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Tagged ‘cd’

The Evolution of the Music Format


The Evolution of the Music Format by: Joseph Beaty (DPS Insider)

We have gone through format after format with how we buy music. Vinyl, 8-Track, Cds and slew of digital formats from .MP3 to .Flac. Seems like a new digital format pops up daily. 8-tracks died a painful death and have not returned in any sort of hipster scene. (Yet) Cassettes are mostly dead with a few hipsters releasing their records on cassettes as novelty with a download code. Vinyl on the other hand, has been around for quite some time. It seems that vinyl continues to survive. Through all the format changes. We still see vinyl on shelves. Record store day has been going strong with vinyl releases from big name bands. I have bought several pieces of vinyl recently. A few which included digital copies. A nice feature. I enjoy vinyl because of it’s large artistic canvas for the artwork. On to the Cd format.

I am a product of the alternative generation. I went to the Cd store and bought my Tool, Nine Inch Nails, Smashing Pumpkins, Fugazi and Jane’s Addiction Cds and (sometimes even cassettes) right when they came out. Basically every band that ever payed a Lollapalooza festival. It became a habit of sorts. Even after a lot of the local record stores died off, I found my online stores and bought music there. Which led to the obvious transition of downloading for myself and everyone else. Everyone gets everything they want right when they think of it. Mostly for free. Hence, the death of the Cd.

Here we are now in a mostly digital age for music. I still find myself buying more hard copies these days than the last few years? I am truly enjoying them. Vinyl and Cds. I think many people would agree that downloading gets old after a while. You only need to listen to one band that sounds like Pearl Jam. So I stream my music online at Pandora or on band’s websites. If I like what I hear and the band or artist are offering a physical release, I will buy it. Do I think we will return to this label run music world where we are spoon-fed music? Probably not. However, I do think that the independent musician is in a prime place to release limited physical packages to die hard fans. I still like to know I am getting something tangible for my money. The digital download included is a nice touch.

Streaming media in the cloud is the now. Why own it? Are people caring less about the art form of music and albums? I am not really sure. I still feel the need to support music and the arts with paying for something and getting something in return. I did the free download thing for a while and it felt dirty. I think at the end of the day it comes down to the quality and dedication to music. Formats aside, I still want the real thing if the artist is the real thing. At the very least some goodies bundled with my download. Wallpapers and bonus tracks make downloading exciting. Just like that hidden track on Nirvana’s Nevermind album. That was a nice and welcome surprise. I can meander all day about this. We are witnessing quite an evolution of the music format. It amazes me that vinyl keeps rearing it’s head. Will the Cd come back as a hipster format like vinyl? What do you think? Crazy evolution in such a short amount of time huh?

Joseph Beaty

DPS Insider

Streaming Audio

I have always been a huge fan of music. Going to the record store and picking up vinyl is still fun.  Assuming you still have a record store in your town.  I am also guilty of still listening to the CD.  I usually have one CD in the car and I still listen to my favorites on my home audio system this way.  Pristine audio is nice once in a while.  If you compare it to your stock system in your car (playing an iPod) you will wonder why people are not still using CDs.  However, I am on my PC or laptop when I work and I cannot help but stream audio.  Pandora and various other streaming sites provide so so quality audio in the background  of my day.  I find it also useful in those situations where you are teaching someone a song on the guitar and your phone is in your pocket.  Streaming Audio is convenience.  We spend way more time online and on our phones.  We like that sites like Pandora give us similar tastes.  A way to hear new music that we might actually like.  I feel the whole streaming audio and movies for that matter.  I do it everyday.  I still love to buy a piece of music that is top notch though.  I guess mediocrity can stay in stream land.

Being a Musician or Fan in 2010.

Being a musician or music fan in 2010 is nothing like being an active musician or music fan ten years ago.  Cd’s were the main source of music distribution.  Now they are a distant second.  With Mp3, Ogg, lossless, etc,  iTunes became our old CD Trapper Keepers…holding things we cannot touch.  While iTunes and app developers are keeping things current and fresh, iPhones integrate every aspect of our online experiences into the palm of our hand.  We don’t stop to think how far things have come in 10 years very often.  Quite amazing really.  Especially in the music world.

I am a part of an old way of thinking and very much a part of the way things are done now.  Musicians are stuck in the middle feeding the free world and being a fan of getting things before they are released.  As a fan of music I believe the artists in my catalog deserve to be paid for physical or digital music.  Whether I can touch it or not, I do still prefer a physical copy of my favorites.  Most artists are only pressing limited amounts of their work and most rely on the digital realm.  I think as a musician I feel both worlds must be fed.  I am curious to see how other music listeners and musicians are making it happen now.  Itunes, Cdbaby, Torrents, Pandora, Streaming audio, etc.  I look forward to hearing your focal points in either realm.

Joseph Beaty

http://www.dpsinsider.com/joseph-beaty/