10.11.11

Indie labels Anti-, Sub Pop, Century Media, Daptone, SideOneDummy & more get behind TheNewRecord.com

Independent record labels have traditionally served as a kind of filter or barometer of new music for fans of the artists on their roster – a trusted source for discovering new music. That relationship is part of what inspired the creation of the TheNewRecord.com, a new digital music service created and launched by SideOneDummy Records co-founder Bill Armstrong along with 30 indie record labels including Anti-, Sub Pop, Kill Rock Stars, Century Media, Daptone Records, SideOneDummy and many others… The site acts as a digital newsstand of sorts, where users are offered a free filtered environment to play and download new songs weeks in advance of release. Membership is free, and users can stream and download unlimited free MP3s, use a built-in widget to embed songs or playlists, create and swap customizable playlists with other users, and share new finds over Facebook, Twitter, email, or other social networks. Using the “Follow” feature, TheNewRecord users will have new music delivered to them directly from the record labels or artists of their choice before release date, and they can also follow each other, filtering new music through their friend’s tastes. For more details and to sign-up go to TheNewRecord.com

04.21.10

Indie Dispatches: Straight From the Chart

Sharon Jones' New Album Enters Top 200 Its First Week

Last week saw another independent label release break into the ‘big boy charts’ with the Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings album I Learned the Hard Way scoring a #15 spot in the Billboard Top 200 with over 20k in sales in its first week. The interesting twist to the story is that the album is on Daptone Records, a label that could be seen more as a cottage operation rather than one of the more storied independent labels. The big winner for the year so far in the indie-label chart story however, has been Merge Records, which has had not one, but two new releases hit the top five in 2010. First with the Spoon Transference album back in January and most recently She and Him’s Volume Two. And that list doesn’t include the highly anticipated third album from the Arcade Fire that is reportedly due out this year. Could that end up being the North Carolina label’s first ever number one album?

Less than a decade ago the thought of an indie release cracking the charts in general, let alone the Top 10, was a pipe dream. Even pre-eminent artists on labels like Sub Pop or Matador in the 90’s barely scraped into the Top 100 – a reason for great celebration at the time. It seems like up until recently the only ranking an independent release could have was in Heatseekers or the tinpot Billboard Indie Chart, but all that has seemingly changed when even the Local Natives album on tiny Frenchkiss Records can hit the Top 200. While it is true independent label sales have seen a slump, and it is as hard as ever for the indies (like majors) to sell records, the drop has in some ways not been as cataclysmic as that of the Big Four.  Maybe it can be attributed to the indies’ dedication to their community of buyers, where the fans seem more invested in the artists,  or maybe it has just been a policy of good releases and reasonable prices.  But most likely it is the fact that many independent labels have simply continued to consistently put out great music.  Whatever the reason, it seems like in 2010 the kids are alright

- Cool Hand Luke