EMI/Capitol Records Works Hard To Make Ok Go's Viral Video Less Viral

from the marketing-geniuses dept

You probably know of the band Ok Go’s famous treadmill video:

It helped attract a ton of attention to the band. The band’s lead singer, Damian Kulash, has been quite outspoken about why bands need to be fan friendly, and even took to the pages of the NY Times to discuss the evils of DRM, and has spoken before Congress on music industry issues as well. The band has always done quite a lot to try to connect with fans and not hinder them in any way — which is part of why it has such a huge following.

So, with the band coming out with a new quirky video, you would think that it would be readily available all over the place. However, Martin points us to the news that the video was put up on YouTube by the band’s label, Capitol Records, a subsidiary of EMI, but it did so with geoblocking and with embedding disabled. In fact, if you go to the original treadmill video, you’ll see that Capitol Records has disabled embedding on that video as well. Notice that I have it embedded above? That’s because I used the embed code from an earlier post back when embedding was allowed. Yet now, go and click on the video… and it gives you an error message saying embedding has been disabled. All those people who helped spread that video? Capitol Records broke them all. Nice of them. It’s impossible to fathom what the folks at EMI/Capitol are thinking here. They are making it more difficult to make a viral video viral. Both blocking it from being viewed in various regions and blocking embeds makes no sense at all.

Of course, the band recognizes this and are pissed off about it:

As for the issue of geoblocking, we’re incredibly upset that the youtube versions of our videos can’t be embedded. Just one more example of major labels accelerating their own demise. We (and every individual band out there) have exactly zero leverage in this particular battle, however. So we post to other sites as well.

In fact, the band itself has now put the video up on Vimeo as well, which does allow embedding:

Of course, given that Vimeo has these bizarre and nonsensical rules against commercial use, and this is obviously a commercial video, you have to wonder why this is allowed. Oh yeah, also, it’s worth remembering that Capitol Records just sued Vimeo for copyright infringement — so I can’t see the label being all that thrilled about this. Either way, the video is going up in a variety of other places in embeddable format, but not by Capitol Records, meaning that it gets more fragmented, less viral, and hurts Capitol Records. And people wonder why EMI and the other major labels are collapsing.

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Companies: capitol records, emi, vimeo

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Comments on “EMI/Capitol Records Works Hard To Make Ok Go's Viral Video Less Viral”

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25 Comments
Lachlan Hunt (profile) says:

I can’t see how this video would go viral anyway, regardless of the actions of the label. I don’t think the song is particularly great, the singing was terrible, the music was irritating and the American style marching band doesn’t seem like it will have much appeal outside the US. I thought it was boring. Honestly, if I’ll be happy to never hear this song or watch the video again.

I think that’s a real shame though, cause I really liked some of their older songs, especially Here it Goes Again.

Henry Emrich (profile) says:

No wonder I basically hate everything at this point:

1. If OkGo is supposedly so “fan-friendly” and actually understands how to leverage the Internet to their advantage, then if they were stupid/gullible/greedy enough to actually ‘sign’ with any label — much less a “major” label like EMI — then they have exactly *zero* reason to be bitching.

Sell your soul to Satan, and then complain when he comes to collect…..brilliant.

The only reason I can actually think of for them signing at all, is that despite all their supposed fan-friendliness and anti-DRM stance, and pro-Internet babbling, they *still* harbor some notion of cashing in on the archtypical “celebrity lifestyle” the major labels made possible.

Maybe it’s time for artists — REAL artists, I mean — to realize that the Internet has basically kicked the shit out of the whole IDEA of “celebrity”, and people should stop trying to resurrect it.

(OF course, if they *really* wanted to leverage the Internet, they wouldn’t have simply uploaded this thing to centralized setups like Youtube or Vimeo — they’d also dump it into every torrent tracker they could find, and/or urge their own fans to host it, a la “Grey Tuesday”.

But no, instead they’d rather just bitch about it.
Serve’s ’em right for “signing” in the first place.

SomeGuy (profile) says:

Re: No wonder I basically hate everything at this point:

In the not-too-distant past, signing was really the only viable way to make music happen. I don’t know if that’s necessarily true for this band, but I’m pretty sure I heard about OkGo quite a while before online indepentent music really took off. At the very least, it’s possible they weren’t aware of an alternative to signing. Unless you know otherwise, cut them a break.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: No wonder I basically hate everything at this point:

According to Wikipedia, OK Go first signed with Capitol Records in 2001. The music industry was entirely different back then, with the major labels having a much tighter hold. It was in its dying days, for sure, but that was still back when signing with a major label was the only proven way to get widespread exposure, and well before YouTube/MySpace/whatever.

Not only that, but maybe their recent activities have been part of them realising their mistakes? Nearly 10 years of experience would have taught them the error of their ways, yet the contracts enforced by major labels usually run at least a decade, often more if a large specific number of albums is contracted.

I’d suspect that if OK Go were just forming this year and still signed for a major, you might have some valid points. A band already working for a major for nearly a decade and trying to make things more fan-friendly should be welcomed, not attacked.

Ady says:

Henry Emrich

Henry, nice facts there. I’m glad you sourced all the reasons they might have signed two major labels.

I’m sure you knew they would have been able to afford their last few tours, albums and ridiculous stage shows without any financial muscle and marketing whatsoever. So they clearly planned this all out very carefully with the intention to whine and bitch about the situation they knowingly threw themselves into.

*Lowest form of wit: deactivate*

I saw them last night and they were damn good. I wouldn’t have gone to the gig or bought their three albums across the last few years if I wasn’t given a copied album to listen to in the first place.

themrbum from youtube says:

EMI/Capitol Records Works Hard To Make Ok Go's Viral Video Less Viral

I hate the big record companies and I think that every body should do what they can to push them out! Record companies only want to make money for them selves and they have too much power to damage artists. They cry out that piracy is hurting art but it’s only a small issue compared to the damage these b@stards are doing.
Every band should get their own publisher of sorts going to push the big names out of business. Bands should own their own material, not be subjected to the will of some mulch-billion dollar scum sucker company who did nothing to create art other then take nearly all the royalties and revenue from it.

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