(This story was initially published in One Movement for Music - Volume 3/Nov.-Dec. 2012)
by
Emmanuel Legrand
It's
been a stellar year for Team GB in music. As the country was getting
ready to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Beatles
first single and paying tribute to the Rolling Stones ascent to
global domination from a pub in Twickenham five decades ago, the
Olympics' opening and closing ceremonies have reminded the world that
the British Isles have been a formidable source of musical talent
during the second half of the 20th Century.
Success
has not been restricted to household names such as the Beatles, the
Rolling Stones, Coldplay or Radiohead. For Geoff Taylor, the chief
executive of music industry trade body the BPI, the past few years
have seen the rise of a new generation of British acts. “British
music is on the crest of a new wave, particularly in North America
where Adele, Mumford & Sons and Coldplay have stormed the charts
followed this year by the amazing Stateside performance of British
boy bands The Wanted and One Direction,” said Taylor.
The
success of this new generation of British acts can be measured by the
findings of a recent report from the UK's authors' society PRS for
Music, which showed that the British industry as a whole has
experienced a decade of ongoing growth outside of its borders.
According to the report, foreign royalties collected by PRS for Music
on behalf of its members have jumped from £85 million in 2002 to to
£188m in 2011, reflecting the global reach of the UK's songwriters,
composers and performers as well as the dynamism of the local
industry.
PRS for Music's Karen Buse |
In
an interview with OMFM, PRS for Music director of international Karen
Buse, explained that the continuous growth over the past decade was
owed as much to increasing success from British acts as it was from
PRS for Music's ability to chase and repatriate foreign royalties
more efficiently. “It's a combination of both,” she said.
“British artists have been very successful but we are also more on
top of it. When I took over the international department here, it was
a small team. We have a full team now, with automated tools, and we
are much more pro-active – we are tracking repertoire where it is
played, and we make sure [royalties] comes back to the UK. And our
sister societies are also doing a better job at tracking repertoire.”
Nigel
Elderton, president of peermusic Europe and managing director of
peermusic UK, concurred, “Under the watchful eye and encouragement
of PRS' International division many local PRO's are increasing their
licensing and collection of UK repertoire while also making
administrative efficiencies, which has resulted in more income
flowing back to UK publishers and writer members.”
Buse
said that the past decade was also characterised by an on-going
development of new media outlets such as satellite and cable TV
channels, as well as digital platforms, all of which have been
revenue generators. Another increasing source of revenues is live
music due to better collections from societies abroad. “In a lot of
countries societies are now tracking not only the major tours but
also concerts in smaller venues,” said Buse, who added that British
acts have also benefited from the increasing number of festivals
around the world.
The
main sources of royalties abroad remain Europe and North America,
although Buse considered that in the US, too many exemptions and
legal challenges by broadcasters has made the situation “not as
good as it would be, even though ASCAP and BMI are working really
hard to grow licensing income.”
Buse
said that streams from other parts of the world, like Mexico, Brazil
or Russia, have also been growing and show great potential. Brazil's
contribution to PRS's collection increased of £1.6 million in the
last two years. However, Buse noted that two countries were still
performing under-par, and these were the two most populated countries
in the world – India and China. “Brazil is starting to grow,”
confirmed Buse, “and we think that Russia has the potential to grow
but we have seen no progress in India and China. Each country has its
set of problems, and we are working [with PRS' sister societies] to
help improve the situation.”
Another
growing source of revenues for British songwriters is synchronization
rights. According to Buse, some British tracks “have done very well
on TV,” citing the series 'CSI' which boasts several tracks by The
Who as theme songs ('Who Are You?' in 'CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation', 'Won't Get Fooled Again' in 'CSI: Miami' and 'Baba
O'Riley' in 'CSI: NY').
Offering
an explanation as to why the UK has this continuous success, BPI's
Taylor said it was down to on-going efforts from UK labels that “make
huge bets on domestic talent – typically spending more than 20% of
their revenues on A&R – and build on this with global digital
and marketing expertise to help British artists break
internationally.”
Songwriter Steve Mac and peermusic's Nigel Elderton |
For
peermusic's Elderton, one of the UK's strength is its pool of
songwriters and composers, whose works are performed around the
world. He cited Steve Mac, a writer signed to peermusic UK before he
recently signed to BMG Chrysalis, who picked up the ASCAP record of
the year award for the 2011 most performed work on US radio with
Cobra Starships's 'You Make Me Feel Good' as one among many UK
writers who “have scored major hits across Europe, Japan and
Australasia”. Explained Elderton, “These successes added to the
catalogue of the UK's popular repertoire stretching back to the early
1920's continues to generate substantial royalty income for our
writers from across the globe.”
The
growth in international revenues can also been explained by a very
pro-active industry, especially from the indie sector. Some of the
biggest British successes in recent years were scored by indies such
as XL (Adele) or Domino (Arctic Monkeys, Franz Ferdinand). Former
Warner Music UK executive and founder of indie label Infectious
Records Korda Marshall, whose act Alt-J grabbed a Mercury Prize award
for their debut album 'An Awesome Wave' in early November, noted that
“historically independent labels by virtue of
necessity have had to make sure that they can sell as many records as
possible overseas and have often used the advances from overseas
licensees to underwrite the investment in the UK.”
“International
business is – and always has been – a priority, almost whatever
part of the UK music business you operate in,” added Julian Wall,
current managing director of London-based One Media iP, and who
worked previously as the director of members services for the BPI. As
such, he coordinated trade missions for British labels and publishers
to various locations such as Los Angeles, Japan or Australia. “Any
individual or company that restricts themselves to simply domestic
market activity is either very lucky to survive and prosper or at the
other end of the scale, simply won't be competitive and/or around for
too long.”
But
for all their talent and hard work, Marshall pointed out to a more
cultural reason explaining the success of Brits: “Possibly the
'celtic effect' – music is more engrained in our culture than many
other countries as fundamentally we like to drink, party, dance and
listen to music all the time.” Someone had to say it!
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