How labels and artists divvy up your MP3 dollar


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Post Sun Jun 22, 2003 3:16 am

How labels and artists divvy up your MP3 dollar

Article with pie graph at...
http://www.business2.com/articles/mag/0 ... 72,00.html

The MP3 Economy
How labels and artists divvy up your MP3 dollar.
By Nancy Einhart, June 2003 Issue

The going rate for downloading songs from online music services like Apple's (AAPL) iTunes Music Store, MusicNet, Pressplay, and Rhapsody is about $1 a pop. Yet the economics of recorded music sales haven't changed much since the vinyl era -- despite the fact that digital files cost very little to produce and distribute. So how much of your buck makes its way back to the artists? Not much, though it's clearly a better deal than they get from piracy.

The Site's Cut
The biggest chunk of your dollar goes to the online music provider. This explains why sites like Rhapsody can offer promotional discounts: When you buy a song for 49 cents, the site sacrifices its profit but the label still gets paid.

The Publisher's Cut
This sliver goes to the music publisher in the form of "mechanical royalties," the amount paid to license the written music. While other fees can vary from artist to artist, mechanical royalties are always a flat-fee transaction.

The Label's Cut
The record company receives "performance royalties" that are paid to license an actual recording (not the written music). That explains why some performers, like alt-rocker Aimee Mann, run their own labels -- it allows them to keep a larger share of these royalties for themselves.

The Middlemen's Cut
A small portion is reserved for various other intermediaries. Sites like Liquid Audio, MusicNet, and Rhapsody often sell their services through secondary distributors like Amazon and AOL, so they, too, get a cut.

The Artist's Cut
Twelve percent is average, but successful bands often hammer out better contracts. In many major-label contracts, charges for "packaging" and promotional copies are subtracted from the artist's cut, leaving the talent with a measly 8 percent. BMG, Universal, and Warner have announced plans to do away with such deductions for digital downloads.
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Post Sun Jun 22, 2003 11:26 am

Re: How labels and artists divvy up your MP3 dollar

Awesome Satori, thank you for the information. Very interesting points. Sheds some light on why artists are fighting the piracty of music sharing.
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Post Sun Jun 22, 2003 1:32 pm

Re: How labels and artists divvy up your MP3 dollar

Give A Man A Fish And Feed Him For A Day. Teach A Man To Fish And Feed Him For A Lifetime. Teach A Man To Start A Fish Farm And He Can Feed A Village For A Lifetime.

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Post Sun Jun 22, 2003 4:52 pm

Re: How labels and artists divvy up your MP3 dollar

Illuminus wrote:Awesome Satori, thank you for the information. Very interesting points. Sheds some light on why artists are fighting the piracty of music sharing.


It wasnt meant to be an anti-piracy screed... which I dont beleive it was.
Only shows where the record companies say where the money goes.

As a life long producer of software, I do understand and participate in intellectual property issuses.

Out of all the worlds problems - music piracy does not rank anywhere near the top.

Satori Muse
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Post Sun Jun 22, 2003 5:03 pm

Re: How labels and artists divvy up your MP3 dollar

It's piracy when the RIAA lobbies to change the bankruptcy law to make it more difficult for musicians to declare bankruptcy. Some musicians have declared bankruptcy to free themselves from truly evil contracts. TLC declared bankruptcy after they received less than 2 percent of the $175 million earned by their CD sales. That was about 40 times less than the profit that was divided among their management, production and record companies.

Toni Braxton also declared bankruptcy in 1998. She sold $188 million worth of CDs, but she was broke because of a terrible recording contract that paid her less than 35 cents per album. Bankruptcy can be an artist's only defense against a truly horrible deal and the RIAA wants to take it away.

Give A Man A Fish And Feed Him For A Day. Teach A Man To Fish And Feed Him For A Lifetime. Teach A Man To Start A Fish Farm And He Can Feed A Village For A Lifetime.
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Post Sun Jun 22, 2003 6:55 pm

Re: How labels and artists divvy up your MP3 dollar

Did I say it was about piracy? All I was saying was thank you for posting it and it shows those who swap mp3s all the time why the artists are fighting their tactics

Happy Sunday :?
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OGR Staff-Technical Director

Posts: 182

Joined: Sun Apr 20, 2003 7:48 am

Post Sun Jun 22, 2003 9:32 pm

Re: How labels and artists divvy up your MP3 dollar

Illuminus wrote:Did I say it was about piracy? All I was saying was thank you for posting it and it shows those who swap mp3s all the time why the artists are fighting their tactics

Happy Sunday :?


Didnt mean to imply anything... just letting you know I'm not an RIAA weanie... :)
And yes today was a Happy Sunday... :D

Satori Muse
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Post Sun Jun 22, 2003 10:02 pm

Re: How labels and artists divvy up your MP3 dollar

Sweeeeeeeeeet

Satori in da house!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Post Mon Jun 23, 2003 10:56 am

Re: How labels and artists divvy up your MP3 dollar

Producers and Dj's are overpaid anyways..... :lol:

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