Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-30T21:50:23.173Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Running a record label when records don't sell anymore: empirical evidence from Poland

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 November 2015

Patryk Galuszka
Affiliation:
Faculty of Economics and Sociology at the University od Lodz ul. POW 3/5, 90-255 Łódź, Poland E-mail: [email protected]
Katarzyna M. Wyrzykowska
Affiliation:
The Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences Nowy Świat 72 00-330 Warsaw, Poland E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

From an economic point of view, the business of record labels until recently boiled down to managing a portfolio of artists, with successful stars bringing the label enough money to recoup investments in market flops. The decline in record sales has called this model into question and forced labels to look for new sources of revenue. Employing qualitative data gathered in Poland, this paper demonstrates how labels react to adverse market conditions and what determines these reactions. The paper shows that these reactions include the monetisation of the relationship that a label has with artists through signing 360° deals, the commercial exploitation of artists’ brand names, and concentration on niche markets, either foreign or format-based (e.g. the market for vinyl). The paper concludes that record labels, regardless of which approach they choose to deal with the adverse market conditions, still think in terms of managing a portfolio of artists. What is more, there is no universal strategy which can be applied by every label to deal with declining record sales.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Arditi, D. 2015. iTake-Over: The Recording Industry in the Digital Era (Lanham, MD, Rowman & Littlefield)Google Scholar
Caves, R.E. 2000. Creative Industries (Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press)Google Scholar
Frith, S. 1988. ‘Copyright and the music business’, Popular Music, 7/1, pp. 5775CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Galuszka, P. 2015. ‘Music aggregators and intermediation of the digital music market’, International Journal of Communication, 9, pp. 254–73Google Scholar
Garofalo, R. 1999. ‘From music publishing to MP3: music and industry in the twentieth century’, American Music, 17/3, pp. 318–54CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greenfield, S., and Osborn, G. 2007. ‘Understanding commercial music contracts: the place of contractual theory’, Journal of Contract Law, 23/3, pp. 248–68Google Scholar
Hesmondhalgh, D. 1997. ‘Post-punk's attempt to democratise the music industry: the success and failure of rough trade’, Popular Music, 16/3, pp. 255–74CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hesmondhalgh, D. 1999. ‘Indie: the institutional politics and aesthetics of a popular music genre’, Cultural Studies, 13/1, pp. 3461CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hull, G.P. 2004. The Recording Industry (New York and London, Routledge)Google Scholar
Huygens, M., Van Den Bosch, F., Volberda, H.W., and Baden-Fuller, C. 2001. ‘Co-evolution of firm capabilities and industry competition: investigating the music industry, 1877–1997’, Organization Studies, 22/6, pp. 9711011CrossRefGoogle Scholar
IFPI (International Federation of the Phonographic Industry). 2013. Recording Industry in Numbers. The Definitive Source of Global Music Market Information, 2013 edn (London, IFPI)Google Scholar
Landes, W.M., and Posner, R.A. 2003. The Economic Structure of Intellectual Property Law (Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press)Google Scholar
Leyshon, A. 2014. Reformatted: Code, Networks, and the Transformation of the Music Industry (Oxford, Oxford University Press)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leyshon, A., Webb, P., French, S., Thrift, N., and Crewe, L. 2005. ‘On the reproduction of the musical economy after the Internet’, Media, Culture & Society, 27/2, pp. 177209CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, L. 2013a. The International Recording Industries (New York, Routledge)Google Scholar
Marshall, L. 2013b. ‘The recording industry in the twenty-first century’, in The International Recording Industries, ed. Marshall, L. (New York, Routledge), pp. 5374Google Scholar
Marshall, L. 2013c. ‘The 360 deal and the “new” music industry’, European Journal of Cultural Studies, 16/1, pp. 7799CrossRefGoogle Scholar
May, C. 2007. ‘A multi-tiered music industry? Intellectual property rights, open access and the audience for music’, Journal on the Art of Record Production, 2. http://arpjournal.com/570/a-multi-tiered-music-industry-intellectual-property-rights-open-access-and-the-audience-for-music/ (accessed 8 October 2015)Google Scholar
Moore, R. 2007. ‘Friends don't let friends listen to corporate rock’, Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, 36/4, pp. 438–74CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Negus, K. 1995. ‘Where the mystical meets the market: creativity and commerce in the production of popular music’, Sociological Review, 43/2, pp. 316–41CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Negus, K. 1999. Music Genres and Corporate Cultures (London and New York, Routledge)Google Scholar
Negus, K. 2004. ‘The business of rap: between the street and the executive suite’, in That's the Joint!: The Hip-Hop Studies Reader, ed. Forman, M. and Neal, M.A. (New York and London, Routledge), pp. 525–40Google Scholar
Passman, D.S. 2011. All You Need to Know about the Music Business, 7th edn (London, Viking)Google Scholar
Pitt, I.L. 2010. Economic Analysis of Music Copyright: Income, Media and Performances (New York, Springer)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
RIAJ (Recording Industry Association of Japan). 2003. RIAJ Yearbook 2003. http://www.riaj.or.jp/e/issue/pdf/RIAJ2003E.pdf (accessed 24 August 2015)Google Scholar
RIAJ (Recording Industry Association of Japan). 2004. RIAJ Yearbook 2004. http://www.riaj.or.jp/e/issue/pdf/RIAJ2004E.pdf (accessed 24 August 2015)Google Scholar
RIAJ (Recording Industry Association of Japan). 2014. RIAJ Yearbook 2014. http://www.riaj.or.jp/e/issue/pdf/RIAJ2014E.pdf (accessed 24 August 2015)Google Scholar
Rogers, J. 2013. The Death and Life of the Music Industry in the Digital Age (New York, Bloomsbury Academic)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogers, J. 2014. ‘Canary down the mine: music and copyright at the digital coalface’, Socialism and Democracy, 28/1, pp. 3450CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogers, J., and Sparviero, S. 2011. ‘Same tune, different words: the creative destruction of the music industry’, Observatorio (OBS*), 5/4. http://obs.obercom.pt/index.php/obs/article/view/514 (accessed 24 August 2015)Google Scholar
Stahl, M. 2010. ‘Primitive accumulation, the social common, and the contractual lockdown of recording artists at the threshold of digitalizationEphemera, 10, pp. 337–55Google Scholar
Stahl, M. 2013. Unfree Masters: Recording Artists and the Politics of Work (Durham, NC, Duke University Press)Google Scholar
Stahl, M., and Meier, L. 2012. ‘The firm foundation of organizational flexibility: the 360 contract in the digitalizing music industry’, Canadian Journal of Communication, 37/3. http://www.cjc-online.ca/index.php/journal/article/view/2544 (accessed 24 August 2015)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Strachan, R. 2007. Micro-independent record labels in the UK. Discourse, DIY cultural production and the music industry. European Journal of Cultural Studies, 10/2, pp. 245–65CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stratton, J. 1983. ‘What is “popular music”?’, Sociological Review, 31/2, pp. 293309CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Styvén, M. 2007. ‘The intangibility of music in the internet age’, Popular Music and Society, 30/1, pp. 5374CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Towse, R. 2003. ‘Copyright and cultural policy for the creative industries’, in Economics, Law and Intellectual Property: Seeking Strategies for Research and Teaching in a Developing Field, ed. Granstrand, O. (Dordrecht, Springer), pp. 419–38CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wikström, P. 2009. The Music Industry: Music in the Cloud (Cambridge, Polity Press)Google Scholar
Williamson, J., and Cloonan, M. 2007. ‘Rethinking the music industry’, Popular Music, 26/2, pp. 305–22CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williamson, J., and Cloonan, M. 2013. ‘Contextualizing the contemporary recording industry’, in The International Recording Industries, ed. Marshall, L. (New York, Routledge), pp. 1130Google Scholar
ZPAV. 2014. Muzyczne serwisy abonamentowe motorem wzrostu sprzedaży nagrań na większości rynków. [Polish Society of the Phonographic Industry: Music Subscription Services Behind Rising Music Sales on Majority of Markets], 28 March. http://zpav.pl/aktualnosci.php?idaktualnosci=862 (accessed 24 August 2015)Google Scholar
ZPAV. 2015a. Branża muzyczna podsumowała rok 2014 r. [Polish Society of the Phonographic Industry: Music Industry Sums 2014], 13 March. http://zpav.pl/aktualnosci.php?idaktualnosci=1191 (accessed 24 August 2015)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
ZPAV. 2015b. Jakie płyty Polacy kupowali najchętniej w 2014 roku – roczne podsumowanie listy OLiS [Polish Society of the Phonographic Industry: What Albums Were Poles Buying Most Often in 2014? Annual Summary of the OLIS List], 19 March. http://zpav.pl/aktualnosci.php?idaktualnosci=1151 (accessed 24 August 2015)Google Scholar