TheBigA said:
adma said:
Yet the label bigwigs and Future of Music Coalition types never "understood" the country revolution.
Not only that...they instead came up with something called "Alt Country." That's what the FMC is promoting. It is basically anything that country radio doesn't play, from bluegrass to roots rock to guys like Robert Plant & bluegrasser Alison Krauss. THAT was a match made in FMC heaven.
Plus, of course, the Neko Case example I mentioned above. Though as I also indicated, we've come to the point where such artists can top the charts on their own *without* conventional radio airplay--and probably, all the better for it.
The FMC wants to force this stuff on the public, and get the FCC to require radio stations to play music regardless of popularity. They're going to use the government's "diversity" agenda to force it through.
So? Diversity is good. Nothing like a bunch of talk-radio redneck bigots to get one reflexively supporting diversity.
But I do sorta agree with you, but in a more passive sense: that is, in an age of downloads and multiple avenues, "why bother"? Take a cue from how the Obama presidential campaign worked around rather than reacted to talk radio, because strategically speaking, conservative talk isn't even worth reacting to. Just bloated buffoons spewing; let'em stew. And commercial country radio is fine as it is, out of sight, out of mind.
At the same time, they are supporting the major labels' called for a performance royalty, to tax radio stations a percentage of their revenue (not profit) in order for the right to play their music.
So let's add it up: The labels make music that is diminishing in popularity, as evidenced by sales and download figures. They make music that appeals to narrow audiences instead of mass audiences.
Actually, this "narrow audience" music is *more* popular than it might have been a decade or two ago--and more so for "not needing" radio. Of course, it isn't
Thriller-scale popularity; but maybe we've outgrown that need.
It's not the Neko Cases or Plant/Krausses who are suffering. It's the Kelly Clarkson-type acts who might have succeeded better under the old pop-radio-based model. *That's* what's bringing down revenues: the looming, tattered remains of that particular old model. Pop Radio Potemkin.
And that's what I mean by the FMC not necessarily getting much sympathy from the *other* end, either; basically, they're viewed as the same old wheezy boomers staggering under the dead weight of their own bloated legacy. They're preoccupied with radio because, back in the 60s and 70s and 80s, *everyone* into pop/rock/whatever was preoccupied with radio--as opposed to today's youngsters who don't give a fig about radio, and aren't even so "into pop/rock/whatever" the way their parents might have been--at least on anything but a free-form downloading scale.
And at the same time, they want to get a chunk of radio revenue. So on the one hand, their music is hurting revenues, and they now want a percentage of that declining revenue. If you're running a radio station, and you see you're about to be screwed from two sides at once, what do you do? Discuss among yourselves.
Boy, I really got you going, did I? Well, I guess this is the music-radio version of the tea-partying desperation among conservative talk radio types. Consider, maybe, that to some extent, you brought that "screwed from two sides at once" onto yourself--and also that whole "mass audiences" may consume your fare, they don't hold any more sympathy t/w the person who runs said radio station than they would t/w a convicted spousal abuser. You're boxed in. Tough.
So, if this means bailing from playing music; well, maybe, as our infinite-download age proves, commercial music radio is overrated and obsolete anyway; or at least confined to very specific realms...