Posts Tagged ‘networking’
Wednesday, May 19th, 2010
Assuming there will be no more ash cloud problems I will be over in Newcastle next week to speak at ‘The Know How‘ event. The panel is called Transmission and focuses on the changes in regional broadcasting and music consumption in general.

The event is organized by Generator and Evolution 2010 and I will be joined on stage by Ben Perreau (Global Radio/Gigulate) and Paul Campell (Amazing Radio) on the 24th May.
When I was on the phone today with our moderator Russ Conway I was reminded again of the gap in our terminology: we keep using the word ‘radio’ when we speak of services such as Last.fm and Pandora. The truth is that they have very little to do with the original ‘one-to-many’ broadcasting service called radio but we don’t seem to have a better term. ‘Personalized Streaming Music Service’ just doen’t sound very neat.
And something became clear today: I’ll probably have to get used to the fact that people will call me a ‘former Last.fm-er’. I noticed that’s the case with many of the guys that left Last.fm and I now often catch myself introducing myself as the former Head of Music. It just makes it easier for other people to understand what I’m all about even though we are more than the name of our old employer.
Tags: conference, digital music, last.fm, music industry, networking, newcastle, panel, radio
Posted in On the road | Comments Off
Thursday, May 13th, 2010
Following last nights great OpenMusicMedia event in Toronto I’m very much looking forward to our nest session in London on the 26th May. I will be back in town that week and hope to see you there. Below my post for the OpenMusicMedia blog with all the details:
After years of proclaiming the ‘death of the physical format’ we’re still celebrating the traditional independent record shops. While big chains are disappearing or changing their inventory from music to other entertainment products the local record store still seems to have an important role in music discovery and delivery.
In our next OpenMusicMedia session on the 26th May we will be joined by Stephen Godfroy who is the Director of Rough Trade Retail to discuss some of the following issues:
- What is the current and future role of independent record shops?
- What is the state of the physical record business?
- With digital music becoming ubiquitous, what does that mean for physical formats?
- What role do record shops provide for a local music scene?
- Will record shops continue to act as a ‘filter’ for music recommendation or are they mainly a point of distribution?
We will meet again in the William IV in East London, a short walk from Old Street station. Sticking to the OpenMusicMedia formula this will be an open conversation and we’re looking forward to everyone’s contribution. All OpenMusicMedia events are free but we appreciate you RSVPing on our facebook event. To get in touch please leave a comment below or send us a message on Twitter. Looking forward to seeing you there!
Wednesday, 26th May 2010 6:00 PM
at the William IV
7 Shepherdess Walk
London, N1 7QE
(Google Maps)
Tags: london, music industry, networking, openmusicmedia, record shops, record stores, rough trade
Posted in On the road | Comments Off
Friday, April 30th, 2010
I’ve been in Vancouver just over two weeks and someone warned me that I will have to go over to Toronto before I realize it. It only took me this long.
As a co-founder of OpenMusicMedia I certainly wanted to see what the guys in Toronto are doing with the idea since I knew they had some good events last year. What I didn’t expect is that they would invited me to lead the conversation is the next OpenMusicMedia Toronto event which will take place on the 12th May.
Our conversation will focus on location based music services and we’ll discuss if those are necessary for the industry as well as music fans. The idea started with me thinking that 15 years ago a lot of the music discovery and consumption happened on a local level: we would find new music on local radio station, in the local record shops or through friends we hang out and go to gigs with. With the Internet things became very global and now we can explore music from all over the world and we are not bound to our local areas.
More recently we see the success of services and websites that are focusing on your area (Foursquare being just one example) and in our next OpenMusicMedia session in Toronto we want to discuss what this means for the music industry. Do we need more ‘local music services’? What role will local radio stations have in the future? After the closure of many local record store around the world will we they see their comeback over the next few years?
As always with OpenMusicMedia, I will not answer those questions but only act as a moderator for a big discussion in an informal setting. If you’re around it’d be great to see you there.
Tags: canada, digital music, music industry, networking, openmusicmedia, toronto
Posted in On the road | 2 Comments »
Monday, February 15th, 2010
Holidays. And not just sitting by the beach for a week but really getting away from life’s routine, seeing other places and getting to know new people. That’s what I’m doing right now.
I haven’t had an iPhone/Blackberry for four months and of course haven’t been working. But I also haven’t produced a radio show (in fact have hardly listened to any new music), haven’t been involved with the new OpenMusicMedia events and haven’t even been blogging.
I spent the last four months in South America with Raila and feel truely relaxed – in fact I’m surprised how easy it was to disconnect from my life in London. We are moving to Canada soon so I have been ‘homeless’ since we left and all my belongings boil down to a 15kg Deuter backpack. I have two pairs of trousers and two jumpers.
Nevertheless (or perhaps because of all this) I look forward to getting back into something you can call a ‘normal routine’. And for me this routine will start with something fun:
I’m moderating a panel at SXSW in Austin this year, the topic of our discussion is ‘how will we listen to music in 2020‘. I will be joined on stage on the 17th March by Alexander Ljung (SoundCloud), Ben Perreau (Gigulate) and Steve Savoca (Domino). With such speakers this should be an intersting talk, if there is anything specifically you want to see discussed, feel free to post a comment here.
If you are at SXSW as well please let me know, would be good to meet you there: jonas(at)jonaswoost(dot)com.
PS: if you’re more intersted in my time off rather than SXSW you can find some pictures here and you can follow me on twitter here.
Tags: austin, conference, digital music, music industry, networking, panel, sxsw
Posted in On the road, Strongly recommended | Comments Off
Friday, September 4th, 2009
This is a copy of a post from our OpenMusicMedia blog, would be great to see you there on the 17th September!
After months of trying to get this nailed down we are very pleased to announce that Joi Ito will be in London and joining us to lead the conversation at the next OpenMusicMedia! Joi is the CEO of Creative Commons so make sure you clear your diaries for 17th September for what looks set to be a great session.
Most of you will probably have heard of Creative Commons already, but we think that it’s a topic that is not discussed enough by a music industry that has traditionally built its business around a different view of copyright. There’s lots to discuss and we’ll only have one evening, but here are just a few of issues that we’d like to talk about:
- What role does Creative Commons have to play within the music industry?
- Does CC mean we are just giving away our music for free and no one makes any money?
- The existing licensing structure for the music industry has been working for so many years, is CC just making it more complex?
As always we want you to get involved as much as possible in the conversation – before, during & after. We’ll be meeting at around 6pm and the talk will start at 7pm, usually lasting around an hour. We strongly recommend that you stick around after as often the best part of the conversation happens over a beer or two.
The event is free and open to everyone but please RSVP on Facebook to help us working out how many people will attend. Please note that we expect this to be a busy night so we recommend arriving early in order to find a seat. If you’re late we can’t guarantee entry. Leave a comment below or contact us on Twitter if you have any questions.
Thursday, 17th September 2009
6:00 PM
William IV
Tags: conference, Creative Commons, digital music, Joi Ito, london, music industry, networking, openmusicmedia
Posted in Strongly recommended | Comments Off
Friday, August 28th, 2009
When I realized that I won’t be able to attend this years Transmission conference because of other commitments (it will become more clear next week) I was disappointed. I had such a great time last year and I felt I’m missing out.
Fortunately I was able to participate at least in one way: I took part in their Politalk48 session which is basically a panel of experts who discuss a topic via email over a period of 48 hours. The results are then published on the TransmitNow website for anyone to read. The topic was “Next Generation Leadership” and the outcome can be found here.
Tags: canada, conference, digital music, leadership, music industry, networking, transmission, victoria
Posted in Strongly recommended | Comments Off
Thursday, July 30th, 2009
This post was originally published on our OpenMusicMedia blog but I re-posted it here for you guys to read as well. Would be great to see you there:
We wanted to do something slightly different for this next meetup, we wanted to discuss ‘Music As Culture’. Leading the conversation will be New Music Strategies’ Andrew Dubber and Jez Collins. This conversation actually started at Unconvention Salford but we felt it was one worth continuing down in London for OpenMusicMedia. But what exactly does ‘Music As Culture’ entail? We’ll leave it to Dubber to explain below…
Music As Culture
It’s no surprise to anyone that the music industries are struggling in the digital age. Faced with a filesharing populace, an incredible array of media choices, a tough economic climate, and plenty of other things for people to spend money on, it can be pretty tight for a lot of people in the industries.
Recent research demonstrates a link from openness and inclusion to massive untapped potential for all kinds of businesses. Consumers have a bigger say in the fate of the industries than ever before – and while they recognise the commercial aspects of music business, they do not accept that old systems of control are relevant to them anymore.
By empowering consumers, opening access to archives and for scholarship, enriching the public domain, according popular music the same cultural status as classical and folk musics, and treating audiences as part of the music process (rather than as merely passive consumers), the society we live in is a much richer and vibrant one.
It’s good for culture, it’s good for the economy, it invigorates local scenes, it’s a lifeline for artists – and it’s great for business. In fact, it might just be what saves the music industries.
As always this will be an open discussion and you will set the agenda for the night. We’ll be starting the discussion at around 7pm but feel free to be there by 6pm and have a drink with us. You can find all the details below, if you have any questions, leave a comment or contact us via twitter.
The event is free to open to everyone but if you can please RSVP at our new Facebook group.
Tuesday, 11th August 2009
6:00 PM – 11:00 PM
William IV
7 Shepherdess Walk
London, England N1 7QE
Tags: digital music, dubber, london, music as culture, music industry, networking, openmusicmedia
Posted in On the road, Strongly recommended | Comments Off
Friday, July 3rd, 2009
I went to the UK launch of Chris Anderson‘s new book ‘FREE‘ last night which unsurprisingly was a very busy event since he is a bit of a digital media pop star. With being a celebrity come the critics that have to proof that your ideas are in fact rubbish and that try to find examples where “The Long Tail” does not work and where “FREE” destroyed jobs.
I’m not one of those guys. However I had to think of something when Chris was talking about some of his ideas last night. They gave out free copies of the book (an abridged version, not the full one) so I can even quote him now. He is writing:
“What the Internet does is combine all three, compounding the price declines with a triple play of technology: processors, bandwidth, and storage. As a result, the net annual deflation rate of the online World is nearly 50 percent, which is to say that whatever it costs YouTube to stream a video today will cost half as much in a year.”
Although I agree that the above applies to any technology costs this does not work for any licensing expenses. The licensing fees for content is already the biggest expense for many services that stream or otherwise deliver content to consumers. Although there is certain evidence that the cost of content is going down (the PRS has recently lowered they per stream royalty for music streaming services) I don’t believe that this trend will keep on going at a rate of 50% per year.
Nevertheless, Chris Anderson’s book ‘FREE’ looks like another must read for anyone who is interested in how technology changes moder day economics.
Tags: chris anderson, economics, free, london, music industry, networking, streaming
Posted in Rambling, Strongly recommended | 1 Comment »
Thursday, June 25th, 2009
Because of the tube strike in London we had to cancel this event but we have now confirmed a new date.
We look forward to seeing you on the 1st July 2009 at the William to discuss Videos & Music. You can find all details below:
In all our previous OpenMusicMedia sessions the focus has primarily been on music – we talked about recommendations, live music, different ways of consuming recorded music and of course how the whole ecosystem of music works (or not) and what has to happen to make it work in the future.
For our next night we want to discuss an art form which has always been closely related to music: videos. We have invited Caroline Bottomley who is the founder of Radar Music Videos, “a music video commissioning platform and music video director network” to present us with her ideas on the future of music videos. She will be explaining why her website is important for musicians and video producers and from there we will try and explore how digital technology has been affecting visual content.
As always the conversation will kept very broad – topics we want to talk about include:
- Do artists need music videos these days?
- Is it easier of harder to get exposure for your music videos in the age of YouTube?
- What makes a video ‘viral’?
As always this will be an open discussion and you will set the topics for this night. We’ll be starting the discussion at around 7pm but feel free to be there by 6pm and have a drink with us. You can find all the details below, if you have any questions, leave a comment or contact us via twitter.
The event is free to open to everyone but if you can please RSVP at our new Facebook group.
Wednesday, 10th June 2009 1st July 2009
6:00 PM – 11:00 PM
William IV
7 Shepherdess Walk
London, England N1 7QE
Tags: music videos, networking, openmusicmedia, radar music, videos
Posted in Strongly recommended | 1 Comment »
Monday, March 2nd, 2009
We’re very pleased to have Spotify speak at our next OpenMusicMedia meet which happens on the 10th March, as always at the William IV in East London.
Spotify is a streaming music service that gives listeners free and legal access to millions of tracks via their desktop client. It’s a service that has proved popular amongst early adopters and is already changing the way that many people access music.
So what is Spotify’s business model? Will it succeed? Can access be funded by advertising? Are there times when ownership is important? What are main benefits off the access model? And what are the implications for the music industry? These are some of the questions that we will be talking about, as always in a open context without hidden agendas.
You can find more information here and make sure you come down early as we are expecting it to be very busy.
Please RSVP on Facebook.
Tuesday, March 10th, 2009
6:00 PM – 11:00 PM
William IV
7 Shepherdess Walk
London, N1 7QE
Tags: london, music, music industry, networking, openmusicmedia, spotify, streaming music, subscriptions
Posted in On the road, Strongly recommended | 1 Comment »