Myspace to Sell MP3s From Unsigned Bands
soldrinero writes "Yahoo! news is hosting a story about a new competitor to Apple's iTunes Music Store. Nearly all the other iTunes competitors have been strongly controlled by the music industry, shackled in DRM, and giving little back to artists. The new MySpace music store will feature vanilla MP3 downloads at prices set by the individual bands (3 million of them!), all or nearly all of whom are unsigned musicians with no industry affiliation. Is this the example we have all been waiting for of how the Internet will obviate the business model of the recording industry?"
Of course not everyone will sell, but imagine a small fraction that eventually will. That could be hundreds.
Multi Search
Heard of the Arctic Monkeys? The first album from that indie band has become the fastest-selling debut album in UK chart history.
Res publica non dominetur
Yeah but the part myspace played in that success is 90% myth. The band hadn't even heard of the site until after they were signed and successful.
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;-)
http://technology.guardian.co.uk/weekly/story/0,,
What actually happened is they gave their music away on good old fashioned CDs at their gigs. So yet again, the #1 way of independent bands getting successful turns out to be "doing gigs". Plus ca change
By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --
I pay a fair price for my music (anywhere from 11 cents to about 30 cents) per selection. And I don't have to purchase the entire album. I have the option of listening to the first 30 or so seconds of the music I expect to purchase. What I like about that offshore site, is that the majority of the money goes to the artist. Does it bypass the RIAA, or the other organisations? Well, I hope so, but I do not know. Search for all of mp3 dot com
Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada