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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2014 at 13:28
Piracy will kill album sales (CDs and vinyl etc) but I doubt it can kill off a specific genre of music altogether. Nowadays bands depend on touring mostly to make a living and get correct exposure for talents sake, not so much on cd sales.
Established bands even don't do this anymore. Sadly the physical copies of music are dying off at an incredible rate. And yes, that is a REAL bloody shame. More often than not people download sh*tty, compressed digital music files not even realizing they are hearing the music totally incorrectly compared to how the artist originally intended the music to be recorded and heard.
People want cheap and convenience    When it comes to music media accessibility.

Lame!!!
Gimmie my headphones now!!! 🎧🤣
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2014 at 13:15
I only want to say that it's far from only being music.
A few decades ago if I wanted to decorate my flat with framed reproductions of art works I would have to go to some shop where they sold art reproductions. Now I find them on the net, download them and take them to a printing shop and get them for a couple of euros.
If I wanted a photographic work I would order the services of a photographer, now I can edit my pics for free.
If I wanted to travel I would go to a travel agency who would charge for their tips and services. Now I learn everything online and book my tickets and hotel bookings without needing to pay anybody.
If I wanted to learn about import / export regulations to some country I had to go to a customs expert, now I find all the information free on the net.
If I wanted to travel by car I needed to buy a road map, now I have GPS and ViaMichelin for free.
If I wanted to read the news I had to buy the newspaper, now I read them for free.

A lot of information has become free, like it or not. The people who initially produced that information are not paid by me directly, but most of them get paid indirectly by some other means.

If you consider music as "information", then you may apply similar considerations. Perhaps the future of music is in finding more creative ways to get income for the musicians while the actual experience by the listener is in principle free, same as with many other digital / online information services. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2014 at 13:10
I always support the artist by paying for my downloads. Especially since my tolerance for crowds has impeded my concert patronage. That being said, anybody that has ever (whether 1973 or 2014) created progressive rock with the intent of making a living off of it is chasing unicorns. Even more so than the rest of the music world. E.g., You can be jazz artist and make a pretty good living as a hired gun in the right market, but how many nightclubs/restaurants have even one prog night?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2014 at 12:35
It's insane to see how much certain people bend words and meaning in order to justify their downloading habits

Edited by Guldbamsen - September 25 2014 at 12:49
“The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”

- Douglas Adams
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2014 at 12:16
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by unclemeat69 unclemeat69 wrote:

< ="text/">

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

If a 10,000 people stole

Sharing is not stealing, with downloading you actually make your own personally copy (copying is multiplying rather than taking a physical object away).

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

But if 100 people steal from (say) Pseudo/Sentai that's a different matter, they are not on their way to selling 37 million copies of their CD, so that's $500 missing from Greg's bottom-line. And that's not fine at all.
Where does that $500 missing come from? Is that a 'lost sale for every download'? That crap has been debunked already.

Only in your head it has.

Your argument is a fallacy designed to appease your own conscience, it fools no one. This line of thinking isn't even smart enough to be classed as specious. If something is sold for a price and you take it without paying then that is theft whether there is a physical object or not. There is no physical money in my bank account but if you hack it and transfer everything to your account you have stolen my money. If I write a book and send it to you to proof read but you then take a copy and publish it under your own name before sending back you have stolen from me. 


If I make an album, burn it onto a 50¢ CDR and sell it for $10 do you then demand that CD for 50¢ as the music therein has cost me nothing to reproduce? 

If all you wanted was the physical object then you could go to a hardware store and buy a CDR for 50¢, but that is not what you want is it.. you want the music not the physical CDR and if you want it you will pay $10. 

So now if you steal that CD have you stolen $10 or 50¢? Obviously its the $10 because the blank CDR is only worth 50¢ and we've already established that if it was only the physical object you wanted you could buy that for 50¢ at a hardware store

But what if you take that CDR, copy it and hand it back, what have you in your possession that you didn't have before? My music of course which, as we have already determined, is worth $9.50 to you because you would have happily paid $10 for a 50¢ CDR, so my music must be the $9.50 "value added" to that 50¢.

So lets now remove the 50¢ CDR from the equation. You want my music, it's going to cost you $9.50. If you take it without my permission you now have something in your possession that you didn't have before. It is theft. there is no pretty way to justify it, there is no excuse you can make, there is no justification you can use. You have something in your possession that you did not pay for.


I cannot be arsed to reply to the rest of your comments, you opinion is based upon a flawed premiss so does not interest me.

Distribution of collection 1s and 0s cost next to nothing, storage of those collection cost next to nothing a piece.
There IS a very real difference between physical (that is finite, scarce) goods and non-physical (that is infinite, non-scarce) goods.
For mp3's or ebooks to cost the same as cd's and paper books is extortion.
The premise that collections of 1s and 0s are exactly the same is any and all ways as physical objects is also a flawed premise, I believe that is your premise.
Follow your bliss
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2014 at 11:55
Hey! I resemble that remark! I lived on a yacht for two years and not only discovered this website while living fhere but some the coolest prog i have ever heard. Of course we just got tbe pirates drunk and fhey raped and pillaged the neighbors who blasted the Kenny G
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2014 at 11:30
the death of yacht rock
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2014 at 11:07
Will Piracy Kill Off Sailing?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2014 at 11:00
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Piracy will disappear completely once everyone has been suckered into adopting the "cloud". You won't be able to download anything, you won't own anything, everything will be streamed and everything will be pay-per-listen. Welcome to the world of tomorrow, please form an orderly queue.

That's only if they manage to kill off Net Neutrality - which the US is in the process of doing. It must be stopped.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2014 at 10:50
Originally posted by unclemeat69 unclemeat69 wrote:




     
     
     
     < ="text/">
     <!--    @page margin: 0.79in     P margin-bottom: 0.08in     A: so-: zxx    -->
     


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 0.15in">
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

If a
10,000 people stole


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 0.15in">Sharing is not
stealing, with downloading you actually make your own personally copy
(copying is multiplying rather than taking a physical object away).


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 0.15in">
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

But if
100 people steal from (say) Pseudo/Sentai that's a different
matter, they are not on their way to selling 37 million copies of
their CD, so that's $500 missing from Greg's bottom-line. And that's
not fine at all.
Where does that $500 missing come from? Is
that a 'lost sale for every download'? That crap has been debunked
already.


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 0.15in">
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Record
companies are not monsters, they are a business. The purpose of a
business is to make money, selling music is how they do that. A
record label is not a public service, it is a factory for making a
product. You may not like the idea of "Art" as a commodity
but that is how it has always been, you make something and sell it,
simple commerce - that's how it works, it worked for Mickey Angelo,
it worked for Johnny Seb Bach and it worked for Billy S Burroughs -
even worked for Vinney van Gogh who would barter paintings for a bowl
of bouillabaisse at the Café du Tambourin. If you can sell your
art you can eat.


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 0.15in">Art is about self
expression,.not about just selling products.


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 0.15in">Michael Angelo
worked for hire and got paid once for each thing that he made, not
again and again.


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 0.15in">John Sebastian
Bach had several day jobs (kapellmeister, organist, music teacher, if
you couldn't improvise he wouldn't have you as his student), making
his many compositions (of which presumably only a quarter survived,
the manuscripts were divided among his surviving children of which
only one was careful with them).


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 0.15in">Vincent van Gogh
sold one painting in his lifetime and the buyer bought it out of
pity.


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 0.15in">He lived for a big
part off his brother's money.


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 0.15in">The business-side
of music exists for about a century or so.


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 0.15in">Before that
composer were employed by the king, archbishop, pope etc and they
were paid one (and only once) per composition if their employer liked
it.


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 0.15in">A bunch of
composers in the past (and most likely in the present) still have a
job to pay their bills and in their spare time they write their
music.


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 0.15in">Gustav Holst was a
music teacher and Charles Ives had his own insurance company.


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 0.15in">Erik Satie was a
bar pianist.


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 0.15in">Neurosis have a
day job.


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 0.15in">


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 120%">
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

The way
music companies works seems unfair and in some ways it was, but not
in every way. The label funded the recording and production, it paid
for the manufacture and distribution and recouped that outlay on
sales. If the record didn't sell they lost money... the company lost
money not the artist, who invariably kept the advance (ie a loan in
advance of sales) the company paid them. That lost money came from
the profits they made on all the successful albums they also made.
The recording and all the other stuff is paid for the artist
out of that advance money that needs to be paid back by the artists'
small percentage of the profit (minus their managers' fee).


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 120%">If the band can pay
it back, the label recoups their investment, if not, the band is let
go.


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 120%">In the meantime the
big bulk of any profits has already entered the deep pockets of the
record label.


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 120%">Especially the big
labels (of which there are now about 3 or 4, used to be 6 a few
mergers ago) do all they can to screw their artists any way they can.


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 120%">So the band gets to
pay for the recording of their album but the copyright of that album
is for the record label (Kudos to Robert Fripp for standing up
against that).


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 120%">Indie labels like
InsideOut will be much fairer and several of the bands on that label
have their own studios in which they record parts (if not everything)
of their albums.


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 120%">


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 120%">
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Today it
doesn't work like that because we broke the music business, now the
music business couldn't give a flying fart about esoteric music
and niche markets like Prog because we broke it. Now the artist has
to pay for everything, up front and out of their own pocket, the
modern equivalent of the record label (Bandcamp, Soundcloud) pays for
nothing. What do we get for that? Artist integrity? Think again.
Every musician needs to eat 


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 120%">


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; line-height: 120%">Prog on, Sign in,
Log out


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in">
Zappa used to pay for his
albums out of his own pocket up front and then sold the tapes to his
record label with no questions asked.


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in">In 1977 Warner Brothers had a problem
with one of his songs (Punky's Whips on Zappa In New York) which
resulted in a bunch of lawsuits which FZ won and thus he won back all
the rights on his albums included all the tapes (which in turn
resulted in whole bunch of really crappy releases of his stuff in the
80's and 90's).


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in">


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in">Sure, musicians may make money off
their music but the natural right to share (not to mention universal
humsn rights like privacy) should not be thrown out of the window
because of archaic, outdated business models.


<p style="margin-bottom: 0in">An insane sense of entitlement (“I'm
the great so-and-so and I used to be famous 40 years ago so I still
deserve a yearly income of some ridiculous amount of money”) should
not be rewarded by bad legislation.







I despair.

You want to completely erode the musician's right to own and make a profit off his labour so that your perceived rights as a consumer are not infringed. The only difference between music and other consumer products is that people feel it is OK to steal music because you likely won't get caught.

And as for the insane sense of entitlement:

...It's only a crime if you get caught...


I presume that if your property is taken without your permission and distributed amongst the starving and needy you won't be going to the Police or trying to retrieve it.

Why not post your address (that's like posting a download link) leave a few copies of your keys under pots in the garden and let the looters descend whilst you are out?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2014 at 10:24
Originally posted by unclemeat69 unclemeat69 wrote:

< ="text/">

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

If a 10,000 people stole

Sharing is not stealing, with downloading you actually make your own personally copy (copying is multiplying rather than taking a physical object away).

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

But if 100 people steal from (say) Pseudo/Sentai that's a different matter, they are not on their way to selling 37 million copies of their CD, so that's $500 missing from Greg's bottom-line. And that's not fine at all.
Where does that $500 missing come from? Is that a 'lost sale for every download'? That crap has been debunked already.

Only in your head it has.

Your argument is a fallacy designed to appease your own conscience, it fools no one. This line of thinking isn't even smart enough to be classed as specious. If something is sold for a price and you take it without paying then that is theft whether there is a physical object or not. There is no physical money in my bank account but if you hack it and transfer everything to your account you have stolen my money. If I write a book and send it to you to proof read but you then take a copy and publish it under your own name before sending back you have stolen from me. 


If I make an album, burn it onto a 50¢ CDR and sell it for $10 do you then demand that CD for 50¢ as the music therein has cost me nothing to reproduce? 

If all you wanted was the physical object then you could go to a hardware store and buy a CDR for 50¢, but that is not what you want is it.. you want the music not the physical CDR and if you want it you will pay $10. 

So now if you steal that CD have you stolen $10 or 50¢? Obviously its the $10 because the blank CDR is only worth 50¢ and we've already established that if it was only the physical object you wanted you could buy that for 50¢ at a hardware store

But what if you take that CDR, copy it and hand it back, what have you in your possession that you didn't have before? My music of course which, as we have already determined, is worth $9.50 to you because you would have happily paid $10 for a 50¢ CDR, so my music must be the $9.50 "value added" to that 50¢.

So lets now remove the 50¢ CDR from the equation. You want my music, it's going to cost you $9.50. If you take it without my permission you now have something in your possession that you didn't have before. It is theft. there is no pretty way to justify it, there is no excuse you can make, there is no justification you can use. You have something in your possession that you did not pay for.


I cannot be arsed to reply to the rest of your comments, you opinion is based upon a flawed premiss so does not interest me.

What?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2014 at 09:44
Originally posted by Gerinski Gerinski wrote:

BTW a question: I do not use "the Cloud", I'm getting old and I'm rather behind in everything concerning all this modern stuff, I just got my first smartphone a few weeks ago and so far I only use it for calling and messaging and at most emailing (which in any case I prefer doing from my computer).

Can the Cloud be used as a new file exchange platform in the way traditional file downloading sites have been until now?
I mean, if anyone uploads files to the Cloud and then just releases access links to other people, would that work? Would that be considered piracy?
Mega upload did something like that I think and got attacked by Big Entertainment after they stopped using it (and they did use it).
Mega upload got sued out of existence with a total absence of due process.
Long story that's still not finished.
The musicians that used it were happy with the money they got from it, much, much better than itunes and legacy record labels.
Follow your bliss
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2014 at 09:28
< ="text/">

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

If a 10,000 people stole

Sharing is not stealing, with downloading you actually make your own personally copy (copying is multiplying rather than taking a physical object away).

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

But if 100 people steal from (say) Pseudo/Sentai that's a different matter, they are not on their way to selling 37 million copies of their CD, so that's $500 missing from Greg's bottom-line. And that's not fine at all.
Where does that $500 missing come from? Is that a 'lost sale for every download'? That crap has been debunked already.

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Record companies are not monsters, they are a business. The purpose of a business is to make money, selling music is how they do that. A record label is not a public service, it is a factory for making a product. You may not like the idea of "Art" as a commodity but that is how it has always been, you make something and sell it, simple commerce - that's how it works, it worked for Mickey Angelo, it worked for Johnny Seb Bach and it worked for Billy S Burroughs - even worked for Vinney van Gogh who would barter paintings for a bowl of bouillabaisse at the Café du Tambourin. If you can sell your art you can eat.

Art is about self expression,.not about just selling products.

Michael Angelo worked for hire and got paid once for each thing that he made, not again and again.

John Sebastian Bach had several day jobs (kapellmeister, organist, music teacher, if you couldn't improvise he wouldn't have you as his student), making his many compositions (of which presumably only a quarter survived, the manuscripts were divided among his surviving children of which only one was careful with them).

Vincent van Gogh sold one painting in his lifetime and the buyer bought it out of pity.

He lived for a big part off his brother's money.

The business-side of music exists for about a century or so.

Before that composer were employed by the king, archbishop, pope etc and they were paid one (and only once) per composition if their employer liked it.

A bunch of composers in the past (and most likely in the present) still have a job to pay their bills and in their spare time they write their music.

Gustav Holst was a music teacher and Charles Ives had his own insurance company.

Erik Satie was a bar pianist.

Neurosis have a day job.


Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

The way music companies works seems unfair and in some ways it was, but not in every way. The label funded the recording and production, it paid for the manufacture and distribution and recouped that outlay on sales. If the record didn't sell they lost money... the company lost money not the artist, who invariably kept the advance (ie a loan in advance of sales) the company paid them. That lost money came from the profits they made on all the successful albums they also made.
The recording and all the other stuff is paid for the artist out of that advance money that needs to be paid back by the artists' small percentage of the profit (minus their managers' fee).

If the band can pay it back, the label recoups their investment, if not, the band is let go.

In the meantime the big bulk of any profits has already entered the deep pockets of the record label.

Especially the big labels (of which there are now about 3 or 4, used to be 6 a few mergers ago) do all they can to screw their artists any way they can.

So the band gets to pay for the recording of their album but the copyright of that album is for the record label (Kudos to Robert Fripp for standing up against that).

Indie labels like InsideOut will be much fairer and several of the bands on that label have their own studios in which they record parts (if not everything) of their albums.


Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Today it doesn't work like that because we broke the music business, now the music business couldn't give a flying fart about esoteric music and niche markets like Prog because we broke it. Now the artist has to pay for everything, up front and out of their own pocket, the modern equivalent of the record label (Bandcamp, Soundcloud) pays for nothing. What do we get for that? Artist integrity? Think again. Every musician needs to eat 


Prog on, Sign in, Log out

Zappa used to pay for his albums out of his own pocket up front and then sold the tapes to his record label with no questions asked.

In 1977 Warner Brothers had a problem with one of his songs (Punky's Whips on Zappa In New York) which resulted in a bunch of lawsuits which FZ won and thus he won back all the rights on his albums included all the tapes (which in turn resulted in whole bunch of really crappy releases of his stuff in the 80's and 90's).


Sure, musicians may make money off their music but the natural right to share (not to mention universal humsn rights like privacy) should not be thrown out of the window because of archaic, outdated business models.

An insane sense of entitlement (“I'm the great so-and-so and I used to be famous 40 years ago so I still deserve a yearly income of some ridiculous amount of money”) should not be rewarded by bad legislation.

Follow your bliss
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2014 at 08:45
BTW a question: I do not use "the Cloud", I'm getting old and I'm rather behind in everything concerning all this modern stuff, I just got my first smartphone a few weeks ago and so far I only use it for calling and messaging and at most emailing (which in any case I prefer doing from my computer).

Can the Cloud be used as a new file exchange platform in the way traditional file downloading sites have been until now?
I mean, if anyone uploads files to the Cloud and then just releases access links to other people, would that work? Would that be considered piracy?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2014 at 08:42
A relevant note from Bob Ezrin -

http://fyimusicnews.ca/post/98271408357/the-day-the-music-died
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2014 at 08:26
Nothing is killing off prog. Our music stores in these parts are thriving and there are more and more prog selections every time i visit. If anything piracy has allowed prog to reach every household
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2014 at 01:10
Originally posted by uduwudu uduwudu wrote:

Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by uduwudu uduwudu wrote:

(...) 

On the doco of the 1970 Isle Of Wight fest the very same subject (free music) reared it's head. "Music should be free" claimed concert goers unable to find the necessary pound to get inthe field. (Tix weren't that cheap, one has to balance the cost of these against the miniscule wages doled out by the mighty). "The artist survives, how?" Asked the interviewer."Record sales" was the response. I'm sure Fripp liner note readers know how reliable that is. Plus ca change, n'est pas? as Geddy and his French friends might have said in the Trees. 

(...) 
 

A weekend ticket on the IOW 1970 was cost £ 3; so the cost of a Levi's 501 pants at that time. 
Was it expensive for the three-day festival with the bands and the artists such as Moody Blues, The Doors, Chicago, Family, Jimi Hendrix, Jethro Tull, Joni Mitchell, Miles Davis, Emerson, Lake & Palmer, The Who and so on? I do not think so. 



Some thought so. Some people decide if someone's going to get paid, how much and by whom. Apparently 3 quid was roughly 10% of the average wage. I assume pre tax. (IMHo for a festival this was quite a good price but the constraints on people are perennial. May be they wanted a physical product....

Anyway if taking without paying is now a legitimate? business model, where does it end? It's cutural, the pirate bay get away with facilitating file exchanging - really just letting people home tape globally.

The point is that someone says "you don't get paid. I want to enjoy your thing but have no wish to fork out." Someone (else) might do that's the extent to which I am going to concern myself. Responsibility for you getting paid is not my concern. Play the music. it should be free. The people have spoken. 

A lot gets stolen, more than many understand. It's not just the money, but the simple enjoyment and fun of it all. 



I already said that I think that YouTube only contributed to the popularization of the progressive rock in the younger population. Are these current progressive rock bands lost something because the songs can be downloaded from YouTube? I think not, 'cause If a band does not have vids at YouTube, it's almost as if that band does not exist - It's like in ancient times that a band has not been played on the radio at all; in ancient times, you was listening to a certain fm radio programme who played, among the others, the progressive rock songs; if you like it, you will burn it to a cassette; if you do much like it, you'll buy a single or LP. Of course, it wasn't the only way to hear the progressive rock back then, but it was the most common way; this is similar to "piracy" from YouTube, with the difference that YouTube is an interactive media as a part of Internet as well. 

Anyone of that prog audience who wants the quality of sound, beautiful album jacket with a nice artwork, liner notes,etcwill buy CDs and LPs or, at least, will pay for legal downloads. Those who don't worry about these things, they will listen to inferior sound of an illegal download, similar to those on the Isle of Wight Festival who were pitch their tents outside the field rather than to pay £3 for a weekend ticket and to become a part of the historyOf course, with the exception of that guy who was interviewed by accident, lol. So, how to sell to that kind of guys something that they do not need, a progressive rock album for exampleWell, that's an eternal question of all marketing magicians, isn't? In my humble opinion, only way is that some band(s) to record an album what would be like a "new DSotM" or a "new Tubular Bells" and, also, that the music industry have to be able to recognize (new) prog as an upward trend in sales and a profit made of white middle class and, consenquently, to invest a serious money in advertising new progressive rock bands, i.e. to pay a campaign created by the guys who know how to sell the things to the people who actually don't need it.





Edited by Svetonio - September 25 2014 at 19:39
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 24 2014 at 17:12
Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by uduwudu uduwudu wrote:

(...)

On the doco of the 1970 Isle Of Wight fest the very same subject (free music) reared it's head. "Music should be free" claimed concert goers unable to find the necessary pound to get inthe field. (Tix weren't that cheap, one has to balance the cost of these against the miniscule wages doled out by the mighty). "The artist survives, how?" Asked the interviewer."Record sales" was the response. I'm sure Fripp liner note readers know how reliable that is. Plus ca change, n'est pas? as Geddy and his French friends might have said in the Trees.

(...)


A weekend ticket on the IOW 1970 was cost £ 3; so the cost of a Levi's 501 pants at that time.
Was it expensive for the three-day festival with the bands and the artists such as Moody Blues, The Doors, Chicago, Family, Jimi Hendrix, Jethro Tull, Joni Mitchell, Miles Davis, Emerson, Lake & Palmer, The Who and so on? I do not think so.



Some thought so. Some people decide if someone's going to get paid, how much and by whom. Apparently 3 quid was roughly 10% of the average wage. I assume pre tax. (IMHo for a festival this was quite a good price but the constraints on people are perennial. May be they wanted a physical product....

Anyway if taking without paying is now a legitimate? business model, where does it end? It's cutural, the pirate bay get away with facilitating file exchanging - really just letting people home tape globally.

The point is that someone says "you don't get paid. I want to enjoy your thing but have no wish to fork out." Someone (else) might do that's the extent to which I am going to concern myself. Responsibility for you getting paid is not my concern. Play the music. it should be free. The people have spoken.

A lot gets stolen, more than many understand. It's not just the money, but the simple enjoyment and fun of it all.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 24 2014 at 13:35
^It is a great point but unfortunately times have changed and "there ain't no goin' back", brother.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 24 2014 at 13:29
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

 Why should Ms Minogue snr. be immune?

Fantastic point.  I think niche genres actually fare better, because fans of genres like prog/psych, metal, punk, indie rock, etc actually care about the music they listen to and actually like to give back to the community and the artists.  With vinyl being a hot commodity again, people actually buy LP's.  If they don't buy hard copies of music anymore, they buy t-shirts and other such merchandise.

People who only follow current generation popular music don't give a crap about supporting the music they enjoy, they simply want to jump on the newest hit singles and club tracks, consume, and move on.

Besides, hasn't Kylie Minogue been making music since the late 80's?  She's not exactly new.
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