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Music as a consumer product is changing radically in the digital age. Packaging and albums are passé. DAB, P2P, the "long tail" and the iPod shuffle are broadening tastes. Can blogs guide us through the maze, wonders Michael Nutley...
Music as a consumer product is changing radically in the digital age. Packaging and albums are passé. DAB, P2P, the "long tail" and the iPod shuffle are broadening tastes. Can blogs guide us through the maze..?By Michael Nutley
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In the few short years since Napster founder Shawn
Fanning wrote the code that would earn him the enmity of the
recording industry, digital downloading has become the most
powerful content distribution mechanism ever seen.
But in parallel with the changes that have seen us swap
hi-fidelity for portability in our chosen formats for listening
to music, we have made sacrifices for the power of this
mechanism. For a start we’ve lost the packaging, itself already
shrunk by the advent of the CD.
And in moving towards a culture where the quantum of music is
the track rather than the album, we’ve made it far more complex
to navigate the massive amount of back catalogue material that
is becoming available. It was bad enough in the old days when a
lack of knowledge of the Rolling Stones oeuvre could mean you
ended up with Goat’s Head Soup rather than Exile On Main
Street.
And before you dismiss these as the ramblings of a nostalgic
forty-something with too many records, it’s worth noting the
explanation given by the publisher of music magazine Mojo for
its latest jump in sales; that teenagers are listening to The
Beatles while their parents are listening to Radiohead. As far
as music is concerned, the generation gap has closed.
Finding & choosing music in the "Long
Tail" retail space
So to put the question another way, when you can listen to
anything, how do you choose what to listen to? This is not a
trivial matter, since in order to take advantage of the Long
Tail effect (that the aggregated value of sales of content
outside the best-seller lists is greater than that of the
best-sellers), music etailers have to find ways for people to
navigate through enormous quantities of material across an
ever-widening spectrum of genres.
Some mechanisms already exist, of course. Amazon has pioneered
several, most notably its recommendations, its “People who
bought this also bought…” and, perhaps most importantly, its
reviews written by users.
A similar approach is being tried by TuneTribe,
the digital download service launched recently by Tom Findlay of
dance act Groove Armada. Interviewed last month in NMA, he held
up The Observer Music Monthly as the model for the service,
citing their recent feature on art-punk, complete with a list of
the 10 art-punk albums you must own, as the type of content he
wants to wrap around the basic download service.
And then there’s the vision of Michael Bayler, founder of The
Rights Marketing Company, who has recently started working with
music journalism archive site Rock’s Back
Pages. He sees an opportunity for download sites to offer
reviews and interviews as part of the purchase in order to give
context to the music on offer, thus adding value for the
consumer and giving a point of differentiation for the
etailer.
Peer-filtering in the blogging era
Of course, beyond all this the P2P philosophy that led to
digital downloading in the first place is being harnessed to
create an alternative marketing structure. One of the many
things that blogging can do is act as a filter, a way of
navigating the vast quantity of information than now makes up
the Internet. You find a blogger whose taste in music coincides
with yours, and suddenly you’ve tapped into a recommendation
engine fuelled by every other blogger he links to (and with
music it’s usually a he), every other blogger they link to, and
so on.
And of course this doesn’t just apply to established acts. New
bands that wanted to take advantage of digital downloading to
bypass the record labels used to be stymied by their inability
to reach potential listeners; the labels still had the marketing
clout required to “break” acts. But now a band simply needs to
identify a few key bloggers who will like what they do and are
sufficiently well linked-to for the word to spread.
And music, for reasons of file size, is just the most developed
market for this model. As broadband penetration grows, the same
effect will be seen in all areas of digital content. There are
already independent film-makers who are using blogs to market
their movies, breaking the domination of both the studios and
the distributors. New technology has democratised music-making
by putting the tools of the recording studio into a cheap
laptop. Now the Internet is making sure people can hear the
results.
Michael
Nutley is
the editor of New
Media Age.
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