Reality Check for Rappers
Thanks to Kevin Walker over at Culture Lab for turning me on to this article. It no longer makes economic sense for most emerging musical artists to seek record deals. The tools to produce, market and distribute your own music are cheap and or free. At the end of the day, if you can leverage these tools effectively, you can have a far smaller audience and still make more money as an independent. Think of it like this, if you can get 1000 people to give you $5 a year directly through your web site, music distribution and social media hustle, you are actually living better than a lot of “signed” rappers that you see on TV. It’s a shell game. Remember, the artist is the last to get paid. Even your manager gets paid before you do. If you can proove that you have an audience through these web and social media tools, the record labels will come to you and be forced to offer you a better deal.
This is why I started the Media Communications Council. We help folks pursue their passions while leveraging free and low cost media tools. Enjoy!
Why Rappers Aren’t Millionaires…from http://daved.com
Why Rappers Aren’t Millionaires By Wendy Day {this insightful article first appeared on Blackelectorate.com} Who is the incredible bonehead who said rappers are millionaires?
Wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong!! Because fans expect their
favorite artists to be richer than Bill Gates, this puts an incredible
amount of pressure on the artists to appear wealthy. And it’s not
just the fans; I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been out with
rappers along with people who work in the industry, who expect the
artists to pick up the dinner check or buy bottles of Moet. I’ve even
seen people cop an attitude if the artist doesn’t pay for everything.
This is small minded and ignorant because the artist is ALWAYS the
last to get paid. Once an artist releases a record, the pressure is on to portray a
successful image to their friends, families, fans, and people around
the way. People expect the artists to be well dressed, drive an
expensive car, etc. Think about it. Don’t you expect the artists “to
look like artists?” Sadly, when an artist gets signed to a label deal, especially a rap
artist, he or she receives somewhere between 10 and 15 points. What
that means is 10% to 15% of the retail sales price, after the record
label recoups the money it puts out (the advance, the sample
clearances, the producers, usually half the cost of the video, any
cash outlays for the artists, half the radio promotions, etc.). The
artist has to sell a huge amount of units to make any money back.
Here’s an example of a relatively fair record deal for a new rap
artist with some clout in the industry and a terrific negotiating
attorney: ROYALTY RATE: 12% “All in deal” We’re going to assume that there are 3
artists in the group, and that they split everything equally. We’re
also going to assume that they produce their own tracks themselves.
Suggested retail list price: $14.98 less 15% packaging deduction
(usually 20%) $ 12.73 gets paid on 85% of records sold (“free
goods/breakage”) $ 10.82 So the artists’ 12% is equal to about $1.30
per CD sold. Let’s assume that they are a hit and their record goes gold (although
it is rare that a first record blows up like this). Bear in mind that
in the year 2000, only 45 rap records sold more than 500,000 units out
of almost 1,000 releases. Of these 45 records, less than 10 were by
new artists. GOLD RECORD = 500,000 units sold x $ 1.30 = $650,000. Looks like a
nice chunk of loot, huh? Watch this. Now the label recoups what
they’ve spent. Half of the independent promotion, half of the video
cost, some tour support, all those limo rides, all those out of town
trips for the artist and their friends, the advance, etc. $650,000 -$
50,000 half the indie promotion -$ 75,000 half the video -$ 25,000
tour support, trips, etc. -$200,000 recording costs -$ 70,000 advance
——–
$230,000 Still sounds OK? Watch… Now, a third of the $650,000 stays “in
reserve” (accounting for returned items from retail stores) for a year
or so, depending on the length specified in the recording contract.
So the monies are actually subtracted from $429,000 (the other
$221,000 is in reserves for a year and a half the way accounting
statements are figured). Now, there’s also the artists’ manager, who
is entitled to 20% of all of the entertainment income, which would be
20% of $650,000, or $130,000 (although many managers do not commission
the recording costs). Remember, the artist is the last to get paid,
so even the manager gets paid before the artist. So the three artists actually receive $33,333 each for their gold
album, and in a year and a half when the reserves are liquidated, IF
they’ve recouped, they will each receive another $73,666. Again, IF
they’ve recouped. Guess who keeps track of all of this accounting?
The label. Most contracts are “cross-collateralized,” which means if
the artist does not recoup everything on the first album, the money
will be paid back out of the second album. Also, if the money is not
recouped on the second album, repayment can come out of the “in
reserve” funds from the first album, if the funds have not already
been liquidated. This is why almost all artists go into their next
album “in the red.” From artists like DMX to Slick Rick, they are
always in a debt position with their record label even though the
label is making millions of dollars per release. For example, on the
Gold album example we’re illustrating here, at a wholesale price of
$11.41 per CD, 500,000 units would bring the label a gross amount of
$5,705,000. Even after the reserves are paid, each artist only actually made 21
cents per unit based on this example. The label made substantially
more. This example doesn’t include any additional production costs
for an outside producer to come in and do a re-mix, and you know how
often that happens. So each artist in this group has received a total of about $107,000
from record sales. After legal expenses and costs of new clothing to
wear on stage while touring, etc, each artist has probably made a
total of $90,000 before paying taxes which probably took another 28%
to 33%, plus accountant fees. Let’s look at the time line now. Let’s
assume the artists had no jobs when they started this. They spent 4
months putting their demo tape together and getting the tracks just
right. They spent another 8 months to a year getting to know who all
of the players are in the rap music industry and shopping their demo
tape. After signing to a label, it took another 8 months to make an
album and to get through all of the label’s bureaucracy. When the
first single dropped, the group went into promotion mode and traveled
all over promoting the single at radio, retail, concerts, and
publications. This was another six months. The record label decided
to push three singles from the album so it was another year before
they got back into the studio to make album number two. This scenario
has been a total of 36 months. Each member of the group made $64,800
(after taxes) for a three year investment of time, which averages out
to $21,600 per year. In corporate America, that works out to be about
$10 per hour. Think about this next time you see your favorite artist
drive by in that new Escalade– I do. Wendy Day can be contacted via e-mail at rapcoalition@aol.com
Also visit her websites:
www.Industryreport.com
and
www.Rapcoalition.org







