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Spose, the major labels, and the new music biz

Did he make it?
By SAM PFEIFLE  |  January 12, 2011

feat_spose_4_main
Nine months ago, this town was celebrating the success of rapper-from-Wells Spose: huge hit single, top of the iTunes charts, major-label deal in his pocket, big-time national debut album on the way.

Today, we're reviewing an album, Happy Medium, he released on his own dime with his own label, Preposterously Dank (if you don't get the weed reference, you won't get Spose), named after his debut indie album from 2008.

Does this mean it's over? No. Not at all. That major-label record is still on the way. But there might even be another indie album released before then. Or maybe a "mixtape." Who knows? It's a cloudy crystal ball.

How did Spose, to paraphrase one of his newest songs, get here from there?

"I got to this point," he says, talking on the phone from his home studio, currently receiving renovations funded by the Universal Republic Records deal, "by believing too much in the major labels for a little while. I think when I initially signed the deal I was under the impression that my years of independent grinding were behind me and they would just snap their fingers and make the Web site and everything else happen, and that's not the reality."

This becomes obvious when you go to the Universal Republic Web site, on which you can find a very sad-looking page dedicated to Spose (see it at tinyurl.com/URSpose). It's a Web site for "musicians" (some of these people couldn't picking out "Mary Had a Little Lamb" on the piano, I'd wager) where you can listen to exactly nine songs, one per artist, on their little proprietary music player. The "Hot Topics" you sometimes see scrolling on the right of the page haven't been updated since 2008.

"They don't have anyone who specializes in online marketing," Spose says, "no one with day-to-day contact with blogs, who knows how to work YouTube," he trails off, sounding a little depressed.

But it's also true that these guys aren't dummies. You've heard of Colbie Caillat? Owl City? Mika? Amy Winehouse?

Actually, maybe you haven't. It's hard to say. There's some kid named Kevin Rudolf on the front page of their artists page who looks like a caricature of the white-boy rapper, and I've definitely never heard of him. (Nor can you listen to one of his songs from his dedicated page.) The way the music industry works, nowadays, it's harder than it's been for a very long time for a song to break into the public consciousness. The influence of radio is on the wane. Taste-making TV shows are ever-less universal. MTV is dead for new music. The old Johnny Carson drew more people to a show than Letterman, Leno, and Conan now draw combined.

This — and file-sharing, to an extent — is changing the music business. Ethan Smith reported on January 6 in the Wall Street Journal (tinyurl.com/wsjalbums) that sales of all kinds continue to plummet, according to SoundScan, the long-time music-industry reporting firm. Sales in 2010 were down more than 12 percent from 2009. And you think iTunes is rocking? Single-song downloads are up just one percent. That doesn't even keep pace with population growth. That's going backwards, especially considering it's supposed to be the new and growingly popular way to consume music.

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ARTICLES BY SAM PFEIFLE
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  •   SPOSE, THE MAJOR LABELS, AND THE NEW MUSIC BIZ  |  January 12, 2011
    Nine months ago, this town was celebrating the success of rapper-from-Wells Spose: huge hit single, top of the iTunes charts, major-label deal in his pocket, big-time national debut album on the way.
  •   REVELING IN SPOSE'S MEDIUM FOR THE MASSES  |  January 12, 2011
    Spose will soon release a new album on a major label, Universal Republic. Happy Medium is not it. The answer to the question "Why?" is the subject of another story (conveniently found  here ).
  •   THE TWO SIDES OF MARIE MORESHEAD  |  January 05, 2011
    To this point, Marie Moreshead has made her bones as a sweet-voiced singer/songwriter with a lot of promise based on 2008's The Distraction EP and 2009's Birdwatchers EP.
  •   UPCOMING ALBUMS: THE WINTER OF OUR DEEP CONTENT  |  December 29, 2010
    There was a time when winter in Portland was pretty sleepy, with bands holing up to practice and write while the snowflakes flew. No longer. The album-release schedule is now equally robust year-round, and there are big shows just about every weekend through to spring.
  •   JONATHAN EDWARDS RECORDS FIRST ALBUM IN 16 YEARS AT THE STUDIO  |  December 22, 2010
    Why has Jonathan Edwards decided to record his first studio album in 16 years down on Casco Street at the Studio? Well, for one thing, he lives here, and it's close by. But, mostly, "it's been a really lucky find," says the folk legend, who was laying down a bass track on his Fender, right in the control room with engineer Jim Begley, when I walked in.

 See all articles by: SAM PFEIFLE

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