Forecasting the Musical Trends of 2024
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- Опубликовано: 5 ноя 2024
- In Episode 350 of the DIY Musician Podcast, Cristina and Rachel share their personal predictions for the future of the music industry in 2024. While these predictions are purely for fun and not grounded in data, their enthusiasm and insightful banter make for an entertaining exploration of what the musical journey might hold in the coming year.
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Folk, acoustic, and people playing "real" instruments has never gone away; in fact it's been growing for years, , especially among younger folks. If you look to areas like Kansas City and the northwest U.S., it's easy to find examples that bear this out. You may want to broaden your horizons. Thanks for all you do!
Amazing forecasting, excited for 2024, I have a lot planned, let's go! Happy holidays! 🎶🎄🎙️
Hey, I’m from Minnesota too!
If you are using a Mac bring down the brightness that should help
SpongeBob was literally inspired by the Ween album The Mollusk, so, yeh, it does sound like SpongeBob music.
Yep! I knew there'd be ONE Ween fan in here.
you are the beautiful bird 🤭😍
Guys, are you going to bring calls and letters back?
Maybe! It's a whole new chapter though, we shall see!
@@cdbabyvideo we're not going anywhere, we'll wait as long as it needs too.
48:00 there already was the great next thing. It was digital downloads. you like it - you buy it. The subscription model is like a 200 mph (kmph) car - the typical consumer is not ready for this. So this model jus downgraded value of good music the same way as fast cars downgraded value of human life. Recently I tried to equate and recount the subscription model with the pre-paid album model, from my experience it was cassettes. I remember how I listened to music when I was a teen. My first every-day cassette was Great Rock Hits, and after that it was Infest by Papa Roach. I literally listened to it on my boombox every day after school before going to music school. So to be safe I took 300 days in a year. The 300 days more in the next 2 years. Then approximately 300 in the next 7 years to be safe. So we can say that I bought an album (let's say 10 songs) for 10 000 song-plays (so as streams). So how much money would I make with 10 000 streams? Around 20 dollars (if we count different subscriptions and regions). Seems the same as for an album. But it's spread in 10 years? So it's like a lease. But I bought this cassette back then because I loved the music. The only problem with analog was delivery and quality degradation. Digital downloads solved both problems. Maybe we're trying to find the answer in the wrong place. Maybe we should be focusing not so much on delivery technologies but rather on discovery, metadata, cataloging, prospecting, And maybe we don't need those who just only want to "watch" music instead of listening to it with their eyes wide closed.
Deep Cut Papa Roach
@@cdbabyvideo Tightrope for sure.
Digital Download sales made a way for folks to make a worthwhile profit and return on investments whereas streaming services put us all out to pasture in a welfare state of emergency. I have no faith in it.
Agreed that something in the model must change!