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Guest Post by Chris Castle on Music Technology Policy…there was lunch in the larger, first floor cafeteria where, in the corner, on a small stage there was a man, playing a guitar, who looked like an aging singer-songwriter Mae’s parents listened to.“Is that….?”“It is,” Annie said, not breaking her stride. “There’s someone every day. Musicians, comedians, writers….We book them a year ahead. We have to fight them off.”The singer-songwriter was singing passionately…but the vast majority of the cafeteria was paying little to no attention.“I can’t imagine the budget for that, ” Mae said.“Oh god, we don’t pay them.”The Circle, by Dave EggersLyor Cohen is going to run YouTube Music. My prediction is that in a year, he will not have been able to accomplish much of anything. This is not because of Lyor who is one of the best we’ve had in the music business. It’s because of the way Google operates and who is really in control.First, remember that YouTube has made a point of telling us how unimportant music is to their business. I’m so sure that was part of their pitch to Lyor–you’re not going to be doing anything that’s very important to us or contributes much to our bottom line. So forget that fifth assistant and any revenue based bonus. Because, you know…you’re just not that big a deal to us.Oh, to have been a fly on the wall…But seriously, like any large organization, Google has competing bureaucracies and therefore its wholly-owned subsidiary YouTube does as well. (Google is now the largest media company in the world.) YouTube’s organizational independence is additionally blurred because it is the #2 producer of revenue inside Google relative to search and advertising sales. But not the music part, let’s get that straight now.
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