juststartingout said:
No I am not saying that it is not worth while.
I am saying that if you don't sell the music, you can't afford to make more. If you can't afford to make more, it will die. It may be fun to play and worthwhile, but it will be dead nevertheless.
Just because music doesn't sell enough to get on big radio stations doesn't mean its dead. Again, none of the bands over here get radio airplay. I have never heard Lamb of God on the radio over here (let me know if you want me to drop anymore 'unradioed' names), but they have a pretty big fan base.
Metal fans hear the music through other mediums than radio. Half the bands I listen to I first saw supporting another band I watched. usually a band I heard on a website or on a CD in a magazine.
We metallers know our music doesn't fit on the radio. So we look for it elsewhere. Radio is not the be all and end all of whether a band is having any success. And success is raltive. Before Machine Head (another band I have never heard on UK radio) recorded 'Through the Ashes of Empires', they were pennyless with no record deal.
To a lot of us, success is being able to play a few live shows and getting a good feeling off of the audience.
Metal is different to other types of music. It doesn't sell based on trends. It doesn't sell on image (at least not to its core fan base). It sell on one thing and one thing alone. The people buying it like the music. You don't need radio for that.
A lot of other music has to be marketed, has to be played on the radio, and to some extent the people listening it have to be told to like it. You know why? Because it sucks.
People think for music to be classified as good, it has to have been packaged and sold. Thats total bullshit. A friend of mine plays piano, he just tinkers away, and I love listening. He likes listening to me play guitar. To us both thats worth more than record sales.
Good music does not need radio airplay or a dollar figure attached to it.
I have been writing my own music since I was 14...for 12 years now. I have never made a damn penny out of it. Does that mean my music is dead? Does that mean I should give up? Cos I enjoy it, and therfore its very much alive to me.
In fact, I would be inclined to say that if it wasn't for the life metal gave me, I may well be half dead by now. Because it's my reason for exsisting, and there aren't a lot of other reasons a lot of the time....
2 memorable gigs...Metallica a few months ago, Machine Head a few years ago. Both put a lump in my throat. Why? Because I grew up listening to that shit, and to see it there in front of me, larger than life, belting out the tunes that molded me. It got me right here *puts hand to heart*. That shit means something to me. And I defy anyone to call anything that can do that "dead".