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50 Cent |
Alicia Keyes |
The Beatles |
The talent scout who turned down the Beatles has long
been credited with committing the music industry's biggest gaffe.
But Dick Rowe's billion-dollar boo-boo has been beaten
to the top spot on Blender magazine's list of the "20 biggest record company
screw-ups of all time" by the failure of record companies to capitalize
on the Internet.
The major labels took top dishonors for driving file-sharing service
Napster out of business in 2001, instead of figuring out a way to make
money from its tens of millions of users. The downloaders merely scattered
to hundreds of other sites, and the industry has been in a tailspin
ever since.
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Guns
'n' Roses
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Neil
Young
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Marvin
Gaye
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"The labels' campaign to stop their music from being acquired
for free across the Internet has been like trying to cork a hurricane
-- upward of a billion files are swapped every month on peer-to-peer
networks," Blender said in the report, which appears in its newly
published April issue.
Rowe came in at No. 2 for politely passing on the Beatles
after the unpolished combo performed a disastrous audition in 1962.
Beatles manager
Brian Epstein later claimed the Decca Records executive had told him
that "groups with guitars are on their way out," a comment
that Rowe denied making. He went on to sign the Rolling Stones.
Motown Records founder Berry Gordy was No. 3, because
he sold the money-losing home of the Supremes and Marvin Gaye for
about $60 million
in 1988. The sum was dwarfed the following year when A&M Records
sold for about $500 million. And in 1990, David Geffen got about $700
million for Geffen Records. (Gordy did retain ownership of the lucrative
Motown copyrights.)
Geffen Records grabbed two spots on the list: No. 11 for suing Neil
Young in the 1980s because it did not like his uncommercial musical
direction; and No. 12, for pumping a reported $13 million into a Guns
N' Roses album that still has not seen the light of day after more
than a decade of work.
Other hall of shamers included Columbia Records at No. 10, for dumping
Alicia Keys and rapper 50 Cent before they became famous; and Warner
Bros. Records at No. 13 for signing rock band R.E.M. to a money-losing
$80 million contract in 1996.
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The
Rolling Stones
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The
Supremes
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R.E.M.
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