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Creativity and Innovation in the Music Industry [electronic resource] / by Peter Tschmuck.

By: Contributor(s): Publisher: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 2006Description: XIX, 281 p. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781402042751
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 338.6 23
LOC classification:
  • HD28-70
  • HD2321-4730.9
Online resources:
Contents:
The Emergence of the Phonographic Industry within the Music Industry -- The Music Industry Boom until 1920 -- New Technology and the Emergence of Jazz -- The Music Industry as Radio Industry -- The Swing Monopoly during the Years of Wartime Economy -- Rock ‘N’ Roll Revolution -- The Recovery of the Phonographic Industry and New Global Players -- The Era of Music Conglomerates -- The Digital Revolution and the Internet -- Theoretical Concepts of Innovation and Creativity -- Creativity and Innovation in the Music Industry -- Creativity and Innovation in the Music Industry’s Value-Added Chain.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: When my Habilitation (the tenure research document for my professorship) was published for the first time by StudienVerlag in 2003, I did not expect that a scientific study such as this would reach such a large readership in the Germ- speaking world. However, public discussion at that time was coincidentally focused on the structural break within the music industry, culminating in a controversial debate about the causes and consequences of that revolution. While I did not intend to address the current discussion regarding the development of the music industry, it nonetheless appeared to be the right time to publish such a book. Timing, in other words, matters! The unexpected acceptance of my book by the Austrian and German readership inspired me to consider publishing it in English as well. The book provides an explanation for the emergence of innovation and creativity in the music industry by retelling and interpreting its history, from Thomas Alva Edison’s invention of the phonograph in 1877 to the latest innovations such as MP3-files and iPods. The global nature of this history causes me to believe that this book is going to be of interest to an international readership as well. My hope is that this translation will be received with the same level of warmth and generosity that the publication of the German original enjoyed.
Item type: eBooks
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The Emergence of the Phonographic Industry within the Music Industry -- The Music Industry Boom until 1920 -- New Technology and the Emergence of Jazz -- The Music Industry as Radio Industry -- The Swing Monopoly during the Years of Wartime Economy -- Rock ‘N’ Roll Revolution -- The Recovery of the Phonographic Industry and New Global Players -- The Era of Music Conglomerates -- The Digital Revolution and the Internet -- Theoretical Concepts of Innovation and Creativity -- Creativity and Innovation in the Music Industry -- Creativity and Innovation in the Music Industry’s Value-Added Chain.

When my Habilitation (the tenure research document for my professorship) was published for the first time by StudienVerlag in 2003, I did not expect that a scientific study such as this would reach such a large readership in the Germ- speaking world. However, public discussion at that time was coincidentally focused on the structural break within the music industry, culminating in a controversial debate about the causes and consequences of that revolution. While I did not intend to address the current discussion regarding the development of the music industry, it nonetheless appeared to be the right time to publish such a book. Timing, in other words, matters! The unexpected acceptance of my book by the Austrian and German readership inspired me to consider publishing it in English as well. The book provides an explanation for the emergence of innovation and creativity in the music industry by retelling and interpreting its history, from Thomas Alva Edison’s invention of the phonograph in 1877 to the latest innovations such as MP3-files and iPods. The global nature of this history causes me to believe that this book is going to be of interest to an international readership as well. My hope is that this translation will be received with the same level of warmth and generosity that the publication of the German original enjoyed.

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