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Guest Post by Bas Grasmayer, from the MUSIC x TECH x FUTURE weekly mailingAs an independent artist or label, it’s important to realize what rules you are playing by. Too often, indies follow the rules set by the status quo, while it’s actually in the interest of indies to disrupt the status quo.When you play by rules set by the status quo, all you can do is lose.Instead, indies should be playing their own game, particularly the ones that don’t care about exact market share percentages. It’s up to you to decide what it means to be in music. You don’t have the budgets that major-backed artists have and you don’t own part of the streaming platforms where you’re competing for attention (eg. Spotify, Soundcloud).In anticipation of the panel I’ll be in at AIM’s Music Connected (April 27, London), let’s look at some of the most important trends that let indies determine their own reality.Fair Trade MusicA couple of years ago, discussions about how bad piracy is were replaced with the ‘rage against the stream’. People were upset with streaming platforms’ low payouts and growing increasingly impatient for their promises of a better tomorrow. A strange blame game started, obscuring what was really going on, but also bringing attention to issues with the way parts of the industry do their accounting. Where was the money going?As a consequence, some have started looking for better ways to do things. The most famous example is Benji Roger’s blockchain initiative: he hopes to get the industry to use blockchain technology to create a worldwide transparent database that makes it easier to understand who to pay, how much, and for what. There’s also a public survey underway for it.Other examples of music service initiatives that aim to provide something more fair and transparent are:-
Resonate, a cooperative that lets indie artists & labels own the platform
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The POLR, which believes micropayments can enable more autonomy
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Whitestone, which aims to reward anyone who contributes value
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