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LYOR COHEN ON MUSIC'S FUTURE




The New Music Seminar's Panel "Crystal Ball Movement: Music Business Visionaries Predict the Future" ( From left): Tyler Gray, Editorial Director, Fast Company; John Sykes, President, Clear Channel Entertainment; NMS Founder/Executive Director, Tom Silverman; Lyor Cohen, CEO of Recorded Music, Warner Music Group; and Michael Green, Founder, The Collective.

What will the music business look like 10 years from now? This broad question, posed to one of the lead opening panels for New York's 2012 New Music Seminar, served as a segue for Warner Music Group's CEO Lyor Cohen to soapbox on the prevalent disparity in attitudes in the music industry towards artist development and camaraderie.

"For me to predict what it's going to be like in 10 years is silly," said Cohen. "I hate when A&R guys tell me rock is dead. They sound like day traders. I'm focused on being open for innovation and rewarding people for making mistakes. You can't move without making mistakes. Long term artist development is the current commitment trend that will yield for the future. We don't feel desperate."

On embracing innovation, Lyor touted that he is the only music executive to have visited the Spotify offices in Sweden. "We should be fully embracing and engaging in what these new companies are doing. In Sweden the people have been living in a growing music economy because of Spotify," he says.

The panel, iHeartRadio Presents: "The New Music Seminar Crystal Ball Movement: Music Business Visionaries Predict the Future," was conducted by Taylor Gray of Fast Company and also featured John Sykes of Clear Channel Entertainment and Michael Green of The Collective.

Green, who serves as The Collective's CEO, helped further Cohen's point by illustrating the problem faced by the industry in the ever-growing world of democratized distribution.

Lyor Cohen T.I., Warner Music Group Chairman/CEO, Lyor Cohen and Jay-Z attend the Audi's TDI Clean Diesel Technology dinner at the Audi Forum on May 12, 2009 in New York City.  (Photo by Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images for Audi of Amer) *** Local Caption *** T.I.;Lyor Cohen;Jay-Z
"What's really changed is that everything is open, and there are no gatekeepers," Green explained. "Social and digital companies that weren't here 5 minutes ago are getting huge valuations and seem poised to take over everything. Previously, if you wanted to get distribution you had to go through a label, but now audiences can be built by the artists. What we need to figure out is how to begin to better filter out the talent from the non talent... and how to create partnerships, which really is the 21st century style of management because [artists] are the ones coming in with the audiences. We help make the deals that will grow those audiences with radio and bring them to the store."
In this emerging economy of friends, subscribers and followers, there can often be a lot of misplaced value in the social cache of large fan-bases as being representative of overall artistic talent. Lyor, much to the delight of the audience, recalled a time when he asked MySpace celebrity and then-budding reality TV star Tila Tequila to "sing something" after his A&R guys "practically kicked [his] door down trying to get [him] to sign her because she had so many online fans." Miss Tequila, as it turned out, wasn't able to parlay her enormous follower-base into a successful career as a singer.

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