If an artist is A) not super rich, B) on an indie or self-owned label, and C) his records are available where you live, is there any excuse for downloading them instead of buying them?

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btw give me a million dollars

worm? lol (J0hn D.), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:30 (seventeen years ago)

all british people should stop making music not just the poor ones

i would never want a book's autograph (M@tt He1ges0n), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:31 (seventeen years ago)

if I ever get 2 million dollars, I will give you 1 of them

iatee, Friday, 29 May 2009 20:31 (seventeen years ago)

dude you just bought yourself beers for life on me when I'm in yr town, just in case

worm? lol (J0hn D.), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:32 (seventeen years ago)

I've said this on previous threads, but rather than getting all pissy about people downloading, musicians, record companies, whomever, should be working their asses off trying to find a system which allows them make a living making music (I mean assuming that's what they want--I get that being pissy has its own rewards.)

Alex in SF, Friday, 29 May 2009 20:32 (seventeen years ago)

k I live in sf

beers here cost half a million dollars btw

iatee, Friday, 29 May 2009 20:33 (seventeen years ago)

truth fucking bomb on alex in SF - I enjoy just yammering about shit but I don't bitch about downloading, I talk a lot about how it's changed the nature of the listening experience but there is, permanently, NO point in whining about the way things are. you play the cards as they lie & STFU; if you have a job in the business, you won at life and should avoid looking like you're not grateful to the people who put you there.

worm? lol (J0hn D.), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:34 (seventeen years ago)

"let me know when some of them produce a body of work over 8 years that compares favorably to the Beatles"

Question: do you think anyone has produced a comparative body of work to the Beatles? Cuz what's music's excuse for not producing a Beatles all the time back before filesharing was killing it and money was free and easy?

Alex in SF, Friday, 29 May 2009 20:35 (seventeen years ago)

Alex I think the decrease of the profit motive has thinned the talent pool & that people who might have made excellent albums are spending their creative energies in other fields where they might be better compensated.

worm? lol (J0hn D.), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:36 (seventeen years ago)

I think they didn't want to make the beatles look bad so they only allowed one beatles at a time

iatee, Friday, 29 May 2009 20:36 (seventeen years ago)

Okay so basically your argument is that music has gotten worse in the post-Napster world? Cuz frankly I don't see much evidence that's the case.

Alex in SF, Friday, 29 May 2009 20:37 (seventeen years ago)

also, prior to the Beatles: Duke Ellington, John Coltrane, Louis Armstrong, Count Basie, Mozart, Beethoven, Mahler, Schubert, and about 20 other artists who hoped to make their living at music & produced bodies of work I'll put up against the Beatles any time

worm? lol (J0hn D.), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:37 (seventeen years ago)

I would say yeah I don't think the age of everything-available-for-free has been real generous with the masterpieces

one can't prove causation obv and there are several dozen other possible explanations (genre stagnation, other entertainment options for starters) but my feeling is - as in boxing, one of my other favorite areas of entertainment - that when the money started to dry up, the talent went elsewhere

worm? lol (J0hn D.), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:38 (seventeen years ago)

So there are just a lot more (a LOT more) hacks making music now in your opinion? Cuz there is certainly still a lot of music out there?

Alex in SF, Friday, 29 May 2009 20:40 (seventeen years ago)

also beethoven etc. didn't actually make enough money (directly) off their music to live.

iatee, Friday, 29 May 2009 20:41 (seventeen years ago)

are you just talking about being prolific? lots of musicians with day jobs are making great albums, but sure it's hard to make 2 or 3 of them a year if you have to do it in your spare time.

xp

Ømår Littel (Jordan), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:41 (seventeen years ago)

I mean the problem with the Beatles argument is that J0hn not one of the acts you named was post-Beatles. If the old Beatles system was great at producing works of musical genius, why didn't it produce more acts that were comparable to the Beatles (or more Coltranes, Ellingtons, Basies, etc)?

Alex in SF, Friday, 29 May 2009 20:42 (seventeen years ago)

The other factor there is "records" as the end goal of artistic output rather than as some kind of 'record' of it

thomp, Friday, 29 May 2009 20:46 (seventeen years ago)

system didn't really change - the system was "you can make a lot of money at it." I am arguing (this is a hella conservative argt I know, which I don't like making, but I cannot front) that once the profit motive is gone, you're left with some inspired hobbyists & a bunch of uninspired second-stringers

worm? lol (J0hn D.), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:46 (seventeen years ago)

It's much easier to make the "there are more hacks now than then" argument because you aren't really going to know who the non-hacks are really going to be until history weighs in; there's a shifting perspective component to this that makes this argument difficult to pursue.

Having said that, one can certainly make the argument that technology has greatly diminished the talent pool of popular music; when you live in a world where you don't have to sing remotely in tune to be successful, it really cheapens the whole craft of singing (to name a personal bugbear; I am certain that the whole ProTools/fix all mistakes mentality behind modern sound engineering also plays into this on the instrumental side).

None of this is directly related to downloading, so I think on balance I agree with Alex's point that you can't blame downloading for this; one could argue that if music wasn't being processed into aural Cheez Whiz in the first place, people would be more willing to pay for it. (I don't know if I buy that argument, but you could make it.)

Obama seems to have the views of a 21-year-old Hispanic girl (HI DERE), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:47 (seventeen years ago)

which, y'know, it's easy to ping-pong this discussion into "so you're saying there are no good records?" - no, of course not; but there's little that's ambitious, and I think the possibility of the sweet life, not having to work, etc, is a good carrot-on-a-stick for artists, and the lack of said carrot means plenty of creative people will go where the money is (which: I don't think there's anything wrong with that AT ALL)

worm? lol (J0hn D.), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:48 (seventeen years ago)

I'm vaguely in favor of the increased quantity and variety of interesting semi-amateur music in the world, but I like punk and indiepop and 1980s one-hit wonders, so at this point maybe I'm just trained to think of that as a good idea.

xpost - I have no real opinion on this matter but it occurs to me that you could totally make any number of devil's-advocate proposition about the Beatles and the 60s and such, mostly relating to the fact that the mid-to-late 60s were surely the first moment that a rock'n'roll musician could seriously have started expecting to have any level of career control or bring home any of the wealth the music created, right? But we're talking about a whole different world with a lot of musicians from that era, because if your sole alternative was to go get a job on a dock or in a factory, pretty much anything that combined music + renown + eating would seem like a step up; I think the "renown" part of that was probably more of a draw than any notion that anyone was going to get rich playing rock'n'roll.

nabisco, Friday, 29 May 2009 20:49 (seventeen years ago)

btw I pitch-corrected a harmony vocal on an EP earlier this year and thought "I should just kill myself right now"

in my own defense though I was stacking four-part harmonies and studio time ain't free

worm? lol (J0hn D.), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:49 (seventeen years ago)

I feel like a million inspired hobbyists putting their stuff on the internet is gonna produce more great music than 10,000 career musicians might

xposttt

iatee, Friday, 29 May 2009 20:50 (seventeen years ago)

another great artist who I don't think would have ever sang outside of church if there hadn't been crazy money in it: sinatra

xpost:

I feel like a million inspired hobbyists putting their stuff on the internet is gonna produce more great music than 10,000 career musicians might

got anything to back this up or is it just a hunch? like, examples?

worm? lol (J0hn D.), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:51 (seventeen years ago)

Do you also think that a million hobbyist violinists are likely, on balance, to sound better than 10,000 symphony violinists?

Obama seems to have the views of a 21-year-old Hispanic girl (HI DERE), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:51 (seventeen years ago)

I mean, you are treating both talent and training (formal and on-the-job) as negligible when you play this type of number game.

Obama seems to have the views of a 21-year-old Hispanic girl (HI DERE), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:52 (seventeen years ago)

if a million monkeys with a million leather jackets go to germany and take a bunch of speed and play music for american GI's. . .

Mr. Que, Friday, 29 May 2009 20:52 (seventeen years ago)

I dunno, iatee, I think J0hn's right to think about the type of great music -- a million inspired "hobbyists" will make a ton of great music in a lot of ways that I enjoy, but not some of the expensive big-audience grand-ambition ways that are also nice, and also (maybe inevitably) slipping a bit away. If that milk has already spilled I won't cry over it too much, but it'd be nice to have all types, you know?

nabisco, Friday, 29 May 2009 20:53 (seventeen years ago)

xxxp I think a sample of a symphony violinist probably sounds better than all of them.

Alex in SF, Friday, 29 May 2009 20:53 (seventeen years ago)

I don't the great artists you've mentioned were motivated by the possibility of not having to work. It would be more like: by the possibility of artistic freedom, I'd think.

dulce est desipere in loco (Euler), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:53 (seventeen years ago)

I bought a pirate copy of Tallahass33 in Hanoi once. I'm sorry.

thomp, Friday, 29 May 2009 20:53 (seventeen years ago)

to john and dan:

I've gotten more pleasure outta this guy than anything else this year

iatee, Friday, 29 May 2009 20:54 (seventeen years ago)

I feel like a million inspired hobbyists putting their stuff on the internet is gonna produce more great music than 10,000 career musicians might

I mean, like, people have been saying shit like this for ten years now. Do we have one example of a guy who the whole world hears and goes "holy fuck, the new system is bringing crazy talent out that might not have risen to the surface before"? barring that, do we have one example of a guy whose stuff is crazy good but just hasn't gotten the attention it deserves, but whose eventual embrace by history seems assured, given how audibly awesome it is?

worm? lol (J0hn D.), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:54 (seventeen years ago)

The problem with the grand ambition is dead because of file-sharing argument is that grand ambition hasn't produced a lot of great records in the past 40 years.

Alex in SF, Friday, 29 May 2009 20:54 (seventeen years ago)

So maybe grand ambition needs a shake up anyway and maybe our current era is going to provide it.

Alex in SF, Friday, 29 May 2009 20:55 (seventeen years ago)

yeah I can feel that argt

worm? lol (J0hn D.), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:55 (seventeen years ago)

It's much easier to make the "there are more hacks now than then" argument because you aren't really going to know who the non-hacks are really going to be until history weighs in; there's a shifting perspective component to this that makes this argument difficult to pursue.

That's a good point, but I'd argue that there are more musicians putting their music in front of the public (even it's just myspace pages and stuff on blogs) than there were before the internet made that possible. I think there are more hacks because there are more musicians.

giving a shit when it isn't your turn to give a shit (sarahel), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:55 (seventeen years ago)

barring that, do we have one example of a guy whose stuff is crazy good but just hasn't gotten the attention it deserves, but whose eventual embrace by history seems assured, given how audibly awesome it is?

i think we all know people like this, or at least i know i do. actually it's more likely it'll never be heard by very many people, in the case of certain friends who don't know how to market themselves or aren't interested in doing it, but still make awesome records.

Ømår Littel (Jordan), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:56 (seventeen years ago)

I think there are more hacks because there are more musicians.

haha I am never going to disagree with this statement

Obama seems to have the views of a 21-year-old Hispanic girl (HI DERE), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:57 (seventeen years ago)

xp Jordan: It's kind of sad to think that the eventual embrace by history is the best these folks can hope for, and that said embrace would happen before they die as opposed to after.

giving a shit when it isn't your turn to give a shit (sarahel), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:58 (seventeen years ago)

Jordan we're talking here about stuff about which you'd say "this is every bit as vital as Rubber Soul"

I say this as a guy who doesn't listen to the Beatles or anything but I really thing the argument that removing the profit motive from art makes for better art is hopelessly naive

worm? lol (J0hn D.), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:58 (seventeen years ago)

haha I am never going to disagree with this statemen

also STFU singerman, I will play bass licks on your grave

worm? lol (J0hn D.), Friday, 29 May 2009 20:59 (seventeen years ago)

well this doesn't go anywhere if we keep talking about what's "great," since we presumably have different ideas of that

NB I don't think file-sharing is cutting into ambition, but I do feel, in terms of the music I know, that there's a whole combination of stuff about fracturing audiences, lower bars for "hobbyist" entry, ease of dissemination, etc. etc. etc. that probably leads just naturally to a world where very few people get to make really grand/ambitious art where they're imagining and trying to communicate with a really large audience. This isn't the worst thing in the world, it's not the fault of anything in particular, and there's nothing about the internet or mp3s that keeps a grandly ambitious musician from trying to talk to the whole universe, but there you have it, that's kinda where things are these days.

nabisco, Friday, 29 May 2009 21:00 (seventeen years ago)

"I miss the monoculture"

thomp, Friday, 29 May 2009 21:01 (seventeen years ago)

lower bars for "hobbyist" entry

well, but when the bar for professionalism got lowered by punk, we got: joy division, the cure, etc

worm? lol (J0hn D.), Friday, 29 May 2009 21:01 (seventeen years ago)

I've gotten more pleasure outta this guy than anything else this year

That's great! Is he trying to make money off of this? If so, have you given him any? How is he going to continue to make things like this without financial support from the people consuming it?

also STFU singerman, I will play bass licks on your grave

you may add a post-punk bass line to Martin's "Agnus Dei", which is what I want performed at my funeral

Obama seems to have the views of a 21-year-old Hispanic girl (HI DERE), Friday, 29 May 2009 21:03 (seventeen years ago)

as a guy who doesn't listen to the beatles or anything, i agree with that.

xxxp to j0hn

Ømår Littel (Jordan), Friday, 29 May 2009 21:03 (seventeen years ago)

couple xposts

I cannot type and think at the speed of other people. Where would you date the interval of "people getting to make really grand/ambitious art where they're imagining and trying to communicate with a really large audience" from and to? — obviously Aristophanes wrote for a tiny fraction of the number of people who are watching the Britain's Got Talent finale I can hear in the next room (although as a proportion of the the population of the civilised world as he saw it I think he probably wins there)

I kind of wonder how low the bar for professionalism really was if you were in a metal band or a soul band in Britain in the 70s and mainly played working men's clubs

thomp, Friday, 29 May 2009 21:04 (seventeen years ago)

like I said, I am way in favor of low bars for entry -- you are talking to a guy who likes those early Beat Happening songs that are just like a pot, a pencil, and a boombox

^ NB for all I know maybe that'll change drastically in five or ten years, like suddenly everyone who misses grand statements or grew up with productive attachments to MCR records starts plotting out world-changing 40-year careers; who knows ... mostly all I'm saying is that envisioning an all-hobbyist culture seems great at providing certain things and maybe not as likely to provide others, and it'd be nice to see cultures that accommodate both

nabisco, Friday, 29 May 2009 21:05 (seventeen years ago)


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