April 10, 2008 4:00 AM PDT

At EMI, could digital music kill the 'record' promo?

French singer Yelle is helping to usher out era of disc promos

(Credit: EMI Music)

Sweet faced and playful, French electro-pop star Yelle seems an unlikely figure to stick a dagger into the heart of a much-loved but quickly disappearing staple of the music industry.

She is unwittingly helping The EMI Group, one of the four largest music companies, to push CDs further into the shadows. Already a star in her own country and a growing nightclub favorite in the U.S., Yelle was being promoted until recently in this country exclusively through digital means.

For decades, music labels trying to break in an act pressed thousands of vinyl records or CDs to distribute to disc jockeys, record stores, journalists, and fans. Those types of promotions have grown too expensive in an era of shrinking music sales, says Jeff Rougvie, general manager of EMI's Caroline Records, who is leading Yelle's U.S. campaign.

"We're definitely spending less than on a traditional campaign," Rougvie said. "It doesn't make sense when you're going out the door to spend a lot of money putting out a physical product and taking in costs before you know what (the demand is)."

For an industry that has been decimated by digital technology, this is an example of how at least one of the four largest music labels is putting it to work.

Caroline Records specializes in introducing international music stars to U.S. audiences. Naturally, this means executives are often less sure of whether a foreign performer can find a niche audience here. Spending big on untested and unknown acts doesn't make sense. As part of the digital-only promotion, EMI didn't seek radio airplay for Yelle's music and didn't buy banner or print ads in traditional music magazines like Rolling Stone or Blender.

Instead, executives took to MySpace, music widgets, and powerful music blogs like Pitchfork. The label started digital and stayed digital until it reached a critical mass. On April 1, EMI finally released a CD version of Yelle's album, Pop Up.

The movement to phase out discs as promotional devices has been around for some time. Last year, EMI drastically scaled back the numbers of CDs it sent out as promos. Just a few years ago, the label may have sent out CDs as complete albums. Now it distributes secure online access where retailers or reviewers can hear songs.

Beyond the cost savings that digital music offers, Rougvie says there is growing need for an act to obtain a "groundswell of digital support" from music blogs, download stores, and MySpace to prove to a label that it can attract fans and is worthy of a larger investment. For that reason, focusing on digital at the beginning of a promotion makes sense.

EMI says it has already seen positive results.

Last year, the label brought Utada Hikaru, Japan's top recording artist, to the United States. EMI helped the singer find an audience in the U.S. without pressing any CDs initially. But the U.S. digital-only campaign was at best an effort to put otherwise hard-to-find product in front of her U.S. fans. Before digital music, those fans might wait months before an expensive import CD hit our shores.

Digital allows EMI to get product to niche audiences affordably as well as generate incremental income for the company. Hikaru would later go on to sell 7.2 million downloads worldwide.

Naturally, EMI is trying it again.

The label couldn't have asked for a better test case than Yelle. The 25-year-old from St. Brieuc, France, told CNET News.com on Wednesday that she grew up with the Internet and fully understands its power to promote and distribute music.

Yelle, pronounced Yeah-elle, was discovered by EMI's unit in France one week after she posted "Short Dick Cuizi," a song that took swipes at a member of a rival band. She renamed the song "Je veux te voir" and then released Pop Up, which features three songs, "Je veux te voir," "Parle a ma main," and "A cause des garcons" attracting big audiences at YouTube.

A version of "A cause des garcons" has been viewed 3.5 million times since August. Her songs have also been heard on such TV shows as "The Hills" and "Entourage."

While Yelle is a fan of digital music and technology, she says there is still a place for plastic.

"I don't know when my first EP on vinyl will come out," said Yelle, whose real name is Julie Budet. "I don't know whether it will come out. I think it's a bonus if it does. It's a plus. I think now you can download music, buy CDs, and that's what people really want. But I would be really proud if my album will be out in vinyl."

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 5 comments (Page 1 of 1)
evidently they didn't spend a lot on the video either
by grossph April 10, 2008 6:33 AM PDT
Sorry, but my nephew could have produced a more interesting video....and he is 3 :-)
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Welcome to the internet EMI!
by nkuk01 April 10, 2008 11:52 AM PDT
Where have you been for the last 8 years? Of course an infinite number of digital copies can be distributed for a fraction of the costs of pressing and shipping physical media. This would have been groundbreaking about 8 years ago when the market was crying out for legal digital music but I don't see how its even newsworthy now.
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It KIlled It Some Time Ago...And In The U.S. Eliot Spitzer Helped
by stephenmeyer April 10, 2008 10:58 PM PDT
Major labels have been using digital distribution of new singles to radio for a few years here in the U.S. They send the music over air via satellite or online direct to radio. And obvioulsy, it's cut back on the need to press thousands of "promo" CD copies. It should also be noted that NY Governor (then state Atty General) Eliot Spitzer's radio-record new payola investigations that started two years ago and resulted in much tighter controls between what labels and radio can and cannot do, diminished labels giving "promo" copies of CDs to radio in any significant quantity. Sure, stations still get multiple promos for their libraries, program and/or music directors, but the boxes of freebies labels used to give away on the air are insignificant now since stations don't want to be under the FCC microscope of taking anything that might influence airplay. ------------- Steve Meyer President/CEO - Smart Marketing Consulting Services Publisher - DISC&DAT - A New Media Newsletter For The Music Industry Available at: www.freewebs.com/stevemeyer Editor, Digital Technology: www.allaccess.com Las Vegas, NV E-mail: stephennmeyer@earthlink.net
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