It's the sobering reality of today's music
business -- a record company executive can sign
a new act and then tell her, "Keep your day
job."
That was one message neo-soul singer
Sharon Little got from Larry Jenkins, head
of the new
CBS Records label, an offshoot not of
Sony-owned Columbia Records but an arm of CBS
Television.
It's equally telling that since hearing that
advice when she signed last fall, Little's
response has been gratitude, not animosity.
"It wasn't like they said, 'Here's $50,000 so we
can sign you'; it was, 'We'll give you a small
advance, but here's all the stuff we're going to
do for you,' " said Little, a 27-year-old singer
and songwriter who did indeed hold onto her job
as a waitress in Philadelphia while recording
her debut album this year.
"It was like tough love in a way," she added.
"You have to work harder to get where you want
to be because you don't have all this money up
front to fall back on."
That's one way this new label with an old name
is trying to blaze a different path in the
ailing record business.
Nancy Tellem, who heads CBS' network and
television studio's entertainment division,
spearheaded the launch of the label in 2006. The
underlying business strategy is twofold: Save on
music licensing by building a small stable of
acts whose recordings would be owned by the
parent group and generate revenue for CBS if any
of those acts get a hit.
But for Jenkins, a veteran music publicist who
left the Sony family of labels five years ago,
it represented a new opportunity to revisit some
old values.
"I spent an entire career at the major labels,"
Jenkins said, "and I learned a lot of what to do
-- and a lot of what to avoid. I thought, 'What
if we went into this where we'll only sign
artists who are really talented? The kind of
artists you can bring to your office with
acoustic guitar or a keyboard and they sing and
play great. The real deal."
For him, that's a group of acts that are all
essentially singer-songwriters, including
Little, who will open for
Robert Plant and Alison Krauss on tour this
summer,
Keaton Simons,
Karmina (sisters Kelly and Kamille Rudisill),
Will Dailey, and
PJ Olsson.
During the last year while CBS Records has been
gearing up -- a period in which the original
business plan was interrupted by the writers
strike -- the label's acts have landed music on
TV about 80 times, Jenkins said.
That's a small slice of what he says is more
than 2,000 music placements in CBS prime-time
shows alone in a given season. It constitutes,
he said, "a small dent." But it's a meaningful
one to aspiring musicians.
"There's a huge television audience out there,
particularly with shows like 'CSI' and 'Grey's
Anatomy,' " said Kelly Rudisill. "That's really
good for artists like us."
It also provides TV's creative types with what
essentially is a one-stop shop for music.
"Two months ago, the label had a showcase with
Will Dailey, Sharon Little and Keaton Simons,
and within a month of that show, we had used a
song from each in our series," said Joshua Rexon,
producer of "NCIS." "It's a great relationship."
That relationship cuts two ways. Most of the
time, the CBS acts get a five- or 10-second
promo at the end of any show their music appears
in, directing viewers to the artists' websites
or retailers such as iTunes or Amazon.
Other networks have made similar moves. For the
last several years, NBC Universal and Target
stores have collaborated on a series of holiday
music releases. ABC and Disney tag team with
Hollywood Records releases from musicians
featured on the ABC-owned Disney Channel.
Of course, the potential dark side of a TV
network with an in-house music library that's
essentially free -- and also eventually could
generate additional revenue for the corporate
parent -- is that bigwigs might insist that
underlings use it.
"Nobody has ever told me to take a song out and
put a CBS song in," said Ken Sanzel, executive
producer of the crime drama "Numb3rs," which has
tapped songs from Simons and Little in recent
episodes. "And when I look at our shows, we
still have a lot more non-CBS than CBS music."
Said Jenkins: "If a show wants Coldplay or
AC/DC, they're not going to take our brand-new
artists instead. It's not like this label is
intended to replace the rest of music industry."
By the same token, Jenkins' vision isn't
restricted to CBS, and he noted that one of
Dailey's songs made the cut for a show on ABC.
The new model won't work all the time, even at
CBS. Veteran music supervisor Gary Calamar ("Six
Feet Under, "Weeds," "Dexter") recently has been
scouting songs to use in CBS' series "Swingtown."
"I did have a meeting with the CBS Records
people and talked about using some of their
music," he said. "Unfortunately, because it's a
period piece, set in 1976, and the producers
really want to stick with recordings from that
period, we couldn't use any of them. . . . In
this particular case it didn't make sense. But
when it does, that kind of resource would be
great to have."
The label is just now putting out its first
physical CDs for conventional and online
retailers. Little's album came out May 27,
Karmina's hit Tuesday and Simons' debut is due
next week.
Jenkins likes to talk about another aspect of
CBS that's something of a throwback: community.
Simons is touring this summer with Dailey, and
Karmina's Kelly has joined Simons on stage.
"It's a small family but a very close family. It
really is," Karmina's Kamille said. "Everyone
works really hard together. We all get along and
go to each other's shows."
Said Sharon Little: "It's kind of neat to be
signed to a label that's a major label but that
has an indie feel. It's like that really popular
kid at school who also turns out to be really
nice."