Should Spotify payments go to artists you actually listen to?
Streaming
companies like Spotify are credited with rescuing the music industry from
piracy, but while label executives rejoice, even top-level artists are
struggling to survive
FOR musicians, the workings of the streaming economy can
be mystifying but the results are clear.
"All
I know is that the earnings from my streaming are not significant enough to
keep the wolf from the door," indie star Nadine Shah recently told a
British parliament committee investigating the issue.
Despite
being nominated for Britain's top Mercury Prize and having millions of
listeners on Spotify, "I am in a position now where I am struggling to pay
my rent," she said.
Few
young artists have her courage to speak out. Many, she said, fear retribution
by streaming platforms and major labels.
That
is not an exaggeration, said Tom Gray of the band Gomez, who founded the Broken
Records campaign last year to raise awareness on the issue.
"The
music industry has its roots in gangsterism and has never shaken that
off."
A
new model?
One
solution that is gaining traction is for streaming services to funnel each
customer's fee to the artists they actually listen to.
At
the moment, all subscription fees go in one big pot which is paid out (minus a
hefty service fee) based on which artists have the most global streams.
That
massively favours a tiny band of uber-stars and top genres, mostly pop and
R&B. The top 10 artists – Drake, Ariana Grande and the like
– take nearly 10% of the entire pay-out, according to a study by France's
Centre National de la Musique.
For
the rest, the odds of survival can verge on the absurd.
Gray
says his five-piece band would have needed 180 million Spotify streams a year
to earn £30,000 (RM170,000) each. That's significantly more than Elvis Presley
and not far off The Beatles.
'Fundamentally
wrong'
There
has been talk of German streaming service Soundcloud becoming the first to try
the so-called "user-centric model", in which subscribers' cash goes
directly to the artists they listen to.
Many
music fans would welcome the move on principle, but it is no silver bullet.
The
French study found it would redistribute 4.5 million euros a year from the top
10 artists on Spotify and Deezer, but spread it very thinly around artists
lower down.
"We
consider it essential that this debate is taking place," said Antoine
Monin, of Spotify France. "In theory, the user-centric model is
attractive, but it's clear that it will not solve everything."
Campaigners
insist it is still better than nothing. And there could be longer-term
benefits, since the study showed a significant boost to lower-profile genres
such as jazz and classical.
"That's
clear proof that their money is being taken by other music, which is just
fundamentally wrong," said Crispin Hunt, chair of Britain's Ivors Academy,
which has also launched a campaign, Keep Music Alive, to "fix
streaming".
"It's
not just the overnight effects. Once people realise there's money in jazz, that
will lead to more investment in jazz."
Major
label stranglehold?
Campaigners
say the issue must go beyond streaming companies to investigate the
stranglehold of the three major labels, Warner, Sony and Universal, who are
seeing record digital revenues.
Just
as musicians were plunged into crisis by the cancellation of live dates last
summer, Warner Music execs awarded themselves US$593 million worth of equity
when they floated their company, according to Music Weekly.
Quizzed
by British lawmakers last month, label bosses said one million streams
generates around £5,000. Under a typical contract, a label keeps £4,000, and
perhaps the entirety if the artists have not paid off their initial debts,
which can take years.
They
argued they take the risk on investing in young artists, who are under no
obligation to sign their contracts.
That
is disingenuous, said Hunt: "In most cases, it's a contract between a
bunch of 19-year-old kids and a huge global corporation. There's no symmetry in
the negotiation whatsoever."
'No
fanfare'
Hunt
said such deals made sense in the 20th century when labels manufactured and
distributed millions of physical albums, but not in the digital age.
"Even
the marketing they claim to do is mostly done by social media platforms
now," added Gray.
Meanwhile,
the price of inaction is often invisible, measured in songs that never get
recorded.
"When
a musician stops producing music... there is no fanfare or press release,"
Guy Garvey, of band Elbow, told the parliament hearings.
"You
just hear one of their songs three or four years down the line and you think,
'Oh, God, what happened to them?'"
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