Interesante artículo aparecido en claasicrockmagazine.com, con apetitotas intervenciones, sobre la crisis del rock y la muerte de EL ALBUM como concepto:
http://www.classicrockmagazine.com/features/rock-in-crisis-is-the-album-era-over/
Newspapers, magazines and even rock stars such as The
Cult’s Ian Astbury have declared the album to be dead. But is the
long-player actually as doomed as it appears?
Words: Chris Roberts
“The album is dying in front of our very eyes… We’ve
turned into a nation of grazers. And the artist’s job is to constantly
be at the smörgåsbord. Not to deliver one big meal that is picked at and
thrown away, but to constantly provide tantalising bites to the public…
It’s not only classic rock acts who have stopped putting out albums,
eventually no one will do it. It won’t be soon, because artists think
making albums is part of their DNA, going into the studio and making a
10-track statement. But that’s like saying typewriters have to be an
office fixture. And you can’t post online unless you write in multiple
paragraphs. And texting must be abandoned because it’s not in-depth
enough” – Bob Lefsetz, Variety
Allow me a brief reminiscence. In September 1975, during the golden
age of the album, I saved up £2.99 in pocket money and excitedly went to
buy Pink Floyd’s Wish You Were Here on the day of its release.
Discovering that Electrip Records (now defunct: such foreshadowing!)
was charging £3.50, I was, to use a term not then invented, gutted. Of
course, as the album age progressed, the price of albums was to soar to a
fiver and then a tenner, where it settled for years.
The 21st century has sent the skittles flying; a paradigm shift has
occurred, offering many benefits and many disturbances. Most new albums
can now be downloaded for a fiver or so, and if you don’t want all of it
you can usually cherry-pick your favourite tracks for 99p or less each.
It’s the new – dread phrase – business model. If only the manager of
Electrip Records had let me buy three quarters of Wish You Were Here,
I wouldn’t have trudged home disconsolate and been excluded from the
hot topic of discussion in the schoolyard the next Monday.
Four decades on, ‘the death of the album’ is the hot topic of
discussion in the playground of media discourse. Free MP3s,
file-sharing, tracks debuted on Soundcloud, pledging, Spotify – all are
eating away at the album as we used to know it.
“There will be no new album. I don’t think we’ll ever see
a Cult album. Albums are dead. The format is dead. iTunes destroyed
albums. The whole idea of an album. Albums were established in the 70s
and 80s and into the 90s, but they’ve been dead for a long time. Nobody
buys albums. It’s been proven. It’s an arcane format, as much as the
78rpm record or writing sheet music for an orchestra” – Ian Astbury, The Cult
It was 1948 when Columbia Records introduced the 33rpm long-player,
which, allowing for a few modifications (such as stereo), ruled the
roost until CDs swanned in in 1982. From the early 60s to the mid-2000s
is now referred to as ‘the album era’, in which artists could explore
their vision, expanding their vocabulary. That’s actually a thing, ‘the album era’: an official historic term, deemed to be waning.
Albums gave you a continuous, immersive musical experience; they
weren’t just a delivery system, but a new medium. “The sequencing of an
album is a very important subtext in the whole chapter of rock music,”
says Peter Hammill, part-time of Van der Graaf Generator. “It’s always been absolutely crucial. For me it has to have a flow, a strange journey going on through the course of it.”
Once,
you held music, carried it, stroked it lovingly. Now it shoots
instantaneously down a wire. Convenient, sure. But the tactile
treasure-hunt element, the thrill of the chase, is gone. As is the
seductive artwork. Record shops struggle to stay afloat. In the first
decade of this century, album sales dropped by 50 per cent while sales
of individual digital tracks raced from zero to 1.2 billion.
A compassionate boxing referee might have stopped the bout.
In 2014, with time-honoured music-biz structures crumbling like
cliff-side residences in a tsunami, the album as a format is under
threat, flailing to survive. What is its fate/future? It seems
extraordinary and saddening to most of us of a certain age that this
beloved institution is fading, that we’re losing our religion.
But the stats suggest so. The top-selling album of last year – One Direction’s Midnight Memories,
rock fans – scraped past 700,000 sales. Compare that to the previous
year’s Emeli Sande (1.4m) and 2011’s Adele (a whopping 3.9m) and you can
see how sharp the fall is. Half of 2013’s Top 10 were released in 2012,
and it didn’t include the albums we mostly talked about, like Bowie’s The Next Day. Rock was represented, but only if you categorise Arctic Monkeys and, er, Jake Bugg as rock. Black Sabbath’s comeback, 13, stormed to Number One in its week of release but didn’t – more horrible jargon – ‘sustain’.
“To understand the shift to a market dominated by singles
and streaming, the industry has introduced a new measure, TEA (track
equivalent albums) which counts 10 track sales as one album. If the TEA
measure is used, [Miley Cyrus’s] Bangerz, which only sold 245,000
traditional copies in its first week, rises to 750,000 sales” – The Guardian, November 2013
And yet people will pay for a pricy collector’s item, an artfully
boxed deluxe or anniversary remaster-repackage with bonus add-ons by a
leading name: a Pink Floyd or Radiohead. This is music as memorabilia,
nostalgia, a desire to revisit lost youth. Nothing criminal about that,
but no one can claim it’s a way forward.
But! It’s not all doom and gloom. In the UK last year, after five
years of decline, sales of albums and singles fell by just 0.5% to £1.04
billion. Digital album sales rose 6.8% to £233m. “As digital music
moves into the streaming era,” BPI chief executive Geoff Taylor told The Guardian,
“the prospects for future growth in the UK music market look strong.”
This supposes we’ve embraced the digital world; CD sales fell another
12.8%.
“For the sixth straight year, more vinyl albums were sold
than in any other year since SoundScan launched in 1991. In 2013, 6.1
million vinyl LPs were sold – up 33% compared to 2012’s haul of 4.55
million. 64% of all vinyl albums sold in 2012 were purchased at an
independent music store (three percent less than compared to indie
stores’ share in 2012). Notably – and not surprisingly – 75% of all
vinyl albums sold in 2013 were rock albums” - Billboard, January 2014
As for the album per se, even combined sales of digital and physical
albums fell 3.6% (to £772M). We’ll stop with the stats now, after
mentioning a glimmer of light (or a quaint sidebar, depending on your
view): the vinyl mini-revival held up well, with 780,000 vinyl albums
sold, double the previous year’s figure. Vinyl’s va-va-voom makes for a
nice dog-saves-man story at the end of the news, but it’s hard to deny
that the future looks digital.
Hope springs eternal. Romance may not be dead. There might be enough
love for the album format to defy logistics. Artists rush to its
defence. “Will the album survive?” says Tony Visconti,
famed producer of Bowie and so many classic albums. “Who is that up to –
the industry, or the artists? The camera didn’t put the painter out of
business. The album is surviving. It will always be an option.”
Steven Wilson,
taking a breath from his prolific career, concurs. “Saying the album
will disappear is like saying that from now on novelists will only write
short stories, or film-makers will only make short films or pop videos.
There is something about the long form and the idea of a gradually
unfolding musical experience that allows for greater juxtapositions of
dynamics, mood and emotion, sometimes simply in the way that the songs
are sequenced. In the case of progressive/art rock, the idea of taking
the listener on a musical journey over the course of 45 minutes or so
has always been the primary form of creative expression, but many other
great pop and rock albums also have that sense of ‘architecture’ that
you find in a beautifully crafted film or novel. While the album might
become less dominant as a format, I believe it will prevail as an
artistic choice for both those making music and those that listen to
it.”
Time was when we, the listeners, couldn’t imagine not wanting to hear
the artist’s full tale; the whole film, not just a trailer. Attitudes
are changing, but affection for the album is ingrained in many of us.
From Abbey Road and Electric Ladyland through Diamond Dogs and Tubular Bells to Marquee Moon and OK Computer,
we fell for the whole trip, not just a few stations. Can the album – as
a narrative, immersive, sensory experience – keep its head above the
tide of digitalism?
Simon Raymonde
is both artist (as an ex-Cocteau Twin, now with Snowbird) and industry
sage, as head of the Bella Union label (home to success stories like
John Grant and Fleet Foxes). “The album isn’t going away anytime soon,”
he says. “Change is something the music business is always assessing.
And now, as the music bloggers’ demand for new content – hourly rather
than daily – increases, it can push us all into a world we’re not sure
we want to be in. The ‘track world’ we are apparently moving towards is
limp. The model doesn’t work yet… The album format has never been
stronger, because bands are writing in a way similar to how directors
make films. They want to tell a story, to create a multitude of feelings
and expressions across the album that cannot be portrayed in a singular
track. Thus it has always been.
“One lucrative song, usually one used in a commercial, will provide a
good income. But I haven’t met an artist yet who hasn’t wanted to make
an album. Even the Flaming Lips, 30 years into their career, after
understandably feeling a little ‘tired’ of the album/tour/album/tour
cycle, broke away for a year or so and just put up a load of tracks
online and had fun again. But a year later the frivolity wore off, and
that urge to create a body of work, the desire to develop ideas and
sounds across one hour of vinyl, returned. I don’t feel it will go away
easily. To hand a band a freshly-pressed copy of vinyl of their new LP
is something I’ll never tire of doing. If I send them a WAV of a track
that we want to post online, there is no palpable joy. Talking of the
Flaming Lips, their delight at our pressing of The Terror album was palpable. When they came over to play The Roundhouse this year, they were visibly cheered at seeing and holding it.”
The album still says: see me, feel me. We’ll still climb the mountain to get the story. Have we gone all the way from Speak To Me to Eclipse? Not yet.
Taken from the new issue of Classic Rock, onsale now in all good newsagents in the UK. Buy the print edition direct from www.myfavouritemagazines.co.uk. The digital edition is available from http://goo.gl/z4Yhu (in the UK) or here http://goo.gl/YUnR9 (for the US).
Taken from the new issue of Classic Rock, onsale now in all good newsagents in the UK. Buy the print edition direct from www.myfavouritemagazines.co.uk. The digital edition is available from http://goo.gl/z4Yhu (in the UK) or here http://goo.gl/YUnR9 (for the US).
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