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It pisses me off when people harp on about the death of the album.... Albums will not die out. The days of artists making albums for profit might (and probably already has). But worse case scenario, you'll be left with the artists/bands who make music for the sheer love of creating something new, and the two-bit, manufactured, corporate acts will just put out singles for the morons who don't have the attention span to sit down and listen to one artist for a whole 45 minutes. | |
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But isn't the concept of an album a manufactured format in the end? Especially the CD, in the early 90s acts were seemed to be forced to fill a complete CD with songs, surely studio time was adjusted to this to minimize losses. These days you don't have to do that, you can release just 4 songs online or something. And it's a fact that outside of hardcore music lovers like us, the album format does not mean much to people anymore. The whole U2 debacle just accentuated this, nobody cared that U2 put 1 or 10 songs on their iTunes. | |
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It cost money 2 create these projects. Folks want 2 see a return on their investments. FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent. | |
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I just read on the news that in England the total sale of LPs is expected to rise above a million. In Holland they're creating a seperate chart for vinyl. There's still hope. | |
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I hope CDs don't go away. It was bad enough losing tapes and record albums. Now, with everything being downloads to phones and iPods (they still use those, right?), it doesn't seem like music can be put phyisically in your hands. It seems like it has become a personable listening activity, and not necessarily in a good way. By that I mean that without a new device like a speaker that docks your phone or iPod, you can't play music aloud without it being heard in ear buds. No one listens to the radio anymore (and that's a whole other topic), but computers allow us to access music stations and to own songs we hear, we may have to download them. While I appreciate these seemingly advances in technology, I think to do away with the physical format like albums and CDs is terrible for the music industry. | |
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But there were no albums before around 1940. Everything before that were 78s, which could hold very little time. There will still be albums because most genres like blues, opera, polka, stoner rock, jazz, new age, etc. were never dependent on singles, Top 40 airplay, or huge sales. It's like some people buy CDs from Renaissance Faire type groups, which has little attention from the media, TV, and radio. Also for mainstream music, country has the highest ratio of folks actually buying the product instead of downloading. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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uh, tapes are dead and gone
records are seen as a relic or a "cool" item, or stuff of DJs...
cds are doomed to become the new records, for people who need to have the physical thing in the hands, with the lyrics, etc
I say the future is deluxe/remastered cds and quality downloads for the hard-drive (mostly singles or one hit wonders)
can't see why anyone would want to buy an 18 bucks cd of the next overrated and / or pointless alt-rock band or rapper... | |
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Cassettes are still around. My mom bought a couple last month from her Malaco catalog and they've recently had a Cassette Store Day here. There's also a company in Texas who manufactures 8 tracks. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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mmm I meant as a viable choice
can't hardly find (at all) tapes at music shops, and of course companies/artists stopped releasing their new music via tapes during the very early '00s...
[Edited 10/19/14 9:11am] | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
People forget that not everybody has a computer, so can't download. You also have to have credit cards to buy something online, and many people do not have credit, and there are people who do that don't trust online purchasing and buy everything from a store. This is one of the reasons kids and teens download for free as they do not usually have credit. There's also the audiophile crowd who spends $20,000 on a CD player or $800 for some speaker wire that are unlikely going to want a MP3. It can't only be the cost of a CD when people spend $80 on a video game disc or $200 for some Air Jordans. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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Buy what you want and steal the shit you don't won't to pay for. You have grown, old azz men, and women spending thousands of dollars on gaming computers!
good points MickyD'
If arist and record companies want people to purchase their albums, allow people to listen to the album before they buy it. I never purchased an album that I didn't get a chance to listen to all of it. Back in the day Mom and Pop record stores allowed you to play before you paid. This listening to a minute and a couple seconds of a music... comes off as being snickey and manipulative. If your music is good, artist should have balls to allow their potential customers to listen to the whole damn ablum.
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Some of these new,young artists should just stop making albums altogether.They should just release singles...put out a new single every few months,promote it,and move on to the next one.These artists are not "album artists" anyway,meaning their fans only care about the 'hits' they put out. | |
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That's a very good point.... nah many of them can't and don't have the talent to "carry" or create an album. Single or EP's. | |
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