by
Emmanuel Legrand
The
slogan of Midem 2014 – ‘Back to Growth? Make it Sustainable!’
– sounded more like a mantra than a reflection of the state of the
business. There is still a long way to go to get to full growth, even if there are some
positive signs. But to the participants of the trade show who made
the trip to Cannes in the South of France, what mattered was that it
was as busy a Midem as ever. Here's a round-up of things seen and
heard on the Riviera.
Growth,
what growth?
The
french market for recorded music experienced growth for the first
time in revenues after twelve years (yes, twelve years!!!!) of
decline. OK, the growth was modest (up 2.3% at €603.2m) but
significant nonetheless. Meanwhile, French authors' society SACEM
announced collections in excess of €810m in 2013, 1.7% up on 2012. But revenues from digital in France are
still below the level of other countries, despite the presence of a
major streaming player in France (Deezer). Scale is not there yet.
Other countries in Europe like Sweden, Germany or Norway have posted
growth and everyone in the industry is looking for the day when scale
will turn streaming into a real money machine. But many speakers felt
quite confident about the future of the business.
Streaming
gets massive boost
WME's Mark Geiger (Picture: Desjardins/Image & Co) |
The
apparent shift from ownership (downloads) to access of music
(streaming) has been the source of many talks lately about the value
and the sustainability of streaming as a model (Tom Yorke, anyone?).
Marc Geiger, head of music at
leading talent agency William
Morris Endeavor, told
audiences at Midem that time was no longer for lamenting, but
embracing the trend. “We’re
transitioning into the next stage of the system, which is streaming,”
he said. But many questions
were asked about the sustainability of the business model underpinned
by streaming if operators of services could not convert free users to
paying subscribers. Former Warner Music US CEO Lyor Cohen said he
believed “in streaming as being the future of very healthy
business.” And Radiohead’s manager, Brian Message,
accepted that streaming was about scale. “It’s a volume game, and
it’s going to get bigger and more important. And for everybody in
the chain… we have to get to a point where everybody trusts and
understands the revenue stream and revenue flow.” But at the same
time, streaming is a massive promotional tool for music and artists,
argued Emmanuel de Buretel, founder of Because Music. He said, “I
spent a lot of investment on how to optimise streaming. The way you
manage YouTube has nothing to do with the way you manage a physical
release. It’s a total new world, and that’s why it’s exciting.”
Can
streaming finance creation?
The
question was asked by the CEO of Deezer Axel Dauchez who simply
stated that “if 70% of the streams are done in the back catalogue,
there will be no new creation.” He believes there is “a common
responsibility to generate discovery, to force people to try new
artists, new songs. Investing in new artists is not a marketing tool:
it’s an industry need.” When shall we see Deezer, YouTube and
others set up a pot to help finance new talent?
YouTube is under attack
YouTube
has become a key source of revenues but many voices in the industry
suggested that Google could do more for the industry. Googleannounced at Midem that YouTube has already contributed to one
billion dollars in revenues to rights holders over the past few
years, and the pot is growing. But Deezer CEO Axel Dauchez accused
the video platform, owned by Google, of being “a legal pirate” by
allowing non-licensed material to flow on the platform. Meanwhile, !K7′s
Horst Weidenmuller questioned the end goal of Google. “I am
concerned with YouTube entering the market because for YouTube
everything is about dominance. And dominance is connected to
destruction.”
Lyor
Cohen thinks Twitter rocks
Lyor
Cohen, until recently CEO of Warner Music US, was in Cannes to
present his new independent company, 300, which counts Google among
its investors. One of the first deals he's made was with Twitter’s
music division. “We’re going to create A&R tools to find
artists early, and help develop them,” he said. “We all are
looking for talent in various places, and certainly Twitter is a
terrific place to look at talent, just like YouTube. If you wanna get
signed, I think you have to engage with Twitter, and of course
YouTube. And we’ll be looking and trying to develop tools that the
rest of the music community can utilise.” Well, aspiring artists,
you know what you have to do now...
Jean-Michel Jarre (Picture: Desjardins/Image & Co) |
Jarre
extends the hand of friendship to tech companies
Although
he had barely landed from Los Angeles where he is currently recording
a new album, French electronic music pioneer Jean-Michel Jarre was in
combative mode. He obviously takes very seriously his role as
president of CISAC, the international body representing authors'
societies. During his appearances at Midem, he repeatedly asked
for creators to be given proper remuneration for the use of their
works. “We are victims of a
system that has not even been thought in the function of the content
they are making so much money on. This is why this idea of fair
remuneration is important,” he said. "If you think that
digital is the future, we are in dire straits.. we need again to
define a fair remuneration in the digital world."
But he was also offering tech
companies a way forward: “We
need to sit around these people making billions with our content, and
say ‘Guys, you love us, we are not hating you, we need to sit
together and find a decent business model'.” Will he be heard?
And
will.i.am wants the music to be more adventurous
Funny
enough, will.i.am also alluded to technology during his keynote
speech. In a video link with Los Angeles, the Black Eyed Peas's
maestro had a few tips for the music industry. “Our industry is
pretty lazy,” he said. “We should’ve been Facebook first. Our
industry should’ve been Twitter. Our industry could’ve been
Apple. Our music industry is powerful, but we don’t use it like we
should.” He added, “The state of the music industry is
delusional. I really encourage every single person in the music
industry to try and compete not with other record companies, but
compete with Samsung, compete against LG, compete against the big
ones!” Hmm, competing with Samsung... Sounds like an interesting
new mission statement for the music industry!
Paul
McGuinness is in combative mode
One
would think that now that he is no longer managing U2 Paul McGuinness
would just keep quiet. Quite the contrary. The Irishman, who steered
the career for over 30 years of what he called “a
fascinating social unit”
delivered one masterclass in artist management during the speech he
delivered after receiving Billboard's 2014 Industry Icon Award. McGuinness could not let this occasion pass without giving a kick to
Google, asking the tech giant to show “social
responsibility” by “taking down the illegal sites” and to “pen
their hearts a little and be more generous to the ecosystem that
started their success a few years ago.” But
most of his comments were about his protégés. There was an obvious
bond between the artists and their manager, but McGuinness was keen
to specify the limits of the relationship: “They
were always my clients, not my partners.”
McGuinness then stated, “When we started we knew nothing.
They didn't know how to play their instruments, I didn't know
anything about the music business.” Well, they all quickly learned!
And in a video, the band paid a heartfelt tribute to their manager.
“I don't think we've ever met another artist who have had the same
manager for 35 years from day one and for that whole time who had
been unfaltering in his integrity, in his excellent business acumen,”
said Bono, while The Edge added: "We own our own master tapes,
we own our own copyrights. We are in effect a a cooperative who
shares those equally with the band and we were designed to survive
and we were designed for something much harder: we were designed to
survive success. And Paul it was your design.” Such design helped
them sell some 160 million albums... Some achievement, indeed.
Ibrahim Maalouf (Picture: Desjardins/Image & Co) |
Artists
adopt DIY attitude
Midem
2014 reflected the DIY attitude adopted by many artists these days. A
lot of sessions were dedicated to showing how to better use the
digital landscape. But it is not an easy road. The best way to sum up
what goes through the lives of artists these days was expressed by
Lebanese-born songwriter and performed Ibrahim Maalouf: "Artists
can't afford 3 cooks. You have to be the cook and the salesperson.
Artists have to do it themselves these days."
But
labels are not dead!
“The
whole idea that you don’t need a label? It’s bullshit!” said
PIAS co-founder Kenny Gates, reflecting the common view that
dis-intermediation was great to a point and that labels do serve a
purpose. “A lot of management companies found out after
doing one or two DIY deals that they actually needed a label,” said
Gates. “[Artists] don’t
necessarily need a label: they need a team around them,” tempered
Colin Daniels, MD of Inertia. Alison Wenham, CEO of AIM, the UK's
independent label's body, claimed that “independents are a natural
home for artists: independents take a long-term view about their
role. They’re very much partnership-based. Their artists should be
supported, they should be allowed to express themselves creatively in
whatever way they want without putting deadlines or artificial
constraints on whatever the artist wants to do.”
And
their future is?
In
no uncertain terms, de Buretel said the future of labels is to become
rights management companies. “It’s extremely difficult, and
that’s the role of a music company – not a record company – to
know how to manage it.”
Indie
publishers want to be heard
The
already crowded music eco-system will have to make room for a new
player, the International Music Publishing Forum, which aims at
representing and giving a voice to independent publishers. This new
organisation was launched at Midem a few hours after its first board
meeting which elected as president Pierre Mossiat from Strictly
Confidential in Belgium (for those not in the know, Strictly is
co-owned by Mossiat with Michel Lambot and Kenny Gates from Play It
Again Sam, who are influential members of Impala, the European indie
labels' organisation). Mossiat said that this new association will
not work against but alongside ICMP, the global body for publishers,
and will give indie publishers a voice and a forum.
Licensing
is still the oil in the business
Whatever
the means of distribution, music gets to consumers via a licensing
process between rights holders and platforms. At least for those who
work with legal frameworks. And there was a lot of licensing
discussions on stage and offline. While pan-European hub Armonia
(regrouping France's SACEM, Spain's SGAE, Italy's SIAE among others)
announced a major deal with YouTube covering over 120 countries,
digital platforms and rights holders had several behind the scenes
meetings, trying to iron out deals and partnerships. On stage, there
were at least four, if not more, sessions dedicated to the theme.
Florian Drücke, managing director of said Germany's trade bodies
BVMI/IFPI, stated that "the next big thing is even better
licensing, get more things licensed. We are making a lot of progress
but there is a lot to be done."
Licensing
in Europe is still a complicated game
Kerstin Jorna (Picture: Desjardins/Image & Co) |
“If
you think that launching a new digital music service is easy, you are
wrong,” said Yves Riesel, founder of French hi-fi platform QoBuz,
when asked how he found the current state of music licensing. But he
said that complexity and dealing with rights fragmentation was a
natural part of the process that platforms tend to factor in when
starting, adding ironically that it was now “easier
to deal with authors’ societies than with record companies.”
Efforts have been made by authors' societies to create in Europe (and
also elsewhere in the world) hubs to license repertoire. One such is
Armonia, which regroups Italy's SIAE, Spain's SGAE, France's SACEM,
among others. Another is project, currently under review by Europe's
competition authorities, aims at regrouping PRS for Music (UK), STIM
(Sweden) and GEMA (Germany). “We believe that authors' societies
are the appropriate answer to massive use of creative works in
Europe,” said Kerstin Jorna, who is in charge of the copyright unit
at the European Commission's Internal Market department.
Europe
is a worry
Several
professionals and creators present in Cannes expressed their worries
a a new consultation on copyright set up by the European Commission.
Jarre urged fellow creators to go online and fill in the 80-question
document. Started early December 2013, and initially due to close on
Feb. 5, the consultation was given an extended deadline (March 5). SACEM's Jean-Noel Tronc expressed his worries that the process has
been steered in such a direction that “sometimes it felt that the
answers were already in the questions” and that the document only
available in English was not easy to navigate for non-native English
speakers. Jarre put this consultation into a wider context: “At
a time when Bruxelles scratches its head on copyright, China and
Korea see copyright as a way to boost economy, and many look at
Europe as a model since Europe has been visionary as being the first
continent to understand that if you want to have a strong identity,
your culture has to be strong.”
Data,
big data, metadata!
If
the music business could cash in a cent each time someone mentioned
at Midem the word data in all its guises, the woes of the industry
would be over. Richard Conlon, BMI's SVP for corporate strategy,
communications and new media, acknowledged that societies have to
deal with a “huge volume explosion” of data which require the
best business processes to make sure that data is identified and
rights holders paid.
Where's
the GRD?
The
main absent at Midem this year (that is, with the sunshine…) was the GRD.
Unlike previous years, no update was provided on this key project for
the industry. The fact that some rights societies are having cold
feet when considering the level of investments required to launch and
operate the global repertoire database could explain such silence.
Sources were telling me that the situation should clear up in the
coming days as all the other societies contributing to the pot were
awaiting for the decision from a major North American society to chip
in or not. If not, some other societies could follow suit and put in
jeopardy the whole project.
What's
next for Midem?
Bruno Crolot (Picture: Desjardins/Image & Co) |
The
future of Midem was a subject of many discussions on the Riviera.
Some were wondering if the trade show would be able to continue to
weather the challenging crisis facing the music industry. Others were
unfazed but the debates and just went on working, and apparently
doing good business. Midem's boss Bruno Crolot announced 6,150delegates from 75 countries (slightly down from the year before) and confirmed that Midem 2015 would take place in Cannes January
31-February 3. So we'll be there next year to monitor if, indeed,
growth has been sustainable.
PS:
total respect to Stuart Dredge for his amazing coverage of Midem.
This guy can type faster than people speak!
[Typed
while listening to Mark Kozelek & Jimmy LaValle's 'Perils From
The Sea' and I Break Horses's 'Chiaroscuro']
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteThanks. Great summary. Wish I had been there.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Emmanuel, how did you do this? Is there a clone of you sitting in all these events typing heavily? Thanks also for taking me along to some of the less well known events (IMPF).
ReplyDelete