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by SkronkFronkerdale_Archive
Interesting thread. I definitely get the jadedness with the cost of things and how difficult it is to get anyone to care, but that's a personal bitterness. Artists inherently desire physical documents of their work, and I would never tell a young artist to not bother experiencing that for themselves, that's not really fair. Small runs of CDs would be my suggestion generally to most independent artists. Bandcamp and vinyl are the most relevant releases nowadays I would think, though vinyl is probably a really bad idea unless you are okay with swallowing the cost and carrying big boxes around the rest of your life. I've never felt very comfortable selling my music, personally. I'm nobody, so I feel quite honored that anyone would want to listen to it at all, I end up insisting on giving it away for free almost every time. But I've only ever self-recorded up to this point, and the costs are mentally written off from the start. I find ways to scrape by in the meantime. If someone's broke but still (quite understandably) wants a physical product, just burn CD-R's and make your own art! Or else print jackets and sleeves and buy cases and CD-R's in bulk. The cost becomes negligible, and having a self-printed CD is not without its charm nowadays. The only real drawback is that college radio is less likely to consider playing your CD-R. Recording lo-fi and DIY, as an independent artist, almost seems more expressive and fitting to me anyways in this day and age, where you'll begin as the smallest needle in the biggest haystack anyway, so fuck everyone's expectations. I very much support anyone's attempt at doing anything artistically though, however they want to do it. You could argue most things to be a product of privilege, including having access to the very means needed to create or do anything in the first place. Making art at all typically denotes a certain amount of privilege does it not? It generally costs large amounts of time and money to make, yet getting anyone to actually pay for it in the internet age, particularly regarding recouping the costs, is mostly a lost cause. Feels a bit like looking down from a mountaintop but forgetting how you got up there. Just because the monetary value of someone's art is ambiguous at best, doesn't in any way negate the spiritual value it has for those who do bother with it, including the creators themselves. The most valuable things seldom translate to numbers on paper. Enough of the shit people buy and consume is unnecessary, such a life-affirming act as having your work made is incomparably more valuable than the vast majority of it. That said, its important to be thoughtful and responsible about how much you are spending versus how much you are making, particularly if you are pressing albums every year.