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Bands 'Urged To Cut Album Tracks'



Bands 'urged to cut album tracks'
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/3280429.stm 
 
Record labels are urging artists to put fewer tracks on albums because fans
are put off by too many average songs, the Los Angeles Times has reported. 
"There's been a tendency to overload CDs because the technology permits it,"
Sony US president Don Ienner said. 

CD sales are competing with websites that give fans songs cheaply or free. 

On Monday, Microsoft unveiled its online music service plans while free site
Kazaa launched a campaign to fight the music industry's anti-piracy drive. 

Record labels are urging the clampdown on album tracks as a way of reversing
a three-year-long slump in album sales. 

"The final choice will always be the artist's, but I feel - and consumer
research bears it out - that the public thinks albums have too much filler,"
Mr Ienner told the paper. 

"We all should be concerned about giving music buyers good value, whether
they're getting eight, 10 or 20 songs." 
 
Digital technology mean CDs can fit twice as much music - 80 minutes - as
vinyl albums.. 

The LA Times said changes would mean a "shake-up" in the music industry,
which was structured around albums of up to 16 tracks selling for $12
(#7.50). 

The article compared Bruce Springsteen's 1975 album Born to Run - which had
only eight tracks - against the recent chart-topping album Speakerboxxx/The
Love Below, which had 34 songs. 

Some record company executives are now saying album albums should have 10 or
fewer songs, the paper reported. 

Meanwhile, Microsoft unveiled plans to launch a downloadable music service
to rival legal online music sources such as Apple's iTunes and Napster, the
Wall Street Journal reported on Monday. 

Analysts said the company's Windows operating system - installed on millions
of PCs - could give it an advantage. 

The service could also be adapted to run through Microsoft's Windows Media
player, which allows people to play music and video files, which is loaded
on many computers. 

The service will be run through Microsoft's MSN website, but further details
were not provided. 

And free file-sharing network Kazaa launched a campaign urging its 60
million users to help it "fight back" against efforts to stop "piracy" on
popular networks. 

Kazaa, which allows people to swap songs through their computers, has been
one of the services accused of letting fans make unauthorised copies of
songs. 

Nikki Hemming, chief executive of Sharman Networks, which owns Kazaa, said:
"It's a call to action. We want to pump up the volume." 

The $1m (#640,000) campaign, which features on the internet and in
magazines, includes an ad that argues music executives are "missing the
opportunity to capture an enormous market". 

"The world of entertainment is changing," it said.
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- SCHRADE in Akron