jim griffin hired by warners, the ‘feels free’ era inches ever closer


But will the punk and indie bands get their fair share? No Age at SXSW – photo © Nilina Mason Campbell

I’ve often remarked that the best way to get money back into the hands of musicians would be through a “feels free” program. For instance, you purchase an iPod, it comes loaded with 2gbs of MP3 files and you pay an incremental amount more than you would if it were empty. Another way would be through your current Internet Service Provider or ISP. Jim Griffin has been championing this kind of thinking since he founded the email listserv, Pho back in the day. Now Jim, who has long been a critic of the way the music business has handled itself in regard to dealing with music file sharing, has been hired by the Warner Music Group. Portfolio Magazine reports – “WMG has tapped industry veteran Jim Griffin to spearhead a controversial plan to bundle a monthly fee into consumers’ internet-service bills for unlimited access to music.” It goes on – “The plan—the boldest move yet to keep the wounded entertainment industry giants afloat—is simple: Consumers will pay a monthly fee, bundled into an internet-service bill in exchange for unfettered access to a database of all known music.”
Critics of Griffin’s plan are immediately calling any fee added to an ISP bill as a “culture tax,” but really it is a service charge added to a bundle – I already pay Comcast for my Cable TV and Internet service and just recently I paid extra to add a HD package that allows me to watch HD programs on cable. Why wouldn’t I want to pay $5 extra a month for free access to all of WMG’s music files? It would soon become “feels free” to me. However this plays out I believe Jim is the right guy to be pushing this particular rock up the hill and the record labels have nothing to lose. As I wrote here recently the fate of a music company or of one that sells music is often in the hands of people without a music background. Hiring people who understand people’s emotional attachment to music and why people are willing to risk punishment for illegally downloading music files is a step in the right direction.

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