Death of the Music Publishing Industry
[I found this on a blog that looks at a lot of business charts…, The Understatement]
The music industry is down 64% from its peak.
The music industry is actually down 45% from where it was in 1973.
The CD peak was only 13% better than the vinyl peak.
10 years ago the average American spent almost 3 times as much on recorded music products as they do today.
26 years ago they spent almost twice as much as they do today.
Kind of a ‘This Was Your Life’ chart, isn’t it? Memories…
Whoa. 10 years ago CD sales jumped off a cliff [just about the time Neli and I turned our hobbyist tendencies into business. Doh!].
Not sure why the recording industry is so dependent on ALBUM sales. Why not singles too? [see original website to see what I am talking about, if you care]
Apparently the iPod killed the CD. Presumably the smartphone will kill the iPod.
Not sure how the ultra high-end is affected, but mid-fi better support the smartphone as a source, or else.
The current trends.
[Personally I think online subscriptions will win the day, albeit apparently the current trend is flat. I think the flat trend is a damping factor provided by the iPod generation who has not yet switched to listening to music on their smart phones].
Is this article shows that everything is going to finish and music publishing companies in a big loss and not getting any more contract