ChrisW wrote:Cassettes and bootleg albums are surely a different level of copying to digital don't you think? My neighbour has downloaded literally hundreds of songs (he revealed as we chatted about how great braodband is). Do you think he would have copied all that music to cassette, while doing his 9 to 5 and looking after 3 kids?
Like JB HI-Fi?
Borders Australia just closed down. Borders in the U.S. are getting scarcer on the ground. Actual retail record stores in downtown London are virtually impossible to find.
There's Amoeba in LA, although I always used to spend an hour or two browsing at Tower on Sunset, now long gone.
OK, it ain't the musical apocalypse, but I think we should also fight to keep the industry going in the face of apparently acceptable plundering of content.
I know more people hanging on with just a little income, than I know those enjoying the industry like I used to 10, 20, 30 years ago.
Hi Chris - sorry about the paraphrasing - just saving some 1s and 0s
I see your point about copying and it's hard to speculate about what others may do. In my case I used to frequent the 2nd hand record shops (remember Ashwoods and The Pitt in Pitt St?) and buy a heap of obscure records, then I'd go out to Matraville and buy a box of cassettes direct from the company (Goldring?). Back home, each record got a clean and then was taped on first play - so I had a cassette copy to listen to in the car. Even though it was in done real time one could set the levels, start recording and come back 20 mins later to pause the tape and turn the record over. Downloads, on the other hand, occur in seconds / minutes and you have to be at the computer pretty consistently to download lots of things. Swings and roundabouts..... and too hard for me to speculate.
Remember a company called "Edels"? They virtually owned the retail outlet market in Oz for many years - I believe they morphed into Brashs but I don't see many of them around now either.... I think Amazon / CDNow etc did more to impact the retail outlets than downloads (or perhaps the combination of the 2?). Now we start to see bookshops (e.g. Angus & Robertson) in trouble. I suspect the next industry will be the printers as the need for sleeves / CD covers reduces...
Your last point is sad to read. Personally, I would love to make my living doing studio work / session playing - unfortunately, it just doesn't offer the income I want for my family's lifestyle so (my choice) I do a job that I don't love......
One excellent part of the "1s and 0s" world is that it's possible now to have quality gear and do audio part time - and technology allows me (being subjective here) to enjoy being a (very small) part of elite groups like this forum. When I was a lad (hahahahahaha) there was no way to meet / chat with people who are at the top of their field unless you "knew someone" or physically pestered people until you "got in" - though having real talent would have helped of course.....