What Is Going on Here?
May 1, 2003 12:00 PM, Tom Kenny Editor George Petersen Editorial Director
Most Popular
advertisement
Polls
TalkBack
Plug-ins are in use almost every day in any music production. What's your go-to plug-in? What's the oddest use you've put a plug-in into effect? E-mail the staff at mixeditorial@mixonline.com.
What have you done to my Mix? Where's the 342-input console on the cover? Well, a funny thing happened on the way to our May issue: The music industry came under attack.
Beginning in late January, a deluge of consumer press — from Wired to U.S. News & World Report to Business Week to The New York Times — predicted the death of the music industry. The arguments all seemed to be variations on a tired theme: CD sales were down, while CD burning was up. File sharing is wired, physical media is tired. The kids have no respect, the labels are dinosaurs. The detractors were many. The solutions offered were few. Then the talk stopped. The media moved on to the next “story of the month.”
Through it all, the one angle the press missed was that the music industry does not exist in a vacuum. Look around today: What industry isn't suffering? What president or CEO hasn't gone through consolidation or reorganization? What company isn't looking for new and inventive ways to make money? Yes, the music industry — as represented by the Big Five — suffered a down-year. And, yes, the pressures from file sharing and new means of distribution have smashed the model that existed for so many years. But the music industry is far from dead.
We in professional audio are both integral to and intertwined with the music industry at large. While tucked away in studios creating and producing — or behind a FOH or monitor board — we are at the same time beholden to consumer behavior. But we are also aligned with the computer industry, the telecom industry, the live event industry, the installed sound industry; if it involves entertainment, we are in the mix. This makes it especially hard to evaluate lags in equipment sales, drooping tour schedules or stagnant studio rates. The challenges facing our industry are far more varied than responding to a “crisis” in the music business. But we thought we'd start there.
So, rather than your usual collection of profiles, projects and announcements, we've devoted nearly an entire issue of Mix to the single question: What can save the music industry? We don't pretend to have all of the answers, and in the following pages, you might wind up with more questions than you came in with. This is a good thing: Everyone involved — whether in manufacturing or A&R, musician or engineer — has a vested interest in these issues. The mutation that is taking place right now in the music industry is very real, and it's still in its infancy.
No piece of technology, no breakthrough album from a Seattle-like scene and certainly no big label contract is going to save the industry. But some 19-year-old kid might come along and really shake it up. Or some portable download payment scheme might bring the moolah — in $0.05, $0.50 or $0.99 waves — rolling in. Who can tell in 2003 what the industry will look like in 2004? The landscape is changing even as you read this.
So peruse our Special Report, and please take some time to tell us what you think will save the music industry. The time to think creatively is now.
Acceptable Use Policy blog comments powered by Disqus
Mix Books
Modern Recording and Mixing
This 2-DVD set will show you how the best in the music industry set up a studio to make world-class records. Regardless of what gear you are using, the information you'll find here will allow you to take advantage of decades of expert knowledge. Order now $39.95
Mastering Cubase 4
Electronic Musician magazine and Thomson Course Technology PTR have joined forces again to create the second volume in their Personal Studio Series, Mastering Steinberg's Cubase(tm). Edited and produced by the staff of Electronic Musician, this special issue is not only a must-read for users of Cubase(tm) software, but it also delivers essential information for anyone recording/producing music in a personal-studio. Order now $12.95
Modern Recording and Mixing
This 2-DVD set will show you how the best in the music industry set up a studio to make world-class records. Regardless of what gear you are using, the information you'll find here will allow you to take advantage of decades of expert knowledge. Order now $39.95
Mastering Cubase 4
Electronic Musician magazine and Thomson Course Technology PTR have joined forces again to create the second volume in their Personal Studio Series, Mastering Steinberg's Cubase(tm). Edited and produced by the staff of Electronic Musician, this special issue is not only a must-read for users of Cubase(tm) software, but it also delivers essential information for anyone recording/producing music in a personal-studio. Order now $12.95
Newsletters
MixLine
Delivered straight to your inbox every other week, MixLine takes you straight into the studio, with new product announcements, industry news, upcoming events, recent recording/post projects and much more. Click here to read the latest edition; sign up here.
MixLine Live
Delivered straight to your inbox every other week, MixLine Live takes you on the road with today's hottest tours, new sound reinforcement professional products, recent installs, industry news and much more. Click here to read the latest edition; sign up here.
MixLine
Delivered straight to your inbox every other week, MixLine takes you straight into the studio, with new product announcements, industry news, upcoming events, recent recording/post projects and much more. Click here to read the latest edition; sign up here.
MixLine Live
Delivered straight to your inbox every other week, MixLine Live takes you on the road with today's hottest tours, new sound reinforcement professional products, recent installs, industry news and much more. Click here to read the latest edition; sign up here.






NAMM 2011: Fairlight CMI
State of NAMM 2011