This is a nice selection... I just listened to the samples through about 20
times last night, whatever you think about the album, there's a pretty
strong vision there...
http://www.juno.co.uk/ppps/products/304896-01.htm
-----Original Message-----
From: kent williams [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Saturday, September 27, 2008 4:09 AM
To: list 313
Subject: Re: (313) Morgan Geist interview

This isn't the place to debate it, obviously, but the fact is that
high-bitrate MP3s can't be distinguished from CDs in blind listening tests.
You can argue that vinyl is superior to both those formats, but in the
majority of listening situations the difference in sound between the formats
is swamped by the quality of the playback equipment.

And to your second point, as someone who has literally run out of room in my
house for vinyl and CDs (and by 'literally' I mean literally literally, and
it's not a small house), I am really happy with having my music on hard
disk.  It's searchable in a way my CDs and vinyl never will be.  You have to
be paranoid about backing it up, but it's a more manageable way to handle a
large collection.

And to the third point -- artist compensation -- with a few exceptions, few
people make a good living out of music, and that was just as true 100 years
ago as now. Technology has upset how musicians make their living over and
over again. Some people adapt and do OK, and some people get bitter and
complain. Musicians complaining about people not paying for their music
shouldn't make the same mistake Software publishers and Major labels do --
every illicit copy does not represent a lost sale.

Studies indicate the biggest downloaders are also the biggest spenders when
it comes to music. And someone who hears your music, no matter the context,
is more likely to purchase it than someone who has never heard it. Even
before the bottom fell out of the dance vinyl market, DJs and producers made
more money from playing out than vinyl sales.
Now, when music is no longer made artificially scarce by being tied to a
physical object, it remains true that a live performance is the only
irreplaceable, unreproducable thing. It seems to me that isn't a completely
bad thing, either.

I don't say this to justify something-for-nothing deadbeats that never pay
for music, just to point out that it's not a black and white thing.

On Fri, Sep 26, 2008 at 10:28 AM, JT Stewart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The mp3 formulation flat-out sucks. I don't care what site you uh 
> cite. The "artifact" and "reality" of music is ceasing to exist -- 
> like MG says, seeing live music is becoming the only way to have a 
> real music experience now. Technophiles will rant and rave about the 
> freedom and access allowed by ethereal digital "objects", but we are 
> losing many of the old ways we marked and appreciated and valued 
> cultural fuel such as music...the digital revolution got ahead of 
> itself. It's not just because we're getting old.
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