Ryan Tedder: Classic songs are strangling new music
New bands don't have a chance because everyone is streaming Queen and ABBA, says the OneRepublic star.
The frustrating thing about music is that now there's too much of it...
Kirk Bayne
The frustrating thing about music is that now there's too much of it...
Today, you have to promote directly to the consumer.
That does not exist today.
FixedThe frustrating thing about music is that now there's too much BAD MUSIC.
I even gave Charlie's jazz and standards work a spin or two.What he's talking about is the total lack of marketing and promotion for new music. Artists and labels are just putting their new music on Spotify and hoping people will discover it. That's not how it works. Back in the day, you had marketing and promotion organizing campaigns to bring music to the attention of the public. Brian Epstein campaigning to have his new band The Beatles appear on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1964, for example. Just making music available doesn't get people to listen to it. It never has. They need to be directed to it, and given a reason to want to listen.
All of the classic rock and familiar hits benefited from that organized marketing & promotion. That's why people know who Charlie Watts was when he died last week. Everyone knows who The Rolling Stones are. I'm sure there was a huge increase in listening to their music last week.
Discovery Weekly is stuff that you haven't listened to (on Spotify at least) that's similar to what you have been listening to. Apparently, Spotify's algorithm believes you're in the mood for older-style music. As a result of this, my Discovery Weekly is mostly old music while my 21 year old daughter's is mostly new music.I pulled up my Spotify "Discover Weekly" playlist, which is branded as "new music and deep cuts picked for you". Here's the first few artists on my list today: Mickey Gilley, Jim Croce, George Winston, Juice Newton, Chet Atkins, and Iain Matthews.
Gilley is 85 and retired, Croce is dead (for decades), Winston is a jazz pianist, Newton is retired, Atkins is dead, and Matthews had only one top 20 hit in the US, 42 years ago.
It's accurate that most of what I'm seeing on this playlist is new to me. But very little of it appears to be new to the world.