There was a point on Saturday when I actually thought it wasn’t going to happen. I thought that a million grannies were going to buy a copy of that X-factor song for each of their grandchildren, and that everyone who downloaded seven copies of Killing in the Name Of was going to be disqualified and count for nothing.
I started to do that little backpedal in my own head of ‘even if it doesn’t win, they’ll have made their point,’ but I knew this was just lying to myself. I said so on here- it was going to be gutting if they lost, pure and simple.
But they didn’t. Oh, simple joy of simple joys, they didn’t. And now Simon Cowell looks like an idiot, and all that money that Sony spent on pushing the musical equivalent of raw tripe down the throats of the music-buying public has been entirely wasted.
That’s the interesting thing- this is the first Download-only Christmas number one. But it won’t be the last. In some strange way, you can see this as another part of the death throes of the old order. In the same way that a band like, say, the Arctic Monkeys, masterminded their meteoric rise through as crude a tool as Myspace, this is the sign that record companies just can’t BUY success any more, that unpredictable things crop up and succeed, and that the old tried and tested techniques for manufacturing success aren’t enough.
The media is dispersed enough that no-one is in control. Not really. That means good news for musicians, good news for fans, maybe not quite so good news for the people who are accustomed to making huge amounts of money from these two groups. That’s fine by me, honest it is.
You see, there’s always been music. There hasn’t always been a music industry.
It doesn’t have to be like this.
Oh, there’ll always be infrastructure, and investment, and networking and promotion, of course there will. It’s just in the hands of the people now, which is what Tracy and Jon Morter realised.
There’s a lot of opportunity out there. If you’re a musician, you don’t need to do what they tell ya. You can just do it yourself.
