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Electronic Dance Music Industry Made $4.5 Billion Last Year, Jamaicans Are Missing Out

Diplo and Major Lazer

According to the Ibiza International Music Summit (IMS) business report, Electronic dance music is earning $4.5bn (£2.9bn) in global revenues per year.

The data presented at this year’s Ibiza IMS showed that annual revenue from Las Vegas shows alone now contributes $600m. Global Dance Music Industry Grew 71% In the Last Year and Web3 was a major industry growth area, with 64% of all identified music NFTs issued by electronic artists. Web3, Metaverse, NFTs, Blockchain, DAOs and tech play key roles in the report, showcasing the adoption of new ways for artists and brands to build and monetize relationships directly with fans. Electronic artists also pioneered NFTs for digital collectibles

The annual IMS Business Report was presented as part of the IMS Ibiza conference, a coming together of the global dance music industry. This year’s event is happening on the shores of the White Isle at the  Destino Pacha Ibiza Resort. This is the first time since 2019 that the conference is happening live, with 2021 and 2022 taking place virtually due to the pandemic.

Coming out of the conference is news that sales of digital tracks in the US have grown to more than three times that of other music genres. The industry is bouncing back from a ten year low in 2020.

David Boyle, the head of London-based research, data and analytics firm Audience Strategies said, “The industry is buzzing,” as he presented the report, “I heard tons of excitement in my interviews with artists, promoters, agents and labels in the last month. Partly because, as predicted last year, electronic music is back once again. Led by market share gains in the U.K. and Germany, we found growth in 16 countries as the joy and energy of electronic music soundtracks the world’s post-pandemic recovery.”

Key findings from the report were;

 

EDM is now a part of the mainstream music industry especially in Europe, but as he genre struggled to make it into mainstream in the 90s it fused with the sub-genres techno music, house music, hardcore rave (hardstyle), dub, trance, and drum and bass which helped propel it into popularity.

DJ and artist earnings were up $400 million — that’s 111% — over 2020, largely due to the return to live music and shows in 2021.

Dancehall is also one of the original forms of electronic dance music and has contributed to the EDM industry’s revenues, but there were no major dancehall-EDM hits or Jamaican shows last year. Events like Colour Fest, Electric Butterfly Music Festival, were not held, and stalled Paradise Lost Festival was set to generated billions but have not managed to stage an event in a couple years.

Among the top paid DJs and artist, Diplo who has been involved in Jamaica’s EDM development is at No. 7 but there are no dancehall or Jamaican DJs, even though the report boast of improvement in diversity. The report found that representation and demand for people of color in the “DJ Mag Top 100” — an annual ranking of the world’s 100 most popular electronic artists — grew in 2021.

A trip to a Las Vegas or club in Dubai last year would have been met with Major Lazer EMD originals and remixes such as Vybz Kartel ‘Pon Di Floor’ that was in turn was sampled by Beyoncé for ‘Run The World’. They also did Busy Signal’s Bumaye.

Damian Marley’s Make It Bun Dem featuring Skrillix and Sean Paul’s One Wine and Come On To Me, add to the modern dancehall-EDM catalogue.

Charly Black and Gyptian have also found success with EDM, via both remixes and original tracks.

Black’s “Party Animal”, Busy’s Bumaye and just about any Sean Paul hit can be heard at NBA basketball games all across the US.

Billboard.com tells the story of how EDM is as Jamaican as Ackee And Saltfish. One which suggests that successful EDM DJs and events are actually the offspring of King Tubby and his pioneering work.

Major Lazer In Jamaica

“EDM DJs who dissect and otherwise manipulate their tracks while playing live, are following an innovation established by the brilliant Jamaican engineer, sound system owner-selector, the late King Tubby (born Osbourne Ruddock). While working as a disc cutter for Duke Reid and using a two-track recording console, Tubby eliminated vocal and instrumental segments, sometimes stripping a song down to a single thunderous bass line – which he embellished with echo and reverb effects – in a process called dub. Because of his expertise with electronics, Tubby was able to recreate the dub effects live on his sound system, something no one had ever heard, making his set the most popular of the early 70s,” Billboard reported.

 

 

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