Showing posts with label Warner Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Warner Music. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Radiohead's In Rainbows Successes Revealed

(swiped from Pitchfork Media)

Photo by Kirstie Shanley

Over the next couple days in Reykjavik, Iceland, music industry sorts will gather for You Are in Control, an international conference dealing with issues in music and media. One such presenter is Jane Dyball, head of business affairs for Warner/Chappell, the publishing company responsible for the work of that Radiohead band. Dyball's presentation concerns all kinds of data surrounding last October's release of In Rainbows, which, as you may have heard, completely changed the music business forever and stuff.

Well, not really; but according to a report on Dyball's figures from "digital music business information and strategy company" Music Ally-- which has been confirmed by Radiohead's publicist-- In Rainbows certainly worked out well for the band.

The writeup suggests that there have been three million purchases of In Rainbows thus far, from digital sales through the band's webstore in the run up to the album's release, the discboxes, the eventual physical release of the album on CD, and through other digital outlets. More specifically, the band moved around 100,000 of those (very nice!) discboxes, and the physical CD has sold 1.75 million units to date worldwide. Not bad for a thing you could get for free.

The report characterizes the In Rainbows experiment as a success, noting "for Warner it served to prove a point that by licensing directly (i.e. outside the collecting society network) and by offering a genuine one stop shop for licensing (i.e. combining all the digital rights into one offer from a single entity) the publisher was able to generate far more money for both themselves and the band than would have been possible under the traditional system."

Music Ally also notes that the last several Radiohead releases sold in the hundreds of thousands, not millions, so the buzz-building nature of the band's release plan certainly lit a fire under consumers. To that end, the report offers that "the fact that Radiohead had made more money before In Rainbows was physically released than they made in total on Hail to the Thief is surely evidence enough that the initiative was a tremendous success." Better album, too.

There were, of course, some hang-ups; the thing hit BitTorrent almost immediately after its release, and it's "clear that the BitTorrent downloads did indeed greatly outnumber those from Radiohead's official site." In fact, the band and their management kept a pretty keen eye on the digital sales of the disc through their website, "and were watching the average price daily with a view to potentially withdrawing it any moment should it drop too low."

They did, eventually, pull the free download option off the site, but the point seems to be this: what they did worked awfully damn well-- for Radiohead, for this particular album, at this particular moment. The article notes this as well: "In fact, if anything, the only trouble with the whole thing was that it was just arguably too successful. The whole 'pay what you like' experiment became the story rather than the music itself. And that's not so Radiohead. The band and Thom Yorke initially found themselves answering questions about why they chose to do what they did rather than being asked about the music itself."

So, back to the music, then. Thom's on that new Björk single, and the band recently joined the artist advocacy group Featured Artists Coalition. Having finally wrapped that Japanese tour, they've got no live dates on the way at the moment, opting instead to work up the successor to In Rainbows. New Radiohead album? AAAAAAAHHH!!!

Tuesday, August 05, 2008

Metallica Reveal Magnetic New Album

(swiped from Pitchfork Media)

Metallica's new album, Death Magnetic, will come out on a Friday, just like the band's last album, 2003's St. Anger, according to a post on the band's website (via Billboard.com). For the sake of Metallica fans everywhere, we hope the similarities between the two records end there.

Warner Bros. will release Death Magnetic on September 12. Giving us hope that the album could be good is the fact that Rick Rubin produced it. Another notable tidbit is the tracklist's inclusion of "The Unforgiven III", the sequel to "The Unforgiven" from 1991's self-titled "Black Album" and "The Unforgiven II" from 1997's Reload.
Death Magnetic's first single will be "The Day That Never Comes", and a video for it, directed by Thomas Vinterberg will debut soon, according to another post on the site. Behind-the-scenes footage of the making of the album can be found at Mission: Metallica.

Prior to the album's release, Metallica have a chunk of August shows, mostly at festivals. The band's next appearance is August 9 at Ozzfest in Dallas. In addition to the Metallica set at Ozzfest, there will also be a Dimebag Darrell tribute performance by Metallica guitarist Kirk Hammett, Slayer's Kerry King, Alice in Chains' Jerry Cantrell, and Anthrax's Scott Ian, according to Billboard.com.

Death Magnetic:
01 That Was Just Your Life
02 The End of the Line
03 Broken, Beat & Scarred
04 The Day That Never Comes
05 All Nightmare Long
06 Cyanide
07 The Unforgiven III
08 The Judas Kiss
09 Suicide & Redemption
10 My Apocalypse

Metallica:
08-09 Dallas, TX - Ozzfest
08-14 Arras, France - Grand d'Arras
08-15 Hasselt, Belgium - Pukkelpop Festival
08-17 Jonschwil, Switzerland - Degenaupark
08-20 Dublin, Ireland - Marlay Park
08-22 Leeds, England - Leeds Festival
08-24 Reading, England - Reading Festival

Video: Metallica: Unforgiven [from the "Black" Album]