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How The Pocket Gods Fought Streaming Royalties And Won [Video]

A clever marketing decision from UK rock band The Pocket Gods has launched the group into the global music spotlight and brought much-needed attention to concerns over streaming royalties.

Spotify finds itself in a lot of hot water right now. The streaming giant is currently embroiled in a battle over misinformation and free speech centered around controversial podcast host Joe Rogan that has, to date, involved multiple rock legends and even earned a response from the White House. In addition to this, the Daniel Ek founded platform is battling several protests from artists worldwide concerned over the minuscule royalty rate offered by Spotify. While Joe Rogan earns $100million, musicians earn roughly $0.004 per stream before splitting that money with their team.

Longtime Haulix clients The Pocket Gods have developed a unique solution to their problems with Spotify. The English rock band is currently making headlines with plans to record and release a 1,000 track album comprised entirely of 30-second songs. The tracks are long enough to be counted as legitimate streams by Spotify but run much shorter than the average song.

The Pocket Gods were inspired to attempt this undertaking after reading an article in The Independent from professor Mike Errico. He said that Spotify’s methods surrounding what constitutes a song—otherwise known as their decision to count plays after 30-seconds—could signal the end of the three-minute pop song.

“I saw the article, and it made me think, ‘Why write longer songs when we get paid little enough for just 30 seconds?’” The Pocket Gods frontman Mark Christopher Lee told i News.

The new album – ‘1000×30 – Nobody Makes Money Anymore’ – directly references Spotify’s business model, and as such, Lee says that it means the band “run the risk of being thrown off the platform.”

Of the process of writing the album, he added: “We wrote and recorded 1,000 songs, each a shade over 30 seconds long for the album. The longest is 36 seconds. It is designed to raise awareness about the campaign for fair royalty rates.”

The logic behind Errico’s original story and The Pocket Gods’ new material is sound. If an artist stands to make the same amount of money for a 30-second song as they do from one that runs several minutes in length, then what is the value proposition of making longer songs? When it takes the same amount of time to consume one modern pop song in full as it does to hear 4-6 tracks of The Pocket Gods’ record, any artist hoping to make money will see the value in writing shorter material.

“Spotify is a great musical resource, and it allows indie bands like us to upload our music without record companies,” the frontman added. “I also believe in free speech even though I’m a massive Neil Young fan, so I don’t support the boycott. We just want to raise awareness of the royalties issue.”

This week, Music Biz host James Shotwell connected with Pocket Gods’ Mark Christopher Lee for a quick chat about the album, the response, and where the band goes from here. Check it out:

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This Week In Music (February 11, 2022)

Snoop Dogg buys Death Row Records, Spotify CEO Daniel Ek defends his decisions, and more in this week’s music news roundup.

The first full week of February 2022 did not disappoint. It seems like every day this week, one or more major stories rocked the music world. From the ongoing controversy surrounding Spotify and its questionable investments in podcast hosts to some of the biggest revenue numbers since pre-COVID, this week made an impact felt in every corner of the industry.

We cannot ease your workload or give you more hours in the day, but we can help you stay informed. That is why we are thrilled to introduce This Week In Music, a brand new weekly column highlighting the best and most talked-about stories throughout the music industry. Each Friday, we will post links to various need-to-know articles and information. 

But let’s be honest. There is no way we can hope to cover everything that happens. If you see a headline we missed that people need to know, please do not hesitate to send james@haulix.com an email. We’ll include your links in the next update.


The Biggest Stories In Music This Week

Snoop Dogg buys Death Row Records

A full-circle moment for the history books occurred earlier this week, and it’s one music students will be studying for years to come. Rapper-entrepreneur Snoop Dogg, who rose to fame during the 1990s on Death Row Records, has acquired the label’s brand from MNRK Music Group, which is controlled by private equity funds managed by the investment firm Blackstone, the firm announced on Wednesday.


Spotify’s Cancellation Page Traffic Spikes as “Rogan” Controversy Continues

Say what you will about the current debate surrounding Joe Rogan and Spotify. Still, it is incredibly rare for any media-related story to dominate headlines for more than a week. The traffic to the cancellation page for Spotify Premium has jumped in recent weeks as the audio streaming company faces a wave of backlash over its support for podcaster Joe Rogan, an analytics firm told CNN. The analytics firm, SimilarWeb, told CNN Tuesday night that it had seen traffic to the cancellation page spike 196% week-over-week in its most recent set of data.

Meanwhile, Rumble, a video startup, offered Rogan $100 million for a four-year exclusive deal involving podcast. Rogan declined the deal, which was similar to the amount Spotify reportedly paid for his podcast and recommitted to the streaming giant in the process.


Big 3 Major Labels Report MASSIVE 2021 Paydays

Our friends at MBW have spent the last several weeks crunching numbers related to industry earnings in 2021. This week, the site found that the big three labels—WMG, Universal, and SONY—made a combined $20 BILLION last year.

Here’s how the ‘Big Three’ did it:

  • Warner Music Group (which announced its calendar Q4 figures today) generated USD $5.58 billion across its global music publishing and recorded music divisions in calendar 2021, according to MBW’s calculations;
  • Sony Corp (which announced its calendar Q4 figures last week) generated USD $7.49 billion across its global music publishing and recorded music divisions in calendar 2021, according to MBW’s calculations
  • Universal Music Group generated USD $7.21 billion across its global music publishing and recorded music divisions in just the first nine months of 2021 – not including Q4 – according to MBW’s calculations;
  • All of that combined comes to a sweet, sweet $20.28 billion.

Rock Band The Pocket Gods protest Spotify by releasing 1,000 track album comprised entirely of 30-second songs

Longtime Haulix clients The Pocket Gods have developed a unique solution to their problems with Spotify. The English rock band is currently making headlines with plans to record and release a 1,000 track album comprised entirely of 30-second songs. The tracks are long enough to be counted as legitimate streams by Spotify but run much shorter than the average song.


Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame Announces Nominees for 2022 Class

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame announced its 2022 nominees on Wednesday (Feb. 2), revealing the 17 acts eligible for induction into the Rock Hall’s Class of 2022.

Indie auteur Beck, rock hitmaker Pat Benatar, art rocker Kate Bush, new wave oddballs Devo, new wave chart-toppers Duran Duran, hip-hop heavyweight Eminem, synth-pop duo Eurythmics, heavy metal fixtures Judas Priest, Afrobeat pioneer Fela Kuti, political rock outfit MC5, proto-punks New York Dolls, country legend Dolly Parton, rap-metal outfit Rage Against the Machine, R&B hitmaker Lionel Richie, pop singer-songwriter Carly Simon, alt hip-hop icons A Tribe Called Quest and pop vocal pro Dionne Warwick are all nominated for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s Class of 2022.


SONG OF THE WEEK: Mammoth WVH – “Epiphany”

Wolfgang Van Halen may be the song of rock’s greatest guitarist, but the debut album from Mammoth WVF proved the young rocker has more than enough talent to escape his legendary father’s shadow. The record speaks to a life lived in the space between reality and the fiction we sell ourselves in the media. It’s a dense and, at times, heartbreaking account of giving your all in search of something you may never find, and we cannot get enough.

This week, Mammoth WVH gave the song “Epiphany” a proper single push by releasing the track’s official video. Check it out:

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