Posted by walter | June 29th, 2006 | 5:42 am
Sorry for the delay on the next podcast. I’d like to get it up and running soon, but some recent changes to my home computer have jacked up my sound settings and at present I’m incapable of recording/editing the content for the next show. I hope to get this remedied soon.
In the meantime, go listen to Emily Stine’s song “What if I punched your girlfriend?” It’s hilarious.
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Posted by walter | June 13th, 2006 | 11:29 am
Update: Turns out Victory Records is run by Commander and Thief Tony Brummel. Hawthorne Heights has some strong accusations.
Victory Records has launched VictorME — a new social site designed as an alternative to Myspace. It’s intended to build up a community directly around their artists.
Victory Records is home to a number of impressive bands including Hawthorne Heights, Spitalfield, Bayside, June, The Junior Varsity, Streetlight Manifesto, and The Forecast. If you like any of these artists and want to listen to their music or participate in their new community, this site should be worth checking out.
Tags: Hawthorne Heights, June, Spitalfield, Streetlight Manifesto, The Forecast, Victory Records
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Posted by walter | June 4th, 2006 | 12:48 pm
Recently, I’ve been seeing a lot of articles about the Russian music site AllOfMp3.com. AllOfMp3.com is a music download site similar to iTunes or Napster wherein users pay a certain price in order to download digital copies of songs and albums. Whereas iTunes, Napster, and similar services generally charge $1 per song, AllOfMp3’s price blows away the competition at prices of $0.03 per minute of song (generally $0.10 – $0.20 per song).
Woah! A four minute song for $0.12? Hook me up?!
So how come more people don’t use this service? Actually, a lot of people do. It was recently ranked second in popularity in Britain behind only iTunes, and it’s been gaining popularity elsewhere in the world as well. With these kind of prices, its newly unveiled music store software called allTunes which makes purchasing/downloading fairly easy (though still more difficult than the iTunes music store and less feature-filled than Napster), and it’s popularity… where’s the explosion? Where’s the commercials? The fanclubs?
Heck, I’d join the fanclub if it cost as much as a couple songs. The price is everything, but the price happens to be the problem. The dirty not-so-secret with AllOfMp3 is: it’s probably illegal. The AllOfMp3.com entry at Wikipedia gives a description of the service along with a rundown of some of the legal problems.
Let me summarize for you. For every song you spend at AllOfMp3, approximately zero cents goes to the artist. They don’t pay royalties, they don’t pay record labels, they don’t really pay anybody. I have no idea where they get the songs from, but basically you’re paying them to make you a copy of a digital file. Your favorite bands get screwed. They’ll go broke if you buy your music from this site.
If you don’t mind buying music from the back alleys of Russia, though, this site is your sweet sugar daddy.
As an example of the sick deal you get at this site, here’s what $10 can buy you:
• Panic! At the Disco – A Fever You Can’t Sweat Out (full album)
• Koyaanisqatsi – Soundtrack (if you’ve never seen the movie this soundtrack is from, you should — minimalism at its best)
• The Beatles – Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (full album)
• George Winston – Forrest (full album)
• Jimmy Eat World – Stay On My Side Tonight (EP)
• five miscellaneous singles
And two cents left over! To buy the same on iTunes you’d have to spend approximately $55. Can you see why people like it?
To close this out, though: even though the store has great prices, buying music from Russian pirates will end up destroying the bands you love. Probably. If you like good music that isn’t Britney Spears. Y’know, smaller artists, smaller labels, smaller budgets.
Support the bands you love.
Update: The US government is threatening to keep Russia from joining the WTO if they don’t shut down allofmp3.com.
Tags: allofmp3, iTunes, napster
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