The Rolling Stones' Business Model 164
reallocate writes "These pages were graced a few days ago by a piece that included comments on the future of the music business from the Stones' Keith Richards. Now, here's a detailed Fortune report on the business side of the Stones -- Keith and Mick seem to know what they're doing and may not be all that concerned about the future -- the Stones have ground out $1.5 billion (yes, that's a 'b') in gross revenue since 1989."
Alright, where's the Stones MS Bashing (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Alright, where's the Stones MS Bashing (Score:1)
Enormous wealth is not something to be admired it is something to be pitied like cancer or Windows 95 code.
Re:Alright, where's the Stones MS Bashing (Score:2)
Re:Alright, where's the Stones MS Bashing (Score:2)
Re:Alright, where's the Stones MS Bashing (Score:5, Funny)
dave
Re:Alright, where's the Stones MS Bashing (Score:4, Informative)
When MS (metaphoricly) reached into its back pocket, withdrew its billfold, and started counting out bills, the Stones realised they had forgotten who they were dealing with.
All thanks to the Promoter.. (Score:1)
Sounds like a smart business plan to me!
Re:gross vs net revenue (Score:1)
They're Going On Another Tour! (Score:2)
Re:They're Going On Another Tour! (Score:2)
If, however, you're talking about getting the Full Pharaoh done in 15 minutes or less, then no. Not only is there the whole brain-removal-through-the-nose business to take care of, but also the internal organectomy (with associated preparation and individualized packaging into a charming array of Canopic jars), the stuffing of the cavities with delicious herbs and spices, the extended natron soak, the wrapping with fine linens... If you're doing the job right, of course, there will also be a tomb of opulent design upon which skilled artisans have been laboring for at least a decade, as well as kick ass grave goods...
Keith may well have a good head start on the process, depending on how much of his grey matter he's already removed via his nasal passages. Heavy alcohol consumption wouldn't be bad for traditional mummification either, but it would probably fuck up a nice predictable freeze dry -- too much alcohol in the blood and it doesn't freeze, and then where are you?
Re:They're Going On Another Tour! (Score:1)
Rolling Stones have hidden their talen REALLY well (Score:1)
and get this little tidbit
So, too, does Prince Rupert Zu Loewenstein, a London-based banker who carries an old Bavarian title and who's been the band's chief business advisor for some 30 years--"and I hope for another 30 too," he says.
They have a bavarian Prince named Loewenstein? Is that a normal Bavarian royal surname?
Since TLD's are apparently being handed out by economic impact (see yesterdays article regarding whois) they'll have to have a new RS set!
--Computers... just a fad. You'll see
Re:Rolling Stones have hidden their talen REALLY w (Score:1)
Yes, see The History of the royal house of bavaria [chivalricorders.org] for information about this family.
rofl (Score:2)
Software, songs and smoking keiths ashes (Score:1, Interesting)
Ah, the future of the music-industry, from the mouth of the dinosaurs of the music-industry (:-)
<<grins, ducks and runs>>
<<peers at 15^H^H36 previous posts..>>
uh-huh...rrright - I'd better write something relevant
<rant & rave>
Well, firstly thats a pretty interesting article...it confirms something that I've been wondering about for a while now; the Rollings Stones haven't had any big hits for quite some time now.
I doubt any of us will ever become rock'n roll legends...(software/internet legends? Phah, thats easy
but I have to wonder how much of that $1.5 Billion
GROSS revenue actually went to each of the rolling-stones after tax, expenses, etc etc etc.
There's a lot of numbers being thrown around in that article...but no specifics...all GROSS figures...hmmm. <<secretly wonders how many pages Mick Jaggers end-of-year tax-statement fills>>
It occurs to me that software has a lot in common with rock'n roll songs:
They are 100% creativity, they are created from nothing. (hey, sold on CD's as well
However, the shelf-life of a given song is near infinite, once a succesfull song is released, you can sit back and let the money roll in. (Making sure you move from country to country to avoid the taxman/taxlaw >:)
On the other hand, the shelf-life for software is ridiculously short though - games are a prime example.(ok ok that doesn't work for (most) open-source software..i think
Maybe I should've become a rock-star after all...
</rant & rave>
To quote from the article:
"How long can we go on?" asks Keith. "Forever. We'll let you know when we keel over."
That sums it up nicely
Moderately impressive (Score:5, Insightful)
Moral: Kids, stop trying to get on reality TV and go to economics classes.
(This is just a plug for my new single, Smack up ma CEO of a Fortune 500 company)
Re:Moderately impressive (Score:1)
LSE (Score:2)
Re:Moderately impressive (Score:1)
Re:Moderately impressive (Score:2)
Re:Moderately impressive (Score:2)
If you had read the article you would have known that too.
Re:Moderately impressive (Score:1)
Tasteless but relevant... (Score:2)
All those paparazzi must play hell with any exit strategy, though... unless he takes the Brian Jones route?
Well, when you reach a certian age... (Score:1)
If you sum up their ages, it comes in right around 134. They are (probably) not burning through other peoples money like some pet food dot com. They've made their billion, married their super models, and pretty much out lived everybody else in their industry. The future they concerned with is propably not a get rich quick scheme -- that probably doesn't matter any more.
Now Mick, feel free to send those comp tickets to the enclosed address.....
Stones (Score:2)
Turned out to be the latest trends
And ther ain't no more progressive music
The business has put it to an end
Ol' "Rolling Stone" has gathered some moss
No they ain't what they used to be
They try to look like "Look" with their political pages
And advertising all over T.V.
So na-na-na-na-na-na-na-na
I bet you've heard this song before
Na-na-na-na-na-na-na-na
Take your cocaine and hit the door.
- "Cheap Shot" John Mellencamp, 1980.
A penny for my thoughts? Here's my two cents. I got ripped off!
satisfaction? (Score:1)
$1.5 billion? Son of a bitch!
Mick, I will NO LONGER TOLERATE hearing you talk about not getting any satisfaction.
Education (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.mick-jagger.com/bio.htm
Re:Education (Score:2)
Re:Education (Score:1)
Jagger is eloquent and informed, but he has a disclaimer: "I don't
really count myself as a very sophisticated businessperson," he says as
he leans back on the couch. "I'm a creative artist. All I know from
business I've picked up along the way. I never really studied business
in school. I kind of wish I had, kind of, but how boring is that?"
Isn't it ironic... (Score:1)
Speaking of Keith, where do I sign up to get some of that man's blood?
Wild. One of the oldest active bands trying out the semi-latest technology/business ideas. Sorry Alanis, but it is a little too ironic. Yeah, I really do think...
Re:Isn't it ironic... (Score:1)
I have three words for you: Swiss Chalet Transfusion [about.com]
Re:Isn't it ironic... (Score:1)
Re:Isn't it ironic... (Score:2)
Touring can be a lot less wearing then they used to make it. After all, tearing up hotel rooms is optional, like riding motorcycles through the lobby and pitching TV's out the window. If you cut back the really wearing activity to the actual performance (and if you take the nannies on tour with you, I'd say that's a safe bet,) then it becomes a much less daunting task.
Re:Isn't it ironic... (Score:2)
So, let me get this straight.. (Score:1)
2) ???
3) Profit!
At least someones got it right...
$1.5b ? (Score:1)
The Record Labels are Protecting the Artists (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course, it wasn't just the taxman's pinch that forced the Rolling Stones to focus on the bottom line. They also got screwed by record labels. "In the early days you got paid absolutely nothing," recalls Jagger. "The only people who earned money were the Beatles because they sold so many records."
By the mid-'60s the Stones had reportedly sold ten million singles, including "Satisfaction," and five million albums, but the band was still living hand to mouth. "I'll never forget the deals I did in the '60s, which were just terrible," says Jagger. "You say, 'Oh, I'm a creative person, I won't worry about this.' But that just doesn't work. Because everyone would just steal every penny you've got."
Re:The Record Labels are Protecting the Artists (Score:1)
After all, it was the artists who raised such a ruckus, when they found unreleased (and unfinished) copies of their songs as MP3s on Napster which started the whole legal shebang. Left to their own devices, RIAA would never have lifted a finger against P2P.
Now, if only we had enough data for a marketing queen (must be smarter than a drone) to explain to Madonna and Lars why controlled and proactive P2P actually increases their record sales...
Longevity (not the mummification variety;) (Score:2, Interesting)
Just one point: the article didn't mention it, but the Stones (and the Beatles, and The Who, and Bob Dylan, and... ) hit the top in the mid to late '60s when the trailing edge of the post-WW2 baby-boom had reached adolesence, which hasn't harmed the longevity of the respective brands... Keith Richards once remarked apropos his love for R&B, that people tend to remain attached to the music that was popular at the time of their first significant interpersonal relationship.
Well, he may have put it a little more pithily than that, but you get the idea.
What ? (Score:2)
Well... (Score:1)
(Heh, could not resist the movie ref, I just got the DVD a few weeks ago for $6 )
Keith Richards quotes (Score:2)
page 2.
Keith, for his part, just shakes his head: "It's a mom-and-pop operation," he laughs. "Mick is the mom, and I'm the pop, and then we have these offspring that need feeding."
Perhaps Keith sums it up best: "With our business, who really knows what's what. You go and look at Lake Superior, and you say, 'Look at all that water, and that's just the top!' "
I'd go on, but they're much funnier in context, so go read the article.
Rich and Famous (Score:2)
There was a cool profile of Puff Daddy in a recent New Yorker in which it was revealed that he spends more time at the office than in clubs. But no one ever made it in the hip hop world by shouting about how they are a suburban catholic school educated grind.
Success as has-beens (Score:3, Interesting)
This could go on for a long time. Elvis dead makes more money than Elvis did living.
I can't believe the Rolling Stones are dead!!! (Score:1)
Rolling Stones & popular music---are a busine (Score:1)
steel wheels (Score:2)
Re:? yea, so what? (Score:1)
Re:you're all a bunch of goddamn commies (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:you're all a bunch of goddamn commies (Score:2)
Re:Keith Richards (Score:1)
Re:IF YOU TAKE DRUGS, YOU'RE SUPPORTING TERRORISM! (Score:2, Insightful)