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| quote: | Originally posted by The Vza
pretty much every artist today has their own label, publishing company and studio. they use their own publicist and manager, etc.
the labels are the ones who do the distribution, pay for the tour, and id assume take care of licensing and copyrighting with the US copyright office.
thats the assumption ive made after a few years of thinking about that topic. when I took my rap album to ultra Patrick told me he wants video of shows, another sick, better produced album, album sales reports, blah blah.
labels want you to be establsihed before they'll even fuck wit u. and why would ANY artist record an album on the labels dime when that means the label owns your masters. fuck that.
so like i said, im under the assumption that labels distribute, maybe run marketing and ad campaigns, and provide a legal team perhaps. and the funding of a tour is huge, especially if there's a band or group that's good enough to signed but doesnt have funds of their own.
i think |
They do contribute to a lot of marketing, but they are hands-off in most other ways. Tours aren't really "paid for", they're setup by a completely unrelated agency or booking management. This varies from continent to continent.
I currently have a booking agent in Australia, an offer from a few in the UK, but none in the United States (out of my own choosing). They are all different agents and unrelated companies, and especially removed from the functions of the labels that my music is on. The labels are happier if I'm touring the world pushing my music, but have very little say in actually making that happen.
The best example is this: I was in Europe over the summer and Tiesto was playing in the town I was in. I emailed his European agent (who I know) for 2 guestlist spots, which he gave to me with no problem. After his new album came out, I asked him if I could remix one of the songs from it to see if Tijs liked it; he said that would be cool, but I'll forward it to his label and they'll handle that request. Tiesto played in Atlantic City last week, so I contacted the same agent to get some free passes; he said sure no problem, but he'd have to forward my request to his North American management (who never replied). If I wanted to get an interview, I'd probably have to not only contact his North American management, but his North American publicist agency!!
This is the perfect example of the multi-faceted world surrounding the DJ and producer, and I'm sure it's worse with pop and hip hop performers...
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