In the
article “Why the Music Industry Hates Guitar Hero”, writer Jeff Howe makes
clear that if business men want to spend all their time dealing with the worry
of how much money they are going to make off of certain artists and their songs
from video games such as Guitar Hero, then money is more than likely going to
be lost. If big time record label CEO’s like Warner Music Group CEO Edgar
Bronfman keep attempting to deny video games of releasing songs, it is only
going to hurt the record label in the end. By giving more songs and artists to
these games which produce mass amounts of money per year, then more money would
be generated towards that record label in the end. It shouldn’t matter what the
overall amount the video game makes, considering it is enormously larger in
profit than album sales. Album sales have fallen due to pirating and other
cheap sources to buy albums; and having songs from a certain label on these
games just further help generate more money back to the label company. By boycotting
certain artists or games would be foolish on both ends. The more songs label
companies release, the more money they are likely to make due to the rise in
video game purchasing. Whereas if the label decides not to release any
artists/songs to video games then they are relying strictly upon album sales;
which has drastically went down.
I agree
with Jeff Howe, that the record label companies should continue to release
songs to the video game companies as long as the demand for the games is so
high. It would be a win-win-win situation for all people. The record labels
will profit over the game, the game will do well because of the mass selection
of songs; and the consumer will be happy that they have such a selection and
not limited to what they could play or purchase.
I am going to edit this for sure!
ReplyDeleteI am going to edit this for sure!
ReplyDeleteGreat start. Be sure not to summarize his argument, but instead to evaluate it. Not his ideas on the topic so much as how he presents them...
ReplyDelete