TheBigA said:
The other chart it's not on is Big Champagne. And that's interesting, because Big Champagne measures P2P and social media exchange of music. That's where I go to see what's happening below the surface. And other than YouTube, there's not a lot going on with this song. So I did a little digging and found that the song hasn't sold well on iTunes. Considering it has over 80 million YouTube views, it's sold less than 100K copies. Rebecca's father says they haven't made any money. That says more about the trickle down system of the music business than anything else.
I've not heard much about Big Champagne, I'm gonna have to check it out. On Ultimate Chart...they're supposed to be a catchall of radio, sales and internet activity, "Friday" reached #15. That was a couple weeks ago.
Whatever the case...I think Rebecca Black's fame clock is at 15:01. My original point was that here's a song - yes a vanity song, a novelty - but still, a song with a lot of internet buzz...more buzz than Lady GaGa's "Born This Way"...that doesn't sound all that different from some of the lower-rent inhabitants of Top 40, why not play it and at least sound like you're tapped-in to that moment in time? (And when the moment passes, ditch it like Leif Garrett and the DeFranco Family?)
In retrospect...at least immediately, radio was right to pass. And BigA, your observations are spot-on. For all the views, and two ABC-TV appearances, at least - those are disappointing iTunes numbers. And I'd love to see a serious investigation into the "Friday" phenomenon. Was somebody behind the scenes manipulating YouTube stats?
Most importantly, can YouTube and other social networking sites generate a hit without the benefit of a record company? I've heard that "Fall For You" by Secondhand Serenade broke from MySpace. Might we see the day that a song closer to "I Want To Hold Your Hand" in quality and societal impact breaks from such sources?
Again, if the decision to not play "Friday" was based on the song's merits - or lack thereof - fine.
But if it was simply because "Friday" didn't come to the public's attention thru the usual channels...then I think we have to look at the possibility that someday, YouTube and social media may supplant Top 40 as the main source of pop music discovery. I don't think any of us reading these boards want to see that day...and I don't think it has to happen. It shouldn't be "either/or"...I like "both/and"...like Top 40 and MTV back-in-the-day when MTV actually played videos...
SirRoxalot said:
Compared to what's out there, it ain't the worst song. The reason that there may not be as many iTunes downloads is simple. The audio that accompanies the YouTube video is pretty darn good - especially to ears that are used to listening to MP3s. Why pay for it when you can simply record the YouTube audio? It ain't hard to do.
I can't believe that the song has created so much discussion. She's simply trying to follow the Taylor Swift - Justin Bieber - et alia model to pop success. The song is hardly the end of Mainstream Rock. If she wants to cash in, she'll simply have to sell her soul to the right "Starmaker Machine". Sounds like she picked the wrong record company.
SirRox...I think it's all in the way it was done...and when. With all the hype "Born This Way" received, to be upstaged by Rebecca Black was certainly s story.
No...this isn't the death of Mainstream Rock...that train, loaded with fragmentation, radio playin' it safe, changing public tastes...left the station long before Rebecca was a gleam in her parent's eyes.
But I'm feeling a sense of temporary relief...and you're gonna laugh...but American Idol contestant James Durbin has been rockin' the house every week and I'm just wondering if he were to win and then with Jimmy Iovine's backing actually put out a hit rock album...that's a LOT of "what if's"...but maybe, just maybe, rock might find its way back into the mainstream.
Then again...the rock classics that we older guys here on this board grew up with, seem to be filling that void quite nicely.