Brazilian Mash-up Techno Becomes Big Business

by Hopenow | April 2, 2009 at 08:34 am
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Brazilian musicians have found a way to prosper and exploit the realities of music distribution in the modern age. The biggest problem for most artists – both beginners and those who are more established – is how to earn an income from their work. In the digital age, it is next to impossible to stop people freely copying your work and passing it on.

The impact of digital technology on the global music business has been earth-shattering. It’s estimated 95 percent of music digital downloads are unauthorized, with no payment to artists and producers. While the legal digital music business grew for the sixth consecutive year in 2008, with a 25 percent increase in global sales to a trade value of US$3.7 billion, this only makes up 20 percent of total music sales (IFPI) (http://www.ifpi.org/). Even legal digital services like Apple’s iTunes have suffered (http://www.apple.com/downloads/).

An economic solution to this conundrum is critical for the growth of creative economies in the South.

The traditional music industry model from the analogue age – where copies of music are tightly controlled and royalties and profits funnel back to recording companies – has come unstuck in the digital age. With digital recordings, it is easy to copy high quality music and distribute it for free through the Internet, by audio music players like the iPod or on discs.

Many are saying a corner has been turned: free distribution is the new future and illegal copying is the new normal. The model for music making has been turned on its head: from high investment and high returns, it is now low investment and low returns. And this model chimes very well with the world most Southern musicians live in. Emulating the champagne-and-jets lifestyle of the Rolling Stones or Beyonce is beyond their reality. But they can build a slower and more sustainable income with the new digital model.

A music phenomenon in Brazil’s poorer neighbourhoods, tecnobrega (brega means cheesy or corny) is a mix of electronic beats from the 1980s, mixed with found snippets of strange sounds or sound bites, combined in a so-called ‘mash-up’ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mashups). It makes for an easy-to-dance-to mix.

“Tecnobrega is a regional music, the music that people here in (the state of) Para most enjoy,” DJ Edilson told the BBC. “The secrets are the beats which drive people crazy.”

With music becoming easier and cheaper to record to a high standard, and distribution of music less and less a money-making opportunity, musicians have turned to economic models revolving around live performance to make the bulk of their income.

“What is going on is that people, sometimes in very poor areas, are appropriating electronic instruments like computers and synthesizers to create their own music,” said Ronaldo Lemos, a professor at the respected Getulio Vargas Foundation (http://www.fgv..br/ ) and project lead for the Creative Commons Brazil (http://creativecommons.org/international/br/).

“So this is a phenomenon that is going on not only in the tecnobrega scene but with many scenes around the world like Kuduro in Angola, Kwaito in South Africa, Bubblin’ in Suriname.”

The tecnobrega model works like this: People set up makeshift studios in their homes. They use a personal computer and a software programme to mix and blend the songs. Once the songs are ready, they either organize themselves, or more often, perform at a sound system party. There are said to be as many as 4,000 sound system parties per month in Belem (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bel%C3%A9m) and it is a hugely competitive market. The sound system parties can vary from a small crowd to heaving groups of 10 to 15,000 people.

The money for performing at these parties is good. A musician performing just once can make 2,200 realis (US $919), and can do this 12 times a month. This is a good income compared to the minimum wage in Belem: 700 realis (US $292). It is estimated it generates US $1.5 million a month in Belem.

In Brazil, where many do not have broadband Internet and thus can’t download music, fans buy pirated and cheap compact discs (CDs) in markets. Local musicians make their own CDs and give them free to local street vendors. While they make no money off the CDs that are then sold by the vendors, they do drum up publicity and profile. And they then use this to draw large paying crowds to their live gigs.

In just a few years, tecnobrega has become a multi-million dollar music business in Brazil. Once an artist has gained experience performing live at the parties, they can develop the skills to organize their own events, and boost their income accordingly.

One singer who has successfully exploited the opportunities raised by the tecnobrega phenomenon is Gaby Amarantos (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZKjH__ghQa4 ). She now regularly appears on TV.

“We have found a new way to work,” she told the BBC. “It is a new format and a new market model because we produce the music ourselves and the cost to make one song is very cheap.”

“What happens is that the musicians skip the intermediaries,” said Ronaldo Lemos.

“So the musicians do not make money from the CDs that are sold by the street vendors, they actually make money by playing live at the so-called sound system parties - the aparelhagem parties as we tecnobrega say here in Brazil - and also by selling CDs after they play live.

“No-one expects to make money from the CDs - they use it as a way to advertise the music and to advertise themselves as artists, and then their expectation is that they get invited to play at the sound system parties and clubs.

“The more their music gets distributed, the more they will make money in return.”

The furious pace of innovation in the tecnobrega scene is all about generating more revenue and more income. New styles emerge to cater to new tastes: cyber tecnobrega, brega melody, electro melody. And this passion for innovation has kept the tecnobrega entrepreneurs ahead of the traditional music business in how it uses digital technologies.

Lemos calls tecnobrega a “globoperipheral music”: it transcends rich and poor divisions and geographical boundaries.

Other examples include Argentina’s Cumbia Villera, or Brazil’s Funk Carioca.

“The number one lesson would be innovation - if you want to survive in the music industry right now you have to innovate,” said Lemos.

Resources:

  • Good Copy, Bad Copy: A Danish documentary film by director Andreas Johnsen about the global explosion in movie- and music-making because of the digital revolution. Website: http://www.goodcopybadcopy.net/
  • A documentary trailer for a film about tecnobrega in Brazil directed by Gustavo Godinho e Vladimir Cunha. Website: http://www.vimeo.com/1993239

Source: Development Challenges, South-South Solutions

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recommend This comment thread is now closed
2
Jarrett Martineau

Thanks for this.  Great post.

0
jazzyzazzy

I would love to get my hands on the Q base software. The untapped talent out there is huge,people who really see their work as an art. Money doesnt it always rear its ugly head,in all industries. Freedom from the ties of cruel schedules that derive some of the young artist of there sanity. Many have a couple of years at the top,then simply fade and burn out.I think this is great news for untaped talent.

0
kellynight

I'm going to check out this "Brazillian Techno", any opinions on the actual music?

thanks David Cross

2
Fred Miller

Here's a link at Blender.com that describes the obstacles the DJs face in Brazil.

Thanks for this most interesting and well-written piece !

1
Paschen

Good post it is. 

"No-one expects to make money from the CDs - they use it as a way to advertise the music and to advertise themselves as artists, and then their expectation is that they get invited to play at the sound system parties and clubs."

I think this is true even here in Japan.

0
luiz fernando

"In Brazil, where many do not have broadband Internet and thus can’t download music,"

a tip to the idiot who wrote this: BRAZIL IS THE 4TH LARGEST BROADBAND USER IN THE WORLD

In fact, percentage wise, Brazil has MORE broadband users than the US.

He should do his homework before posting dumb stuff like that.

0
Hopenow

In regards to Brazil's broadband users, according to statistics collected by Internet World Stats (http://www.internetworldstats.com/dsl.htm), the absolute number of broadband users and percentage of penetration of the population, place Brazil in eleventh place in the world, with broadband available to 3.4% of the population. In the US, broadband reaches 21.9%.

The Guardian has summation of broadband reach in this article: http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2007/jun/13/newmedia.media.

According to researchers Point Topic in their broadband report on Q4 2008, "North America and Western Europe had the highest population penetration rates at 26.8 per cent and 26.5 per cent respectively in Q4 2008. Asia Pacific followed with a penetration rate at 10 per cent and Eastern Europe was next at 6.9 per cent. The three regions with the lowest penetration rates were Latin America (5.4 per cent), South and East Asia (3.5 per cent) and Middle East and Africa (2.8 per cent)."


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