blinkx
  • UNITED KINGDOM: British band 'Koopa' breakthrough in another landmark in the internet revolution sweeping the music industry

  • 00:00:11
  • ITN Source
    • Browse

UNITED KINGDOM: British band 'Koopa' breakthrough in another landmark in the internet revolution sweeping the music industry

A little known band reaching no. 31 in the British charts is not normally the stuff of headlines. But Koopa's breakthrough into the prestigious top 40 this week is another landmark in an Internet revolution sweeping the music industry. The punk-rock trio from Essex, east England, have literally played to one man and his dog, so modest is their background. "At one point the man left for 10 minutes, but the dog, he weren't going nowhere," Joe Murphy, guitarist and singer, said in his distinctive Essex slang. "He loved it, tail wagging," the 26-year-old added in a run-down studio on a bleak industrial estate where the band have been rehearsing for years. Koopa is the first unsigned band to land a top 40 single -- "Blag, Steal & Borrow" -- that is available only by downloading it on the Internet. The breakthrough followed changes to the chart this month that mean no physical version of a record is required for the track to qualify. Record executives believe the change will level the playing field in music making, allowing new acts to land hits and old favourites to get a fresh lease of life. While unlikely to have the big record labels quaking in their boots, Koopa's success is the latest example of the fundamental change to the business that is allowing bands to break through via viral hype alone, with no outside backing. "We've worked hard and we work hard on the internet as well as working around, gigging and stuff like that," Murphy said. Music executives admit the industry has been slow to capitalize, focusing for too long on cracking down on illegal file sharing and missing an opportunity to make money from downloads to compensate for falling CD sales. Global digital music sales more than doubled in the first half of 2006 year-on-year, industry figures show, but the overall market fell four percent. Koopa are not the first act to harness the Internet -- the Arctic Monkeys in Britain won a huge online following before securing a record label deal, and went on to have the fastest selling debut album in the country's history. But they are unlikely to be the last, argues Murphy. "We've played with many good bands who could definitely make it and I hope they do now," he said, flanked by brothers Stu and Ollie Cooper, drummer and guitarist/vocalist respectively. The band was critical of big record companies and what they said was a tendency to change bands' style and music. Ollie, 19, recalled one unsuccessful meeting with a major label. "It was going well, this little meeting we had, and then they said 'What would you do if we told you what to do?' And I told them to get lost and we left." Murphy said Koopa had received several phone calls from record labels -- both major and independent -- since their recent success, and the band was not averse to signing a deal. "It's almost like the boot's on the other foot and we're saying to the record labels: 'Well, you've got to come to us and impress us and make us want to sign to your label', rather than us going to them." The band may be going to the United States to record for a label there, and they believe they have a secret weapon to crack the key market that many British groups have failed to conquer. When Stu, 25, turns his head to one side, his spiked hair is a spitting image of the Statue of Liberty's pointed crown.

ITN Source | January 17, 2007Watch more videos from ITN Source

Tags:. .weapon. .alone. .respectively. .required. .normally











Admit   Alone   Arctic   Argues   Averse   Background   Blag   Bleak   Boots   Borrow   Breakthrough   Charts   Compensate   Conquer   Cooper   Cracking   Definitely   Distinctive   Drummer   Essex   Example   Favourites   Fell   Flanked   Focusing   Fundamental   Gigging   Guitarist   Harness   Hype   Illegal   Impress   Industrial   Industry   Kingdom   Koopas   Labels   Landmark   Lease   Left   Literally   Modest   Monkeys   Murphy   Normally   Nowhere   Ollie   Overall   Physical   Prestigious   Punkrock   Quaking   Qualify   Rather   Recalled   Rehearsing   Required   Respectively   Revolution   Rundown   Slang   Steal   Stu   Success   Sweeping   Tail   Tendency   Trio   Unlikely   Unsigned   Unsuccessful   Vocalist   Wagging   Weapon   Werent   Weve