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Learn More About The Changing Face Of The Music Industry

The face of music has always been changing, from the days of Mozart to Buddy Holly there has only been one constant factor remaining consistent throughout the centuries, the music industry is a commercial medium. The musical revolutionaries of the 60s might well disagree however even at that point people were buying records and labels were making millions.

This is more true than ever in this day and age, where musical instruments have been replaced by grinding women in bikinis, low riding Cadillacs and more bling than you can shake a stick. The changing face of music is not only in the image and artists but also in the musical equipment used to produce and distribute music.

Musical piracy as it is being called, is dominating the music industry and there are two schools of thought on it. One being that of the music industry and the law who understand the illegal sharing and distribution of music as copyright infringement, the other being the people who believe that music should be free to everyone, however it is not clear how they are suggesting that the Cadillacs and bling are going to be financed.

This has come due to the massive technological advances in the last decade in the field of musical technology. The face of music has changed due to the accessibility of musical production and distribution. You can now at a click access your favourite music legally and free of charge via various video hosting sites and it is a massive form of marketing now.

Production takes place in many a bedroom and have become very accessible to those with very little musical knowledge due to the relatively simple midi based software packages that have saturated the market. These have made music production much more accessible than previously and with many global forums you can share your music and potentially distribute it with great ease.

The digital age has rendered other formats almost obsolete. As the CD killed off the cassette in one foul swoop, CD is now on the edge of extinction being replaced by an array of audio files. The death of CDs has been slower than the predeceasing format, this might be accounted for because the retailers buying from the music industry still need to sell products and there has been no next generation product that can be bought over the counter to replace CDs.

The retailers are encouraging people to buy CDs and then rip them onto their iPod or MP3 players. It is thought that CDs will stick around for a while. The greatest surviving format has to be vinyl which is still massively popular with DJs around the globe. This again is under attack by products such as the Tonium Pacemaker, which is the size of a Nintendo DS, however holds 120gig, about 3000 hours work of music.


Watch the video related to US Music Industry

***TEXT 3814 TO 81700 FOR JIMMY SHOE ON CHANNEL AKA – SKY CHANNEL 370 !!!! *** The single Jimmy Shoe is a tongue-in-cheek track gently poking fun at the obsession that girls have with their shoes as well as being an upbeat and raw hip-pop tale of teenage lust. Although distinctly British, the listener can pick up on the musical influence of US artists that Fugative cites as inspiration, including Sean Kingston and Lil Wayne. During the development of Fugatives debut album, set for summer 09 …

Help answer the question aboutUS Music Industry

What kind of hold on us does the music industry have to make us think that songs like "Doesthat make me Crazy"
And "Sexy Back" are good. Or even this old song calle "Ladda Dee Ladee Dow" (2 versions!) And it was the only words in the whole dang song!!!!! Face it, if u or I were 2 go into a music producers office wit dat crap, we'd get thrown out on our tukas! Even some of these so called rap songs are getting lame: My Lumps, Go down like London, Milkshake, Laughy Taffy euhhhhhhh!

18 Comments

  1. this guys is fukin shit. hes givin the lads in the uk a bad name. every mc i know would kill this guy on a mic.

    karizma

  2. this guys is fukin shit. hes givin the lads in the uk a bad name. every mc i know would kill this guy on a mic.

    karizma

  3. Staxx247233 says:

    Dissss Faggot is sooooooo SHIIITTTTT! he’s a disgrace to any form of music and one of the reason’s the u.k can’t compete with da u.s wen it comes to rap, I mean only a batty Boi would talk about a girl’s shoes throughout a whole song.
    Dis pathetic virgin should put da mic down and quit cause he’s shit.

  4. Shibz7861 says:

    that song is sikk it has amazing bars and how come white boys are trying and act black nowadays :s
    its a good tune tho for a white boy (Y)

  5. youngcarter1995 says:

    baty boiii

  6. monseurkez says:

    God this is disgraceful lmao

  7. this song is so shit all his music is he could do better

  8. ×N!cky™ says:

    Possibly the IRS or an Entertainment Guild could better direct you. You can contact your local IRS office or one of the Entertainment organizations at this site
    http://www.afm.org/resources/labor-unions
    Not the best answer–but a start

  9. DAMn says:

    Its all about looks today, talent seems to have become meaningless. A lot of the greats wouldnt get a contract today bc they dont look hot by todays standards. So all we get is crap musically , its all eye candy. MTV changed things bc music became about visual rather than sound. Most of the great bands are pre MTV era.

  10. From one who was there, it was minimal. Instead, it was more the other way around….protest music reflected popular sentiment among the American youths' peace/anti-war movement, not influenced it. Country Joe didn't convince draft dodgers to burn their cards and run to Canada; he sang about them doing that. And John Fogarty and CCR didn't convince Congress and others to to allow for draft deferrals due to colletge, allowing America's "fortunate sons" to remain at home while to lower classes went to the front lines; instead they sang about the economic disparity of the front line soldiers. The music simply gave yet another dimension to a voice of the the anti-war movement.
    HTH

  11. sillythebard says:

    I completely agree. This is why I have been listening to XM Satelite Radio for the last 3 years…

    I still listen to regular radio every now and then, but an hour or so later (and after hearing one song 3 times), I no longer listen.

    XM or Sirius is THE way to go…

  12. The music industry is a corporate cash machine where marketing and money rules over real talent.

    Music has been reduced from an art form to a product to be bought or sold.

  13. Yes, people are lame everywhere and the popular music that young people listen to here in the US is terrible. On the other hand, isn't most popular music terrible?

  14. MIDI says:

    sadly, it's a resounding yes. Charice Pempengco ought to be another Sarah Geronimo if it weren't for Ellen DeGeneres and Oprah Winfrey. OPM doesn't have an identity with the way it sounds. J-Rock/J-Pop is distinctly unique because it barely relies on synthesizers or turntables, they emphasize the use of all types of instruments like brass, strings, and piano to blend with their specific genre; and it has a certain tempo and rhythm to it. (Flow, Orange Range, Asian Kung Fu Generation, Mr. Children, Skapara, Utada Hikaru, Ken Hirai, Yui… their music sounds unique)

    it's not that Japanese Music has worldwide recognition, but it's develoved a following among those interested in their culture especially J-Drama and Anime. their hit singles are ususally made into a show's theme song, and if that show becomes a hit, the artist/band who sang the theme song is recognized.

    does talent alone dictate if an artist or band should gain worldwide recognition? of course not. we have a few talented artists here… but the reality is if the Americans don't know them, the rest of the world won't know them.

    *edit for Karlo C*

    you'll be surprised how poetically deep most Japanese lyrics are when translated to english, it actually makes OPM lyrics look bad.

    sample Jap lyrics in english:

    "even if it’s light like fireworks, that can never be caught
    one more time, one more time… I want to reach out for it."

    "the sky I looked up at was blue and perfectly clear, I decided to open the locked window, the moment that changes me and the world is always right here with me."

    "may our two winding roads merge here together and become a rainbow."

    "where did the burning tears, the outcry of love, the sparkling days vanish off to? if we keep wandering down this aimless path… we'll never go back to the way things used to be"

  15. Anonymous says:

    Maybe for now—-but not forever. If you notice with more and more upcoming artists this country has, plus the ones that are becoming more popular here from overseas—-traditional "black" music is slowly starting to "fade" and/or incorporate other musical genres from around the world. I personally don't care for Rap, RnB or other typical Black music. I can't say what type if music will dominate in the future,but I doubt the African music we know today will.

  16. Paul Parker says:

    This question is too generalized.

    Even a guess is unlikely to come close because of the sheer number of songs that have actually been produced, let alone published.

    The Library of Congress or the US Copyright Office might be able to provide some info regarding the number of songs that have been submitted for copyright protection, however you would have to be able to weed out the songs submitted but never actually produced – this will most likely be an astounding number in and of itself.

    Sorry but I haven't a clue where you would start your research in the UK.

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