179,854Messages
9,130Senders
30Years
342mboxes

← back to listing · view thread

From:
Wallace Winfrey
To:
idm
Date:
Wed, 24 Oct 2007 14:42:00 -0600
Subject:
Re: [idm] who still buys CDs
Msg-Id:
<471FAE18.3080006@booyaka.com>
In-Reply-To:
<13386412.post@talk.nabble.com>
Mbox:
idm.0710.gz
At this point, I pretty much only buy limited-edition vinyl with some element of special packaging to it, like 180-gram pressings, colored vinyl, picture discs and especially box sets. If a CD release also has some element of this kind of "specialness" to it, I'm inclined to pick that up too (case in point - the Rather Interesting "Classic" re-releases, which were signed and numbered). Digital music to me has very little worth, I mean, as a whole, I appreciate my digital music collection, but when you get down to the individual files in that collection, they're almost worthless. Like Alan Lockette said, physical media just has a much greater aesthetic cache. In Philip K. Dick's "The Man In the High Castle", one of the storylines is about how some of the characters create hand-made "Americana" objects which have an element called "Wu" (or "inner truth") about them. When the same objects are fabricated and produced on a mass scale, they lose their "Wu". A pair of Japanese collectors of authentic Americana are sensitive to objects with Wu and objects without, and develop special, intimate attachments to the authentic objects. To me, limited-edition physical media has much Wu, as opposed to digital files, which, with rare exception, have almost none. There was an article in the Village Voice this summer about Hospital Productions, a tiny East Village record store specializing in noise releases. There were a few quotes that seem notable: -- His customers—almost exclusively drawn to the hidden shop through friendly word-of-mouth—are searching for intimacy as well. "The more obscure, the rougher the packaging, the more handmade, the faster it sells," Fernow says. "The irony is that in getting away from trying to be mass-produced, you created an even more desirable consumer product. The CDs trickle. The vinyl? Pfft. Gone. I can barely keep that fucking thing full. The tapes? Gone. It's the personal touch, it's the feeling of the individual putting their mark on it." -- and -- The search, of course, is harder to find these days. "That's why things like MySpace and file-sharing turns me off, because it takes the sweat out of the underground," he says. "It just makes everything so fuckin' easy. There's no passion, no pursuit. You might as well be checking your fuckin' bank balance." -- It seems to me that, mp3s and the like are the ultimate negation of Wu - they're easy to obtain, easy to duplicate, easy to play back and easy to lug around. They require little to no care. Their convenience is what's best and worst about them. The convenience of the digital audio file has also contributed to an overabundance of shitty music by shitty labels sold at shitty online stores (rhymes with "Meatdork"). The only thing digital audio files are good for, IMO, is padding out an extensive home library and getting the word out about your music, which are very valuable attributes, but not worth money in and of themselves. If I were starting a label, I'd give the mp3s away for free (or by donation), encourage their distribution on the file-sharing networks (as complete packages, including .sfv files, .nfo files about the release encouraging people to buy the physical media if they like it, and high-res images) and put as much energy into creating physical media with as much "Wu" and "personal touch" into them as possible. Of course, that's just my opinion. I just think it's easier to sell someone something they can hold in their hand and put on their shelf. Their relationship to the music will grow more intimate if they have to seek it out and actually handle it in order to listen to it. w --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org