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Making a Scene Presents - The Artist-Owned Ecosystem: Replacing the Label, Distributor, and Platform
It usually happens after the show.
Not onstage. Not in the comments. Not when the playlist adds hit. It happens when the room is half empty, the drummer is packing hardware, somebody is folding shirts at the merch table, and the artist is looking at a phone full of “engagement” that does not pay tomorrow’s hotel bill. That is the moment the old music business starts to look less like a dream and more like a machine built to turn artist momentum into platform traffic, label leverage, and somebody else’s data.
For years, the industry sold one big fantasy. Get signed. Get distributed. Get promoted. Get placed in front of the audience. Then the money will come. But the modern version of that deal has a nasty twist. Even when artists do get attention, they often do not get ownership. The fan relationship lives on someone else’s platform. The audience data sits in someone else’s dashboard. The checkout happens inside someone else’s system. The artist becomes the fuel, while the infrastructure belongs to everybody else. That is not a career. That is a dependency. And dependency is not the same thing as growth.
http://www.makingascene.org
By Richard LHommedieu1
11 ratings
Making a Scene Presents - The Artist-Owned Ecosystem: Replacing the Label, Distributor, and Platform
It usually happens after the show.
Not onstage. Not in the comments. Not when the playlist adds hit. It happens when the room is half empty, the drummer is packing hardware, somebody is folding shirts at the merch table, and the artist is looking at a phone full of “engagement” that does not pay tomorrow’s hotel bill. That is the moment the old music business starts to look less like a dream and more like a machine built to turn artist momentum into platform traffic, label leverage, and somebody else’s data.
For years, the industry sold one big fantasy. Get signed. Get distributed. Get promoted. Get placed in front of the audience. Then the money will come. But the modern version of that deal has a nasty twist. Even when artists do get attention, they often do not get ownership. The fan relationship lives on someone else’s platform. The audience data sits in someone else’s dashboard. The checkout happens inside someone else’s system. The artist becomes the fuel, while the infrastructure belongs to everybody else. That is not a career. That is a dependency. And dependency is not the same thing as growth.
http://www.makingascene.org

14,543 Listeners