Web-Only Album Wins Grammy 290
blamanj writes "Jazz artist Maria Schneider won a Grammy last night for her album 'Concert in the Garden.' What makes this unusual, according to CNET, is that she might be the first artist ever to win a Grammy for an album distributed solely on the Web. None of the sales were in record stores, and the album was financed through Artist Share."
that's nice (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:that's nice (Score:4, Funny)
Better ceremony: "The Torrents"
Re: that's nice (Score:3, Interesting)
Which is very significant indeed.
Re: that's nice (Score:5, Informative)
Not according to their web site [grammys.org], where it basically states the the awards are based on a multi-tiered voting process.
Two words (Score:4, Funny)
Oh, but it's on their official website. Well then. I'm sure they woulnd't bend the truth to not look like corporate whores.
Re: that's nice (Score:4, Funny)
Re: that's nice (Score:2)
Tell that Celine Dion, Bryan Adams, Shania Twain, The Hip, 54-40, etc.
IMO they do just fine. Really, we have 1/10th the population of the US, yet our artists can hold their own...
Re: that's nice (Score:2)
Re:that's nice (Score:4, Funny)
Re:that's nice (Score:3, Funny)
and ditto.
Re:that's nice (Score:3, Funny)
Re:that's nice (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, yet another example of slashdot logic: "If I don't care about it, surely no one else does!" +1, Insightful!
Hate to break it to you, but the Grammys get a lot of viewership and attention. Now, this specific award may not have gotten a lot of attention. But the term "Grammy" carries a lot of weight in the music industry. If someone can win a Grammy using only web-based distribution, it's a big deal.
Re:that's nice (Score:2)
You mean Maria Schneider got first post? Strange, it doesn't appear she even posted anything here... [slashdot.org]
Music Without The Middlemen (Score:4, Interesting)
It'll be interesting if a pop singer pulls a similar stunt for his/her next album, and we'll have a real comparison, and see how (un)important a publisher is in terms of marketing and sales.
Is publisher still an important factor?
Re:Music Without The Middlemen (Score:3, Interesting)
And in some ways it's beneficial. I didn't have to muck around with copy protection or having the CD in the drive at all when I bought Half Life 2 off of Steam. Plus, it doesn't give Vivendi Universal a dime.
And we all know how many /.ers would love to not give the RIAA a dime.
Re:Music Without The Middlemen (Score:2)
Re:Music Without The Middlemen (Score:5, Interesting)
Unfortunately, most artists aren't able to do anything like this. Case in point Poe [realpoe.com] (or try the iTunes [apple.com] link) has basically been screwed left and right by Atlantic for the past 5 years. She can't perform any of her own songs until 7 years after her contract expires, and at current, if I understand correctly, she is essentially barred from creating any new music and releasing it without Atlantic's approval.
Even Prince had to bend over and take it. His contract was so bad he wasn't even able to use his performing name until the contract expired.
All of this of course just underscores how screwed up the RIAA is.
Not just the RIAA (Score:2)
Re:Not just the RIAA (Score:3, Interesting)
The reason for this is exactly what we're seeing here: the artist are being screwed over by the record companies. If you're a "to be" artist, you need someone to record your songs, distribute them and give you PR. Either you sign the standard (awfull) contract, or you get nothing. Of course they sign it, they want to be artists, right?
If music distribution on the net was legal, artists wouldn't be so much u
Re:Not just the RIAA (Score:3, Interesting)
She's not, and wasn't screwed up, just screwed over. Young musically (or otherwise artistically) inclined people are not lawyers. When the record company comes by with the tantalizing offer of becoming a millionaire most of them don't know enough about business or the world in general to negoti
OT:The Grammys (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:OT:The Grammys (Score:2, Redundant)
i didn't see it. what do you mean?
Re:OT:The Grammys (Score:3, Insightful)
It pisses me off to see people complain about "stars" not doing anything good for society, but when someone like Bono gets involved, he's labeled as cocky, a sellout, whatever. Walk in his shoes for a year and then talk.
Re:OT:The Grammys (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:OT:The Grammys (Score:2, Funny)
Re:OT:The Grammys (Score:2, Insightful)
Yeah, that was annoying. It's almost as if these people, that earn their living by being paid to entertain their audiences, are annoyed when people decide that they like their music, but not enough to pay for it. Pretty obnoxious, expecting to actually get paid for their work. Jerks! Soooo annoying.
Re:OT:The Grammys (Score:2)
Say it with me, a download does not necessarily equal a lost sale.
Re:OT:The Grammys (Score:4, Insightful)
Almost as obnoxious as expecting to make money on an album, instead of accepting an advance which then gets taken out of album sales and paid back to the record label, so that you never actually see any money from it even if people do buy it. Look at the figures. [negativland.com]
Re:OT:The Grammys (Score:2)
Just because it can be done doesn't mean it is a legal or ethical thing to do. On the flip side, I don't like what the RIAA is doing either.
Re:OT:The Grammys (Score:3, Insightful)
But if you ran a small store, and for a year you lost all of your proceeds because you kept getting ripped off... wouldn't you want to do something about it, rather than just throw your hands up? And wouldn't at least some people in the situation want to get on the news and say: "hey kids! when you rip off my store, you're stealing from actual people!"
Professional musicians spend the best part of their lives ge
Re:OT:The Grammys (Score:2)
No, but the good ones work their asses off, and attract money from producers to pay for expensive studio time, musicians, marketing, and other huge costs, in anticipation of a certain level of sales. They build a recording for a particular audience, they risk time, money, and investor's money in the expectation that a fairly predictable number of a certain type of person will like their music, and they'll be compensated for that risk and eff
Re:OT:The Grammys (Score:3, Insightful)
This is always so funny. I love the way that people who are too cheap, and too disrespectful of the very musicians they seem to like to listen to, respond to any challenge by attempting a redirect. How about this: let's forget worrying about whether it's theft (like of a baseball), or "infringment" (in th
I think the term is: (Score:5, Funny)
Dear RIAA,
PWNED,
Toddy boy
Re:I think the term is: (Score:5, Funny)
Exec 1: Oh my god we are toast!
Exec 2: Why?
Exec 1: The grammy awarded a non-CD winner last night!
Exec 2: No problem. We'll just hire more lawyers and sue the grammys.
Exec 1: Brilliant!
Exec 2: We just need a lawyer with morals, only buy CDs and doesn't do P2P.
Exec 1: Ok, we are toast.
no, no, no... (Score:5, Funny)
RIAA chairman: "what happen"
RIAA flunky: "somebody set us up the bomb!"
RIAA flunky: "we get signal!"
RIAA chairman: "what?"
RIAA flunky: "main screen turn on!"
RIAA chairman: "it's you!
schneider: "how are you gentlemen. all your sales are belong to us. you are on the way to obsolescence."
RIAA chairman: "what you say!"
maria schneider: "you have no chance to survive. make your time."
ed
See how it works, RIAA? (Score:5, Insightful)
I've downloaded most of Maria's album, and am looking for the final pieces. This is how distribution can and SHOULD work
Re:See how it works, RIAA? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:See how it works, RIAA? (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't be a dick. Pay for the album.
Re:See how it works, RIAA? (Score:3)
The "Concert in the Garden" CD was limited to 10,000 copies, with 9,000 available for pre-order to participants and 1,000 held in reserve for later auction, through ArtistShare.
Reality Check (Score:2)
What ? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What ? (Score:5, Funny)
I tried to explain that to my wife. She didn't buy it.
Re:What ? (Score:2)
Records Cos on borrowed time (Score:4, Insightful)
Come on, when a dead guy nearly sweeps the awards (regardless of the fact that Ray was talented), truly this an industry running out of options.
in all fairness (Score:2, Informative)
Yea, most of the rest of the RIAA stuff produced is crap tho.
Re:in all fairness (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:in all fairness (Score:2)
have you heard a lot of rock/punk bands using mandolins in their music?
I'm the first to admit that Billy Joe cant play guitar, but Tre is an EXCELLENT drummer, and mike is a decent bassist and is very talented at writing lyrics.
I cant really speak for the makeup part of your argument. But frankly, even if they are, I dont care. That's a stupid thing to base your argument on.
Re:in all fairness (Score:2)
REM, the Dead Milkmen, They Might be Giants, the White Stripes...
But honestly, Green Day's catchy and all, but the only reason they did pop-punk was cuz the Mr T Experience showed em how. And the only reason they're trying new things is cuz the Mr T Experience showed em how. Dr Frank literally taught BillieJoe how to play guitar. Listen to the MTX song "dumb little band" one time.
And if you wanna hear revolutionary, experimental, and incredibly beautiful, you might wanna pic
Re:in all fairness (Score:2)
Billie Joe Armstrong will probably never win any solo god guitar awards, but he's extremely talented. Mike Dirnt and Tre Cool are absolute monsters.
Have you even LISTENED to American Idiot? Obviously not. It has more of a message than the snobbish music critic crap you listed.
Re:in all fairness (Score:2)
If GD came out and said "hey, we're a bunch of sellouts -- we are just trying to get paid" I would have some respect for them. For the record, Dookie was a great album. It just got a little old the fifth time. And to reiterate, anybody claiming
Re:in all fairness (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Records Cos on borrowed time (Score:5, Funny)
But he was still alive when it was recorded, which does make a difference. Otherwise I agree with you.
Re:Records Cos on borrowed time (Score:2)
Re:Records Cos on borrowed time (Score:2)
Yeah, but you can still record new albums with old material, like the Nat King / Natalie album, which was "recorded" long after his death.
Re:Records Cos on borrowed time (Score:2)
Yeah, it's not just the Grammies. I'd go so far as to say it's the entire American entertainment industry. "I,robot" would never have been made when Asimov was alive. I've known bands signed to major label who were literally told, "maybe you'll die in a bus crash and then we can sell these".
Re:Records Cos on borrowed time (Score:2, Interesting)
I dont mind that the major awards shows do this (You can't tell me to this day that Al Pacino "deserved" an Oscar for Scent of a Woman), it's when they choose to do it that irks. At times they choose to reward when a tr
Re:Records Cos on borrowed time (Score:2, Interesting)
Yeah, but one has to ask, so what? I can understand people's impatience with award shows that give out sympathy awards. Same thing for awards given for political reasons, although that tends to be the movie industry. Ray Charles had a enormously successful career. Everyone knows he was an amazing talent. People living on Peruvian mountaintops know who he was. He made fifty million billion dollars. What's a Grammy on top of that? An
Re:Records Cos on borrowed time (Score:2)
Re:Records Cos on borrowed time (Score:4, Informative)
"More to the point, look at the manufactured crap the record companies are spitting out - Maroon 5, retreaded Green Day and a dead Ray Charles."
For what it's worth, Maroon 5 got their start posting their stuff to MP3.com. However, I agree that they're pretty mediocre.
Re:Records Cos on borrowed time (Score:5, Insightful)
Maroon 5: The fact that they are successful suddenly makes them crap? I forgot, selling records make you suck They put out Songs About Jane in 2002. The fact that it is a really good album is what made it succeed, not some plot by the labels to push "crap." New bands like Maroon 5 disprove your point that the industry is running out of options.
Green Day: Retreaded? Once again, people like to slam green day as not being punk because they're popular. Nevermind that they continue to put out good songs. Ray Charles: He died less than 9 months ago. The RIAA didn't trot out a corpse to sell records, he recorded (obviously) and released the album before he died.
Can you even fathom that these people are musicians and not just pawns of the RIAA? They work hard (none harder than Ray) and try to get as many people as they can to hear their art. And then some pissant like you dismisses them as crap because they happen to be popular.
Your opinions on music are not the only ones that matter (shocking!) The fact you feel like Maroon 5 is crap, Green Day is re-treaded, and Ray Charles' album is a publicity stunt doesn't change the fact that they are all really good artists, and really good albums. But it's your loss for not appreciating them.
Re:Records Cos on borrowed time (Score:2)
Re: 3 Rules of winning a Grammy (Score:3, Funny)
1. If a Grammy can be awarded post-humously, it will. No disrespect to Ray Charles at all, he is one of my favorites, but did his duet album deserve to win EIGHT Grammies? He won for pretty much every award he was up for. The same thing happened in the past with Johnny Cash, Roy Orbison, and George Harrison. There are much better records by Ray Charles out there that should have deserved more when they came out, but to get all these awards p
The big question... (Score:5, Insightful)
As a musician, I hope her win is a precedent that will be emulated over and over.
Re:The big question... (Score:5, Funny)
Two words: Kurt Cobain
The Josie and the Pussycats movie had a spoof of this where they disappeared the goth-punk girl from the record store.
Re:The big question... (Score:3, Funny)
Tell
Connecting to www.mariaschneider.com[216.130.189.66]:80... failed: Connection refused.
Nervous times for RIAA & MPAA... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Nervous times for RIAA & MPAA... (Score:5, Insightful)
Look, the RIAA doesn't "control" anything. They do the bidding of the big record labels, and take all the heat from people like you so Sony Music and the other actual villains in this story don't have to.
The last decision which the RIAA made was the standardized design of that little preamp that goes into the "phono" input of most stereos prior to 1998 or so.
All they do now is serve as a mouthpiece (and lightning rod) for the record labels in their efforts to lock down their IP. Ranting about how eeeeevil the RIAA is simply plays right into the hands of the labels behind it all.
Re:Nervous times for RIAA & MPAA... (Score:2)
Do you think they do all this out of the goodness of their heart?" There's good reason they do the bidding and representation - they're compensated for it. It's just another cog in the music machine.
Re:Nervous times for RIAA & MPAA... (Score:2)
All they do now is serve as a mouthpiece (and lightning rod) for the record labels in their efforts to lock down their IP. Ranting about how eeeeevil the RIAA is simply plays right into the hands of the labels behind it all.
Smartest post I've ever seen on /. Finally someone realizes that huge compan
Does it matter? (Score:5, Funny)
it's coming down (Score:2, Funny)
To be fair... (Score:5, Informative)
Still, a good sign.
sad thing is (Score:5, Funny)
Stupid question (Score:2, Offtopic)
Not so much the distribution... (Score:5, Insightful)
What's really interesting is that the album was made with no involvement of a record company at all.
The business model is dead... (Score:2, Funny)
Music..the other way (Score:5, Interesting)
Internet is their greatest tool, so with a bit of time and dedication you can reach millions of people from the comforts of your own home.
I don't think it's about the music industry now, it's about the new uprising of artists taking a step on freely distributed music. The RIAA has their game, but we have ours too.
Instead of changing them, lets just use our own method.
that's my
- pronobozo [pronobozo.com]
Great... (Score:2, Funny)
I guess they had to *ahem*face the music soon, though.
Well... damn (Score:2, Funny)
It'll be the most derivative crap ever created. but, hey, lots of people have become wealthy doing *that*. :)
Progressive jazz metal, maybe. Hmmm. Instrumentals only, because my singing kills cows at fifty paces. I'll sell *that* disc to the farming industry, although PETA might protest it as being more cruel than a pneumatic bolt to the skull.
I hope the RIAA sues the Grammies (Score:3, Funny)
Steps will be taken.
Quick review of the Grammys. (Score:4, Funny)
Highlights include:
Animating Ray Charles corpse to sell box sets and tribute albums. Look at the dead guy dance! Reminded me of last year's "Cash in on Johnny Cash".
The most god-awful rendition of 'Across the Universe' ever. Hey, if I wanted wooden performances, I'd hang out with a drugstore Indian. And Slash, you don't need to lean that far back when you're playing a quietly phased 12 string. Save the rock pose for something that isn't being butchered right before your eyes.
The internet-inspired 'mash-up'. You can't tell me that someone didn't get that idea from searching Livejournals, and thinking, "This is super-hot! The kids will eat this up! LOLLERS!"
Industry fuck talking about the usual, "downloading music is illegal". Unless you don't own the rights to it. Great crowd shot during that speech. So many 'fuck you' expressions on the audience that had been screwed by industry contracts. Or boredom, apathy and 'get this over with'. I would have been yelling, "Michael Bolton called, and he wants his hair back!". Or something funny.
The endless 'we care' about the tsunami or fill in the blank tragedy of the moment' blathering. How about you kids spend more time making a listenable record, and less time pandering to your bleeding heart market share?
Once again, the Grammys show that the RIAA is not relevant. When are we getting rid of them again?
Buy Her Music (Score:5, Insightful)
If you truly want music to be free (as in speech), put your money where your mouth is for once. The success of such artists depends on the financial backing of people who claim to support independent music.
Slightly OT: RIAA & MPAA Law Suits (Score:3, Informative)
Therefore, if you find yourself the victim of a MPAA or RIAA lawsuit, you just should stay out of Federal parks, buildings, Puerto Rico, Guam and American Samoa. Voluntarily appearing before the court is admission of jurisdiction. Furthermore, if you are asked to serve on a federal grand jury, in an article 1 court, make sure you are from a federal territory.
Re:Slightly OT: RIAA & MPAA Law Suits (Score:3, Informative)
Any federal court can indeed hear a matter of federal law, by definition, respecting the nature of the court as specified by congress [Here's your sign!
However the limited Article 1 courts cannot hear cases out of their jurisdiction. The jurisdiction of an Article 1 court is Federal territies.
That is to say, for my ass to be dragged into US District court, I need to commit the offense of fede
Re:MOD PARENT DOWN, TAX PROTESTING TROLL (Score:3, Insightful)
2) Years of court rulings tell this to be true
3) Common sense has been perverted by the IRS. Why do you think they only send subsection (b) and not subsection (a) on the Notice of Levy form? Because subsection a says that ONLY Government employees may be levied. So most HR departments (completly ignorant of the law) comply.
Why do you seek to mod me down? Ibrought up a legitimate wuestion of Jusrisduction. Now you find that I'm a "tax protester" and seek to sile
Re:MOD PARENT DOWN, TAX PROTESTING TROLL (Score:3, Interesting)
If you're not beliveing me, then I suggest that you start reading, starting from the constitution and then jump to title 26. Make sure you read it in its entirety, particularly section 3401. There ar
Re:MOD PARENT DOWN, TAX PROTESTING TROLL (Score:3, Insightful)
All of our founding fathers knew that slavery was wrong. But they also knew it could not change overnight without throwing the nation into great chaos. So what sis they do? They made every man whose life was worthless worth well over half of a life. This
Irony... (Score:4, Interesting)
Jazz is a bad test case (Score:5, Interesting)
The "Social Revolution" Begins (Score:5, Interesting)
This is precisely the way in which this "revolution" should happen. This artist has choosen to distribute her music only over the internet. Because of her choice many people are able to enjoy her music that might not otherwise. She also has cut out the RIAA member middlemen. We need more artists that are willing to do this.
Her choice, though, is the key issue here. An artist that does not make a similar choice should not have thier right to make that choice usurped by a bunch of thieves with bittorrent clients.
Yeah, but can she live off the net profits? (Score:4, Informative)
Her site has gone down in flames (no coral cache available), so I can't check how much she was charging. Granted, a jazz artist with her tallent is likely doing a fair amount of live performances, so the album's not her only source of income, but still . . .
I remember her from an NPR piece (Score:4, Informative)
She's interviewed in part 1 of the series which was aired on the 15th of September [clip length: 5' 42"]. Odd, though, that clip one is the middle link among the three.
RIAA Press Release (Score:3, Funny)
The RIAA has today shown further proof that non-conventional Internet Music systems are flawed, and costing the artists money. The recent Grammy success of a relatively unknown artist, Maria Schneider, through an unconventional medium is hurting artists. Sure, her method of direct sales, thereby lowering the overhead of record stores, executives and others in the chain seems innocuous enough.
But it's not.
You see, since her record was not released through the RIAA, we missed out on that chunk of profit. That's money straight from our profit coffers, err, I mean our lower employee payrolls. Now, since she cut our profit on her work off, we have to compensate to meet our annual profit-for-executives margins. So, we had to cut into other artists's payments. Now, Maroon5, Britney Spears, and Metallica will NOT be able to upgrade the toilets in their pet's private jets to a gold plating, versus their current silver plated models.
In addition, the RIAA said that without direct control over what the content of the music was, they couldn't tell people what they wanted to hear. One executive was flabbergasted "How the hell are we going to tell the radio stations we want people to listen to this if we don't control it. It's outrageous! I know people aren't smart enough to think about what they want to hear, so how are we going to tell them about this music. It's just a stupid career-limiting move."
Britney was quoted as saying "All those people buying those records they want are hurting my dog. I hope they can sleep at night, knowing my Poopsie will have to deal with the pain of only a silver toilet seat. They all should die in a tire fire."
They also reported that in addition to not distributing through the RIAA or a major label, she was able to control the content. The RIAA has said that they are considering lobbying Congress to get this "potential for free-radical thought" listed as a terroristic activity. No response yet from Capitol Hill or the White House on these allgations yet.
Maria Schneider is a jazz goddess! (Score:4, Informative)
Patent pending business model (Score:5, Informative)
Ms. Schneider's site (Score:3, Informative)
To become eligible to buy the album, something I'd do out of curiosity and because I think the ARTIST should be supported by a method that purports to funnel the monies to the artist as opposed to funneling it thru the accounting dept of some faceless record company where any number of charges are made against the net sales of an album, whatever it takes to make sure they don't have to cut the artists a royalty check being the order of the day.
To continue with the first sentence above, one must open an account, complete with usernames and passwords. Somehow, it didn't like something and looped around to have me fix it, but when I fixed it, then it just loops forever asking me to login, something about an expired security certificate was being reported by my browser. And I was unable to get past that, so I never got a chance to drop my card and actually make the purchase.
FWIW, its $16.95 USD & probably a hefty shipping fee if that site is like most.
But I'm a little put off, not getting the chance to support what, from the sounds of things, must be a worthy artist to support, by buying her output.
If you are copying the mail here Ms. Schneider, grab a ball bat and go see your web designer, and don't leave until it works as intended. We really should be able to purchase it without all this 'membership' crap as long as our card has a sufficient line of credit to support the purchase. And I believe $30K+ should be enough to buy your cd unless you'd like to have a really really exclusive club that doesn't mind playing the starving artist scene for real.
--
Cheers, Gene
Obligatory Jazz Reference (Score:3, Funny)
RP
Re:Don't you mean INTERNET? (Score:2, Insightful)
what TYPE of "audio files"?!
and since when was the "web" just "HTML"?!
Booyah!
Re:Just curious... (Score:4, Informative)
Argh..... (Score:2)
Be careful, falling from such a high horse may break your neck...