GOODSOUND!GoodSound! "Editorial" Archives

September 1, 2005

 

Music like Water

In their recent book, The Future of Music: Manifesto for the Digital Music Revolution, David Kusek (a dean at the Berklee College of Music) and Gerd Leonhard (a music-industry veteran) describe an idea they call "music like water." The main idea is that consumers and the music industry should begin to think of digital music delivery as akin to utilities such as water and electricity. Instead of worrying about record sales and units sold, record companies should be thinking in a new way about providing music as a profitable service. Just as the water company delivers water to your house for a nominal fee along with some charge for the amount you use, music companies should be doing this with their vast libraries via your computer.

There are good reasons for taking this idea seriously. Digital copying via downloads, hard-drive swapping, CD recorders, etc., is a reality that music companies must acknowledge. No matter what measures they take to corral it now, people will continue to copy music. The music companies’ aggressive stance against this has done more, I think, to antagonize consumers than to help their own bottom lines. People copy music not because they want to steal or don’t want the artists to get paid, but because CD prices are too high. On a recent trip to Borders, I noticed that several CDs by major artists were priced at $18.99, which makes them more expensive than other kinds of entertainment, such as DVDs. True, you should be able to charge what you want to dispense with your property, but if you exceed a decent ratio of price to value and there is a simple way open to everyone to circumvent your rights, you can expect those rights to be circumvented.

Consider a similar case having to do with waste management. If a town stops collecting old car tires or starts charging to do so, you’ll notice a lot more car tires on the side of the road because people don’t want the hassle of getting rid of them properly or paying for it. It would be better for the town to charge everyone a nominal fee and just collect the tires. Sure, people do wrong by throwing tires on the side of the road, but the choice is between setting up elaborate traps to catch the few violators and coming up with a plan that avoids the problem altogether. Similarly, the Recording Industry Association of America can either prosecute heavy downloaders at great expense to themselves and the wrongdoers, or restructure themselves so that the problem disappears. But music companies will say that high prices are the only way that they can make a profit on the music. This is untrue.

In a recent podcast, Gerd Leonhard pointed out that only two out of every ten people in the US purchase music in any form. If we assume that the music companies are correct in saying that they can make a profit only by charging ungodly prices, it would seem that this is because they are leaving 80% of the population out of the equation. What they should be striving for is to have 80% of the people buying music; this would allow them to charge less per unit of music sold instead of going after conspicuous downloaders.

It seems to me that if music companies charged a flat rate of $20 a month -- a figure based on the monthly fees charged by satellite radio stations, a service similar in some regards -- they would widen their market share for the simple reason that it would no longer be worth people’s time to download from peer-to-peer networks with no quality control, or to swap hard drives or USB drives with friends. It would be easier to just go to your computer and get what you want through the legitimate service.

Kusek and Leonhard have many more interesting things to say; I recommend the book to those interested in music as a business and those interested in what the future might hold. Their observations about how such a system might affect artists seem very good, but at times I’m uneasy reading about music as a business. Perhaps I’m too much of a romantic, but I like to talk about music in aesthetic terms, not economic ones.

I’m not sold on the idea of buying into music services. My main concern is that if the main distribution of music goes to a digital download system, companies are likely to sacrifice quality for speed. If only 20% of the people now purchase music, it’s an even smaller number who care about the quality of the music’s reproduction. And if the new system does bring more people to the music-buying fold, it’s likely that they will not initially be interested in high-quality reproduction.

Another concern I have is for small, independent record labels. It seems unlikely that small companies could offer competitive pricing on their own, which will put them under pressure to license their music to bigger companies for download. This would seem to put small companies at an even bigger disadvantage than they are now. Right now, if someone goes shopping for a CD, that buyer may or may not choose a record on an independent label. If the industry moves to music services, then those labels will be hard-pressed to compete with, say, Sony’s music catalog.

If I were a hi-fi company right now, my main concern would be trying to figure out how to survive in the world of digital music. If most people use their computers for music and just download it to an iPod, then these manufacturers are fighting an uphill battle. Not only will people not realize that their music doesn’t sound as good as it should, but they may be unwilling to pay for equipment that is able to provide high-quality reproduction. These problems aren’t unsolvable, but companies have not had to face them in the past, and they may tax smaller companies’ limited resources.

One way to show what quality sound reproduction is like is to offer a system at a reasonable price that can deliver quality beyond what the average Best Buy or Circuit City customer expects. In that regard, the Onix all-in-one system that we review this month is a shining example of high-quality construction married to great sound for a decent price. If more people could hear and appreciate it, I bet more people would care about the quality of music reproduction in their homes.

I hope I’m Chicken Little crying that the sky is falling, but I think there’s real reason for those of us who cherish music and quality sound reproduction to be wary of digital services. Audiophiles are already a small minority among music buyers. If the music industry begins to focus its energies on getting the attention of the non-music-buying public, we’ll likely become an even smaller percentage of their customer base.

…Eric D. Hetherington


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