Making a Scene Presents - The Real Reason Streaming Pays So Little, And Why It Was Designed That Way
Streaming did not become unfair by accident. The dominant payout model was built to make giant catalogs easy to license, cheap to sell, and sticky for listeners. That helped platforms grow and helped major rights holders protect old power in a new format. It did not build a healthy middle class for working artists. The next fight is not just about a better royalty formula. It is about ownership, fan data, and turning streaming back into what it should be for independents: discovery, not destiny.
The music business loves a clean rescue story. Piracy nearly burned the whole thing down. Streaming rode in like a hero. Subscriptions brought the money back. Everybody got saved. End of movie.
Except that is not how it feels from the van, the home studio, the merch table, or the monthly distro report.
For a lot of independent artists, streaming feels like standing in the middle of a giant city, singing into a megaphone, and getting tipped in pocket lint. The audience is massive. The access is global. The numbers look big on the screen. But the money that reaches the artist often feels weirdly small, almost insultingly small. And because the platforms are wrapped in the language of “access,” “discovery,” and “democratization,” artists are often pushed to think the problem is them. Maybe they just need more streams. Maybe they need better playlisting. Maybe they need to crack the algorithm. Maybe they need to go viral.
That is the trap.
http://www.makingascene.org