Very interesting article and debate in The Guardian this morning:
The CD vs. Streaming
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"What if Spotify ever goes down, or goes under?"
The article talks as if Spotify were the only way possible to stream recorded music, which it isn't. If it disappeared tomorrow the people actually creating the music would be wishing it good riddance, and so should everyone else. The idea that the choice is between Spotify and CDs is nonsense.
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I have about 5000 CDs and my shelves are full. I only now buy CDs occasionally, eg a rarity maybe not otherwise available, or if I specifically want to own something as an album, eg the latest Dylan to go with all the others, or Richard Barrett Nacht und Träume. I also still sometimes prefer to buy song recitals as a CD.
I have a very good streamer/tuner linked to my amp and the only stream source it links me to is Spotify, so I'm afraid that is what I use, and it has transformed my listening. I enjoy good sound but am not a hi-fi wiz and am aware that my septuagenarian ears are not what they used to be.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostI have about 5000 CDs and my shelves are full. I only now buy CDs occasionally, eg a rarity maybe not otherwise available, or if I specifically want to own something as an album, eg the latest Dylan to go with all the others, or Richard Barrett Nacht und Träume. I also still sometimes prefer to buy song recitals as a CD.
I have a very good streamer/tuner linked to my amp and the only stream source it links me to is Spotify, so I'm afraid that is what I use, and it has transformed my listening. I enjoy good sound but am not a hi-fi wiz and am aware that my septuagenarian ears are not what they used to be.
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Every time I'm involved in a CD release I think "ok, that really is the last one this time", but there's still a sense that releasing a "physical product" has something that digital ones don't, particularly as concerns gaining publicity through reviews - it still seems that journalists or the outlets they work for take more seriously a recording that arrives in a padded envelope as opposed to one that comes in the form of a download code in an email. Despite the fact that the magazine or journal itself may exist only in online form! But this will change I think. And maybe my next CD really will be the last one. If Spotify disappeared, its place would rapidly be taken by something else. As concerns less commercial music being produced now, the best deal for everyone is to be had on Bandcamp. If someone downloads an album on my label there and pays 8 euros, less than 20% of that is retained by Bandcamp, alongside the subscription costs; this means that listeners are much more directly supporting the artists whose work they want to hear, creating in turn a more direct relationship between artist and audience than is generally the case now that so much of our life is lived online, certainly much more direct than is the case with Spotify and similar platforms. Of course most people aren't particularly concerned with having a more direct relationship with the artists whose work they listen to, and that's up to them.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostA CD collection is an investment. A streaming service requires you to pay up until you die, and to hope the internet doesn’t fail, and that the providers don’t go under.Last edited by Bryn; 25-02-22, 11:34. Reason: Space added after C: to avoid it being misinterprested as an emoticon by the forum software)
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostAnd maybe my next CD really will be the last one.
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Originally posted by EnemyoftheStoat View PostI really must stop using my CDs as beermats or to prop up that dodgy table leg!
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