Another Day Late and Still a Dollar Short Dept.
(The following press release is courtesy of Bob Sarles and his electrifying Music Wire.)
The Way the Music Died
Thursday, May 27, at 9pm, 60 minutes
In the recording studios of Los Angeles and the boardrooms of New York, they say the record business has been hit by a perfect storm: a convergence of industry-wide consolidation, Internet theft, and artistic drought. The effect has been the loss of billions of dollars, thousands of jobs, and that indefinable quality that once characterized American pop music.
"It's a classic example of art and commerce colliding and nobody wins," says Nic Harcourt, music director at Los Angeles's KCRW-FM. "It's just a train wreck."
In "The Way the Music Died," airing Thursday, May 27, at 9 P.M. on PBS (check local listings), FRONTLINE follows the trajectory of the recording industry from its post-Woodstock heyday in the 1970s and 1980s to what one observer describes as a "hysteria" of mass layoffs and bankruptcy in 2004.
"This is the story of how the pressures to perform financially have affected the ability of many pop musicians to make the art they want," says FRONTLINE producer Michael Kirk. "The starkness of the difference between the environment that exists in the midst of this 'perfect storm' and the way the business once operated is nothing short of astonishing."
The documentary tells its story through the aspirations and experiences of four artists: veteran musician David Crosby, who hopes his newest album will cash in on the resurgence of baby boomers buying music; songwriter/producer Mark Hudson, a former member of The Hudson Brothers band whose daughter, Sarah, is about to release her first single and album; and a new rock band, Velvet Revolver, composed of former members of the rock groups Guns n' Roses and Stone Temple Pilots, whose first album will be released in June.
But how will these artists fare at a time when the record industry is clearly hurting?
"It's a big moment," says Melinda Newman, West Coast bureau chief for Billboard magazine. "There are about 30,000 albums released a year, maybe a hundred are hits. Sales have fallen from $40 billion to $28 billion in just three years."
FRONTLINE follows the trends in the record business that led to
unprecedented growth of more than 20 percent per year in the 25 years following the industry watershed at Woodstock. Crosby, for example, recalls how his new band's album made millions after Crosby, Stills, and Nash performed at the legendary rock concert.
"It was the moment when all that generation of hippies looked at each other and said, 'Wait a minute! We're not a fringe element. There's millions of us! We're what's happening here,'" Crosby tells FRONTLINE.
FRONTLINE follows the career of rocker Mark Hudson, whose group The Hudson Brothers began as a 1970s rock band. "It was post-Woodstock, pre-disco, pre-MTV. So it was a point when music still had truckloads of integrity," Hudson tells FRONTLINE. "Somebody was getting ready to exploit rock and roll."
Hudson tells his story of how the business changed him and how The
Hudson Brothers ended up becoming TV stars as the summer replacement for the Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour.
In the early 1980s, MTV fueled a further explosion of interest and
seemed to broaden the appeal of rock music.
"I thank God for the music video channels because they're another way of getting people to hear music," says music industry veteran Danny Goldberg, now president of Artemis records.
But surprisingly, there are those who now argue MTV was a negative
force.
"What it did really is make the business a one trick pony--and
everything became about the three minutes, the single, the hit single," entertainment attorney Michael Guido tells FRONTLINE. "I think the album died with MTV. The culture in the record companies in the last twenty years has been to reward artists for three minutes of music, not for forty minutes of music."
Some critics fear that the industry's need for quick hits has made it difficult for more adventurous artists to offer the unique sounds and challenging themes that have long been the hallmark of the best album artists.
FRONTLINE also examines the effect of consolidation of ownership on the music industry. "What you had were these people who had been tremendous entrepreneurs...bought up by a multi-conglomerate," Billboard's Newman says. "And it just changes the complexion. The whole way you're having to make decisions is based on different models."
Michael "Blue" Williams, manager of the Grammy Award-winning OutKast, agrees. "We're run by corporations now," he says. "We have accountants running two of four majors now, and they don't get it. It's a numbers game. And music has always been a feelings game."
The consolidation of the radio industry also negatively impacted the recording industry, observers say.
"Thousands of radio stations changed hands, and companies that wanted to really get on radio were able to pull up some enormous multibillion dollar mergers," Los Angeles Times reporter Jeff Leeds tells FRONTLINE. "Suddenly a company that once owned three dozen stations could suddenly own a thousand."
With programming decisions centralized at the corporate level, most stations follow a mandated play list. In some cases, it's just fourteen songs per week--leaving little airtime for the introduction of new artists.
FRONTLINE profiles Mark Hudson's daughter singer/songwriter Sarah
Hudson as she prepares to release her first album at a time when the music industry is struggling. "For any new artist, the odds are almost insurmountable. I think if they knew the odds, they would never get in the first place. You know, the vast, vast majority of records go absolutely nowhere," Newman says.
Vying with Hudson for a place on the Billboard charts is Velvet
Revolver, a "super band" backed by RCA Records, a label that is betting heavily on the group. FRONTLINE follows the marketing of the band as its members struggle to return to the spotlight. Velvet Revolver's manager says success takes more than an expensive video and a marketing campaign. "It's still all about the kids. If the kids want to request it, it gets played more and more. The more it gets played, the more people buy. The more people buy, the more records they sell. The more records they sell, shazam, you're a rock star," David Codikow says.
"The Way the Music Died" is a FRONTLINE co-production with the Kirk Documentary Group. The producer, writer, and director is Michael Kirk.
FRONTLINE is produced by WGBH Boston and is broadcast nationwide on PBS.
(UPDATE: The irrepressible
Rock and Roll Report breaks the news that this broadcast will be streaming on the internet beginning May 29. Good news for fanaticos, tho I'm still a dollar short.)