The Internet Debacle
An Alternative View
by Janis Ian
"The
Internet, and downloading, are here to stay... Anyone who thinks
otherwise should prepare themselves to end up on the slagheap of
history." (Janis Ian during a live European radiointerview,
9-1-98) *Please see author's note at end!
When I research an article, I normally send 30 or
so emails to friends and acquaintances asking for opinions and anecdotes.
I usually receive 10-20 in reply. But not so on this subject!
I sent 36 emails requesting opinions and facts on
free music downloading from the Net. I stated that I planned to
adopt the viewpoint of devil's advocate: free Internet downloads
are good for the music industry and its artists.
I've received, to date, over 300 replies, every single
one from someone legitimately "in the music business."
What's more interesting than the emails are the phone calls. I
don't know anyone at NARAS (home of the Grammy Awards), and I know
Hilary Rosen (head of rhe Recording Industry Association of America,
or RIAA) only vaguely. Yet within 24 hours of sending my original
email, I'd received two messages from Rosen and four from NARAS
requesting that I call to "discuss the article."
Huh. Didn't know I was that widely read.
Ms. Rosen, to be fair, stressed that she was only interested in
presenting RIAA's side of the issue, and was kind enough to send
me a fair amount of statistics and documentation, including a number
of focus group studies RIAA had run on the matter.
However, the problem with focus groups is the same problem anthropologists
have when studying peoples in the field - the moment the anthropologist's
presence is known, everything changes. Hundreds of scientific studies
have shown that any experimental group wants to please the examiner.
For focus groups, this is particularly true. Coffee and donuts are
the least of the pay-offs.
The NARAS people were a bit more pushy. They told me downloads
were "destroying sales", "ruining the music industry",
and "costing you money".
Costing me money? I don't pretend to be an expert on intellectual
property law, but I do know one thing. If a music industry executive
claims I should agree with their agenda because it will make me
more money, I put my hand on my wallet
and check it after they
leave, just to make sure noothing's missing.
Am I suspicious of all this hysteria? You bet. Do I think the issue
has been badly handled? Absolutely. Am I concerned about losing
friends, opportunities, my 10th Grammy nomination by publishing
this article? Yeah. I am. But sometimes things are just wrong, and
when they're that wrong, they have to be addressed.
The premise of all this ballyhoo is that the industry (and its
artists) are being harmed by free downloading.
Nonsense. Let's take it from my personal experience. My site (www.janisian.com
) gets an average of 75,000 hits a year. Not bad for someone whose
last hit record was in 1975. When Napster was running full-tilt,
we received about 100 hits a month from people who'd downloaded
Society's Child or At Seventeen for free, then decided they wanted
more information. Of those 100 people (and these are only the ones
who let us know how they'd found the site), 15 bought CDs. Not huge
sales, right? No record company is interested in 180 extra sales
a year. But
that translates into $2700, whiich is a lot of
money in my book. And that doesn't include the ones who bought the
CDs in stores, or who came to my shows.
Or take author Mercedes Lackey, who occupies entire shelves in
stores and libraries. As she said herself: "For the past ten
years, my three "Arrows" books, which were published by
DAW about 15 years ago, have been generating a nice, steady royalty
check per pay-period each. A reasonable amount, for fifteen-year-old
books. However... I just got the first half of my DAW royalties...And
suddenly, out of nowhere, each Arrows book has paid me three times
the normal amount!...And because those books have never been out
of print, and have always been promoted along with the rest of the
backlist, the only significant change during that pay-period was
something that happened over at Baen, one of my other publishers.
That was when I had my co-author Eric Flint put the first of my
Baen books on the Baen Free Library site. Because I have significantly
more books with DAW than with Baen, the increases showed up at DAW
first. There's an increase in all of the books on that statement,
actually, and what it looks like is what I'd expect to happen if
a steady line of people who'd never read my stuff encountered it
on the Free Library - a certain percentage of them liked it, and
started to work through my backlist, beginning with the earliest
books published. The really interesting thing is, of course, that
these aren't Baen books, they're DAW---another publisher---so it's
'name loyalty' rather than 'brand loyalty.' I'll tell you what,
I'm sold. Free works."
I've found that to be true myself; every time we make a few songs
available on my website, sales of all the CDs go up. A lot.
And I don't know about you, but as an artist with an in-print record
catalogue that dates back to 1965, I'd be thrilled to see sales
on my old catalogue rise.
Now, RIAA and NARAS, as well as most of the entrenched music industry,
are arguing that free downloads hurt sales. (More than hurt - they're
saying it's destroying the industry.)
Alas, the music industry needs no outside help to destroy itself.
We're doing a very adequate job of that on our own, thank you.
Here are a few statements from the RIAA's website:
"Analysts report that just one of the many peer-to-peer systems
in operation is responsible for over 1.8 billion unauthorized downloads
per month". (Hilary B. Rosen letter to the Honorable Rick Boucher,
Congressman, February 28, 2002) "Sales of blank CD-R discs
have
grown nearly 2 ½ times in the llast two
years
if just half the blank discs sold in 2001 were used too
copy music, the number of burned CDs worldwide is about the same
as the number of CDs sold at retail." (Hilary B. Rosen letter
to the Honorable Rick Boucher, Congressman, February 28, 2002)
Let's take these points one by one, but before that, let me remind
you of something: the music industry had exactly the same response
to the advent of reel-to-reel home tape recorders, cassettes, DATs,
minidiscs, VHS, BETA, music videos ("Why buy the record when
you can tape it?"), MTV, and a host of other technological
advances designed to make the consumer's life easier and better.
I know because I was there.
The only reason they didn't react that way publicly to the advent
of CDs was because they believed CD's were uncopyable. I was told
this personally by a former head of Sony marketing, when they asked
me to license Between the Lines in CD format at a reduced royalty
rate. ("Because it's a brand new technology.")
Who's to say that any of those people would have bought the CD's
if the songs weren't available for free? I can't find a single study
on this, one where a reputable surveyor such as Gallup actually
asks people that question. I think no one's run one because everyone
is afraid of the truth - most of the downloads are people who want
to try an artist out, or who can't find the music in print. And
if a percentage of that 1.8 billion is because people are downloading
a current hit by Britney or In Sync, who's to say it really hurt
their sales? Soft statistics are easily manipulated. How many of
those people went out and bought an album that had been over-played
at radio for months, just because they downloaded a portion of it?
Sales of blank CDs have grown? You bet. I bought a new Vaio in December
(ironically enough, made by Sony), and now back up all my files
onto CD. I go through 7-15 CD's a week that way, or about 500 a
year. Most new PC's come with XP, which makes backing up to CD painless;
how many people are doing what I'm doing? Additionally, when I buy
a new CD, I make a copy for my car, a copy for upstairs, and a copy
for my partner. That's three blank discs per CD. So I alone account
for around 750 blank CDs yearly. I'm sure the sales decrease had
nothing to do with the economy's decrease, or a steady downward
spiral in the music industry, or the garbage being pushed by record
companies. Aren't you? There were 32,000 new titles released in
this country in 2001, and that's not including re-issues, DIY's
, or smaller labels that don't report to SoundScan. Our "Unreleased"
series, which we haven't bothered SoundScanning, sold 6,000+ copies
last year. A conservative estimate would place the number of "newly
available" CD's per year at 100,000. That's an awful lot of
releases for an industry that's being destroyed. And to make matters
worse, we hear music everywhere, whether we want to or not; stores,
amusement parks, highway rest stops. The original concept of Muzak
(to be played in elevators so quietly that its soothing effect would
be subliminal) has run amok. Why buy records when you can learn
the entire Top 40 just by going shopping for groceries? Which music
consumers? College kids who can't afford to buy 10 new CDs a month,
but want to hear their favorite groups? When I bought my nephews
a new Backstreet Boys CD, I asked why they hadn't downloaded it
instead. They patiently explained to their senile aunt that the
download wouldn't give them the cool artwork, and more important,
the video they could see only on the CD. Realistically, why do most
people download music? To hear new music, or records that have been
deleted and are no longer available for purchase. Not to avoid paying
$5 at the local used CD store, or taping it off the radio, but to
hear music they can't find anywhere else. Face it - most people
can't afford to spend $15.99 to experiment. That's why listening
booths (which labels fought against, too) are such a success.
You can't hear new music on radio these days; I live in Nashville,
"Music City USA", and we have exactly one station willing
to play a non-top-40 format. On a clear day, I can even tune it
in. The situation's not much better in Los Angeles or New York.
College stations are sometimes bolder, but their wattage is so low
that most of us can't get them.
One other major point: in the hysteria of the moment, everyone
is forgetting the main way an artist becomes successful - exposure.
Without exposure, no one comes to shows, no one buys CDs, no one
enables you to earn a living doing what you love. Again, from personal
experience: in 37 years as a recording artist, I've created 25+
albums for major labels, and I've never once received a royalty
check that didn't show I owed them money. So I make the bulk of
my living from live touring, playing for 80-1500 people a night,
doing my own show. I spend hours each week doing press, writing
articles, making sure my website tour information is up to date.
Why? Because all of that gives me exposure to an audience that might
not come otherwise. So when someone writes and tells me they came
to my show because they'd downloaded a song and gotten curious,
I am thrilled!
Who gets hurt by free downloads? Save a handful of super-successes
like Celine Dion, none of us. We only get helped.
But not to hear Congress tell it. Senator Fritz Hollings, chairman
of the Senate Commerce Committee studying this, said "When
Congress sits idly by in the face of these [file-sharing] activities,
we essentially sanction the Internet as a haven for thievery",
then went on to charge "over 10 million people" with stealing.
[Steven Levy, Newsweek 3/11/02]. That's what we think of consumers
- they're thieves, out to get something for nothing.
Baloney. Most consumers have no problem paying for entertainment.
One has only to look at the success of Fictionwise.com and the few
other websites offering books and music at reasonable prices to
understand that. If the music industry had a shred of sense, they'd
have addressed this problem seven years ago, when people like Michael
Camp were trying to obtain legitimate licenses for music online.
Instead, the industry-wide attitude was "It'll go away".
That's the same attitude CBS Records had about rock 'n' roll when
Mitch Miller was head of A&R. (And you wondered why they passed
on The Beatles and The Rolling Stones.)
I don't blame the RIAA for Holling's attitude. They are, after
all, the Recording Industry Association of America, formed so the
labels would have a lobbying group in Washington. (In other words,
they're permitted to make contributions to politicians and their
parties.) But given that our industry's success is based on communication,
the industry response to the Internet has been abysmal. Statements
like the one above do nothing to help the cause.
Of course, communication has always been the artist's job, not
the executives. That's why it's so scary when people like current
NARAS president Michael Greene begin using shows like the Grammy
Awards to drive their point home.
Grammy viewership hit a six-year low in 2002. Personally, I found
the program so scintillating that it made me long for Rob Lowe dancing
with Snow White, which at least was so bad that it was entertaining.
Moves like the ridiculous Elton John-Eminem duet did little to make
people want to watch again the next year. And we're not going to
go into the Los Angeles Times' Pulitzer Prize-winning series on
Greene and NARAS, where they pointed out that MusiCares has spent
less than 10% of its revenue on disbursing emergency funds for people
in the music industry (its primary purpose), or that Greene recorded
his own album, pitched it to record executives while discussing
Grammy business, then negotiated a $250,000 contract with Mercury
Records for it (later withdrawn after the public flap). Or that
NARAS quietly paid out at least $650,000 to settle a sexual harassment
suit against him, a portion of which the non-profit Academy paid.
Or that he's paid two million dollars a year, along with "perks"
like his million-dollar country club membership and Mercedes. (Though
it does make one wonder when he last entered a record store and
bought something with his own hard-earned money.)
Let's just note that in his speech he told the viewing audience
that NARAS and RIAA were, in large part, taking their stance to
protect artists. He hired three teenagers to spend a couple of days
doing nothing but downloading, and they managed to download "6,000
songs". Come on. For free "front-row seats" at the
Grammys and an appearance on national TV, I'd download twice that
amount! But
who's got time to download that many songs? Does
Greene really think people out there are spending twelve hours a
day downloading our music? If they are, they must be starving to
death, because they're not making a living or going to school. How
many of us can afford a T-1 line?
This sort of thing is indicative of the way statistics and information
are being tossed around. It's dreadful to think that consumers are
being asked to take responsibility for the industry's problems,
which have been around far longer than the Internet. It's even worse
to think that the consumer is being told they are charged with protecting
us, the artists, when our own industry squanders the dollars we
earn on waste and personal vendettas.
Greene went on to say that "Many of the nominees here tonight,
especially the new, less-established artists, are in immediate danger
of being marginalized out of our business." Right. Any "new"
artist who manages to make the Grammys has millions of dollars in
record company money behind them. The "real" new artists
aren't people you're going to see on national TV, or hear on most
radio. They're people you'll hear because someone gave you a disc,
or they opened at a show you attended, or were lucky enough to be
featured on NPR or another program still open to playing records
that aren't already hits.
As to artists being "marginalized out of our business,"
the only people being marginalized out are the employees of our
Enron-minded record companies, who are being fired in droves because
the higher-ups are incompetent.
And it's difficult to convince an educated audience that artists
and record labels are about to go down the drain because they, the
consumer, are downloading music. Particularly when they're paying
$50-$125 apiece for concert tickets, and $15.99 for a new CD they
know costs less than a couple of dollars to manufacture and distribute.
I suspect Greene thinks of downloaders as the equivalent of an
old-style television drug dealer, lurking next to playgrounds, wearing
big coats and whipping them open for wide-eyed children who then
purchase black market CD's at generous prices.
What's the new industry byword? Encryption. They're going to make
sure no one can copy CDs, even for themselves, or download them
for free. Brilliant, except that it flouts previous court decisions
about blank cassettes, blank videotapes, etc. And it pisses people
off.
How many of you know that many car makers are now manufacturing
all their CD players to also play DVD's? or that part of the encryption
record companies are using doesn't allow your store-bought CD to
be played on a DVD player, because that's the same technology as
your computer? And if you've had trouble playing your own self-recorded
copy of O Brother Where Art Thou in the car, it's because of this
lunacy.
The industry's answer is to put on the label: "This audio
CD is protected against unauthorized copying. It is designed to
play in standard audio CD players and computers running Windows
O/S; however, playback problems may be experienced. If you experience
such problems, return this disc for a refund."
Now I ask you. After three or four experiences like that, shlepping
to the store to buy it, then shlepping back to return it (and you
still don't have your music), who's going to bother buying CD's?
The industry has been complaining for years about the stranglehold
the middle-man has on their dollars, yet they wish to do nothing
to offend those middle-men. (BMG has a strict policy for artists
buying their own CDs to sell at concerts - $11 per CD. They know
very well that most of us lose money if we have to pay that much;
the point is to keep the big record stores happy by ensuring sales
go to them. What actually happens is no sales to us or the stores.)
NARAS and RIAA are moaning about the little mom & pop stores
being shoved out of business; no one worked harder to shove them
out than our own industry, which greeted every new Tower or mega-music
store with glee, and offered steep discounts to Target and WalMart
et al for stocking CDs. The Internet has zero to do with store closings
and lowered sales.
And for those of us with major label contracts who want some of
our music available for free downloading
well, the record
companies own our masters, our outtakes, even our demos, and they
won't allow it. Furthermore, they own our voices for the duration
of the contract, so we can't even post a live track for downloading!
If you think about it, the music industry should be rejoicing at
this new technological advance! Here's a fool-proof way to deliver
music to millions who might otherwise never purchase a CD in a store.
The cross-marketing opportunities are unbelievable. It's instantaneous,
costs are minimal, shipping non-existant
a staggering vehicle
for higher earnings and lower costs.. Instead, they're running around
like chickens with their heads cut off, bleeding on everyone and
making no sense. As an alternative to encrypting everything, and
tying up money for years (potentially decades) fighting consumer
suits demanding their first amendment rights be protected (which
have always gone to the consumer, as witness the availability of
blank and unencrypted VHS tapes and casettes), why not take a tip
from book publishers and writers?
Baen Free Library is one success story. SFWA is another. The SFWA
site is one of the best out there for hands-on advice to writers,
featuring in depth articles about everything from agent and publisher
scams, to a continuously updated series of reports on various intellectual
property issues. More important, many of the science fiction writers
it represents have been heavily involved in the Internet since its
inception. Each year, when the science fiction community votes for
the Hugo and Nebula Awards (their equivalent of the Grammys), most
of the works nominated are put on the site in their entirety, allowing
voters and non-voters the opportunity to peruse them. Free. If you
are a member or associate (at a nominal fee), you have access to
even more works. The site is also full of links to members' own
web pages and on-line stories, even when they aren't nominated for
anything. Reading this material, again for free, allows browsers
to figure out which writers they want to find more of - and buy
their books. Wouldn't it be nice if all the records nominated for
awards each year were available for free downloading, even if it
were only the winners? People who hadn't bought the albums might
actually listen to the singles, then go out and purchase the records.
I have no objection to Greene et al trying to protect the record
labels, who are the ones fomenting this hysteria. RIAA is funded
by them. NARAS is supported by them. However, I object violently
to the pretense that they are in any way doing this for our benefit.
If they really wanted to do something for the great majority of
artists, who eke out a living against all odds, they could tackle
some of the real issues facing us:
The normal industry contract is for seven albums, with no end date,
which would be considered at best indentured servitude (and at worst
slavery) in any other business. In fact, it would be illegal. A
label can shelve your project, then extend your contract by one
more album because what you turned in was "commercially or
artistically unacceptable". They alone determine that criteria.
Singer-songwriters have to accept the "Controlled Composition
Clause" (which dictates that they'll be paid only 75% of the
rates set by Congress in publishing royalties) for any major or
subsidiary label recording contract, or lose the contract. Simply
put, the clause demanded by the labels provides that a) if you write
your own songs, you will only be paid 3/4 of what Congress has told
the record companies they must pay you, and b) if you co-write,
you will use your "best efforts" to ensure that other
songwriters accept the 75% rate as well. If they refuse, you must
agree to make up the difference out of your share. Congressionally
set writer/publisher royalties have risen from their 1960's high
(2 cents per side) to a munificent 8 cents. Many of us began in
the 50's and 60's; our records are still in release, and we're still
being paid royalty rates of 2% (if anything) on them. If we're not
songwriters, and not hugely successful commercially (as in platinum-plus),
we don't make a dime off our recordings. Recording industry accounting
procedures are right up there with films. Worse yet, when records
go out-of-print, we don't get them back! We can't even take them
to another company. Careers have been deliberately killed in this
manner, with the record company refusing to release product or allow
the artist to take it somewhere else. And because a record label
"owns" your voice for the duration of the contract, you
can't go somewhere else and re-record those same songs they turned
down. And because of the re-record provision, even after your contract
is over, you can't record those songs for someone else for years,
and sometimes decades. Last but not least, America is the only country
I am aware of that pays no live performance royalties to songwriters.
In Europe, Japan, Australia, when you finish a show, you turn your
set list in to the promoter, who files it with the appropriate organization,
and then pays a small royalty per song to the writer. It costs the
singer nothing, the rates are based on venue size, and it ensures
that writers whose songs no longer get airplay, but are still performed
widely, can continue receiving the benefit from those songs. Additionally,
we should be speaking up, and Congress should be listening. At this
point they're only hearing from multi-platinum acts. What about
someone like Ani Difranco, one of the most trusted voices in college
entertainment today? What about those of us who live most of our
lives outside the big corporate system, and who might have very
different views on the subject?
There is zero evidence that material available for free online
downloading is financially harming anyone. In fact, most of the
hard evidence is to the contrary.
Greene and the RIAA are correct in one thing - these are times
of great change in our industry. But at a time when there are arguably
only four record labels left in America (Sony, AOL/Time/Warner,
Universal, BMG - and where is the RICO act when we need it?)
when entire genres are gloriffying the gangster mentality and losing
their biggest voices to violence when executives change positions
as often as Zsa Zsa Gabor changed clothes, and "A&R"
has become a euphemism for "Absent & Redundant" well,
we have other things to worry about.
It's absurd for us, as artists, to sanction - or countenance -
the shutting down of something like this. It's sheer stupidity to
rejoice at the Napster decision. Short-sighted, and ignorant.
Free exposure is practically a thing of the past for entertainers.
Getting your record played at radio costs more money than most of
us dream of ever earning. Free downloading gives a chance to every
do-it-yourselfer out there. Every act that can't get signed to a
major, for whatever reason, can reach literally millions of new
listeners, enticing them to buy the CD and come to the concerts.
Where else can a new act, or one that doesn't have a label deal,
get that kind of exposure?
Please note that I am not advocating indiscriminate downloading
without the artist's permission. I am not saying copyrights are
meaningless. I am objecting to the RIAA spin that they are doing
this to protect "the artists", and make us more money.
I am annoyed that so many records I once owned are out of print,
and the only place I could find them was Napster. Most of all, I'd
like to see an end to the hysteria that causes a group like RIAA
to spend over 45 million dollars in 2001 lobbying "on our behalf",
when every record company out there is complaining that they have
no money.
We'll turn into Microsoft if we're not careful, folks, insisting
that any household wanting an extra copy for the car, the kids,
or the portable CD player, has to go out and "license"
multiple copies.
As artists, we have the ear of the masses. We have the trust of
the masses. By speaking out in our concerts and in the press, we
can do a great deal to damp this hysteria, and put the blame for
the sad state of our industry right back where it belongs - in the
laps of record companies, radio programmers, and our own apparent
inability to organize ourselves in order to better our own lives
- and those of our fans. If we don't take the reins, no one will.
Sources:
Baenbooks.com, BMG Records, Chicago Tribune, CNN.com, Congressional
Record, Eonline.com, Grammy.com, LATimes.com, Newsweek, Radiocrow.com,
RIAA.org, personal communications
* for more information on the Free Library, go to
www.baen.com/library.
Read Janis' follow up to this article: FALLOUT
- a follow up to The Internet Debacle
This article has been revised to ensure factual accuracy.
Author's note: You are welcome to post this article on any
cooperating website, or in any print magazine, although we request
that you include a link directed to http://www.janisian.com
and writer's credit!
Additionally, we've started putting our money where my mouth is.
We will be offering one song a week in mp3 format for free downloading...and
if we can ever afford the server space, we'll try to put a bunch
of them up there at once! These are songs I own and control both
the copyright and master to; you are welcome to share these files
with your friends. We'd appreciate your showing your support of
this project by signing up for our email list - just send an email
to
janisian-announce- subscribe@yahoogroups.com. We won't bother
you very often! Beyond Yahoo's requirements, we do not rent, sell,
or lend our email list. All you will receive is notification when
a new album is released, and an occasional tour schedule. Thank
you for your support!
Want to know how your politicians are voting on these issues? Go
to www.vote-smart.org
Write to
your representative and be heard on this subject!
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