Music industry troubles caused by radio?


Apparently the music business is in trouble. For the first time since the Beatles, sales are diminishing. Some people think it's because of internet downloading and perhaps that is part of the problem but I think it's more because there's not much new worth listening to. The thing is, I'm sure there are amazing musicians out there who we're just not hearing. They probably fall outside of the narrow range of music that most radio stations choose to play.

I can remember discovering FM in the '70s. It was amazing. Low key, huge variety, minimal commercial content, and whole album sides sometimes. In the '80s, I enjoyed a paricularly cool modern rock station where once again, variety ruled. Then along came the '90s. The bean counters took over and issued an edict that the same 40 songs should be played over and over ad nauseum. Pick a genre and you can almost predict the song that will be played based on the time of day. With less variety, there are fewer opportunities to introduce new artists and a bland, homogenized form of radio pap results.

Maybe I'm just becoming an old fart but I can't think of many bands worth mentioning that actually came on the scene in the '90s. The artists that I find are still worth listening to emerged in the '60s, '70s and '80s and continue to record today.

There might be reason for hope. If XM can offer a more diverse pallate of music, maybe some of the fun of radio could return.
jlambrick

Showing 1 response by kthomas

I find questions like this difficult to assess because each of us have our own experience as our most prevalent reference point, and yet we change over time as well. For me, radio has made a series of missteps that has made it totally irrelevant - to me, anyway. There is absolutely no reason to listen to it, and many reasons to not listen to it - the music selection is terrible, there are commercials, you have to listen to an announcer, etc. It's so easy to have your choice of commercial-free music of your choice and variety anywhere you happen to be going, there's no reason to listen to radio anymore.

I agree that the incredible quantity and diversity of music coupled with a lack of adaptation by the people marketing music have led to the "decline". The music industry is responding about as slowly and ineptly as baseball is responding to they're problems - so slowly, you can barely perceive it. While I don't support piracy, and in fact am an incredibly good customer of the music industry, it's pretty obvious why piracy occurs and that it will continue to occur until the industry starts to make fundamental changes instead of the little tactical ones they're currently taking.