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SurfGuitar101 Forums » The Shallow End »

Permalink Bandcamp and the direction of online music

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Bandcamp recently published a blog about the current success of their music platform. Considering quite a few surf artists and labels use Bandcamp as an online outlet, I thought it would be an interesting article to post & discuss.

https://blog.bandcamp.com/2016/05/19/bandcamp-downloads-streaming-and-the-inescapably-bright-future/

Bandcamp, Downloads, Streaming, and the Inescapably Bright Future

In light of a recent report that Apple will soon abandon music downloads (later denied, but undoubtedly containing a certain amount of inevitability), we thought we’d take a moment to update you on the state of Bandcamp’s business and our plans for the future.

Bandcamp grew by 35% last year. Fans pay artists $4.3 million dollars every month using the site, and they buy about 25,000 records a day, which works out to about one every 4 seconds (you can see a real-time feed of those purchases on our desktop home page). Nearly 6 million fans have bought music through Bandcamp (half of whom are younger than 30), and hundreds of thousands of artists have sold music on Bandcamp. Digital album sales on Bandcamp grew 14% in 2015 while dropping 3% industry-wide, track sales grew 11% while dropping 13% industry-wide, vinyl was up 40%, cassettes 49%… even CD sales grew 10% (down 11% industry-wide). Most importantly of all, Bandcamp has been profitable (in the now-quaint revenues-exceed-expenses sense) since 2012.

Subscription-based music streaming,* on the other hand, has yet to prove itself to be a viable model, even after hundreds of millions of investment dollars raised and spent. For our part, we are committed to offering an alternative that we know works. As long as there are fans who care about the welfare of their favorite artists and want to help them keep making music, we will continue to provide that direct connection. And as long as there are fans who want to own, not rent, their music, that is a service we will continue to provide, and that is a model whose benefits we will continue to champion. We have been here since 2008 and we mean to be here in 2028. Thank you!

Bandcamp is not a download store, and we very much embrace the convenience of streaming. When you buy music on Bandcamp, whether that’s in digital or physical form (30% of sales on Bandcamp are for vinyl and other merchandise), you not only get the pleasure of knowing you’re supporting the artist in a direct and transparent way, you also get instant, unlimited streaming of that music via our free apps for Android and iOS, as well as an optional, high-quality download. Your purchase is about direct support, ownership and access, whether that access takes the form of a stream, download, or both. So please consider joining us in never using “streaming” as shorthand for “subscription-based music.” The former is an inevitable technological shift, the latter is an unproven business model.

I personally use Bandcamp whenever I possible can for online/download music. Plus, its a good way to get Vinyl or CD with high quality digital download as well. Plus the artists get a bigger cut than they would from iTunes (at least that's what I hear. Any artists here have a different spin on that?), so it seems to be a better method of artist support than other sites. Of course, nothing beats buying from the artist at shows or buying direct from labels like Double Crown and Green Cookie. But I think the future of music is online, and I like how Bandcamp is doing business.

What are your thoughts? Anyone else a Bandcamp fan? Anyone hate it?

Last edited: May 23, 2016 13:43:27

From a consumer's perspective, I absolutely love it. Good quality downloads, no bullcrap, easy and unobtrusive way to follow artists plus many ways to find new ones. Plus a few little things like the emails it sends me to tell me somebody bought an album after seeing that I had bought it.

edit: the user pages are cool too, here's mine https://bandcamp.com/HunterKing

Storm Surge of Reverb: Surf & Instro Radio

Last edited: May 23, 2016 13:50:37

Compared to a lot of the other band-related sites I've used over the years (MySpace, Soundcloud, X-Ray Music etc), Bandcamp does in theory make a lot of sense and I can't think why I've never thought to use it. Is there much of a surf presence on there?

I really like Bandcamp!
Lots of surf there Smile
Take a look at my collection: https://bandcamp.com/surfybear

Its very convenient to follow other users with similar music taste.
This way I get recommendations regularly Smile

I spotted this earlier today. I'm kind of shocked by the statement about Apple abandoning downloads. The truth is that iTunes isn't a particularly great place to sell music - it just makes it easier to sell to some people. Bandcamp however allows a variety of high definition formats and streaming from the cloud for a fair price, taking only a minimal cut.

I really feel that intellectual property lawyers have had too much of Tim Cook's ear and this story heralds that music as a service has taken over completely from music as a product. But I just can't see subscription services as a viable business model for artists.

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The good part is that streaming increased music consumption nearly to its possible peak. This happened by lowering the price of admission. The only way to further increase listening time now would be to strip ads from free plans.

The Exotic Guitar of Kahuna Kawentzmann

You can get the boy out of the Keynes era, but you can’t get the Keynes era out of the boy.

Hmmm, might have to look into bandcamp...

Cheers,
Jeff

http://www.facebook.com/CrazyAcesMusic
http://www.youtube.com/user/crazyacesrock
http://www.reverbnation.com/crazyacesmusic

josheboy wrote:

...Of course, nothing beats buying from the artist at shows or buying direct from labels like Double Crown and Green Cookie...>

What are your thoughts? Anyone else a Bandcamp fan? Anyone hate it?

Thanks for hip'ing us to Bandcamp, Josh. I hadn't heard of this resourse. I do question your statement I've singled out above. Back when , I was of the opinion that it was better to have one's releases purchased at a retailer than at an appearance or direct from the label. Having your release purchased at a third party retailer meant wider exposure which would translate into greater sales. Had "Surfbeat '80" only been sold through Bomp Records or a Nightriders show instead of my local Music Plus, I might never have stumbled upon surf music - well not until Pulp Fiction anyways! It appears to me that steering sales to Bandcamp could provide the same expanded exposure and greater sales. -Marty

"Hello Girls!"

Last edited: May 24, 2016 16:23:40

MT, you've really got to get hip to all the new music that's coming out these days! Don't you listen to any Surf radio? Wink

Josh's statement needs to be taken in the context of the current state of the music business and how differently things are done these days. Brick and mortar retailers are practically dead, and the relationship between artist, label and/or distributor are night and day. Especially for our niche genre, which only sees a small number of units pressed, it is even more important to buy directly from the band to ensure that they receive as much financial gain as possible. Why buy from a third party when you know the band is only receiving wholesale cost vs. directly from them or their label, in which case they receive 100%?

The days of buying music in 1980 and 2016 are apples and oranges.

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Last edited: May 24, 2016 17:13:02

JONPAUL wrote:

Brick and mortar retailers are practically dead

I think that's a bit of an exaggeration, here in New Orleans we have more record stores than we did 10 years ago and most of them weren't around before then. The rise of vinyl has changed the game there and pulled some stores out of the nosedive they would have been in had they stuck with CDs. Of course, chances that I'm going to find the latest Madeira at my local record store is about zeeeero.

I think your main point is correct though. Surf especially benefits from services like bandcamp, helping global acts ignore oceans as shipping prices go further and further up. If you take Green Cookie, I used to get occasional releases from them, but I knew less about each one and I often had to wait for them to get to Double Crown's mail order before I bought them. Now I can try all of their releases before I buy them AND get a digital download instantly. In fact, in their case I usually get to hear it way before it's released.

And then there are tons of great surf bands that don't have the startup capital to release, promote and send CDs. No problemo, stick it up on bandcamp, you could even have people download it for free. Amphibian Man is a great example of somebody that would be doing things very differently if he weren't on bandcamp.

Storm Surge of Reverb: Surf & Instro Radio

While some things seemingly get better, and that's wonderful that things are different in your neck o' the woods, Mom n' Pop record stores all over are still having to shut their doors. And I really don't consider it an exaggeration in the context of the discussion. Compared to the amount of chain stores around in 1980, they are definitely now almost dead.

Insect Surfers
The Tikiyaki Orchestra
The Scimitars
Lords Of Atlantis
Fiberglass Jungle - Surf Radio

ElMonstroPorFavor wrote:

I think that's a bit of an exaggeration, here in New Orleans we have more record stores than we did 10 years ago and most of them weren't around before then. The rise of vinyl has changed the game there and pulled some stores out of the nosedive they would have been in had they stuck with CDs.

In Seattle, they are pretty much dead. Stabbed like hell in the back and left to die. We've been hemorrhaging shops the last decade. We have three shops left and none of them are downtown and I'd be hesitant to call one of them "in Seattle".

We have 6-7 used only record stores. One is metal only, one is nothing after 1990, one doesn't have prices and the owner charges a fortune and it is actually a pretty shit collection, and several are really small and sad.

Man, that's wild, Jake. I was in Seattle in maybe 2012 or 2013 and I didn't even have to look for them, I would just stumble across record stores while I was walking. Good ones too!

Storm Surge of Reverb: Surf & Instro Radio

JONPAUL wrote:

MT, you've really got to get hip to all the new music that's coming out these days! Don't you listen to any Surf radio? Wink

Yes, I do mention that old Nightriders record a lot but I've also written enthusiastically about a number of the new bands here on SG101. I also co-DJ'd a CSUN surf radio show some years ago that played primarily 3rd wave bands. -Marty

"Hello Girls!"

Last edited: May 25, 2016 02:12:50

JONPAUL wrote:

Josh's statement needs to be taken in the context of the current state of the music business and how differently things are done these days. Brick and mortar retailers are practically dead, and the relationship between artist, label and/or distributor are night and day. Especially for our niche genre, which only sees a small number of units pressed, it is even more important to buy directly from the band to ensure that they receive as much financial gain as possible. Why buy from a third party when you know the band is only receiving wholesale cost vs. directly from them or their label, in which case they receive 100%?

The days of buying music in 1980 and 2016 are apples and oranges.

Where music is sold is certainly different. I was just thinking the advantage to the third party sale is still exposure. There exists a large market of music lovers that don't belong to SG101 or tune into dedicated surf radio. They may hear a surf recording on Little Steven's Garage - for example - and might more naturally look for the artist on Amazon. I was just curious - if it's not the reality it is interesting to hear. -MT

"Hello Girls!"

Last edited: May 25, 2016 02:52:03

http://www.digitalmusicnews.com/2016/05/24/spotify-losses-2008-present-667-2-million/

For those of you interested in the viability of subscription models - check out the stats on Spotify.

Sharawaji Records - UK Registered Record Label Dedicated To Surf, Instro, Reverb and Twang
DripFeed.net - the Network for Surf Music Join Now
Surf Rock Radio - the World’s Number 1 Surf Music Station
Surf Music Radio - the World's Number 2 Surf Music Station
Monstromental - Pulp Horror Instro Surf Radio

Mike75 wrote:

http://www.digitalmusicnews.com/2016/05/24/spotify-losses-2008-present-667-2-million/

For those of you interested in the viability of subscription models - check out the stats on Spotify.

I guess this is one of those rare situations where everybody gets screwed except the consumer... Obviously Spotify is aimed towards growth, which is why they'll sustain huge losses like that yearly (Amazon not making money for years yadda yadda) but it's hard to see how they can pull out of that with no sign of changing royalty structures. People have already gotten VERY used to getting their music for free and Spotify has been picking up the tab, hard to imagine how you can tweak that model back into the black in any reasonable amount of time.

Storm Surge of Reverb: Surf & Instro Radio

ElMonstroPorFavor wrote:

Mike75 wrote:

http://www.digitalmusicnews.com/2016/05/24/spotify-losses-2008-present-667-2-million/

For those of you interested in the viability of subscription models - check out the stats on Spotify.

I guess this is one of those rare situations where everybody gets screwed except the consumer... Obviously Spotify is aimed towards growth, which is why they'll sustain huge losses like that yearly (Amazon not making money for years yadda yadda) but it's hard to see how they can pull out of that with no sign of changing royalty structures. People have already gotten VERY used to getting their music for free and Spotify has been picking up the tab, hard to imagine how you can tweak that model back into the black in any reasonable amount of time.

There are more people not getting screwed. Managers and founders of streaming services. Internet providers. Manufacturers of playback devices. Users of Big Data (AI and marketing). In short: The Music Industry 2016.

The Exotic Guitar of Kahuna Kawentzmann

You can get the boy out of the Keynes era, but you can’t get the Keynes era out of the boy.

Last edited: May 25, 2016 18:53:07

The Exotic Guitar of Kahuna Kawentzmann

You can get the boy out of the Keynes era, but you can’t get the Keynes era out of the boy.

The word on the street is that itunes in Korea has now stopped offering downloads as it cannibalised Apple Music. iTunes in China never offered downloads. I'll give downloadable mp3s via itunes about 18 months. This will drive more niche content to bandcamp which will thrive.

Apple Music isn't exactly my favourite piece of software but I can see that some people (the youth) really do appreciate streaming. Where I live in Hong Kong, Spotify is not regarded as an evil company but actually a useful service that many are willing to subscribe to. However this is not a tool for discovery for these people, but a tool to hear something familiar.

Soundcloud is now experimenting with paid services. Apparently Mixcloud is doing very well financially, and all artists get paid royalties.

Sharawaji Records - UK Registered Record Label Dedicated To Surf, Instro, Reverb and Twang
DripFeed.net - the Network for Surf Music Join Now
Surf Rock Radio - the World’s Number 1 Surf Music Station
Surf Music Radio - the World's Number 2 Surf Music Station
Monstromental - Pulp Horror Instro Surf Radio

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