TRMW *

January 28, 2011

Container List: Record Labels

Utopia logo by the great Milton Glaser.

Container List: Record Labels

Utopia logo by the great Milton Glaser.

April 5, 2010

Signing in the Rain

thebooksmusic:

Finding a home for this record was a pain in the ass. Everyone I’ve played it for says it’s our best, most daring record yet, and still, all of the labels we admired that we thought would go for it wouldn’t touch it. Our former label Tomlab was not an option since we felt we needed better representation in North America, and it would have been nice to have been paid royalties without a fight for the past five years, although we can’t blame Tom personally for that… music sales are low and getting lower, of course, and the first streams to dry out are the cash flows of small labels. There were a number of sparks of support from key members of ‘major indie’ labels and our conversations with them were very promising, until we would find out after weeks of silence that it wasn’t going to happen. The story we kept hearing was as fascinating as it was disappointing… “our label is run by a democratic process and everyone on the team has to be on board for us to commit to a new artist.” Makes sense, superficially… everyone loves democracy, but the more i thought about it, the more i realized that that sounds like the perfect recipe for the homogenization of music. i don’t know any two people who agree about music, let alone a whole group of them, and at any rate, people who agree about everything are certainly not our target audience. So it’s probably for the best they won’t work with us.

This is probably the best description I’ve read of the “talking to labels about maybe getting signed” process. It’s a mystical thing, and it’s interesting to hear someone else’s experience with it. I actually think consensus makes sense if you’re trying to get the entire company behind something, and a bunch of creative people with differing opinions can still end up signing some truly weird stuff, and — perhaps more to the point of the above post — not signing some totally palatable MOR indie fare. But I can see where these guys are coming from, and it sounds like we’ve been on the receiving end of some pretty similar, occasionally frustrating emails.

This also functions as a pretty good State of the Indie Nation, at least in regards to independent record labels and the way bands experience them. From here, the band (The Books) considers self-releasing, and ends up going with a small label (Temporary Residence) basically just because they really like the guy behind it. All the bases are covered, from big indies to good and bad little indies, to no label at all.

Also, the guys in The Books sound like really cool people, which is absolutely not at all surprising. Their music radiates thoughtful decency and, as they put it later on in this post, “emotional intelligence.” Now their blog can do the same.

May 1, 2009

Warp’s new website is up, designed by Universal Everything.  It’s dangerously close to information overload; it took me a second to figure out where exactly I should be looking for what.  But I think it works.  I’m definitely into the use of huge images and streaming media — audio AND video — which can be embedded other places.  Also cool to see their various film efforts integrated into the main site; I assume this is the reason they changed the domain from warprecords.com to simply warp.net.

In related news, I just downloaded this old Warp release off eMusic, and I’m totally enjoying it.  Some if it sounds like what might have happened had Bleep decided to step a little closer to Trance, and that’s totally OK with me.  Once you go there — which I totally did, in high school — you can never fully go back.  Maybe.

Warp’s new website is up, designed by Universal Everything. It’s dangerously close to information overload; it took me a second to figure out where exactly I should be looking for what. But I think it works. I’m definitely into the use of huge images and streaming media — audio AND video — which can be embedded other places. Also cool to see their various film efforts integrated into the main site; I assume this is the reason they changed the domain from warprecords.com to simply warp.net.

In related news, I just downloaded this old Warp release off eMusic, and I’m totally enjoying it. Some if it sounds like what might have happened had Bleep decided to step a little closer to Trance, and that’s totally OK with me. Once you go there — which I totally did, in high school — you can never fully go back. Maybe.

July 25, 2008

Nonesuch Records →

Totally gorgeous redesign at Nonesuch.  This is now one of the best record label sites I have ever seen.