antiGUY's
RANTitorial
2-25-03
antiGUY
Tuning Out: Why Radio Sucks!
Ok, the headline is a bit crude but how
else can you describe the shape of mainstream rock radio these days?
This article has been a long time coming and several readers have been
asking when a rant would be forthcoming about the ills of the radio industry.
I’m happy to report it is here!
A lot of research went into this article
and as one layer of the onion was unpeeled another appeared that just called
out to be investigated. A couple of insiders also offered some illuminating
information about the radical changes that are occurring in radio at the
moment. Let me tell you, it’s not pretty.
There are no easy answers to the problems
with radio and things are getting harder as the landscape is shifting from
one problem to a worst one… I’ll get into that in the next rant.
Due to the complicated nature of the problem
and the two main causes of the downfall of modern commercial radio, I have
split this rant into two parts. The first part gives a little history of
independent radio promotion; the system the major labels have used to basically
cut out access to the airwaves for smaller labels but at the same time
created a monster that has them reeling at the high cost of landing a radio
hit. The second part will deal with a company that is doing their
part to put independent radio promoters out of business, not to mention
concert promoters and even record labels. In the long run this company
may turn out to be far worst than the system they are trying to replace
and they have the industry and even members of Congress frightened at their
growing power over the industry. Yes, I’m talking about Clear Channel Communications.
The Goliath that is slowing beating the David of indie promotion.
To understand the whole picture we must
look at the history of commercial radio and it’s relation to indie promotion
and then the growth of Clear Channel. Instead of going all the way
back to the beginning of rock radio and how payola played a role, I decided
to start our look at a mid point – 1980 – when the independent radio promoters
were starting to really show their power.
Hitting The Brick Wall.
Fredrick Dannon’s book “Hitmen” opens with
the tale of “Dick’s War”. Dick Asher at CBS had grown concerned over the
large amount of money his company was spending on “independent promoters”.
Indies were contracted by the record companies to get radio stations to
play their songs. The thinking goes that it would be easier for one person
to deal with radio programmers than to have the radio programmer have to
deal with various people at the all of the record companies.
Dick Asher wanted to run an experiment
to see just how pervasive the indies were. He looked for a song and a market
that would allow him to see if a popular song from a popular group would
end up on the radio without CBS paying indie promoters to have it added.
He found the perfect song for his experiment
when Pink Floyd embarked on their tour to support “The Wall”. The tour
was a monumental undertaking, so large that it could only be staged in
a few select cities. Los Angeles was one of them and Pink Floyd became
the hottest ticket in town.
The single from the album, “Another Brick
In The Wall Part II” was enjoying heavy airplay across the country. Dick
decided that he would not pay the indies to have the song added to play
lists in Los Angeles during the time leading up to Pink Floyd’s sold out
engagements in the City of Angles.
The results of his experiment freighted
Asher. Not one of the 4 leading Top 40 stations in Los Angeles played the
song. It didn’t matter that Los Angles had caught “Pink Floyd Fever” and
the song was number one on stations across the country. “Another Brick
in the Wall” hit a brick wall in Los Angeles when it came to airplay that
was bought and paid for.
Pink Floyd’s management were curious when
they didn’t hear the song on the radio while they were in Los Angeles and
they approached CBS to find out why. Long story short they found out that
indies weren’t put on the record in LA and they pressured CBS to do so.
Literally within hours that indies were put on the song it was added to
3 of the 4 major stations in LA and soon climbed to top of their playlists.
A couple of years later the major record
companies were distraught that the price of the indies had gone through
the roof. They reluctantly decided to put a ban on the use of indie promotion.
Although the ban didn’t last long, they soon discovered that the power
of the indies was so pervasive that they could in fact not only get songs
on the air but could get songs knocked off of the air as Asher discovered
when one of the group’s he had a keen interest in, Loverboy, watched their
single fall off the charts as the ban went into effect.
The artist and their manager began to smell
a rat and went to the labels to find out why their songs weren’t on the
air. When confronted with the truth the artists were upset that they were
being used as guinea pigs in the crusade against the indies. Soon labels
were funneling money to the indies once again except now the money was
going in the books as “tour support” and became a recoupable expense that
went against artist royalties. So the record companies not only failed
to bring down the indies but they also effectively passed the buck on to
the artists, with the rising cost of Indie promotion coming out of the
artists pockets.
They paid how much to get that horrible
song on the radio?
The old payola joke went like this. A radio
programmer holds a 45 record with a $20 bill folded into the sleeve up
to his ear, shakes it and says, “this sounds good, real good!”
Payola is a nasty word in music and radio
circles and the image of a DJ taking a few bucks to play a song on the
air still lingers but some say that the business of indie promotion is
just institutionalized payola.
The basic question that has to be asked
is this; is money changing hands to insure radio airplay? There is a really
easy answer and that is yes! We’re not talking $20 stuck in a CD case either.
We are talking real money.
If you are living in an area serviced by
a midrange or large radio market then chances are you have a few Top 40
stations to choose from. If you have noticed that these types of stations
tend to only play a select few songs and often in heavy rotation, as much
as once every couple of hours, then you see one of the major results of
indie promotion. Rock radio may be a little more varied but airplay
on most of those stations come with a price tag as well.
Those are the two formats we will concentrate
on here for the sake of simplicity. By now you may be curious how much
it cost the record label to put that annoying overplayed song on the air.
This is actually a sticky area since the indie promoters I spoke with have
said that recently the cost has gone down as record companies battle red
ink and the indies battle Clear Channel over contracts with stations but
for a ballpark idea of the cost we will look at the numbers used in an
article published by Salon.com last June.
According to Salon.com’s Eric Boehlert,
it cost the record companies $800 per song in a mid-size market and $1000
or more in larger markets. The price can escalate to $5000 per song at
the largest stations in major markets. Boehlert wrote that most radio stations
add between 150 and 200 songs to their playlists each year.
For you average rock single the record
companies have to shell out around $250,000 to get access to airplay on
rock radio and if the song crosses over to Top-40 radio then we are looking
at over $1 million dollars in indie promotion costs.
That is one of the reasons why CD’s come
with such a high price tag despite the fact that they are cheap to manufacture.
When you add in the cost of indie promotion and regular marketing you can
see why most releases actually lose money.
Click here for
the conclusion and Fan Speak
.
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