Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon Join our Email Newsletter
Compassion International

Sunday Edition


01
Mar
2005
Educate Gospel Thieves


Add this entry to Your Favorites | [0] Favorites [76] Comments

image

Music theft. Did you think it wouldn't hit Southern Gospel? If you did - you were dead wrong, friend. "File Sharing" has become an enormous problem in all music markets. In Southern Gospel, music is being stolen - illegally downloaded from the Internet - every hour of every day. Every Tuesday morning I watch the sales sheets coming in, and I am amazed at the continuos drop in units sold by top Southern Gospel artist. Artist that use to sell 30 to 40,000 units per project, are lucky to move 9,000 a year.

Gritting my teeth, I set out to prove what many say has "not yet become a problem" in Southern Gospel music. I allowed a song, I had written and owned to be added to three well known file sharing websites. Anyone can sign up for free and download music, illegally, for nothing. Nothing. Within 24 hours over 400 people had downloaded the song. With just one song, that's nearly $6,000.00 in lost revenues for the record companies, distributors, writers and publishers.

Not a problem in Southern Gospel? I beg to differ. It's stealing. It's unfair-and it's happening everyday. Statistics show that 5 out of 10 consumers own or have burned at least one CD in their collection that they did not purchase.

Morally speaking, I'm not sure I understand why the downloaders don't just get a bag, run down to the local Walmart, pick up a CD, slide it under their coat and hit the door. Folks, stealing is stealing. Sure, Southern Gospel music is hard to find in retail outlets. But, what exactly makes illegal file sharing different to these people from shoplifting?

Why it's easy to "share files":

YOU ARE IN THE SAFETY OF YOUR OWN HOME
NO SECURITY CAMERAS ARE WATCHING
YOU CAN SAVE YOURSELF 14 DOLLARS
YOU WILL NOT BE STOPPED AT THE DOOR AND ARRESTED

Why it's WRONG to share files:
YOU ARE ROBBING ARTIST'S, LABEL'S AND WRITER'S OF MILLION'S OF DOLLAR'S
YOU ARE BEING WATCHED BY THE LAW
YOU CAN BE ARRESTED FOR STEALING MUSIC ON LINE
YOU MAY NOT HAVE SECURITY CAMERAS WATCHING - BUT, GOD IS

I took my search a little further. I searched some of the online hosts of these sites. Some of these folks had downloaded my song. While searching their shared files, I crossed Gaither Vocal Band, Happy Goodmans, Hinsons, Gold City and many other artist they were currently sharing.

The following are estimated numbers of stolen music files in a 7 day period

GAITHER VOCAL BAND- SHARED 8,654 FILES
HINSONS-SHARED 4,598 FILES
GOLD CITY- SHARED 3,457 FILES
PERRYS- SHARED 1,877 FILES
CATHEDRALS-SHARED 4,555 FILES

Even more alarming is the file sharing of our current top hit songs. Below, are the Top 5 songs in the National Charts for March 2005. Next to the title, you will find the estimated times the songs were stolen and shared on-line by users of these 3 sites.

Top 5 Songs in the Nation

1. "I GOT HERE AS FAST AS I COULD" - MARK BISHOP- USERS SHARED 1685 TIMES
2. "COME AWAY" - KEVIN SPENCER - USERS SHARED 959 TIMES
3. "FACES" - GREATER VISION - USERS SHARED 655 TIMES
4. "YOU'LL NEVER RUN OUT OF THE BLOOD" - HEIRLINE SHARED 1644 TIMES
5. "IT LOOKS LIKE LOVE TO ME" - CROSSWAY- SHARED 306 TIMES

There is a flip side to all this, of course. From the consumer standpoint, Southern Gospel may have become perfectly ripe for what is called by many "justifiable theft." Radio stations are lost every day to corporate takeovers and poor revenue related format changes. Record companies are releasing new music at an unbelievable pace while retail shelf space is still, primarily, given to Contemporary and Black Gospel artists. Demand increases while supply or, at least, local retail supply -- dwindles. The Internet puts the hard-to-find Southern Gospel smack in the lap of the consumer - for free.

There is also a "doomsayers" contingent, both in our corner of the music industry and across the board, that suggests we are heading for a black out and total shut down of Southern Gospel music. I strongly disagree. We are not going away. But, my question is where are we going? Labels are already cutting projects back to 10 songs, dropping artist, and cutting retail prices by 15%. Artist are being charged unreasonable recoupments by their labels, not getting paid royalties on time, suffering a shortage of concerts and losing shelf space.

If the labels are going to charge artists unreasonable recoupments, and wash any profits under the table, then PROTECT your product. Labels, are less concerned in gospel, because their money has already been made.

But, can't we think past the recoupment stage? Can we think beyond reaching the industry standard? Can we look past selling 9,000 units because that's what the average artist is moving? The industry is dropping it's standard, cutting the consumers out of more music, cheating the artists, publishers, and writers out of their money. If the labels and owners are going to bark about every issue and going to spend big money to showcase their clients with ads and lavish projects, then start protecting your product.

Lobby and educate consumers about the file sharing. Go on these sites and demand users and hosts to stop using your products, hire a lawyer to certify letters to the file sharing companies. And for the consumers, stop stealing people's music. Every time you rip a copy of someone's CD's to give to someone else, you could just as well have stuck your hand in their cash box and grabbed you a $20.00 bill. You my friend, just took $15.00.

The artists pick the songs, sing the songs, pay the musicians, fight for their creative control, spend endless months recording, radio tours, photo shoots, single releases, leave their families, fight the politics of the industry, suffer concert disappointments, bad checks from promoters and churches, rising fuel costs, travel thousands of miles, sleep sometimes 3 hours a night, set up and sing, stand on their feet 10 hours a night, pray endless for their ministry. Then here comes Aunt Mable to stand at their tape table and decide which CD's you will buy and burn for each other. Stop stealing!! I hope Southern Gospel consumers, labels, and artists will help educate the public.

I would love to know everyone's take on this.

Do consumers have the right to download Southern Gospel music?
Do you feel it's stealing, if the consumer can't find it anywhere else?

Rick Hendrix
http://www.rickhendrix.com

Reader Comments

Great Article.....I agree with you. Look forward to our work together.


Commented by Justin Endicott On 03/04/2005
I'm amazed that anyone in Southern Gospel would ever think that file sharing would not be a problem in this music genre. The two groups of people who think most that music should be free are the youth and Christians from small, conservative, southern churches. I've been wrestling with members of my church on this issue for 25 years.

Back in 1980, it was photocopying sheet music. Then it progressed to copying cassette tapes. Every Christian I knew had more Christian music that was illegally copied than was purchased honestly. One of the biggest collections of Southern Gospel music I ever saw in one spot was a rack of bootlegged cassette tapes at Court Days in Mount Sterling, KY. (There was a big police raid there a few years ago!). The only difference today is that the technology is better and easier. And once the computer got cheap enough for the less-weathy to purchase, it was "Katey bar the door!"

The rationale of some is that "the record companies are making lots of money and I am not hurting anyone." Some also believe that the gospel should always be free. But I heard Joyce Meyer say that the reason she sells her books is that the more people invest in something, the more they will appreciate it and get the intended blessing. Jesus says that we should not cast our pearls before those who will not appreciate it (the swine). The scriptures are full of admonishments to give: give and it shall be given you, the labor is worthy of his hire, the wages of him that is hired shall not abide with thee all night until the morning. It is our duty as Christians to give to those who provide things we want or need the full value of that service. It is my opinion that the true sign of whether someone has truly received Christ is this very thing. After all, Jesus did say that where your treasure is, that is where your heart is also.


Commented by Keith Prater On 03/05/2005
Great article Rick. Thanks for laying the truth on the line and not being afraid to speak the truth. It hurts all of us when one person at a church buys a CD or the pastor hints for one free and then copies an endless number for his "people" because that now is "his" or "hers". For singers, songwriters or anyone else in the ministry these actions cut into expense money needed for maintaining travel and other expenses and the opportunity to record new projects.


Commented by Boyd Raper On 03/05/2005
I think you are right. Stealing is wrong. People need to wake up. I have seen this for years in my church.Way to go Rick. I figure folks will be scared to comment on this one, cause most have done it or are doing it. LOL

DE


Commented by On 03/06/2005
We'll they have never stopped recording from radio stations. I seriously doubt anyone will stop them from downloading. People have always thought the music should be free. But, you are correct.Its stealing. Just because you can see a mans cow from the road, doesnt mean the milks yours.

Jerry Watkins


Commented by On 03/06/2005
You are right, of course. But I have been amazed that no one has come up with the idea of allowing legal downloads. Why can't a label sell a song for 99 cents like iTunes or Napster from it's web site? A group could do the same. You typically can't find much SG on these sites, leaving no alternative but illegal downloading or being forced to pay $15 to obtain the one song you might want on a whole project. Neither of these is very appealing.

I think most people would pay the 99 cents, but personally don't buy many southern gospel CDs any more because I'm tired of paying $15 for a CD with one or two good songs and the rest plain junk.

I would probably buy each song in the top 40 if I could do it without having to buy 40 CDs.


Commented by On 03/07/2005
What a great article. Thanks for having the courage to tell it like it is. Although I have never downloaded any songs from file sharing sites, I must admit that I have recorded specific songs from the radio in the past to avoid buying the CD. I'm ashamed to admit that it is all the same thing; stealing.

I live in the West and we love it when the top Southern Gospel groups make the expensive trip out here. As they lose a portion of their income stream, I suspect they will be forced to stay closer to home. We all lose.

Let's all get the word out: downloading songs for free from a file sharing site is stealing!

STOP SONG THEFT!


Commented by On 03/07/2005
I am guilty of the same thing. I have recorded from radio stations. I have printed off sheet music at church. I never really thought about it. I am glad you pointed this out. I appreciate your article. I will pass it on to my church. I never looked at it this way. I agree with Ken Hurley STOP STEALING!!!!!!!!!!


Commented by On 03/08/2005
Those of you who are beating yourself up for copying from radio, you can rest a little easier. It is not illegal to record from the radio, though it may be morally wrong.


Commented by Keith Prater On 03/08/2005
Hi, Rick, I really enjoyed your articles. This is good stuff. So, TRUE.

Lara


Commented by On 03/08/2005
Page 1 of 8 Comment Pages  1 2 3 >  Last »

Add Comments

If you are seeing this form you are not a Member or have not logged in. Why not consider becoming a Member?

Membership allows you to have a prepared signature of your choice applied to every comment you make, as well as the ability to choose an avatar to display next to your name to help identify your posts. Members are also given opportunity to vote weekly in our Weekly Chart as well as special Members Only contests, polls and giveaways during the year. If you are already a member, login here, otherwise please register here.

**Note: Forums membership is a seperate membership.

By posting you agree to our Comments Policy

Name:
Email:
Location:
URL:
Comment:
Remember my personal information
Notify me of follow-up comments?
Please enter the word you see in the image below: