This article is relevant I think to the discussion on intellectual property.

THE CAPITALIST MUSIC INDUSTRY IS
OBSOLETE: WHAT CAN TAKE ITS PLACE?

    A music industry that prices music out of the reach of tens of millions
of people, intentionally keeps most music off the radio, and censors 
musicians has clearly outlived its usefulness. 

    A music industry that gets laws passed to prevent the distribution of 
music by computer technology, makes music a slave to the whims of Wall 
Street, and would rather work with the FBI to combat "piracy" than put
money 
into artistic development is not only obsolete, it's dangerous. The beauty 
and power of music can no longer co-exist with the corruption and greed of 
the capitalist music industry.

    These harsh assessments may seem hard to accept, since the rise of the 
popular music that dominates most of the world today has been closely
linked 
to the rise of post-war capitalism and to thousands of music business 
entrepreneurs. 

The Post-War Music Industry

    As rock and soul music emerged in the 1950s, new record labels took the
stage and made the new sounds available at affordable prices. Clear channel
radio stations beamed music from the deep South out across the country.
Even 
payola--the payment of bribes by the record companies to get records played
on the radio--had a positive aspect. Payola helped to break down many of
the 
barriers in the broadcast industry, allowing the music of Southern blacks
and 
whites to break out and become the raw material of an emerging culture.
    
    Entrepreneurs were indispensable to this process. Although they
brutally 
exploited artists, the owners of record labels and radio stations helped to
create and shape a previously non-existent teen market (the idea that youth
has a culture of its own did not exist before the 1950s). The emergence of 
the teen market was an important step in the evolution of today's 
revolutionary youth culture. However, the music we take for granted today
did 
not emerge peacefully. In the 1950s, there were constant attacks on music
by 
politicians, the media, police, district attorneys, the Klan, and the
church. 

    In the late 1960s, a concert industry developed which brought a variety
of artists into every town in America with a decent-sized theater at an 
affordable price. At the same time, both national record store chains and a
new breed of independent record stores brought a diversity of recorded
music 
within driving distance of most Americans.

    The strength of the U.S. economy--not just high profits but the growth
of 
jobs and even welfare benefits--allowed music to develop as it did. For the
first twenty-five years of the rock & soul era, the stock market allowed 
music companies to raise the capital they needed to fund an infrastructure 
that brought music to almost everyone. It allowed corporations to raise the
money they needed to build the factories and offices that kept us employed.
Those jobs provided the money we needed to buy records and concert tickets.

In the 1980s, entrepreneurs made sure that new styles of music became
widely 
available and, in the most striking example of that process, rap was 
transformed from a New York neighborhood phenomenon into an international 
language of the greatest importance. 

The Worm Turns

    The 90s has seen a resumption of the full-scale war against music that 
took place in the 50s. Once again, politicians, the media, the police, 
district attorneys, and the church are attacking music, blaming it for 
everything from drug use to the depressed state of the economy.

    But there is a very important difference today. The same music industry
that helped make our culture possible has become one of the foremost 
obstacles to getting music heard. 

High Retail Prices.... Although total manufacturing cost for a CD is around
50 cents per disc, the consumer pays up to $20 for it. In a world where 3 
billion people live in poverty (including 80 million people in the U.S.), 
many music fans can no longer afford to buy the music they love.

Live Music.... Many concert tours now have average ticket prices of over 
$100. Ticketmaster surcharges are now sometimes more than the price of a 
concert ticket itself was only a few years ago. With millions of Americans 
who used to enjoy a night out now living in poverty, many clubs have gone
out 
of business. Those that remain often force bands to pay for the privilege
of 
playing while fans suffer from high cover charges and drink prices. Many 
clubs have become dependent on tobacco company promotion money and, as a 
result, musicians must promote lung cancer in order to be heard. 

Censorship.... The major record companies now place warning stickers on
many 
of the albums they release. This means a lot of music that does get
recorded 
can't be sold to teenagers or, in many cases, anyone. The major record
store 
chains all actively promote censorship. The record companies all have 
in-house censorship committees that, among other things, forbid criticism
of 
the police.

>From its beginnings in the mid-1980s, the current wave of music censorship
has been orchestrated from the highest levels of power, led by politicians 
who receive strong music industry support. For example, in 1986 a secret 
meeting was held in the Maryland countryside to discuss the danger music 
presents to the ruling class. Sponsored by the Parents Music Resource
Center 
(an organization founded by current Second Lady Tipper Gore), participants 
included the commandant of the Marine Corps, representatives of foreign 
countries, most Democratic and Republican Presidential candidates of the
past 
twenty years, a former chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, 
current vice-president Al Gore, a vice-president of Merrill Lynch and a 
vice-president of Northwest Airlines. The music industry has gladly
accepted 
many of the demands of the Parents Music Resource Center, such as placing 
warning labels on CDs and cassettes.

Radio.... Since the 1996 Telecom bill made it legal to put together giant 
radio chains--including ownership of several stations in the same
city--radio 
has played a narrower and narrower span of music, focusing on selling 
advertising to national corporate clients. Record companies now openly pay 
hundreds of thousands of dollars to radio chains to get their records
played. 
This keeps anyone without a multi-million dollar slush fund from being
heard.

    Many people have turned to unlicensed ("pirate") radio as a way to 
broadcast the music and news ignored by the big radio chains. The response
of 
the broadcast corporations has been to pressure the Federal Communications 
Commission to shut down all pirates. Over the past few years, the FCC has 
raided hundreds of unlicensed stations, often at gunpoint.

Technology.... There has been a steady stream of advances in music
technology 
since the end of World War II: stereophonic sound, eight-track, cassette 
players, compact discs, DVD, etc. The music industry embraced and promoted 
them all until the most important advance ever--the Internet--came along. 

    A lot of people all over the world use computer technology to listen to
and distribute music without paying for it. The response of the giant music
monopolies has been to hire people to search the web for "unauthorized" use
of music, to sic their lawyers on music-lovers who use the Internet to 
distribute music or lyrics for free, to prevent artists from putting their 
music up on the Internet for free, and to get legislation passed to 
criminalize the free distribution of music. 

The Stock Market

The role of the stock market has changed. Today, the only thing Wall Street
wants to hear from a company is how many jobs it's going to eliminate. The 
more people who hit the street, the higher a company's stock price goes.
The 
increase in poverty and homelessness that results undermines the
distribution 
and enjoyment of music because it removes millions of music consumers from 
the economy.
    
    The stock market is also used as a club to force record companies to 
censor themselves. Politicians in several states who control pension funds 
that own record company stock have threatened to dump that stock on the 
market if music that's critical of society isn't eliminated. For instance, 
every major record label passed on issuing a pro-choice compilation album 
featuring several well-known musicians, saying that to release it would
cause 
them to be attacked in the stock market.

What can replace the capitalist music industry?

    There was a time when it was almost impossible to even record music 
without using a full-blown studio controlled by a record company. Today,
it's 
easy for any musician to make high-quality recordings and to distribute the
result via the Internet. In other words, we no longer need the capitalist 
music industry. For anything. It's obsolete. It's worthless.

    But the rapidly-growing music underground is only an indicator of what
a 
bright future culture can have. By itself, the underground is not that 
future. We can't settle for simply finding ways to circumvent the
capitalist 
music industry while most musicians remain in poverty and the attacks
against 
the music underground continue in the form of lawsuits, raids, and punitive
legislation. That is a losing strategy.

    The League of Revolutionaries for a New America (LRNA) proposes that we
turn the music underground into an overground of unlimited musical creation
and enjoyment. We already have the capability to guarantee the basis for
the 
full creativity of every human being: Food, shelter, medical care,
education, 
and 24 hour a day access to all the tools anyone needs for producing music.

    It is computer technology that makes the current music underground 
possible and modern technology also produces an abundance of food, shelter,
medicine, and, of course, musical instruments. We simply need to take music
and the other essential elements of life out of the hands of the
capitalists 
and place them in the hands of the public. By removing the barriers of the 
music industry, of the stock market, and of capitalism itself, what
naturally 
wants to happen will be able to happen. 

    The result will be that everyone who wants to create music will be able
to. Musicians will be able to be heard by anyone on earth who wants to 
listen. They won't have to work at degrading day jobs. Music and other
forms 
of culture will finally be free to fully reflect and uplift the human
spirit 
as part of a cooperative society that nurtures humanity every step of the
way.

This is the lead article in
Music & Revolution, number 3, which is now available 
on-line. M&R 3 is a special 
edition of the People's Tribune, the newspaper of the League of 
Revolutionaries for a New America (LRNA).

Music & Revolution 3 is designed to help change the world by providing, 
for the first time, an in-depth analysis of music's place in the revolution. 
We would greatly appreciate it if you would forward this e-mail far and wide.
 
The entire contents can be found at:  <A 
HREF="http://www.lrna.org/league/mr/mr3.html">http://www.lrna.org/league/mr/mr
3.html</A>

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