Tag: royalty free music

A Brief History of Library Music

The evolution of the music library business has been driven by technological change, notably the digital revolution. Pre-1980 Production library music was born in 1927 with the British company De Wolfe, under the name “pre-recorded music.” It was first available on wax cylinders, and then tapes and LPs. De Wolfe’s eventual competitors came mostly from…


Music Maker

Music Maker We are the music makers, And we are the dreamers of dreams – O’Shaughnessy, Elgar When I was young I burned with desire to make things with my hands. I wanted my father to teach me to hammer and saw but he showed me his big hands and said, “All I can do…


Vanishing Bandwidth for Music

Being born in 1950, my teenage years coincided with the 1960’s.  Music was without question the dominant art form in my life. Rock concerts were the most exciting events. When my father took me to hear Martin Luther King speak at Wesleyan in 1963, I was blown away by his thundering voice, but even more…


What is a Music Library?

Music libraries, more accurately described as production music libraries, supply music for productions. Why do you need one? Can’t you just use whatever might sound good from your CD/iTunes collection? No….


Convergence

A frank discussion of the blurring line between “License” and “Royalty Free” production music. Twenty years ago, all music libraries were “License” – i.e., they only offered music on a Needledrop (or per-use) basis, or by Annual Blanket. Around 1990 “Buyout” or “Royalty Free Music” libraries appeared.  This was before the internet allowed for individual…


Introduction

In a couple of weeks my production music library, Manchester Music, will be launching a new website, designed and developed by the fine folks at Ascend Marketing.  They advised me that starting a blog to publicize it was de rigueur. So here I am, and here’s the pitch: Customers will be able to search and browse our catalog…


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