SuperFerret
King of the Urban Jungle
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And all I said originally, is that the political aspects of the CD cover would likely deter more people that I know of than the naked woman would.
While you and I may own record players, the vast majority of todays music fans do not, and most have never even seen one. Nickleback have sold millions of cds...but if they released a vinyl it would sell several dozen copies. YOU like vinyls...but the sales facts are clear. If vinyl was even remotely profitable, there would be vinyl stores...but there arent. Most of todays music fans do not want vinyls, as stores who do carry them cant sell them to young fans. Those fans walk past the discount vinyls and grab a cd (if they buy anything at all)
I do agree that cd sales are going the way of the dodo...but thats no reason to not make them. There are thousands of situations where a band needs actual cds in order to get heard. Tons of radio outlets and review opportunities will not accept digital files. Besides...it sets the serious apart from the guys who arent serious. Labels, managers, publicists, and the press knows that any slacker at home can record MP3s...but a serious band will still go through the effort of making a professional release. The serious band is a better investment of time, attention and money.
Download cards are cool, and almost all profit. I've found though that at a live concert people like to buy something that they can get signed and keep. Download cards do not compare to cds in that regard. Also, if someone is going to spend a dollar at your merch booth, it will usually be for a sticker or buttons. If they have ten bucks to blow itll be a tshirt or something like a cd that they can get signed. I do think that download cards will continue to increase in popularity.
Boobs? SOLD.
Political nonsense? Meh.
Okay, you're right....vinyl is king in 2010...despite the fact that 99.9% of the population has no intention of ever buying a record player.
While vinyl is made (we will even probably release a picture disc or something), it is not even remotely as profitable as you think it is. It does have an awesome sound to it, which is why I still have my record player, but the fact is that it remains a tiny little market. If you went to a high school and asked every student, you MIGHT find 2 that have a record player.
I agree that download cards are a growing market...people like portability, something cds dont provide very well (and vinyl doesnt provide at all). Clearly music files are the future. I wouldnt dare argue against that.
However, the future is not now. I cant think of a single band that has given their music away until they reached superstardom. Bands like Radiohead have sold millions, made millions of dollars, and then given away free music...but how many no-name bands offer up free downloads and end up headlining acts because of it?? You still have to show that you can generate profit, not simply give your stuff away a bunch. What club promoter books a band and pays them good money based on free downloads? What label will spend millions promoting a band who's fans are only as loyal as the next free release? The labels ARE out of touch, I have quit some of the biggest labels in the world over how out of touch they are. However, it's not just the labels that havent figured out how to make money off of downloads...its everyone. If Rolling Stone could sell magazines by having a popular unsigned downloaded artist on their cover, they would...but they can't. Downloaded artists have shown no proof of selling magazines. Or concert tickets. Or beer (Budweiser stopped their unsigned artist program due to its complete and utter failure). Some day the industry will figure out how to make money off of bands that dont sell cds...but that day has not yet arrived.
First of all...all of those are good ideas.
Secondly, we WILL be doing things like that. I think the tshirt bundling idea is much better than the vinyl bundling, and it really is a great idea.
However, just because we will be using this method, does not mean that we should abandon cds altogether. Like I said, in 2010 you must have a hard copy of a cd to send out for reviews, radio play, and cd stores. Without a hard cd, we get no love from magazines or radio stations. And, the indusry and the public both still view a band with an actual cd in stores as more "legit" than a band with free downloads on Myspace. The industry IS killing itself by not adapting to the times, and I could go on and on about the mistakes being made. However, in 2010 an actual cd is still needed to take that next step.
So...we do things the old way...AND we embrace the new ways of doing things. We'll absolutely be selling download cards and ANY way that we can embrace new technology we will. We're spending GOOD money on a video that we know will never see a tv screen...because Youtube is viewed enough that we think it's worthwhile.
Besides...printing a few thousand cds isnt THAT expensive...especially considering the tens of thousands spent on production costs.
But vinyls? No, mass producing those would be a disaster...and most would end up broken on the tour bus anyway. Not enough people would buy them to offset the costs of making more than a few. I would love a picture disc though, like a limited run special offer thing.
first, i never said vinyl would be king in 2010, so lets not be ridiculous here. but fact of the matter is, over the past many years vinyl sales have been on the rise, downloading music has been on the rise, and CD sales have been on the decline. based on that, you go ahead and choose you're own adventure.
second, by bundling free mp3 downloads with other merch items, you're going to be selling a s**t ton more merch, which not only results in a greater profit, but it gets your band more visibility on the street (with shirts and such), and gets your music in more peoples hands.
third, no band using this practice has hit the mainstream yet because its still a young practice. but all the bands and labels that i know who do it are extremely happy with the results, both financially and musically. fact of the matter is, this is undeniably the current future of music. if you want to hang on to the past practices which are rapidly dwindling, have at it. but i'd recommend taking the steps to make the future today and strive to be that first band to make it big like this, setting an example and trend for others to follow. do you know how many incredible things this world would be without if people didnt do things simply because its never been done before?
First the story to explain why I'm asking...
We just shot the cd cover for the new CD, and it's going to look great. Our cover model is a well known porn star, so we definitely have the sex appeal angle covered and guys are going to love it!
However, the image itself is not really about sex appeal (even though she appears naked). The message is all about the freedom and natural state of humanity being taken away or censored. It's kind of a political statement about how the people we elect to keep our freedoms secure are the very people that take our freedoms away.That all said...we are down to a few different pictures, one more artistic...more "angelic" with her looking away from the camera and kind of playing off of the concept. The other is her giving more of a sexy look, more of an outright sex appeal type thing.
So...guys will check out the cover either way, it's a hot, seemingly naked blond...but where is the point where women feel uncomfortable or objectified?? Do any of the ladies here see advertising and dislike it due to it's sex appeal to the point where they won't buy the product?
The point of this is to communicate the message of freedom/nature being defiled and corrupted...so it isn't like we want simulated sex acts or anything...but the discussion over the pictures made me curious of what women think of advertising for guys...
Whenever I think of vinyl, I just get an image of hipster music snobs, not the mainstream public. Heretic is looking to get more mainstream appeal, vinyl is not the way to go, this isn't the '60s or '70s, it's 2010, vinyl is a dead medium with only a small percentage of the population still wanting it.
Yeah, I know.
You could call it a cop-out if you want. The people looking fr a message will find one. The people not looking for a message will just see a hot naked girl.
The funny thing is that people are trashing the message, when most album covers have messages, even the ones that are just some hot chick posing. There was a certain idea that they started with, and then they adapted it...and the vast majority of people will only see the hot chick and it never occurs to them that there was a message. Even things like Playboy pictorials will go in with a message, and then no one will get it because all most people will see are the boobs.
im glad that you'd embrace some of those ideas. and im not trying to specifically tell you what your band should do, you can do whatever you want. im just speaking generally. if you dont want to sell vinyl personally because you dont think your fans would buy them, then thats cool (but no, they wont get broken on tour). im just saying, there is a significant market for vinyl. it's never died, nor is it dying. vinyl sales have undeniably been on the rise for many years now. so has mp3 downloads. and the practice of bundling the two together have proven to be very successful.
p.s. you spent tens of thousands on production costs?
having dealt with lots of bands and labels that always release everything on vinyl, they've never complained of any problems unique to the vinyl. just my personal experience.
while it depends on the music, some of my favorite bands recorded some of their best albums in a mere days for very little. hell, the beatles first album (please please me) was recorded in one day. every single white stripes album was written and recorded in 1-3 weeks. the sonics mic'd their drums with a single mic hanging over the kit. i could go on, but at the end of the day its whatever suits you and your band. my point being, it doesnt always take time and money to get some killer recordings. i would almost argue that any band who takes more than a few weeks to record their album don't know what they're doing (but lets not start that debate, ha ha).
I don't think it's a cop out, but asking the consumer/listener to be high minded about it might be expecting too much
Vinyl is not a dead medium, it's more of a niche these days IMO
Recording quickly works for The White Stripes...it would not work for Incubus...
And it has very little to do with the band (as long as they come prepared). It's not like band is producing itself. For us, we took one day to tune the drums and get stuff the way we wanted. The next day (maybe two, I forget) was adding guitar scratch tracks for the drums to play to. Tracking the drums took two or three days. Thats one week of recording with no vocals, guitar or bass being done AT ALL. That isnt slow, its deliberate. Its making sure that you are doing the song right. Again, some forms of music work well with doing everything quickly...but for mainstream, radio rock doing things quickly will usually produce as bad product. Heck, the producer might have some ideas to restructure songs in the studio, and that alone could push you over the two week limit.
Your opinion that recording should be quick and cheap, and that vinyl is the better platform shows that you are more of an oldschool purist, and thats fine. There's nothing wrong with that. Heck, this same band did an acoustic EP and that thing was done with a quickness. It depends on what you are going for. To have a radio ready modern rock cd with quality production, its best not to just rush through and get it done.