Minotaur029 wrote:Is there an example of a major label treating a band fairly? Ever? And how do these people survive after getting completely fucked over financially?
Actually I was almost tempted to start a new thread based on this. Major Labels that were decent, or artists who had survived in Major Labels, etc. I can think of a few.
The Flaming Lips - Warner Brothers (how this worked I'll never know. I think in a Priest Driven Ambulance and Hit to Death in the Future Head are fine albums, but let's be honest, they weren't big sellers in the major label sense of the word - I'm surprised they weren't dropped, but they've gone on to be a moderate success, have they not? Though they don't rock anymore.)
PJ Harvey - Island Records
Sonic Youth - DGC (this was a long and fruitful relationship for them)
Mercury Rev - Columbia / V2 Sony (though they started out on Mint, all of their albums were released by a major label at one point or another.)
Gang of Four - EMI/WarnerBrothers/V2 Sony (it's always surprised me/seemed ironic that everything Gang of Four has ever done has always been released on a major label)
...now, these are just off the top of my head, and I can't really say if the band is being treated fairly or not, for all I know WB might keep the Flaming Lips locked up in chains and feed them only bread and water between letting them out for public events. However, these are just bands that I can think of that have had long successful/semi-successful careers with major labels.
The question is: Did these bands/artists receive preferential treatments or contracts that made working with the major label easier? Or were they just the lucky ones that swam through the shark infested waters?
I do think since the whole "alternative boom" that the ratio of major label murders of independent bands has gone up exponentially, it was a feeding frenzy there for a while. In fact the whole contract slaying phenomenon really seems to have started rolling since the mid to late 80's. I mean, it always existed, and was bad in the 50's and 60's, but it then seems to have gone into a recess only to come back witha vengeance recently.