Thursday, March 10, 2011

A Connection Maybe?




FROM BACKSTREETS.COM


In May, Columbia will issue a new single-disc release for Thom Zimny's documentary film The Promise: The Making of Darkness on the Edge of Town, on both DVD and Blu-Ray. The film premiered on HBO and received a rapturous critical response around the world, including as an official selection, Toronto International Film Festival, The BFI London Film Festival, and The International Rome Film Festival. Previously, the acclaimed doc has only been available as part of the six-disc Darkness box released in November.

For those fans who already picked up the box set as a matter of course, the new release packs a pair of bonus features previously commercially unavailable: "Songs From the Promise," the five-song performance film from the Asbury Park carousel house; and "A Conversation With His Fans," from the Dave Marsh-hosted fan Q&A at Sirius/XM studios.
"Songs From the Promise" was filmed before an audience of approximately 60 fans in December 2010 and was webcast only through the end of that month. For this one-time concert event, Springsteen and members of the Darkness-era E Street Band lineup (Clarence Clemons, Stevie Van Zandt, Max Weinberg, Roy Bittan, and Garry Tallent) were joined by keyboardist Charles Giordano, a full horn section (Ed Manion, Barry Danielian, Curt Ramm, Clark Gayton and Stan Harrison) and special guest David Lindley, who played violin during the original recording sessions. Directed and edited by Zimny and mixed by Emmy-winner Bob Clearmountain, the concert features E Street Band performances of four tracks from The Promise plus "Blue Christmas":
1. "Racing in the Street ('78)
2. "Gotta Get That Feeling"
3. "Ain't Good Enough For You"
4. "The Promise"
5, "Blue Christmas"

Judging by today's press release, no additional footage from the carousel will be included other than what was previously webcast as "Songs From the Promise." Just in case any powers-that-be want to get clever and throw in some easter eggs -- y'know, pull another "The Way" on us -- we'll keep fingers crossed for "One Way Street" or "The Brokenhearted."
"A Conversation With His Fans" aired on VH1 Classic and Palladia earlier this year, a 22-minute program offering footage of the question-and-answer session with a small group of fans in the studios of Sirius XM's E Street Radio channel. Springsteen discusses the writing and recording of Darkness on the Edge of Town and the decision to release the extensive collection of songs that didn't make the record. Questions are intercut with highlights from The Promise box set, including the Paramount Theater performance and rare archival footage from 1978.
The DVD and Blu-Ray will be released on May 3; we'll have pre-order information shortly.


AND THEN THERE'S THIS, FROM NPR.ORG

2010 was another lousy year for the music industry – and in particular, the CD. Sales of compact discs dropped last year by nearly 20% percent, according to Billboard. For a while, those shiny plastic discs lifted the fortunes of the recording industry to new heights. But the CD also contained the seeds of the industry's collapse — a collapse that's rattling more than Manhattan boardroom windows.
A Sony factory in Pittman, New Jersey, will see its last CD roll out off the assembly line at the end of this month. At its height, the plant employed 1300 people.

"The overtime, you had it whenever you wanted it," says Jim Jones, who's been driving a forklift at the factory since 1982, when the plant still made LPs. "10 hour days if you wanted it. Saturdays, Sundays — you could get it. That's how busy we were. A lot of times it was mandatory. You had to work, that was it."
Jones met his wife, Cindy, at the plant in the 1990s, when they worked in the warehouse together, rushing out the latest hits. "It's been so long since there was a big hit," she says. "It's just," she pauses, "slow."
Sony will still make CDs at its factory in Indiana. But the closure of the New Jersey plant is telling. Sales of compact discs have fallen 50 percent over the past decade. It's a long way from the early 1980s, when breathless ads and over-the-top hyperbole touted "sound like you've never heard it before."

The CD was invented by hardware manufacturers Sony and Philips. At first, executives at the major record labels didn't like the new format. But they started to come around — thanks in large part to Jac Holzman, the founder of Elektra Records who will be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame next week. Holzman was a big advocate for the CD when he was at Warner Music Group.

"The CD was sexy. And it would bring higher prices — from about 8 dollars for cassettes or LPs at the end of the '70s, to about $15 in the early '80s," Holzman says. "You could resell your best catalogue again. CDs were lighter and cheaper to ship, which is a big consideration."
All of that meant giant profits for the music industry in the 1980s and '90s. "The CD sold so well. And it created this gigantic boom in the industry," says Steve Knopper, the author of Appetite for Self-Destruction: The Spectacular Crash of the Record Industry in the Digital Age. "And everybody got rich. And people just got incredibly accustomed to this. To the point where in the late '90s, the only way that you could get the one song that you liked was to buy the 15 to 18 dollar CD at the Tower Records."
At first, Knopper says, people didn't mind paying a lot for the new format. "You didn't hear the outcry at the time of, 'Hey, we're getting price-gouged.' Instead the public was going, 'this is much better sound.'"
The record labels promised that the price of CDs would come down eventually. And the discs did get cheaper — to make. But the labels kept retail prices - and profits - high. Jac Holzman says that was a mistake.
"It's fine to keep that up for two or three years. But the labels kept it up far too long. And I think it was a fraud on the public, and on the artists."
Sales peaked in 2000. Back when the disc was designed, no one in the music industry thought much about ripping or burning on a personal computer. But CDs were the first widely available format that allowed consumers to free digital copies of songs from a physical object. Which led to the rise of the mp3, and Napster, and other peer-to-peer networks.
On a recent afternoon, while shopping for used discs at the Princeton Record Exchange in New Jersey, Larry Haas offered that the music industry "shot itself in the foot" by not rolling back CD prices. Scott Gordon was there too and says that he still prefers CDs to digital downloads. "There's a certain thing about holding it in your hand," Gordon adds. "As long as this store is here, and I'm breathing, I'll be here probably 4 times a year."
That's hardly enough to bring back the glory days, but the CD hasn't faded out yet – in fact, Jon Lambert, the Record Exchange's general manager, says CDs are his store's bread and butter. He says sales of new CDs have declined dramatically. But the store makes up for it with a brisk business in used discs – especially in the five-dollars-and-under section. "Probably the biggest fallout from the downloading mentality is it became more a singles market. People were willing to pay a couple dollars for the songs off an album. But they're not willing to pay 18 for a new CD," Lambert says.
He wouldn't be surprised if new releases on CD slow to a trickle in the next 10 years, as record labels turn their attention to so-called 'cloud-based' music services.

4 comments:

steve simels said...

I am sure that there is absolutely no correlation between declining CD sales and the quality of most contemporary corporate pop music.

None whatsoever.
:-)

itsok2beright said...

That NPR editorial is spot on, though, it left out (purposely?) the word GREED. The writer tried three different ways to avoid using it. Short term profit over long term growth has been the mantra of many industries, including the large chain retailers of CD's. Which were also left out of the article. They certainly have to shoulder some of the blame. If I remember right, the musicians saw this coming long before the execs at the music companies, but couldn't fight the men who signed their checks.

@Steve: That doesn't have much to do with it. Remember, when CD's were sexy, we had to endure Vanilla Ice, and other noteworthy 'artists'. The quality of the pop music has not changed too much. It has been terrible since the 70's, when music video took over, and the artists were more concerned with their look than their sound. The growth of producers bands (boy bands, et al), were a byproduct of music videos.

soundsource said...

so my question is am I getting hosed by Bruce since I bought the Darkness Box Set but if I read you right there is additional material on the new DVD release of the documentary that isn't on the DVD in the Box Set. Nice and they wonder why I don't buy CD's anymore and I just download music off the interwebs.

Troy said...

My first thought was that this is '18 Tracks' all over again.