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independent on a major: the new business model

Posted: Thu May 06, 2010 12:52 pm
by Mindbender Futurama
With his independently released mixtape So Far Gone, Drake went from digital dynamo (2,000 downloads in ten minutes) to Grammy nominee all before he signed on any dotted lines. Or maybe not: While a major-label bidding war supposedly raged, rumor had it that he was already signed to Young Money/Universal. Either way, the excitement around his quick, seemingly unassisted rise translated into true stardom. And today, a number of up-and-coming rappers, eager to re-create his magic, are at pains to represent themselves as boot-strapping independent artists ג€” even when theyג€™ve got freshly inked major-label deals.

This phenomenon existed before Drake. ג€œI was over at Interscope when we signed Souljah Boy,ג€ recalls Archibald Bonkers, manager of Indiana rapper Freddie Gibbs and A&R for HHH Artists from 2004 to 2007. ג€œAt the first radio meeting after he was signed, [the label decided to] do nothing. They didnג€™t want to mess with the grassroots.ג€ But recent examples of rappers who have secretly signed to labels while continuing to market themselves suggest that the trendג€™s truly taking hold among those still trying to make their break. The idea is simple: Artists market themselves gradually, via social networks and blogs, avoiding oversaturation. They make their music using low-budget production techniques. And then, once their ג€œindieג€ success wins notice in the mainstream, their label backers come out from behind the curtains.

According to industry insiders, Pittsburghג€™s Wiz Khalifa has been signed to Atlantic Records for close to a month now. (You may have noticed Kush and Orange Juice, the title of his most recent mixtape, trending on Twitter and Google.) Asked about the signing, Khalifa said, ג€œWhatever people want it to be, thatג€™s what it is. I didnג€™t say yes, I didnג€™t say no.ג€ Either way, he released Kush independently, planning, as he told VIBE.com, the publicity behind the project himself. ג€œThe mixtape was done last month, but I really wanted to do it up and make sure something like this [buzz] would happen,ג€ he said. ג€œI got some more tricks up my sleeve, too.ג€

Meanwhile, Atlantaג€™s Spree Wilson recently inked a deal with Jive records without disclosing it. ג€œThey want me to market myself,ג€ he explains. ג€œMixtapes, pre-projects ג€” all before the album, [in order] to create a buzz.ג€ (Release dates for Spreeג€™s upcoming projects have yet to be announced.) And Warner Bros. calls Brooklynite Theophilus London ג€” who independently released I Want You in August April and counts Solange Knowles among his fans ג€” a "new signee," despite the fact that it's known that he was signed late last year.

These marketing plans are meant to capitalize on, and strengthen, an artistג€™s independently generated buzz. Practical concerns aside, this carries the always-magical whiff of rebellion. ג€œRebel music always does well, because kids always want to rebel against something,ג€œ says Archibald Bonkers. Itג€™s the new hip-hop cred: succeeding without a record label. So why sign to a major at all? ג€œMoney. Thatג€™s the only thing,ג€ says Khalifa. Rappers ג€œhave to start rolling the weed and sweetening the lemonade.ג€
By: Erika Ramirez
discuss

Posted: Thu May 06, 2010 12:57 pm
by wheels
Why?

Posted: Thu May 06, 2010 1:03 pm
by Employee
IthiKKKle is the only person who will remember Wiz Khalifa in five years. Is there a reason people are trying to sustain this industry?

Posted: Thu May 06, 2010 1:13 pm
by 21Grams
whats good bender? ey homie, do you still do those articles where rappers like Raekwon interview you?

Posted: Thu May 06, 2010 1:37 pm
by Smooth Lou
Thanks for the intelligent quotes from the Reverend Doctor Archibald Bonkers.

Posted: Thu May 06, 2010 1:38 pm
by wheels
21Grams wrote:whats good bender? ey homie, do you still do those articles where rappers like Raekwon interview you?
Yes. This type of stuff happens constantly to mindbender

Posted: Thu May 06, 2010 2:58 pm
by Renessis
Stand back to applaud the manipulation!
Yippee!

On the real, I sure hope this new way to work the 'artist' doesn't continue to undermine paying audiences. Also, this is only a way to let the labels breathe. They have to spend less time and money to develop an artist. Scheme, ploy. Same shit.

But, it could weed out more of this garbage. Lazy arists won't want to promote themselves, therefore give up.

This is, for me, just some shoulder shrug shit.

Posted: Sat May 08, 2010 5:30 am
by starks
feel like B.O.B. is an example of this but i don't know

personally i think he sucks

Posted: Sat May 08, 2010 8:25 am
by ayentee
Renessis wrote:
But, it could weed out more of this garbage. Lazy arists won't want to promote themselves, therefore give up.
not the best thing for music imo

Posted: Sat May 08, 2010 12:53 pm
by Mindbender Futurama
starks wrote:feel like B.O.B. is an example of this but i don't know

personally i think he sucks
personally i agree with you

Andre 3000 Lite is :bunk:

Posted: Sat May 08, 2010 12:57 pm
by Philaflava
There are about 10-12 rappers that can sell, the rest of the bunch have no chance.

Maybe with some affiliation they do alright, but for the most part selling music in a form of record on indie or majors is a thing of the past.

Posted: Sat May 08, 2010 2:42 pm
by Gyangsta 4 Life
This is nothing new. Southern rappers have been doing it since the beginning of time.

Posted: Sat May 08, 2010 5:12 pm
by Nathan Blaze
Talking about the music industry is depressing. LOL.