Apply to Win $10,000 at SXSW’s Hackathon

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SXSW will be hosting their second annual Music Hackathon at this year’s conference. Hackers, designers, programmers, and showcasing artists will work on projects that enhance live performance and fan interactivity.

The event starts on March 18th at 2:00 PM at the Hilton and goes for 24 hours.<!–/*
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// <![CDATA[
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// ]]>Those that are interested in participating can apply here. A SXSW badge is not required to participate.

There is a $10,000 prize for the top team. Judges include: Alex Ebert (Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros), Mack Maine (Young Money Entertainment), James Williamson (The Stooges), Stephen White (Gracenote), and Jonathan Dwarkin (Warner Music Group).

 

Nina Ulloa covers breaking news, tech, and more. Follow her on Twitter: @nine_u

The post Apply to Win $10,000 at SXSW’s Hackathon appeared first on Digital Music News.


Source: Industry News

Spotify’s Chairman Has “Zero Understanding” of Why Artists Are “Complaining”

…from a little-read interview with Spotify chairman Martin Lorentzon, conducted back in November by Swedish magazine SvD Näringsliv.

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[interview excerpt, translated from Swedish]

SvD: Is growing artist discontent a risk for Spotify?

Lorentzon: No, Spotify’s risk comes from other things.  And I have zero understanding of the complaints.  Just look at the amount of money we’re paying out.  It isn’t crumbs.

“We’ve reversed a music industry in freefall through blood, sweat, and tears, and we’re handing money back to the record industry.  All the while, music has been completely free to steal or do whatever you want with it, from the Pirate Bay, SoundCloud, Youtube or Grooveshark.”

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Source: Industry News

Dear Spotify, Please Pay Us Fairly. Signed, 133 Swedish Songwriters…

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An open letter from a newly-formed collective of 133 Swedish songwriters, first published (in Swedish) in Stockholm-based magazine, Aftonbladet.  

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Over the past few months, the debate over streaming royalties has intensified with Taylor Swift’s decision to remove her entire catalog from Spotify.  Swift, who is currently the world’s best-selling musician, voiced concern that Spotify was actively devaluing her music, while short-changing the very people that helped create Spotify’s business: songwriters.

Daniel Ek, CEO and co-founder of Spotify, eventually responded that Spotify gives 60-70 percent of all royalties back to the music industry.   Chairman Martin Lorentzon flatly stated that he had ‘zero understanding’ of artist and author demands for better compensation.

A study conducted in November of 2014 in the US revealed that just 3 percent of Spotify’s royalties make it back to songwriters.  A similar study has not been conducted in Europe, though the payout percentages are similar to the US.  Despite this, the debate over streaming royalties remains focused on artists and labels, with songwriters rarely mentioned.  But the majority of hits are written by authors who are not performing artists and work entirely behind the scenes.  They don’t have the same ability tour, sell merchandise, or otherwise compensate for the loss of income brought on by digital.

The inevitable result is that artists and labels are sawing off the very branch they sit on, and forcing professional songwriters to become hobbyists.

Ten years ago, as the downloading debate was at its peak, record labels were on their knees while CD sales started to plummet.  When Spotify finally presented their business model, there were few that thought it would work.  And, it would only further erode CD sales.

In that environment, major labels took a tough licensing stance, demanding large equity percentages of Spotify and a large piece of the revenue pie.  Publishers and STIM, on the other hand, agreed to bad terms to allow the fledging technology to get off the ground.  Nobody wanted to stand in the way of technology, or scuttle an attempt to reduce piracy.

Now, we can see the consequences of those choices.  The digital revolution has allowed record labels to drastically reduce their costs of production and distribution.  The recording industry in Sweden started to flourish, and there were signs that the rest of Europe would soon follow suit.

But songwriters, who invested both time and money to make Spotify happen, have received little benefit.  It is now time to create a proper balance.

That is why today, February 16th, the songwriters coalition SKAP has called for a meeting among the various industry stakeholders.  The purpose of this meeting will be to figure out how we can create a more fair and equitable distribution of streaming royalties.

The first step will be transparency.  Spotify, along with other streaming services, have created deals with the major labels using NDAs, or Non-Disclosure Agreements, which prevent transparency in negotiations.  STIM is forced to negotiation upon the NDA agreements, and therefore can’t even share the terms with its members.  As a result, songwriters never know how much they are getting paid for the use of their songs.

The second step is to determine a royalty allocation that allows the industry to thrive, not just the record labels and distributors who feed off the music we create.

And the third step is to start crediting the songwriters and producers, many of whom aren’t even mentioned anywhere on Spotify.  We just don’t think it’s right that the people who created the music aren’t getting credit for it.

Sweden has done a great deal towards the development of digital services.  It makes sense that we, with our relatively small music industry and a spirit of consensus, can show the way for a more equitable and fair industry.  Let’s hope that this meeting opens the door for that.

Lasse Andersson
Tomas Andersson Wiij
Johan Becker
Johan Bejerholm
Daniel Bengtson
Anoo Bhagawan
Arnthor Birgisson
Peter Boström
Jonas von der Burg
Niclas von der Burg
EagleEye Cherry
Robert “string” Dahlqvist
Adrian Davinski
Joy Deb
Linnea Deb
Mohs Denebi
Ana Diaz
Niklas Edberger
Olle Ekberg
Per Eklund
David Elfström Lilja
Jade Ell
Lina Eriksson
Mårten Eriksson
Peter Alexander Esbjörnsson
Annika Fehling
Oscar Fogelström
Mikael Frithiof
Tobias Fröberg
Magnus Funemyr
Aleena Gibson
Daniel Gidlund
Daniel Gilbert
Hakan GLANTE
Irya Gmeyner
Thomas Gson
Robert Habolin
Peter Hallström
Thomas Hanna
Oscar Harryson
Mats Hedstrom
Uno Helmersson
Patrik Henzel
Louise Hoffsten
Anton Hard Af Segerstad
Henrik Janson
Martin Jarbeck
Niklas Jarl
Niels Jensen
Andreas Jismark
Andrew Johnson
Karina Kampe
Magnus Kaxe
Jackie Kavan
Niclas Kings
Jorgen Stewart
David Kruger
Jimmy Lagnefors
Anders Larsson
Tim Larsson
Caroline Leander
Peter Cetera
Ari LeTennen
Mattias Lindblom
Helienne Lindvall
Martin Lorentzson
Patrik Lorentzson
Tobias Lundgren
Niclas Lundin
Malin Maggie Lübeck
Bernard Lohr
Rikard Löfgren
Viktor Lofgren
Henrik Lörstad
Awa Manneh
Erik Martensson
Andrew Matthews
Peter Jacobson Moren
Per Magnusson
Tony Malm
Marcus Maria
Johan Moraeus
David Myhr
Anders Nilsson
Henry Nordenback
Johan Norrby
Erik Nyholm
Mats Nyman
Thomas Nyrre Nystrom
Pauline K Olofsson
Emanuel Olsson
Ollie Olsson
Per Olsson
Jonas Quant
Eric Palmqwist
Miqael Persson aka Hicks
Pettersson, Niklas
Eddie Rahmati
Johan Ramström
Sigurd Resnes
Anders Ringman
Elias Ringquist
Leah Muscat Rodo
Asa Rydan
Anders F Rönnblom
Sigurd Rosnes
Hanif Hitmanic Sabzevari
Erik Sahlen
Ken Sandin
Jerry Sillah
Frederick Sonefors
Wind Sonnvik
Nicklas Stenemo
Dan Sundquist
Markus Svensson
Andreas Söderlund
Fredrik Söderström
Anna Ternheim
Frederick Thomander
Max Thulin
Peo Thyrén
Johanna Toth
Mats Tärnfors
Samuel Waermö
Johan vegna
Christian Waltz
Par Wiksten
Anders Wikström
Henrik Wikström
Anders Wollbeck
Jonas Moonchild Zekkari
Frederick Fredro Ödesjö
Frida Öhrn
Stefan Örn

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Source: Industry News

Stagehands Protesting Mistreatment at Live Nation Concert in Atlanta

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The following statement comes from the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees. They will be protesting poor treatment of stagehands at a Live Nation Maroon 5 concert on Thursday, February 19th in Atlanta.

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Stagehands to Protest “Poor Performance” at Thurs., Feb. 19, Live Nation-Sponsored
Maroon 5 Concert in Atlanta’s Philips Arena

This Thursday’s performance onstage at the Maroon 5 concert in Atlanta will be great, but backstage it’s a different story. Stagehands work in poor conditions, are paid poverty-level wages, with no benefits – for a job that is often dangerous. On Thursday evening, outside Philips Arena, stagehands and their supporters will hold banners and approach concertgoers with information on this and other “poor performances.”

WHO: Atlanta stagehands and their supporters

WHAT: “Poor Performance” protest against the mistreatment of Atlanta’s backstage workers

WHEN/ WHERE: Outside Philips Arena, Thurs., Feb. 19, 5:00 pm – 8:30 pm

In most major cities and outdoor concert venues, including southern cities such as Birmingham and Charlotte, concert promoter Live Nation pays union-scale wages and stagehands receive benefits and payroll taxes are paid to the state –not in Atlanta. At Philips Arena and venues around the Perimeter, Live Nation uses Crew One, a temping firm that acts as a middleman, to staff concerts. Crew One treats stagehands as independent contractors and avoids paying payroll taxes to the State of Georgia. Workers receive little training, no benefits and sometimes don’t even get water to drink.

Last summer, the roughly 400 stagehands who work for Crew One on Live Nation productions and the shows of other promoters voted by a 2 to 1 margin to form a union. Crew One has refused to bargain with workers despite rulings from the federal National Labor Relations Board.

Shows at Philips Arena and other area venues are primarily “promoter choice.” Concert promoter Live Nation, a publicly-traded corporation with $22 billion in annual revenues, a company that also owns Ticketmaster and charges concertgoers hefty fees on top of high ticket prices could easily correct these substandard conditions. Live Nation has turned a blind eye.

The mistreatment of Atlanta stagehands by employers in the industry is drawing the attention of state lawmakers and the national media. A few days ago, the Washington Post documented the abuses Atlanta stagehands face in a story entitled “How Live Nation exploits low-wage workers to stage its rock concerts.” In January, the magazine In These Times also reported on poor conditions faced by Crew One workers in a story, “Atlanta Stagehands Fight ‘Labor Pimps’ Pushing Temp Work, Low Wages.”

Find out more at: http://www.poorperformanceatl.org

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Source: Industry News