Encyclopedia > Recording industry

  Article Content

Record industry

Redirected from Recording industry

The record industry (or recording industry) is the industry that manufactures and distributes mechanical recordings of music.

In the early years of the phonograph in the late 19th century, the music industry was dominated by the publishers of sheet music. With the start of the 20th century the importance of recorded sound grew in the business, and about the end of the first World War records supplanted sheet music as the largest player in the music business. The business has largely been dominated and controlled by the record industry, as the economics of mass-production of copies allow the manufacture of valuable music recordings for a tiny fraction of their sale price. There have been repeated allegations of illegal price fixing by the record industry.

The Recording Artists' Coalition exists to represent the interests of members of the music industry, in their fight against what they see as inequitable treatment by the record industry.

There is a fundamental tension between the two industries -- they have been in an uneasy symbiotic / parasitic relationship since this time, which is threatened by the advent of file sharing technologies.

Critics of the record industry have compared it to the buggy whip industry, fighting the disruptive technology of file sharing by all possible means.

See also: Record label

Record industry organizations:

External links:



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
BBC News 24

... broadcast in November 1997 and at first only cable television subscribers could view it. In 1999, with the advent of digital television in the UK, satellite viewers wer ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 36.3 ms