Deadlines/Brief

Music videos are so 80s/90s, right? They belong with the era when MTV screened wall-to-wall vids instead of 'reality' TV? Try telling that to the millions who bought Gangnam Style; were they really simply loving the music? 1.6bn (and still climbing) have viewed the video on YT, not to mention the many re-makes (school eg, eg2), viral ads + celeb link-ups (even political protest in Seoul) - and it doesn't matter how legit it is, this nightmare for daydream Beliebers is making a lot of money, even from the parodies + dislikes. All this for a simple dance track that wouldn't have sounded out of place in 1990 ... but had a fun vid. This meme itself was soon displaced by the Harlem Shake. Music vids even cause diseases it seems!
This blog explores every aspect of this most postmodern of media formats, including other print-based promo tools used by the industry, its fast-changing nature, + how fans/audiences create/interact. Posts are primarily written with Media students/educators in mind. Please acknowledge the blog author if using any resources from this blog - Mr Dave Burrowes

Showing posts with label back catalogue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label back catalogue. Show all posts

Tuesday, 28 November 2017

VINYL hits 4m in UK Sainsburys launch label Metallica Master Retromania

This is how Sainsbury's announced the launch
Sainsbury’s customers can now pick up some exclusive, freshly pressed vinyl alongside their freshly pressed fruit juices. (Sainsbury's,1st Nov. 2017)

Sadly the vinyl boom, boosted by nostalgia* from the deaths of the likes of Prince and Bowie, whose final album Blackstar was a vinyl bestseller, is led this year by the tragic return from early retirement of Ed Sheeran.

Further evidence of how mainstream this vinyl resurgence is, a major Xmas pressie source, the Gallagher brothers solo records and Sergeant Peppers are joined as major sellers by ... supermarket Sainsbury's own label.

Grab a loaf, milk and a compilation record with some Van der Graaf Generator. Tremendous. Though the only real national music store chain left, HMV, remains the dominant force in vinyl sales for now.

See Guardian: Ed Sheeran and Gallagher brothers lead vinyl revival at HMV. and Sainsbury's announcement.

Here's a very useful video suggested by Richard D:
... 

*THEORY TIP + A SPOTof INDUSTRY ANALYSIS: 
Simon Reynolds wrote an interesting book, Retromania, about the profound change in the cultural position of music and how its consumed brought about by digitisation. Thanks to YouTube especially, older acts never actually fade away. Pop was always considered ephemeral: pop acts would have their year or so of popularity then fade from the limelight and memory as their teen/tween fanbase got older and bored.
Now we can easily access older acts material, and record labels see back catalogue as a key driver of revenue. Spotify is full of special editions, and even re-recordings (eg Def Leppard's Hysteria), which enable a band to regain control of revenue streams rather than the record label they were signed to for the original album.

The Smiths, The Sex Pistols and Metallica are but 3 recent examples of bands re-releasing iconic albums with lots of studio outtakes, demos etc, sold in multiple packages (with vinyl options in all 3 of these examples). The Master of Puppets boxset was gifted by the Danish PM to his Indonesian equivalent, and you can also treat yourself to the very dull featuring singer James Hetfield's hands, part of the publicity and marketing campaign that kicked in months before the release date.

Saturday, 9 April 2016

MARKETING REISSUES Depeche Mode remaster videos


I'm sure they've released a NEW video for a 1985 single too - but I can't find it.

Indisputably, in another sign of how YouTube is becoming key to monetising back catalogue, there have been REMASTERED videos issued through Warner-EMI...


Saturday, 19 October 2013

CrowdFunding: Universal muscles in for vinyl reissues

Universal appeal? Ah, never mind
Crowdfunding is generally seen as one of the key means by which digitisation offers a democratisation of media production, enabling producers at any level to appeal directly to fans or investors (the line is often blurred) for funding for new projects, which might be a new game, album, film, app, etc.

I've blogged on this before, with many big-name artists and film-makers turning to this model for funding, generally offering promotional packages rather than financial returns for this funding - signed copies, chance to appear as an extra, extra tracks, deluxe packaging, etc.

So much for levelling the ground for the little guy: news comes of Universal's (rather smart to be fair) wheeze to take any risk out of the recent trend of re-releasing albums on vinyl, reflecting the steep increase* in vinyl sales (and the long tail theory). So, instead of taking a punt on which album to expensively re-press on vinyl, Universal instead put it to fans: if enough of you provide advance funding, we'll do it - advance publicity and sales in one go, and premium pricing to boot. Cynical, but smart.

*Vinyl sales doubled from 2012 to 2013, with David Bowie and Daft Punk releases amongst those seeing sales of the format soar.
 
Here's Sean Michaels on the story:

Wednesday, 28 August 2013

Director's Cut/Anniversary as promo tool: Nirvana

Picked this up from the Mojo website: Nirvana are issuing the 'director's cut' of Heart Shaped Box, borrowing a standard tool from the film toolkit to promote back catalogue sales:
An extended version of the Anton Corbijn-directed video for Nirvana’s Heart-Shaped Box has appeared online ahead of the release of the 20th Anniversary edition of In Utero (due out on September 24).
We’ve called on MOJO’s forensic unit to compare this Director’s Cut with the original film. Their analysis suggests three key areas where this new version differs, namely, more appearances from the small girl in the robe, more of the fleshy-body-suit woman and more Nirvana at their visceral best. 
[source: http://www.mojo4music.com/5909/nirvana-heart-shaped-box-directors-cut/]

The magazine is running its own tie-in, using the 20th anniversary of its release as a hook too:
And if that’s not enough of a Nirvana rarity for you, you can always check out the band’s original 1988 recording contract with Sub Pop. As the label says, “Six hundred bucks well spent. Not that we had it at the time.”
And don’t forget – you can read Jon Savage’s mammoth 1993 interview with Kurt Cobain in the current issue of MOJO magazine – on sale now. 
[ibid.]

THE POINT IS...
Good example of another strategy used by record co's/bands to promote back catalogue, but also a good idea for you to consider making a vid for a track released 10/20/25 (etc) years ago, as there is likely to be increased media attention and possibly a re-release/re-packaging/compilation to go with it.
You can look for inspiration by viewing past charts (eg at http://www.officialcharts.com/archive/music/). Another great site, which features all the vids (with iTunes purchase links) for top 20s of each year in the 70s/80s/90s (US charts) is http://www.songs-old.com/Top-20-Songs-Billboard-Charts.html.

Here's the vid cited:

Tuesday, 17 July 2012

Def Leppard rerecord entire back catalogue?

Here's a very relevant headline from the Guardian's music industry section:
Get rocked, Universal! Def Leppard plan to rerecord their back catalogue
Sheffield rockers are so angry with their label over royalties issues that they plan to replace their old recordings with copies
The article sets out their plan to rerecord ... for which they would want fresh videos?!
Another example of the real-world industry relevance of making new music videos for back-catalogue music.

Monday, 5 March 2012

DIGITISATION: Kurt Cobain resurrected

2 egs of how Nirvana continue to be virally marketed (even if unintentionally), and continue to find new audiences..
Kurt Cobain the iPad graphic novel
Cobain's vocal track, isolated from the music, has gone viral (have a listen below, 1 of 4 embedded with the article, its quite spooky, and really quite brilliant)
Your music vids are intended to be means of keeping interest alive in and generating new sales of existing tracks - all part of the upside of digitisation which the record co's seem to largely ignore while they incessantly moan about piracy

Monday, 20 February 2012

AUD Rock's for 40+ folk?!

With key 60s icons still singing their songs of youth and youthful rebellion but hitting their 70s, and even punk icons like the Pistols' Johnny Rotten at 56 (and a band Paul McCartney picks out as representing today's kids, the Foo Fighters, having an average age of 43.6), John Harris puts forward the argument on the Guardian Music blog that rock is for the over-40's! He backs this up by pointing to the now quarter-century growing dominance of hip-hop and associated forms; none of the current top 40 singles are rock. He also writes of switching from NME to Mojo for his rock news, the latter now overtaking Q (itself centred on a mature, sophisticated audience) as the UK's biggest selling music mag.

What do you think? Is rock music no longer 'for the kids'?!

Read the full article here; and see links list on nostalgia in music, plus various posts (THEORY TIP: see Simon Reynolds' book...)

Monday, 21 November 2011

DIGIPAKS: all the previous posts gathered together

I'VE GATHERED TOGETHER VARIOUS PREVIOUS POSTS ON DIGIPAKS BELOW:
2012
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2012/02/photoshop-andy-warhol-effect.html
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2012/02/digipakmag-ad-layering-is-key.html
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2012/01/digipaks-further-pointers-on.html 
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2012/01/digipak-vinyl-style-cds.html 
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2011/11/digipaks-scanned-examples.html 
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2011/03/digipaks-many-missing-small-details.html 
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2012/01/marketing-use-dates-to-create-special.html
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2010/12/contacting-labels-etc.html


2011
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2011/03/eg-of-re-digipackaging-old-albums-tour.html
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2011/10/cdmag-ad-editionalising.html
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2011/10/digipak-concept-judas-priest-eg.html
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2011/01/digipak-templates.html
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2011/01/digipak-examples.html  - containing link to: http://getaheadocrmedia.blogspot.com/2010/10/what-does-digipack-look-like.html and http://getaheadocrmedia.blogspot.com/2010/09/clarification-6-digipak.html
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2011/11/audience-posthumous-releases.html
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2011/11/digipaks-scanned-examples.html
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2011/11/audience-posthumous-releases.html 
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2011/11/new-mediaaud-queen-remix-comp.html - Eg of band using own website to promote album but also involve fans in it; have you thought about a poll (set a swift deadline so you get final results in time), eg on which of 3 tracks to include as closing track on CD? (you can think of other ideas I'm sure, eg which of the 2 versions do you prefer [having linked to drafts])

http://musividz.blogspot.com/2011/10/we-looked-at-how-joydiv-group-used.html - QR code linking strands of package? HINT: easy + v useful for Q3/Q4 marks! 

http://musividz.blogspot.com/2011/03/album-as-bonus-with-gig-ticket.html 
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2011/04/covergence-albums-via-magazine-papers.html 
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2011/03/gorillaz-download-album-to-get-physical.html  
http://musividz.blogspot.com/2011/03/mp3-killed-album.html 



See also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digipak
http://stbedes.durham.sch.uk/blogs/04watsonc/files/2011/02/digipack-madonna.jpg
http://www.thethingswemake.co.uk/graphics_hyper.htm
http://www.alibaba.com/product-gs/200068349/printed_CD_digipack_with_cd_tray/showimage.html
http://www.discpack.co.uk/creative_disc_packaging.shtml
http://digipack.eu/templates/
http://digipack.eu/featured/cd-digipack-with-booklet/ (LP-style 'tunnel' panel, which allows for a booklet)
http://www.coverdude.com/cd-covers/6981-moonstone-project-hidden-in-time-2008-digipak.html

Past blogs are also a rich seam of useful material, and should help you see what you need to be doing, eg:
(from Jonny Hughes' 2011 Joy Division blog) What is a Digipak CD?; Deconstruction of a Digipak CD; Ancillary Draft: Digipak; Ancillary Draft: Digipak 2; Vodcast: More on the Digipak; Original Photographs for Digipak; Final Digipak Template; Evaluation Q2 - Combination of Products; Final Digipak
(from Beth Cooper's Gorillaz blog) Digipak Design; Gorillaz Album Art; DigiPak; WeWow on the Music Industry & DigiPaks)
(from Megan Claydon's Backstreet Boys blog) Digipak; Q2) How effective is the combination of your main ...; Digipak- Second draft of images; Gaining audience feedback on Digipak; (EB & MC) Our photo draft for the front and back o...; Photographs for Digipak and Advert; Possible photos for our Digipak; Our idea for the Digi-pak; Digi-paks)

Eg of re-[digi]packaging old albums + tour: SUEDE

90s Britpoppers Suede provide a useful eg of bands reissuing repackaged versions of their albums, with bonus DVDs; this is part of the article from pitchfork.com; the full article gives complete CD/DVD listing. Suede are touring to support this release, playing a classic album each night, which links into your digipak ads in most cases...

Suede Reissue Details Revealed

Suede Reissue Details Revealed
As previously reported, reunited Britpop leading lights Suede will release expanded editions of their five studio albums in May and June, via Demon Records. Each of the records has been remastered and expanded to include B-sides, demos, and previously unreleased songs, as well booklets and bonus DVDs featuring recent interviews with the band members and more. The entire band, including once-estranged original guitarist Bernard Butler, worked on the reissue project.
The expanded edition of the band's 1993 self-titled debut is due May 30, with 1994's Dog Man Star following June 6, 1996's Coming Up out June 13, 1999's Head Music arriving June 20, and 2002's A New Morning due June 22. On Record Store Day, April 16, Suede will release a limited edition single featuring demo versions of their first single, 1992's "The Drowne

Tuesday, 1 November 2011

AUDIENCE: Posthumous releases

Rap artists such as 2Pac and Biggie Smalls are 2 striking examples of growing, but already long-established trend for the music industry to release 'new' material after a singer/artist's death; Elvis' estate continues to mushroom with endless 'new' releases and compilations 34 years after his death, while Bob Marley and Jim Morrison continue to successfully sell truckloads of albums. Then we have the anniversary re-packaging of Nirvana's Nevermind which has been all over the media in October 2011.

Back catalogue is big business, but so is creating new albums from demos and rehearsal material, which has happened with The Beatles and Jimi Hendrix to take two examples.
These are just my own examples; read more in the article below from http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/oct/31/amy-winehouse-posthumous-album

Bottom line: the artists aren't available for filming any new video material any more than they are for your productions, another useful point to raise to argue the case that yours is a realistic, 'real-world' production.


Amy Winehouse is the latest to give us songs from beyond the grave

The secret of posthumous albums is to allow the departed artist some dignity – but unfortunately that doesn't always happen
  • Amy Winehousendon
    Amy Winehouse … recent songs have been padded out with covers and alternate takes.

    The mystery of how much music Amy Winehouse managed to record in the five years between Back to Black and her untimely death looks to have been solved by the tracklisting of her "new" album Lioness. A handful of recent songs have been padded out with cover versions, alternate takes and unreleased songs stretching back to 2002. Of necessity it's a thing of threads and patches.

Tuesday, 15 March 2011

Eg of re-[digi]packaging old albums + tour: SUEDE

90s Britpoppers Suede provide a useful eg of bands reissuing repackaged versions of their albums, with bonus DVDs; this is part of the article from pitchfork.com; the full article gives complete CD/DVD listing. Suede are touring to support this release, playing a classic album each night, which links into your digipak ads in most cases...

Suede Reissue Details Revealed

Suede Reissue Details Revealed
As previously reported, reunited Britpop leading lights Suede will release expanded editions of their five studio albums in May and June, via Demon Records. Each of the records has been remastered and expanded to include B-sides, demos, and previously unreleased songs, as well booklets and bonus DVDs featuring recent interviews with the band members and more. The entire band, including once-estranged original guitarist Bernard Butler, worked on the reissue project.
The expanded edition of the band's 1993 self-titled debut is due May 30, with 1994's Dog Man Star following June 6, 1996's Coming Up out June 13, 1999's Head Music arriving June 20, and 2002's A New Morning due June 22. On Record Store Day, April 16, Suede will release a limited edition single featuring demo versions of their first single, 1992's "The Drowners" b/w "To the Birds". In addition, The Best of Suede, which came out last year in the UK, will be released digitally in the U.S. on March 22.
Over the next few months, the band will also play shows in Europe, North America, and Asia, including a set at Coachella and a couple of three-night stands where they'll play a classic album in full each night. Below, we've got the tracklists for each of the reissues, as well as the band's tour dates and their video for "The Drowners".

Tuesday, 4 January 2011

Rock dinosaur finally go digital

With The Beatles marking their belated permission to market their back catalogue digitally with a publicity blitz taking in The X Factor and a series of mini-vids released on YouTube (featuring clips of tracks only), the ultimate rock dinosaurs, Pink Floyd have now followed suit ... not long after winning a court case to prevent their label, EMI, allowing online consumers to cherry-pick individual tracks. They're now generously going to allow the great unwashed to download individual tracks, instead of being forced to buy entire albums. A few more 10s of £millions for the pension pots then
See http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/jan/04/pink-floyd-emi-single-digital-downloads

Thursday, 25 November 2010

Vids for older tracks: Beatles

The Beatles have provided the perfect example of how record companies are looking to wring sales out of their back catalogue (cf. the long tail theory). They timed the week the X Factor had a Beatles theme to coincide with their finally allowing iTunes to release their back catalogue - but only at a higher price than anyone else. They've released a series of teaser vids for many of these, one eg below:



See also http://new.music.yahoo.com/blogs/mojo/14873/beatles-not-for-sale/