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I think that many of you are hilarious. There is one way of ending the "punishment".......stop illegally downloading music!! Period.
No thanks. I spend most of my disposable income supporting musicians, record labels and record stores I love, I'll do as I please because I KNOW I am doing the right thing.
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To those of you who say that 30 second samples and multiple full song samples on MySpace are not enough for you to decide if you like an album...TOO BAD.
No it isn't. there's better options out there.
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You're all spoiled rotten by the Internet and it's capabilities to fill your computer up with illegally stolen digital music.
Bullshit, up until about 2 months ago I bought the vast majority of the music I had. The stuff I did not buy, I had because I loaned the CD from my friends (one of which owns a record store and knew I would buy it even though I had it ripped to Hard Drive if I liked it.) I will continue to buy music as ever because I am a collector.
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You see there was a time (back when dinosaurs roamed the earth) that you heard a track or two on the radio from a band.
That's just sad, just because then you have to be at the mercy of record companies ability to market, rather than judge by the quality of the product
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You felt that the songs were either good enough for you to go buy the album or they weren't.
...and either way, the record company assured thier record would go gold this way
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If you did buy the album then you ran home or to your car (cassette or cd) and discovered the rest of the material that you had not heard on the radio. Sure there were some songs that weren't great but that was a part of the process.
I am starting to figure out no matter how legendary, overblown, overrated, ect. and album is, the vast majority is about half quality songs, a few great songs and the rest half-assed, half-hearted bullshit that wasn't suitable for a demo. That's how music was done until a few artists insisted on making great all around records (Rush anyone?)
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If you're rational is that you download to find out if every track is a winner then that is the flimsiest argument ever!!
Not really, You're finding out what you'll be getting and possibly saving yourself the hassle if something sucks. I said something similar to what you are referencing. I'll amend that by adding that if an album does not sufficiently give me my money's worth, I wouldn't buy it. That personal standard has got to be half the tracks have to be enjoyable listens.
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I never ever found a CD or cassette in my 28 years of buying music that didn't have a dud song that just sucked. Get over it.
I have, you should listen to a lot more music, maybe blindly buying albums based on radio-appeal is the problem. On that note, There's no album that has been perfect as far as I'm concerned either.
And does someone not have the right to buy only songs they enjoy from i-tunes after a thorough evaluation of it's material? By this logic, no, you must buy the cow to get the milk. This kind of thinking leads to mediocrity and laziness. You'[re suggesting that you only have the right to not listen to a song after buying it. Fuck that.
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As for videos, we didn't have them at our finger tips as we do today. We had to wait for MTV to play them or sit up half the night on Friday night and watch Friday Night Videos. Now you just go to your artists web page or YouTube and you can see them instantly. Even the old MySpace again has tons of videos from literally every damn artist you can think of.
Every musician in the business encourages thier videos being broadcast by as many outlets as possible. Who wouldn't? It's free advertisement and the reason these damn things are getting made in today's marketplace anyway.
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There are enough ways for music fans to hear a few song samples and decide if they want to buy the CD. Even if you don't want to pay full price you can find many discounted dealers on the Internet. If not you can buy plenty of used CD's via Ebay, Half.com, Amazon (private sellers) at damn cheap prices that beat digital downloading prices.
Yeah, you can pay 5 cents per song legally too. None of this helps the industry, the artist or anyone but the seller, so what exactly is your point? Are you just against doing something illegal with no moral reason behind it?
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I sample most of my music from Myspace. I buy every CD. If you don't have the money because you're a student then I guess you won't be able to have as much music until you're out of school and working.
This is dumb, telling someone who in a few years will have the buying power of a college graduate "see you in few years, thanks for the interest, now fuck off" is the best way to make sure they lose interest and become sour over the music they love. Heavy metal is especially prone to this because you REALLY have to keep up or just drop out of the whole thing. Here's the news from my aforementioned friend who owns a record store for over 20 years:
People will buy whatever music they were into in college for the rest of thier lives, they generally don't change tastes or even what specific artists they care about. they stop being "up on things" after graduation. People will use their buying power later to make these artists and labels money later in the long run. Or they'll buy used and contribute zero, either way seems to suit you fine.
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Just because you don't have tons of cash doesn't give you the right or perceived privilege to steal the artists work. When I was younger that just meant that I became a loyal follower of a few bands instead of virtually hundreds of bands. I was loyal to Iron Maiden, Metallica, Megadeth etc. I knew there were many other bands I was missing at the time but I didn't have the Internet and MySpace to give me legal samples to fill the void until I had money to buy more CD's. No, we had to wait for the songs to be played on the radio.
This whole thing is really coming off as "I couldn't do it back then, so now you shouldn't be able to either" Who fucking said downloading something meant you couldn't buy it later. The people that care now have always cared and have always supported music. This won't change. Music sales increase every year, they haven't declined overall since the internet, nor will they ever due to new customers entering the market every damn day. Go ask some popular artists, like Ozzy, Metallica, or hell, even Anthrax what they sell weekly, I bet thier doing about 2000 copies or more per album.
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Is it right that the RIAA is engaging in these tactics some will say yes some will say no. However, until people stop stealing music, the RIAA will be waging the war against you.
They can't do anything short of searching people's computers. They wont stop the uploading sites that are located off-shores nor the people that link to them. They won't stop people from making copies of music because speakers won't work without an analog signal, and even if they impossibly stop that, microphones will render that useless.
They are powerless, so they need to do thier part and start encouraging artistic integrity and quality above marketablity.
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