Jul 14

Topspin has a great concept: Drive all traffic and sales through the artist’s own website, not iTunes, Amazon or some label’s portal, and use music to create direct connections with fans.  That last part is half of the New Music Business Model; “Connect with Fans” and provide a “Reason to Buy” to generate sales.  Topspin’s great at connecting with fans.  It’s up to the artist to Connect with their own fans.

Topspin’s own business model is a bit wonky.  They take a cut of sales, so they’re selective about who gets in – they rely on a network of “partners” who serve as gate keepers, and they complicate engagement so it’s nearly impossible for individual bands to get in the front door.  So unless you’re already a star, you need a middleman, a pile of cash, or great determination to work with them.  What’s more, bands who make the least pay the most.  The terms are essentially punitive to slow sellers and true indies.  Trent Reznor and Radiohead get a way better deal than anyone you know.  But really, what else is new?  Topspin’s simply chosen a “pay to play” model with incentives for stars to help them pay the bills as they find their niche.

Topspin and CEO Ian Rogers get the new music business.   In this video he explains the intersection of music and data as they relate to selling songs.  And while Roger’s pimps Topspin as the tool of choice for obvious reasons, ordinary mortals can find the same tools on more open platforms, like ReverbNation and Bandcamp.

Still confused?  No worries.  Drop us a line, The All Night Party can help you get up and running in this new era.

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Mar 01

The day after The All Night Party’s first licensing workshop, Digital Music News published this piece on how Synch Revenues Remain Under Serious Rate Pressure.  To summarize, buyers are paying less for rights to using existing recordings in commercial and creative contexts.  Much less.

The reasons cited by DMN for the decline are many.  First, the number of paying projects being produced has declined across the board, increasing the competition for what remains.  Alongside that decline, there’s been an increase in the supply of music due to lower barriers – today it’s cheaper and easier to make music.  Creatives and music buyers are leveraging new market mechanisms, like One Stops (PumpAudio, Rumblefish), to justify resetting budgets at ever-lower rates.  None of this is good news, and we’ve seen the same signs.  But as ANP’s entered the licensing arena, we’ve discovered that artists and bands collectively have the means to bend the curve in the other direction.

The One-Stops have opened the licensing market to pretty much everyone with a tune and copyrights.  Unfortunately they’re (rightfully) designed to appeal to creatives working existing markets – all the shadiness and opacity of those niches are baked in.  So pricing is always a mystery… the average artist has no way of knowing what to charge for a needledrop use versus a full-buy out, because customers are used to buying blind, and haggling over prices.  The flood of new artists and titles make the situation worse, thanks to the “man behind the curtain” mystery of rates.  As a result, newbies sell $20,000 licenses for $5000 or less every day, often bragging about their deals.

What is the value of a song?  In some sense, it’s whatever someone is willing to pay.  To a band who might earn less than $5000 profit selling 1000 CDs, a $5000 buy-out of a single track seems like a no-brainer windfall.  And if the band is quirky, unstable, or generally non-commercial in orientation taking the money may not be a bad thing, since these opportunities are increasingly rare (see above).  But charging too-little in an established market is short-sighted.  Each sub-par deal struck validates the new, lower rates.  Once market rates ratchet down, it’s nearly impossible to raise them again.  Further, if an advertiser truly wants to buy your quirky, non-commercial piece, it’s very likely to be perfect match for their picture, ad copy or script; unlike pure pop, whatever you’ve bottled is unique and clearly works for this client.  So your money is left on the table when you accept the low-ball offer; you would likely get more for the asking because, unlike bands, most buyers have some idea of fair market rates and are quite happy to offer less on the chance you’ll accept!

We see the challenge a little differently.  As usual, we’re focused on making the most of these new opportunities and see a relatively simple solution for the entire licensing market: Radical transparency.  The problems in licensing aren’t related to too many one-stops or too much information.  The problem is the mushroom-farming habits of the current players.  Licensing Agents, music directors and even the emerging one-stops believe they make more when no one knows what things cost.  In the 20th century, every deal was a customized one-time special, crafted to extract the most dollars possible from each unique client.  It was a benefit to be able to sell a track to Target for $100,000 then sell the same rights package again year to a cheeky startup for a bargain $10,000; as long as neither party knew what the other was paying, prices were whatever came out of the sellers pen or mouth on any given day.  In the 21st century, One-Stops turned this upside down.  By making it easier for big advertisers and creatives to reach artists directly, music buyers have effectively taken control.  Today, big advertisers pit bands against one another, making the apples fight the oranges in a steel-cage death match.  Most jobs start with a low-ball offer for a premium rights package; when the artist squeals, the advertiser rattles off an impressive list of bands willing to accept the offer, usually including some familiar, famous names.  The artist usually buckles at this point, swallowing their pride to avoid risking a deal that could pay for their next record.  When the smoke clears, market rates are a little lower.  But what would happen if the artists, like the buyers today, actually knew the score?

Where market rates were known and familiar low-ball offers fail.  Sure, you can walk into a gas station with a fat $20 bill and declare “I’ll give you $20 for 20 gallons of gas”, but you won’t find many takers because the station owners know their competitors won’t accept your ‘generous’ offer, so there’s no risk if they decline.  The current low rates only work because sellers are deliberately kept in the dark.  One-Stop prices are completely open to buyers with valid credit cards, while artists are kept apart from one another, always guessing.  A simple solution is apparent: open the drapes and let the sun shine in on rates!  Licensors must top pretending it’s so complicated, and begin defining the market before licensees define it for us.  Making prices transparent and clear will eventually stop the bleeding.

Obviously this isn’t good for everyone, and the biggest winners relying on 20th century tactics stand to lose the most.  Agents and managers of big stars who’ve flocked to licensing to replace lost retail music sales will not be happy with fair and open market rates, because they’ll be forced to explain why their product is worth more (yes, really) than songs from lesser-known artists.  That’s more work for the same, or slightly fewer dollars.  But over the long haul even those artists win, if transparency prevents a total collapse of the market.  What happened in 2009 can get much worse, very fast.

So what are fair market rates?  There are many variables, and it’s a bit more complicated than it sounds, so we can’t answer it either.  We think we have a clue, but the backwards offers we get these days have left us a little gun shy.  But it’s not difficult to define them as ranges, using an open, web-based reporting tool could objectively collect and report that data.  The trick would be populating it with realistic, verifiable data, from enough sources to accurately depict the market, and at the same time account for geographic differences… for instance music costs more in NYC than Nashville, while some remote markets are still able to command relatively high rates for composition work thanks to less competition.  It takes a village of agencies and sellers, willing to be open about former secrets, to bend this curve.

If you sell music and are ready to think outside the box, we should talk – together a few of us could change the future of our industry for the better.  Transparency is scary and radically different, but clearly a path forward.

Feb 12

If you’re releasing a record soon, you can’t beat our current mastering specials: Free Tunecore Digital Distribution or Download Cards (pick one, your choice!).

We don’t believe in “one-size-fits-all”, even for promotions, and our specials leave it up to the artist.  As it should be!

Of course it only matters if you want to master your record with us.  We realize you have choices there too, so again, we make it easy: We’ll master a track free, and send you a download link to check it out when we’re done.

Check in with ANP Mastering Engineer Dave Davis and make your choice.  In February, there are no bad options for mastering at The All Night Party!

Oct 25

Since our launch we’ve struggled to describe ourselves to fans, artists and the world.  While we can’t really point to any familiar companies or business models, our goal is pretty clear and simple: We want to grow the market and demand for original, regional music, and expose the sound of our area to the people who live here, by any means necessary.  The industry remains in crisis, but we see music being used in new places and ways.

While we have an imprint that functions much like an old-school “record label”, that’s just the tip of the iceberg.  Nearly everything we do is available to anyone who needs us.  We will include any artist in our licensing catalog.  We will master any record or song.  We will do PR for anyone with a release or event in need of promotion.  The only areas that are closed are our retail distribution (where we must buy physical discs for cash to resell) and our on-label releases (which are objectively selected from finished projects submitted).  The thing is we’re a service company first and foremost, with a record label exists devoted to selling records.

Our goals:

  • We’re pushing into new markets to expand the “middle class” of working musicians, put food on their tables.  So far this year we’ve pioneered new stages at The Museum Center, the Cincinnati Art Museum, and new retail initiatives at MPMF.
  • We believe in “Continuous Creation”: artists should be creating content all the time, be it writing music, recording shows, making videos, or taking photos.   We support constant creative activity, to drive new products in all formats
  • If you make it, we’ll figure out how to sell it.  We’re not afraid of new ideas, we look for them.  In our current pipeline are USB-based products, enhanced CDs, iApps for iPods/iPhones, and Flash pieces.
  • Most bands cannot envision or afford effective websites.  At best most have an attractive press kit that bleeds music, at worst an ugly, illegible MySpace page.  We build rich, interactive, and valuable sites that connect with all of your consumer products in ways you’ve never thought of.
  • Every services we provide is standalone and competes in the real world. Since most of our clients aren’t on the label, every division must attract it’s own business. So what we provide is priced competitively, and must deliver results.

How We Help:

  • All of our services are available to all area artists, regardless of whether they’re on our label or not.
  • Our deals are modular: you can participate to whatever degree you are comfortable, and literally “write your own contract”, making tradeoffs you’re comfortable with.
  • With the exception of consumer release products (CDs, USB, and certain digital products requiring label investment), our deals are non-exclusive, so you can continue presenting your music in license catalogs like PumpAudio and YouLicense.
  • Rates are based on the current local market, not NYC or LA, but goals are more concrete than conventional providers; in mastering we guarantee work and include revisions, in promotion we specify placements and goals up front.
  • We will place your music in new retail venues (not just CD stores) where there is less competition for eyeballs and dollars and sales are actively encouraged.

So really, we’re a music services company.  We make music, create musical products, and sell them to the world.  It’s that simple.  Welcome to The Party!

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Sep 30

Sure, MPMF is over, but here at The Party, we’re just starting to realize how great a weekend we had.

ANP partners/artists, The Sundresses, and their soon-to-be label mates, mallory, kicked the door down on Friday.  Rather than sing our own praises, check out what Brian Baker had to say about Themdresses.  We’ll just note how great it is that this light’s finally dawning.

He was still talking about them at the opening of his next column, MPMF: Saturday Night’s All Fight for Writing.  But ANPfolk continued to make headlines personally.  First, there’s a great picture of All Night Intern Ryann Walton, and a lot of love for her band (though I wish ANP were running their merch, so we could have sold that CD to Brian! Hey Brian: Call us and we’ll hook you up!).

Brian also burned some pixels on our clients, Sparrow Bellows, whose record partner John Curley recorded, and Dave Davis mastered.  Wussy is another ANP client-done-good: all of their records have been recorded or mastered by ANP partners (talk about luck! We’re pretty lucky to have clients in their league).

The same week, Mike Breen pointed fans to videos by The Sundresses, and our friends/clients, The Lions Rampant (who we’re working hard with to release a killer album from which this video came).

It’s been a great week for ANP.  Big thanks to our showcase bands, mallory, Scotty Lust and The Two Timers, Magic Shop and The Sundresses. And even bigger thanks to the fans, press and volunteers who helped us launch this ship.  We’re nothing without all of you.

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