Chicken Smoothie said:
The debate continues over the justification for increased royalties...
Since non-live contemporary music radio really started (late 40's to early 50's after the AFM issues were mostly resolved) record companies have spent billions upon billions to get radio to spin their records. No, it seems, the record companies want it all back.
Thing of the huge and expensive promotion staffs, independent promoters, the travel, entertainment, product give-aways, cost of promo mailings and copies, ads in the trades, from Cash Box to R&R, free appearances for stations of artists, and, of course, the legendary gifts that got Alan Freed and others indicted.
And this is all because the record companies lost sight of how the consumer wants to purchase and use music. The latest idiocy is the withdrawal or threatened withdrawal of major labels from iTunes because "we don't want Jobs to control the industry" despite the fact that iTunes is how music buyers want to get their music. Damn the consumer, we can't let Jobs be any more important than we are...
What an incredibly Luddite and idiotic attitude.