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Thread: "When Pigs Fly: The Death of Oink..."

  1. "When Pigs Fly: The Death of Oink..."

    Obviously, this article is a couple of months old, but the content is great enough that it needs to be shared:

    http://www.demonbaby.com/blog/2007/1...-birth-of.html

    For the past eight years, I've worked on and off with major record labels as a designer ("Major" is an important distinction here, because major labels are an entirely different beast than many indie labels - they're the ones with the power, and they are the ones driving the industry-wide push against piracy). It was 1999 when I got my first taste of the inner-workings of a major record label - I was a young college student, and the inside of a New York label office seemed so vast and exciting. Dozens of worker bees hummed away at their desks on phones and computers. Music posters and stacks of CDs littered every surface. Everyone seemed to have an assistant, and the assistants had assistants, and you couldn't help but wonder "what the hell do all these people do?" I tagged along on $1500 artist dinners paid for by the labels. Massive bar tabs were regularly signed away by record label employees with company cards. You got used to people billing as many expenses back to the record company as they could. I met the type of jive, middle-aged, blazer-wearing, coke-snorting, cartoon character label bigwigs who you'd think were too cliche to exist outside the confines of Spinal Tap. It was all strange and exciting, but one thing that always resonated with me was the sheer volume of money that seemed to be spent without any great deal of concern. Whether it was excessive production budgets or "business lunches" that had nothing to do with business, one of my first reactions to it all was, "so this is why CDs cost $18..." An industry of excess. But that's kind of what you expected from the music business, right? It's where rock stars are made. It's where you get stretch limos with hot tubs in the back, where you get private jets and cocaine parties. Growing up in the '80's, with pop royalty and hair metal bands, you were kind of led to think, of course record labels blow money left and right - there's just so much of it to go around! Well, you know what they say: The bigger they are...
    Last edited by jyoung; 09 Apr 2008 at 12:41 AM.

  2. I never read that, a well written article.

    I would gladly pay money for a service that allowed me unlimited downloads of all music on a monthly basis.
    You sir, are a hideous hermaphroditical character which has neither the force and firmness of a man, nor the gentleness and sensibility of a woman.

  3. #3
    I would have paid to be a member of Oink.
    Pete DeBoer's Tie
    There are no rules, only consequences.

  4. #4
    I DID pay to be a member of OiNK.

    (donation)

  5. Quote Originally Posted by Cowutopia View Post
    I would have paid to be a member of Oink.

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