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Guest post by Songspace Darius Van Arman has a lot on his plate. The music business visionary is one of the co-founders and co-owners of the Secretly Group, which consists of influential indie labels Jagjaguwar (started by Van Arman in 1996), Secretly Canadian, and Dead Oceans, as well as the respected reissue house, The Numero Group, and a publishing arm, Secretly Publishing. Collectively, the group has helped launch artists such as Bon Iver, Sharon Van Etten, Phosphorescent, Angel Olsen, and Foxygen. Van Arman is also a co-founder and co-owner of Fort William Management, a firm that manages the likes of The War on Drugs, Grizzly Bear, Beirut and Grouplove. In case that all wasn’t enough, last year, Van Arman and the Secretly Group partnered with Dave Hansen, the GM of Epitaph Records, to start Independent Record Pressing, a vinyl record manufacturing plant in Bordertown, New Jersey.In his spare time, Van Arman sits on the board of directors for Merlin, SoundExchange, and A2IM, three of the leading advocacy groups for independent labels and artists. In June of 2014, he traveled to Washington, DC to speak to Congress on behalf of A2IM. “In the end,” he wrote in an essay that Billboard published a day before his testimony, “all the independent sector wants is a free market with a level playing field.” A few weeks later, the WIN Fair Digital Deals Declaration was released. Van Arman co-authored the decree, which outlined a collective plan for transparent accounting related to digital transactions. Over 700 labels, including Beggars Group, Sub Pop, Domino, Tommy Boy, and Epitaph, signed it. Equality and transparency. It’s the same message a group of Grammy luncheon attendees heard last month, nearly two years later, from Van Arman and his main advocacy cohort, Beggars Group head Martin Mills. “[Artists] deserve fair and equitable trading terms and transparent accounting.” The man is consistent.It’s easy to find inspiration in Van Arman’s work ethic and his positivity. “I do truly believe,” he wrote to us last week, “that sometime soon we will have a bigger music industry than what we had in the heyday of the 90s and early 2000s.” Read on to find out why he thinks that’s a possibility.
The War on Drugs found success working with both Secretly Canadian and Fort William.
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