that matter on film, and it is because of this attention to detail that you feel like you’re sitting in the room watching Mike, James, Chris and Jon perform. We can’t wait for EYB fans, and music lovers in general, to see this performance.”
Ballard’s “Hear & Now: Live From Blackbird Studio” episode includes “Sunshine & Whiskey,” the title track from his Feb. 11 album release, as well as “Helluva Life,” “It Don’t Take Much” and “Drinky Drink.”
Pictured (L-R): Butch Waugh, Jay Frank, Brandy Clark and Stokes Nielson

Pictured (L-R): Butch Waugh, Jay Frank, Brandy Clark and Stokes Nielson


Stokes Nielson with Love and Theft

Stokes Nielson with Love and Theft

Dierks Bentley, OneRepublic To Meet At 'CMT Crossroads'

riser dierks bentley11OneRepublic will share the stage with Dierks Bentley when CMT presents an all-new episode of CMT Crossroads, which will be taped in Nashville. CMT Crossroads: OneRepublic and Dierks Bentley will premiere mid-March on CMT.
CMT Crossroads is produced by Tom Forrest and Kathryn Russ. John Hamlin, Margaret Comeaux and Bill Flanagan serve as executive producers for CMT.
Bentley recently announced that he will soon debut the film documentary Dierks Bentley: Riser, which follows the singer-songwriter through the emotional events that inspired his album Riser, set for release Feb. 25.

Industry Ink (2/4/14)

Some of ASCAP‘s top songwriters gathered at LA’s SLS Hotel this week to celebrate the organization’s upcoming 100 birthday on Feb. 13. Brandy Clark, Ozzy Osbourne, ASCAP Board member Desmond Child, Jon Lind, ASCAP president and Chairman Paul Williams, Jessi Alexander, and others joined in the celebration.

ed to share these two great photos from ASCAP's 100th birthday brunch that feature country's Brandy Clark and Jessi Alexander. Let me know if you might be able to help with posting something this week - our official birthday is Feb 13 - captions below.Best,DanSome of ASCAP's top songwriters gathered at LA's SLS Hotel this week to celebrate the organization's upcoming 100 birthday on February 13th. Pictured (l-r) are: Brandy Clark, Claudia Brant, Ozzy Osbourne, Geezer Butler and Tony Iommi of Black Sabbath, ASCAP Board member Desmond Child, Jon Lind, Narada Michael Walden, ASCAP President and Chairman Paul Williams, Jermaine Dupri and Jessi Alexander.

Pictured (L-R): Brandy Clark, Claudia Brant, Ozzy Osbourne, Geezer Butler and Tony Iommi of Black Sabbath, ASCAP Board member Desmond Child, Jon Lind, Narada Michael Walden, ASCAP President and Chairman Paul Williams, Jermaine Dupri and Jessi Alexander.

 • • •

Warner Chappell Production Music BLACK Logo111Warner/Chappell Production Music, Warner Music Group’s production music arm, today announced the launch of its improved website and search platform at WarnerChappellPM.com. The improved website and search platform offer a responsive layout with simplified controls, easier access and improved functionality to the company’s expansive library of music through its search platform. In addition, Warner/Chappell Production Music has incorporated the logo of its legendary parent company, Warner/Chappell Music, to achieve a closer alliance.
The new website has also integrated a more fluid feel and greater compatibility with mobile device, adopting HTML5 technology. As it always has, WarnerChappellPM.com hosts all of Warner/Chappell Production Music’s 80+ catalogs of music, allowing users to preview all of its tracks and view them sorted by brand, catalog, style, or purpose. The site also features video and audio montages of the various uses of Warner/Chappell’s production music, including sports programming, news, music packages, and advertisements, among others.

 • • •

mtvMTV is seeking young adults in the Nashville area for a new reality show, The Kids of Nashville. The show seeks applicants between the ages of 18-26, who are charismatic, attractive and have affluent friends, according to the Nashville Scene.
“We are searching for Nashville’s most exclusive communities for the biggest personalities, most popular social circles and most affluent families to be America’s next national television obsession,” the ad reads. “To be considered for a starring role in ‘The Kids of Nashville’ you need to show us that you are instantly adored, attractive, and a reality superstar with lots of drama going on in your life; all wrapped together with the style, the strength of personality, and the sense of humor to be unapologetically yourself. This is the opportunity to prove you’ve got the attitude and the commitment to pull off the ultimate vanity lifestyle ensemble performance that will capture it all, even the heart. We want your inner circle too — your friends, your family and even your frenemies.”
Casting is limited to Nashville residents and surrounding areas. To apply, potential cast members should send a bio, three recent photos and contact information.

'MusicRow' Announces Third Annual Rising Women on the Row Breakfast

Final_Logo_Presenting_SponsorMusicRow’s third annual Rising Women on the Row celebration will be held Fri., March 21, 8:30 a.m. at the Omni Nashville. City National Bank is the presenting sponsor of the premier event saluting women in the Nashville music industry. 
This year’s honorees include Julie Boos (Flood, Bumstead, McCready & McCarthy), Caryl Healey (Sony Music Nashville), Kelly Rich (Big Machine Label Group), Ebie McFarland (Essential Broadcast Media), and Alicia Pruitt (Warner/Chappell Music). Read more about the honorees here.
The Recording Academy’s Senior Vice President, Member Services, Nancy Shapiro has been announced as the featured speaker for the sit-down breakfast and awards ceremony. Jo Dee Messina will treat guests to a sampling of her latest music with an acoustic performance.
Sponsor seating is available for the first time this year, offering two sponsorship options which include priority seating for two people, or a table of ten.
MusicRow’s Rising Women on the Row event provides a great opportunity to honor influential Nashville talent as they create momentum in their careers,” said MusicRow Publisher/Owner Sherod Robertson. “Our event has grown substantially year-on-year, which prompted a move to Nashville’s newest luxury venue.”
TICKETS ARE SOLD OUT.

 

Emmylou Harris' 'Wrecking Ball' To Be Reissued in April

wrecking ball1111Emmylou Harris‘ groundbreaking album Wrecking Ball is set to be reissued April 8 on Nonesuch Records. The project, produced by Daniel Lanois, earned the 1996 Grammy honor for Best Contemporary Folk Album. The new three-disc CD includes the remastered original album (remastered by Joe Gastwirt), a bonus CD of previously unreleased material, and a DVD of the documentary Building the Wrecking Ball, which features interviews and footage of Harris and Lanois, as well as guests Kate and Anna McGarrigle, Neil Young, Steve Earle, Brian Blade, and others. The album is available to pre-order at nonesuch.com with an exclusive print autographed by Harris.
In celebration of the reissue, Harris and Lanois will embark on an international tour this spring, including shows at The Wiltern in Los Angeles, The Vic in Chicago, and the Lincoln Theatre in Washington, D.C. See below for tour and album details.
Disc 1 – Wrecking Ball (remastered by Joe Gastwirt)
1. “Where Will I Be” (Daniel Lanois)
2. “Goodbye” (Steve Earle)
3. “All My Tears” (Julie Miller)
4. “Wrecking Ball” (Neil Young)
5. “Goin’ Back to Harlan” (Anna McGarrigle)
6. “Deeper Well” (David Olney, Lanois, Emmylou Harris)
7. “Every Grain of Sand” (Bob Dylan)
8. “Sweet Old World” (Lucinda Williams)
9. “May This Be Love” (Jimi Hendrix)
10. “Orphan Girl” (Gillian Welch)
11. “Blackhawk” (Daniel Lanois)
12. “Waltz Across Texas Tonight” (Rodney Crowell, Emmylou Harris)
Disc 2 – Deeper Well: The Wrecking Ball Outtakes
1. “Still Water”
2. “Where Will I Be” (alternate version)
3. “All My Tears”
4. “How Will I Ever Be Simple Again”
5. “Deeper Well”
6. “The Stranger Song”
7. “Sweet Old World” (alternate version)
8. “Gold”
9. “Blackhawk” (alternate version)
10. “May This Be Love” (acoustic)
11. “Goin’ Back to Harlan”
12. “Where Will I Be” (alternate version)
13. “Deeper Well”
WRECKING BALL TOUR
April 3 Los Angeles-The Wiltern
April 5 San Francisco-The Warfield
April 7 Royal Oak, Mich.-The Royal Oak
April 8 Chicago-The Vic
April 11 Washington, D.C.-The Lincoln Theatre
April 12 Brooklyn, N.Y.-TBA
April 13 Boston-The House of Blues

MIDEM Blog—Music Is Key For Marketing

Francois speaks at MIDEM.

Oliver Francois of Fiat/Chrysler speaks at MIDEM.


MIDEM 2014 opened on Saturday, Feb. 1 in Cannes, France and while Nashville slept—it was 3 a.m. Nashville time when the program began—the music industry reps gathered at MIDEM buzzed about the present and future music business. The themes that emerged on the first day: (1) streaming will play a major role in the future of the music business and (2) companies need music to market their products.
• • •
In the session titled “Back to Growth? Make It Sustainable!” panelists Nicolas Galibert, president of Sony/ATV Music Publishing in France; Alison Wenham, Chairman/CEO of the Association of Independent Music in the UK; and Richard Smirke, Billboard correspondent in the UK; noted that the entertainment industry does not receive credit for what it adds to the economy. Galibert stated that “in terms of creating jobs, opportunities, or contributing to the GNP of a country, music doesn’t get the credit it should receive.” Wenham noted that “the creative industry is a key economic driver” in a nation, in addition to its contributions to the social sphere. Galibert stated that governments should give the creative community “tools not rules” for future growth.
Wenham stated that independent labels have been “crucial to solving the problems brought on by digital” and that “the challenges are huge.” She noted that indies are responsible for 59 percent of the vinyl market and that indie labels “are the natural home for artists who take a long time to develop.” The key to an indie’s success, according to Wenham, is “local but global” where an indie concentrates on breaking an artist in a local market as a foundation for breaking the act globally.
• • •
One of the most interesting Visionary Talks on the first day of MIDEM came from Olivier Francois, CMO and head of the Fiat Brand for the Chrysler group. Francios leads a team that has made extensive use of music in commercials for Chrysler and Fiat. Perhaps the most famous is one with Eminem, initially aired during the Super Bowl, where the singer promotes the city of Detroit as well as the car he’s driving. Francois took over as head of marketing in 2008 during a deep recession. After the Super Bowl ad with Eminem, Chrysler went from selling 600 cars a month to 6,000 cars a month.
Francois likes to combine selling cars with selling the artist and he has used Diddy, L.L. Cool J, Lenny Kravitz, Jennifer Lopez, Pharrell Williams and others which “makes it look like we’re a little ahead of the curve in popular culture.” Francois has a close working relationship with Jimmy Iovine and Republic Records and they work jointly to “make music videos that feature the car.” Francois believes “there’s only one right track for a campaign” and, if that track is not found, “we don’t use music at all.”
• • •
In the seminar “Streaming: A Sustainable Platform for Artists?panelists included Axel Dauchez, CEO of Deezer; Eddy Maroun, co-founder and CEO of Anghami, a streaming service in Lebanon; Brian Message, Chairman of the management group MMF in the U.K.; Thorsten Schliesche, General Manager of Napster for Europe; Mandar Thakur, COO of Times Music in India; and Milana Rabkin, Digital Media Agent for the United Talent Agency in the United States.
The streaming services have found they must create their own content and not depend on record labels to provide everything. The challenge is “discovery,” presenting listeners with something new. Thorsten Schliesche of Napster noted that “investing in new artists is not a marketing tool, it’s an industry need.” Brian Message said, “the key to the future of streaming is discovery, otherwise it becomes a low margin business.”
A question from the audience was raised about royalty rates paid by streaming services. The services pay a fraction of a penny for each streamed song and Schliesche noted that “75 percent of the revenue goes to the music industry” while the remaining 25 percent is required “to build and run and maintain” the streaming business. “It’s a long term business model,” said Schliesche. “It cannot be a short term solution. In the long run, streaming will make more money for record labels than they will receive from the sales of records.”
“We’re giving more money back to the industry than anyone else,” stated Schliesche, who labeled YouTube “a legal pirate.”
In the digital recording industry, Brian Message noted that amongst managers a chief concern is “to get beyond the non-disclosure agreements and be more transparent” because “artists need to see how revenues are calculated. We need to get to the point where everyone understands the flow of money and trusts and respects each other.”

The Band Perry To Advise Shelton's Team on 'The Voice'

the band perry111

The Band Perry

On the heels of their performance on the NFL and Fox’s Super Bowl LXVIII Tailgate pregame show, The Band Perry will advise Blake Shelton‘s team during the “Battle Rounds” on Season Six of NBC’s The Voice. The season premiere will take place Monday, Feb. 24, 2014 at 8 p.m. EST / 7 p.m. CST.

“Blake didn’t have to ask us twice if we wanted to mentor his team this season on The Voice, ” said The Band Perry. “It was so much fun to work with Team Blake, and after 15 years of receiving plenty of ‘constructive criticism,’ it was our turn to pay it forward. We just hope we were as helpful to Blake’s team as our own mentors have been to us through the years.”

The trio is currently on the road as part of their We Are Pioneers World Tour.

Watch The Band Perry’s performance during the Super Bowl LXVIII Tailgate pregame show below.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qdfgbgq2ock#t=76