The music industry consists of the individuals and organizations that earn money by writing songs and musical compositions, creating and selling recorded music and sheet music, presenting concerts, as well as the organizations that aid, train, represent and supply music creators. Among the many individuals and organizations that operate in the industry are: the songwriters and composers who write songs and musical compositions; the singers, musicians, conductors, and bandleaders who perform the music; the record labels, music publishers, recording studios, music producers, audio engineers, retail and digital music stores, and performance rights organizations who create and sell recorded music and sheet music; and the booking agents, promoters, music venues, road crew, and audio engineers who help organize and sell concerts.
The industry also includes a range of professionals who assist singers and musicians with their music careers. These include talent managers, artists and repertoire managers, business managers, entertainment lawyers; those who broadcast audio or video music content (satellite, Internet radio stations, broadcast radio and TV stations); music journalists and music critics; DJs; music educators and teachers; musical instrument manufacturers; as well as many others. +more
The modern Western music industry emerged between the 1930s and 1950s, when records replaced sheet music as the most important product in the music business. In the commercial world, "the recording industry"-a reference to recording performances of songs and pieces and selling the recordings-began to be used as a loose synonym for "the music industry". +more
In the first decades of the 2000s, the music industry underwent drastic changes with the advent of widespread digital distribution of music via the Internet (which includes both illegal file sharing of songs and legal music purchases in online music stores). A conspicuous indicator of these changes is total music sales: since 2000, sales of recorded music have dropped off substantially while live music has increased in importance. +more
Business structure
The main branches of the music industry are the live music industry, the recording industry, and all the companies that train, support, supply and represent musicians.
The recording industry produces three separate products: compositions (songs, pieces, lyrics), recordings (audio and video) and media (such as CDs or MP3s, and DVDs). These are each a type of property: typically, compositions are owned by composers, recordings by record companies, and media by consumers. +more
Compositions
Songs, instrumental pieces and other musical compositions are created by songwriters or composers and are originally owned by the composer, although they may be sold or the rights may be otherwise assigned. For example, in the case of work for hire, the composition is owned immediately by another party. +more
Recordings
Recordings are created by recording artists, which includes singers, musicians (including session musicians) and musical ensembles (e. g. +more
Recordings are (traditionally) owned by record companies. Some artists own their own record companies (e. +more
Media
Physical media (such as CDs or vinyl records) are sold by music retailers and are owned by the consumers after they buy them. Buyers do not typically have the right to make digital copies from CDs or other media they buy, or rent or lease the CDs, because they do not own the recording on the CD, they only own the individual physical CD. +more
When music is digitally downloaded or streamed, there is no physical media other than the consumer's computer memory on his or her portable media player or laptop. For this reason, artists such as Taylor Swift, Paul McCartney, Kings of Leon, and others have called for legal changes that would deny social media the right to stream their music without paying them royalties. +more
Broadcast, soundtrack and streaming
When a recording is broadcast (either on radio or by a background music service such as Muzak), performance rights organisations (such as the ASCAP and BMI in the US, SOCAN in Canada, or MCPS and PRS in the UK), collect a third type of royalty known as a performance royalty, which is paid to songwriters, composers and recording artists. This royalty is typically much smaller than publishing or mechanical royalties. +more
Live music
A promoter brings together a performing artist and a venue owner and arranges contracts. A booking agency represents the artist to promoters, makes deals and books performances. +more
Major, successful artists will usually employ a road crew: a semi-permanent touring organization that travels with the artist during concert series. The road crew is headed by a tour manager. +more
Artist management, representation and staff
Artists such as singers and musicians may hire several people from other fields to assist them with their career. The artist manager oversees all aspects of an artist's career in exchange for a percentage of the artist's income. +more
Emerging business models
In the 2000s, traditional lines that once divided singers, instrumentalists, publishers, record companies, distributors, retail and consumer electronics have become blurred or erased. Artists may record in a home studio using a high-end laptop and a digital recording program such as Pro Tools or use Kickstarter to raise money for an expensive studio recording session without involving a record company. +more
After 15 or so years of the Internet economy, the digital music industry platforms like iTunes, Spotify, and Google Play are major improvements over the early illegal file sharing days. However, the multitude of service offerings and revenue models make it difficult to understand the true value of each and what they can deliver for musicians and music companies. +more
History of printed music and recorded music
Early history: Printed music in Europe
Music publishing using machine-printed sheet music developed during the Renaissance music era in the mid-15th century. The development of music publication followed the evolution of printing technologies that were first developed for printing regular books. +more
The use of printing enabled sheet music to reproduced much more quickly and at a much lower cost than hand-copying music notation. This helped musical styles to spread to other cities and countries more quickly, and it also enabled music to be spread to more distant areas. +more
The pioneer of modern music printing was Ottaviano Petrucci (born in Fossombrone in 1466 - died in 1539 in Venice), a printer and publisher who was able to secure a twenty-year monopoly on printed music in Venice during the 16th century. Venice was one of the major business and music centers during this period. +more
Until the 18th century, the processes of formal composition and of the printing of music took place for the most part with the support of patronage from aristocracies and churches. In the mid-to-late 18th century, performers and composers such as Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart began to seek more commercial opportunities to market their music and performances to the general public. +more
In the 19th century, sheet-music publishers dominated the music industry. Before the invention of sound recording technologies, the main way for music lovers to hear new symphonies and opera arias (songs) was to buy the sheet music (often arranged for piano or for a small chamber music group) and perform the music in a living room, using friends who were amateur musicians and singers. +more
In the late part of the century the group of music publishers and songwriters which dominated popular music in the United States became known as Tin Pan Alley. The name originally referred to a specific place: West 28th Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenue in Manhattan, and a plaque (see #plaque|below) on the sidewalk on 28th Street between Broadway and Sixth commemorates it. +more
Advent of recorded music and radio broadcasting
At the dawn of the early 20th century, the development of sound recording began to function as a disruptive technology to the commercial interests which published sheet music. During the sheet music era, if a regular person wanted to hear popular new songs, he or she would buy the sheet music and play it at home on a piano, or learn the song at home while playing the accompaniment part on piano or guitar. +more
The "record industry" eventually replaced the sheet music publishers as the music industry's largest force. A multitude of record labels came and went. +more
Genre-wise, music entrepreneurs expanded their industry models into areas like folk music, in which composition and performance had continued for centuries on an ad hoc self-supporting basis. Forming an independent record label, or "indie" label, or signing to such a label continues to be a popular choice for up-and-coming musicians, especially in genres like hardcore punk and extreme metal, even though indies cannot offer the same financial backing of major labels. +more
Rise of digital online distribution
In the first decade of the 2000s, digitally downloaded and streamed music became more popular than buying physical recordings (e. g. +more
In response to the rise of widespread illegal file sharing of digital music-recordings, the record industry took aggressive legal action. In 2001 it succeeded in shutting down the popular music-website Napster, and threatened legal action against thousands of individuals who participated in sharing music-song sound-files. +more
Legal digital downloads became widely available with the debut of the Apple iTunes Store in 2003. The popularity of music distribution over the Internet has increased, and by 2011 digital music sales topped physical sales of music. +more
After 2010, Internet-based services such as Deezer, Pandora, Spotify, and Apple's iTunes Radio began to offer subscription-based "pay to stream" services over the Internet. With streaming services, the user pays a subscription to a company for the right to listen to songs and other media from a library. +more
Spotify, together with the music-streaming industry in general, faces some criticism from artists claiming they are not being fairly compensated for their work as downloaded-music sales decline and music-streaming increases. Unlike physical or download sales, which pay a fixed price per song or album, Spotify pays artists based on their "market share" (the number of streams for their songs as a proportion of total songs streamed on the service). +more
The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) revealed in its 2015 earnings report that streaming services were responsible for 34. 3 percent of the year's U. +more
The turmoil in the recorded-music industry in the 2000s altered the twentieth-century balance between artists, record companies, promoters, retail music-stores and consumers. , big-box stores such as Wal-Mart and Best Buy sell more records than music-only CD stores, which have ceased to function as a major player in the music industry. +more
Companies like Kickstarter help independent musicians produce their albums through fans funding bands they want to listen to. Many newer artists no longer see a record deal as an integral part of their business plan at all. +more
Sales statistics
Digital album volume sales growth in 2014
According to IFPI, the global digital album sales grew by 6. 9% in 2014. +more
Source: Nielsen SoundScan, Official Charts Company/BPI, GfK and IFPI estimate.
Consolidation
Prior to December 1998, the industry was dominated by the "Big Six": Sony Music and BMG had not yet merged, and PolyGram had not yet been absorbed into Universal Music Group. After the PolyGram-Universal merger, the 1998 market shares reflected a "Big Five", commanding 77. +more
In 2004, the joint venture of Sony and BMG created the 'Big Four' at a time the global market was estimated at $30-40 billion. Total annual unit sales (CDs, music videos, MP3s) in 2004 were 3 billion. +more
Nielsen SoundScan in their 2011 report noted that the "big four" controlled about 88% of the market: * Universal Music Group (US based) - 29. 85% * Sony Music Entertainment (US based) - 29. +more
After the absorption of EMI by Sony Music Entertainment and Universal Music Group in December 2011 the "big three" were created and on January 8, 2013 after the merger there were layoffs of forty workers from EMI. European regulators forced Universal Music to spin off EMI assets which became the Parlophone Label Group which was acquired by Warner Music Group. +more
Note: the IFPI and Nielsen Soundscan use different methodologies, which makes their figures difficult to compare casually, and impossible to compare scientifically.
Current Markets shares as of September 2018 are as follows: * Warner Music Group - 25.1% * Universal Music Group - 24.3% * Sony Corporation - 22.1% * Other - 28.5%
The largest players in this industry own more than 100 subsidiary record labels or sublabels, each specializing in a certain market niche. Only the industry's most popular artists are signed directly to the major label. +more
Albums sales and market value
Total album sales have declined in the early decades of the 21st century, leading some music critics to declare the death of the album. (For instance, the only albums that went platinum in the US in 2014 were the soundtrack to the Disney animated film Frozen and Taylor Swift's 1989, whereas several artists did in 2013. +more
Ranking | Market | Retail value US $ (millions) | % Change | Physical | Digital | Performance rights | Synchronization |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | United States | 4,898. 3 | 2. +more | 26% | 71% | 0% | 4% |
2 | Japan | 2,627. 9 | −5. 5% | 78% | 17% | 3% | 1% |
3 | Germany | 1,404. 8 | 1. 9% | 70% | 22% | 7% | 1% |
4 | United Kingdom | 1,334. 6 | −2. 8% | 41% | 45% | 12% | 2% |
5 | France | 842. 8 | −3. 4% | 57% | 27% | 13% | 3% |
6 | Australia | 376. 1 | −6. 8% | 32% | 56% | 9% | 2% |
7 | Canada | 342. 5 | −11. 3% | 38% | 53% | 6% | 2% |
8 | South Korea | 265. 8 | 19. 2% | 38% | 58% | 3% | 1% |
9 | Brazil | 246. 5 | 2. 0% | 41% | 37% | 21% | 1% |
10 | Italy | 235. 2 | 4. 1% | 51% | 33% | 13% | 3% |
11 | Netherlands | 204. 8 | 2. 1% | 45% | 38% | 16 | 1% |
12 | Sweden | 189. 4 | 1. 3% | 15% | 73% | 10% | 2% |
13 | Spain | 181. 1 | 15. 2% | 47% | 35% | 17% | 1% |
14 | Mexico | 130. 3 | −1. 4% | 41% | 53% | 4% | 2% |
15 | Norway | 119. 9 | 0. 1% | 14% | 72% | 12% | 2% |
16 | Austria | 114. 9 | −2. 7% | 65% | 22% | 13% | 1% |
17 | Belgium | 111. 2 | −5. 8% | 49% | 28% | 22% | 0% |
18 | Switzerland | 108. 2 | −8. 1% | 52% | 38% | 9% | 0% |
19 | China | 105. 2 | 5. 6% | 12% | 87% | 0% | 1% |
20 | India | 100. 2 | −10. 1% | 31% | 58% | 8% | 3% |
Source: IFPI 2014 annual report.
Recorded music retail sales
2000
In its June 30, 2000 annual report filed with the +more
2005
Interim physical retail sales in 2005. All figures in millions. +more