Digital Media Is Not The Death Of The Album
One of the laments voiced by the labels and RIAA is that music lovers downloading singles will be the death of the album. That doesn’t make much sense to me based on my experience.
My first three music purchases in the late 70’s were singles on 7″ vinyl. My fourth and fifth purchases were LP’s on 12″ vinyl. My parents had boxes of 45’s and a serious amount of LPs as well. Singles were very popular in the 60’s and 70’s but musicians still produced full-length albums. In the 80’s, cassettes became the audio medium of choice and I loved their durability. I carried a few of my favorites with me to the Middle East when I was deployed for Desert Shield and I have to them to this day. Recording songs to blank cassettes from the radio was very big back in the day.
Then came the CD and a requirement for me to re-purchase every cassette I owned. Compact discs are not the least bit durable and I’m sure the age of the CD was a financial watershed for the labels. Imagine: millions of people purchasing dozens of (more expensive) versions of the music they already own and on a MUCH frailer format to boot. I don’t know why CD singles never caught on. Perhaps we were being conditioned to buy the more expensive conpact disc LPs by the industry?
For my part, I still purchase CDs but I download MP3s as well. I rip my CDs to my harddrive because it makes sense. I can then store the original CD safely away and place the MP3s on my iPod.
The labels – and some of the musicians – are quickly becoming as hated by consumers as the big oil companies. I doubt they were expecting that.
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First of all: You get a fucking blog and don’t let us know at the mixxingbowl? WTFIUWT?
Second of all: Good post. I think it’s complete dog-shit what the RIAA claims. Think about it this way – I might like a song by Artist A, but not the other songs I’ve heard by them. In a CD world, I’d pass on buying it at all. Now, I can buy the single I like, giving the artist and label some money, rather than the no money they would get otherwise. Also, I might hear a song and download it. Then really like it. Then I’m likely to download the entire album. I got an emusic gift sub for a year, and I get 30 downloads a month. I find myself downloading a song or two, then getting the rest of the album for the tracks I like. The RIAA is wrong about everything. Everything. Their rant about making tracks available for free ruining the industry turned into so much hot air as soon as Trent Reznor did so and made over a million dollars in less than a week. Of course the RIAA hated that. Because it proved them wrong and because the money went to the artist and not the labels.