Music industry
Categories: Music stubs | Music industry
The music industry is the industry that creates, performs, promotes, and preserves music.
The music industry is made up of:
- musicians such as singers
- musical ensembles
- Musicians' Unions
- composers and songwriters
- publishers such as Carlin America
- writers' copyright collectives and performance rights organisations like ASCAP and BMI
- record industry
- A&R
- band managers
- tour promoters
- bookers
- roadies
and so on...
History
In the 19th century the music industry was dominated by sheet music publishers. In the United States, the music industry arose in tandem with the rise of blackface minstrelsy. The group of music publishers and songwriters which dominated popular music in the United States was known as Tin Pan Alley. In the early 20th century the phonograph industry grew greatly in importance, and the record industry eventually replaced the sheet music publishers as the industry's largest force.
The advent of file sharing technologies may change the balance between record companies, song writers, and performing artists. Bands such as Metallica have fought back against p2p programs such as the infamous Napster. MP3s
Further Reading
- Norman Lebrecht, When the Music Stops: Managers, Maestros and the Corporate Murder of Classical Music, Simon & Schuster 1996
- Christian Imhorst, The ‘Lost Generation’ of the Music Industry, 2004 - http://imhorst.com/en/Gen_D_en.html
Music industry organizations
- Recording Industry Association of America
- Recording Artists' Coalition
- American Federation of Musicians
- Musicians' Union
- Country Music Association
- Academy of Country Music
- MCPS
- Performing Right Society