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Create, Produce, Consume: New Models for Understanding Music Business

Create, Produce, Consume: New Models for Understanding Music Business

Current price: $29.95
Publication Date: October 8th, 2019
Publisher:
University of California Press
ISBN:
9780520303515
Pages:
424

Description

Create, Produce, Consume explores the cycle of musical experience for musicians, professionals, and budding entrepreneurs looking to break into the music industry. Building on the concepts of his previous book, Making Money, Making Music, David Bruenger provides readers with a basic framework for understanding the relationships between the artist and audience and the producer consumer by examining the methods underlying creation-production-reception and creation-consumption-compensation. Each chapter offers a different perspective on the processes and structures that lead listeners to discover, experience, and interact with music and musical artists. Through case studies ranging from Taylor Swift’s refusal to allow her music to be streamed on Spotify to the rise of artists supported through sites like Patreon, Bruenger offers highly relevant real-world examples of industry practices that shape our encounters with music. Create, Produce, Consume is a critical tool for giving readers the agile knowledge necessary to adapt to a rapidly changing music industry. Graphs, tables, lists for additional reading, and questions for further discussion illustrate key concepts.
 
Online resources for instructors and students will include sample syllabi, lists for expanded reading, and more.

About the Author

David Bruenger is the founding director of the Music, Media, and Enterprise Program at The Ohio State University. He is the author of Making Money, Making Music: History and Core Concepts.

Praise for Create, Produce, Consume: New Models for Understanding Music Business

"The music industry has changed dramatically in the past two decades. Bruenger . . . has written another very useful book for those seeking a framework for understanding those changes. . . . The underlying theme of the book is that music is not just about making and spending money but also about experiences that can change people's lives."
— CHOICE