Jolted: Starbucks Walks Away From Music Business…
Posted April 25, 2008 — in Music News

Starbucks has decided to walk away from the recorded music business.
Instead, ‘Starbucks will hand over day-to-day management of its year-old music label to Concord Music Group, as it strives to contain costs and rejuvenate its coffee shop business’.
‘Just recently Starbucks unveiled its Hear Music label with great fanfare. Paul McCartney was the first artist to release an album under the Hear Music label, which has since also released CDs by Joni Mitchell and James Taylor, among others’.
Ken Lombard, who oversaw Starbucks’ music unit for much of its existence, is also leaving the company.
This isn’t the first time Starbucks had a failure. In 2006, Starbucks promoted a movie, “Akeelah and the Bee,” which turned out to be a box office flop.
‘It also scrapped a plan to allow customers to create customized CDs in its stores’.
‘In recent months, however, the chain’s overall fortunes have soured due to a sharp downturn in U.S. consumer spending. On Wednesday, the company blamed hard-hit housing markets in California and Florida for slowing sales and warned that its quarterly and 2008 profits would be below expectations’.
“There are people who can handle it better,” Bob Goldin of industry research firm Technomic said of Starbucks’ music business.
Starbucks did a better job at selling music when the were picking a few eclectic titles to sell through their stores. They should have stayed out of the music business beyond that because for all their promotion, Paul McCartney didn’t hit platinum.
Maybe they could have implmented download kiosks in the store as well since everyone in Starbucks seems to own a laptop or a digital music player.
THe downloads of course should be of those same eclectic artists and DRM free…
Comment by Universal Indie Records — April 25, 2008 @ 8:39 am
I wont disagree with Universal Indie, but I am sad to hear the news. Their Hear Music samplers remain some of the best mix cd’s I own and I had high hopes for the label.
Le sigh.
Comment by Gregory — April 25, 2008 @ 10:27 am
Well, now we have Redbull records to take their place.
Comment by Jim — April 25, 2008 @ 1:13 pm
Concord will do a good job — better, IMHO. Fret not, Gregory.
Now if they would just get rid of those super-gross egg sandwich things…
Comment by Stu Gots — April 25, 2008 @ 2:41 pm