FarSky wrote:
I think he's switched topics by the latter paragraph, no longer referring to iTunes but rather talking about consumers' attitudes toward paying for music when they want and pirating when they don't. Poorly-written article is poorly written.
And going back to his iTunes "points," I rather don't understand what he's carping about. He says that iTunes should offer services to artists that record labels and music publishers used to provide. But record labels and music publishers still exist, and they still serve the same purposes they've always served. iTunes is just a distribution outlet, like brick and mortar stores were before it. I can't see where you'd ask Walmart or Target to "employ talent scouts, give space to allow bands to stream their music, or pay smaller artists directly rather than through a third party aggregator."
Actually, it's my understanding that iTunes is targeting small acts and individuals, marketing iTunes itself as a
complete direct distribution model that will take care of the distribution infrastructure/architecture, transaction payments, etc.. In which case, it's advertising itself as a replacement for many of the direct benefits and responsibilities of record labels. While offering none of the indirect benefits of talent scouting, marketting, etc.
I suspect that Townshend is upset at the margin they're making given they are not providing any of the most expensive parts of a traditional record label's actions on the behalf of their signed artists.
Edit: Okay, did a little digging, and added the link on Apple's site. I didn't scan over the application in detail, but it looks like all you need is some tax information to give them, and a source with which to register your songs and albums for the correct metadata identification formats (UPCs for albums, some other format for songs).
I can't speak to how aggressively they're targetting this market segment, but they are certainly offering the service and making it pretty "easy" to interface with them to use it.