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Chapter 7 Audio: Music and Talk Across Media. Storing Sound 1877: Edison invents phonograph, records sound on foil cylinders.cylinders 1888: Emile Berliner.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 7 Audio: Music and Talk Across Media. Storing Sound 1877: Edison invents phonograph, records sound on foil cylinders.cylinders 1888: Emile Berliner."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 7 Audio: Music and Talk Across Media

2 Storing Sound 1877: Edison invents phonograph, records sound on foil cylinders.cylinders 1888: Emile Berliner develops gramophone, plays music on mass produced discs. 1953: Hi-Fi is combination of technologies to create better music reproduction.

3 Signals at a Distance 1844: Samuel Morse’s telegraph allowed messages to be sent over wires. 1890s: Guglielmo Marconi develops wireless telegraph. 1905: Reginald Fessenden makes Christmas Eve broadcast with voices and music.

4 Radio Music Box Memo Written in 1915 by American Marconi engineer David Sarnoff. Suggested major uses for radio as mass communication tool including news, music, and sports. More receivers than transmitters.

5 RCA Monopoly Radio Corporation of America created to bring together patents, develop radio as medium. Composed of General Electric, AT&T, Westinghouse, & United Fruit Company. United Fruit Company??? Held many radio patents to communicate with ships carrying fruit. 1920: KDKA in Pittsburgh launched as first commercial radio station.

6 How To Make Money With Radio? Taxes? Selling radios? Advertising

7 Growth of Radio Networks Sarnoff saw NBC as source of programming. William Paley saw CBS as advertising medium. ABC was splintered off from NBC.

8 Golden Age of Radio Music Drama Little Orphan Annie, The Lone Ranger, The ShadowThe Lone RangerThe Shadow Soap operas Guiding Light started on radio in 1937, moved to television in 1952, ran until 2009

9 Golden Age of Radio Amos ‘n’ Andy Started in 1926, became most popular show on radio. Story of two African American men; writers/actors were white. Controversial, but popular with both black and white audiences; portrayed a black middle class.

10 The BBC British Broadcasting Company created as public service in the 1920s. During World War II was international voice against Nazis, transmitting around the world on shortwave. Current BBC reaches 95 percent of world’s population, uses Internet as well as FM, shortwave, and satellite.

11 Rock ‘n’ Roll & Musical Integration Rhythm & blues Hillbilly music Rock ‘n’ roll Dewey Phillips attracted multi-racial audience for Red, Hot & Blue radio show 1950s: Elvis Presley and Chuck BerryElvis Presley 1950s and 1960s: Motown

12 British Invasion A rougher sound from British bands The BeatlesBeatles The WhoWho The Rolling Stones Dusty Springfield Many others

13 Role of Producers Producer: job is to oversee and manage the recording of an artist’s music. A producer has many roles that may include, but are not limited to, gathering ideas for the project, selecting songs and/or musicians, coaching the artist and musicians in the studio, controlling the recording sessions…

14 Role of Producers and supervising the entire process through mixing and mastering. Producers also often take on a wider entrepreneurial role, with responsibility for the budget, schedules, and negotiations

15 Effects of Music on Young People Have always been concerns about effects of lyrics on young people. Rap and hip-hop have attracted lots of controversy. Fears of hidden or “back masked” lyrics. Middle-class white parents concerned about effects of black music.

16 Changing Musical Formats Always a conflict over what format will be used to distribute music. LPs (Long Play) vs. 45s shorter less songs

17 Rise of Digital Music Digital CDs introduced in early 1980s, sold for premium price. With analog recordings, quality of copies degrades with each generation. Digital recordings allow consumers to make perfect copies.

18 Consequences of Digital Music Consumers “share” music over the Internet, violating copyright law. But artists can use Internet to promote music directly to consumers, bypassing record labels.

19 Radio Business Popular Radio Formats 1.Country 12.7% 2.News/Talk/Info 10.7% 3.Adult Contemporary 7.2% 4.Top 40 5.6% 5.Classic Rock 4.5%

20 Radio Business Talk Radio Political talk radio Most political talk is conservative; Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity most popular. Shock Jocks Howard Stern, Opie and Anthony, Bubba the Love Sponge. All-sports radio Passionate listeners who won’t change channels.

21 Radio Consolidation Broadcast ownership largely deregulated with Telecommunications Act of 1996. Prior to 1985, a single entity could own no more than 7 AM and 7 FM stations nation- wide. After 1996, could own unlimited number of radio stations. By 2003, Clear Channel owned 1,200+ stations

22 Public Radio NPR founded in 1967 All Things Considered goes on the air in 1971 NPR’s Morning Edition news show has bigger audience than any of the morning TV programs NPR’s Web site is key part of network’s strategy. Is no longer National Public Radio, just NPR.

23 The Changing Musical Experience Death of social music. Rise of the “personal soundtrack” with Sony Walkman, followed by iPod and other MP3 players. Can lead to “withdrawal from social connections.”

24 Future of Sound Radio HD trying to bring new life to broadcast radio, but few receivers. Satellite Radio—XM and Sirius merge. Are people willing to pay for subscription radio?

25 Future of Sound Long Tail Alternatives Webcasting Streaming sound over the Internet Podcasting Downloading programs to take with you on your MP3 player.

26 New Economic Models for Music Industry CD sales declining. Pirating and illegal file sharing common. Artists need new ways to make money Touring, sale of merchandise, commercial endorsements, direct sales of music to consumers are all options.


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