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DIY or die: netlabels liberate music
By Joshua Smith
jsmit293@mscd.edu
With the introduction of MP3 technology and
peer-to-peer filesharing networks, the world has watched the
music industry drop head
first into a pool of existential angst as it searches for a new
identity in a suddenly unfamiliar world.
Regardless of where
you stand on the issue of the digital music trade, everyone can
agree that it’s here to stay. However,
it’s not all stolen music and sagging record sales, as
a new sort of record label has sprung into existence as a result:
the netlabel.
What usually surprises most people about the netlabel phenomenon
is the price you’re asked to pay for the music offered,
which is nothing.
“I like the DIY attitude,” says Shaun Blezard, creative
director of Earth Monkey Productions, a nonprofit based in the
U.K. “I was a punk rocker back in the day, and this
attitude, through cassette labels, etc., still excites me aesthetically
and politically. I had some of my own music to put out with no
money to spend, so I started Earth Monkey to do that. Then I
put out a friend’s E.P. and it sort of grew quite quickly
from there.”
This new revolution in music distribution has
offered us a world in which all you need to have your sound heard
by a global audience
is a website and hosting service. Now those with the ambition
to run a record label – but not necessarily the means – have
an avenue to promote music and artists that they believe in.
As a result, netlabels have become a launch pad for many musicians
whose work may have otherwise gone unnoticed.
“As far as I know, EMI got interested in Stockfinster’s
music after it was released on Sutemos.net,” says Walkman,
head of Lithuania’s, Sutemos, which is both a netlabel
and a music-focused e-zine. “So I guess the benefits are
pretty clear.”
For most people involved in the movement,
dollar signs and bottom lines never come into play. The simple
act of making music freely
available for anyone to hear is the start and end point of their
philosophy. As Noah Christopher of Denver’s own Seedsound
label said, “My label isn’t generating income, and
was never intended to. At one time I thought about ways to cover
server costs, but at this point I’ve decided to pay for
it out-of-pocket. It’s sort of a gift back into the community
that inspired me in the first place.”
The question arises,
though: does the fact that music will be released with little
or no chance of monetary gain drive away
musicians who might wish to make their living on their art?
“Not so far, though I’ve only been doing it for
8 months or so,” said Adrian of Sydney, Australia’s
4-4-2 Music. “But I don’t imagine the well will dry
up too quickly when you take into consideration the fact that
the
globe is opened up to connect with. I have noticed that it’s
electronic-based producers who seem more willing to release music
for free though, probably due to low production costs while maintaining
high production standards.”
While it is true that the bulk
of the music offered through netlabels is from electronic musicians,
the bedroom producer nature of
the genre has allowed a wide range of experimental music to
be offered to a vast audience. The ready availability of this
music
to anyone with an Internet connection gives curious listeners
the chance to explore music they may have never heard otherwise.
So while the birth of MP3 culture and online music trading is
sometimes thought to be damaging the music industry as a
whole,
the existence and growing popularity of netlabels shows that
a new ethic in music distribution is emerging in tandem with
the advances in technology available. |