Author Topic: Rundgrens take on the RIAA  (Read 821 times)

SPARX

  • Member
  • Posts: 2070
Rundgrens take on the RIAA
« on: October 23, 2003, 05:04:00 pm »
Commentary: Todd Rundgren
 The music industry veteran argues that the labels have mishandled
 downloadable music.
 
 Musician Todd Rundgren is known for such 1970s pop hits as "Hello It's Me,"
 but his wizardry as a producer, music video pioneer and explorer of computer
 technologies is legendary in the industry. Since 1998, his recordings have been
 underwritten by PatroNet, a subscription service that gives his loyal fan base
 online access to works in progress.
 
 "Music is a sacrament. This has been true for thousands of years of human
 history, save the last 100 or so. I'm sure it was not Edison's purpose to debase
 
 such an important aspect of our collective liturgy, but what would one expect
 when something that was once ephemeral and could only be experienced at the
 behest of other humans is reduced to a commodity on a shelf.
 
 The mechanisms of music, how and why it affects us the way it does, are still
 mystical even to a cynical older record producer like myself. Anyone who
 denies the depth and power of this medium has simply forgotten, in the face of
 the
 relentless Philistine argument, that all things can be commoditized
 regardless of their sacred origins -- that all music is worth exactly what the
 RIAA
 says it is.
 
 Most musicians who have enjoyed any success under this model are in an
 ethical bind: On one hand, you may believe that your survival depends on
 effective
 marketing of a commodity; on the other, you realize that your truest
 expressions are being trivialized to fit properly into a prealloted space. How
 many
 times have I heard the argument, "Love the record, but we don't hear a third
 single -- back to the studio"?
 
 I must remind my fellow players that for the vast majority of history we have
 only been appreciated for the quality of human expression we could produce at
 the moment. Great performances were only memories in the minds of those who
 witnessed, each unique except perhaps for the calliope at the local
 merry-go-round which was, of course, a machine.
 
 The plain reality is that, except for a few notable aberrations, musicians
 will always be more appreciated, certainly in a financial sense, by live
 audiences than by labels and the listeners they purport to represent. The
 seemingly
 quaint idea that recordings were promotion for great performers is no less true
 today. Ask Phish.
 
 Ask also whether, as a musician, you ever believed the RIAA was actively
 protecting your interests until they got into a fight with their own customers
 and
 started using your name, your so-called well-being, as justification. And
 when the customers became skeptical they became the enemy. And to follow the
 RIAA's logic, customers are therefore the enemies of musicians. Let us ignore
 the
 fact that if you ever got compensated for your contribution, it would have
 been because your manager and lawyer (and many before) forced the labels to
 recognize your labor in financial terms.
 
 The reason why the RIAA comes off as a gang of ignorant thugs is because,
 well, how do I put this -- they are. I came into this business in an age of
 entrepreneurial integrity. The legends of the golden age of recorded music were
 still at the helm of most labels -- the Ertegun's, the Ostins, the Alperts and
 Mosses by the dozens. Now we have four monolithic (in every sense of the word)
 entities and a front organization that crows about the fact that they have
 solved their problems by leaning on a 12-year-old. Thank God that mystical
 fascination with the world of music has been stubbed out -- hopefully everyone
 will
 get the message and get over the idea that the musician actually meant for you
 to hear this.
 
 The RIAA protects musicians like the musicians union protects musicians: They
 reward hacks and penalize those outside the system. The labels are not making
 this stink out of principle. They are not interested in the rights of
 musicians who don't sell any records for them. That myth was exploded when
 Warners
 dropped Van Morrison for "lackluster sales."
 
 This stink is about a bunch of dumb-asses blaming the public for doing what
 the labels could have -- and should have -- done 10 years ago. I know because I
 told them so, each and every one individually and relentlessly: Put the music
 on a server so you can deliver on-demand services to people's homes. Seems so
 stupidly simple now.
 
 After nearly 40 years in this business I know who my friends are. I know it
 isn't the labels who lost interest in my "fringe audience" decades ago. It is
 that fringe audience who still await any recording or performance I may come up
 with despite the RIAA trying to drive some symbolic wedge between me and my
 listeners just because their ass is in a sling. Don't do me any favors.
 
 Audiences and musicians are on the same side. Musicians come from the
 audience (unlike record execs who come from the ranks of failed musicians). We
 experience together the mystical sacrament that a musical performance can
 represent.
 Additionally, we will be comfortably if not handsomely compensated by that
 audience if we can deliver a suitably affecting performance with some
 regularity.
 
 It's time to let the monolith of commoditized music collapse like the Berlin
 Wall. Musicians can make records if they feel like it, or not. Wide open pipes
 are ready to transport us, mainstream and fringe alike, into the ears of an
 eager audience who appreciates us and is more than willing to financially
 support us. Get out of the way if you can't lend a hand because ... you know the
 
 rest by heart."
 
 http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/thr/music/feature_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=
 2007230
 
 Published Oct. 22, 2003