Type de publication:
BookSource:
Oxford University Press,, New York, NY, p.xii, 491 pages, United States : (2023)Numéro d'appel:
ML3790Autre numéro:
40031957907Mots-clés:
Enregistrements sonores, fast, History., Industrie, Music and the Internet, Music and the Internet., Music trade, Musique, Musique et Internet., Sound recording industry, Technological innovations, Technological innovations.Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 395-477) and index.Introduction: whole lotta shakin' goin' on - Jerry Lee Lewis -- Phonograph: put your records on - Corinne Bailey Rae -- Radio: we want the air waves - Ramones -- Vinyl: spin the black circle - Pearl Jam -- Tapes: rhymin' and stealin' - Beatie Boys -- Television: television rules the nation - Daft Punk -- Compact discs: zero-sum - Nine Inch Nails -- Downloads: don't download this song - Weird Al Yankovic -- Streaming: islands in the stream - Dolly Parton and Kenny Rogers -- Streaming video: throw away your television - Red Hot Chili Peppers -- Artificial intelligence and voice interfaces: you took the words right out of my mouth - Meat Loaf -- Coda: time after time - Cyndi Lauper -- Afterword: unchained melody - Righteous Brothers."This is a book about how technology has affected the music industry through a series of disruptions that have taken place ten times over the past century. Whenever technological innovations result in a compelling new way to distribute music to the public, the music industry changes in myriad and fundamental ways to adjust to the new format. And while the technologies themselves have evolved over the decades, the changes within the business follow a distinct pattern. Key Changes describes this pattern: it defines an analytical structure, the 6C Framework, that explains how the music business transformed in each era. The ten disruptions are the formats for distributing recorded music: phonograph records, radio, LPs, tapes, CDs, television, digital downloads, streaming, and streaming video; and then into the future with voice response and AI technologies, where the changes are in progress now. Each of these has a chapter in the book. The book concludes with an examination of how the 6C Framework applies across the timeline of various music formats, as well as to technologically induced changes in other industries, ranging from movies to sports to coffee, and it offers some observations about how blockchain technology could be the source of the next set of disruptive innovations in the music industry"--
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