Birdman, there goes your boy...Orpheus!

FatbackFatback 6,746 Posts
edited June 2006 in Strut Central
Orpheus Records owner Richard Carlisle shuns iPods but says his Arlington business is affected by online preferences. [/b]*******************************************With Online Music, It's a Buyer's MarketShared, Often Eclectic Tastes Determine What Will SellBy Yuki NoguchiWashington Post Staff WriterSaturday, June 24, 2006; A01For years, old recordings have piled up in the archives at Verve Records, including beloved jazz tracks that had no market big enough to justify pressing new discs. But thanks to the Internet, music lovers are rediscovering iconic titles like Ella Fitzgerald's "Sunshine of Your Love" and Quincy Jones's "Body Heat" -- rekindling enough popular demand to prompt Verve to reissue them through a project called Verve Vault."The demand for music has never been as big as it is today. We get all kinds of questions from customers worldwide, looking for a track name or an album, or asking, 'Why haven't you put that out yet?' " said Jon Vanhala, vice president of new media and strategic marketing at Verve. So far, about 2,700 albums have been brought back through the Vault, with more than 5,000 scheduled to follow.Because the Internet has changed how people discover and share music, the rules of marketing it and the hierarchy of who determines what's hot have also changed. As radio-music listenership declines, the industry finds itself spending more time courting a broader field of tastemakers who, through Web sites, are popularizing songs that never get radio play. The primary tool in this transition is the playlist -- a sequence of tracks posted on blogs or shared on music purchase sites such as iTunes."I listen to way more music than I ever have in my life," said Robert Burke, a North Carolina quality assurance manager by day who spends nearly all of his free time searching through new music online, then compiling tracks in playlists with various themes, like rock songs that include a tuba, Top 20 bands from the 1980s with mullets, artists who sample riffs from Miles Davis, and so on."I kind of started it because I've always collected music, and I've become pretty obsessed with it since then," said Burke, whose blog on Yahoo Radish, Playlistradish.com, has published thousands of his playlists for the consumption of others.With legions of new bands popping up online every day, fans need guidance just to keep up, said Oliver Wang, founder of Soul Sides, another high-traffic music blog.In the online world, friends' recommendations or an endorsement from bloggers such as Wang and Burke, as well as podcasts such as "The Nashville Nobody Knows" and "Accident Hash," can yield significant marketplace results.A duo called Gnarls Barkley, for example, found a huge following online. The band's songs, including "Crazy," were well established online before getting radio play. Its songs have been listened to on the band's MySpace social-networking site more than 6 million times. Transatlantic online exchanges made the British band Arctic Monkeys famous in the United States before any album came out here."Word of mouth benefits [independent labels] in particular, and we're only starting to see the benefits," said Kevin Arnold, founder and chief executive of the Independent Online Distribution Alliance, which disseminates music from 2,500 labels to digital music services.To court the online tastemakers, the alliance last fall launched Promonet -- a system that maintains a master playlist of new releases for reviewers, Arnold said.Digital music services themselves have become engines of recommendation. Music stores such as iTunes, EMusic, and Yahoo Music give users the ability to check out others' playlists, so people with similar tastes can find each other and discover new music. Additionally, services such as Rhapsody, Napster, Livefm, Pandora, AOL and Yahoo all have Internet-radio options with algorithms that register a person's taste and, based on the listeners preference, stream in similar, new music."I've found a few bands that way," including one called the Magic Numbers, said Alex Kilfoyle, 23, a Washington electrical engineer."When I started college, I was listening to rock and classic rock, and that's it," said Kilfoyle, who swaps music recommendations with old college friends through instant messaging, online chats and checking out each others' playlists on iTunes. A program called Hamachi also allows them to listen to music saved on each others' computers. Because of his friends, he said, his musical taste has evolved to "eclectic -- a lot of everything."Ian Rogers, 33, grew up in Goshen, Ind., where there was no record store."I drove five hours to Chicago to see a punk rock band," he said. He'd pore over reviews in Maximumrocknroll magazine, then have his mother write checks so he could send off for albums without having listened to them, said Rogers, who is now director of product marketing for Yahoo Music.The effort and cost involved in buying made him feel almost obligated to like what he could get, he said. "You end up consuming what's marketed to you. With the Internet, you consume exactly what you want."To adjust to that shift, radio stations are experimenting with "send us your playlist," or by-request music shows, said Mike McGuire, an analyst with the research firm Gartner Inc. "It greatly complicates how you promote acts and content," which is why forward-thinking labels like Warner Music Group's all-digital label Cordless Recordings are spending more time and promotional money on finding bloggers, he said.While consumers say the diversity and availability of more content is unequivocally good, some bemoan the lost art and distinction of having the great, comprehensive record collection.In the past, a music aficionado had to invest time and money sifting through racks in the hunt for, say, a little-known ska band. Now, entire CD racks and vinyl-record collections can fit into several gigabytes of computer memory -- and people who never invested their resources in acquiring music can simply rip off a playlist, or type in a search to find that same, small-time ska band. It's yet another blow to brick-and-mortar record stores, which with the rise of digital music have already lost CD sales."The fun of collecting is gone," said Michael Crowley, who said he spent his childhood hunting for bootlegged copies of obscure acts in hidden-away record shops run by edgy people with nose rings. "They're not that fun if you can download them with a few mouse clicks," said Crowley, a Washington journalist who wrote about the rock snob's demise by digital music for the New Republic.Crowley admits that he now relies more on music blogs and friends' playlists to keep up with trends in music, making him more of a follower than a leader in the online world. Still, he said, the ability to copy music can't stand in for taste. "Taste is something you have to cultivate."Richard Carlisle toes a harder line. The self-described vinyl-record purist has sold records for 30 years and owns Orpheus Records in Arlington. He's never put an iPod to his ears and spends no time on the Internet surfing for new music. "I have a vested interest in people not using an iPod," he said. "I guess you could call it a sour-grapes phenomenon."But online trends still affect his business; a customer recently came in asking for an album from an indie-rock band he'd never heard of -- Neutral Milk Hotel -- which had become popular online. Since then, he's sold roughly 30 of those albums.

  Comments


  • coffinjoecoffinjoe 1,743 Posts


    Richard Carlisle toes a harder line and spends no time on the Internet surfing for new music.



    he must be surfing for "old" music or porno
    cause
    everytime i'm in the shop he's lurking on the bay

  • NiteKrawler45NiteKrawler45 1,062 Posts


    Richard Carlisle toes a harder line and spends no time on the Internet surfing for new music.



    he must be surfing for "old" music or porno
    cause
    everytime i'm in the shop he's lurking on the bay


    With his hardly-changing-stock and popsike-wet-dreams-pricing-on-common-material, can someone tell me how he stays in business?

  • JLRJLR 3,835 Posts


    With his hardly-changing-stock and popsike-wet-dreams-pricing-on-common-material, can someone tell me how he stays in business?

    But online trends still affect his business; a customer recently came in asking for an album from an indie-rock band he'd never heard of -- Neutral Milk Hotel -- which had become popular online. Since then, he's sold roughly 30 of those albums.
    ???????????

  • NiteKrawler45NiteKrawler45 1,062 Posts


    With his hardly-changing-stock and popsike-wet-dreams-pricing-on-common-material, can someone tell me how he stays in business?

    But online trends still affect his business; a customer recently came in asking for an album from an indie-rock band he'd never heard of -- Neutral Milk Hotel -- which had become popular online. Since then, he's sold roughly 30 of those albums.
    ???????????

    Dude has a tiny new release section. Sold 30 of them? I doubt it. I'm refering to the fact that 95% of the store is older material and it's almost always the same stuff. Believe me, I live just down the street.

  • Birdman9Birdman9 5,417 Posts


    Richard Carlisle toes a harder line and spends no time on the Internet surfing for new music.



    he must be surfing for "old" music or porno
    cause
    everytime i'm in the shop he's lurking on the bay


    With his hardly-changing-stock and popsike-wet-dreams-pricing-on-common-material, can someone tell me how he stays in business?

    I assume it's because he probaly sells a lot of used CDs, which are about the only thing he prices to move. And they seem to, and that's about all I ever see other customers look at. Hell, it's all I seem to buy from him either the past few times I have been there. I think this is the fact that will one day drive him crazy because he HATES CDs.

    And yeah, for a luddite who claims to hate the internet, he sure knows where to look for prices.

  • FatbackFatback 6,746 Posts


    Richard Carlisle toes a harder line and spends no time on the Internet surfing for new music.



    he must be surfing for "old" music or porno
    cause
    everytime i'm in the shop he's lurking on the bay


    With his hardly-changing-stock and popsike-wet-dreams-pricing-on-common-material, can someone tell me how he stays in business?

    I assume it's because he probaly sells a lot of used CDs, which are about the only thing he prices to move. And they seem to, and that's about all I ever see other customers look at. Hell, it's all I seem to buy from him either the past few times I have been there. I think this is the fact that will one day drive him crazy because he HATES CDs.

    And yeah, for a luddite who claims to hate the internet, he sure knows where to look for prices.

    He had me pegged as big dude ebay dealer (I'm not). So every time I bought something, he'd look it up on ebay and if it wasn't there (it usually wasn't) he'd freak out. Then when I came back in, he'd ask me what I got for each title (he had memorized them) on ebay.


  • Mike_BellMike_Bell 5,736 Posts
    If dude stresses this much over eBay, he should probably close his shop and sell primarily on eBay.

  • LordNOLordNO 202 Posts
    I remember this cat...Classic record troll, down to the mythical title "orpheus" and long flowy beard. The positive thing I recall tho, is getting a few nice joints really cheap cause they had like, radio station names scrawled across the back in marker...

    I heard he has a "back room" but who knows if there's anything worthwhile, it's certainly not worth the repeated patronage that would be the price of admission.

  • FatbackFatback 6,746 Posts
    that back room and he has a personal collection that would son every body on this board.


  • noznoz 3,625 Posts
    TOE NAILS

  • NiteKrawler45NiteKrawler45 1,062 Posts
    that back room and he has a personal collection that would son every body on this board.


    The "back room" is just extra shelf area (which you can see in the back) in which he keeps stock of things usually out on the floor. His backroom is weaksauce.

  • noznoz 3,625 Posts
    i got a stock of $$$ electroterds there once.

  • Birdman9Birdman9 5,417 Posts
    that back room and he has a personal collection that would son every body on this board.


    The "back room" is just extra shelf area (which you can see in the back) in which he keeps stock of things usually out on the floor. His backroom is weaksauce.

    While I am certain it is primarily doubles and sealed shit(lots of 80s jazz I imagine), I would love to have an afternoon to go through stuff back there and on the top racks above everything. I know he has stuff that you can't figure, because I have asked him about shit only to hone in on 3 inches of spines and pull out a sealed copy of said item. One was a sealed Shuggie Otis and one was Black Gladiator. Nothing crazy, but why wouldn't you just put these things out?

  • Jonny_PaycheckJonny_Paycheck 17,825 Posts
    why wouldn't you just put these things out?

    because once you sell it, you don't have it anymore.

    Some of these guys are hoarders, they used to buy a lot but they don't anymore, haven't had a big score in years, and they get scared that if they sell off the good shit they won't have anything left.

    Or, conversely, if they sell the good shit to you, they won't have a nice looking list for ebay.

  • Birdman9Birdman9 5,417 Posts
    why wouldn't you just put these things out?

    because once you sell it, you don't have it anymore.

    Some of these guys are hoarders, they used to buy a lot but they don't anymore, haven't had a big score in years, and they get scared that if they sell off the good shit they won't have anything left.

    Or, conversely, if they sell the good shit to you, they won't have a nice looking list for ebay.

    Rick would go crazy if he started dealing on eBay. I doubt that he could handle e-beef. But I bet it would make for good feedback reading!

  • NiteKrawler45NiteKrawler45 1,062 Posts
    why wouldn't you just put these things out?

    because once you sell it, you don't have it anymore.

    Some of these guys are hoarders, they used to buy a lot but they don't anymore, haven't had a big score in years, and they get scared that if they sell off the good shit they won't have anything left.

    Or, conversely, if they sell the good shit to you, they won't have a nice looking list for ebay.

    Rick would go crazy if he started dealing on eBay. I doubt that he could handle e-beef. But I bet it would make for good feedback reading!

    Rick may be a hoarder, but I think the reason he keeps some things in hard to reach or non accessible spots is so he can personally grab them for people and look like some sort of hero.

    His Ebay name should be NailsMcHair. He should be registered ASAP so we can all clown his auctions and send him questions to drive him nuts.

    Sign him up Chr*s!

  • ScottScott 420 Posts
    i got a stock of $$$ electroterds there once.

    Yeah, he had a grip of RANDOM RAPP DJ IVORY 12-inches in a cardboard box a few months ago. Since then, not so much.
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