June 1, 2007 1:27 PM PDT
Music meets politics in Darfur campaign
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The campaign, called Instant Karma, will promote an album of the same name with Lennon song tracks recorded by U2, REM, Green Day and a host of others, to be released in stores and for download on Apple's iTunes on June 12. In a modern-day version of the 1980s' "We are the World" music project for Africa, the campaign seeks to raise money for Darfur--the
One piece of that equation is a widget called MixedTape that lets anyone cut and paste 10 lines of code to add a music player, political petition and CD store to their MySpace page, blog or Web site. Created by e-commerce site
"People like to accessorize their pages, and we thought this was very cool and different, yet really useful," said Steve Daigneault, director of Internet communications for Amnesty International. "Friends can sign the petition on your MySpace page and listen to portions of the album without going to iTunes."
But apart from the charity effort, industry analysts say that the MixedTape technology could be a harbinger of yet another change in the music business, if it catches on in the Web community. Like other technologies from companies such as Snocap, MixedTape lets independent artists and record labels upload songs and sell them without relying on physical stores or big marketing budgets. But what's different about this widget is that it gives music fans the power to promote and sell their favorite songs from their own Web page, for a small cut of the profits.
"This makes everyone out there a potential retailer of their favorite music," said James McQuivey, principal analyst at Forrester Research. "What's powerful about that is that it establishes a sense of community around music. No one is more of a genuine advocate of that music than a fan."
Still, there's a downside. Not much popular music is sold online without a digital rights management system protecting it from mass distribution or illegal reuse. And songs protected by DRM can't be sold through a widget like MixedTape. That fact might dampen demand for the widget among music fans who might like to mix "tapes" of songs from R.E.M. and U2, for example.
One sign that the tides may be changing among big record labels is that
For now, GoodStorm has built up a music store of 2.7 million songs from independent artists and labels that are legal for people to sell. (It's licensed songs from
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