The first thing we're talking about doing is in essence not doing an album that has any walls. So we'll release the album in different forms in different places. Not just one CD with twelve songs. Our next album might be forty songs. Now, to the mainstream person, that's too many songs. So maybe you only give them one or two songs at a time. And then I think what's cool is you can deal with different people. You can do a deal with a skater Web site or you can work with Pepsi if you choose.
The music business has sown the seeds for it's own destruction here. So we're not in any hurry to go back and help save them. Warner Bros. treats us like we're from another planet. We've had a good record and we've sold records. And I haven't spoken to the label president since 2005. Now we're free, we're out of our contracts. So I think that makes us really dangerous, because we really are the kind of band that's willing to take chances. We really will work with anybody if we feel it's a cool, fun thing. And it doesn't have to always be about money.
Trent Reznor and Radiohead and all kinds of people have
been jumping out of the major label system and doing things their
own way. Can the labels survive?
Well, as long as they have young dumb bands who are willing to sign
their lives away, yeah, of course. The label's going to continue to
sell them that they're star makers. They're not star makers. Stars
are born. MTV and the labels and secret people you don't know about
don't run the music business any more. MySpace runs the music
business now. Lots of other people run the music business now.
So it's safe to say that now that you are free of your
contracts you're not going to be rushing to sign a new
deal?
Well, I think it's kind of interesting and it's a vulnerable thing
to say: People aren't beating our doors down to sign us, either.
It's not that we're not desirable. We're not dumb. They're not
going to be able to sell us their soap they're going to sell a
twenty-two-year-old. And that's why they don't want to do business
with us.
They're still trying to sell you on the idea that they know something that you don't know. But if you look at the numbers, they don't, they know less than the consumer. The consumer's been telling them for ten years they don't want albums. So what do they do? They continue to try to sell them albums. The consumer says that they don't want to pay $15 for fifteen songs when they only want one song. What do they try to do? They try to shove albums down their throat.
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