News
News.blog: Oasis considers Radiohead route
These are fearful times for the music industry. As record companies train their considerable legal might on a Minnesota mother accused of illegal downloading, their talent is walking out the back door.
No sooner had Nine Inch Nails announced on Monday that it no longer was under contract to a record label, when word came that Oasis and Jamiroquai are considering whether to release songs online for free, according to The Telegraph.
Should they decide to go the free route, Oasis and Jamiroquai -- two unsigned but very popular bands -- would follow Radiohead, the group that last week announced it would issue a digital version of its next album, In Rainbows, for whatever price individual customers are inclined to pay.
In addition, Radiohead, one of the world's most popular bands, said it would no longer be represented by a music label.
Even the hardiest music executive is going to struggle to spin this news. There's no hiding what's occurring here. The music industry is on the threshold of disintermediation, a fancy word that means the Internet is threatening to blast a thick layer of the sector's infrastructure into blue oblivion -- just like it has with travel agents, stockbrokers and newspapers.
Bands don't need huge music conglomerates to give away songs. Legions of A&R teams are no longer needed to ferret out talent. Music fans can go online and decide for themselves what gets heard.
More about MP3 & Digital Music
- News.blog: iPod nano pics September 08, 2008
- News.blog: Yahoo Music switches off July 25, 2008
- MySpace Music gets September launch July 24, 2008
- News.blog: Apple reports record Mac sales July 22, 2008
- News.blog: Last.fm gets wobbly makeover July 18, 2008

- OpenOfficeMouse has frankly preposterous 18 buttons, joystick
- EMI Abbey Road Live: Instant gig recording
- Sony BDP-S760 Blu-ray player: Super bit-mapping reality enhancer
- Nokia Booklet 3G hits US: Hands-on verdict
- Lady GaGa Monster Heartbeats: They're plastic but they still have fun
- The 6 worst video game samples in rap music

- EMI Abbey Road Live: Instant gig recording
- The 6 worst video game samples in rap music
- EMI baffles us: Offers Beatles MP3s... on memory sticks
- Mint Tank MP3 player: Tracks for your tracks
- Spotify's Daniel Ek to headline SXSW: Spotify coming to America?
- England mi-football: Music on the ball
- Win a CNET UK Editors' Choice swag bag worth £1,200!
- Interview: Lala co-founder Bill Nguyen on Google and the future of music
- Google amps up music search
- Spotify vs Sky Songs: Sound quality blind test
- Napster vs Spotify vs Sky Songs
- iPhone, iPod touch to get FM radio update?
- CNET UK Editors' Choice winners September 2009
- SpoTV? Spotify TV and phones on the way
- 3M brings 3D for phones, without the glasses



