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-   -   Downloading your music vs buying your music (https://www.musicbanter.com/general-music/41683-downloading-your-music-vs-buying-your-music.html)

Urban Hat€monger ? 06-20-2009 05:30 PM

CD

Whilst still inside the stereo.

Dr_Rez 06-20-2009 05:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Urban Hatemonger (Post 686895)
CD

Whilst still inside the stereo.

Lets hope its one of those early 90's players that make my refrigerator look small.

Urban Hat€monger ? 06-20-2009 05:35 PM

This one

http://i94.photobucket.com/albums/l9...ttoBoomBox.jpg

Dr_Rez 06-20-2009 05:36 PM

The black kid too????!

Urban Hat€monger ? 06-20-2009 05:38 PM

He said he'll do it for me if I buy him some alloys.

Dr_Rez 06-20-2009 05:39 PM

Theres nothing he wont do for some 24's

Arya Stark 06-20-2009 10:21 PM

So... downloading and buying music... yeah... -_-

Blazed And Confused 06-21-2009 01:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TheCunningStunt (Post 686176)
15-20 minute drive?

Takes 40 minutes to get to HMV from my house.

How come you prefer used record stores? I prefer HMV because I know I'm gonna get what I want there. And I don't know of any record stores close by :(

Least you're not a total music sponge just downloading, if you go to the concerts then at least you're giving something back :)


i dunno i guess i just like the feeling of supporting the small businesses more than going into an hmv. i like the atmosphere a lot more aswell, walking into hmv i feel like im walking through the music isle at walmart. its just a different atmosphere that i like better.

also yeah if i REALLY like an album ill usually go out and buy it, theres just something different about owning the album that makes me appreciate it alot more .

Kool_Dude_HaMeR 06-21-2009 02:31 PM

I used to browse in the small local shop until I found something I liked, then go to the big chain store to see if they had the same thing for cheaper, and if I couldn't find it I would go back and buy it in the local store. Now the chain store is closed down and the local one is still open.

music_phantom13 06-21-2009 10:41 PM

I buy music when I can. A lot of the stuff I like I never see in record stores. I collect vinyl too; I always pay for that (obviously). When I first started downloading music, I had this notion that I would always pay for the music if I liked it. I would love to do that, if I could find everything I download on vinyl and I was a billionaire. Sadly, neither of these things are the case. That said, if I'm out shopping for new music and I found a cd or record of something I downloaded that I really really like, I'll usually buy it so I have a copy and support the band.

ziren 06-22-2009 07:27 AM

knowing you own an album of your favourite band is a great feeling, though you can not always buy it at where you live. Then downloading is a great choice.

RonaldSays 06-23-2009 08:09 AM

I buy all my stuff on CD. It's not out of principle since I also own loads of downloaded albums but at one point I noticed I have so many albums I never listened to because it's just to much. So now I only download some stuff from friends occasionally so I can at least give it a proper listen and for the rest buy CDs online. Over here (the Netherlands) CDs are just ridiculously expensive (around $20 for the newest main stream band album) so I get them from all kinds of online web shops.

I love to buy albums at concerts especially from smaller bands since it gives me the feeling I'm really supporting them.

ElephantSack 06-23-2009 10:15 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TheCunningStunt (Post 685119)

You're a musician? what do you play? you in a proper band, doing gigs? if you do gigs, what kind of things you play? cover songs? I'm in the process of learning the guitar and I write alot. Best of luck to you :thumb:

Well, first of all, thank you.

I play bass and backing vox in a 3-piece band with my brother on guitar and main vox and our friend on drums.

We call ourselves AFTERMATH.

You could call us Metal. You could call us Experimental. You could call us Experi-Metal, I guess. My brother and I have been playing in a band together for almost 12 years now. And yes, we started out playing covers.

ElephantSack 06-23-2009 02:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by boo boo (Post 685192)
It's also about giving a lot of money to people who had nothing to do with making the actual music.



Some bands like Radiohead have already found a way around that.

And you don't need CD's to have a successful music career, music predates the invention of compact discs by a few thousand years you know. There's a little thing called touring, which is where the bulk of a musician's income comes from in the first place.

Record executives make more from CD sales than the artists do, and I don't really feel too guilty about stealing from them.

See, what you have there, is a point. Yeah, I wish the physical album were more of a personal creation as far as it coming straight from the artists, but unfortunately the artists aren't the ones who own the manufacturing plants and distribution deals. Unfortunately. as beautiful and spiritual as music can be, the business aspect of it involves a lot of shaking hands with the Devil. At least in the beginning.

You know, stating the obvious has a tendency to make someone sound like a prick.

And believe me, I know a little bit about touring. I still work a dead end job so I can save up enough money for gas, food, emergencies when we head out on the road. Especially in the beginning, touring costs money. And that's where the merch comes in, including CDs. The benefits of touring really come when you get signed and receive touring support. Which brings me back to shaking hands with the Devil.

TheCunningStunt 06-23-2009 05:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Urban Hatemonger (Post 686753)
All i've seen you do since you've been here is bitch & whine about 'real fans' and it's getting really old.

So she's not heard the bands entire discography or been to gigs. Big ****ing deal, she obviously likes them based on what she's heard so she has every right to call herself a fan. She might go off them or she might get more into them, there's nothing wrong with that either that's how things work.

If you had made that kind of comment to me I would have bought that album, came & found you, then inserted it nice & deep into your anus.

Kinky.

But I disagree, listening to the charts and not paying for the music in anyway doesn't make them a fan, if they get more into music, then fair enough, they're a fan. Other than that, they are not.

Urban Hat€monger ? 06-23-2009 05:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TheCunningStunt (Post 689120)
Kinky.

But I disagree, listening to the charts and not paying for the music in anyway doesn't make them a fan, if they get more into music, then fair enough, they're a fan. Other than that, they are not.

I used to record songs I liked off the radio because I couldn't afford to buy every song I liked. Does that make me any less of a fan OF THE MUSIC?

someonecompletelyrandom 06-23-2009 05:31 PM

I have over 300 albums and haven't bought any of them. Maybe I shouldn't be bragging about that...

Antonio 06-23-2009 05:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sonace (Post 689134)
I have over 300 albums and haven't bought any of them. Maybe I shouldn't I be bragging about that...

*knock knock*


"hello, this is special agent Gibbs with the FBI"

someonecompletelyrandom 06-23-2009 05:39 PM

YOU WON'T TAKE ME ALIVE!!

Seriously if they chose me out of the 100 million plus people that download music each day i'd be super-pissed. Of course I could always sue them for discrimination...

LoathsomePete 06-23-2009 08:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Antonio (Post 689138)
*knock knock*


"hello, this is special agent Gibbs with the FBI"

Fail! Gibbs is with NCIS NOOOB :P

And Sonace don't feel too guilty, I have 1778 albums, about 1750 of them are downloaded.

Gavin B. 06-24-2009 01:16 AM

If an album or song is out of issue I don't have any ethical problem with downloading it a file sharing website.

I rarely purchase a compact disk anymore for a couple of reasons. 1. The retail price of a cd is grossly overpriced and 2. I'm running out of space to store my record collection. I have nearly 1000 gigs of storage space on my computer and currently have around 75,000 songs on my computer. My computer is hooked up to my sound system and I can rip, burn, remix, dub, crossfade and do mash ups of songs all on my computer. I prerecord my radio show and broadcast it via Shoutcast so I don't even need to leave home to do my show anymore.

Digital downloads of albums are about half the price of a compact disk and you can find a wider range of music in digital modality these days. Indie record stores are a dying breed in the United State and stores like Borders and Best Buy have scaled back on the number of titles they carry because of shelf space. The good part about digital music is it doesn't cost the retailer anything to carry slow selling titles, so you can find a lot of titles that are out of issue in compact disk form.

I download music at AltNet, Amazon and Rhapsody and YouTube. The YouTube stuff is free because I convert the videos into MP3 form and there's no law against downloading videos, therefore converting them to MP3s after the fact is not against the law either. I had a horrific experience with iTunes and will never purchase another music file from them if my life depended on it. iTunes uses spyware and malware in the Digital Rights Management (DRM) software which literally destroyed the hard drive of one of my computers and none of the iTunes software works as advertised.

I happen to know a great deal about how royalty points are distributed and can tell you that file sharing is not stealing very much income, if any, from the artists who make the music. The entire campaign of the major labels to brand file sharing as thievery is bogus because the biggest music thieves are the major record labels who don't pay royalties to their artists.

Roger McGuinn once told me he never received a penny of royalties for any of the Byrds recordings on Columbia Records. The Byrds had seven albums that sold more than a million units in the Sixties and early Seventies and McGuinn told me that with the exception of a small advance to make each album, none of the members of the Byrds saw a penny in royalties for any of their albums. McGuinn now makes his own albums at home, on his own label, and has negotiated a 50/50 split on royalties with any retailer that carries his music. Roger told me he's making more money on royalties now than he ever made when the Byrds were the top selling American rock group.

Most of the royalty money is distributed on the basis of a complex point system which the record label negotiates with each perspective artist. Here's how it works:

Usually an artist can be offered anywhere between 10 to 20 royalty points depending on his/her credibility etc. The second royalty source is "mechanical" royalties. These are royalties payable to the songwriters. Last time I checked the statutory rate was around 7 cents per song (possibly changed again by now). A songwriter who writes 100% of an album's worth of let's say 10 songs will therefore make 70 cents per album sold. This is payable from record one. It is therefore extremely beneficial for artists to write the music they record!

Anyway, the only real drama with mechanicals is that labels somehow get away with paying artists only 75% of the statutory rate, which means labels are effectively witholding 25% of the copyright income. There is absolutely no reason for them to do this apart from the fact that they have always got away with it! This is one thing I would like to see changed. Very successful artists can usually negotiate 100% of stat. New artists, very very rarely.

Let's go back to our "artist" royalties because this is where ALL the problems really lie. Let me explain what the problem is really all about.

Let's say a major label has just signed your band "The Ahmesh Conspiracy" and offered you an exhorbitant amount of money. Your attorney has negotiated an artist royalty of 15 points. Traditionally not bad for a new artist. Here's the way it works...

Every single promotional penny spent on promoting your record, be it video costs, indie radio promotion or retail programs etc, is recoupable from your royalty points in some way, depending on how your contract is set up. Some things are charged to the artist at 100%, some 50%. What this means is that in order for you to recoup let's say $100,000 in promotion, the record company will have to receive income almost 10 times that amount before you clear that recoupment. (Don't forget, you the artist don't see a penny until your recoupment is clear).

How is this so? When $100,000 of income goes to the record label, only 15% of that goes towards your recoupment. You are recouping at a snail's pace because you are recouping at 15% of the pie! That means that realistically, you can never really make money because if records are selling well, the label will continue to spend X amount of promotional dollars which in turn gets recouped at the 15% snail's pace.

Under this system Columbia Records wasn't sending McGuinn a royalty check every quarter, rather Columbia sent him a bill for recoupable costs that the Byrds owed Columbia Record for studio time, distribution, promotional and touring expenses and other incidental expenses.

In some ways the digital music revolution has liberated the music artists. Now anybody with a digital mixer can record an album and artists no longer need to purchase studio time. Digital music doesn't require equipment to press an album because the entire physical production of an album can be done at home. Nor does digital music require a distribution network to ship all the albums to various stores across the nation. And finally an music artist can do his own promotion via internet retailers and social networking sites.

Record labels have pretty much outlived their usefulness to recording artisits in the digital age and my best advice to any aspiring musician or musical group is to produce, record, distribute and promote your own music because contract with a major label is a big swindle.

Antonio 06-24-2009 01:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by LoathsomePete (Post 689303)
Fail! Gibbs is with NCIS NOOOB :P

yeah, but it's a better FBI name :p:

Dr_Rez 06-26-2009 01:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gavin B. (Post 689390)
If an album or song is out of issue I don't have any ethical problem with downloading it a file sharing website.

I rarely purchase a compact disk anymore for a couple of reasons. 1. The retail price of a cd is grossly overpriced and 2. I'm running out of space to store my record collection. I have nearly 1000 gigs of storage space on my computer and currently have around 75,000 songs on my computer. My computer is hooked up to my sound system and I can rip, burn, remix, dub, crossfade and do mash ups of songs all on my computer. I prerecord my radio show and broadcast it via Shoutcast so I don't even need to leave home to do my show anymore.

Digital downloads of albums are about half the price of a compact disk and you can find a wider range of music in digital modality these days. Indie record stores are a dying breed in the United State and stores like Borders and Best Buy have scaled back on the number of titles they carry because of shelf space. The good part about digital music is it doesn't cost the retailer anything to carry slow selling titles, so you can find a lot of titles that are out of issue in compact disk form.

I download music at AltNet, Amazon and Rhapsody and YouTube. The YouTube stuff is free because I convert the videos into MP3 form and there's no law against downloading videos, therefore converting them to MP3s after the fact is not against the law either. I had a horrific experience with iTunes and will never purchase another music file from them if my life depended on it. iTunes uses spyware and malware in the Digital Rights Management (DRM) software which literally destroyed the hard drive of one of my computers and none of the iTunes software works as advertised.

I happen to know a great deal about how royalty points are distributed and can tell you that file sharing is not stealing very much income, if any, from the artists who make the music. The entire campaign of the major labels to brand file sharing as thievery is bogus because the biggest music thieves are the major record labels who don't pay royalties to their artists.

Roger McGuinn once told me he never received a penny of royalties for any of the Byrds recordings on Columbia Records. The Byrds had seven albums that sold more than a million units in the Sixties and early Seventies and McGuinn told me that with the exception of a small advance to make each album, none of the members of the Byrds saw a penny in royalties for any of their albums. McGuinn now makes his own albums at home, on his own label, and has negotiated a 50/50 split on royalties with any retailer that carries his music. Roger told me he's making more money on royalties now than he ever made when the Byrds were the top selling American rock group.

Most of the royalty money is distributed on the basis of a complex point system which the record label negotiates with each perspective artist. Here's how it works:

Usually an artist can be offered anywhere between 10 to 20 royalty points depending on his/her credibility etc. The second royalty source is "mechanical" royalties. These are royalties payable to the songwriters. Last time I checked the statutory rate was around 7 cents per song (possibly changed again by now). A songwriter who writes 100% of an album's worth of let's say 10 songs will therefore make 70 cents per album sold. This is payable from record one. It is therefore extremely beneficial for artists to write the music they record!

Anyway, the only real drama with mechanicals is that labels somehow get away with paying artists only 75% of the statutory rate, which means labels are effectively witholding 25% of the copyright income. There is absolutely no reason for them to do this apart from the fact that they have always got away with it! This is one thing I would like to see changed. Very successful artists can usually negotiate 100% of stat. New artists, very very rarely.

Let's go back to our "artist" royalties because this is where ALL the problems really lie. Let me explain what the problem is really all about.

Let's say a major label has just signed your band "The Ahmesh Conspiracy" and offered you an exhorbitant amount of money. Your attorney has negotiated an artist royalty of 15 points. Traditionally not bad for a new artist. Here's the way it works...

Every single promotional penny spent on promoting your record, be it video costs, indie radio promotion or retail programs etc, is recoupable from your royalty points in some way, depending on how your contract is set up. Some things are charged to the artist at 100%, some 50%. What this means is that in order for you to recoup let's say $100,000 in promotion, the record company will have to receive income almost 10 times that amount before you clear that recoupment. (Don't forget, you the artist don't see a penny until your recoupment is clear).

How is this so? When $100,000 of income goes to the record label, only 15% of that goes towards your recoupment. You are recouping at a snail's pace because you are recouping at 15% of the pie! That means that realistically, you can never really make money because if records are selling well, the label will continue to spend X amount of promotional dollars which in turn gets recouped at the 15% snail's pace.

Under this system Columbia Records wasn't sending McGuinn a royalty check every quarter, rather Columbia sent him a bill for recoupable costs that the Byrds owed Columbia Record for studio time, distribution, promotional and touring expenses and other incidental expenses.

In some ways the digital music revolution has liberated the music artists. Now anybody with a digital mixer can record an album and artists no longer need to purchase studio time. Digital music doesn't require equipment to press an album because the entire physical production of an album can be done at home. Nor does digital music require a distribution network to ship all the albums to various stores across the nation. And finally an music artist can do his own promotion via internet retailers and social networking sites.

Record labels have pretty much outlived their usefulness to recording artisits in the digital age and my best advice to any aspiring musician or musical group is to produce, record, distribute and promote your own music because contract with a major label is a big swindle.

I agree with most of what you said in this but, but you failed to mention a couple aspects of the royalty business. First off it is not the record company collecting royalties, it is companies like BMI that take care of all that for a small cut.

You talked about how the artist you met made almost nothing from the millions of albums sold. This is not uncommon; most artists make there money from live performances and royalty checks from various uses of there music.

Now I agree that the record companies take advantage of artists and are run by hordes of scumbags, but if research is done and a proper contract is agreed on your band does have a chance making good royalties. A smart tricky system calls for tricky consumers.

Our Heliophobic Sun 06-26-2009 01:56 PM

I download my music. Illegally. Why? Because I am all for the illegal download industry. Songs should be available on the internet, and people should not be forced to pay for them.

Well, that might have sounded a little blunt, but I also have the arguments to back this up.

Music is about the expression of an emotion, making a statement, giving an opinion on something, etc. The prime objective of any artist should be to do these things, and reach as many people as they can with this, because you want people to feel the way you do, you want people to think about things. Even if people do not agree with your viewpoints as an artist, still you made them at least think a little more about the subject, and that what it is about.

Up and until a few decades ago, the only way to reach a lot of people, was through extensive advertising of your product, and selling it in as many countries as possible. This has changed. Music is no longer only available via the selling of cd's, but also for free, and to a lot more people then you could reach before the coming of the internet. In that aspect, you would think that any artist would embrace the downloading of their music with open arms. In what other way could you bring your message to so many people, could you bring over your feeling to this magnitude of humans?
All the things that music is about, are being strengthened by the illegal download of music, people from all over the world can listen to your music with one click of the mouse. I'd say that that is a dream come true.

Yet many artists are against the illegal downloading of music. The prime argument they make, is indeed not about them not being able to transfer a message or a feeling, or whatever. It is about the money.

This insinuates that the artists do not care one bit about their music, and only care about making as much money as they possibly can through the music.

I myself have a little solo project as well, and I am trying, through that solo project, to wake up those artists, and show them that if they really care about the music, and if they really care about the essentials of music, they would embrace the downloading of music with open arms. My solo project is called "Our Heliophobic Sun", my songs are on myspace (/ourheliophobicsun). You can not buy my albums, the only way to possess my music, is by asking me for the mp3's (acdeicide@live.nl). I do not accept payment in any form, I want to let people know once more what music is actually about, what it should stand for, and the reasons why one makes music, or, at least, should make music. Not for the money, not to make as much people as possible like you, but to bring over a feeling, a message, whatever.

- Theo Therion

someonecompletelyrandom 06-26-2009 06:59 PM

Musicians have to eat too.

Five words just destroyed most of your argument.

+81 06-26-2009 07:11 PM

I can't afford to buy every single thing I want to hear. I may not even like it.

Anteater 06-26-2009 08:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sonace (Post 691551)
Musicians have to eat too.

Five words just destroyed most of your argument.

You didn't really; musicians in need of extra moolah could always do prostitution on the side. :pimp:

clarksided 06-26-2009 09:04 PM

I generally download music, then I buy it if I like it. It's a process, of sorts. It can also take a while. For example, I downloaded For Emma, Forever Ago, probably at the beginning of 2008, and it's probably one of my favorite albums of the last five years, but I still haven't bought it. I will eventually though.

Our Heliophobic Sun 06-27-2009 01:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sonace (Post 691551)
Musicians have to eat too.

Five words just destroyed most of your argument.

No, like I said, I myself am a musician, and I don't let anyone pay for my music. Yet I make enough money, I just don't make money because of the music, I make money with a job. I do spend every free moment I have on music, but my money comes from elsewhere.
There are thousands of bands in the world. Some of these bands limit their albums to 100 or even 14 copies, yet they keep making music, and I think they are more true in their music than many of the big bands and artists.

Freebase Dali 06-27-2009 02:17 AM

I can't believe some of the complete bullshit I just read in this thread... Especially from you, Heliophobic.

If you think bands are tirelessly touring across the country night after night and working endless hours in a studio to cut their next full length JUST because they like doing it... you need to get your head out of your ass and let it dry off in the real world, because that shit is work. While you're flipping burgers at Wendy's, they don't have time for a job because they're busy making music that YOU love and you're not even attempting to contribute to their ability to stay alive long enough to see some kind of pay-out for their trouble?
Bands can't stay alive without an income. And they can't give you the music you love if that income is in the form of them having normal full time jobs. Their music is their job, whether you twist that little stick up your ass to the left or the right.

I'm not saying that all downloading of music should stop in all forms... But I'm saying we need to use some fucking judgment in this. Yea, your friends send you over some albums you may have not bought in the first place.. no big deal.
But if you head over heels love and get something out of a band and have been forever and you're intentionally skirting the responsibility of paying for the labor that you're benefiting from, then you're fucking your favorite band in the ass. It's not just because YOU'RE doing it, though, but us collectively. All our dicks, together, just so happen to be big enough to do some unrepairable damage...

Make a fucking effort to support the bands who've been supporting you all these years. It's a matter of principle.

TheCunningStunt 06-27-2009 04:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Veridical Fiction (Post 691784)
I can't believe some of the complete bullshit I just read in this thread... Especially from you, Heliophobic.

If you think bands are tirelessly touring across the country night after night and working endless hours in a studio to cut their next full length JUST because they like doing it... you need to get your head out of your ass and let it dry off in the real world, because that shit is work. While you're flipping burgers at Wendy's, they don't have time for a job because they're busy making music that YOU love and you're not even attempting to contribute to their ability to stay alive long enough to see some kind of pay-out for their trouble?
Bands can't stay alive without an income. And they can't give you the music you love if that income is in the form of them having normal full time jobs. Their music is their job, whether you twist that little stick up your ass to the left or the right.

I'm not saying that all downloading of music should stop in all forms... But I'm saying we need to use some fucking judgment in this. Yea, your friends send you over some albums you may have not bought in the first place.. no big deal.
But if you head over heels love and get something out of a band and have been forever and you're intentionally skirting the responsibility of paying for the labor that you're benefiting from, then you're fucking your favorite band in the ass. It's not just because YOU'RE doing it, though, but us collectively. All our dicks, together, just so happen to be big enough to do some unrepairable damage...

Make a fucking effort to support the bands who've been supporting you all these years. It's a matter of principle.

Correct. Although, just because it's work, doesn't mean they can't enjoy their work. After all beind adored by thousands/millions is better than sitting at a desk wondering how close it is to 5 o clock.

someonecompletelyrandom 06-27-2009 01:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Our Heliophobic Sun (Post 691782)
No, like I said, I myself am a musician, and I don't let anyone pay for my music. Yet I make enough money, I just don't make money because of the music, I make money with a job. I do spend every free moment I have on music, but my money comes from elsewhere.
There are thousands of bands in the world. Some of these bands limit their albums to 100 or even 14 copies, yet they keep making music, and I think they are more true in their music than many of the big bands and artists.

Music IS my job so quit making a mockery of my profession, hippie. Why should I take something as valuable as music and sideline it? I want to WORK in music and I do WORK in music and I get PAID for WORKING in MUSIC. It's quite simple really, music costs money to make, therefore music costs money to buy. If you are happy with your hobby than you are happy, but I want more than a hobby.

LoathsomePete 06-27-2009 04:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Veridical Fiction (Post 691784)
I can't believe some of the complete bullshit I just read in this thread... Especially from you, Heliophobic.

If you think bands are tirelessly touring across the country night after night and working endless hours in a studio to cut their next full length JUST because they like doing it... you need to get your head out of your ass and let it dry off in the real world, because that shit is work. While you're flipping burgers at Wendy's, they don't have time for a job because they're busy making music that YOU love and you're not even attempting to contribute to their ability to stay alive long enough to see some kind of pay-out for their trouble?
Bands can't stay alive without an income. And they can't give you the music you love if that income is in the form of them having normal full time jobs. Their music is their job, whether you twist that little stick up your ass to the left or the right.

I'm not saying that all downloading of music should stop in all forms... But I'm saying we need to use some fucking judgment in this. Yea, your friends send you over some albums you may have not bought in the first place.. no big deal.
But if you head over heels love and get something out of a band and have been forever and you're intentionally skirting the responsibility of paying for the labor that you're benefiting from, then you're fucking your favorite band in the ass. It's not just because YOU'RE doing it, though, but us collectively. All our dicks, together, just so happen to be big enough to do some unrepairable damage...

Make a fucking effort to support the bands who've been supporting you all these years. It's a matter of principle.

You really should do something the field of debate for a career man, you have a very good way with words. It's because of this post that I've decided to start buying more and downloading less. You put it in a way that really spoke with me, so I just want to thank you. I think I'll try and buy at least one physical copy of a CD a week.

Freebase Dali 06-27-2009 10:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by LoathsomePete (Post 692135)
You really should do something the field of debate for a career man, you have a very good way with words. It's because of this post that I've decided to start buying more and downloading less. You put it in a way that really spoke with me, so I just want to thank you. I think I'll try and buy at least one physical copy of a CD a week.

I'm not sure if that was sarcasm, but anyway:
Thanks.
:)

Edit:
I keep forgetting you're the poster formally known as Pobody's Nerfect.

Astronomer 06-27-2009 10:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Veridical Fiction (Post 691784)
I can't believe some of the complete bullshit I just read in this thread... Especially from you, Heliophobic.

If you think bands are tirelessly touring across the country night after night and working endless hours in a studio to cut their next full length JUST because they like doing it... you need to get your head out of your ass and let it dry off in the real world, because that shit is work. While you're flipping burgers at Wendy's, they don't have time for a job because they're busy making music that YOU love and you're not even attempting to contribute to their ability to stay alive long enough to see some kind of pay-out for their trouble?
Bands can't stay alive without an income. And they can't give you the music you love if that income is in the form of them having normal full time jobs. Their music is their job, whether you twist that little stick up your ass to the left or the right.

I'm not saying that all downloading of music should stop in all forms... But I'm saying we need to use some fucking judgment in this. Yea, your friends send you over some albums you may have not bought in the first place.. no big deal.
But if you head over heels love and get something out of a band and have been forever and you're intentionally skirting the responsibility of paying for the labor that you're benefiting from, then you're fucking your favorite band in the ass. It's not just because YOU'RE doing it, though, but us collectively. All our dicks, together, just so happen to be big enough to do some unrepairable damage...

Make a fucking effort to support the bands who've been supporting you all these years. It's a matter of principle.

I agree, this is so well put. I'm just an amateur and whenever I've recorded something with my band members it has turned out to be a LOT of work. You think it's just a 24 party? Definitely not. It's hard! I have so much respect for recording musicians. I would hate to put so much work into my music only to have it ripped off.

That being said, usually it's the live shows where most bands make their money. I go to a lot of shows so I think I'm doing my bit to support the bands I love. But I also always buy the real CDs if I'm really into the band.

Freebase Dali 06-27-2009 10:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by shiseido red (Post 692365)
I agree, this is so well put. I'm just an amateur and whenever I've recorded something with my band members it has turned out to be a LOT of work. You think it's just a 24 party? Definitely not. It's hard! I have so much respect for recording musicians. I would hate to put so much work into my music only to have it ripped off.

That being said, usually it's the live shows where most bands make their money. I go to a lot of shows so I think I'm doing my bit to support the bands I love. But I also always buy the real CDs if I'm really into the band.

It's true about touring acts, but touring definitely takes its toll on their personal and family lives, not to mention the physical and mental exhaustion that comes out of it.
It's the other half of their job.
Where some of us love to see them perform, we still have the opportunity to listen to their music when they're not touring. They work hard in either scenario and touring/recording enables the success of both.

I just think we need to use some personal judgment and really ask ourselves if we're contributing. If we can say "yes" in good conscience, then we don't have to blame ourselves.

Freebase Dali 06-27-2009 10:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bambr (Post 692370)
What the point in buying songs of artists that just have one song that is catchy. I will only buy songs/albums if I love the singer

Buy the MP3.

LoathsomePete 06-27-2009 10:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Veridical Fiction (Post 692362)
I'm not sure if that was sarcasm, but anyway:
Thanks.
:)

Edit:
I keep forgetting you're the poster formally known as Pobody's Nerfect.

totally not sarcasm, I actually went out today and purchased two of my favourite albums Deliverance by Opeth and Fear of a Blank Planet by Porcupine Tree. I've decided that every week I will purchase an album I love.

Astronomer 06-27-2009 10:27 PM

^ Two awesome albums btw.

Freebase Dali 06-27-2009 10:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by LoathsomePete (Post 692379)
totally not sarcasm, I actually went out today and purchased two of my favourite albums Deliverance by Opeth and Fear of a Blank Planet by Porcupine Tree. I've decided that every week I will purchase an album I love.

:love:


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