For Taylor Swift, the
Future of Music Is a Love Story
The Singer-Songwriter Says Artists and Fans
Will Still Form Deep Bonds, but They Will Do It in New Ways
By Taylor Swift in the
Wall Street Journal
Where will the music
industry be in 20 years, 30 years, 50 years?
Before I tell you my
thoughts on the matter, you should know that you're reading the opinion of an
enthusiastic optimist: one of the few living souls in the music industry who
still believes that the music industry is not dying…it's just coming alive.
There are many (many)
people who predict the downfall of music sales and the irrelevancy of the album
as an economic entity. I am not one of them. In my opinion, the value of an
album is, and will continue to be, based on the amount of heart and soul an
artist has bled into a body of work, and the financial value that artists (and
their labels) place on their music when it goes out into the marketplace.
Piracy, file sharing and streaming have shrunk the numbers of paid album sales
drastically, and every artist has handled this blow differently.
In recent years,
you've probably read the articles about major recording artists who have
decided to practically give their music away, for this promotion or that
exclusive deal. My hope for the future, not just in the music industry, but in
every young girl I meet…is that they all realize their worth and ask for it.
Music is art, and art
is important and rare. Important, rare things are valuable. Valuable things
should be paid for. It's my opinion that music should not be free, and my prediction
is that individual artists and their labels will someday decide what an album's
price point is. I hope they don't underestimate themselves or undervalue their
art.
In mentioning album
sales, I'd like to point out that people are still buying albums, but
now they're buying just a few of them. They are buying only the ones that hit
them like an arrow through the heart or have made them feel strong or allowed
them to feel like they really aren't alone in feeling so alone. It isn't as
easy today as it was 20 years ago to have a multiplatinum-selling album, and as
artists, that should challenge and motivate us.
There are always going
to be those artists who break through on an emotional level and end up in
people's lives forever. The way I see it, fans view music the way they view
their relationships. Some music is just for fun, a passing fling (the ones they
dance to at clubs and parties for a month while the song is a huge radio hit,
that they will soon forget they ever danced to). Some songs and albums represent
seasons of our lives, like relationships that we hold dear in our memories but
had their time and place in the past.
However, some artists
will be like finding "the one." We will cherish every album they put
out until they retire and we will play their music for our children and
grandchildren. As an artist, this is the dream bond we hope to establish with
our fans. I think the future still holds the possibility for this kind of bond,
the one my father has with the Beach Boys and the one my mother has with Carly
Simon.
I think forming a bond
with fans in the future will come in the form of constantly providing them with
the element of surprise. No, I did not say "shock"; I said
"surprise." I believe couples can stay in love for decades if they
just continue to surprise each other, so why can't this love affair exist
between an artist and their fans?
In the YouTube
generation we live in, I walked out onstage every night of my stadium tour last
year knowing almost every fan had already seen the show online. To continue to
show them something they had never seen before, I brought out dozens of special
guest performers to sing their hits with me. My generation was raised being
able to flip channels if we got bored, and we read the last page of the book when
we got impatient. We want to be caught off guard, delighted, left in awe. I
hope the next generation's artists will continue to think of inventive ways of
keeping their audiences on their toes, as challenging as that might be.
There are a few things
I have witnessed becoming obsolete in the past few years, the first being
autographs. I haven't been asked for an autograph since the invention of the iPhone with a front-facing camera. The only memento
"kids these days" want is a selfie. It's part of the new currency,
which seems to be "how many followers you have on Instagram."
Fan Power
A friend of mine, who
is an actress, told me that when the casting for her recent movie came down to
two actresses, the casting director chose the actress with more Twitter
followers. I see this becoming a trend in the music industry. For me, this
dates back to 2005 when I walked into my first record-label meetings,
explaining to them that I had been communicating directly with my fans on this
new site called Myspace. In the future, artists will get record deals because
they have fans—not the other way around.
Another theme I see
fading into the gray is genre distinction. These days, nothing great you hear
on the radio seems to come from just one musical influence. The wild,
unpredictable fun in making music today is that anything goes. Pop sounds like
hip hop; country sounds like rock; rock sounds like soul; and folk sounds like
country—and to me, that's incredible progress. I want to make music that
reflects all of my influences, and I think that in the coming decades the idea
of genres will become less of a career-defining path and more of an
organizational tool.
This moment in music
is so exciting because the creative avenues an artist can explore are
limitless. In this moment in music, stepping out of your comfort zone is
rewarded, and sonic evolution is not only accepted…it is celebrated. The only
real risk is being too afraid to take a risk at all.
Celebrity Spotlight
I predict that some
things will never change. There will always be an increasing fixation on the
private lives of musicians, especially the younger ones. Artists who were at
their commercial peak in the '70s, '80s and '90s tell me, "It was never
this crazy for us back then!" And I suspect I'll be saying that same thing
to younger artists someday (God help them). There continues to be a bad girl
vs. good girl/clean-cut vs. sexy debate, and for as long as those labels exist,
I just hope there will be contenders on both sides. Everyone needs someone to
relate to.
And as for me? I'll
just be sitting back and growing old, watching all of this happen or not
happen, all the while trying to maintain a life rooted in this same optimism.
And I'd also like a
nice garden.
Ms. Swift is a singer
and songwriter, and the winner of seven Grammy Awards.
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