SONG REMAINS THE SAME GRAMMYS UPBEAT WHILE MUSIC BUSINESS IN A WHIRL.Byline: >>STORIES BY FRED SHUSTER >LA.COM (1) (Computer Output Microfilm) Creating microfilm or microfiche from the computer. A COM machine receives print-image output from the computer either online or via tape or disk and creates a film image of each page. What's the difference between the Titanic and the music industry? A cynic cyn·ic n. 1. A person who believes all people are motivated by selfishness. 2. A person whose outlook is scornfully and often habitually negative. 3. might answer that at least the Titanic had a good band before it went down. Actually, the quality of the music these days is just part of a chorus line of problems facing the troubled music world. As celebs prepare to walk -- or in some cases stumble -- down the red carpet at Staples Center This article has multiple issues: * Its neutrality is disputed. * It may contain original research or unverifiable claims. * It does not cite any references or sources. tonight for the 50th annual Grammy Awards Grammy Awards Annual awards given by the Recording Academy (officially the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences). The first Grammies (the name is a dimunitive of “gramophone”) were given in 1958. , the talk is again of a once-thriving industry in free fall. The latest bad news includes business down 36 percent since 2000, massive layoffs in all corners of the industry, and a dramatic drop in sales in every major genre for the first time. This was the year when record companies realized hip-hop and alt-rock weren't going to pay the piper to bear the cost, expense, or trouble. to bear the cost, expense, or trouble. See also: Pay Piper . The final insult: The biggest music-related hits of 2007 were the video games See video game console. "Guitar Hero" and "Rock Band." "It's an industry in the midst Adv. 1. in the midst - the middle or central part or point; "in the midst of the forest"; "could he walk out in the midst of his piece?" midmost of significant transition," says Neil Portnow, president of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences The National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, Inc. is known variously as The Recording Academy or NARAS. Established in 1957, The Recording Academy is a U.S. , which hands out the Grammys. "There's still a tremendous demand and interest in music. But it's a matter of a business model being employed and delivery systems developed." Part of that transition includes moving from the manufacture and sales of hard copies of CDs to new digital services that, with the backing of labels, distribute music by both established acts and new ones, sometimes for free. The move would require a significant change of thinking for an industry that only recently sued fans who illegally shared their music online and companies like Napster that helped facilitate that concept. Another important way music is being sold today is as ringtones, sales of which are as closely watched now as the Top 40 used to be. Meanwhile, fans were busy showing the most heavily hyped acts the door. Kanye West's latest, for example, hardly scratched the Top 10. New offerings from Maroon 5 and 50 Cent never even managed to trouble the Top 15. And with all the talk about an audience hungry for new challenges, the No. 1 album of 2007 was a Josh Groban pop-opera Christmas album. Meanwhile it seems all anyone's excited about is "High School Musical" and similar kiddie kid·die or kid·dy n. pl. kid·dies Slang A small child. kiddie Noun Informal a child confections. "Certainly there's been some interesting albums produced, and when you look at the (Grammy) nominations, you see the tried and true and the new," Portnow said. "Long-term artists are still doing well, making the better albums of their careers. And there's a whole new crop." So, what's going down at tonight's Grammys (which almost didn't happen at all until the striking writers agreed not to picket the show)? West leads with eight nominations, followed by Amy Winehouse with six, and the Foo Fighters, Jay-Z, Timbaland, Justin Timberlake and T-Pain with five nods each. Here are profiles of three nominees: best new artist contender and r&b newcomer Ledisi, jazz pianist and album-of-the-year nominee Herbie Hancock, and top pop producer Phil Ramone, who's looking at his 34th Grammy nomination, this year for work with the saxophonist Dave Koz. Fred Shuster, (818) 713-3676; fred.shuster@dailynews.com GRAMMY AWARDS >What: Record industry trophy handout in 110 categories, 12 of which are presented on air. >Where: CBS (Cell Broadcast Service) See cell broadcast. (Channel 2). >When: 8 tonight (tape-delayed). CAPTION(S): photo Photo: (cover -- color) 50 YEARS OF GRAMMY GOLD |
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