Vanessaâs test
Vanessa Jourdan used up her lunch hour June 20 to race down to Best Buy at the Metro Pointe at South Coast shopping center to check for a new CD on the rack. She didnât intend to purchase the album, but when she found it, she examined the front and back cover intently and snapped one picture after another on her cellphone.
The CD, âEternal Things,â was Jourdanâs third album â and she had taken advantage of RegionalCD, a program that permits independent artists to submit their work to be sold at Best Buy. Jourdan, a member of Rock Harbor Church in Costa Mesa, didnât expect to make much money off record store sales; most of her minimal earnings come from people who buy her songs online. Still, she couldnât help but feel giddy seeing her work on the rack between Janis Joplin and Journey.
âItâs something I never imagined would happen,â said Jourdan, 32, a Texas native who has been pursuing a music career for a decade. âReality is never what you expect. But this is something I will tell my grandkids about. Grandma had a CD in Best Buy.â
Like many independent musicians, Jourdan has no agent, contract or connections in the major-label world; she works during the week as an administrator in an autism therapy program in Irvine. That hasnât stopped her, though, from putting her work on the shelf with the Kanye Wests and U2s of the industry. With a number of websites making artistsâ music instantly available throughout the world and even Best Buy stocking independent discs on the shelf, doing it yourself has become easier than ever in pop music.
Getting rich, of course, is another matter. The consensus among many observers and experts is that the music industry is in a steady decline as CD sales drop and illegal file-sharing on the Web proliferates. Rolling Stone published a two-part series last summer on the marketâs financial woes, even quoting an anonymous industry source who declared, âThere wonât be any major labels pretty soon.â
Geoff Mayfield, a senior analyst for Billboard magazine, considers that idea absurd. CD sales, he said, still count for more than 80% of the music sold every week, and downloaded tracks play the same role 45s did a generation ago: namely, singles, which may entice listeners to purchase entire albums later. And while Mayfield agrees the digital era provides independent artists with more opportunities than ever, he doesnât foresee the giants disappearing any time soon.
âKids discover music on the Internet now the way I used to discover it going to a music store,â he said. âSo, in that way, it helps fledgling artists a lot. But even though the mass audience has unlimited choices, they only get exposed to so much.â
Still, for a fledgling artist, exposure is no longer a matter of playing one gig after another, stacking CDs in the car trunk and trying to lure fans to the local indie store. In the 1990s, Napster and other websites began offering songs online for free, and Apple introduced iTunes â considered the dominant industry downloading site â in 2001. CD Baby, which launched in 1997 to market work by independent artists, began distributing music digitally in 2004; according to the companyâs website, it has sold 4.4 million CDs and paid $79 million to artists to date.
And even with consumers downloading more music every year â according to the statistical firm Nielsen SoundScan, digital track sales leaped from 581.9 million in 2006 to 844.2 million in 2007 â niche markets continue to thrive. The Japanese Motors, a Costa Mesa-based surf-rock band, recently released their first track on a vinyl single. The band plans to release its first album on vinyl as well â and package it with a coupon to download the songs for free.
âIt all depends on the customer, the consumer,â said Mary Begley, the manager of New York-based Righteous Babe Records, which independent singer-songwriter Ani DiFranco founded in the 1990s. âIâve met people who donât buy CDs at all, and I know people who donât download at all. I think the landscape is shifting, and itâs just trying to figure out the ratio.â
For Jourdan, getting an album made is a personal passion â and one sheâs thrown herself into three times, even at the expense of a steady income.
The singer-songwriter, who grew up in Riverside and recently moved to Huntington Beach, recorded her first album, 2001âs âGive Me a Stage,â with a friend who ran a makeshift recording studio in the backroom of a sewing shop. (The albumâs liner notes thank the two women who ran the business.) Three years later, she followed it with âWanderlust,â most of which was recorded in the back of a warehouse.
Both times, Jourdan and her producer, Paul Antony, played nearly all the instruments themselves â in part because they were proficient, and in part to save money on backing musicians. Jourdan overdubs most of her own harmonies on the records, sometimes laying her voice down three or more times.
During the two years she worked on âEternal Things,â Jourdan didnât have a full-time job, barely eking out a living as a restaurant hostess and high school substitute teacher. She finished the album early in 2007, but didnât have enough money to have it duplicated. Eventually, she scored a job at the Kids Institute for Development & Advancement and mailed copies of the CD to those who had pre-ordered them, attaching a note with each one thanking her fans for their patience.
Since then, Jourdan said, some of her most fulfilling moments have come from looking her albums up online and seeing where theyâve landed. Many downloading websites are affiliated with others, and Jourdanâs songs have ended up on CD Universe, Music is Here, MusicStack and other sites she didnât even know existed.
Best of all, that wide distribution can turn into sales â even if some of the sites keep a large amount of the proceeds for each track.
âSome of the numbers Iâve seen are just a fraction of a number,â Jourdan said about her payments. âBut it means people are listening to it.â
SPECIAL ONLINE PACKAGE
To chack out the Daily Pilotâs six-part series on the Newport-Mesa music scene, click here.
THE ETERNAL JOURNEY OF âETERNAL THINGSâ
Late last year, Vanessa Jourdan released her long-awaited third album, âEternal Things,â after two and a half years of songwriting, recording and fundraising. Hereâs the path she took from laying down the first track to landing the album at Best Buy:
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June 2005: Jourdan begins recording four tracks with her friend Tom Harris, who attends the University of Redlands. Most of the recording is done on university equipment, with additional mixing in Harrisâ dorm room and a professorâs home.
April 2006: Jourdan brings eight more songs to Paul Antony, a friend who produced her first album. The two begin recording and mixing in Antonyâs old bedroom in his parentsâ home, which heâs since converted into a studio.
March 2007: Harris finishes mixing on the first four songs.
August 2007: Jourdan shoots CD artwork at a photo studio in Santa Ana, meets with a designer in Huntington Beach to create CD artwork, and holds a fundraising show in Riverside where patrons pay $15 admission and are put on a mailing list to receive the album once itâs finished.
November 2007: Jourdan and Antony complete the final eight tracks; Jourdan submits all 12 songs and artwork to DiscMakers in Los Angeles, with an order for 1,000 copies.
December 2007: Four days before Christmas, the package from DiscMakers lands on Jourdanâs doorstep. She mails copies of the CD to everyone who bought one in advance.
January 2008: Jourdan submits the album to CD Baby and iTunes.
February 2008: Jourdan submits the album to the Regional CD program, which delivers it to Best Buy stores in select parts of California.
MUSIC SERVICES FOR INDEPENDENT MUSICIANS
iTUNES
WHAT IT IS: The worldâs top music-sharing site
WHAT YOU SUBMIT: Digital music files and an online application form
WHAT YOU GET: Your work on the same site with Bob Dylan, the Rolling Stones and Madonna
COST: Free
WEBSITE: www.apple.com/itunes
â
CD BABY
WHAT IT IS: A website that sells CDs and MP3s by independent artists
WHAT YOU SUBMIT: A submission form describing who you are and how you want your music classified on the website, and five CDs
WHAT YOU GET: Your own page on CD Baby with reviews, links, audio clips and more; payments every Monday night, with CD Baby keeping $4 from every CD and 9% from every MP3 download
COST: A one-time $35 set-up fee
WEBSITE: cdbaby.com
â
REGIONAL CD
WHAT IT IS: A service that stocks your CD in Best Buy stores
WHAT YOU SUBMIT: Application forms indicating what stores you want to carry your CD, plus three copies of the album
WHAT YOU GET: If your CD is accepted through the review process, youâll get your album in Best Buy within two months. For every copy sold by the store, youâll receive $5.15 for a full-length CD and $3.65 for an EP
COST: $250 set-up fee for the first CD, $100 for each subsequent one
WEBSITE: www.regionalcd.net
â
MYSPACE
WHAT IT IS: The social networking site beloved by teenagers, politicians, rock musicians and just about everyone else
WHAT YOU SUBMIT: Song clips, videos, photos, text, graphic art, etc.
WHAT YOU GET: Countless dollars saved that you might have spent mailing press kits around the world
COST: Free
WEBSITE: www.myspace.com
MICHAEL MILLER may be reached at (714) 966-4617 or at [email protected].
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