Originally posted by: thomsbrain
Originally posted by: ThePresence
Originally posted by: FeathersMcGraw
Probably because the sound that it takes to gain mainstream acceptance will differ from the things that the first-adopter niche market likes.
Maybe, but there is usually a reason why the first cd didn't make them popular. Usually because it sucked.
you obviously have no clue how the music industry works. do you have any idea how much raw money it takes to get a single song on the radio, let alone promote an entire album? you can't just release an album and have it blow up on it's own. the best you can hope for (if you are really amazing) is maybe 10,000 copies. Sublime managed 30,000 copies of their first album on their own, and that was with huge word-of-mouth.
many bands are signed on the strengh of one song, and since that one song always fits a very specific industry format, chances are it doesn't represent the band. So you get signed and the label says "we need 12 more of these or we don't release your record, and we own your ass for the next 5+ years, so unless you just want to sit around doing nothing, you have to do what we say." in addition, if a band spends their recording budget recording an album that the label deems unacceptable, who do you think pays to record the replacement? THE BAND. that's ON TOP of already having to pay back the label for the first try. So now they owe the label money AND they probably had to take out huge personal loans to record the second try. Thus there is huge pressure to get the first try approved, and that almost always means making compromises to the sound of the band. The only way to avoid this is if you're lucky enough to have a label that's really into you as a band, not just for one potential single. Then they're more likely to approve whatever you send their way. But those situations are few and far between because the industry is run by people who love money, not music, and that applies to even the indie labels.