By Glenn Peoples, Nashville | December 02, 2013
Independent artists have never had access to so many customers. A
single distributor can get an artist’s music into digital services
around the world. U.S. artists were getting Spotify royalties before the
service was available stateside. Now they’re getting royalties from
Deezer, Bloom.fm and other services not yet available in the States.
Since distributors have added their catalogs to YouTube, independent
artists can reach listeners through the world’s most popular video
service.
Access to consumers has meant hundreds of millions in revenue through
the years. CD Baby has paid out more than $300 million since it was
founded in 1998. TuneCore has paid out more than $330 million since it
launched in 2006. This year, CD Baby expects to pay out $58 million --
that’s cash to artists minus the company’s distribution fee. This year’s
distributions should be about 9% higher than the $53 million paid out
last year and 35% greater than 2011’s distributions of $43 million.
The future may be streaming, but independent artists get most of
their revenue from downloads. CD Baby artists will receive 77% of their
revenue from downloads, down from 80% last year and 81% in 2011. CD Baby
marketing manager Kevin Breuner says that about 73% of digital revenue
and about 61% of total revenue comes from iTunes.
THIS ARTICLE FIRST APPEARED IN BILLBOARD MAGAZINE
Streaming revenue is small but growing. This year, CD Baby will get
8% of its revenue from streaming services, up from 5% and 2% in the
previous two years. Subscription services like Spotify and Rhapsody are
included in CD Baby’s streaming revenue. Noninteractive services like
Pandora and SiriusXM, which pay royalties through SoundExchange, are
also not included.
Also excluded from the streaming figures is YouTube, a service long
used for promotion that is gaining as a revenue source. CD Baby has
delivered its catalog to YouTube and the company is experiencing strong
revenue growth. CD Baby has paid out more than $1 million, and the last
quarterly distribution was about $300,000. “It’s something we think is
just going to explode,” Breuner says.
Independent artists are aided by continued demand for physical
product. CDs and LPs will account for 15% of artist revenue this year,
even with last year and down slightly from 17% in 2011. Some of that
revenue comes from CD Baby’s partnership with Alliance Entertainment
that puts independent artists’ albums into brick-and-mortar stores. But
those figures don’t tell the entire story. Not counted in CD Baby’s
artist distributions are artist earnings from selling CDs and LPs
themselves. Anyone who attends concerts frequently knows the venue
merchandise table is one of the last bastions of physical product.
source:
http://www.billboard.com/biz/articles/news/indies/5812284/where-indie-artists-are-making-most-of-their-money-from-the
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