Colonel Panic wrote:I don't get the argument. What's wrong with good music being more accessible?
Shitty music has always been accessible. Hell, it's more than accessible, it's ubiquitous! It's crammed into your earholes everywhere you go. Walk into a clothing store, a grocery store or a fast-food restaurant and what do you hear? Crap music. Turn on the TV or radio, what do you hear? Crap music. Go out to any random club or bar on any random night, what are you likely to hear?
Good music is far less common.
Quoted because it's my opinion as well.
I don't even listen to radio for music anymore. The only radio program I listen when I wake up is a program with news reports, debates, and interviews.
It's extremely rare for me to put a radio station, and hear music that
I like. Most of the "John Peel-style" author programs, where people who were passionate about music would pass it on air, have all but dissappeared.
Whenever I want to listen to music, I just go to myspace, or another music website, where I usually find some pretty nice stuff on a regular basis.
Blogs are a great way to listen to music that I could nevber have heard otherwise. Sometimes, when I have the luxury of travelling, I'll try to go see some local band that I discovered through myspace.
And guess what? even though I rarely hear radio anymore, or see top-10 programs, I still know every single song that's in the charts right now, precisely because these songs are still being thrust inside my throat against my will: it happens on waiting rooms for dentists, cafés, discothéques, working spaces, grammy awards, brit awards, tv news, offices, stores, ringtones, even on the street there's some dick with his walkman too loud for comfort. It's impossible to escape, but at least now, I feel like I can balance things by easily finding music I like on the internet.
I buy few cds nowadays, but when I really love the band I do all I can to support them.
When I was young, I used to dream about a world in which great music would be easily acessible to a lot of people. Now that it's becoming a reality, I'm certainly not going to complain. I just hope that we solve the problems that are arising from this transition period, so that bands have a new infrastructure from which to release their music.
The pricing scheme for the new EPs for Nine Inch Nails is very interesting for me. I would like to see more bands following that scheme.
I would not buy a 300-dollar Shellac vinyl, but I'd certainly support the cheaper options. I don't think that music becomes disposable just because you can get a great quantity of it. I've listened to every single mp3 on my colection of several gigabytes. And there are albums that I just come back to again and again on my wish to listen to them.
A girl that has gigabytes of music which most of it she never listened to, is the same as a girl with a 500-pair shoe colection, of which most shoes have never been worn. There are simply people who are going to collect things, if they have the means at their disposal.
On the other hand, I see a lot of kids who grew up on the mp3 period, who are just as passionate about music the way I was during the mix-tape exchange period. With a large acessibility of music, the end result is simply greater quantities of people who use it either as a disposable item, or as a precious thing.
We are in a period of change, and I'm "realistically" excited about what's coming ahead... I don't miss the old days that much.