Crowd-Sourcing &
The Music Industry By Joey
Odorisio
Crowd-sourcing
has
become an increasingly popular option in
the music industry. Whether its artists
forging a closer connection with their
fan base, or radio stations going above
and beyond the traditional request
lines, the advent of social media and
the Internet have made fan connectivity
a must. Websites such as Kickstarter
and Pledge Music and
radio services like Jelli
are being used to bring music fans into
the fold in unique ways.
Amanda
Palmer
Crowd-sourcing
is traditionally thought of as the
outsourcing of tasks to a larger group.
In the music world, this concept has
recently been applied by artists whose
biggest fans have contributed
financially or artistically to their
newest projects. Musicians Ben
Folds and Amanda
Palmer made their names via
the major labels, but for their latest
albums, both have used crowd-sourcing
websites to help fund the releases,
albeit in different ways.
Chicago
radio veteran James VanOsdol
used Kickstarter to fund his upcoming
book about the history of Chicago Modern
Rocker Q101. VanOsdol
was a longtime DJ at the station (which
famously flipped formats in 2011 after
being sold to Merlin Media)
and currently hosts a podcast as part of
the Steve Dahl Network.
Additionally, user-controlled
crowd-sourcing music services such as Jelli
(which we spotlighted in a 2010 eQB feature)
have continued to build its footprint at
radio stations around the country.
Amanda
Palmer released two studio albums as one
half of the “Cabaret Punk” duo The
Dresden
Dolls, and made headlines
earlier this year by raising almost $1.2
million on Kickstarter for her new solo
record Theatre Is Evil. Palmer
has always been hands-on with her fan
base, famously signing autographs for
hours after concerts and staying in
constant contact via Twitter.
After finishing the recording of Theatre
Is
Evil, Palmer used Kickstarter to
offer a wide variety of pre-order
options to her devoted fans, ranging
from just a $1 for a digital download to
high-end private concerts.
After
releasing her first solo album in 2008
with a major label, Palmer proceeded to
research the marketplace to get a feel
for how things were developing and
decided to go on her own. She says that
move gave her the freedom to work more
directly with her fans. Palmer said, “I
could have signed with another label or
I could try going direct to fans. I
spent a good year looking around and
watching the evolving landscape and
doing little test runs with the fan base
to see if I was capable of running my
own business.” These test runs included
an EP of Radiohead
covers released only digitally and on
vinyl, as well as a few other
smaller-scale records, as a way of trial
and error in selling directly to her
fans.
She
says the Radiohead covers record “was a
lot more strategic than people thought.
I wanted to put out a project that was
going to be fun and cool and that I
could take risks with, but if it failed,
it wasn’t gonna break my heart. I didn’t
do a publicity campaign, market it or
put it in the stores. I literally did
nothing. I sent an email to my mailing
list and posted about it on my blog. I
stood back and just wanted to know what
my fans would do, if they were willing
to simply throw their credit card into
my PayPal.” Palmer
says there was an immediate reaction,
then sales dropped off, but “mostly I
was measuring my fan base and seeing who
was out there.”
Michael
Dougherty
Jelli
CEO Michael Dougherty
says that people who aren’t familiar
with the concept of crowd-sourcing
“shouldn’t underestimate the desire of
people to contribute to things they care
about. [This desire] can lead to also
wanting to make an imprint in some way
and also feeling like they’re part of a
community around them.” He continues,
“In the context of radio, it pulls
people together around a radio station
where they feel like they can contribute
to something they care about and a brand
they connect with. They feel part of a
community they helped shape. I think
that’s a super powerful component of
crowd-sourcing.”
Dougherty
notes that radio listeners making
requests and forming a community around
their local stations is nothing new, but
“by providing the ability for the
listeners to participate, it strengthens
that bond with the brand and amplifies
the notion of participating and being
part of something. I think that’s really
strong. It really enhances that notion
of community with the radio station.”
Ben Folds
Five
Piano Rock group Ben Folds Five
reunited in 2008 for a one-off charity
show, but earlier this year the trio of
Folds, Robert Sledge
and Darren Jessee
announced they would be releasing their
first album since 1999, The Sound
Of The Life Of The Mind. The band
used Pledge Music to offer pre-orders
directly to their fans, and like Palmer,
also sold a variety of different
packages and options.
Folds
emphasizes that “We don’t know what the
f*** we’re doing. The whole landscape is
evolving and I’m not particularly
interested in being a revolutionary
about this, to tell you the truth. The
industry’s changing and you have to find
a way to do things that suit you at that
moment. You have to look at how you can
take advantage of the chaos. Right now
for us, the way we can take advantage of
the chaos is that we didn’t really want
to have a plan. We wanted to go into the
studio and not have to commit to
finishing the record, or releasing the
record on any kind of schedule or even
at all. And the only way to do that is
to pay for it ourselves.”
“The
idea came up [that] we could pay for
this by pre-selling it and this
crowd-sourcing method seems to be good.
Plus crowd-sourcing was going to get a
certain amount of press, because it’s
new. So it generated its own interest
while involving fans.”
Folds
takes a more practical approach to
crowd-sourcing, saying. “I don’t think
it’s that different. Crowd-sourcing is
still part of a system that pretty much
by design remains fairly stable, which
is: You have to pay for a record, you
have to manufacture it and you have to
get it into people’s hands, then you
have to pay for more records. Then you
have to pay for promotion in order to
get it into people’s hands again. What
people misunderstand about Kickstarter
(and the name of Kickstarter is
brilliant) is that it’s a kick start,
that’s it. It’s not a record company.
It’s not taking the place of the record
companies. We started our own record
company (ImAVeePee)
after we did the pledge campaign, and
now we have distribution with Sony
so we’re in bed with Sony, we’re not
revolutionary. We’re just doing it a
little bit differently because that’s
what the times call for.”
Many
Kickstarter users offer different bonus
options and content for larger pledges
and purposes. Palmer sold vinyl
packages, autographed art books, tickets
to special Kickstarter-only events and
more. Ben Folds Five also sold vinyl
records, along with autographed lyrics
sheets, t-shirts and even offered to
re-record the vocals to their single “Do
It Anyway” with lyrics about the
pledger.
Folds
says, “We priced it up really high, and
this may sound like weird logic, but
I’ve seen über-fans who are college
age, shell out a thousand dollars for
something that I wish they wouldn’t
because they don’t have the money. I
made this weird, subjective decision to
price that one up enough where only
established people could afford it,
because I was going to be really not
happy if some college kid had spent a
thousand dollars of the money they
didn’t have in order to have their name
in a song. We tried to actually
out-price, over price that [option]. I
almost went to $3,000 simply because
that would assure that the
college kid who didn’t have the money
would be paying that amount for it. As
it turns out, it was couples and they’re
older and more established, they can
make that decision. They have the money
and so it’s okay.”
James
VanOsdol
For
the funding of his book, Smells
Like Rock Radio: The Oral History Of
Q101, James VanOsdol raided his
collection of rare CDs and autographed
memorabilia. He also offered “two
different pledge levels where if people
wanted to write a 250 or 500 word essay
about Q101, for a certain dollar amount
they could be writers in this book,
which to me was the perfect way to play
up the whole nature of the community
supporting this project concept. So
there’s an entire section in the back of
the book of what are essentially
listener essays.”
Palmer
says that “the hidden story of my
Kickstarter that nobody’s picking up on”
is a series of fan-organized house
parties she sold. She did a test run of
house shows in Australia last year,
where fans would pay to have her play a
backyard BBQ the day after she played a
theater gig. “I’m doing 40 shows next
year for $5,000 each that were organized
and promoted by my fans. In each city,
one fan stepped up and said, ‘I’m gonna
be the leader for this show, I’m gonna
get 50 people to split the cost and
we’re all gonna meet at my house.’ They
put a $5,000 check directly in my bank
account. None of that money is going to
promoters, agents, security, insurance,
rental fees… With a $5,000 guarantee to
play a show in any city, I would
probably be taking home $500. But this
way I’m taking home all of the money
directly. They are paying to hang out
with me, granted in a really stripped
down environment. There is no band, no
lightshow, but it’s really fun. It’s
really possible thanks to the Internet.
It wouldn’t have been possible for these
specific people to find each other 10
years ago.”
Jelli’s
Dougherty agrees, noting that at
Dance/CHR KYLI, it’s a
24/7 Jelli-branded station in Las Vegas,
“an amazing community” formed around a
station “that was really started from
scratch, didn’t have a brand and was a
different format altogether before we
launched.” Now it has “pulled together a
bunch of people with like-minded
interests around the music and you act
as their home station. In fact, they
probably view this as more than a
station, they view it as a community,
and [the listeners] started to develop
some community group pages on Facebook
on their own. They created a group
called ‘The Jelli Fam’ and it was a way
they could connect with each other on
Facebook and go out together. They
started having bowling nights. You give
people a chance for something they like
and to connect with other people
associated with it and some really cool
things can start happening.”
Folds
says that “The Pledge Music
crowd-sourcing gives you the direct
connection with the fans that are the
closest. In our case they really are
the closest because we didn’t go to the
press with this. We announced everything
we were doing over my Twitter at
midnight, and so if you found us and you
supported the record through a pledge
you’re pretty much our closest friend. I
know some big fans who didn’t know we’re
putting out a record yet. We didn’t go
full-tilt with this.”
VanOsdol
says crowd-sourcing was the only way he
could publish his book about Q101.
“There’s a lot of expense, things people
don’t even consider, from publishing and
designing the book, to having it
professionally edited and formatted.
There’s so much involved…the legal
concerns, having an attorney to give it
the once over. There’s a lot of expense
that I just couldn’t fund so in order to
do it and do it right, I needed to turn
to crowd-sourcing. There is a legitimate
community out there that can support a
project and are hungry for a project,
and it is nice to have them as
investors.”
Folds
agrees that crowd-sourcing is helping to
fund the costs involved in creating art.
He says that artists are using
crowd-sourcing to help fund
higher-caliber packaging and art
partially because the record labels are
not paying for it anymore. He said,
“There is a development of the music
business that people haven’t really
considered and don’t know about: as the
record labels have stopped being able to
take risks they used to take, the
artists are taking those on. So artists
have been funding their own records, and
have been funding their artwork and
tours. If you get nice packaging with
your vinyl, that came right out of the
pocket of the artist. They didn’t make
their money back; no one made their
money. If you buy a SufjanStevens record with
gorgeous packaging and the vinyl is
gorgeous, I can tell you who paid for
that: Mr. Stevens paid for that, and not
the label.”
He
continues, “Nowadays, what’s happening
is the artist is now sharing that burden
with their fans, who are willing to pay
because they want to know that their
artists made a new record and they can
be in on it. So, really kind of what’s
happening is that the fans and the
artists are getting together sharing
this responsibility and everyone gets
something for it.”
Despite
the headlines about raising over a
million dollars via Kickstarter, Palmer
says the money is essentially all gone.
She says if she’d made her album a
digital-only release, not marketed it
and played a short stripped down tour,
she could’ve kept the money. “But I
wouldn’t have made $1.2 million dollars
if all I was offering people was a
digital download of a solo piano record.
I really wanted to offer people
something huge and special that was
going to take a lot of time and energy.
So I’ve spent a lot of time working on
the artwork, the stage show and the
videos. The whole thing has been a huge,
vast undertaking but my fan base knows
me and they know where my priorities
are. And I think they’ve learned that
the energy they put into me they’re
always gonna get back.”
She
continues, “The money is already spent
or earmarked on marketing and promoting
the record and going to radio and really
beautiful videos. We’ve made four
relatively high budget short film videos
that cost a lot of money to make. We’re
building a complicated and unique stage
show, with lights and a crew. All of
that costs money so that’s what all of
that budget has gone in to.” (In May,
Palmer blogged an estimated breakdown of
how the Kickstarter money would be
spent, which you can find here.
VanOsdol
says the experience has taught him that
“everything we’d once held to be true
about physical media is f***ed. There is
a means and a way for people to create
art without having to go through the
meat grinders of record companies and
traditional publishers. People can do
things and do them right completely
independent and it’s a really inspiring
realization.”