Author Archives: Earl McCluskie

I am a music/media producer with Chestnut Hall Music. We are bridging the ever-shrinking gap between real-world and virtual music performances.

Canada is on the cusp of a new wave of media convergence.

The Big App Transition

http://www.financialpost.com/m/story.html?id=3338766&p=5

You don’t have to jump through the hoops to sell your idea to a cable executive or make it appetizing for a sponsor” – Josh Shore. “Flakey or not, Mr. Shore, a Vancouver-based producer, has raised significant financing from the New York-based FOSS Fund.”  http://www.illuminated.com/

Some, like Tom Jenkins, founder of OpenText Corp. and the Canada 3.0 conference, favours the next wave of digital designers.

“The creative people are digital natives; they don’t think of themselves as tech-savvy, they are just [tech] literate,” says Mr. Jenkins. “They have our IT department built into their brain.”

The smart producers know what they aren’t good at,” says Nic Sulsky.

music subscription services way of future, ISPs should be sharing their windfall profits

 Music industry is getting no where with illegal downloads: U2 manager

http://news.therecord.com/arts/NightLife/article/779503

As far as solving the music industry’s financial woes, U2 manager Paul McGuinness still hasn’t found what he’s looking for. But he’s not about to stop beating the drum.

McGuinness writes a lengthy piece in the new issue of Rolling Stone addressing the file-sharing and piracy issues that he believes are largely the source of the meltdown of the music business in recent years. It’s an update and expansion on ideas he put forth at the international MIDEM music conference in Cannes two years ago, an event at which I spoke with him at length about some very specific recommendations on how to address those issues.

Now, as then, he holds Internet service providers — and the giant telecommunications corporations that control the vast majority of ISPs — responsible, arguing that they’ve built their industry to a large extent by providing free content, often irrespective of the intellectual property rights of musicians and other creative types responsible for that content.

When I sat down with him in Cannes, he noted that ISPs have no qualms about promptly shutting down the accounts of users who don’t pay their ISP bills; they should do the same for those who illegally share copyrighted Web content like music.

More than two years later, he writes in Rolling Stone’s Sept. 30 issue that’s just out, little has changed in that regard.

“For the world’s Internet Service Providers, bloated by years of broadband growth, ‘free music’ has been a multi-billion dollar bonanza,” McGuinness writes. “Unfortunately, the main problem is still just as bad as it ever was.

“Artists cannot get record deals. Revenues are plummeting. Efforts to provide legal and viable ways of making money from muse are being stymied by piracy. The latest industry figures, from IFPI (the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry), show that 95 percent of all the music downloaded is illegally obtained and unpaid for. … A study endorsed by trade unions says Europe’s creative industries could lose more than a million jobs in the next five years.

“Finally,” he adds, “maybe the message is getting through that this isn’t just about fewer limos for rich rock stars.”

Many of those rock stars have been reluctant to go on the offensive, because the problem is often cast in precisely those terms: millionaire musicians whining that they aren’t making even more money.

McGuinness still thinks, as he did back in early 2008, that music subscription services should be the way of the future and that ISPs should be sharing their windfall profits with the artists and labels that have helped them pull in that money. If they don’t do so voluntarily, government intervention should be the next step. He points to laws passed in France, England, South Korea, Taiwan and New Zealand aimed at tipping the scales back toward equity for musicians. But that still leaves much of the world without any such protections.

“I think we are coming to understand that ‘free’ comes with a price,” McGuinness writes, “and in my business that means less investment in talent, and fewer artists making a living from music.”

The $64-billion question is: How many musicians, managers, record company executives or even ISP bigwigs will be willing to get behind McGuinness?

Study: 4 Million HD Radios to Hit Marketplace by Year’s End (2010)

http://www.billboard.biz/bbbiz/content_display/industry/e3id4800d851700dee992e99acf8408de0a

By 2015, there could be as many as 64 million, with 26 million in-car radios and 37 million in smart phones.

CBC (including radio) to stay the course

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/television/john-doyle/the-post-stursberg-cbc-tilt-goes-the-tightrope/article1671986/

“Stursberg’s CBC is ratings-driven, populist, pop-culture-obsessed in its news coverage, lightweight, disdainful of the arts and mortally afraid of appearing highbrow.”

“…anyone who thinks that Stursberg’s departure means a reversal of his various TV and radio implementations is kidding him- or herself. The five-year plan has more to do with capital spending, hardware and financial management systems than it has to do with dramas and sitcom on TV or the genre of music played on CBC radio channels. Things are not going backward. If you worship at the altar of the old CBC of Peter Gzowski and Barbara Frum, you are not going home again. We’ll all be living with Stursberg’s CBC for a long time to come.”

Music fees in US being reviewed, someday (soon?) maybe in Canada

The fees paid by Yahoo Inc. and RealNetworks Inc. for licences to play music on the Internet should be recalculated, a U.S. appeals court ruled Tuesday in the first case over music usage involving so-called new media.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/technology/us-court-orders-music-download-licence-fee-review/article1732614/

Broadband home-video market is expected to increase by more than 50 per cent annually over the next several years

At Netflix, the picture is darkening

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-investor/investment-ideas/david-milstead/at-netflix-the-picture-is-darkening/article1744322/

“Netflix (NFLX-Q152.78-1.83-1.18%), with a series of deals to stream movies and television shows over the Internet, seems poised to make a technological transition that its floundering competitor Blockbuster Inc. failed to do.”

“And that is where the growth is: Standard & Poor’s credit analyst Jayne Ross believes the broadband home-video market is expected to increase by more than 50 per cent annually over the next several years, even as the overall movie rental business will be flat to slightly up.”

Apple In Talks On Subscription Service: Report

“Apple is in talks with major record labels to provide a subscription-based music service, allowing unlimited access to songs for a monthly fee, the New York Post said, citing unnamed sources.”

http://www.billboard.biz/bbbiz/content_display/industry/e3i22ebc6f33ed6ca2eb68d2304bd3d8614

Apple is in talks with major record labels to provide a subscription-based music service, allowing unlimited access to songs for a monthly fee, the New York Post said, citing unnamed sources.

This will be the defining, game-changing moment for the recording industry.  Apple will continue be the dominate retailer of music for the forseeable future.  But, there will be room for niche players.

Internet and TV, “the next big thing”, is on its way

From Globe and Mail article about Google and Sony joining forces with an Internet televison:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/technology/personal-tech/gadgets/sony-google-unveil-connected-tvs/article1754723/

Those relatively modest sales figures show how reluctant people have been to inject the Internet into the three to five hours they spend, on average, in the so-called “lean back” mode of watching television.

But that almost certainly will change as younger people who have grown up Web surfing on their computers while channel surfing on the TVs look for products that bring together the different media. The only question seems to be how much longer it will be until the market reaches the tipping point where Internet TV goes mainstream.

Sony’s own research has identified consumers who are under 44 years old as the most likely buyers of the new Google TV sets. McQuivey thinks the market is probably even narrower than that right now, ranging mostly from people between 30 and 45 years old who have settled down into their own households and can afford fancy TVs.

Convinced the Internet TV will be the next big thing, other consumer electronics manufacturers such as Samsung Electronics Co., Vizio and Mitsubishi also are promoting Web-connected sets and Blu-ray players.

To compete with Apple, you have to start “free”

Bob Lefsetz argues that in order to create competition for Apple’s iTunes, music providers must initially allow their content to be provided to a start up such as Spotify for free.

Apple has too strong a “default” hold, and this will only be strengthened by its new Ping service and whatever streaming service they announce in the future.

http://lefsetz.com/wordpress/index.php/archives/2010/09/02/applestreamingsubscription/

Music labels eager for Google-Apple battle

Google mulling download store, song locker service; talks with labels led by Android founder Rubin

 

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/technology/music-labels-eager-for-google-apple-battle/article1694271/