For understandable, but not necessarily justifiable
reasons, Sub-Saharan Africa has been the scourge of the international
recorded music industry for decades.
Africa is a vast continent that has delivered comparatively little financially in return for investments.
Copyright protection, as agreed by treaties
internationally, has been almost non-existent in practice. Fiscal
infrastructures for securing revenues have been constantly
unpredictable.
But in the 21st century, the era
of digital tech, social media marketing, mobile apps and streaming
distribution, opportunities are opening up for African and international
rights music holders in the region.
Many are predicting the world’s next global music star or hit could come from Sub-Saharan Africa:
South African telecom behemoth MTN Group generated a
reported $70m from its pan-African subscription-funded streaming music
service in the first six months of 2016 alone?
And CNBC reports that Nigeria, Africa’s biggest territory
by population, releases 500 plus albums annually. With the rampant
piracy market, it is difficult to know how much income sales yielded.
Accountancy giant PwC predicts Nigeria’s total music sector should
generate $86m by 2020.
The French division of international digital distribution
outfit believe digital started offering video distribution deals to
local African indie labels in 2016. The company felt confident to make
that move thanks to the grow thin local-music catalogues, the gradually
increasing Internet and digital media penetration, and the strong
billing infrastructures setup by telecom companies delivering music
content as part of their services.
Africans are among the most prolific creators and consumers of popular music:
Music is being played everyday, round-the-clock, at home
and at work, at birthday parties and graduation celebrations, at schools
and churches, at weddings and funerals, on the street and at corporate
events.
African music is already popular worldwide:
The global fame of veterans like South Africa’s Miriam Makeba, Lady-smith Black Mambazo and Hugh Masekela, Nigerian Afrobeat pioneer Fela Kuti, Angelique Kidjo from Benin and Zimbabwean Oliver Mtukudzi
has raised international awareness of the region’s exceptional talent.
Another generation of equally influential stars singing Hip Hop,
R&B, Afrobeat and numerous indigenous sounds has since appeared.
They include Davido, Efya, Cassper Nyovest, Sauti Sol and Lira.
Zimbabwean veteran Oliver Mtukudzi has sold 700,000 units in South Africa via the country’s biggest label Gallo Record Company and continues to do so from his catalogue.
There is nothing to say why more cannot be achieved in a
region rich in natural resources, a youthful population, arising
educated middle class, an accelerating adoption of digital media, and
abundant potential for economic growth as opportunity knocks within
Sub-Saharan Africa:
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After more than 20 years’ absence, the major labels are returning to Africa.
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Legally accessed streaming is gradually winning over young fans.
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Social media networks are empowering African artists and labels to reach fans directly.
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Big-name brand owners like MTN Group, Vodafone, Unilever and Coca-Cola to sponsor live music events and festivals.
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International hit makers such as Chris Brown, Travis Scott, 50 Cent, Sir Paul McCartney, Jay-Z, Ciara and Rick Ross are collaborating with African acts and linked to African ventures.
Several African countries are signatories to international copyright treaties and conventions:
These include the Berne Convention for the Protection of
Literary and Artistic Works, the International Convention for the
Protection of Performers, Producers of Phonograms and Broadcasting
Organizations, the Geneva Phonograms Convention, the Universal Copyright
Convention(ParisTreaty), the TRIPs Agreement, the Rome Convention and
the WIPO Copyright Treaties.
Enforcing them in the developing African markets has been
almost impossible. However, anti-piracy policies have been yielding
success in South Africa, where the battle against the illegal use and
sale of music has been led by local collective trade association RiSA
(the Recording Industry of South Africa).
Another pro-active copyright organization has
been COSON(Copyright Society of Nigeria), which has been working with
global trade body IFPI to pursue, collect and distribute sound-recording
royalties in Nigeria.
CISAC, the Paris-based international umbrella organization
for the world’s collecting societies, says it had 33 African members by
May 2016.
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