Something new!
Jun. 30th, 2003 01:30 amI was reading a discussion at plastic.com about the RIAA's plans to ream everyone with an MP3 file. Most of the talk was basic:
The real point was that you download a random track from a random band since the original methods of sampling new music (radio, MTV...) have stopped playing new music. If you dig it, you buy the album straight from the artist's web site. Then you go to a show and buy more crap, cuz the band's broke and you have a day job.
This one guy mentioned a band called Dismemberment Plan, which I'd never heard of before. So I went to the web site. The first visuals were two guys that looked like Phish fans on Segways. Eeek, right? I clicked on and looked for sample tracks. I grabbed the track "What Do You Want Me To Say?" because it had a sufficiently non-jam-band title. Jam bands don't offer ego or confrontation. Either way, it's a free sample.
I was hooked right away. I haven't dug a track so fast in years! It felt good to hear a rock band with a skinny but tight rhythm section, a singer with some nasal annoyance but just enough to get you to listen to the lyrics, lyrics that weren't purely insulin nor insolent. Check 'em out if you want.
It felt good to get something good out of a message board. Heck, I'm shocked I'd never heard of this band before (they seem to be from Boston; too many publicity photos from Logan Airport; however, one photo is underneath a school in DC). I gotta get out more.
-carving up boxes, Dante
- Downloading MP3s is stealing;
- ...but the most interesting stuff isn't available any other way;
- so we hope they'll just go after the Britney Spears traders;
- Say, whatever happened to the Fair Use laws?
- Oh yeah, deregulation.
The real point was that you download a random track from a random band since the original methods of sampling new music (radio, MTV...) have stopped playing new music. If you dig it, you buy the album straight from the artist's web site. Then you go to a show and buy more crap, cuz the band's broke and you have a day job.
This one guy mentioned a band called Dismemberment Plan, which I'd never heard of before. So I went to the web site. The first visuals were two guys that looked like Phish fans on Segways. Eeek, right? I clicked on and looked for sample tracks. I grabbed the track "What Do You Want Me To Say?" because it had a sufficiently non-jam-band title. Jam bands don't offer ego or confrontation. Either way, it's a free sample.
I was hooked right away. I haven't dug a track so fast in years! It felt good to hear a rock band with a skinny but tight rhythm section, a singer with some nasal annoyance but just enough to get you to listen to the lyrics, lyrics that weren't purely insulin nor insolent. Check 'em out if you want.
It felt good to get something good out of a message board. Heck, I'm shocked I'd never heard of this band before (they seem to be from Boston; too many publicity photos from Logan Airport; however, one photo is underneath a school in DC). I gotta get out more.
-carving up boxes, Dante
no subject
Date: 2003-06-30 06:32 am (UTC)the continuing argument
Date: 2003-06-30 06:51 am (UTC)I read an interesting paper on the economics of intellectual property, (but of course I can't find the link now) that showed how music sharing did not hurt the creators. It would seem, however, to hurt the major corporations, and that's what the real issue is.
-Teru
http://teru.blogspot.com
no subject
Date: 2003-06-30 07:26 am (UTC)Now, when Napster was up, the search engine was (IMO) broken, because it only let you look for stuff you knew about, so you couldn't download "A random song from a random band"; and that may have been just a technology issue, but the fact that it was so popular puts the lie to people who claim that folks don't download REAMS of free music that they would otherwise buy. Of course we do! Sheesh! If someone offers you stuff you like for free, you take it. *Maybe*, if you feel guilty, do you go buy the album, but anyone who talks about buying as much music as they downloaded is a chump or didn't download enough. ;-)
Nowadays my "new" music mostly comes from streaming broadcasts like Live365, but it's not *all* that new, really. I'd say most of the stations play about 25% new-to-me music; again, personal preference.
I've been taking the "long view" for a while now on Music, and Musicians, and trying to look at how it worked in the days before mass media (which seems to really be what changed how we think about music)...basically, throwing off the mindset that "Radio Playlists are where music was invented". Lots of interesting thoughts in there if you follow it through, and some conclusions if music becomes highly non-centralized (e.g., Rock Gods become really, really rare - a true power law curve). But I'm procrastinating a paper right now so I'll leave that as an exercise for the reader.
TMH