Research Catalog

Rock and roll fantasy? : the reality of going from garage band to superstardom

Title
Rock and roll fantasy? : the reality of going from garage band to superstardom / Ronnie J. Phillips.
Author
Phillips, Ronnie J., 1951-
Publication
New York : Springer, ©2013.

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library ML3795 .P55 2013Off-site

Details

Description
xxiii, 124 pages : illustrations (chiefly color), color maps; 24 cm.
Summary
We are in an era where developments in both technology and musical style have coalesced to produce the greatest period of change in the music industry since the invention of recorded sound. Globalization, the Internet, and digital technology are now opening up possibilities for more artists to be innovative and financially successful. But new music requires new ways of doing business. For more artists to be better off requires new business models to replace those that dominated the 20th century. Integrating insights from economics, management, and intellectual property law, the author explores the dynamics of entrepreneurship and innovation in the music industry, and offers such provocative assessments as these: · The Beatles might never have broken up if they had the kind of two-tier contracts - as band members and as solo artists - that are common in the music industry today. · Buddy Holly would likely have avoided his tragic death in a plane crash at age 22 if his 1959 tour had been sponsored by a company like Coca Cola because today's corporatized tours are vastly better financed and organized than the haphazard efforts of the 1950s. · The economic value of albums by the likes of Elvis and Michael Jackson has risen significantly since their deaths - the ironic byproduct of the way their behavior tarnished their own brands while they were alive. · Diana Ross might never have quit The Supremes if she had known that one-third of the artists in the 1960s who quit the group had charting careers of only one year. · Thomas Edison's invention of the phonograph led to the modern record industry, but he is really the godfather of computer programs like Garageband which have created home recording studios. The collapse of the Soviet Union threatened the sound of rock and roll but an American entrepreneur saved the day.
Series Statement
SpringerBriefs in business, 2191-5482 ; [35]
Uniform Title
SpringerBriefs in business ; 35.
Subject
  • Rock music > Vocational guidance
  • Rock music > Economic aspects
  • Music trade
  • MUSIC > Genres & Styles > Classical
  • MUSIC > Reference
  • Musikproduktion
  • Künstler
  • Innovation
  • Entrepreneurship-Ansatz
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. 115-120) and indexes.
Contents
So You Want to Be a Rock and Roll Star? -- Hitsville: Writing a Hit Song -- Innovation: Will You Ever Hear Surf Music Again? -- Contracts: You Never Give Me Your Money, All I Get Is Your Funny Paper -- Live Performance: Touring Can Make You Crazy. Are Your Grandparents Driving Up Ticket Prices? -- Death: Elvis Has Just Left the Building -- The Technological Entrepreneurs: Engineers, Accountants, and Hippies -- Absolutely Free: Only If You Want It to Be!
ISBN
  • 9781461458999
  • 1461458994
LCCN
2012951330
OCLC
  • ocn828925968
  • 828925968
  • SCSB-14060223
Owning Institutions
Princeton University Library