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The Song Economy Is Just Getting Started: Here’s Why

Keith Jopling explores the development of the burgeoning song economy. This new music industry growth engine has spurred decades-old chestnuts back to the top of the charts, as well as. Continue reading [https://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2020/01/the-song-economy-is-just-getting-started-heres-why.html]

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A sleek music studio setup with turntables, headphones, a laptop with music software, and vinyl records on a textured workspace, emphasizing professional music production and DJing.

Keith Jopling explores the development of the burgeoning song economy. This new music industry growth engine has spurred decades-old chestnuts back to the top of the charts, as well as giving new tracks a path to major popularity.

Guest post by Keith Jopling of music and entertainment consultancy  MIDiA

When Journey’s song Don’t Stop Believin’ was originally released as the second single from the album Escape in 1981, it was a modest US chart hit (Billboard Hot 100 no. 9). Fast forward 28 years, in 2009 the track had two very prominent syncs: The Sopranos finale and Glee  (the song featured in six episodes). From there, the song’s ascendance into global popular culture (and commerce) is well known. In 2009 it  re-entered the Billboard Hot 100, this time peaking at no. 4, and finally became a UK top 10 hit following several renditions on The X Factor.  However, it is on streaming platforms where the song truly thrives,  steadily working its way into the ‘one billion club’ (at 757 million  just now, but clearly in it for the long game).

Sony Music understands this success very well indeed. Don’t Stop  Believin’ is an evergreen streaming success for the label. It is revered. Sony Music also has similar success with another 1981 song,  Toto’s Africa (actually a 1982 release chosen as the third single from Toto IV).  Africa was a much bigger hit on first release than Don’t Stop Believin’ and has had continual success on radio. And again, Africa has seen a meteoric rise on streaming–  sitting at 711 million. Both these early eighties tracks are millennial  sensations, and both are mini-industries in their own right.

My third example just happens to be another Sony Music track, though this post is not about Sony as such. Nevertheless, there is no doubt that SME has been instrumental in the calculated success of Mariah Carey’s All I Want For Christmas. This 1994 release was in fact the  number-one streamed song in Germany for all of 2019.  Consistently a top 10 streaming catalogue hit for the label since the dawn of the  streaming era, 2019 (thanks to a finely-tuned and bigger marketing  campaign) amounted to a new peak for the track – the year in which it  finally made the holy grail some 15 years after release: Billboard no.  1.

As I said, to even out the copy a bit – every label and publisher  with known catalogue – Queen, Elton John, Radiohead, Led Zeppelin,  R.E.M. to name just a few, is operating at full-tilt utilisation of song  assets – even if that means investment in other media assets.  It’s  movies, documentaries, new videos, re-masters, re-issues and myriad of  strategies to generate more and more streams. No wonder Def Leppard,  Peter Gabriel and other long-term streaming hold-outs finally succumbed  only last year. They saw the future clearly but took their time to  realise they will just have to learn to love it or lump it.

The three songs illustrate the development of  the song economy.  The Song Economy is the new music industry’s growth engine. It’s why  publishing and songwriter catalogues are being acquired at multiples of  between 10-20 of annual royalty revenues. It’s why playlists are the  most valuable real estate on streaming platforms. It’s why labels and  publishers are staffing up their sync teams around the world. It’s why  some publishers – the administrators of the music business – are  investing in creative and marketing talent and signing artists with  great songs before their record label counterparts. And it’s why those  publishers and labels are being pulled together under one leadership, from Downtown to Sony Music.

The Song Economy is critical for new songs just as it is for old  ones. Hit songs are more important than they have ever been. That’s why,  according to New York-based Hit Songs Deconstructed (which  does indeed deconstruct the elements that make a major hit song, so that  others can do their best to emulate that success) has been reporting a  steady rise in the number of songwriters per hit (in 2018-19 a quarter  of Billboard top 10 hits had no less than four songwriters) as well as  producers (two per hit is more usual than just a single producer).

In all of our future-gazing industry work at MIDiA, we often look at  what will drive the next big growth curve for music (indeed, we report  on that very thing here),  expecting that to be a new tech platform or a brand new music format.  However, the real driver perhaps for the next few years at least, will  be the micro-growth driven by individual songs – those big enough to  qualify as mini industries.

Sure – streaming has made it much more competitive for songs,  composers, artists and their representatives. But those songs that break  through into millennial streaming culture (or blow-up in Gen Z  streaming culture as memes and TikTok sensations) will be pinching share  of ear from the rest. At the same time, songs in popular culture are  helping to keep music up there in the attention economy – competing with  TV, games, books, spoken word and sports. Indeed, it is only those  mini-industry songs that can claim a spot across every slice of media,  through sync to podcasts to multiple forms of video. Those are the songs  we want to know all about and hear over and over again.

Those songs have always been pots of gold to the industry, but in the global streaming economy they have become something quite different. They can be revived and multiplied. They can be hits over and over again. They are, in fact, industries in themselves. Welcome to The Song Economy. Don’t Stop Believin’!

Keith Jopling is MIDiA’s Consulting Director – contact him on keith@midiaresearch.com. He also helps drive The Song Economy via the discovery & playlist venture https://www.songsommelier.com/