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Amazon & TuneCore To Cut Out the RIAA Middleman

eldavojohn writes "So you're an aspiring band and you haven't signed with a record label. Maybe you've got a fan base interested in purchasing your stuff but you're not really into accounting? Enter Amazon's partnership with TuneCore, a CD printing and music distribution service. You want to sell a full album on Amazon of you brushing your teeth? $31. And you get about 40% back on sales, so selling nine digital copies of your CD will put you back in the black. There you have it, public availability on one of the largest online commerce sites for $31 — no RIAA involved!" TuneCore's CEO put it this way: "As an artist, you have unlimited physical inventory, made on demand, with no [sic] upfront costs and worldwide distribution to anyone who orders it at Amazon.com."

11 of 291 comments (clear)

  1. Re:At $31 per album by AlmondMan · · Score: 3, Informative

    How on earth do you figure it's 31$ pr album? It's 31$ to get listed. Read the article, how would you ever make it out to be 31$ pr. album when 9 sales is all that's required to get back in the black?

  2. Re:At $31 per album by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    No, no, no. You, the artist, pay them $31 to get started and have them take you on. Then they sell the albums at a "normal" price. RTFA... Although, I also blame /. for increasingly bad summaries these days.

  3. Re:At $31 per album by styryx · · Score: 4, Informative
    FTA:

    Tunecore will charge just $31 a year in upfront fees to handle a 10-track CD from pressing to delivery, passing all other costs through to the buyer.

    And

    If one of Amazonâ(TM)s 80 million customers buys your 10-song CD on Amazon for $8.98, youâ(TM)ll receive $3.59

    However,

    one obvious drawback to this model is that you canâ(TM)t sell an on-demand CD at shows, where enthusiastic fans are most likely to pick one up.

    That being said, if anyone here wants to potentially earn some money. Create a mobile (or iphone) app that will allow you to buy the CD from amazon, as well as download the tracks (DRM free) to your mobile device there and then. Perhaps using the barcode apps. This would be the best of both (plus another) worlds.

  4. Re:$31 for pressed CDs? by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Informative

    They are NOT pressed CD's. they are BURNED CD's.

    There is no way in hell that for $31.00 they will crank up a pressing process. I've seen those machines, they blow 100 disks just in testing runs.

    Granted I can get CD-R's that 90% out there cant tell is a burned CD. They have a beautiful Silver dye system out there that with a silver thermal printing surface looks like the real deal.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  5. Re:At $31 per album by Locklin · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's a $31 per year "hosting fee" for the artist.

    From the article:

    If one of Amazon's 80 million customers buys your 10-song CD on Amazon for $8.98, you'll receive $3.59. After selling just nine discs, you're in the black.

    emphasis mine.

    --
    "Knowledge is the only instrument of production that is not subject to diminishing returns" -Journal of Political Econom
  6. Re:CDBaby by Mendokusei · · Score: 5, Informative

    While iTunes would be slightly bigger, Amazon is a big leap for Tunecore and I'm happy to see it even on this level.

    According to their website, TuneCore already has a deal with the iTunes store, as well as most all of the other digital music services.

  7. Done years ago by east+coast · · Score: 4, Informative

    Used to be called mp3.com.

    Aside from that indies have been around forever.

    I've always said that artists who cry about this have options but they're too lazy/too talentless to do it for themselves. Oh well.

    --
    Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
  8. NMPA/Harry Fox Agency by tepples · · Score: 3, Informative

    I for one wait to see the lawsuit the RIAA is drawing up to bring down upon Amazon for squelching their draconian business practices by violating their 'copyright' on 'distribution of artistic works of an audio based nature'

    You're thinking of the National Music Publishers' Association, which controls the rights to record cover versions and licenses them through its Harry Fox Agency. Your "RIAA" guess was close because a lot of labels in the RIAA are under the same management as publishers in the NMPA.

  9. Re:Print on demand... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 4, Informative

    From the FAQ

    "What format must my music be in, in order to upload to TuneCore?

    We have found .wav files to be the most reliable and therefore recommend them first and foremost. Remember that they must be set at a 44.1 khz sample rate, 16 bit sample size and the channel set to stereo. Not sure how to convert your music? - Check out our tutorial.

    What format must my artwork be in, in order to upload to TuneCore?

    Artwork can be in one of the following file formats: JPG, GIF or PNG. The image must be a perfect square and at least 1600x1600. All artwork must be in best-quality RGB Color mode (including black and white images) and must have a resolution of at least 72 dpi. You may not include: email addresses, URLs, any other contact information or any pricing information. You must include both the artist name and album title on the artwork and remove any stickers or other items from your artwork in case you are scanning it in from a physical CD."

    I'm certain that, because people aren't so bright, there'll be a lot of "CD containing audio derived from mp3s that came from ripping a burned CD that was produced from .aacs, that were compressed from the output of a ten dollar ADC connected to a microphone taken from a 'Barbie's Kiddie Karaoke' machine" stuff floating around; but it looks like the service itself supports perfectly sensible upload options.

  10. Re:$31 for pressed CDs? by EnglishTim · · Score: 4, Informative

    TuneCore don't do the disk printing; that's done via Amazon's Disk on Demand service, which is actually performed by CreateSpace.

    The service that TuneCore provides is that it handles submission of your album to a whole bunch of online music download stores, like Amazon, eMusic, iTunes, Napster etc. I think from skimming its faq it also handles receiving your payment all into one account.

    Therefore, as they say, all of the money Amazon pay goes into your account.

    They've been doing this for a little while, but now with the link with Amazon Disk on Demand, albums submitted to TuneCore can for the first time be bought on physical CDs.

  11. Re:CDBaby by Peter+Wells · · Score: 4, Informative

    We do. It's our bread-and-butter. We've been delivering music to iTunes--half a million songs already--for three years now. :) --Peter peter@tunecore.com