Originally posted by RichardB
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There has been a huge decline in CD sales, but I'd be happy to suggest that the biggest percentage drops are in the volume sectors and biggest artists.Low volume sales at concerts and events can be a valuable income stream for artists and producer.
Predicting the future is a bit of a modern curse really. Who knows what will happen to streaming in the future ? Price rises, internet capacity constraints, record company changes of policy. There is no guarantee that £10 a month will guarantee almost unlimited access to all the music you could ever want indefinitely. And until now the lesson is that people like stuff, and they like to buy, relatively expensively stuff by artists and authors dear to their hearts.
I think that Sony hold the patents for CD players ? ( Bryn will know), so they might make changes. But I doubt they will cut off their nose to spite their fate, and plenty of audio producers are happy to churn out CD units for now, even with modest sales volumes of new CDs And as far as I am concerned ,I'm happy for physical musical media to continue.That sort of choice and availability seems to me to be a positive thing.
Re books, the point about simplicity of use is fair, but it turns out that the cheap and easy ebook didn't take over the world, just added a ( usually) low price buying or rental option.
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