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Pop Idols and Pirates - Mechanisms of Consumption and the Global Circulation of Popular Music (Hardcover, New Ed)
Loot Price: R4,163
Discovery Miles 41 630
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Pop Idols and Pirates - Mechanisms of Consumption and the Global Circulation of Popular Music (Hardcover, New Ed)
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The music industry has been waging some very significant battles in
recent years, reacting to numerous inter-related crises provoked by
globalization, digitalization and the ever more extensive
commercialization of public culture. These struggles are viewed by
many as central to the survival of the central mediators in the
consumption of popular music. These battles are not just against
piracy and the sharing of digital song files on the internet. The
music industry is also struggling to find ways to compete or
integrate with many other forms of entertainment, including films,
television programmes, mobile phones, DVDs and video games in an
extremely crowded communications environment. The battles currently
being fought by the music industry are about nothing less than its
continued ability to create and maintain specific kinds of
profitable relationships with consumers. This book presents two
inter-related cases of crisis and opportunity: the music industry's
epic struggle over piracy and the 'Idol' phenomenon. Both are
explicit attempts to control and justify the particular ways in
which the music industry makes money from popular music through
specific kinds of relationships with consumers. The battles over
piracy have been fought with a remarkable collection of campaigns
consisting of advice, coercion and argument about what is or is not
the best way to consume music. From these complicated and often
contradictory campaigns we form an unusually clear picture of what
many within the music industry imagine their industry to be. In a
complementary way, 'Idol' works to demonstrate the joy and pleasure
of consuming popular music the 'right' way. By creating a series of
intertwined relationships with consumers around multiple sites of
consumption, incorporating television, radio, live performance,
traditional print media campaigns, text messaging and all manner of
internet-based systems of communication and 'fan management,' the
producers of 'Idol' present an ideal relationship between musicians
and audiences. Instead of focusing on selling CDs, the music
industry's digital Achilles' heel, 'Idol' has given the music
industry an integrated platform for displaying its expanded palette
of products and venues for consumption. When understood in specific
relation to the battle against piracy, Fairchild's analysis of
'Idol' and the emerging promotional cultures of the music industry
it exhibits shows how multiple sites of consumption, and attempts
to mediate and control the circulation of popular music, are being
used to combat the foundational challenges facing the music
industry.
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