Showing posts with label CD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CD. Show all posts

Monday, April 15, 2019

DIGIPAK: Research

I looked at three different digipaks, two from the indie genre and one from a pop genre to see the contrast and tried to notice common conventions and distinctive features on each.



Front Cover
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Kasabian Empire (Indie)

Pixies Indie Cindy (Indie) 

Sam Smith In The Lonely Hour (Pop)
The three front covers I looked at, these are the common conventions:
  • Front Cover image/design 
  • Band name + Album title
  • Parental Advisory Sticker (if needed) 
  • Stickers to highlight special edition or limited edition explaing whats in it
Not much different rather than a striking image on all of them which the audience will recognise. Also increases chances of being noticed in a CD store or another retailer such as US number 1 retailer Walmart.

Possible Influences
Sticker with limited edition
Striking cover

Back Cover
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Ariana Grande Yours Truly (Pop)

Arctic Monkeys AM (Indie) 

Oasis Stop The Clocks (Indie/Pop)
These are the three back covers I looked at. Common Conventions are:

  • Track list
  • Barcode
  • Copyright statement
  • Copyright logos
    • All these will be on our digipak
The recipe is seems very similar just with different art styles, Indie being a bit more subtle sans serif bold font whereas Ariana Grande has a serif bold font and has colour coded where someone is featured. The font is also pink rather than white. Arctic Monkeys and Oasis have also gone for a design as a back cover rather than an image of the band or lead singer etc.

Possible Influences
Track list + copyright statement + barcode and copyright logos + record lable logos

Inside Cover
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Coldplay Ghost Stories (Soft Rock/Pop)

Depeche Mode Violator (Dance/Indie) 

Metallica, Metallica (Heavy Metal)
 There are a few common conventions I can spot here but each seems to have a small difference.

  • Copyright logos
  • Compact disc logo
  • Band name on CD + Album Name
  • Tracklist on CD
  • Blank or minimal inside cover
I also noticed that Metallica has the track list on the inside as well as on the CD where Coldplay has the copyright statement on the CD and Depeche mode has both the copyright statement and tracklist. Depeche Mode inside cover on the left has the record company name and a P.O box for fans "Depeche Mode fanclub".

Possible influences
I think we might go for a minimalist design, maybe with the band being part of the both sides.

Spine
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Queen Greatest Hits ll (Classic Rock)
David Bowie Changesbowie (Dance/Pop)
AQUA Aquarium (Electro/Dance)
Common conventions:
  • Band name/logo
  • Album Title
  • Serial Number (with letters) 
  • Mainly formatted album title in middle with band name a bit to the left
There is also a universal logo for aqua album 

Possible  Influences
We will have both band name + album title and serial number, maybe even the band logo

Tuesday, February 5, 2019

CS INDUSTRY: History of digitisation and the impact

History of CD 
The digital format of a CD became public in 1980 with the first commercial CD player being created by Sony in 1982 released in Japan. The Sony CDP - 101 became available in worldwide in 1983. CD's where rising but still seen as a niche until the British rock band Dire Straits released their "Brothers in Arms" album alongside their new tour sponsored by Philips to advertise the CD format. The album was the first time a CD had outsold the vinyl format. This is seen as the album which kick started and made CD sales skyrocket. The sales quickly overtook vinyl and in 1991 overtook cassettes and became the leading form of distributing media.

Rise and Fall of CD sales
CD sales kept rising and rising with some experts claiming "indestructible industry" it rose to over 1 billion sales worldwide in early 90's all the way up to 2 billion in the mid 90's. Part of the reason for this was because people had bought 1 album on vinyl, then bought them on cassette and final bought the same album on CD. Artists and Bands had convinced many people to buy the new format as it became mainstream. The industry was booming. The big three where getting huge profits.
CD Sales from 1991 to 2015 (in millions)
There where people who predicted there would be a fall and who where developing the fully digital format know as MP3. This could be downloaded from the new world of the internet. Peer to peer file sharing became available with the launch of Napster in 1999. The online distribution method being so easy to access and free led to the first decline of CD sales. The highest selling point of this new form of distribution through Piracy was that it was free, and you could access it anywhere.The physical media format was disrupted by the digitization/convergence of the new age of Web 2.0.
The iPod
The invention of the iPod in 2001 also greatly affected the physical media sales. The sheer difference in size making this device extremely portable compared to the previous mainstream portable music player of the Sony Walkman. The iPod also had a whopping 5GB flash drive as storage which was huge compared to the other MP3 players at the time. Another major factor was the MP3 format, you didn't have to bring other physical media with you or chose which album you wanted to listen to before your commute as they where all downloaded onto the iPod. iTunes was introduced alongside the iPod which became the largest market place for digital media quickly. It was also easy to rip previous CD's and download them to your iTunes library. “Before that the MP3 was an inferior good, “Once you had the iPod, the CD was an inferior good. It could get cracked or lost, whereas MP3 files lasted.”  Quote from Stephen Witt. The impact wasn't large until smartphones where introduced in 2005 when people really began to exploit the piracy sites. The release of the iPhone was what made iTunes extremely popular.


Streaming
With the fall of CD sales and the rise of digital media through web 2.0/convergence and digitization, there was way of listening to music bound to arrive. YouTube was founded in 2005 and set the benchmark for streaming to come. Streaming was a legal and (sometimes) free way to access media and music across all devices with an internet connection. YouTube to date has over 1.5 billion registered accounts with the largest music specific paid for streaming service Spotify (launched in 2008)  having 87 million users subscribed with an estimate of 5 times more people using the free version. Streaming overtook global revenues for the first time in 2017 to become largest source of revenue for the global music industry. Streaming became the new mainstream and easiest way to listen to music still at a decent quality. 


Digipak/Monetization 
Monetizing music had already become harder due to digitization so artists and bands thought of new ways to earn money such as Merch and special editions of physical formats as seen with the Slayer example of limited edition Vinyl (as seen by the example on the left). It became more mainstream to have a promo package/digipak as it was harder to earn money from streaming. Streaming has caused controversy through low payment rates. Artists and Bands just aren't earning the same amount of money for streams than from previous singles or album sales on CD. It doesn't help that 80% of all music sales in the global industry go back to the big 3 as they are the ones profiting the most from streaming. It is calculated that Spotify (the largest paid streaming service for music) pays the artist $0.003 to $0.0084 per stream depending on a few variables. This is significantly less than what was earned before with an artist earning about $0.12 per single sale on CD's. 

Summary
The music industry boomed in the 80's and had the largest revenue with a total of over $38 billion at the end of the 20th century. A figure that is yet to be touched since. 
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Vodcast to go here
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