TheBigA said:Bongwater said:It says NOTHING about web radio...unless it's coming from one of these stations. And even then, it doesn't mention streaming audio at all. Just terrestrial signals......
That's because web radio already has a performance royalty...has had it since 1996. The deal the NAB just made with the RIAA requires terrestrial streams to pay as much as 30% of their revenue to the labels. This is, by the way, the same NAB that Mitch Bainwol said won't negotiate with them.
But yes, you're correct. The RIAA is aiming their bill at the 20% of the radio stations owned by the big companies. They are the ones who have the most audience, who make the most money, and are also, by the way, the most valuable to the labels in terms of selling music. And if you study the Digital Performance Royalty Act, and use it as a moel for what they'll do if this new law passes, they will use this royalty to attempt to control the music decisions radio stations make. The more familiar music they play, the more they'll have to pay. The more money those stations make, the more they'll have to pay. And because SoundExchange is a cartel, radio stations will have no alternatives. Either play by their rules, or don't play music.
But aren't there ENOUGH stations playing JACK or "classic hits" now owned by mega corporations? Wouldn't it be refreshing to hear NEWER music for a change?
I'm pretty burnt out on old music. And I speak for many. When playlists are so restrictive that it shuts out a lot of NEW talent in favor of the same BIG artists and their old hits over and over and over (and there's LOTS of newer acts out there. In every genre), it's not doing much to help create better and innovative music, but encouraging record labels to sign "clones" of these other acts. We already have Nickelback, do we really need Daughtry? And hip-hop, of which I have no idea of where most songs end and another begins, to say nothing of distinguishing between most acts themselves were it not for DJs, voicers, jingles and stop breaks.
It's nice to hear oldies once in a while, but too much of the same thing in any genre is overkill......
And if you're a big station that wants to play the same 300 old songs over and over and over, that's fine. Just fork it over. Don't tell me Clear Channel or CBS CAN'T afford it. They're still on the air, they're still making a LOT of $$$. It's just that they're trying to live up to unrealistic corporate profit margins that were pretty much by the wayside 8 years ago. And I still don't see KZOK going News/Talk anytime soon because of this bill.....
Would be a GREAT April Fool's joke though.......now that I think of it......