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Monday, January 14, 2013

ASCAP Daily Brief powered by The Dean's List

We are pleased to offer you the
ASCAP Daily Brief powered by The Dean's List
 

This daily email, compiled by ASCAP Board member, music publisher and songwriter Dean Kay, cuts through the media clutter to bring you links to the most relevant news and commentary on the rapidly evolving music industry and how it affects your future livelihood. Now the ASCAP Daily Brief can be accessed on the Headlines page ofASCAP.com and in the ASCAP RSS Feed

Tech companies have made billions supporting the illegal exploitation of our cultural past while ruthlessly pursuing the dismantling of incentives creators need to fashion our cultural future.

A Better Look at the Digital Pie
By Glenn Peoples -- Digital download sales were up in 2012 in the United States. Track sales set a record. Digital album sales set a record. In fact, sales were so healthy the gains nearly offset the decline in physical sales...So what does the U.S. digital market look like when subscription and performance revenues are added?
Facebook's Ime Archibong On 2013's Music Strategy, Timeline Grumbling
By Alex Pham -- It's been a hectic year for Facebook, which spent $1 billion buying Instagram in April, then raised $16 billion from its initial public offering a month later...Facebook manager of strategic partnerships Ime Archibong is the person most responsible for the social network's music and video strategy...Here then are his six answers to our commensurate questions.
Reading Between The Lines Google Tells The Truth On Ad Supported Piracy, Now Let Markets Do Their Work.
By The Trichordist -- The four read-between-the-lines admissions are as follows...
[Good article about the trials and tribulations of starting a small indie label. Word of caution: don't forget to pay the songwriters!]
UK: Simon Dunmore: Defected Founder On Surviving The Digital Music Revolution And His Guilty Pleasures 
By Charlie Thomas -- Simon Dunmore founded Defected records, one of the UK's best known dance labels, with Ministry of Sound in 1999. Nearly 14 years on, he's seen off two recessions, the digital revolution and the threat of file sharing, and he shows no sign of stopping.
[I love the vinyl cartel.]
It's Official: Vinyl Sets Another Sales Record In 2012...
By Paul Resnikoff
Forget the Internet: Americans Still Glued to TV sets in 2012
By Neil McAllister -- Wasting time on the internet has become a popular concept in recent years, but even in 2012 nothing wasted time like the idiot box.
Hulu Achieved What the Networks Wanted. The Problem Was the Unlikely Success it Found Along the Way
By Sarah Lacy -- What a five-plus years it's been for a venture that never should have even been remotely interesting to begin with.
How MP3.com's Artist-Friendly IPO Apparently Changed the SEC
By Eliot Van Buskirk -- This is not earth-shattering news, but it's an interesting footnote to digital music history: An attempt to make the internet pay musicians apparently caused the Security and Exchange Commission to alter its rules for how many people can join an initial public offering.
The Tyranny of Choice
By Suzanne Spector -- So many choices amongst tech devices, and yet so few - once you choose your ecosystem...Mobile is now the tipping point for the rest of what you will buy. Or at least that's the picture that Apple, Google and Microsoft want to paint.
How to Get Rejected in the Music Business
By Music Marketing [dot] com -- There are some things about the music business, or any creative profession, that are accepted by pros, but scare the hell out of amateurs. In fact, these things are so terrifying that they actually keep people from attaining "amateur" status.
Tom Kelly, Acclaimed Songwriter, Speaks on Writing "Like a Virgin" for Madonna
By Steve Rennie -- Back in the 1980s, Tom Kelly formed one half of a formidable songwriting tandem with Billy Steinberg. For several years running, they wrote #1 hit songs for artists like Cyndi Lauper, Whitney Houston, Heart, and Madonna.

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