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Playing the World From a Basement 145

Albanach writes "Singer songwriter Sandi Thom is one of a growing band of new musicians using the internet to circumvent the traditional and traditionally expensive tour circuit. Thom described her free online concerts as a Web Tour, saying 'A web tour is basically what you do when you have a lack of money and no car.' Services such as The Streaming Tank have grown to satisfy the need for broadcast services and the figures are impressive. Just 74 people watched Thom's first concert on February 24th. The concert on March 2nd drew 62,138 viewers."
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Playing the World From a Basement

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  • Re:Who? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Red Flayer ( 890720 ) on Tuesday March 07, 2006 @03:51PM (#14869095) Journal
    That kid of viewership numbers could be easily explained if she performs in the nude.

    But I expect there was some marketing of some sort for the 3/2 show, and not the 2/24 show. Even so, I think you're right.

    My question is, will she sign with a major label and perpetuate the crap we deal with from the RIAA?
  • by Shadarr ( 11622 ) on Tuesday March 07, 2006 @04:05PM (#14869221) Homepage
    I was thinking the same thing. The new business model should be to give away the recordings because they were always a loss leader anyway, and make your money on live shows and merch. I would guess that she's generating a lot more buzz than she really should, just because she's doing something "new." Once this becomes the norm, it won't be viable.
  • Playing the world? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by fak3r ( 917687 ) on Tuesday March 07, 2006 @04:13PM (#14869286) Homepage
    I thought this article was going to be a slam at the standard /. meme; a loaner living in his parents basement playing World of Warcraft all hours of the night!

    As it stands, it's a nice idea to try and spread music/art this way, but it will *never* come close to providing the atomosphere/feeling that one gets at a concert or art gallery.
  • by coffeechica ( 948145 ) on Tuesday March 07, 2006 @04:14PM (#14869305)
    I think this is an excellent opportunity for an upcoming musician/band. It gets you some publicity, people can check you out, and maybe they'll remember your name once you actually play in a club somewhere. Perhaps you could even sell your music this way - and you'd cut out the middle man and actually get more than the measly 16cents or so. It's going to be word-of-mouth, but that works often enough.
  • by LazyPhoenix ( 773952 ) on Tuesday March 07, 2006 @04:27PM (#14869397)
    Sure, the intarwebs have been great for bands -- including mine! [bluemoonshineband.com] -- but, for me, the joy, the passion, the reason for doing it is the live shows. I love touring to new towns and clubs and making new fans. People dancing, drinking, having a great time. Playing music FOR people.

    I think the advent of easier video will continue to bring great opportunities to indie musicians, but it ain't touring.
  • by soupdevil ( 587476 ) on Tuesday March 07, 2006 @04:27PM (#14869399)

    The assumption is that every artist is a live performer. While live performance is one talent, recording, remixing, songwriting, arranging, and many other musical skills don't lend themselves well to the stage. But music would be much poorer without them.

    There will always be a place for live bands. But I hope we as a society don't lose the ability to reward those who create music in other ways.
  • by Leviathant ( 558659 ) on Tuesday March 07, 2006 @04:37PM (#14869479) Homepage
    Whenever I go to see a band play, it usually smells kinda funny at the venue. Sometimes the singer gets the words wrong, or the drummer messes up on my favorite fill. I usually have to drive an hour to the nearest decent venue, spend money on parking, and all that. The songs don't sound the same as they do on the CD, and the musicians aren't nearly as attractive as they looked on the album artwork.

    That's why I like to buy DVDs of my favorite bands performing "live" in my living room. It's all the excitement of seeing my favorite band, without having to worry about the microphones not working, and especially without the bother of other people. I can pause the performance and go pee without anyone offering me illicit drugs. If you time it right, you might even get a package deal at the FYE, where you can get a discount on a concert tshirt if you buy the DVD at the same time. AND! And the concert's in 5.1! I don't think most venues are set up to play in 5.1 surround sound yet, they're still only outputting stereo.


    No one ever says, Dude, you remember watching that concert at Matt's place in 2002? That was amazing!

  • by hackstraw ( 262471 ) * on Tuesday March 07, 2006 @04:42PM (#14869536)
    The new business model should be to give away the recordings because they were always a loss leader anyway, and make your money on live shows and merch.

    That is not the new business model, its the only one.

    It kills me that someone actually thinks that one can be a millionaire for life because they spend a couple of weeks in a recording studio. Granted, some people do. Sting reportedly makes $2,000 a day off of "Every breath you take". Who pays this is beyond me. But still, that is "only" 0.75 mil a year for one of the most popular songs ever recorded. The lottery is a much better investment for those that don't want to work and have cash.

  • Re:Who? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Jason Earl ( 1894 ) on Tuesday March 07, 2006 @04:58PM (#14869659) Homepage Journal

    My question is, will she sign with a major label and perpetuate the crap we deal with from the RIAA?

    She probably will, but that's just because the RIAA still has more marketing muscle than anyone else. However, there is no question that the balance of power is shifting in favor of the artists. The primary reason that the RIAA is so powerful is that historically the RIAA controlled the primary means of marketing music. Unless you signed a deal with a major record label you couldn't get your song played on the radio, you couldn't get yourself professionally recorded, your CDs didn't end up in record stores, and you couldn't play the larger venues.

    These days creating, publishing, and distributing your own CDs is ridiculously simple, and it is possible to play in front of thousands of fans over the Internet. If the record labels continue to pretend that they have all of the leverage then we will undoubtedly see a shift towards more popular bands that choose to remain self-produced.

  • by metlin ( 258108 ) * on Tuesday March 07, 2006 @06:07PM (#14870205) Journal
    I'm a resident of real life.

    Very different from a make-believe world, we meet together every weekend and play music, build things, socialize etc etc. Even in our real worlld, we own the copyrights to the things we create.

    For example, just last week, we built a bed for my apartment which I own. All of this has led to some really creative and clever objects, such as lego beer dispensers.

    Anyway, more to the point, music has really taken hold in our real lives. Me and my friends go to concerts, and we even play in a local band! There are several bars (Hofbrauhaus and Beer Sellar are two I can think of) where real musicians play in real bars with real beer and real women with real boobs. Okay, maybe not the last one. Sadly, not all of us are a cultured people, but it has however taught us such things as tolerance. For those of us do like tolerance, we go to these things called musicals, orchestras and theatre plays.

    I also know of these music festivals like the Celtic and Renaissance music festivals that have been happening for a couple of hundred years, where once again you get to meet real *shudder* people. Those that like this can actually go to the websites (virtual, virtual!) and look up cool stuff.

    More important to the point, doing this has taught me and my friends some good social skills, gotten us free beer and live music - and sex.

    But go ahead, though. I'm sure a virtual life is infinitely more enjoyable. I mean, we sure as hell can't do all that stuff in real life, right? Right?

All seems condemned in the long run to approximate a state akin to Gaussian noise. -- James Martin

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