Living Down Stream

Bobby St. Mute
14 min readJan 16, 2019

In 1982, Prince prophetically released the album that sealed his superstardom. “I’m gonna party like it’s nineteen ninety-nine,” the extravagant pop star proclaimed, backed by trademark synth sounds. The foretold 1999 would see recorded music revenue reach the highest point it ever had[1], and — thanks to the internet — likely the highest it ever will.

*This article was originally published 5 March 2018. Updated 15 January 2019.

A Drowning Industry

On 24 Jan. 2018, Senator Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) introduced the Music Modernization Act to Congress.[2] The bill reforms section 115 of the Copyright Act and allows the Copyright Royalty Board (CRB) to change royalty rates to match market value.[3]

In the digital age of instant access and if-not-free-close-to-it, the music industry, and perhaps our culture itself, needs governmental help to survive.

Keeping Freedom Current

The Founding Fathers knew the importance of intellectual property. Article I, Section 8, Clause 8 of the U.S. Constitution says that “Congress shall have power . . . to promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries.”

Congress introduced the Copyright Act in 1790 — it was the tenth act passed by our young country’s congress. The first major revision to the Copyright Act was in 1909 with the express purpose of paying composers their fair share.[4] It’s important to note that the first standardized music recording and playback technology — the phonograph record — emerged around 1925, 16 years after the law was codified.[5]

The Copyright Act was once again updated in 1976 and introduced Section 107, commonly known as the “fair use clause”, which allows teachers to use segments of music, books, and other media to teach, but the rules governing royalties remain antiquated.[6] The Music Modernization Act aims to update these laws.

However, before we look at individual artists, let’s look at the changes in the music industry as a whole.

From Boom to Bust

The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) reported a staggering $14.6 billion ($21.0 billion, adjusted for inflation) revenue for recorded music in 1999. Fewer than two decades later, that number has dropped to $7.6 billion.[7]

Figure 2 — Recorded music revenue in the USA from 1999 to 2016. Source: RIAA.

CDs provided nearly 88% of revenue in 1999, with the dying cassette tape bringing the next highest portion at 7%. In contrast, 2016 saw a much wider distribution of formats — the largest market share attributed to paid subscriptions (such as Spotify and Apple Music) at 30%, CDs holding on at 15%, and downloaded singles at 12%.[8]

The convenience of music today is remarkable and the death of the CD should not be mourned. In fact, the continuing shift to the internet and cloud computing means that we will likely never see recorded music dominated by a physical medium again. However, as Chris Anderson asserts in his book Free: The Future of Radical Price, when there is no cost of a physical product (when marginal cost is zero), economics dictate that the price of a product will approach – and eventually reach – $0.00.[9]

Though we cannot blame the internet for slashing music revenues by nearly two-thirds, we can demarcate some of the critical events and cultural shifts that guided the music industry to where it is today. Let’s investigate two groups: Pirates and Swindlers.

Raiders and the Lost Arts

The internet was created with the hope of ultimate democratization. However, it became as lawless as the wild west, full of plundering and moral ambiguity.

The First Pirates

Sean Parker was an unassuming, asthma-ridden kid from Virginia. His dad, an oceanographer, introduced Sean to programming at a young age.[10]

While still in high school, his home was raided by the F.B.I. after he was caught dabbling in the computer mainframes of an unnamed Fortune 500 company.[11]

Sean would become one of the wealthiest — and most disputed — figures of the digital age.

In 1999, Sean teamed up with programmer Shawn Fanning to create Napster, a file-sharing service that was the beginning of the end for the golden age of CDs.

The service, used primarily by college students with access to the developing university network we now know as the internet, allowed anyone who had access to any form of content (music, movies, textbooks) to share that content with anyone else on the site. The bandwidth required for large media such as movies hadn’t developed yet, and printers were still relatively expensive, so the most trafficked content was music.

Everyone owned CDs and now everyone could, surreptitiously, own everyone else’s CDs too.

Scott Timberg, author of Culture Crash: The Killing of the Creative Class, convincingly argues that record labels are partly to blame for their own implosion — they neglected to change their business model to match the consumers’ needs.[12] However, that doesn’t negate the fact that a lot of users — up to 21 million — probably got away with theft.

I asked my brother, who attended college during the heyday of Napster, how ubiquitous the file sharing was. He stated frankly, “everyone had Napster. It’s just the way everyone got music. And once that went down, everyone got Kazaa [another file-sharing application]. And when that went down, Limewire.”[13]

So how did these companies run these smuggling operations in broad daylight?

A Safe Harbor

In 1996, President Clinton signed into law the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) to enact two treaties established by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) — an agency of the United Nations. The constituent Online Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation Act, commonly known as the “safe harbor clause”, has proven a flash point for almost all major online service providers.

Sean Parker and the Napster team came under fire in 2000 during a lawsuit famously lead by Lars Ulrich, the drummer for the band Metallica. The dispute was settled out of court but opened the door to a whole slew of litigation from the RIAA, A&M Records, Dr. Dre, and others.[14]

Parker’s defense was based around the safe harbor clause in the DMCA: he claimed his platform wasn’t responsible for policing what users share. Though Napster eventually succumbed to legal pressures, this set a precedent for almost all other forms of digital piracy today.[15]

Legal Loopholes

YouTube is an excellent example of legal piracy.

YouTube is owned by Google (which is owned by Alphabet, which is owned by stockholders). Google sells advertisements. Google sells a lot of advertisements. Revenue soared to $32 billion in 2017, a 15% increase from the year prior.[16]

Because advertisers pay top dollar for large view counts, YouTube has a strong incentive to maximize views. To the view count algorithm, it does not matter whether the content is a music video uploaded by the original artist, an adoring fan from the rural countryside, or a robot in Russia — if it drives website traffic, it produces revenue.

When it comes to copyright infringement, YouTube’s argument is basically the same as Napster’s: under the DMCA, the platform (YouTube.com) is not liable for the content that users put up; policing efforts are the charge of the copyright holder.[17]

YouTube provides quick access to file a copyright infringement complaint but does nothing to keep that content from being re-uploaded immediately after.

The minds at YouTube hide behind the fact that every minute, 300 hours of video are uploaded to their servers — checking all this content would be costly, if not impossible.[18] However, not only is it possible, but YouTube is quite good at filtering videos and screens videos regularly.

The Doubloon Standard

After backlash for hosting videos of the extremist Islamic State (ISIS), both YouTube and Facebook implemented systems to screen for extremist videos. [19]

Why? Because American users felt threatened and traffic decreased; decreased traffic equates to fewer ad views; fewer views means less revenue.

Noticeably, YouTube also does not host pornographic videos or extremely violent videos. The technology to screen content is available, but the money from the ad traffic is too tantalizing to turn down.

Daylight Robbery

Ultimately, the U.S. Department of Justice has ruled that under the current laws, YouTube’s morally questionable model falls within the bounds of legality.[20] There is no immediate action being taken by Congress to amend the DMCA or its safe harbor clause, but that does not mean we should ignore future reforms.

But what about artist-uploaded content?

Swindlers and False Profits

YouTube lauds the normality of its superstars, claiming that their platform can make the common person rich. The Swedish gamer PewDiePie rolled in around $15 million in 2016[21] — anybody can play games, right?

In 2009, Business Insider reported that 52.6% of YouTube videos have fewer than 500 views, while around 0.3% have greater than 1 million.[22] While I couldn’t find more current data without paying a lot of money to a data analyst, the proportions today likely similar.

Now, consider that YouTube pays around $2 for every 1000 views — or in other words around $0.002 per view.[23] Videos that hit one million views (or 0.3% of videos) make roughly $2,000. Minimum wage is around $1,260 a month, so a successful video can turn a reasonable profit, though it’s hardly comfortable, especially if you live in New York or California.

*Some authors report that YouTube is the most used music platform, even ahead of Spotify and Apple Music[24], but I struggled to confirm or deny this figure with the RIAA’s reports.[25]

The Lowering Middle Class

I’ve specifically hounded the YouTube business model, but when it comes down to it, I enjoy the convenience of YouTube daily. Nevertheless, I’ve chosen to stick to other platforms to listen to music.

However, the current rates for artists on streaming platforms are only marginally better than those of YouTube. The Music Modernization Act has been introduced to help those whom Scott Timberg calls the “middle-class creatives.”[26]

A 2012 study conducted by the Future of Music Coalition concluded that median gross revenue for musicians was $34,455.[27] This puts musicians 15% below the 2012 median per capita income reported by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, $40,534.[28] Keep in mind that this number does not include expenses related to touring, instruments, or recording.

Of course, there are superstars in the music industry that make enough to drive fancy cars and own multimillion-dollar homes like those featured on MTV’s Cribs. But these are the exception, not the rule. These are music’s 1%.

A Necessary Evil

Progenitors of the internet lauded the democratization and decentralization made possible through the network; “information wants to be free” was the rallying cry of the forward-thinkers of the day.[29] For the music industry, that meant that the behemoths that controlled the business — the record labels — would fall.

Contracts between labels and artists usually end up giving the label 50% of revenue. 30% then goes to the distributor (record shops and bookstores), and the artist gets the remaining 20%.[30] At first glance, this seems like extortion of industrial-age proportions.

Nonetheless, Timberg notes that despite the hype about self-releasing music, artists without record deals averaged around $26,500 gross revenue yearly — 24% less than the music industry median.[31] Record labels are expensive, but they take care of promotion, production, distribution, and legal matters. Labels allow the artist to “be quiet” and focus on the product.[32]

What’s more, record labels promote the ecology of music by reinvesting in other artists. Labels function as venture capitalists, funding recording projects and tours for new acts all of the time.

Jonathan Taplin, director of the Annenberg Innovation Lab at USC and author of Move Fast and Break Things, notes the parallels of Renaissance creativity and organizations of artists today. Taplin asserts that proximity was crucial for artists such as Michelangelo, Botticelli, and da Vinci, who all lived in Florence, Italy around the same time.[33] Record labels foster similar creative collaboration.

More People, Smaller Pie

Though record labels will likely need to restructure to survive, they still play an important role in royalty collections, especially considering the contract between Sony Music and Spotify.[34]

So how do streaming services like Spotify and Apple Music affect artists?

Let’s ignore the heyday of CDs — when a consumer who liked a single song on an album was forced to buy a $15 disk — and compare individual song purchases and streams.

The Utah-based band Fictionist sells their song Free Spirit through the iTunes store for $0.99 - $1.29. Apple takes a 30% cut, their label Atlantic Records (with whom the band has recently split) takes their cut of 47%.[35] That leaves 23% of the revenue for the five band members and their families. To net $1,000 as a group, they need to sell anywhere from 3.3 thousand to 4.3 thousand songs.

Figure 3 — Source: Rolling Stone, Spotify.com

Contrast this with the streaming model: Spotify pays $0.0060 — $0.0084 per stream. Spotify only keeps a 25% cut, but Atlantic Records knows that streaming is less lucrative and takes a 55% chunk.[36] This leaves the band with around 20% of the revenue. For Fictionist to make $1,000, Free Spirit needs to be streamed a whopping 525.2 thousand times by premium users or 833.3 thousand times by free tier, ad-funded subscribers.

Chris Anderson argues that such low prices were inevitable, saying that as the supply of information grows, the cost will become too low to matter.[37] But as Lord Darlington quips in Oscar Wilde’s Lady Windemere’s Fan, “A cynic knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.”

Will a price-centric internet kill music?

The music industry, content creators, and our culture itself need governmental — and your — help to survive.

Hope in Democracy

Culture, especially in America, is in constant flux. The asceticism of the 50s led to the sexual revolution of the 60s; the arena-rock era of the 80s invited the punk/grunge scene of the 90s.

Culture changes and laws should follow suit. The Google/YouTube lobbying budget (in excess of $18 million) [38] will not be silenced easily, but America needs reform, especially the copyright royalty laws and the safe harbor clause of the DMCA.

Though the bureaucratic process is slow, it constitutes a crucial element of the moldable American republic we’re a part of today. The Music Modernization Act is perhaps the first of many steps to guarantee a future for music, but it’s an important one.

Contact your state representative today and encourage them to support the Music Modernization Act; you can find your representative’s contact information by visiting www.house.gov and searching your zip code.

2019 Update

The Music Modernization Act was signed into law by President Donald Trump on 11 Oct. 2018. The bipartisan support for the bill was a seemingly rare victory for the modern American democratic process.

Nevertheless, much remains to be done to ensure fair compensation for artists. Amidst the scandals of data privacy, the inaccessibility to data actually proves to be a liability for music creators.

Tidal, the music streaming platform currently owned by Hip Hop producer Jay-Z, was accused in May of 2018 by the Norweigan newspaper Dagens Næringsliv of falsifying stream data. Tidal allegedly inflated the number of streams for artists Beyoncé and Kanye West.[39] Inflation in the number of streams for Beyoncé, who has been married to Jay-Z since 2008, is equivalent to embezzlement.

Furthermore, as Amy Wang noted in 2016, streaming services are remarkably susceptible to click fraud, which is the use of “bots” to click on links such as the play button on Spotify.[40]

The activity data of these streaming services should be subject to audit and scrutiny if Americans hope to foster a culture of creativity.

NOTES

The original article in its 2018 PDF format can be found at http://www.mountainsidemusic.com/noted/ipo-livingdownstream

[1] Recording Industry Association of America. 2018. RIAA Sales Database. Accessed February 28, 2018. http://www.riaa.com/u-s-sales-database/.

[2] The office of Sen. Christopher Coons, D-Delaware. 2018. "Senators introduce "most significant change in music licensing laws in decades" to ensure songwriters are paid fair value for their songs." Christopher Coons: United States Senator for Delaware. January 24. Accessed February 21, 2018. https://www.conns.senate.gov/newsroom/press-releases.

[3] The office of Congressman Ted Lieu, D-California. 2018. "Overview of the Music Modernization Act." United States Representative Ted Lieu: Representing California’s 33rd District. February. Accessed March 4, 2018. https://lieu.house.gov/.

[4] Association of Research Libraries. n.d. Association of Research Libraries. Accessed February 21, 2018. http://www.arl.org/focus-areas/copyright-ip/2486-copyright-timeline. In particular, the quotation under the header “1909: Revision of the U.S. Copyright Act.”

[5] Taintor, Callie. 2014. "Chronology: Technology and the Music Industry." Frontline. Accessed March 4, 2018. https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/music/inside/cron.html .

[6] Association of Research Libraries. n.d. Association of Research Libraries. Accessed February 21, 2018. http://www.arl.org/focus-areas/copyright-ip/2486-copyright-timeline.

[7] Recording Industry Association of America. 2018. RIAA Sales Database. Accessed February 28, 2018. http://www.riaa.com/u-s-sales-database/.

[8] Recording Industry Association of America. 2018. RIAA Sales Database. Accessed February 28, 2018. http://www.riaa.com/u-s-sales-database/.

[9] Anderson, Chris. Free: The Future of Radical Price. (New York: Hyperion. 2009), 82-84

[10] Kirkpatrick, David. "With a Little Help From His Friends." Vanity Fair, October, 2010.

[11] Kirkpatrick, David. "With a Little Help From His Friends." Vanity Fair, October, 2010.

[12] Timberg, Scott. Culture Crash: The Killing of the Creative Class. (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2015), 104-105

[13] Jimmy Alger in discussion with the author, March 2018.

[14] Taplin, Jonathan. Move Fast and Break Things. (New York City: Little, Brown and Company. 2017), NEED PAGE

[15]Taplin, Jonathan. Move Fast and Break Things. (New York City: Little, Brown and Company. 2017), NEED PAGE; see also Timberg, Scott. Culture Crash: The Killing of the Creative Class. (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2015), 97-108

[16] Shaban, Hamza. "Google parent Alphabet reports soaring ad revenue, despite YouTube backlash." The Washington Post, February 1, 2018.

[17] Taplin, Jonathan. Move Fast and Break Things. (New York City: Little, Brown and Company. 2017), NEED PAGE; see also https://www.youtube.com/yt/about/copyright

[18] Taplin, Jonathan. Move Fast and Break Things. (New York City: Little, Brown and Company. 2017), NEED PAGE; Need additional stats

[19] Reuters. "Facebook and YouTube use automation to remove extremist videos, sources say." The Guardian, June 25, 2016.

[20] Viacom International Inc. v. YouTube, Inc. 676 F.3d 19 (NY 2012)

[21] Berg, Madeline. "The Highest-Paid YouTube Stars 2016: PewDiePie Remains No. 1 With $15 Million." Forbes, December 20, 2016.

[22] Frommer, Dan. "Half Of YouTube Videos Get Fewer Than 500 Views." Business Insider, May 20, 2009.

[23] Pullen, John Patrick. "Here's How People Make Money From Viral Videos." Time, July 14, 2015.

[24] Taplin, Jonathan. "Sleeping Through a Revolution: A Moral Framework for the Technology Revolution." Annenberg Innovation Lab. Los Angeles, March 10, 2015.

[25] Recording Industry Association of America. 2018. RIAA Sales Database. Accessed February 28, 2018. http://www.riaa.com/u-s-sales-database/.

[26] Timberg, Scott. Culture Crash: The Killing of the Creative Class. (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2015), 10-14

[27] Thomson, Kristin, and Jean Cook. 2012. "Putting Common Assumptions About How Musicians Earn Money to the Truthiness Test." Future of Music Coalition. December 4. Accessed March 4, 2018. https://futureofmusic.org/blog/2012/12/04/putting-common-assumptions-about-how-musicians-make-money-truthiness-test.

[28] Bureau of Labor Statistics. 2014. TED: The Economics Daily. United States Department of Labor.

[29] Anderson, Chris. Free: The Future of Radical Price. (New York: Hyperion. 2009), 94-95. (Taplin, Move Fast and Break Things 2017)

[30] Rolling Stones Citation

[31] Timberg, Scott. Culture Crash: The Killing of the Creative Class. (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2015), 91

[32] Timberg, Scott. Culture Crash: The Killing of the Creative Class. (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2015), 111

[33] Annenberg Learner. 2017. Florentine Art and Architecture. Accessed March 4, 2018. http://www.learner.org/interactives/renaissance/florence_sub2.html.; see also Taplin, Jonathan. "Sleeping Through a Revolution: A Moral Framework for the Technology Revolution." Annenberg Innovation Lab. Los Angeles, March 10, 2015.

[34] Singleton, Micah. "This was Sony Music's contract with Spotify." The Verge, May 15, 2015.; the full contract is available in PDF format on several file-sharing websites (patterned after Napster).

[35] Numbers based on Rolling Stone.

[36] Once again, based on Rolling Stone.

[37] Anderson, Chris. Free: The Future of Radical Price. (New York: Hyperion. 2009),

[38] Shaban, Hamza. "Google for the first time outspent every other company to influence Washington in 2017." The Washington Post, January 23, 2018.

[39] Park, Andrea. “Tidal accused of falsifying stream numbers for Beyoncé and Kanye West.” CBS News, May 9, 2018.

[40] Wang, Amy X. “Music streaming has a nearly undetectable fraud problem.” Quartz, March 15, 2016.

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Bobby St. Mute

Critical thinker in the streets — Musician in the sheets.