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jobeterob
11-08-2015, 04:53 AM
http://www.cbc.ca/news/arts/adele-album-sales-1.3302090

theboyfromxtown
11-08-2015, 05:52 AM
I saw her on the Music Awards at Cannes on TV last night. She won an award and sung a song called Hello in English.

I'm not up to speed on this lady yet...but she seems to be well loved by the French.

scanspeak
11-08-2015, 07:50 AM
Save the music industry from what? There are so many talented performers right now.

theboyfromxtown
11-08-2015, 08:01 AM
There is a lot of activity in France at the moment and these new kids on the block are even appealing to an old timer like me.

mysterysinger
11-08-2015, 08:26 AM
Seems a strange kind of thread. And I'm not sure why all the references to France as Adele is a very well established English singer. True she exudes quality and is not un-soulful but it seems a bit much to burden her with saving the music industry. Adele has longevity by comparison with others these days, but even she won't stay around forever. Music still thrives, it's just evolving. Yet there seems to be a lot of vinyl getting released once again. What goes around comes around in a different way.

theboyfromxtown
11-08-2015, 08:32 AM
Seems a strange kind of thread. And I'm not sure why all the references to France as Adele is a very well established English singer. True she exudes quality and is not un-soulful but it seems a bit much to burden her with saving the music industry. Adele has longevity by comparison with others these days, but even she won't stay around forever. Music still thrives, it's just evolving. Yet there seems to be a lot of vinyl getting released once again. What goes around comes around in a different way.

The reason there are references to France is because I am in France at the moment and Adele is appearing here.

splanky
11-08-2015, 10:00 AM
Save the music industry from what? There are so many talented performers right now.

Exactly...Geeze, I never heard so much hype and bullshit theory in my life. So now people
think music just evaporated in the time this one chick's been out of the studio? Somebody
should hurry up and tell all of the other singers they can quit now...

Glenpwood
11-08-2015, 11:08 AM
Michael Jackson met with this level of hype and expectation when he released Bad after the mega selling Thriller. Adele's following up the biggest selling album of the decade so of course the press is interested as shes been the only artist to buck the downward spiral in music sales. It probably won't match 21's numbers thanks to streaming becoming the norm but it will still be huge....

jillfoster
11-08-2015, 11:52 AM
Just goes to show, when true talent comes along, the buying public grabs onto it and hold on for dear life.

copley
11-08-2015, 11:57 AM
Thank god Adele has got nothing to do with Motown! BTW IMHO there are far better singers out there who just haven't had the hype that she has. She's not a bad singer, just nothing special. Only my opinion of course.

jillfoster
11-08-2015, 01:11 PM
Thank god Adele has got nothing to do with Motown! BTW IMHO there are far better singers out there who just haven't had the hype that she has. She's not a bad singer, just nothing special. Only my opinion of course.

Who might these people be?

marv2
11-08-2015, 01:54 PM
http://www.cbc.ca/news/arts/adele-album-sales-1.3302090

+That was a ridiculous question. The CBC should be ashamed. There are whole demographics that have never even heard of her before but regularly listens to and buys music. She's not saving anything.

marv2
11-08-2015, 01:56 PM
Thank god Adele has got nothing to do with Motown! BTW IMHO there are far better singers out there who just haven't had the hype that she has. She's not a bad singer, just nothing special. Only my opinion of course.

This girl has nothing to do with Motown. Who started this thread?

marv2
11-08-2015, 01:59 PM
Who might these people be?

Ledisi Anibade Young aka "Ledisi" for one. Janelle Monáe if they ever get her the right material.

marv2
11-08-2015, 02:20 PM
Who might these people be? Janelle Monae for one if she gets the right material. Ledisi Anibade Young aka Ledisi can sing with the best of the classic singers. Jobeterob you'll know this one............Jully Black! But none of this Motown related.

midnightman
11-08-2015, 02:29 PM
Adele is one of those rare artists in today's very fragmented music industry that just appeals all across the board. Other artists who SHOULD appeal to everyone either, as Marv said, don't have the right material or are not promoted right. Adele has all of that. Not too many artists these days don't. The industry doesn't understand that teens don't buy records, adults do [[and still have).

Don't understand why this is in the Motown section myself.

splanky
11-08-2015, 03:12 PM
Janelle Monae for one if she gets the right material. Ledisi Anibade Young aka Ledisi can sing with the best of the classic singers. Jobeterob you'll know this one............Jully Black! But none of this Motown related.

Truth spoken here. I know there are a lot of people pushing Adele as a savior of some type
and that's their right if they wish. I won't her of them but I do take issue with so many ignoring other great voices and artists in the biz on both sides of the pond. Hell, any of the ponds. I still like Jazmine Sullivan, really have fallen in love with relatively new singer Somi
and Alice Smith is one of the most versatile artists I've heard this side of jazz in a long damn
time. If the folks at Motown knew what they were doing they would have signed her:)...

marv2
11-08-2015, 03:27 PM
Truth spoken here. I know there are a lot of people pushing Adele as a savior of some type
and that's their right if they wish. I won't her of them but I do take issue with so many ignoring other great voices and artists in the biz on both sides of the pond. Hell, any of the ponds. I still like Jazmine Sullivan, really have fallen in love with relatively new singer Somi
and Alice Smith is one of the most versatile artists I've heard this side of jazz in a long damn
time. If the folks at Motown knew what they were doing they would have signed her:)...

Splanky this is called HYPE! Her PR people are probably behind it to get her more attention. If Adele is agreeing to this approach, lord help her! She'll be at the bottom of the list in America before you know it. She has nothing whatsoever to do with Motown, so why Jobeterob put it here is suspect.

copley
11-08-2015, 08:03 PM
Carmel
PJ Harvey
Neneh Cherry
Marianne Faithfull
Paloma Faith
Alison Goldfrapp
Nona Hendryx
Sharon Jones
Grace Jones
Josephine
Buffy Sainte-Marie
Suzanne Vega
Anna Calvi
Elle King
Kate Bush
Birdy

To name just a few who don't have the power of hype behind them. As I said Adele is OK but she's not saving anything!

soulster
11-08-2015, 08:30 PM
+That was a ridiculous question. The CBC should be ashamed. There are whole demographics that have never even heard of her before but regularly listens to and buys music. She's not saving anything.

The industry is not dead. The traditional model we know is changing, though. It's not about putting a CD out and buying it at the local record store. It's about:

decreasing quantities of CDs being manufactured [[at least here in the U.S.)

fewer avenues for physical distribution

streaming services such as Tidal, Pandora, iTunes, and Spotify accounting for about half of music listening now

the sales of vinyl overtaking CD sales

Concerning Adele: The market for music is very fragmented. The days of genre and demographic-crossing mass superstars are long over. I may be in her alleged demographic, but I am not a fan. Her music does nothing for me. I don't like her voice. It grates on my nerves.


This girl has nothing to do with Motown. Who started this thread?

I propose that the mods eliminate specific Motown and Soulful Detroit sections. I think the fortum, and the music scene has grown beyond those boundaries. I know, it's a topic for another thread, and there will be strong resistance, but it is worth seriously looking at.

marv2
11-08-2015, 08:36 PM
Carmel
PJ Harvey
Neneh Cherry
Marianne Faithfull
Paloma Faith
Alison Goldfrapp
Nona Hendryx
Sharon Jones
Grace Jones
Josephine
Buffy Sainte-Marie
Suzanne Vega
Anna Calvi
Elle King
Kate Bush
Birdy

To name just a few who don't have the power of hype behind them. As I said Adele is OK but she's not saving anything!


I could double that list, but thank you Copley for making the point I was hoping to make!

marv2
11-08-2015, 08:41 PM
The industry is not dead. The traditional model we know is changing, though. It's not about putting a CD out and buying it at the local record store. It's about:

decreasing quantities of CDs being manufactured [[at least here in the U.S.)

fewer avenues for physical distribution

streaming services such as Tidal, Pandora, iTunes, and Spotify accounting for about half of music listening now

the sales of vinyl overtaking CD sales

Concerning Adele: The market for music is very fragmented. The days of genre and demographic-crossing mass superstars are long over. I may be in her alleged demographic, but I am not a fan. Her music does nothing for me. I don't like her voice. It grates on my nerves.



I propose that the mods eliminate specific Motown and Soulful Detroit sections. I think the fortum, and the music scene has grown beyond those boundaries. I know, it's a topic for another thread, and there will be strong resistance, but it is worth seriously looking at.

More great points made! The point that should be abundantly clear to everyone is that the market for music and entertainment is very fragmented and has been that way since the expansion of cable tv and the internet! Gone are they days of radio stations that played a good cross section of artists and musical styles. Gone are the big television Variety Shows that were show on 2-3 large television networks where the majority of the population tuned into the same show or shows each week. There are no "mass market" stars today.

jobeterob
11-08-2015, 08:43 PM
Motown gets the views so I put it here.

Streaming is taking over. I got a new vehicle that comes with Sirius. And I haven't put a CD in it since I got it a month ago. By the way, Sirius [[I think Soul Town) said Mary Wilson was from the Temptations the other day! Kind of complimentary.

I don't think the industry is dieing. But the money has been bled out of it by the Internet and the public. Now the artists have to tour for money.

splanky
11-09-2015, 07:24 AM
Motown gets the views so I put it here.

Now the artists have to tour for money.

When I click on the main page of Soulful Detroit recent comments from other sections
show up in a sidebar. That's how I first saw this thread. I hadn't set out to read the Motown
threads and I'm sure others found it the same way. If I wanted to start a conversation about
Ben Carson's presidential chances I wouldn't put it here just because people who only read
the Motown Forum and follow one singer or group wouldn't see it otherwise. But maybe
that's just me...BTW, artists have had to rely on constant touring for money long before the
internet...

mysterysinger
11-09-2015, 10:51 AM
Like it or not, Motown is part of the music industry and Motown product is subject to the same trends as the rest of the industry in the main - so I think this thread is actually OK for the Motown Forum given the way the thread has evolved. It is interesting and not yet another Ross/Supremes topic.

jobeterob
11-09-2015, 11:16 AM
And it really appears the industry continues a steep decline that has been going on for 15 years or so. The demise of Hip - O surely is just part of this.

marv2
11-09-2015, 11:28 AM
Like it or not, Motown is part of the music industry and Motown product is subject to the same trends as the rest of the industry in the main - so I think this thread is actually OK for the Motown Forum given the way the thread has evolved. It is interesting and not yet another Ross/Supremes topic.


You are reaching. This has nothing at all to do with Motown.

luke
11-09-2015, 11:49 AM
Money money money. Isn't a transistor radio similar to streaming. I may buy one. Do they still exist?

midnightman
11-09-2015, 12:13 PM
Like it or not, Motown is part of the music industry and Motown product is subject to the same trends as the rest of the industry in the main - so I think this thread is actually OK for the Motown Forum given the way the thread has evolved. It is interesting and not yet another Ross/Supremes topic.

Adele is not a Motown artist so no it's not "okay".

Bluebrock
11-09-2015, 12:37 PM
Adele is not a Motown artist so no it's not "okay".

I don't really know why Adele is in any of these forums. She is a great talent for sure. I have seen her live twice and loved her, but does she really belong here?

soulster
11-09-2015, 12:42 PM
Motown gets the views so I put it here.

That is the very reason I suggest that the specific two music forums be eliminated. Too many threads aren't seen because many members don't click on all three forums, or use the "New Posts" option.


Streaming is taking over. I got a new vehicle that comes with Sirius. And I haven't put a CD in it since I got it a month ago. By the way, Sirius [[I think Soul Town) said Mary Wilson was from the Temptations the other day! Kind of complimentary.

Streaming has taken over because it's cheap, and the masses really don't want to buy physical product anymore. I personally don't like streaming for several reasons, but i'm also not your typical music consumer.

I was driving to another city last Saturday night and happened to land on Soul Town. The good news is that they are back to playing deeper cuts rather than just the tired old hits. But, damned if they can get their information correct!


I don't think the industry is dieing. But the money has been bled out of it by the Internet and the public. Now the artists have to tour for money.

Artists always had to tour to make the money, but now it's an absolute necessity, and the ticket prices show it. Also, it's somewhat rare for a single artist to headline a show with an opener. They do these festivals with several big-name artists now.

midnightman
11-09-2015, 12:58 PM
The industry has always been a mess, you have labels who keep artists tied to these stupid contracts, the streaming issue is really because when artists and songwriters signed those contracts, the label already gets a chunk of that artist's money. When labels did contracts with streaming companies, they left the artist and songwriter out. Once Spotify and Pandora blew up, artists went on an anti-streaming rampage when really it's the labels they should be going after. As much as I read about contracts, I don't get how many still get tricked to sign these contracts, knowing as much as I know about how contracts stifled artists anyway. This is probably why the industry is struggling as it is. Streaming allows a lot of music to be heard in ways you probably couldn't with radio, which is why I don't mind it. Streaming is why I'm into a lot of newer artists, like Years & Years for example.

soulster
11-09-2015, 04:53 PM
The industry has always been a mess, you have labels who keep artists tied to these stupid contracts, the streaming issue is really because when artists and songwriters signed those contracts, the label already gets a chunk of that artist's money. When labels did contracts with streaming companies, they left the artist and songwriter out. Once Spotify and Pandora blew up, artists went on an anti-streaming rampage when really it's the labels they should be going after. As much as I read about contracts, I don't get how many still get tricked to sign these contracts, knowing as much as I know about how contracts stifled artists anyway. This is probably why the industry is struggling as it is. Streaming allows a lot of music to be heard in ways you probably couldn't with radio, which is why I don't mind it. Streaming is why I'm into a lot of newer artists, like Years & Years for example.
The industry has always been a controlled mess with the labels always having the upper-hand. Even Prince learned that if you want to go anywhere and make money, you have to deal with the [[major) labels. The labels handle the promotion, distribution, and manufacturing, and the artist pays for all of that. How the music gets to the end user is the other matter. The industry lost control when the original Napster, Kaazaa, Grokster, Bearshare, and all the rest, gained popularity, and now the industry is finally getting it back. It's just not the old business model they tried in vain to preserve for the last decade and a half.

And, now, because of Apple's iTunes, the demise of the record store, big-box retailers dropping the CD, and the constant missteps of the record industry over the last twelve or so years, the CD has fallen out of favor and is being replaced with downloads and vinyl. Even cassette tapes is gaining in popularity among young people.

jobeterob
11-09-2015, 08:47 PM
I think the posts by Midnightman and Soulster are good summaries.

The real nub of the problem is that the money from CDs is gone, gone, gone. Many of the downloads are free. The streaming costs next to nothing. I have a lifetime subscription to
Sirius which is now 8 years old. I pay nothing. I got it as a Christmas present in 2007 for a hundred dollars or so.

So the money is gone.

marv2
11-10-2015, 05:13 AM
Since this thread is non Motown related and is off of the subject. I don't know much about Adele, but I am going to at least keep this in Detroit. You see, this is the singing, the talent I grew up with. Anything this Adele is doing is not soul. Give me Soul! Give me the Queen! Give me Aretha!


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=amhofKBvuyU&feature=gp-n-y&google_comment_id=z12mxf4jnlepd31vd23mt5wyypusvdfg x04

Bluebrock
11-10-2015, 06:20 AM
Since this thread is non Motown related and is off of the subject. I don't much about Adele, but I am going to at least keep this in Detroit. You see, this is the singing, the talent I grew up with. Anything this Adele is doing is not soul. Give Soul! Give me the Queen! Give me Aretha!


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=amhofKBvuyU&feature=gp-n-y&google_comment_id=z12mxf4jnlepd31vd23mt5wyypusvdfg x04

Correct. Adele is a fine talent and shines like a beacon in these lean times but she sure as hell ain't soul. No way.

mysterysinger
11-10-2015, 08:12 AM
"Oh Me Oh My" it's a great song - I love Lulu's version too.

At least Aretha has had releases on Motown.

I'm seeing a thread about the state of the music industry and entirely relevant to Motown. Adele was just a vehicle for it. I certainly wouldn't rush out and buy her stuff though, even if it was on Motown.

Bluebrock
11-10-2015, 08:39 AM
"Oh Me Oh My" it's a great song - I love Lulu's version too.

At least Aretha has had releases on Motown.

I'm seeing a thread about the state of the music industry and entirely relevant to Motown. Adele was just a vehicle for it. I certainly wouldn't rush out and buy her stuff though, even if it was on Motown.
Lulu did indeed record a fine version. I never took much notice of her due to the bubblegum pop she churned out but now I realise what a talented vocalist she is.

MIKEW-UK
11-10-2015, 11:38 AM
I don't see Adele as relevant to Motown or soul music as I recognise it. But the PR machine constantly cranks away at trying to brand a UK female singer as the next soul diva......

my post from February 2011......

Ah, I thought it was only me!

From my post 25th feb this year;

I have seen too many false dawns in the UK of the next great British soul singer, and they just don’t fill those shoes. Over recent years in the UK, we have had a tidal wave of hype launching the careers of so-called Soul Divas; Duffy, Adele, Amy Winehouse, Estelle, Joss Stone, and Leona Lewis. Singers they are. Soul Divas they ain’t! It’s the PR machine trying to market them into a retro fashion market.


Anyway, not to worry...she's moving away from the soul market and onto something new....just like Joss Stone did...

Adele To Explore Country Music On Third Album
As her sophomore LP 21 reaches yet another milestone in America...
15:30, Thursday, 4 August 2011
Adele has revealed that she has "fallen in love" with country music, so much so, that she hopes the genre will influence her third album.

The Someone Like You singer, who is due to perform at the 2011 MTV VMAs later this month, claims to The Sun that she hopes to experiment with country and bluegrass sounds for the follow-up to her hit record, 21.

23-year old Adele explained: "I was exposed to a lot of country, rockabilly and bluegrass because I was touring for such a long time,"

"The melodies and to-the-point lyrics I have found in a lot of American styles of music is definitely something I'm going be pursuing heavily from now on."

The Rolling In The Deep hitmaker added: "I want to spend some time in Austin in Texas and Nashville, Tennessee, and learn about it."

skooldem1
11-10-2015, 12:10 PM
I am only familiar with her last album. It was very good. Adele is not a soul singer and does not sing soul music.

marv2
11-10-2015, 12:17 PM
Lulu did indeed record a fine version. I never took much notice of her due to the bubblegum pop she churned out but now I realise what a talented vocalist she is.

Lulu was/is Soulful! We bought or rather my parents bought single and the soundtrack "To Sir With Love" back in the sixties.

marv2
11-10-2015, 12:19 PM
Is Adele's record company working on crossing over to black audiences? Is that what this is about. I did not read the article.

marv2
11-10-2015, 12:21 PM
I don't see Adele as relevant to Motown or soul music as I recognise it. But the PR machine constantly cranks away at trying to brand a UK female singer as the next soul diva......

my post from February 2011......

Ah, I thought it was only me!

From my post 25th feb this year;

I have seen too many false dawns in the UK of the next great British soul singer, and they just don’t fill those shoes. Over recent years in the UK, we have had a tidal wave of hype launching the careers of so-called Soul Divas; Duffy, Adele, Amy Winehouse, Estelle, Joss Stone, and Leona Lewis. Singers they are. Soul Divas they ain’t! It’s the PR machine trying to market them into a retro fashion market.


Anyway, not to worry...she's moving away from the soul market and onto something new....just like Joss Stone did...

Adele To Explore Country Music On Third Album
As her sophomore LP 21 reaches yet another milestone in America...
15:30, Thursday, 4 August 2011
Adele has revealed that she has "fallen in love" with country music, so much so, that she hopes the genre will influence her third album.

The Someone Like You singer, who is due to perform at the 2011 MTV VMAs later this month, claims to The Sun that she hopes to experiment with country and bluegrass sounds for the follow-up to her hit record, 21.

23-year old Adele explained: "I was exposed to a lot of country, rockabilly and bluegrass because I was touring for such a long time,"

"The melodies and to-the-point lyrics I have found in a lot of American styles of music is definitely something I'm going be pursuing heavily from now on."

The Rolling In The Deep hitmaker added: "I want to spend some time in Austin in Texas and Nashville, Tennessee, and learn about it."

It sounds like she has aspirations to become a Country singer .

midnightman
11-10-2015, 01:05 PM
"Oh Me Oh My" it's a great song - I love Lulu's version too.

At least Aretha has had releases on Motown.

I'm seeing a thread about the state of the music industry and entirely relevant to Motown. Adele was just a vehicle for it. I certainly wouldn't rush out and buy her stuff though, even if it was on Motown.

*BUZZER* Wrong! Aretha was never on Motown...

Motown isn't just about the music industry, it's about a sound and people who defined the sound. Adele =/= Motown. Cut it out. LOL

midnightman
11-10-2015, 01:07 PM
The industry has always been a controlled mess with the labels always having the upper-hand. Even Prince learned that if you want to go anywhere and make money, you have to deal with the [[major) labels. The labels handle the promotion, distribution, and manufacturing, and the artist pays for all of that. How the music gets to the end user is the other matter. The industry lost control when the original Napster, Kaazaa, Grokster, Bearshare, and all the rest, gained popularity, and now the industry is finally getting it back. It's just not the old business model they tried in vain to preserve for the last decade and a half.

And, now, because of Apple's iTunes, the demise of the record store, big-box retailers dropping the CD, and the constant missteps of the record industry over the last twelve or so years, the CD has fallen out of favor and is being replaced with downloads and vinyl. Even cassette tapes is gaining in popularity among young people.

Strange thing about it is people still buy CDs... the industry doesn't know its music fans, I tell you.

soulster
11-10-2015, 03:07 PM
Strange thing about it is people still buy CDs... the industry doesn't know its music fans, I tell you.

I didn't say people weren't buying CDs, but, at least for here in the U.S., they aren't buying them in large quantities anymore, not like even ten years ago. The reasons are because of what I mentioned above, and others.

jobeterob
11-10-2015, 03:18 PM
I think the article lists the most recent decline in CD sales ~ you can't even buy them in stores like Costco anymore.

And it is only listing the most recent declines; it's been going on for 15 years.

Isn't this why Hip O Select isn't able to release hardly anything? And why Funny Girl was digital only? It certainly isn't because Andy and George want it that way.

It is because of the record industry malaise.

mysterysinger
11-10-2015, 03:33 PM
[QUOTE=midnightman;309895]*BUZZER* Wrong! Aretha was never on Motown...

I'm afraid Aretha has definitely been released on Motown - and to prove it...
10653

http://www.discogs.com/Various-The-Big-Chill-Original-Motion-Picture-Soundtrack/release/6023549

midnightman
11-10-2015, 06:50 PM
LMAO that doesn't count. Aretha wasn't signed as an artist. Only Motown "connection" is she lives in Detroit and she was close to some of the Motown luminaries like Mary, Florence, Diana, the Four Tops, Smokey, Stevie and the Temptations. Nice try though. Can we move on already? LOL she's also inadvertently connected because some of the songs she performed were Motown originals. But other than that...

soulster
11-10-2015, 06:58 PM
It is because of the record industry malaise.

No, it isn 't. It's because the market, and consumer demands have changed, and the industry is simply responding to that. If you have a problem with not being able to buy a CD, look no further than iTunes, Best Buy, and Walmart.

marv2
11-10-2015, 07:30 PM
[QUOTE=midnightman;309895]*BUZZER* Wrong! Aretha was never on Motown...

I'm afraid Aretha has definitely been released on Motown - and to prove it...
10653

http://www.discogs.com/Various-The-Big-Chill-Original-Motion-Picture-Soundtrack/release/6023549

She never recorded specifically for Motown. Even the duets she did with the Four Tops were for other labels. Like I said, you are reaching.

marv2
11-10-2015, 07:32 PM
No, it isn 't. It's because the market, and consumer demands have changed, and the industry is simply responding to that. If you have a problem with not being able to buy a CD, look no further than iTunes, Best Buy, and Walmart.

You have to understand where this dude is coming from. He says what he says because his favorite is no longer in the record industry. Once that special someone releases something then BANG! The record industry is back with a vengeance! LOL!

midnightman
11-10-2015, 08:20 PM
I didn't say people weren't buying CDs, but, at least for here in the U.S., they aren't buying them in large quantities anymore, not like even ten years ago. The reasons are because of what I mentioned above, and others.

Yeah I know what you were trying to say lol we're pretty fragmented and divided as it is though. The CDs have not died because there's still a good amount of CD buyers [[me included) but I also love to stream a record as well... :)

marv2
11-10-2015, 08:22 PM
Yeah I know what you were trying to say lol we're pretty fragmented and divided as it is though. The CDs have not died because there's still a good amount of CD buyers [[me included) but I also love to stream a record as well... :)

I am waiting for the complete resurgence of vinyl before I start buying music again on a regular basis. Throughout the entire "CD era" I purchased less than 200 and probably less that 100 that were new releases.

midnightman
11-10-2015, 08:27 PM
I am waiting for the complete resurgence of vinyl before I start buying music again on a regular basis. Throughout the entire "CD era" I purchased less than 200 and probably less that 100 that were new releases.

Time will tell if there will be a vinyl resurgence but it does seem promising... but I think it has to do with how the industry sees how each listener decides to do with music. It's not as monolithic as they think. There's a lot of formats now: vinyl, CD, streams, downloads, cassettes are coming back... so yeah, definitely something that could be figured out in a few years.

But I do hope for y'all's sake that vinyl makes a full comeback. :)

jobeterob
11-10-2015, 09:04 PM
Maybe it's just going to be like TV - many options.

I can't see how they can every hope to recover the buckets of money that was being poured out in the 90's. To me, that seems gone.

marv2
11-10-2015, 09:05 PM
Time will tell if there will be a vinyl resurgence but it does seem promising... but I think it has to do with how the industry sees how each listener decides to do with music. It's not as monolithic as they think. There's a lot of formats now: vinyl, CD, streams, downloads, cassettes are coming back... so yeah, definitely something that could be figured out in a few years.

But I do hope for y'all's sake that vinyl makes a full comeback. :)

The experience in buying vinyl alone cannot be matched! It will hopefully create new manufacturing jobs.......................in this country!

jobeterob
11-10-2015, 11:02 PM
But the money running through the business has collapsed.

midnightman
11-10-2015, 11:05 PM
The experience in buying vinyl alone cannot be matched! It will hopefully create new manufacturing jobs.......................in this country!

I didn't even think about it like that but you're right.

marv2
11-10-2015, 11:16 PM
I didn't even think about it like that but you're right.

We have to learn to start manufacturing consumer goods again in this country. We never had a huge unemployment problem from roughly 1950 -74. We make ZERO cell phones in this country and there is only ONE manufacturer of flat screen tv's in the U.S. and even he has to buy components made elsewhere!

soulster
11-11-2015, 11:38 AM
You have to understand where this dude is coming from. He says what he says because his favorite is no longer in the record industry. Once that special someone releases something then BANG! The record industry is back with a vengeance! LOL!

Marv, don't start! We are finally getting this forum back to where it should be after years of the "crap". Don't bring it all back.


Yeah I know what you were trying to say lol we're pretty fragmented and divided as it is though. The CDs have not died because there's still a good amount of CD buyers [[me included) but I also love to stream a record as well... :)

Just because there are still CD buyers doesn't mean the format is thriving. The number of CD buyers are dwindling in favor of streaming, which I do not like. The main reason I don't like streaming is because the record labels, or the artists, can arbitrarily pull any title off for any reason or no reason. Say you wanted to listen to a Curtis Mayfield album and Warner, or the estate pulls it off the services. That choice is taken away from you without warning.

The good news, of course, is that as people move to streaming, they dump their old CDs. Since Cds are no longer popular, it has been a buyer's market. Often you can get a new or used CD for less that what you could download it for. It's been great for me. I have been buying up all those long sought-after CDs for cheap. But, I rip them to the hard drive/server and play them through software and in the car. The only problem with that is record stores aren't taking used CDs for any money, so, unless I donate them to the library or give them away, they take up space and may as well get dumped into the garbage.


I am waiting for the complete resurgence of vinyl before I start buying music again on a regular basis. Throughout the entire "CD era" I purchased less than 200 and probably less that 100 that were new releases.

The vinyl resurgence is back. Vinyl now accounts for half of all non-streaming music sales. Obviously, what is driving the resurgence is the youth market. The problem is that new vinyl is expensive as hell, and what new plants that are coming online are pressing indie rock, not vintage R&B/funk reissues.

midnightman
11-11-2015, 12:34 PM
I didn't say they were thriving, I just said that there's still a hefty number of CD buyers... it was expected to have a big drop but people are being overly dramatic about it.

jobeterob
11-11-2015, 01:26 PM
There are still vastly more cd sales than vinyl

The real problem with streaming is they choose what to play; all you get to choose is the genre!

mysterysinger
11-11-2015, 01:30 PM
LMAO that doesn't count. Aretha wasn't signed as an artist. Only Motown "connection" is she lives in Detroit and she was close to some of the Motown luminaries like Mary, Florence, Diana, the Four Tops, Smokey, Stevie and the Temptations. Nice try though. Can we move on already? LOL she's also inadvertently connected because some of the songs she performed were Motown originals. But other than that...

Lol - I like to "cheat" now and again!

marv2
11-11-2015, 01:34 PM
Lol - I like to "cheat" now and again!

Cheaters never win.................hehehehehehehehehehe.......... .......

mysterysinger
11-11-2015, 01:48 PM
Well I notice you were too smart to fall into my trap Marv.

Mind you - could make a good quiz - "which Motown album included"....... Jerry Butler's "Only The Strong Survive" for example? Might make a good thread on its own.

Personally I think I win whenever I listen to my Motown CDs. "Win With A Spin" you could call it.

marv2
11-11-2015, 02:28 PM
Well I notice you were too smart to fall into my trap Marv.

Mind you - could make a good quiz - "which Motown album included"....... Jerry Butler's "Only The Strong Survive" for example? Might make a good thread on its own.

Personally I think I win whenever I listen to my Motown CDs. "Win With A Spin" you could call it.

Your evil, diabolical scheme? Mini-Me is now on our side. He's warned us about you!

First thing that came to mind was the documentary "Only the Strong Survive". I will have to do some research to find which Motown album included it.

arr&bee
11-11-2015, 02:47 PM
The music industry died the night that[ the singin bunny rabbits] got cheated out of the grammy award for[here comes peter cottontail]by some rappin chipmonks!!

marv2
11-11-2015, 03:10 PM
The music industry died the night that[ the singin bunny rabbits] got cheated out of the grammy award for[here comes peter cottontail]by some rappin chipmonks!!

the singin bunny rabbits? Huh? How about when the Smurfs were robbed for best background vocals on Yarborough & Peoples "Don't Stop the Music"!

arr&bee
11-11-2015, 07:16 PM
The smurfs???those one hit wonders,the bunny rabbits had real lettuce and they could hop too!!

marv2
11-11-2015, 09:36 PM
The smurfs???those one hit wonders,the bunny rabbits had real lettuce and they could hop too!!

The Smurfs would eat the rabbits in a singing contest!

mysterysinger
11-11-2015, 09:51 PM
Did you have Pinkie and Perky in the USA?

marv2
11-11-2015, 11:08 PM
Did you have Pinkie and Perky in the USA?

No! We had Moose and Squirrel aka Rocky & Bowinkle!

arr&bee
11-12-2015, 12:00 PM
no! We had moose and squirrel aka rocky & bowinkle!haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaa....!!

jobeterob
11-12-2015, 01:38 PM
According Nielsen data, digital downloads have been on the decline for the last three years, and CDs even longer.

In 2013 alone, overall album sales in the U.S. saw an 11.2 per cent drop, CD sales were down 15 per cent, digital album sales declined 9.4 per cent and digital song sales went down 12.5 per cent. Music streaming, on the other hand, was up 54 per cent.

marv2
11-12-2015, 01:56 PM
According Nielsen data, digital downloads have been on the decline for the last three years, and CDs even longer.

In 2013 alone, overall album sales in the U.S. saw an 11.2 per cent drop, CD sales were down 15 per cent, digital album sales declined 9.4 per cent and digital song sales went down 12.5 per cent. Music streaming, on the other hand, was up 54 per cent.

Probably because these artists that they have been promoting for years made crappy music. Now when there is good music being produced, sales will go up.

midnightman
11-12-2015, 02:18 PM
That's why Adele's sales are important tbh... HDD say that her album may be reaching NSYNC's record. Not too many artists influence many to buy the product these days!

marv2
11-12-2015, 05:20 PM
No, it isn 't. It's because the market, and consumer demands have changed, and the industry is simply responding to that. If you have a problem with not being able to buy a CD, look no further than iTunes, Best Buy, and Walmart.

or Amazon.com. The CD's I have purchased were mostly from Amazon.

midnightman
11-12-2015, 05:45 PM
I need to start purchasing from Amazon. Most of the CDs we all keep looking for are not always in those physical retail stores...

jobeterob
11-12-2015, 07:28 PM
U.S. Vinyl Album Sales Up by 53% in Q1
ARTICLESBUSINESSNEWS
By Lars Brandle | April 17, 2015 3:29 AM EDT

Vinyl Record Player
David Herrmann/Getty Images
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The vinyl comeback story just keeps on spinning.

New research published just in time for Record Store Day drives home the point: vinyl has been on a real tear over the past half-decade, and the purple patch isn't fading just yet.

According to Nielsen, U.S. album sales between January and March of this year were 53% higher than during the comparable period last year, driven largely by solid gains in catalog album sales. Current releases in the format are also performing well, up by 37% in the first three months compared with the corresponding period last time.

In a wider-angle look at the market, vinyl album sales have grown by 260% since 2009, Nielsen reports, with vinyl unit sales rising to 9.2 million last year, up from 6.1 million in 2013. Check out the graph below.



The best-known band in the history of music has had the best-selling vinyl album since 2010, the Beatles’ classic 1969 release Abbey Road. Nielsen’s top 10 reveals there’s “something in the mix for everyone,” with recordings from Mumford & Sons, Arctic Monkeys, Pink Floyd, Lana Del Rey and Miles Davis appearing. See the list below.



Vinyl remains a niche part of the market, and no-one is saying the old-school format is the saviour of the industry, artists and for entertainment retailers. Consider it a feel-good story in a time when technology and digital streaming models dominate talk on the future of music distribution.

The Resurgence of Vinyl in Seven Graphics: A Breakdown

The IFPI confirmed as much when the trade body published its Digital Music Report earlier in the week. Vinyl sales currently account for “only a small fraction of the overall industry revenues” at around 2%, the IFPI explained, but the format has seen a steady increase, including a 54% jump in 2014. Trade revenue generated by the global recorded music industry in 2014 fell by 0.4 percent to $14.97 billion.

In March, the RIAA noted that vinyl had contributed $320.8 million in revenue in the U.S. last year, 50% up from the $213.7 million generated in 2013.

Vinyl Sales Charts Launch in U.K.

The U.S. gains in vinyl corresponds with similar spikes reported elsewhere. In the U.K., the industry's official charts compiler has just launched vinyl sales charts [[singles and albums) which the OCC says reflects Britain’s “renewed interest in music on vinyl."

For the full year 2014, more than 1.28 million vinyl LPs were sold across the U.K., a figure which hadn’t been reached since 1995 when 1.41 million LPs were sold.

Billboard’s Top Vinyl Chart [[from week 1, 2010 to week 12, 2015)
1. Beatles, “Abbey Road” [[172,000 units)
2. Mumford & Sons, “Sigh No More” [[110,000)
3. Bon Iver, “For Emma Forever Ago” [[102,000)
4. Jack White, “Lazaretto” [[94,000)
5. Arctic Monkeys, “AM” [[89,000)
6. Pink Floyd, “Dark Side of the Moon” [[87,000)
7. Bob Marley & The Wailers, “Legend” [[83,000)
8. Lana Del Rey, “Born To Die” [[81,000)
9. Miles Davis, “Kind of Blue” [[75,000)
10. Black Keys, “Brothers” [[75,000)

jillfoster
11-13-2015, 12:51 PM
You see... last year a total of 320 million in sales. I'd say that amount of money is worth SOMEONE'S time. Hate to say it, but Universal is missing the boat, they should be compiling unreleased Motown compilations and putting them on vinyl. Double nostalgia product.

Bluebrock
11-13-2015, 12:59 PM
You see... last year a total of 320 million in sales. I'd say that amount of money is worth SOMEONE'S time. Hate to say it, but Universal is missing the boat, they should be compiling unreleased Motown compilations and putting them on vinyl. Double nostalgia product.
Totally agree with you!!!

midnightman
11-13-2015, 02:35 PM
You see... last year a total of 320 million in sales. I'd say that amount of money is worth SOMEONE'S time. Hate to say it, but Universal is missing the boat, they should be compiling unreleased Motown compilations and putting them on vinyl. Double nostalgia product.

That just shows you Universal doesn't know what it's doing...

imnokid
11-13-2015, 06:50 PM
Thank god Adele has got nothing to do with Motown! BTW IMHO there are far better singers out there who just haven't had the hype that she has. She's not a bad singer, just nothing special. Only my opinion of course.

amen!!!!!!!!!!!

marv2
11-13-2015, 07:06 PM
amen!!!!!!!!!!!

I agree. I have listen to a few of her songs and they did nothing for me.

Guy
11-13-2015, 07:21 PM
Truth spoken here. I know there are a lot of people pushing Adele as a savior of some type
and that's their right if they wish. I won't her of them but I do take issue with so many ignoring other great voices and artists in the biz on both sides of the pond. Hell, any of the ponds. I still like Jazmine Sullivan, really have fallen in love with relatively new singer Somi
and Alice Smith is one of the most versatile artists I've heard this side of jazz in a long damn
time. If the folks at Motown knew what they were doing they would have signed her:)...

You just name-checked two of my favorite artists of recent years -- Somi and Alice Smith.

I would not diminish Adele's talent or appeal, she's clearly a distinctive talent if not unique. However, I think she's given a lot of space to be her authentic self as an artist whereas other equally talented artists are not given the same space or hype or acclaim. Many talented female artists are forcibly shoved into 'commercial' boxes that prevent them from presenting as authentic.

marv2
11-13-2015, 07:45 PM
You just name-checked two of my favorite artists of recent years -- Somi and Alice Smith.

I would not diminish Adele's talent or appeal, she's clearly a distinctive talent if not unique. However, I think she's given a lot of space to be her authentic self as an artist whereas other equally talented artists are not given the same space or hype or acclaim. Many talented female artists are forcibly shoved into 'commercial' boxes that prevent them from presenting as authentic.

What I see happening is this younger generation hoping for major success of a singer from their generation along the lines of what great artists like Whitney Houston, Aretha, Mariah and even Janet were able to accomplish. But this girl is not in their league. Why does she look so old to be 27?