Should todays bands/artists release more than 1 album every 3 years?

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed

Rihanna's manager thinks so

The music industry routine of releasing a new album every three to four years is no longer viable, Rihanna's manager has argued.

"Kids want new material all the time," said Jay Brown, who has overseen the singer's career since she signed as a teenager.

"I think you become disposable when you put out an album every three years."

Brown was speaking as Rihanna, 23, prepared to launch Talk That Talk, her sixth album since 2005.

She has sold more the 20 million albums worldwide, recording new tracks in mobile studios as she tours, allowing for an almost unbroken schedule of annual releases.

"It's not like we force her," said Brown. "She goes into the studio because she likes it."

The star's manager, who works for Jay-Z's Roc Nation company, added that he felt albums had become bloated, with unnecessarily long running times.

"Nobody, when they're buying an album, wants to skip over tracks," he said.

"If there are too many songs, you dilute what you're trying to do."

He pointed to Sarah McLachlan's 1997 album Surfacing as an example of an ideally-paced record. The Grammy-winning work featured just 10 tracks and clocked in at a compact 41 minutes.

It was released at a time when record companies, keen to make CDs look like value for money, packed out discs to their maximum, 80-minute capacity.

More recently, some of the biggest-selling international hits, including Amy Winehouse's Back To Black and Adele's 21, have featured similarly slight running times.

Rihanna has followed suit. Talk That Talk, is just over 35 minutes on the standard edition.

"When we were deciding the tracks to put on there, I wasn't thinking about minutes and seconds," said Brown. "I just wanted to make sure it was all hits."

The album, which was played to journalists in London on Thursday afternoon, continues Rihanna's fusion of eurodance, R&B and reggae.

Early tracks maintain the uptempo club feel of her recent number one single, We Found Love, while the Bajan singer's predilection for raunchy lyrics is unabated on songs such as Roc Me Out and Watch N' Learn.

The record is released by Mercury on 18 November.

(Algerian Goalkeeper) Vs (Armand Schaubroeck Ratfucker), Friday, 11 November 2011 01:39 (thirteen years ago)

Noise dudes figured this one out a while ago

|III|||II|||I|I||| (Matt #2), Friday, 11 November 2011 01:41 (thirteen years ago)

5 albums a week is a bit much..

(Algerian Goalkeeper) Vs (Armand Schaubroeck Ratfucker), Friday, 11 November 2011 01:42 (thirteen years ago)

I think that Rihanna shouldn't if it means we would've been spared Loud.

Who wants to see the great Pavarotti sit on a pie? (jer.fairall), Friday, 11 November 2011 01:42 (thirteen years ago)

3 or 4 years between albums is too long though, why do the labels do this?

(Algerian Goalkeeper) Vs (Armand Schaubroeck Ratfucker), Friday, 11 November 2011 02:37 (thirteen years ago)

i feel like more than 2 years only became standard for a while in the 80s and 90s, after Thriller etc. showed how long you could prolong an album's shelf life with videos and tours etc., and when albums got longer in the CD era and artists could kinda blow their load with a bunch of material at once. obv there's still some artists who take long breaks between albums and still stay a big deal (Justin Timberlake, Coldplay's standard 3 year gaps), but that's always gonna be the case really.

some dude, Friday, 11 November 2011 02:44 (thirteen years ago)

I think to an extent rock and really a big chunk of music in general is back to the clubs. Putting out new music is a way to get people to go to the gigs or buy a shirt. The huge artists will continue to spread them out, but I think the people that are working it hustle it more and putting out new music is a way to keep people on the trail. The technology is there that you also CAN do whatever you want whenever you want wherever you are, so it isn't like the old days where you had to get your label to block out some time in some studio to make a record happen.

Sure it won't change it for the guys in the top echelon, as they are working with a whole different budget, but for tons of other groups and musicians, they got to play gigs and keep new tracks coming to keep it rolling on.

earlnash, Friday, 11 November 2011 03:49 (thirteen years ago)

maybe record companies will want albums released more often so they can get regular money coming in from the big acts though?

(Algerian Goalkeeper) Vs (Armand Schaubroeck Ratfucker), Friday, 11 November 2011 08:15 (thirteen years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.