Originally Posted by
Mindgames
Maybe it'll help to give you all an idea of where the money goes for a CD sold in a record store. Stakes very a lot but for a typical CD album predicted to clear 1 million units domestic, from an artist signed to the label releasing it, you're looking at this:-
Payments taken by the record label
$0.75 : Manufacture per disc (pressing, inlay print, case.. less for a digipak)
$1.00 : Mechanical fees (approx 8% of wholesale)
$4.00 : Label share (profit, overheads and coverage for marketing, etc.)
$1.50 : Artist unit royalty
Payments taken by the distributor
$1.50 per unit for domestic B2B (ish)
The remaining value is taken by the retailer to cover their premises and staffing overheads, sales taxes, credit card fees and so forth.
"Artist royalty" needs some explaining. Every artist negotiates for "points" - a point is a fraction of the wholesale value of the CD, not the retail price. When you're bartering it's all down to past record of sales and predicted unit ships, so indies and newcomers often get between 1 and 5 points. Midrange artists (100,000 to 500,000 unit ships) can expect to see 10 to 15 points, and majors (people you know by their first name) can hold out for anything up to 40, but 25 to 30 is more typical.
A point is worth, looking at some figures from last month, about ten cents. It can be more, but before you work out 'a point' the label and distributor subtract all their fixed conditionals we've talked about above.
So, if you sell 200,000 units (typical for the sort of domestic midrangers Tower was known to stock), you earn $200,000 right? Wrong. The label has lent you money and it gets it back first - something called a 'recoupable'. Say they gave you a $25,000 advance to pay your food bills while you were writing, then the cost of recording the album and paying the producer came to $100,000. Now the band goes on a promo tour, and the label pays $50,000 towards the costs of staging and promoting it. They make a video ($50,000) and play it on TRL (a bottle of Cristal to a girl called Maxie.. ) Total $225,199. That comes out of the royalty fee before the artist gets it, so our band actually OWES the label 25 grand.
The only realistic way for an artist to make a profit is to either sell millions of copies, or to write all the material (so they keep the few cents mechanicals per unit, which aren't recoupable). It's why writing credits on album tracks are such a hard-fought issue for bands in the middle range of sales, and the only bands to release albums entirely made up of cover songs are the ones that don't need any more cash in the bank.
If the label sells the music online there's a massive cut in overheads and no distribution or manufacturing costs, so the artist can win more points and break into profit far sooner.
mG
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