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"It's a natural phase, the next progression," says Baptiste, urban music business development manager for Beatsource, who enlisted Rodriguez. "It's like, here's an opportunity to take the music industry in a new direction. If you read Vibe and Source, you can really see the atmosphere of music. This is definitely the next step.
"It's a cliche phrase by now," he goes on, "but the music industry's dying. Record sales and CD sales are down. Artists are getting shafted. Basically, in a nutshell, the music industry just sucks right now. But what Beatsource is going to do is to put the business back into the hands of indie labels and artists, essentially, first and foremost. I think it's going to allow artists to make creative music, and by doing that, they won't have to worry about budgets as much. You don't have to spend any more money on the process of printing up CDs and all that stuff. Basically, all you need now is a studio and some artwork. Shoot it to Beatsource, and it's up."
Not only that, but the music will be offered in multiple formats (320-bit MP3s, 192-bit MP4s and uncompressed wav files), as well as various mixes (clean, dirty, a cappellas and instrumentals). And like the early incarnation of its electronic counterpart, Beatsource will initially be geared toward DJs.
"This is a DJ-friendly site for the DJ, just like Beatport is," Baptiste points out. "The music is sold in non-DRM, non-encrypted files. If a DJ is at a club and is like, 'Damn, I need that new, hot song,' you can't directly download from iTunes, because it's a whole long process. First of all, they sell their stuff in an MP4 format. Ours are sold as MP3s, MP4s and wavs — they can download it right through the wi-fi in the club. Go to Beatsource.com, and bam! They can play it instantaneously with whatever method they want.
"It's basically like going to the record store back in the day to get that twelve-inch," he adds. "A lot of that stuff, right now, is still on wax; it's hard to find. If you're a DJ and you started in the ´90s, a good portion of stuff you really love is on wax."
When Beatsource launches (the tentative target date is next month), it will be stocked with 20,000 titles from hundreds of labels, everything from those hard-to-find titles, to classic hip-hop from labels like Delicious Vinyl and Nervous, to current hip-hop releases. Baptiste believes Beatsource will have an even bigger impact once the labels recognize that this is the way the business is headed. "It's all going digital," he declares. "I think it's just changing the business strategy, the business model. You have to change with the times.
"Since July, when we started," he says, "I've heard Rick Rubin from Columbia; I've heard Jay Z [talking about digital]. We've talked to Warner Bros. personally, and everybody's saying, 'We're looking for other ways to make money.' Everybody knows they're not going to make a lot of money. But some money's better than none." To that end, Beatsource has set up a generous 60/40 split with the labels.
"I think this is definitely a catalyst to start a domino effect," Baptiste continues. "I enjoy the challenge, you know what I'm saying? That's kind of really what I've always been into with hip-hop: How can I make it look good, and where can I help take it? It's a real good look for me right now."