Macklemore Explains Why Not Being On A Label Helped Him Succeed
from the looking-for-a-come-up dept
Unless you’ve been totally under a pop-culture/music rock for the past few months, you’ve probably heard of Macklemore and his hit song (and video) Thrift Shop. Now at well over 200 million views, the song itself has been at the top of the charts and has sold over 4 million copies. In case you somehow have missed it, or in case you just want to watch it again, here’s the video:
A few weeks ago, Macklemore sat down with Chris Hardwick on the Nerdist podcast and it’s great. Beyond some interesting discussions about sudden fame (and then doing laundry in the communal laundry room of your apartment building days after appearing on SNL), he does talk a little about being a successful musician without a label. Chris asks him about the no label part and mentions what a great story it is:
Chris: To see you and Ryan Lewis come out of Seattle just making stuff you like making, with no label, and oh you’re at the top of the charts, and all these people are talking about the song… that’s just a great story.
Macklemore: Yeah, I appreciate it. It is a very cool story. It’s what you always hope for in terms of picking the independent path. It’s cool to see that that’s been a focal point. It’s not just “Thrift Shop”; it’s this kind of do-it-yourself attitude behind the music we’ve made — that is also within the midst of this thrift shop song. That these two dudes chose to go independently, to turn down the labels. That the music industry is changing. That it’s evolving. And to be at any sort of place where we’re at the forefront of that, at the moment, is exciting.
Chris: It’s so inspiring to so many young people who maybe — and I think people are more and more used to the fact that they can just make stuff in their bedrooms and it can turn out to be huge. But every time it happens, it’s that much more inspiring to a younger generation of people who go… ‘there’s no excuse any more to not go out and make stuff that you want.’
Macklemore: Absolutely. And that’s what we watched people that came before us that have done it independently, whether it’s Sub Pop, or whether it’s… Mac Miller did it independently. And he had every major label hollering at him with huge seven figure offers and turned it down and still went number one on Billboard. There’s examples of it that came before us, that had us say ‘I think that it can work — I’m not sure that it can work.” But, at the end of the day, what’s most important, and creative control is number one for Ryan and I. It’s a no brainer.
Chris I’m sure you’ve been approached a million times at this point, but you still don’t want the infrastructure of a label?
Macklemore: Yeah, there’s no reason to do it. With the power of the internet and with the real personal relationship that you can have via social media with your fans… I mean everyone talks about MTV and the music industry, and how MTV doesn’t play videos any more — YouTube has obviously completely replaced that. It doesn’t matter that MTV doesn’t play videos. It matters that we have YouTube and that has been our greatest resource in terms of connecting, having our identity, creating a brand, showing the world who we are via YouTube. That has been our label. Labels will go in and spend a million dollar or hundreds of thousands of dollars and try to “brand” these artists and they have no idea how to do it. There’s no authenticity. They’re trying to follow a formula that’s dead. And Ryan and I, out of anything, that we’re good at making music, but we’re great at branding. We’re great at figuring out what our target audience is. How we’re going to reach them and how we’re going to do that in a way that’s real and true to who we are as people. Because that’s where the substance is. That’s where the people actually feel the real connection.
And labels don’t have that.
So you sign up for a label. There’s not some magic button they’re now going to push and it means that people are going to like who you are. Or that they’re identify with your vision or your songs. It actually comes from sitting down, staring at a piece of paper for months or years on end, trying to figure out who you are as a person, and hoping that it comes through in the end. But a label’s not going to do that for you.
Uh huh. Once again, it makes you wonder what people are thinking when they claim that YouTube is putting artists out of work.
The whole episode is worth listening to as Macklemore has a great perspective on all of this, and it’s interesting to hear him discuss the oddity of his sudden increase in fame and how he’s dealing with it, without letting it go to his head. But considering how often we’ve had similar discussions about artists who choose to go independent, I thought some would enjoy that particular snippet especially.
Filed Under: connect with fans, labels, macklemore, music, thrift shop, videos, youtube
Comments on “Macklemore Explains Why Not Being On A Label Helped Him Succeed”
They’re trying to follow a formula that’s dead.
Most obvious and yet most insightful statement ever. While they do have deep pockets to sustain this they’ll eventually fail. We’ll see the smarter labels acting as they should. As enablers.
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Or the legacy gatekeepers will cry bloody murder and demand some of the spotlight from Youtube. I could see them trying to have Youtube charge to upload a video (which of course they get some of the proceeds). Just like the newpapers vs Google News, or Britian’s MAFIAA vs DJs.
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Their plan seems to be hang on as long as they can until someone else figures out how to make money, and then buy them with whatever cash they have left.
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I suspect they will be trying to find the formula used by these artists and using that to take over youtube, maybe even hiding the fact that the artist is signed by a label for a while.
If you look at the way the music industry has worked over the years they have been restricting the release of music to push new “stars” and this with youtube will hopefully stop.
Chris Hardwick*
‘This video contains content from WMG…’
What’s with that?
Re: WMG
An interesting question. Macklemore’s records are distributed by AMA who are owned by WMG.
I’m not sure how that gives them rights to block his videos in various countries. Might be that WMG are overreaching (wouldn’t be the first time). Might be that Macklemore isn’t as independent as he makes out.
Re: Re: WMG
Nah, in terms of indie, Macklemore’s still independent.
Instead of signing with WMG, Macklemore hired ADA to help him and Ryan Lewis distribute The Heist/promote Thrift Shop on the radio waves. This is also (according to Ryan Lewis) a The Heist-only deal.
In other words, the record label (WMG’s subsidiary ADA) is doing what record labels should have been doing from the beginning: offering their services out to artists on a project by project basis, doing distribution and promotion for one album at a time.
Here’s why:
-the artist wouldn’t get locked into a contract that forced them into a deal with a record label 1)that takes a 93% cut of the profit, 2) be pressured by their labels to start churning out new albums and exhaust all their creativity on the earlier ones, and 3) take away the artist’s right to select the record label that will treat the artist better than the others.
It would also benefit the record labels, because they wouldn’t have to waste time and resources on artists they get in multi-album contracts who turn out to be nothing more than one-hit wonders, and can turn those resources toward promoting new artists or creating more productive ways to provide content……
Who am I kidding, the cash flow would probably go toward the exec’s salaries.
Re: Re: Re: WMG
So are you saying that Macklemore is the one investing into ADA and Warner Brothers for their services? If so, is this just a rumor or what source did you find that in? Do you know how much he invested into them or how much they invested into him?
Re: Re: WMG
He doesn’t says it in the way of distribiution but in the freedom of the artist on being a product. Labels design artist but he designed himself as an artist by who he is
This only works...
This approach only works for people named Macklemore.
Re: This only works...
Well that’s weird was listening to his album on the way home. Heard one song on a commercial and then saw him on SNL. Decide to buy his album, happy to hear that all is working out well for him
Here are some lyrics from his song title jimmy iovine
“I made past security, the secretary, the cubicles
But it?s weird, it?s like this room I?ve walked into is unusual
Thought it would be shiny and beautiful
Thought it would be alive and like musical
But it feels like someone died, it?s got the vibe of a funeral
There?s numbers on a chalkboard
CDs boxed in cardboard
Artists that flopped, that got dropped and never got to be sophomores
Graphic designers are sitting around
Waiting for albums that never come out
Complainin? that they have nobody in house
Wonderin? what they make art for
I start thinking, am I in the right place?
Just walk forward, see plaques on the wall
Oh yea, in a second those will be all yours
Finally see an office with a mounted sign, heaven sent
Big block silver letters, read it out loud: President (nice!)
This was my chance to grab that contract and turn and jet
Right then felt a cold hand grab on the back of my neck
He said: we?ve been watching you, so glad you could make it
Your music, it?s so impressive in this whole brand you created
You’re one hell of a band, we here think you?re destined for greatness
And with that right song we all know that you?re next to be famous
Now I?m sorry. I?ve had a long day remind me now what your name is?
That?s right, Macklemore, of course, today has been crazy
Anyway, you ready? We?ll give you a hundred thousand dollars.
After your album comes out we?ll need back that money that you borrowed (mm-hm)
? So it?s really like a loan.
? A loan? Come on, no!
We’re a team, 360 degrees, we will reach your goals!
You?ll get a third of the merch that you sell out on the road
Along with a third of the money you make when you?re out doing your shows
Manager gets 20, booking agent gets 10
So shit, after taxes you and Ryan have 7% to split
That?s not bad, I?ve seen a lot worse,
No one will give you a better offer than us (mm-hm)
I replied I appreciate the offer, thought that this is what I wanted
Rather be a starving artist than succeed at getting fucked “
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Did you just commit copyright infringement? Did you ask for permission to copy those lyrics and post them on the Internet? They’re copyrighted.
SOMEBODY CALL THE POLICE!!! HELP!!! HELP!!! PIRATE!!! PIRATE!!! PUT THIS MAN IN JAIL SO THEY CAN BE RAPED!!!
For justice’s sake.
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Does it count against one of my six strikes!
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One?
No… Each paragraph counts as one so… that’s 5 right there.
On second thought why stop there? 6 second snippets of videos count as infringement so that’s about every 10 words…
Needless to say your internet privileges have been revoked
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And just to be sure, we’ll forward your IP address to Malibu Media so they can sue you for pornography you may have downloaded. After all, John Steele’s gotta eat too you know!
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Can’t believe someone else beat me to posting this (that’s what I get for being a slacker on this kind of thing).
Anyway, Macklemore is the kind of artist that other aspiring artists should aspire to be, and not sell their souls to the RIAA.
That said, I’m a Seattle native born & raised so I’m kinda biased. God I feel hipster when I say this, but I was a fan of “Thrift Shop” and made a huge effort to go and buy physical version of The Heist album. [Found it for $12.99 at Fred Meyer’s.]
And I confess that I downloaded the “Thrift Shop” single without paying for it, but I deleted the single version as soon as I got bought the full album.
And it is by far the best album I’ve listened to in a long, long time.
And here I knew him more for this song first…
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hlVBg7_08n0
Anyone else notice the lack of ACs calling out Mike for never saying anything good about copyright or artists making money?
*Cricket*
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Surprising only because they usually switch to some crap about “this only works because he’s not already famous” or “this will never work for anyone else” or some variation thereof.
Don’t worry, they’ll conveniently ignore this story, as they ignore every other example, next time it’s more convenient to attack Mike rather than defend the despicable actions of their copyright obsessed peers.
“…totally independent artist…”
Well, here in Germany the video cannot be viewed, because Macklemore is probably a member of the GEMA (our super greedy collectors’ society) which still haven’t reached an agreement with Youtube. But then again, they are well known to often just CLAIM that an artist falls under their “protection” (birds’ twittering in the background of a video come to mind). Bastards. Thank you, GEMA, for basically killing Youtube in Germany. I often don’t even click the links any more, it’s so frustrating to always see this stupid message starting with “This video is not available in Germany…”
independent deals
Mackle Moore only has a deal to distribute his music into retail stores. It doesn’t manner how independent you are, you gotta sign a deal to manufacture and ship the cds to Walmart, target, etc.. That doesn’t give ownership to the label, only the right to sell and make profit per sale. For example Itunes make 30% off the sale of every album, so the label raises the cost to make up for that which is why most deluxe albums cost nearly $20 these days. Amazon has a lower fee at 17%.
Anti bullying
I am desperatly trying to get a hold of macklemore and or Ryan Lewis!
My daughter used parts of same love but rewrote
The words to suit a bullying situation at her school! It has become so popular that the
School wants to submit it to a national contest.
There is no monetary compensation.
Just helping a young girl build some self asteem
And possibly win a trophy for her efforts.
818 515 0069! We love ur music
Good for him! I predict that the Record labels will be out of business in 20 years. If you know how to market yourself online, you will make it in this profession as an independent. It really takes a lot of hard-work, passion and dedication in order to make it on youtube. It is a lot more then just uploading a video like many people think. If you don’t know what you are doing, you will not get people to watch your videos.
Good music
http://youtu.be/raCQhM8Gx0I
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