I've not had nearly enough time to write here recently. If I had, I would have written a long and involved post that's been developing in my head since Radiohead first released In Rainbows. The general jist would have been this: it makes economic sense for artists to sell music directly to consumers, in fact it makes sense for them to give it away
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As Fake Steve Jobs put it:
[...]beneath all the glamour these guys are actually operating two very low-tech businesses. One is a form of loan-sharking: they put up money to make records, then force recording artists to pay the money back with exorbitant interest. The other business is distribution. They’ve got big warehouses and they control the shipment of little plastic boxes that happen to have music in them.
[...]Their loan-sharking business is being eliminated by low-cost digital recording technology that lets people make an album for very little money. And by letting us [i.e. Apple] build the online music store they've taken themselves out of the distribution business. In the days of vinyl and then CDs, the labels managed to control the value chain by having loads of retailers in a highly fragmented market, and playing them off each other. In the digital world they've got us. And that's it.
With the obvious caveat that the iTunes music store is not the only way to sell music, I think he's pretty much spot on.
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I think more and more artists are going to start realizing the points you make. However, you mentioned "In Rainbows" which to me is a pretty poor example. It was great to open the door to conversation, and get the ball rolling on what will hopefully become a trend... but, the problem for me is that about a month or two after it was released for "pay what you want" online, it was released in the stores... with bonus material. So, for people who paid for it the first time around, out of a sense of obligation, or just because they wanted to support the band, this is a REALLY shitty deal, because they now essentially have to buy the entire thing AGAIN just to get the bonus material. (if they want it... which, y'know, I wasn't all that impressed with "In Rainbows" anyway, so...)
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I should probably listen to it a few more times before I pass judgment... but it wasn't, at least, something that truly grabbed me.
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