Category: Reissues

Restoring lost albums for cash

I was reading an article in the Australian publication ‘The Vine’ this morning. A meandering piece about music in the digital age, apps, music formats, archives and reissues. It’s worth a read if you have ten minutes to go for a leisurely mental stroll.

This bit leapt out at me:

Gil Matthews is probably best known as the drummer for Billy Thorpe and the Aztecs, but he has also built a solid business giving many classic Australian albums new life on CD. Since 2005 the label Aztec Music has released about 60 titles, each with high-quality packaging and a 28-page booklet, creating a business with a yearly turnover of about $250,000. ”There are an incredible number of titles we could release if we had the time,” says Matthews. ”If we had a catalogue of 300 titles, this would be close to a million-dollar business.”

Each release is a painstaking process, requiring Matthews to go back to the ageing master tapes — or even vinyl if tapes are unavailable — and restore them for the digital format. ”Sometimes it can take 40 hours alone to remove all the clicks and pops from the original source — it’s almost a labour of love,” says Matthews.

It sounds like the kind of labour of love that might economically justify opening up the vaults, seeing what’s in there and figuring out if there is, in the first instance, a commercial imperative for reissuing back catalogue that major labels have more or less locked away to rot because they don’t feed the new release, promo, popstar machine.

Yes there is some healthy activity in the area of reissues (both physical and digital), but these tend to be the perennial moneymakers and still-active artists that can leverage big money at corporate levels of turnover. But cottage industry outfits like that of Matthews could be more than sustainable on the number of units that less well-remembered artists might sell – and not only would this create economic value, grow the industry, put more music in more hands and return money to artists… but it would also rescue some significant works of cultural heritage from inevitable decay.

Of course, for this to work, licences would need to be worked out, vault inventories would need to be made available, and – ideally – copyright laws would need to be changed to include a use-it-or-lose-it clause that would incentivise the major labels to maximise the value hidden in their own coffers.

A Conversation With Angus Batey

There’s a fascinating post over at Can’t Stop Won’t Stop, in which Jeff Chang interviews Angus Batey of the Guardian. They were talking about hip hop, archives and the idea of reissues and box sets. Batey mentioned that he’d been talking about this with Chuck D of Public Enemy, and the fact that this would be very difficult now that Universal Music owns Def Jam…

He also talked about something he called “new discovery” which would happen if and when anyone went back to the original PE master tapes and remixed or remastered them: there are sonic elements on those records which are unidentifiable, and indeed pretty much inaudible, in the finished and originally released versions, but without which the tracks don’t work – yet the legal onus would be on the company releasing a remaster to go through the multitracks and ensure every last thing was cleared. Chuck said those PE albums didn’t just contain samples from hundreds of records – they came from thousands.

Full clearance would be impossible under the present free-for-all rules; and there is absolutely no incentive for any of the people in the clearance industry to have those rules changed — unless, of course, it could be definitively demonstrated that a flat-rate clearance system would enable so much more sample clearance to take place that the overall sums involved would mean the whole pot of money accruing to each entity along the chain would be greater than that generated through the present system.

Read the full article here.