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debrewguy View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 05 2009 at 19:30
as I said in the other thread, I like it best when an artist (say Hi Monsieur Barrett, take a bow Marillion) simply advises their fans that they rely on albums sales to keep making music, and then thank the fans who do support them.
Illegal downloads are a mixed bag at best, and it depends on each act as to whether they've been affected positively or negatively.
When a musician shows me that he or she appreciates the fact that people have chosen to spend hard earned money on their music, well ... right there it shows a certain respect for their audience, and reveals that the artist knows they must work to earn that privilege, album after album, tour after tour. No matter the challenges faced.
And I'll be honest, with the current explosion niche within niche within a sub niche genre in music, it's no longer about trying to attract the casual listener. It's about getting and keeping those hard core fans that will pay for your CDs, special editions, LPs, DVDs, merchandise, tickets ... and also provide you with a honest to goodness real street team who's out there sharing their enthusiasm, not for pay, but for love of the music.

Think of it - They'll pay you for your music, and  , to top that, they'll work for you.

"hey , have you heard the new Voivod album, man ?"


"Here I am talking to some of the smartest people in the world and I didn't even notice,” Lieutenant Columbo, episode The Bye-Bye Sky-High I.Q. Murder Case.
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debrewguy View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 05 2009 at 19:32
you know Dean, this merging of two threads is really going to kill a good series of quotes within quotes within quotesThumbs Up
"Here I am talking to some of the smartest people in the world and I didn't even notice,” Lieutenant Columbo, episode The Bye-Bye Sky-High I.Q. Murder Case.
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Dean View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 05 2009 at 19:37
^ I think they had played out Claude, but if you want to continue pyramid building you only have to hit "quote" in the other thread, then cut and paste it into the reply box of this one.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 05 2009 at 19:47
Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:

as I said in the other thread, I like it best when an artist (say Hi Monsieur Barrett, take a bow Marillion) simply advises their fans that they rely on albums sales to keep making music, and then thank the fans who do support them.
Illegal downloads are a mixed bag at best, and it depends on each act as to whether they've been affected positively or negatively.
When a musician shows me that he or she appreciates the fact that people have chosen to spend hard earned money on their music, well ... right there it shows a certain respect for their audience, and reveals that the artist knows they must work to earn that privilege, album after album, tour after tour. No matter the challenges faced.
And I'll be honest, with the current explosion niche within niche within a sub niche genre in music, it's no longer about trying to attract the casual listener. It's about getting and keeping those hard core fans that will pay for your CDs, special editions, LPs, DVDs, merchandise, tickets ... and also provide you with a honest to goodness real street team who's out there sharing their enthusiasm, not for pay, but for love of the music.

Think of it - They'll pay you for your music, and  , to top that, they'll work for you.

"hey , have you heard the new Voivod album, man ?"


As I said in my previous post, I don't see this as any different to how bands were operating before P2P raised it's head.
 
I cited The Enid in that post and they are a good example of how this interaction with their fanbase created a much larger following than their record sales at the time would suggest they had, and has helped sustain them since the mid 70s.
 
When I was managaing a band at the turn of this century, we used networking to keep in contact with the fans we picked up around the county as we played to small crowds of 10 then 50 then 100 then then 500 people.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 06 2009 at 09:49
What about downloading music from a dead artist?   Who benefits from the sale of one of their albums?
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Mr ProgFreak View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 06 2009 at 09:54
^ the heir. I think there's a time limit though.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 06 2009 at 10:05
Originally posted by terryl terryl wrote:

Hi, just a thought here about this mp3 discussion. I had bought a lot of music in the cassette tape era, and these were copyrighted, legally distributed stuff by their appropriate labels. Of course, the artists had their share of the sales. Years gone by, cassette players became obsolete. Legal MP3 download off amazon or itunes mean nothing to me as my country is not eligible. Do you think downloading in this case is wrong?

I do buy some albums i really like on CD format, even though i already paid for the cassette fifteen years ago. But to buy back all of those albums in CD i need to be a millionaire, even if I hunted most of my CDs on ebay.



in light of the big and long quote from Dean, I don't see that my downloading old back catalogue of those albums i already had for their cassette format will cause any income threats to the artists. Is this a bad thought really?
And who are we to justify the right in all we do
Until we seek, until we find Ammonia Avenue

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 06 2009 at 11:34
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^ the heir. I think there's a time limit though.


well screw them, no? Winkdont the heir's have their own jobs? Wink Unless it's someone like Dweezil Zappa Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 06 2009 at 11:42
Isn't the music copyrighted for only so long?
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Mr ProgFreak View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 06 2009 at 12:44
^ that's what I meant by "time limit". It varies from country to country, but it's at least several decades (I think in Germany it's 70 years).
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akin View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 06 2009 at 14:56
My views about the subject are:

- What I'm saying may be wrong, but I believe that the music industry was starting to decline after a huge boom in the mid nineties, exactly when the illegal downloads and p2p networks became popular, making it seem as if the downloads were the only responsible for all the losses. That is why it is hard to evaluate the impact of the downloads on the music market.

- Whether an illegal download is harmful or helpful to the artist and the record companies depends only on the person who is downloading. There are both the ones who download with the sole purpose of finding another albums to buy, the ones who download and buy, but downloading neither prevent them buying CDs nor cause them to buy more CDs and those who download instead of buying. The harmful case for the artists and record industry is the last one.

- What is feel is that, with the time, less people are used to pay for the music, so the last case mentioned outnumbers by far both the first and the second case. Being so, illegal downloads are harming the industry and the artists not because every download would become a sold CD if downloads didn't exist (anyone who thinks so need a sanity check), but because newer generations are much less used to pay for music. That is, in my opinion, why the music industry is shrinking. People who listen to music, but are not potential consumers. And I feel that most of the younger generation is falling in this category.

- My dad used to tell me that when he or a friend of his bought a new record (on late 50s, early sixties), there was a fuss among all the other friends, since it was expensive to an album at those times. When I was young, it was much easier to buy albums, but even so, people found it cool to have the cds, even being able to tape or rip them. Nowadays, people say it is stupid to buy cds and it is a waste of time and money, since you can download it 2 months before it is released. This change in culture is what is really sad and dangerous to the whole music industry.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 06 2009 at 17:21
I'm still with Nick Barrett on this one - the middle tier bands rely the most on album sales. From there, to each to make their decision on how their choice may affect their favourite band's options.
Now of course, as Akin has mentioned, and I've said too, many of those middle tier bands are still around because they've learned how to offer something that their fans will pay for, no matter how easy it is to download it for free.

Oh, by the way, can someone lend me $15 ? I want to get the new Marillion, but the budget won't be there 'til Mid November Cry
"Here I am talking to some of the smartest people in the world and I didn't even notice,” Lieutenant Columbo, episode The Bye-Bye Sky-High I.Q. Murder Case.
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Mr ProgFreak View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 07 2009 at 01:36
Originally posted by J-Man J-Man wrote:



If someone downloads an album that they like, why wouldn't they buy it? It's probably because they don't have the money to buy everything they like. If we didn't download the album in the first place, we still wouldn't buy it because we don't have the money.

If the situation does work out that way, then all the download did was give you some exposure to the artist, hopefully resulting in a purchase of a new album, or something like that down the road. Sure there are exceptions, but that is how I look at it. The bottom line is that we won't have the money to buy every album in existence, whether we download it or not. And I should mention that I rarely fileshare. I just try to defend it because it gets so much negative hype, when in reality it's no worse than "samples".

-Jeff


So should people only pay for music if they can afford it? In many cases people have enough money to buy an album that they downloaded and enjoyed ... but instead  they spend this money on other things they (think they) want, which can't be downloaded. Hand on heart - if you had a computer filled with downloaded albums and you went to a store, would you spend your hard earned cash on some of the albums that you already have as illegal downloads, or on albums you don't already have (and which you can't find as downloads)?

I don't doubt that there are people out there who are that fair and honest that they buy each downloaded album that they enjoy ... but I think that the exception rather than the rule.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 07 2009 at 13:56
^  Several years ago, I was involved in an "arrangement" with an internet buddy.  He had a friend who set up an FTP site, and uploaded ripped prog albums.  My buddy only had web tv (remember that???), so I would go to the site once a week, get the albums (20 or so at a time), burn them to CDR and send them to my buddy.  After getting around 70 or 80 albums this way, I started to question the ethics of this, and also started getting tired of spending the time doing it.  Of those 70 or 80 albums, I have bought maybe 6 or 8 on CD.  At the time, my justification was that I would buy what I really liked (although at the time, some of these albums, probably a third, were not in print and couldn't be bought new in any case........a subset of those were actually ripped from vinyl and had never been on CD.....I've kept about 10 or so that still are not available on CD at all).  Obviously, that didn't happen.

Now, in truth I doubt I would have bought even the 6 or 8 that I did buy if I hadn't heard them (though it's hard to say........I've learned about quite a few bands from this site that I never knew about back then, so it's still possible those would have been purchases eventually).  But as a musician myself (lifelong amateur), I can't help but feel guilty about taking someone else's hard  work (not to mention heart and soul) and not giving them anything in return.  So I never download, except if an artist is offering stuff for free and asking people to listen.  I also hate samples, and find them utterly useless.  This is just my feeling about them and experience with them and if other people find them helpful or useful that is great for them.

My first albums I purchased as a teenager were all on vinyl.  I taped them all and listened to them that way mostly.  My friends and I would give each other copies of albums on cassette regularly, because we didn't have enough money to each buy everything we wanted individually  (this, I don't think, can be considered the same as illegal downloading, since we were not making these tapes for millions of people to hear for free........though I'm sure it's no less illegal either).  By college, I bought everything on CD, but still taped them all for listening (CD players were still expensive then).  I like to have the physical object.  Call it a fetish, but I think it's just a simple thing, like stamp collecting or any other type of collection that people everywhere enjoy doing.  The music should always stand on it's own, of course, but for me I have a hard time separating prog music from the physical forms of art and lyrics in the booklets.  I can't even conceive of Tales From Topographic Oceans or Nursery Cryme without their covers and booklets.  But I suppose I'm a very visual person, and prog at its best creates lovely landscapes and galaxies and geometries in my head when I listen.

Anyway, I agree with Dean that downloading has probably done more to hinder the innovation and revolution in music than it has to move it forward.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 30 2009 at 05:44
How much money do artists receive from download services? Or even ordering a CD from a place like Wayside or Greg Walker's?
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