View Full Version : It's official - the powers that be at ClearChannel are going straight to hell.


AKA
05-26-2004, 12:44 AM
We've all assumed this fo some time, but here's confirmation.

Enjoy eternal damnation, guys.

Clear Channel Limits Live CDs

Company to block bands from selling instant albums

By Steve Knopper
Rolling Stone

In the past few years, fans leaving some concerts have discovered a souvenir far better than a T-shirt: a live recording of the show they just attended. Bands including the Allman Brothers, moe. and Billy Idol have sold instant concert discs, and the Pixies and the Doors plan to launch similar programs this summer. The recording-and-burning company DiscLive estimated on April 12th that it would gross $500,000 selling live discs this spring alone.

But in a move expected to severely limit the industry, Clear Channel Entertainment has bought the patent from the technology's inventors and now claims to own the exclusive right to sell concert CDs after shows. The company, which is the biggest concert promoter in the world, says the patent covers its 130 venues along with every other venue in the country.

"We want to be artist-friendly," says Steve Simon, a Clear Channel executive vice president and the director of Instant Live. "But it is a business, and it's not going to be 'we have the patent, now everybody can use it for free.'"

Artists net about ten dollars for every twenty- to twenty-five-dollar concert CD that's sold, no matter which company they use. But with Clear Channel pushing to eliminate competition, many fear there will be less money and fewer opportunities to sell live discs. "It's one more step toward massive control and consolidation of Clear Channel's corporate agenda," says String Cheese Incident manager Mike Luba, who feuded with Clear Channel last year after promoters blocked the band from using CD-burning equipment.

The Pixies, who are booking a fall reunion tour with several probable Clear Channel venues, say Clear Channel has already told them DiscLive can't burn and sell CDs on-site. "Presuming Clear Channel's service and product are of equal quality, it may be best to feed the dragon rather than draw swords," says Pixies manager Ken Goes. "Still, I'm not fond of doing business with my arm twisted behind my back."

Clear Channel doesn't plan to stop Phish, Pearl Jam, the Who or other bands that make live recordings available days after the show. It has also granted one-dollar licenses to a few up-and-coming bands to record and sell instant CDs of their own shows. But Clear Channel executives maintain that they have the right to stop anyone who tries to infringe on the patent. Many say this strategy prevents inventors from jumping into a marketplace and creating further innovation. "We'd like to see this industry opened up to everybody," says Erik Stubblebine, founder and vice president of Hyburn, a Phoenix company that has sold instant CDs for dozens of concerts in the past three years. "They're trying to squeeze us."

Jrnygrl
05-26-2004, 01:12 AM
WOW!!! Arms twisting is right. Well what do you expect from a company that sold its soul to congress??? To hell they will go is right.

:eek: :eek: :nonono: :angryfire

Hollow
05-26-2004, 01:37 AM
Last month or so they made a fake announcement about James Hetfield killing himself. damn. what a bunch of *******s

Dean Winchester
05-26-2004, 04:45 AM
the fact that Clear Channel exposed the following artists onto an unsuspecting public (radio has really began to suck since the mid-90's when they took over) will fulfill the eternal damnation

Jennifer Lopez (IMO, she is the epitome of everything wrong with mainstream music right now, and look at the Pandora's Box she opened for the now-cliched "rapper + female r&b/pop star" formula because she just had to do a song with Ja Rule. If she wasn't already a movie star when she started her music career, she would've been a prime candidate for the WB's Superstar USA)

Ashanti (she actually compared herself to Aretha Franklin, and then when asked what it felt like to do a feat only accomplished by The Beatles in 1964 and The Bee Gees in 1978, shrugged it off like "well, that's how good I am")

Avril Lavigne (I like a few of her songs, but a "rock singer" who does not know who either David Bowie or Sex Pistols are isn't worthy of a record contract... that's like an r&b singer who isn't aware of Marvin Gaye or Michael Jackson)

Creed (Pearl Jam meets The Faith Channel. It's a shame that this egotistical Eddie Vedder knockoff was selling tens of millions of albums while the real deal's last two albums barely sold 1 million combined)

Kid Rock (where is his talent? he certainly can't rap. His "rock" music is atrocious, and now he's also trying to be a really bad country singer? Clear Channel and MTV are both bypassing purgatory and going down over this one)

robyrob
05-26-2004, 07:21 AM
this is ridiculous and frankly, sickening.

So now they can prevent anyone from making and selling live concert-cds after any show, anywhere in the country?

Do we have a new omnipotent being to serve now?

Steve M.
05-27-2004, 10:01 PM
Clear Channel makes me want to :barf: !!! :mad:

AKA
05-27-2004, 10:45 PM
Originally posted by Steve M.
Clear Channel makes me want to :barf: !!! :mad:

Yeah. They're certainly awful people.