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Virtually every town in America and Canada has at least one artist or band that puts out their own CDs. Artists with local and regional followings can sell as many as 5000 recordings a year at performances;; artists with followings in several states can sell many more recordings.
Record labels that focus on particular genres of music can have gross incomes of up to several million dollars a year. According to SoundScan, sales of indie recordings in the United States accounts for over a billion dollars annually or approximately 15% of the sales of all recorded product.
The actual income generated by sales of indie recordings may be much higher. Many indies do not bar code their recordings because they sell them at performances, by mail order to fans and on the Internet. And, SoundScan statistics do not include sales generated in many nonrecord retail stores.
If you add consumer purchases of concert tickets for indie performances and sales of promotional merchandise, it is easy to realize why independent recording is a multi-billion dollar industry.
Other benefits for indie artists and labels:
Training Ground for Major Labels.
Artists, such as Loreena McKennitt, bands like Pearl Jam, and whole labels, such as Windham Hill and Interscope have signed deals with major labels. Indie labels have spurred major labels into marketing genres of music they previously spurned, such as hip-hop and Latin.
Control of their Careers.
Artists that make and sell their own recordings profit from their careers, without surrendering their passion and artistic control.
Revitalization of Regional Economies.
Indie labels hire employees, contract services from local vendors and buy or rent musical and audio equipment from local retailers. As artists expand sales beyond their communities, they import money, which further increases the community's economic base.
Indies Under Siege
For all its successes, the indie record industry is increasingly under siege.
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