:
We'd like to thank you for the opportunity to appear in front of you today.
The digital frontier of Canada's music industry has empowered independent artist entrepreneurs by means of a fully integrated business ecosystem. It is now viable for musical acts to establish an intimate and dedicated following through a grassroots approach without record companies. As a result of this digital progress, and due to the contracting of the traditional music industry, the last 25 years has seen the rise of the artist entrepreneur.
CIRAA provides support to these artist entrepreneurs through unique programming, such as an online music business educational series, monthly mentorships with established artists, and a monthly micro grant to reward and encourage live performances.
Our current membership exceeds 9,200 artists across the country; however, CIRAA's statistics confirm that there are approximately 19,000 active, independent recording acts in Canada. Seventy-eight per cent consider themselves professional musicians, with a staggering collective reach of 5.2 million fans, collectively performing 750,000 shows annually, or 2,000 performances every single day.
Each spend, on average, $3,400 annually on their music careers, amounting to tens of millions of dollars and triggering hundreds of millions in economic activity.
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Over the past seven years, FACTOR has contributed just over $105 million in total offerings. Of that $105 million, $97 million, or 93%, has gone to signed artists and music businesses, with a paltry 6.8% going to all of Canada's artist entrepreneurs. Another way to put it is that 93% of the money has gone to 1.5% of Canada's active artists.
Then you add the fact that this 1.5% of Canadian bands are often also eligible to receive funding from the Radio Starmaker Fund and are often supported by both organizations in the same fiscal year.
Then, you also add the fact that many of the record labels and management companies representing the majority of this 1.5% are also receiving CMF support from the music entrepreneur component of the Canada Music Fund. All told, between MEC funding, Starmaker, and FACTOR, a handful of artists and companies received more support than all of Canada's artist entrepreneurs combined.
CIRAA is not here to judge the needs of this 1.5%. We are here to report on the neglect of the 98.5% and its effects on our industry.
In 2006, there were 28,000 active artist entrepreneurs in Canada. That number is down nearly 50%, slowly choking off the supply of talented artists, and potentially depriving Canadians of the next Glenn Gould, or Bryan Adams, or Arcade Fire.
Another telling fact is that, of Canada's 19,000 recording artists, only 3,400 have even bothered to register with FACTOR, due to widespread apathy. Canada's remaining artists feel abandoned, frustrated, angry, and are increasingly vocal.
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CIRAA and others have attempted to modernize FACTOR. However, the bylaws dictating the institutional makeup of the FACTOR board of directors, created before the rise of the artist entrepreneur, assures us that nothing there is likely to change. Roughly half the seats are assigned to traditional commercial music businesses and the other half to radio.
To ensure a sustainable Canadian talent development strategy, CIRAA respectfully offers the following recommendations:
One, the Canada Music Fund should be divided equally across the development supply chain. We recommend that one-third of CMF funding goes to independent artist entrepreneurs, another third to established artists through FACTOR, and the final third to music businesses through the music entrepreneur component and the collective initiatives program.
Two, we recommend that a new funding organization be founded collectively by specialists in the independent artist entrepreneur field; including, but not limited to, CIRAA. This new funding organization would invest its third in artist development and artist entrepreneurs. We believe that no association should ask for this task alone, and that there are many across the country that can provide valuable leadership.
We strongly believe that a new organization allocating funds towards artist development for early career musicians and artist entrepreneurs will see a number of improvements, which this committee is seeking.
One, more funding will flow to communities nationwide, with less concentration in Toronto, where Canada's music companies primarily exist. This also means greater support for homegrown, local culture across Canada.
Two, there will be greater public recognition and appreciation for the Government of Canada's support to music in all communities, due to fewer intermediaries.
Three, there will be more artistic and business innovation by fuelling entrepreneurs using modern technologies and cutting-edge methods beyond simply recording music.
Four, there will be a levelling of the playing field between artists supported by personal investment of family and those without financial support.
Five, music business literacy will be expanded through education and mentorship.
Finally, Canada's music companies will benefit from having more developed and educated artists ready to expand their audiences; in essence, a stronger and more vibrant supply line.
We are asking for a nod, an invitation, or better yet, a clear mandate from this committee to begin the work of assembling associations nationwide to create a new funding body tasked with solving this fundamental imbalance that, without repair, will make all other recommendations heard here akin to rearranging the chairs on the Titanic. We need a strong, educated, literate, and confident artist entrepreneur base that sparks artistry and innovation in communities coast to coast to coast.
We thank you for your time today and for your continued support of Canadian music. We look forward to your questions and comments.
:
Good morning, bonjour, and thank you for inviting us to speak to the standing committee today. And thank you for all of the support that the government of Canada has made over the years in fostering, developing, and sharing Canadian music.
I applaud you for wanting to learn more, and for asking the question regarding whether or not the current strategies and investments are working as well as they can, and if they're not, what can be done to adjust, alter, or reinvent them. Regardless, the government of Canada's role at the table is fundamental, as music is a vehicle by which we communicate our values, our identity, and our nationhood.
The facts speak for themselves. Today, we are already an arts nation, a country where ordinary Canadians spend more than twice as much each year attending the arts—of which music is a major component—than all sports in Canada put together. In short, Canada cares about music.
It's no secret that the changes in technology over the past 10 to 15 years have impacted all of us, between the launch of Napster in 2000 and the iPhone in 2007. It is also no secret that these technologies, as well as others, have profoundly affected the music industry, both positively and negatively. Although the impact of these new technologies on the development of music and the music industry is nothing new—it's been happening for centuries, often in transformative ways—its net impact over this period has fundamentally altered the commercial system of the music industry that has been in place for well over 100 years, and much more quickly and adversely than originally anticipated.
I'll describe some of these changes. While digital revenues for music have increased, they have not replaced what has been lost due to the disappearance of physical sales. Revenues paid to creators for the intellectual property created has decreased significantly, forcing musicians to find other ways to earn a livelihood. The public has devalued the economic value of an artistic work. The traditional role of a major record label has been redirected from marketer and incubator mainly to distributor. The presentation of live music is becoming more important for artists to generate revenue than ever in the past.
Despite these changes, we have not seen an erosion of music, but rather quite the contrary, in fact. Music is more ubiquitous and varied than ever, offering more choice for the listener and, I would argue, more opportunities for the musician and the creator to draw upon to expand the creative process. There is an opportunity that we must recognize and celebrate with these changes in technology.
As the seventh largest music market in the world, Canadians have demonstrated their support for music, and we need to continue to build on those successes, but be more innovative in how we continue to nurture our uniquely Canadian voice for the future. It is in this context that I will be making the following recommendations to this committee.
Number one, invest in awareness that celebrates and educates. We believe there needs to be more focus on recognizing and celebrating the contributions that Canadians have made in music, and celebrate it not only nationally within Canada but globally as well. In short, invest a portion of the existing allocation to a national awareness program that educates and celebrates the stories of performers, songwriters, producers, and composers of our country through a myriad of media platforms. The stories of these individuals are often inspirational tales of unique talent, drive, hard work, and competitiveness.
The contribution that Canada has made to music is staggering when you consider our relatively small population and the size of our economy, the 14th largest in the world. For example, since the 1950s we have given the world such artists as Glenn Gould, Oscar Peterson, The Band, Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, Leonard Cohen, The Guess Who, Offenbach, Harmonium, Céline Dion, Arcade Fire, and untold others. These stories are untapped treasures, and my own experience at the National Music Centre has elevated my own awareness that many people don't realize that these artists are, in fact, Canadian.
Number two, brand Canada as a music country, and launch this national awareness strategy to further communicate the impact that the creative industries, and music in particular, have on strengthening Canada's economic position in the world as a place that attracts the brightest and most creative talent to live here and work here. It's taking the success of music tourism and expanding it further as an economic pillar. In the process, this is one way we can continue to develop and celebrate our uniquely Canadian diversity and voice.
Number three, expand hall of fame celebrations in Canada beyond a segment of an annual awards show to an outreach opportunity that tells a broader narrative relating to the inductees' success and what impact they are having on younger artists emerging today. Think of it as successful artists giving back to their community. Celebrating recognition will amplify existing support for production, marketing, and touring opportunities to completely new levels.
Number four, celebrate diversity and broaden support to include the unique multicultural tapestry of Canadian identity. By this, I mean be inclusive. In addition to our aboriginal peoples and our founding peoples from Europe, consider the broader ethnic voices that are a significant part of Canada's population.
Number five, as part of the National Music Centre's offering, our intention is to represent our geographical regions by amplifying their unique stories, not only through the assembling of collections but also by supporting and incubating the unique voices that come from each of these regions.
In the area of incubation and professional development, we offer the following recommendations: Canada's musicians need a hub that is available 365 days a year. Musicians today need to have a holistic understanding of the environment they're working in, from the creative process to the marketing process, and everything in-between.
We need to ask where our professional knowledge is and if we are creating an environment that fosters meaningful collaboration and mentorship. The National Music Centre can potentially help with this. It would not surprise me if many of you had never heard of the National Music Centre prior to this presentation, what our purpose is and why we matter to Canadians, regardless of where they live in Canada.
We're headquartered in Calgary, Alberta. We're a non-profit charitable organization. Our vision is to harness the power of music and use it as a way to catalyze innovation, discovery, and renewal of things that matter to Canadians.
Our mission is to build a home for music in Canada that champions our stories, as a country, through a wide range of programs, including exhibitions that celebrate our history in music, our contributions, our voice, and our identity; education programs for elementary schools that extend beyond traditional music education, that connects core curriculum subjects, including math, science, language arts, social studies, to examples from music. This very successful practice is particularly important for those who might never be exposed to traditional music education; supporting performances of touring Canadian artists across the musical spectrum through live shows that foster, at various stages of an artist's development, their own professional abilities. Finally, inviting an artist...in resident incubation programs that nurture the development of new Canadian music for recording artists, composers, as well as performers.
In essence, the National Music Centre is a hybrid organization and has derived its influence from a variety of influences--music, technology, and museums. On an annual basis, today we serve about 75,000 people, mostly in Calgary, and we're now in the process of building a new National Music Centre building, that is currently under construction in Calgary, for which we have already raised $103 million. We're scheduled to open in the first quarter of 2016.
As a nationally focused organization, we have several partnerships, with the Canadian Music Hall of Fame, Junos, CARAS, the Canadian Country Music Association, CKUA radio network, Library and Archives Canada, as well as several others.
I've worked and volunteered in many aspects of the music industry over the past 25 years—as a musician, an academic, a promoter, and a broadcaster. I was the first employee at the National Music Centre 16 years ago. I've been fortunate enough to be in a position to shape an entirely new organization for Canada that supports and celebrates our country's national music story through education, as well as serving as a hub for creating, supporting, and celebrating Canadian music.
I think we've been fortunate enough to be in a position to fill a void in Canada at a time when the music industry, as well as museums in general, have undergone a radical shift as a result of the rapidly changing technologies—
:
Thank you for the opportunity to appear in front of the committee today.
I represent Lula Lounge, a mid-size venue in Toronto that specializes in presenting world music, often through partnerships with other presenting and community organizations. In tandem with the venue we run a not-for-profit organization, Lula Music and Arts Centre, which receives some support from arts councils for its multicultural presenting and educational activities. This private-public partnership model was inspired by organizations such as Harbourfront Centre in Toronto and the Public Theater in New York City, both of which derive some income from a separate for-profit corporation.
While best known for our weekend salsa nights featuring 10-piece to 12-piece live salsa ensembles, we also present many other forms of Latin music as well as jazz, opera, classical, flamenco, Brazilian, African, Eastern European, and South Asian music.
I'm sure you're all aware that Canada is home to some of the world's very best musicians working in these genres. Many of these receive support directly or indirectly from Heritage Canada programs.
With a capacity of 250, Lula tends to host emerging rather than established artists. While more mainstream musicians such as Feist, Metric, and Norah Jones have performed at Lula, most of our programming focuses on artists from diverse cultural backgrounds whose work lies outside of the commercial mainstream. Although we serve audiences with quite particular musical interests, our presenting activity has significant economic, artistic, and social impact. More than 30 people are employed year-round by the venue and each year hundreds of musicians, mostly Canadian, derive income from playing at the club. Performing at Lula, they build their fan bases, sell CDs, and develop artistically.
Our venue and other places like it are spots where projects funded by municipal and provincial arts councils, FACTOR, and Canada Council come before an audience, creating connections between communities and art. Lula and other world music presenters provide opportunities for immigrant communities to engage with their musical traditions and for audience members to learn about and enjoy a diversity of artistic cultures.
We hope that the results of this study will recognize the importance of small, mid-size, and non-traditional presenters and venues. Small presenters in bars, churches, and libraries in and outside of major city centres make tours across Canada possible. It is through such tours that artists can build an audience and launch their careers. Collectively the social, artistic, and economic impact of these small presenters is very important and needs to be taken into account.
To support such presenters we suggest Heritage Canada continue to foster the presenting infrastructure by encouraging networks across the country. The Canadian world music presenting community has formed such a network. We hope that our efforts will be supported as we have seen firsthand how such a network can increase touring opportunities for artists and allow presenters to do more with the resources that they have at their disposal.
We urge Heritage Canada to work with Immigration Canada to eradicate the new LMO application fees for foreign artists. A healthy music industry cannot be insular. Canadian audiences clearly have an appetite for hearing great music from around the world and are interested in emerging artists from elsewhere.
While our foremost goal is to support Canadian artists, we've seen that working with international musicians can benefit those from Canada. For many years at Lula we've programmed concerts that bring together local and international artists. We do this with an eye to creating unique experiences for audiences, as well as professional and artistic opportunities for Canadian musicians. Often the invited guests are further along in their career path and a mentoring relationship develops. These international collaborations have been very successful in terms of the calibre of art created, economic impact, and the career development of the artists involved.
The new LMO application fees make such international collaboration significantly more expensive and difficult. While we've been able to obtain exemptions for some of our activities, each exemption is done on a case-by-case basis and is not guaranteed. The process to apply for an exemption is cumbersome and acts as a barrier to taking on such projects. We know that colleagues who present some of their jazz and world music festivals and series in bars face similar uncertainty.
We hope that the Canadian government will see that, unlike other industries, our goal in bringing in foreign workers is not to save money or to cut out Canadians, but to enrich the artistic lives of creators and music fans.
On the flip side, Canadian artists need to tour in the U.S. as well as Canada. Given the importance of access to U.S. markets to Canadian artists, we wonder if an agreement of sorts between Canada and the U.S. for touring musicians might be possible.
We'll also briefly mention that the unwieldy process for applying for tax waivers for foreign artists puts additional stress on many festivals and serious presenters funded by Heritage Canada programs. Perhaps this is another issue on which branches of government could work together to strengthen our industry.
Many presenters to this committee have stressed the importance of music education. We would like to reinforce this point and add that we need to simultaneously foster a culture of professional music journalism. With changes to the publishing industry and cutbacks to the CBC, many of the writers and broadcasters who used to celebrate and critique Canadian musical arts are no longer active. Perhaps this could be achieved by working with university journalism programs or perhaps through the Canada Media Fund.
Finally, going back to the importance of supporting a diversity of musical cultures, we would like to point out that CBC Radio has been crucial in helping us to develop audiences for our programming and the artists we present. We have really felt the impact of the loss of the initiative to do live recording for a future broadcast as this was an effective vehicle for reaching new listeners across the country and affirming the importance of artistic contributions being made by culturally diverse Canadian artists.
Thank you.
:
Good afternoon. Thank you for inviting us to present to the committee.
I am Mathieu Péloquin, Senior Vice-president, Marketing and Communication. With me today is Eric Albert, Executive Vice-president.
Stingray Digital is the leading multi-platform music service provider in the world, with more than 100 million subscribers in 113 countries. Geared toward individuals and businesses alike, the company's commercial entities include leading digital music and video services, Galaxie, Music Choice International, Concert TV, and The KARAOKE Channel. The company also offers music solutions to more than 70,000 businesses via its Stingray360 division and music licensing service through Stingray Music.
Stingray Digital is headquartered in Montreal and has over 200 employees and offices across Canada, as well Los Angeles, Miami, London, and Tel Aviv.
In Canada, up to 60% of Canadians with access to pay television will listen to a Galaxie channel in a given month, as reported by our quarterly listenership tracking survey from Vision Critical.
Stingray is firmly rooted in Canadian culture, and with its extensive international presence our services provide an unparalleled window for the promotion of Canadian artists abroad. We greatly appreciate the opportunity to share with you our thoughts and ideas, with the objective of further strengthening the Canadian music industry.
To address the committee's question on the impact of government support on the Canadian music industry, we'll focus our comments primarily on three specific areas of the music creative and distribution flow. They are creation and production, distribution, and global scope.
[Translation]
I will now turn the floor over to my colleague, Eric Albert.
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First, on the creation and the production side of the equation.
Other participants in these proceedings have provided excellent comments and ideas regarding the production aspects of the Canadian music industry value chain. We would like to echo and re-emphasize that a sustainable pipeline of high-quality musical content is crucial for the success of Canadian services like Galaxie. Being a service regulated by the CRTC that is 100% based on music, having access to a large amount of high-quality content is a must to meet our Cancon requirements while ensuring that we deliver a credible service that Canadians will want to listen to.
Canadian music listeners, like consumers around the world, want to listen to good music regardless of whether it is classified as Canadian content or not. As such, it is imperative that a sustainable music creation echo-system flourishes to ensure a constant availability of content that Canadian consumers will want to listen to.
Canadian content quota rules imposed on regulated broadcasters have greatly helped in providing a window to showcase Canadian artists. Canada is a relative small market in the global music industry, yet Canadians constantly produce content that receives international recognition, thanks in part to programs like the Canadian-content development funding provided by regulated broadcasters.
Stingray, for example, through it's Galaxie Rising Stars CCD program initiatives, supports dozens of events each year directed toward emerging talent. With the increased popularity of unregulated streaming services that do not have CCD contribution obligations, the Canadian music industry could be at risk of losing a significant funding source directed toward the development of local content. Though it would technically be possible to impose CCD funding requirements, or Cancon quotas, on unregulated entities, an alternative may be to offer fiscal incentives to companies to provide assistance for the creation of Canadian content, with further incentives provided for broadcasting increased levels of Canadian content.
[Translation]
Let us now turn to distribution.
As mentioned earlier, the ability to produce high-quality Canadian content is of fundamental importance to a healthy music industry. But an efficient distribution chain for that content is equally important. Today, we have two main processes that are peculiar to music consumption. One is discovery, the other is validation.
The discovery process exposes the average consumer to new songs or new artists that would not generally be heard on conventional commercial radio. The validation process complements the discovery process. It happens when an artist is broadcast on commercial radio, and generally means that the artist has reached a certain level of fame and success.
As Annie Laflamme and Scott Hutton, from the CRTC, said when they appeared before this committee, commercial radio in Canada is doing relatively well and continues to play a very important role in ensuring our industry's success, specifically in terms of the validation process.
The sustainability of the Canadian music industry has to depend on the emergence of new artists of quality. Hence the importance of continued investment in our creation and production capabilities. We also believe that more effort and more resources could be invested in order to make sure that those emerging artists have access to the highest possible number of platforms on which to showcase their talent.
In that context, increased support and direction could be beneficial for Canadian entrepreneurs wishing to start distribution companies focusing on discovering new artists.
[English]
The complex and uncertain rights and royalties regime that exists in Canada today creates a barrier to entry to a lot of entrepreneurs who could otherwise become great promoters of both emerging and established Canadian artists. As suggested by other witnesses, the committee should propose increased support to the Copyright Board of Canada to accelerate rate-setting proceedings that would provide increased certainty around costs of launching and operating music services in this country.
Secondly, the committee could recommend the creation of an industry task force that would focus on simplifying and streamlining the management of rights and royalties in this country. This task force should include representatives from all components of the value chain including creators, producers, broadcasters, distributors, and collection societies. Topics addressed by this task force could include, for example, a standardization of content metadata, which would ensure that content used is accounted for and that the proper stakeholders receive compensation for the use of such content.
We'd like to comment briefly on the economics of the music industry value chain, specifically in an era of digitization and decreasing overall revenue for the industry. You have heard several witnesses comment on the chasm that exists between the significant number of plays of certain songs on streaming services, while royalties received by stakeholders as a result of these plays are quite low. Some have suggested that music services should pay higher royalties for the use of music so that the creators get fair compensation.
We agree completely and support all initiatives that would result in proper compensation received by the artistic community. We would suggest, however, that increasing royalty rates paid by music services may not be a long-term solution to the imbalance of royalties paid by services and royalties received by rights holders.
Certain well-known services available internationally today pay between 50% and 70% of their revenues in rights and royalties, and identifying a sustainable business model for these entities has proven to be a challenge. Subscription models are starting to show very positive trends, but it will take time to modify the habits of consumers so that subscription-based services reach critical mass. Education of the marketplace on the value of music is one solution to this dilemma. One thing is clear, though: for an industry to succeed in the long term, all components of the industry value chain need to be profitable to survive. This applies to the Canadian music industry as well, and higher royalty rates may not be the only solution.
Lastly, I have a word on globalization. The music industry is increasingly global and to succeed, scale is becoming a key requirement. As mentioned previously, Stingray now operates in 113 different countries, providing unparalleled opportunities for Canadian artists to be heard internationally. Canada needs to continue its efforts in the fostering of an environment where companies like Stingray can succeed in Canada and use this success as a foundation for international growth and expansion.
Globalization also means that the definition of a Canadian citizen now includes ethnicities and languages beyond English and French. This country's growing population of ethnic groups should not be overlooked in this process, and the definition of Canadian content has to be inclusive of these multicultural groups.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
My name is Jason Kee, and I am the public policy and government relations counsel at Google Canada. Some of you may not recognize me because I'm actually wearing a suit. I promise I'll establish my technological bona fides by reading my comments off a tablet.
Some hon. members: Oh, oh!
Mr. Jason Kee: I know, it's sexy.
It's not an exaggeration to say that digital technologies are fundamentally changing both the business and cultural landscape of Canada, both nationally and, in a very real way, at the most local level. Indeed, this is true not just in Canada but around the world.
Canadian consumers are massively connected to the Internet. Seventy-five percent of Canadian households have fixed broadband Internet access, as compared to only sixty-nine percent in the U.S. In 2010 the Internet accounted for $49 billion, or 3%, of all Canadian economic activity. It's a little staggering when you think about it, but it shows how readily Canadians are taking to working and living in an online world. Clearly, this has had an impact across all industries and throughout our culture.
The media landscape has evolved significantly over the past decade. Traditional entertainment industries have begun to harness the power of the Internet to develop new audiences in Canada and internationally and to drive revenue to creators. Digital platforms have quickly become the dominant form of distribution for music, movies, books, and all forms of creative media. The music industry is a great example of this.
According to IFPI, the industry's digital revenues grew to $5.9 billion U.S. in 2013, with explosive 51% growth in revenues from streaming and subscription services. Globally, digital now makes up 39% of all industry revenues, and in many markets it accounts for the majority of revenues.
At the same time, more music, video, text, software, and all other kinds of media are being created by more people than ever before. Every kind of creative endeavour, both amateur and professional, is being transformed by new opportunities, lower production costs, and lower barriers to entry, all made possible by digital tools and online distribution.
Online platforms are making it possible for new artists to connect directly with global markets and entirely new audiences. Google and YouTube are now major contributors to this developing ecosystem.
According to IFPI, Google Play Music All Access was the fastest growing music subscription service in 2013, and we are thrilled to have launched the service in Canada only yesterday. All Access gives subscribers unlimited ad-free access to 25 million songs from all major record labels and a number of top local and independent labels in Canada for only $9.99 a month.
But wait, there's more.
It's a cross-platform service, so subscribers can listen on their smart phone, tablet, or the web and discover new music through interactive radio stations, or generate instant playlists of music based on their existing libraries.
Google Play Music also includes the ability for users to purchase songs and albums à la carte, and to store up to 20,000 songs from their own collection in the cloud and stream them to their devices.
Moving on to YouTube, with over a billion views each month, YouTube is also a major platform for artists and fans alike. From breaking in massive superstars like Stratford's Justin Bieber and B.C.'s Carly Rae Jepsen to helping indie bands like Burlington's Walk Off The Earth cultivate strong followings to propelling new young talent like Winnipeg's Maria Aragon to public attention, YouTube now plays a significant role in music discovery, especially amongst teens. This is why Neilsen and Billboard now factor in the popularity of music on YouTube when determining the rankings of songs on the music charts.
Moreover, YouTube is increasingly driving revenue to the creator community, both emerging and established. There are over a million partners making money from YouTube, and partner revenue increased by 60% in 2013. In fact, over the past few years YouTube has generated over a $1 billion to the music industry alone.
We also recently launched YouTube Live, a new feature that lets channels live stream large events and interact with their fans in a way that simply is not possible through regular YouTube videos. Along with Google+, Hangouts On Air, and other social services, Google provides artists with powerful tools they can use to drive audience engagement.
It's clear we've made tremendous progress, and we'll continue to partner with the entertainment industry and with creators of all kinds to bring Canadian entertainment and culture to the world.
Online piracy has been an ongoing challenge for creative industries, and Google takes that challenge very seriously. We develop and deploy anti-piracy solutions with the support of hundreds of Google employees, and we invest tens of millions of dollars in new tools and systems to improve and expand our anti-piracy efforts.
Google has made extensive efforts to make it easy to submit takedown notices, whether you are a large multinational entertainment company or an independent artist. We maintain a public web forum to which anyone may submit takedown notices 24 hours a day. As the volume of removal notices continues to rise, detecting inaccurate or abusive notices continues to pose a challenge, but we continue to invest in solutions to address this challenge as well.
We've also invested in measures that go above and beyond traditional approaches in order to provide real, effective protection to copyrighted works in the online environment. For example, Google created Content ID for YouTube. With this system, rights holders are able to identity user-updated videos that contain their content, and choose, in advance, what they want to happen to that content.
This is how it works. Rights holders deliver reference files—audio or video—of content they own to YouTube, including metadata describing that content. They also tell YouTube what they want done when a match is found and then track it, monetize it, or block it. YouTube then compares videos uploaded to the site against those reference files and automatically applies the right holder's preferred policy to all matching content.
Content ID scans over 400 years of video every day against the more than 25 million reference files that we have in our database, making it one of the most comprehensive copyright protection systems in the world.
Thanks to the options that Content ID provides copyright owners, it's not just an anti-piracy solution, but it also offers new business models for rights holders. The vast majority of the more than 5,000 partners that make use of Content ID choose to monetize their claims rather than block content. Consequently, Content ID has generated hundreds of millions of dollars for partners. In fact, recently the Toronto Star reported that mashups and fan-made videos are actually generating more money for record labels than their own music videos they have put out.
Google has also made a number of other innovations that allow us to better protect creator content, such as prioritization for legitimate content sources, as well as ongoing collaboration with stakeholders to make sure our efforts are working hand-in-hand.
As I noted at the beginning of my remarks, it's clear that Canadians are adopting digital technologies at a rapid pace, and they are eagerly consuming and creating online content.
The evolution of Canada's media landscape will continue to bring about significant change in the years ahead, and Canada's entertainment industries are keen to grow and adapt.
We're eager to help, and we are devoting significant resources to ensure that Canada's cultural industries will have every advantage they can get to thrive in this new digital economy.
Thank you, and I look forward to your questions.
:
Mr. Chair, and members of the committee, thank you for inviting me to speak here today. My name is Justin Erdman. I'm a drummer, a huge music fan—heavy metal, in particular—a 12-year veteran of the Canadian music business, and the Canadian managing director for Deezer, the most widely available subscription streaming music service on earth. We are currently operating in 182 countries, with over 30 million songs streaming on the web, smart phones, tablets, and dozens of other devices.
My teammates and I are proud to have launched Deezer in Canada with a real reverence for and commitment to this country. Our nation's unique listening habits are a function of our multiculturalism and multilingualism, so we have ensured right from the start that we have representatives in both Toronto and Montreal and that we have catalogues from not just from the major labels, but also from as many Canadian independents as possible in both official languages, and many languages beyond. Just recently, for example, we added a huge amount of the franco-Québec repertoire from our friends at Distribution Select. We are proud to have their catalogue available on Deezer.
Mr. Vice-Chair, I saw from a previous meeting's transcript that you're currently a Deezer user. I thank you sincerely for that, and hopefully our new additions to the catalogue will improve the experience for you.
Speaking of which, we are equally proud of a self-imposed mandate. We deliver a minimum of 33% Canadian content in our recommendations and promotions, with a goal of promoting Canada's incredible musical pedigree as well as amazing young Canadian artists whom we aim to develop into global stars.
Deezer's reach and unique human-based editorial approach helps Canadian stars break out beyond our borders. In our first year we've helped to promote internationally artists like Wildlife, Misteur Valaire, July Talk, and Brett Kissel, whom we've spoken of before, and we go even beyond that. In less than a year, starting with our official launch in June 2013, we've now directly invested several hundred thousand dollars into promoting Canadian artists, their albums, and the tours and festivals they perform in.
Even in its relative infancy, streaming is a highly competitive business with small start-ups and giant conglomerates alike jumping into the fray. Each company has different goals, but I believe my teammates and I are in it for the right reasons: introducing Canadian artists and music fans to an exciting future in which more artists become successful, more music is listened to, and the Canadian music business grows rapidly because of technology, not in spite of it. I have a few ideas for specifically how we can help that process along.
I've read with great interest the transcripts of previous hearings on the topic. You've covered a lot of ground and you've had a lot of champions of the industry here before you. We're a varied bunch and yet we all share a common thread. We are the beneficiaries of years of robust government support of Canada's cultural industries, and in music, through Canada Music Fund, FACTOR, Musicaction, and other structures, as you've heard. The support is more important than ever but perhaps the time is right to begin an evolution of these structures.
We're entering the third generation of the music business, the post-piracy years. The first generation was physical objects being sold, records, cassettes, CDs; the second was digital files, MP3s; and the third was streaming, a service-based model as opposed to selling a thing that fans then own. This phenomenon has been called the rentership society. You may have heard this term. Young people see no need to buy things as they once did. With homes, cars, cable TV, and of course, music, you can rent them all with no commitment.
But where does that leave our precarious music business model that is predicated almost exclusively, until recently, on selling things? Well, that's where music streaming answers. A recent speech at the global music industry gathering Midem, by Marc Geiger of William Morris Endeavor, the global talent agency, suggested that subscription rates will actually rise over the next 10 to 15 years, and the commonly-accepted view of the music industry's glory days being long past is simply a misunderstanding of current trends. The fact is fans will spend more money each year on music through subscriptions than they did in the previous two music business generations. As an example, at Deezer's regular retail price of $9.99 for our best service tier, that equates to approximately $120 per year per user. In previous generations, the average was between $40 to $55 per user per year, depending on which source you use. More money in the system means that labels can afford to invest in more artists, and because the services are available on so many devices and are so easy to use, fans listen more. In the case of Deezer, it's around 60 hours a month, on average.
So streaming is quite simply the future. And now the challenge before all of us is to arrange that path as neatly as possible. This is not just self-interest as a business person; this is much more self-interest as a music fan.
Here are four suggestions on how to do this. I should point out they are not the official position of my employer. They are more based on my individual experience. Previous to Deezer, I was at Universal Music Canada, and before that at MuchMusic.
First, encouraging foreign investment in music technology is vital. Music technology is an incredibly hot sector. Streaming services, apps that supplement the listening experience, and Internet-connected audio hardware have all seen a huge amount of activity of late. Deezer is arguably the best example of how a foreign-owned music technology business can inject new direct funds into the Canadian music industry, and we should seek new ways to encourage others to do the same. The most immediate way would be to streamline the set-up of international branch operations such as the one I set up for Deezer, and to provide guidance and assistance when it comes to following the various administrative and taxation policies currently in place.
I spent a lot of time just learning what the right questions were, and I'm still figuring out the answers.
Second, we should incentivize telcos to include music as a standard part of each cell phone plan. Mobile is the future. According to the CWTA, there were 27.6 million subscribers in Canada in 2013, and more than half of that number have smart phones that are primed to use music services like Deezer. Two-thirds of our user base currently use Deezer on their mobile devices. So if telcos and their devices are the access point for the music business of the future, we need to ensure that the telcos see their role here as fundamental to the sector's renaissance and growth, and that they are given good reason to participate.
Third, I would like international streaming services to be able to access grants or matching funds to promote Canadian artists internationally. Currently we can't do this. We have to have the labels or artists do this themselves, which just adds an extra step. Instead I propose giving services like Deezer access to at least matching funds specifically for international promotions. This will benefit artists, music fans, and of course services like ours that are providing jobs and direct investment in the country.
The final point is education, something many of my colleagues have brought up in previous meetings, but I come at it from a different angle. Having pirated music myself in the past, I know how easy it is. I know how impossible it is to legislate it away. Students are the biggest consumers of music, and many build their identities around the music they love. So let's focus on getting students using legal music options earlier and thus educating them on the value chain that makes their favourite music possible. Let's include streaming options as part of their education. They will then access legal music that compensates creators. As they get older, they will hopefully continue to be subscribers benefiting the next generation of developing artists.
Thank you for your time, and I look forward to questions.
I appreciate all of you being here.
We've spoken a lot about the elephant in the room, in always referencing the fact that the industry has changed so much. So it's good to meet both Justin and Jason whom I'll refer to today as the elephants in the room in reflecting the changing industry.
Jason, to start with something totally off topic, when you started speaking, I was thinking, “This guy's from Google, but he actually has a voice for radio”, so I was quite interested in seeing that you had shifted over.
I really would like to get into the discussion about exactly what you deliver, because it is fundamentally one of the major reasons why we're doing this music study. That is based, Justin, on your company's efforts to ensure that people can have as much access to music as they possibly can, and likewise, Jason, the recent announcement on your company's foray into this from a Canadian perspective.
We have heard a lot. I don't know whether you have had a chance to read some of the testimony here, but one of the biggest issues facing musicians in Canada today is that they are making little to no money on the art they are producing and the music they are playing, because the vehicle for actually accessing financing or rewarding their creative efforts is subject to .005¢ or .004¢ each time their song is played. We have had accounts of a band's songs being played hundreds of thousands of times and their receiving a cheque for $47.50 for that effort during a year.
I'm wondering how you respond to that, because we are going through a fundamental shift, and all four of you have acknowledged the shift we are going through with respect to the industry. But you guys are the elephants in the room, and I wonder how you respond to the future of Canadian artists, the future of their opportunity, not only to produce and be creative but also to make a living.
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I'll start more generally and then move to some of the specific discussion on streaming.
I think the representatives from CIRAA in the previous panel summed it up with a beautiful phrase, which is “the artist entrepreneur”.
One thing you will find general consensus about is that the paradigm is shifting, the ecosystem has changed fairly dramatically. There are many reasons for that, but basically all of them are online related.
We're also finding ourselves in a situation where the skill set that is required to be successful has also evolved. The cases that I always see, the stories of the artists who seem to do extremely well in the ecosystem, are the artist entrepreneurs. Anyone who wants to engage in a business online has to not only be producing an amazing product that people love and then they can distribute to global audiences, which all of the online platforms are there to help with, but also have to be skilled at how to engage with their audience, understand who their audience or community is, and have the skills to build those communities. These are marketing skills.
The most successful stories that you hear time and time again are about the ones who have a natural gift for it, or, if they don't, are able to link with those people who do, whether they're working in-house at services, or whether this is label 2.0 where it's essentially the people who know how to leverage social media platforms to drive audience engagement.
Also, it's an understanding that the entire mix of income that's going to be flowing to artists is evolving as a consequence. The amount of income in the pie that you're going to see from purely recorded music, I think will not be as significant as it used to be for the majority of artists, not the least of which is because there are a lot more artists, amateur and professional, creating a lot more content than there used to be on a global basis. This has a natural inflationary impact.
The line between the professional and the amateur, the established and the emerging, is extremely blurry. Essentially it's just a matter of whether or not you're trying to do it professionally or not, and whether or not you can hack that. Certainly there are plenty of artists historically who would—
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Looking at ways that we can contribute, even if it's not necessarily providing a mandatory monetary contribution to a fund versus other things that can actually be done, certainly we as a company would be more inclined to look at what can we do creatively to actually promote Canadian content.
For the launch of Google Play music, we made sure that we had a number of playlists basically promoting Canadian artists and so on and so forth, because we knew how extremely important it was. And so, looking at those elements of contribution....
I know that some other witnesses have mentioned the extension of conventional radio regulations to online platforms.... It's something that we would. frankly, be concerned about for a number of reasons.
First, to the extent that the overriding policy objective of the broadcast regulation is to promote the creation and distribution of Canadian content, we have to look at the market and see whether or not that is already being accomplished, and thus whether or not it necessitates regulatory intervention.
Second, I would be very concerned about the impact that would have on the introduction of new services in this country. As has already been alluded to, it's a very complex place to do business in the music space. Licensing is extremely complicated. Adding additional regulations on top of that with respect to mandatory contributions or a mandatory percentage of Cancon would be a significant disincentive for a lot of online services and would not be beneficial to consumers, because it would mean that you have less competition.
It also is not beneficial to artists, because it means that you will have less competition. When there's a plethora of online services operating, each artist has a better position to negotiate with us, because they can say, “Well, if you don't give me the rate that I want, then I'll just go to your competitor because people want my music.”
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I'll start. Define “problem”. It's definitely an issue for some. I think we have all heard their concerns flagged, both in the context of this committee and elsewhere.
It's important to note that on the concerns that have been flagged, there's no consensus even amongst the artistic community about the impacts of streaming and what they actually think about it or what they don't think about it. Every single time I hear a newspaper article about the reduction in royalty rates they're getting from streaming, I'll see another artist who basically says, “well, actually my royalty rates are pretty good”, and/or “to me it's a really powerful discovery service, I'm actually making more money from X, Y, and Z”.
As a consequence, the challenge is not the royalty rate per se. The challenge is that the skills that are required to succeed have radically changed. Some are doing a better job at adapting than others because it's just a completely different environment they're operating in. That's the biggest challenge. Again, if all you do is write songs and your entire living is based purely on royalty-collecting songs, then it's going to be challenging because that royalty is going to diminish over time because now there's more that needs to be done. The question is, okay, then how can you adapt? How can you actually embrace that or pivot into it?
The other thing that actually goes to another recommendation where actually I think you'd find a broad consensus is the issue with respect to streamlining, or at the very least making faster and more efficient, the process at the copyright board. It has been a significant impediment to the development of new services, and it doesn't do anyone any good because it's slow and it's uncertain, which is bad for the collectives, the artists, and the services. We have to look at ways that we can actually improve that process to make it faster and more efficient—frankly, actually more transparent and accessible—and to speed that along. That will probably be resources given to the board because right now it is radically understaffed, especially as the landscape becomes more complex. It's also what you can do to actually improve the process.