If you want to find music on vinyl that is your deal. I can let you know while vinyl provides better sound is not making a comeback in fact CDs are going to be gone soon.
Many people are stealing music or just listening for free. They are not buying it and while we had radio and T.V. shows that allowed us to listen to music for free. Commercials insured that T.V, Radio and the artist were compenstated.
Despite the free content of broadcast networks money did exchange hands and people did buy music. You only have to contrast the record sales of past decades to the time that on-line music became availble.
As far as artist not making any money off of their music that may be true for some and not true for others but people stealing or just plain not buying it at all hurts the artist as much as the crooked crap that the record companiens are pulling.
At the end of the day if no one buys an artist's music the record company will drop them so if you like the music you should buy it and stop being cheap. ( This post is not solely directed at you but at a lot of orgers who defend this behavior)
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Thanks for your reply, theSoulbrother.. Prince 4Ever. | |
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Micky, respectfully - The argument that the loss of revenue from piracy does not impact artists' revenue streams, because the labels are so awful, is one of the biggest fundamental myths about the music business. People use it to justify stealing, because hey, the artist won't be hurt, only the terrible, awful, no-good record company.
Folks - if record companies did only bad things to artists, we would have gotten rid of them a long time ago. The fact is, it is a complicated business. It's very hard to run a label fairly and profitably.
It's also not reasonable to compare artist contracts from 50 or 60 years ago to today. The business has changed, a lot. It's still possible to sign bad deals, but they're not bad in the same way. Most people had figured out by the 70s that they needed to retain some major portion of publishing to get any long term revenue. So the deals changed and labels started letting artists keep it. Maybe they find some other, less well-known way to make up the difference.
It is weird to feel like a shill for the music industry. I used to think they were the root of all evil - I guess in some ways I still do feel that way. But I constantly see people making the claim that piracy hurts the label and not the artist, and I know that is not true. | |
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it's Youtube fault, really
there are at least 4 good sites to download the audio of youtube videos
and youtube doesn't give a damn | |
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