{"version":1,"type":"rich","provider_name":"Libsyn","provider_url":"https:\/\/www.libsyn.com","height":90,"width":600,"title":"Will Musicians Survive in the Age of Free When the &quot;Bottle&quot; is worth more than the wine: ","description":"Episode: 007\r\nWill Musicians Survive in the Age of Free When the &quot;Bottle&quot; is worth more than the wine?\r\nInterview Subject:&amp;nbsp;Count\r\n&quot;I think we can all agree, if somebody has millions of streams and they are popular enough to be a household name they should be able to pay their rent&amp;hellip;&quot;\r\n- Count (Producer: Radiohead, Rolling Stones, New Order, Frank Sinatra,&amp;nbsp;Blackalicious)\r\nThey say we are living the, &quot;Golden Age&quot; of media:&amp;nbsp;endless streams&amp;nbsp;of music, more television then hours in the day, enough&amp;nbsp;books to read in twenty&amp;nbsp;lifetimes. The buzzword for this amazing content, -&amp;nbsp;&quot;free.&quot;\r\nFor the consumer, it's a&amp;nbsp;golden age.\r\nBut&amp;nbsp;music producer and filmaker Mikael&amp;nbsp;&quot;Count&quot; Eldridge&amp;nbsp;sees a dark side for, the artists, creators and writers that might bring the entire golden age to an end.\r\nFor the past twenty years, Count has been working, &quot;on the other side of the glass &quot; as as an A-list music producer working with some of the top artists&amp;nbsp;in the world, from&amp;nbsp;Radiohead to&amp;nbsp;Frank Sinatra to DJ Shadow&amp;nbsp;to&amp;nbsp;the Rolling Stones and more, Count knows that great music comes from a collaborative effort between the artist and the&amp;nbsp;producer. &amp;nbsp;\r\nBut, in an unexpected twist&amp;nbsp;as music creation and consumption has exploded, Count, other music producers and now artists&amp;nbsp;can no longer count on their&amp;nbsp;profession to&amp;nbsp;pay them enough to live. &amp;nbsp;\r\nThe business models which&amp;nbsp;powered the industry for 50 years have been uprooted and tossed aside. &amp;nbsp;The economics which allowed emerging artists a chance to claw their way into&amp;nbsp;the middle class, and middle level bands to reach for the gold ring, all but dried up. &amp;nbsp;Count saw his own job, and an entire class of music producers, mixers and engineers, become, first a costly necessarily, then a extravagant luxury, and today, he admits, his job of music producer is nothing more than a, &quot;glorified hobby.&quot;\r\nHe isn't alone. &amp;nbsp;An entire generation of creatives:&amp;nbsp;writers, editors, musicians, artists, just about anyone looking to make a living in the creative fields has&amp;nbsp;been affected. &amp;nbsp;The middle and upper class of artists is vanishing. &amp;nbsp;\r\nYou can no longer equate being a popular artist with making money from your music.\r\nSo Count, pivoted. &amp;nbsp;He turned from a music producer, to a movie director, and for the past five years has has been documenting the plight of, &quot;middle class&quot; artists for an upcoming documentary. &amp;nbsp;In,&amp;nbsp;&quot;UnSound: How Musicians and Creators Survive in the Age of Free,&quot; he argues,&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;there are still fortunes being made in music, but it's no longer the creators, rather&amp;nbsp;the distributors: the Pandora's and Spotify's of the world who are seeing the benefit at the expense of the artists and creators.\r\nIn the end he laments, &quot;the bottle is worth more then the wine.&quot;\r\nThere's a lot more at,&amp;nbsp;unsoundthemovie.com...","author_name":"21khz: The Art of Money In Music","author_url":"http:\/\/www.21khz.com","html":"<iframe title=\"Libsyn Player\" style=\"border: none\" src=\"\/\/html5-player.libsyn.com\/embed\/episode\/id\/3832461\/height\/90\/theme\/custom\/thumbnail\/yes\/direction\/forward\/render-playlist\/no\/custom-color\/88AA3C\/\" height=\"90\" width=\"600\" scrolling=\"no\"  allowfullscreen webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen oallowfullscreen msallowfullscreen><\/iframe>","thumbnail_url":"https:\/\/assets.libsyn.com\/secure\/item\/3832461"}