Where Indie Artists Get Everything 142
anonicon writes "From the same people who brought you the Web's first corrupt CDs tracking list comes the first site where independent musicians receive 100% of the money that fans pay for their music or merchandise (of course, after the credit card company takes their cut from the payment). More information can be had here or here."
The List: (Score:5, Funny)
HAHA... NOOOOO... someone beat me to it :) (Score:1)
-Daedalus
Re:HAHA... NOOOOO... someone beat me to it :) (Score:1)
Re:HAHA... NOOOOO... someone beat me to it :) (Score:1)
-Daedalus
PS - Salary and "compensation" should be relevant to the amount of work, personal danger, and risks of the job. Therefore a CEO should make LESS than a good janitor. All CEO's should also take a pay cut for every job they slash. Thus it will be in their b
Love that Math (Score:5, Interesting)
Obligatory link to an article by Courtney Love:
Courtney Love does the math [salon.com]
The final score?
Band: $0.00
Record Label: $6,600,000.00
obligatory correction: (Score:5, Insightful)
Obligatory Steve Albini article [arancidamoeba.com]
ubiquitous response to ubiquitous obligatory (Score:2)
Re:Love that Math (Score:3, Interesting)
The Problem with Music [petdance.com]
She once tried to slap David Gedge of The Wedding Present backstage because she heard he was friends with Albini.
Good Steve Albini quote: (Score:2)
Re:Love that Math (Score:2)
Interesting...
Now, is anybody going to tell me who Steve Albini actually is?
Re:Love that Math (Score:2)
Re:Love that Math (Score:2)
Hmmm, smells like someone has a racket going and they don't want Napster etc. undercutting them.
Re:Love that Math (Score:1)
A much better, white trash, raunchy, bitchy place.
Not that I'm disagreeing.
Awesome? (Score:1)
I should point out that this description also fits Hitler, Saddam Hussein and Stalin.
Your wordage essentially means "people who are unreceptive to dialogue." I don't think that's very awesome.
Good on 'em (Score:5, Insightful)
People: Please support these guys even if you hate their music. If they turn a profit, other bands will follow suite.
Re:Good on 'em (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Good on 'em (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Good on 'em (Score:5, Interesting)
One slight problem: follow the link and you'll find there aren't actually any artists signed up to buy from.
EMusic rules (Score:5, Interesting)
I guess it's a product life-cycle thing. Relatively few people are buying classic jazz these days (compared to top 40/pop/alternative), so the record labels are figuring they'll take what they can get for it.
Re:EMusic rules (Score:2)
Good, isn't it?... I've downloaded a whole range from emusic, and it's really helped the depth and breadth of my collection...
Definitely good value if they offer something you like.
Re:EMusic rules (Score:2)
After the "revolution" is over (Score:4, Interesting)
I want my old mtv! (where they played MUSIC videos)
Re:After the "revolution" is over (Score:1)
I can imagine a few among that crowd might find this useful...
Let's here it for FatChuck (Score:4, Interesting)
That site has been great... particularly for finding crippled/broken CDs BEFORE you buy the stinkin things. I'm a fan, primarily because I don't own a regular CD player... but I own four computers with CDROM drives.
Well done, charles... well done.
Make that "hear" (Score:2)
Yes - For all intensive purposes he's the best! (Score:1)
A just little exaggeration here?! (Score:4, Insightful)
Could the Slashdot editors possibly have taken this seriously??! This is a small website with zero artists. A good thing I guess, but definetly not an industry revolution
These things do "take time".
Re:A just little exaggeration here?! (Score:1)
ZzzzSleep
Re:A just little exaggeration here?! (Score:3, Insightful)
So, outside of car trunks and live shows, your music is available to anyone anywhere in the world if you decide to join.
Show some patience. Have a drink. We're working on it.
Pea
Re:A just little exaggeration here?! (Score:1)
Now that this is setup, however, perhaps you could clear the cruft out of the shituation that middlemen serve as a function of (they're there for a reason). The social lubrication that causes CDs to be purchased. I think a few people have sort of approached the issue in the comments (I read them all the way through (so far)), but haven't been blunt enough about it.
I'm sure you've already thought about that, and perhaps your model is
Re:A just little exaggeration here?! (Score:2, Informative)
The idea behind FCM (Fat Chuck's Music) is to get rid of all the middlemen and allow artists to ship directly to fans and to be paid directly from fans. As you can see, we're not in the payment loop or the ordering loop besides letting artists list their goods with us (shopping has to begin somewhere that's convenient for fans).
I've been surprised by all the negative reactions here since I've seen so many comments about how great it would be to allow artists to sell directly to the world without
Artists get 100%? Not for long. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Artists get 100%? Not for long. (Score:3, Informative)
Even if they didn't ask for payment they might still take donations or some well meaning people might choose to fund it out of their own pockets (as with the Wikpedia [wikipedia.org])
Re:Artists get 100%? Not for long. (Score:2)
What's stopping them from doing what many other websites do? They could just place advertising on their site.
Re:Artists get 100%? Not for long. (Score:5, Informative)
For more info:
http://www.fatchucks.com/about.html [fatchucks.com]
Scroll to the end. No ads.
Re:Artists get 100%? Not for long. (Score:2)
Fair enough if you don't want to advertise on your site. Cool idea, and I'm looking forward to purchasing in the future
Re:Artists get 100%? Not for long. (Score:1)
It's been up for maybe 2 days, give'm a break. OTOH, maybe they should have done a bit of promoting and signed up some artists before their 'launch' so the site wouldn't look so barren.
check the site. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Artists get 100%? Not for long. (Score:5, Informative)
Per bandwidth, 300gb/mo is $95.00. If I need more, I can get 2tb/mo for about $600/mo.
As far as keeping 0%, that's absolutely no joke. When you pay for an artist's CD, the money moves from your bank through the processor (2CheckOut) directly to the artist. We keep nothing because we're not even in the payment stream.
My expenses for now are $10/month for cheap hosting. I think I can handle it.
Peace.
Re:Artists get 100%? Not for long. (Score:2)
Slashdot effect, hmm.
Your bills may increase next month, I fear.
Re:Artists get 100%? Not for long. (Score:3, Informative)
I pay $9.95/month for 30gb of traffic at hostforweb.com, a pretty good hosting company. If I need to go to 300gb/month, they charge 95.00. The next step up in case things get crazy is sanethosting.com:
http://www.sanethosting.com/
They charge $200/month for colocated hosting (including 330gb of transfer) and $99/month for every 330gb block after #1.
Hope this helps!
Chuck
Busted Stuff?? (Score:1)
Re:Busted Stuff?? (Score:2)
Here's a site with one artist... (Score:1)
Re:Here's a site with one artist... (Score:1)
Jam Recordings [jamrecordings.com]
Enjoy!
Re:Here's a site with one artist... (Score:4, Insightful)
1) "start the revolution"
2) get your music listed while its still being hit really hard by slashdot
just an idea
Another Shameless Plug for a Good Unsigned Artist (Score:2)
Angie Nussey [angienussey.com] is an artist that I really like a lot. Piano, vocals and guitar. Good little jam session every monday night.
Her web site has a bunch of realaudio clips up so you can give her a listen, or order one of her CDs if you feel so inclined.
PS: I am not her, nor do I know her at all really. I just like her music.
Thanks!
A nice idea, but... (Score:3, Interesting)
In all seriousness, I think that it's a really good idea, if they can pull it off. The problems with signing to a major label are covered nicely in an article that can be found here {http://www.arancidamoeba.com/mrr/problemwithmusic .html), and trying to market your music by yourself can be an exercise in utter futility. There's both safety and promotion capital in numbers.
Here's hoping... *crosses fingers*
fatchunks blows fat chunks (Score:4, Interesting)
How is this any better than musicians setting up their own site and using paypal (which takes out a lower percentage for credit card charges)?
This doesn't seem like a revolution, just a way to make money off wannabe musicians that think they might sell something.
Re:fatchunks blows fat chunks (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:fatchunks blows fat chunks (Score:5, Insightful)
Many people don't use paypal, and setting up your own account to process credit cards is expensive, time-consuming, and nearly impossible if you're just some unknown musician who isn't incorporated and can demonstrate a long and flawless credit history.
I think this is a pretty good idea in theory, but in practice... we'll see. I think they could stand to have a bit more professional look to the site, and "fat chuck's" isn't a name that exactly fills me with confidence.
Re:fatchunks blows fat chunks (Score:2)
Re:fatchunks blows fat chunks (Score:3, Interesting)
1. Offer (optional) CD creation services at various levels: CD with generic label, CD with custom label, and CD with custom label and insert (album art and lyrics)
2. Publish web services for publishing and consuming orders. That way you could set up partner services for promotions, and bands could automate CD printing and delivery if they opt not to pay for the CD creation services.
With those two things this would be a very powerful service.
Re:fatchunks blows fat chunks (Score:2)
Sometimes diversification of one's business plan can be considered di-worse-ification.
As far as partnerships wth businesses who can help Indies, I'm working on it, but the site laucnhed about 48 hours ago, so give me some time.
Peace.
Re:fatchunks blows fat chunks (Score:3, Interesting)
That $60 is to pay for your Internet merchant account (I actually make $20/account for year 1) so that you can accept credit card orders from anyone in the world - not just the limited number of countries that paypal supports (I believe it's 37 compared to the 200+ countries you get with your merchant account).
As far as getting the email and processing it, well, you can pay to ship all of your CDs to someone who will distribute it for you and they will A) keep $3-4 pe
Just wait (Score:2)
100%? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:100%? (Score:1)
Wow, could it be true? (Score:1)
Nowdays, I go to Broadway shows and the local philharmonic to support them, in addition to donations.
On the list of banned items... (Score:2)
Not exactly a new idea (Score:3, Informative)
My brother-on-law sells on CD Baby [cdbaby.com] and seems pleased. Not sure how they structure the deal, but the basic idea is to allow independent artists to get most of the money.
None of these sites solve the much larger problem of artist marketing, IMO. That's the one service that the record companies offer to the artists that no one else can get close to (in part because they lock competitors out of radio access, for example). There's room in the market for someone to do that, but they're going to have to find other means of getting to the customer other than radio (sites like Epitonic.com [epitonic.com] are a good step in that direction).
Re:Not exactly a new idea (Score:3, Interesting)
So, you could sell your CD for $14 + $2.25 shipping and make $10, or you could sell your CD for $14 + $2.25 and make $15+ before shipping costs. Or, you could sell your CD for $10 + $2 shipping, get about $10 and maybe sell more because of the cheaper price.
As for marketing, y
Re:Not exactly a new idea (Score:2)
These are three artists whose CDs I picked up while looking for Alpha Conspiracy music.
Since you don't have to pay shipping if you buy 4 or more CDs, there's that subconscious urge to keep looking to find something you like.
I've bought 15 CDs from CDBaby and I've had rather good luck.
That's not to mention that I know that CDBaby runs a professional outfit and I'll get the CDs within a week. Who knows if it's directly from the ar
My god! How revolutionary! (Score:1, Redundant)
Ain't nobody home!
Is this a bad joke by a sniggering Hilary Rosen? Is this her plan to give artists 100% of.... NOTHING?
I thought eMusic was the height of marginality, but these guys have them beat.
As for Chuck, I'd LOVE to see the pitch for this business model:
1. pay for lotsa hosting & bandwidth
2. 100% to artist = no margin
3. ???
4. profit!!!
Now I can't wait til monday...
More convenient services available (Score:2, Informative)
CDBaby (Score:3, Informative)
Re:CDBaby (Redundant) (Score:1)
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=62025&cid=5814 602 [slashdot.org]
When artists sign up with us, 100% of the money that fans pay for their music goes to the artist (after the CC company takes their cut). CD Baby keeps $4/album and they keep the shipping. When you're selling your album for $15, which scenario do you believe you'll make more money in for each sale?
Sorry, the devil is in the details. This has never been done before outside of live shows and car trunk
Re:CDBaby (Score:2)
I run a small indie record label and I have been using CDBaby.com. They're HONEST - send checks out on time for the correct ammount - and keep track of sales for you via an administrative login. They also email you when they only have a few copies left.
We have regular distribution thru indie distributors that I won't mention - but they take a big cut and you have to make sure you keep your invoices up to date and chase them down for payments.
Here's how it works:
CDBABY - sells cd's for $10 -
"Nothing matters" (Score:2)
Interesting slam...
Re:"Nothing matters" (Score:2)
I guess I should add a
In all seriousness, it's a joke and a takeoff on what some people think Slashdot is. My bad for perpetuating that image when I'm actually joking.
Peace,
Chuck
Re:"Nothing matters" (Score:2)
My mistake for being snippy in my comment, sorry. I should probably leave editorial comments about other people's web sites to the professionals. When I saw that link I had a micro-flashback to a site that got slashdotted a few weeks ago that put up some rather sarcastic commentary/flamage about slashdot, and I made an incorrect assumption.
Mea culpa. Thanks for keeping your site up. It's a great resource to protect everyone from companies who are trying to hide the fact that they're deliberat
Where can I go to get some Indie Music? (Score:1)
Jim Thirlwell (a.k.a. Foetus, Manorexia, Baby Zizanie) has a couple of cd's for sale at foetus.org [foetus.org]. Radiolarian Ooze is awesome. Check out his aud/vid link for some samples.
Another oldie but goodie is Alternative Tentacles [alternativetentacles.com] where you can find Jello Biafra and lots more.
Any other good indie stuff for sale out there?
Comparison with CD Baby (Score:1)
While Fat Chuck's is subscription based (you pay a $60 annual fee), CD Baby charges $4 per CD sold. So Fat Chuck's is a better deal if you know you are going to sell more than 15 discs (probably a fair bet).
The other difference I see is that Fat Chuck's only processes the transactions, they don't ship the CDs. CD Baby is a real on-line store and maintains inve
Re:Comparison with CD Baby (Score:2)
First, check out the overview [fatchucks.com]. It's $60 for year 1 and $40 year after year 1. You get your *own* Internet merchant account and you keep all the money that the CC processor doesn't take.
Per shipping, the only way to do shipping is A) yourself and keep everything, or B) pay to send your CDs to a company somewhere and watch them keep $4/CD and the shipping charge for each CD.
If you want to pursue your own online transaction capability, I encourage you to. CCNow charges $9.95/month, PayPal does a ~
Music (Score:2)
Chuck is just spreading the costs of the credit card system amongst all the bands.
What I didn't see is ho well it integrates into an existing site, so theoretically people buy a CD without even knowing th
Re:Music (Score:1)
Check out the demo page [fatchucks.com]. It probably answers your question.
I am crushed (Score:1)
Now they are just corporate dupes playing dance music.
*sniffle*
Re:I am crushed (Score:1)
At the bottom, a guy from the US says he went to E.N.'s website where "Blixa also claims the band wasn't even told about the protection by the label and they didn't know until they saw the finished product. Furthermore, it appears the band will not be applying copy protection to CDs produced in the immediate future."
I dig E.N. too.
does 'get everything' include (Score:1)
Am I missing something? (Score:1)
Daddy, where does the merchandise come from? (Score:1)
Fatchuck's 100% offer is a nice marketing gimmick, but it conveniently neglects to tell artists that they have to have the stuff first beforethey can sell it. If a musician pays out for 100 pro-grade CDs and 100 decent T-shirts, signs up on Fatchuck's for $60, and only sells a handful of each in 12 months, the artist is still out for the cost of making the CDs and T-shirts. It's one thing if it's a touring band that can sell their stuff at gigs, too, but if they can do that, why pay the extra $40/year?
I
Re:Daddy, where does the merchandise come from? (Score:2)
One point. Whether you sell through Fat Chuck's or any other site (CD Street, CD Baby, Amazon), you still have to assume the risk of having it created no matter who your store front is. Sorry, but I think most artists already understand that and it would be pretty insulting for me to tell them.
As far as touring bands, this is a great idea. If the band's out touring, they can choose to suspend their account (since they can't ship their goods while on the road) or if they have a reliable friend
ignore music in the vault! (Score:4, Interesting)
Actually, because of the Verizon case, I have decided to boycott all commercially recorded music which forbid the rights to free distribution. By boycott, I don't merely mean "refusing to buy" CD's. I mean refusing even to listen or download such music (even illegally). Yes, that probably means that I will no longer listen to Philip Glass, Suzanne Vega, etc. Once they wise up and liberalize their licenses, I might consider listening to them again. And I might also consider checking their CD's out of the library (whenever I feel a pang of nostalgia, in the same way that a Russian might for a moment miss a gulag's watery soup).
The restrictive licenses of music companies essentially lock commercial music in the vault. I'm not interested in picking locks anymore just for a momentary glimpse at these so-called "precious" flowers. I'm interested in enjoying what is free out in the free air. Let all those "precious" flowers in the vault lose their color, rot away and turn into crap. Good riddance.
We as creative artists need to wean ourselves from this enslavement that we call "copyright enforcement." The people and companies who benefit by starving artists, drafting exploitative contracts and preventing works of art from being distributed freely deserve nothing less than our contempt.
You may say: how could I survive without vault music? Simple. If the music rots away in the vault, it was already dead to begin with. Who wants to keep dead flowers around? Instead of locking flowers in the vault, it is better to appreciate them in the open where it's easy to pick and admire. We are like bees admiring the flowers all around us, flitting about, taking what we need and moving on (and propagating the beauty of what we see at the same time). Flowers look pretty among other flowers, not inside some ugly dirty vault guarded by lawyers with vulture-like beaks. As the public areas become more covered with flowers, the desire to possess the rotting heaps in the vault will seem more bizzare, less relevant. The best way to increase the number of flowers in this world is to open the gardens up to bees. Anyway, it is folly to think that a group of lawyers (and that is essentially what a music company is ) owns a song or a human voice or an image. The copyright to Beauty is owned by one person, and that is God. His lawyers are ruthless and know the law of nature backwards and forwards. The license they enforce allows infinite creation and multiplication, but banishes those who say beauty belongs to one.
Freeing myself from the music of the vault provides an opportunity to learn about artists with more enlightened views toward distribution. I plan to patronize them in many ways, including donations. Also, I plan to attend more concerts and still pay for my commercial-free Internet radio ($5 a month) until decent creative commons radio stations [sourceforge.net] emerge. It doesn't mean that I am opposed to paying money for music per se. But when I pay for music, I want either to have free distribution rights and/or the certainty that the artist is receiving at least 50% of the money I am paying. What do artists for major labels now receive? 1%?
Actually lawyers are not completely the culprit here. It would be a trivial matter for lawyers on either the artist's or industry's side to draft a limited duration copyright. All ownership rights could expire after about 5 or 10 years. Artists are partially to blame for not insis
Re:ignore music in the vault! (Score:2)
There's no way for the artist to even break even on such a proposition!
I'm not talking the big 6, I'm talking the independant label... The Ani DiFrancos, or Atoosas, et al...
I'm not talking about millions of dollars, just enough to pay the costs of producing such music and some compensation for the time involved, even at McDonalds wages.
Re:ignore music in the vault! (Score:2)
For example, let's say I have a bunch of tunes I've produced and I add them to the Creative Commons site above. Though I didn't see a license that quite matched the GPL, imagine I had my stuff under a license that said, "You can use this work as-is for any purpose, public or private. You can even make derivatives of this work. However, if you release the derivative (play in public
Re:ignore music in the vault! (Score:2)
Fairtunes is a place where you can pay the artist directly. (Of course, that merely means you are shifting production costs to the artist, which I think is fair). Fairtunes doesn't seem very well established though. Perhaps a better organization exists to handle the transaction.
The other thing is: cd's
The downhill slide continues... (Score:2)
Which makes this article nothing more than a blatant advertising piece.
Taco, why don't you put the advertising articles where they belong: In the banner ads. Stop wasting our time with "submissions" that are nothing more than thinly-disguised marketing pitches.
100% EXCEPT for setup fees, wire service fees... (Score:2)
"Fat Chuck's Music costs $60 for the first
Re:100% EXCEPT for setup fees, wire service fees.. (Score:1)
Enough already! (Score:3, Informative)
Chuck's site is a popular site already with the corrupt CD list, and it's only a matter of time before they come. So, rather then pan the idea because it may not look professional or because it doesn't have any artists signed up yet, applaud it and Chuck for wanting to do the right thing for the artist, giving them the money they deserve.
sevcom.com (Score:4, Informative)
Severed Heads also offer improved versions of their older stuff - and the latest album (Op) comes with a key to access 'upgrades' - i.e. extra songs and new versions. On top of all this, you can hear just about everything they sell as a (low bandwidth) MP3 before you buy.
Cut up the middleman!
Remember (Score:2)
RE: I'd buy this stuff... (Score:1)
(had to do it)
Give him a break (Score:2, Insightful)
been doing this for the last year... (Score:3, Informative)
MP3 sound samples (full songs) you can download off our site.
All we did was upload (we snailmailed the CD for replication) our info, all we have to do with fulfillment is wait for them to send the checks. They handle the credit card stuff and create the goods on demand. The prices are a bit high, but creating stuff on a one-off basis is expensive even with everything basically automated.
Check out our site... it's in the sig below.
misplaced faith (Score:2)
And so it did, but the above link is clickable.
fatchucks.com doesn't have any music (Score:2)
Re:Europeans (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Europeans (Score:2)
Actually, the owner and the site are both U.S.-based. The translation flags are there for the benefit of an non-native English speakers who visit the site and want to read it in their language, not mine.
Hope this helps!
Chuck
Re:2CheckOut (Score:2, Informative)
You're right and you're wrong. You're absolutely right that you can sign up for your own merchant account at 2CheckOut for $49 and take it from there.
The rest of the pie is where you're somewhat wrong. Besides hosting their page at artist.fatchucks.com, we also take care of all these items:
Creating the shopping links and variable shipping for each item the artist wants to sell, both on our end and on the 2CO end.
Taking care of scanning and editing the album art so that people can see what th