Sign In Sign Out Subscribe to Mailing Lists Unsubscribe or Change Settings Help

smoe.org mailing lists
ivan@stellysee.de

Message Index for 2006111, sorted by... (Author) (Date) (Subject) (Thread)
Previous message, by... (Author) (Date) (Subject) (Thread)
Next message, by... (Author) (Date) (Subject) (Thread)

From Marty Rudnick <mrudnick@marturo.com>
Subject EMI Music CEO says the CD is 'dead'
Date Mon, 06 Nov 2006 15:53:52 -0800

[Part 1 text/plain us-ascii (1.9 kilobytes)] (View Text in a separate window)

I knew I should have taken up ceramics....

LONDON (MarketWatch) -- EMI Music Chairman and Chief Executive Alain 
Levy Friday told an audience at the London Business School that the CD 
is dead, saying music companies will no longer be able to sell CDs 
without offering "value-added" material.

"The CD as it is right now is dead," Levy said, adding that 60% of 
consumers put CDs into home computers in order to transfer material to 
digital music players.

EMI Music is part of EMI Group PLC (EMI.LN).

But there remains a place for physical media, Levy said.

"You're not going to offer your mother-in-law iTunes downloads for 
Christmas," he said. "But we have to be much more innovative in the way 
we sell physical content."

Record companies will need to make CDs more attractive to the consumer, 
he said.

"By the beginning of next year, none of our content will come without 
any additional material," Levy said.

CD sales accounted for more than 70% of total music sales in the first 
half of 2006, while digital music sales were around 11% of the total, 
according to music industry trade body the International Federation of 
the Phonographic Industry.

CD sales were worth $6.45 billion and digital sales $945 million, the 
IFPI said.

Levy said EMI is continuing to hold talks with Google Inc. (GOOG) on an 
advertising-revenue sharing partnership with the community video Web 
site YouTube, which the Internet search giant acquired in October for 
$1.6 billion in stock.

EMI's rivals, Warner Music Group Corp. (WMG), Sony BMG - a joint venture 
between Sony Corp. (SNE) and Bertelsmann AG - and Universal Media have 
all signed content deals with YouTube.

"The terms they were offering weren't acceptable," Levy said, adding 
that EMI continues to be concerned about copyright issues.

Company Web site: http://www.emigroup.com

Message Index for 2006111, sorted by... (Author) (Date) (Subject) (Thread)
Previous message, by... (Author) (Date) (Subject) (Thread)
Next message, by... (Author) (Date) (Subject) (Thread)

For assistance, please contact the smoe.org administrators.
Sign In Sign Out Subscribe to Mailing Lists Unsubscribe or Change Settings Help