Burn A Song For 99 Cents 433
tusixoh writes "CNN is running an article about an online music company, Listen.com, who has signed deals with Warner Music Group and Universal Music Group allowing users to burn songs from both companies' catalogs (more than 75,000 available tracks) on Listen's Rhapsody music subscription service for 99 cents per track. Until now, Rhapsody had primarily offered only streamed music to subscribers from all of the world's largest record labels as well as several independent labels." The upside of this, of course, is that it won't be necessary to pay for songs that are just "album filler".
Neat. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Neat. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Neat. (Score:3, Interesting)
Four times cheaper for back catalog access (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure you get to cut the worthless songs but even then the prices match the store prices
The price matches, but the quality I can get for a given price increases dramatically. When I go to Best Buy and plunk down my hard-earned 13 USD for an album with 13 songs on it, I want 13 songs I like, not three. The way I see it, these CDs will be four times cheaper than[1] the CDs I can buy at Best Buy.
[1] Pedants: "Cheapness" here refers to the number of discs I can afford with a given amount of money. Thus, "Four times cheaper than" means "one-fourth as expensive as".
This is not far enough a benefit to make it a sustainable venture.
How can you be sure that four times cheaper for the average fan of oldies singles isn't enough of a benefit?
Re:Four times cheaper for back catalog access (Score:5, Interesting)
Mix discs without a PC? (Score:4, Insightful)
make it a dollar per track, but I'm licensed to use that track for my entire lifetime, in whatever current music format is popular, that way I don't have to re-buy the song for my 8-track, cassette, LP and MP3 players.
That's what the current model does. A 10-track disc costs $10, and under the Betamax precedent, you can copy it to whatever writable medium is popular at any time.
let me mix and burn my own music without the need of my own PC
Mix your own music without a PC? How are you supposed to do beat-matched crossfaded transitions between songs? Yes, I do that on my own mix discs, even of rock music.
And why does a CD with one hour of audio (which cost thousands of dollars to produce) cost as much as a DVD
A soundtrack album (or any other CD for that matter) is as expensive as the movie because unlike the movie, you can play an CD in your car, in the kitchen, in your pocket player while jogging. Unlike a movie, a recording doesn't demand your full attention. Thus, you play it more often.
Re:Mix discs without a PC? (Score:3, Funny)
I use this thing called a "turntable." It's really cool, if a little unweildy, and the music is recorded in the entirely noncontroversial LP3 format.
Re:Beat-matching in kiosks; DVD format-shifting (Score:3, Informative)
Hehehe, you must not watch much DVD pornography, then :) It's been said time and again -- porn always seems to drive technology. Lots of adult DVDs these days have multiple camera angles. Sometimes they do a crap job (i.e. to keep one "angle" you have to switch angles around as each stream has edits in them where they switch to different cameras), but sometimes they do pretty well with it.
I don't know if I'd want a pornography director to bother with multilingual audio and subtitling, though. Pornography with 5.1 audio? "Man, oh, man, it sounds like she's right there in your living room, er, moaning and stuff!"
Oh my god..tears in my eyes. (Score:5, Insightful)
Honestly, from this point on, if I want an mp3, I'll check to see if one of those labels are the labels that the artist in question is on, if so, they get my 99 cents.
Stop Crying Damnit (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Stop Crying Damnit (Score:4, Funny)
And please, for the love of God please, no one respond with "well the DCMA got passed!". I get a massive laugh out of that.."Damn DCMA got passed..doesn't seem to have effected my download of 20 gigs of warez and mp3's a day, but it's still evil!"
Re:Stop Crying Damnit (Score:4, Insightful)
It hasn't affected your downloading warez and mp3's yet. That's an important distinction to note. Remember, the RIAA and MPAA have both openly stated they fully intend to begin poisoning peer-to-peer networks with bogus files to deter people downloading content and go after individuals (that is, not corporations or groups -- but single itty bitty people like you and I) sharing their music.
Of course they haven't started invoking the DMCA in all the evil nasty ways everyone here is predicting. It's too soon. It makes far more sense for this law to stay on the books for years, fall into obscurity, then suddenly reappear with big nasty pointy teeth to bite every music and movie sharing human right in the ass.
That "dark ages" you describe is close and getting closer; the world's most prevalent computing platform (Windows, sad as that may be) is already chock full of "Digital Rights Management" functionality to limit what consumers can do with their music and videos. CPU manufacturers are already building copy-protection schems straight into their hardware right now; the next generation of CPUs will cheerfully obey the MPAA and RIAA's wishes, refusing to run binaries that aren't blessed by someone with deeper pockets than we have.
Someone recently said it perfectly, that this "Trusted Computing" initiative isn't quite how it sounds -- Microsoft are pitching it to sound like we (consumers) can "trust" their operating system. In reality, it's an initiative to make a platform that the MPAA and RIAA can trust -- they can trust that it will only let us do precisely what they grant permission for us to do with the content we pay for, and nothing more. Do you honestly believe "compress to an unencrypted, open format with decompressors and players available for free on all platforms," "compress and transmit to my friends on AIM," and "store for future playback without the original media and license file" are going to be on that list?
Getting back on subject (today's conditions), note that students have been thrown out of dormitories (and sometimes ejected from school entirely) for sharing music, companies (namely Napster) have been sued out of existence not for sharing music, but for enabling others to do the same, and ISPs are being forced to spy on their customers' activities just to avoid lawsuits and criminal prosecution under that lovely law that supposedly hasn't affected you.
Remember: the DMCA created brand new crimes out of thin air. I can literally write "this string is encrypted", forbid you from decoding it without buying a license from me, and if you point out I've ROT26'd it, you've just violated the law. If an RIAA minion catches you handing a CD-R with a copy of a new album on it to a friend, you can be thrown in jail for copying and distributing the material, and your friend can be thrown in jail for receiving it. The DMCA is being invoked more and more every day. I imagine you might be pretty surprised if the cops break your door down to confiscate that evil, crime-breaking computer of yours that's sharing your favorite Pink Floyd tunes, and to haul you to jail for it. You can literally spend more time in jail for a criminal violation of the DMCA than you can for certain violent crimes.
But you're right. I'm just being pessimistic. The DMCA doesn't affect us. Not one bit.
Re:Stop Crying Damnit (Score:3, Insightful)
If they go Palladium, I'll stop buying their music.
If enough of us do it, they'll have to wake up and smell the coffee...
Re:Oh my god..tears in my eyes. (Score:5, Interesting)
You know, a couple of years ago when this started to heat up, I would have been the first customer in line to use this service in order to prove that I'm willing to be legit about music. When they started doing things like proposing the SSSCA and accusing Apple of promoting piracy, they made me mad. So now my attitude is 'screw them'.
Am I being rational? Not really. Consider this my way of saying "I want the RIAA to apologize to Apple for their accusations, and to all of us legit consumers who were never given a chance to show their good will." I doubt that'll happen. Hopefully I'll grow up one day. heh.
Re:Oh my god..tears in my eyes. (Score:2)
Re:Oh my god..tears in my eyes. (Score:3, Insightful)
People see these media giants as pirates holding their monopoly by any means available, and the law as just another tool they use to do this.
Consequently they no longer respect the law.
I also think that breaking the law is a valid and effective means of protest. I smoke marijuana too :-)
Re:Oh my god..tears in my eyes. (Score:3, Informative)
If you read the fine print, only WINDOWS users are allowed the priviledge of paying for Listen.com's 'service', so the 'day has come' for them I guess (any Windows users want to comment). Fact is, I don't download copywritten material I don't already own, but even if I wanted to buy Listen.com's music, I can't.
Re:Oh my god..tears in my eyes. (Score:3, Insightful)
Excuse me, why are you jumping to the harshest conclusion?
If I say I agree with the AC are you going to assume I want to steal music? I got news for you buddy, I spent a good deal of money legitimizing my MP3 collection. There was a time I had a CD containing the song of every MP3 I had. Why did I have MP3s? Two reasons: 1.) To try out music, 2.) so I can listen to my music from work without having to shuffle CDs all day. Never mind that the RIAA was making money from my downloading. No no no, everybody who has an MP3 is 'downloading communism'.
I agree, they owe everybody an apology. When we get it, I'll resume legitimizing my MP3 collection.
I don't really give a flying fuck if you think I'm trying to justify not paying for music. You know damn good and well you wouldn't get gas at a station that raised your car 5 feet in the air to prevent you from driving off.
Re:Oh my god..tears in my eyes. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Oh my god..tears in my eyes. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Oh my god..tears in my eyes. (Score:5, Interesting)
To me, it looks like these two giants are making a small investment now so that if and when Palladium and trusted security prevents the average non-techie home Windows user from burning his or her own CDs, Warner and Universal will have ready a business model and the associated infrastructure capable of filling the ensuing vacuum. Then it's just sit back and reap the rewards.
Microsoft doesn't want another black eye. (Score:3, Informative)
if and when Palladium and trusted security prevents the average non-techie home Windows user from burning his or her own CDs
And that's a big if, to which the answer is "probably not." Microsoft has repeatedly stated that Palladium will not interfere with any applications that don't know anything about Palladium, such as CDex [sourceforge.net] or CDRDAO [sourceforge.net]. The only way your scenario will play out is if a future version of Windows places CD audio extraction and recording into a Palladium vault, which I don't see as likely to happen given the big stink that users raised about CD writing software not working with Windows XP. Microsoft doesn't want another black eye.
Re:Oh my god..tears in my eyes. (Score:4, Interesting)
1 Song For Just 99 Cents........ (Score:5, Funny)
Outstanding.... (Score:5, Funny)
So this is better how? (Score:5, Insightful)
S&M is a 2CD Set (Score:3, Funny)
Metallica S&M would run over $20 on this.
Metallica's S&M CD is a 2 CD set. It retails for $25.
$ .99 * 21 songs = $20.79
You save $4.21!
neurostarRe:So this is better how? (Score:3, Insightful)
Metallica S&M would run over $20 on this. I'd rather pay the $16 for the CD and be able to burn it in the for4mat of my choice. (i.e. ogg)
This is better, because now you have a choice. If you want a whole album, you get a discount by going to Wal-Mart and purchasing the CD for $16. If you just want one song off the album, you pay 99 cents.
Re:So this is better how? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, if you like the whole album, then go down to your local music store and buy the whole album. But how many times have you spent $16 on a CD for only 3 good songs? Would you rather spend $18 for a CD of 18 songs you like or $108 (3 songs x 6 CDs x $16/CD) for 18 songs you like?
Come on, we've been harping on the RIAA and music labels for some time to give us this very thing. Let's pat them on the back for finally doing it.
As for your ogg comment, please. You'd be ripping it to ogg from what? A CD . And what do you make using this service? A CD . Duh. Burn the freakin' CD and then rip it to ogg.
Songwriter gets a royalty (Score:3, Interesting)
One "set charge per track" will break in a lot of ways.
Yeah, but it's the law. In the USA, a songwriter gets a fixed 8 cent cut per song five minutes or less in duration. (The royalty increases with the duration of the composition.) The songwriter typically splits the royalties 50/50 with a publisher, meaning that on a typical album with twelve songs, the songwriter gets just under half a buck a disc.
Re:So this is better how? (Score:2)
Finally... Good songs for a decent price... (Score:2, Funny)
bah too expensive (Score:3)
Re:bah too expensive (Score:2)
Re:bah too expensive (Score:2)
Oh wait. What's the catch? There's gotta be a catch. $5 shipping? 3 weeks to make? Unrippable? Not supported by Apple? there's ALWAYS a catch.
Triv
Re:bah too expensive (Score:2)
Wow. SOMEONE (ahem. me) should've hit preview.
(runs in fear from rabid MathTrolls)
Triv
Re:bah too expensive (Score:5, Insightful)
You could do like me and only listen to bands that make full CDs of good music. I can't imagine only wanting to buy a part of a CD. IMHO a band isn't worth listening to unless they build a decent albumn. In fact, a good deal of the best CDs in my collection are intended to be played from start to finish as one full serving of excellent music, not as a collection of individual songs.
Re:bah too expensive (Score:2)
Personally, I've got nothing against random play, but you can listen to your tunes in any manner you desire.
triv
Re:bah too expensive (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh, I'm sorry. I'll change my musical tastes today so I stop liking songs unless I like EVERY song by that artist on that album.
Sometimes, I like a pop song. I don't want the album, but one track may catch my ear. And how exactly do you know beforehand? What happens when a band you like releases a third album with a poor track? Do you throw it away?
Your post just sounds haughty. Not all people only like music that comes as "one full serving".
Not viable yet. (Score:5, Interesting)
Nothing will succeed when there is a free alternative. Sure, it may not require as much work, but the artist selection is more limited, and the CD's are about the same price as normal ones (you just like more tracks on the CD).
Without getting into the legality of P2P-music-downloading, it is simply too widespread and commonplace for something like this to work right now.
Most non-techie people I know really never even question the legality of downloading music, they just know how to do it and burn it to CD's. They never consider the moral or ethical reasons not to. With a market like that, it will be an uphill battle to make users want to pay for something they get for free right now.
Nothing will succeed? (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh, that must be why Linux has 95% market share on personal computers...
And why all those free web hosting / free 30-pound bags of pet food shipped to your door / free postage, etc. companies are thriving against the companies who actually expect to make a profit on the aforementioned items...
The phrases "Worth every penny" and "You get what you pay for" come to mind. A company wants to send me full-quality (not 128KBps) music that has no restrictions for 99 cents a track? I'll pay for it, and so will most others. It's all about perceived value and convenience -- things that most people will happily pay for.
Re:Not viable yet. (Score:5, Interesting)
I agree with you that the listen.com offering isn't going to compete with the free stuff. But it's a step in the right direction.
The free alternatives come with their own problems, and a suitably designed pay-per-song download would succeed and would make the record companies a lot of money if most music fans think like I do.
The problems I have with the free protocols: they don't have everything all the time. Some nights I can find what I'm looking for, many nights I can't. The quality is spotty. Some songs are of good quality, both in terms of the rip and the encoding (bitrate and the like), but most are not. Many songs have glitches in the ripping or are encoded at lower bitrates than I like (I prefer 192, 160 minimum). And downloading is slow; it might take hours to download just one song because I'm competing with all the other "customers" downloading from the provider's PC.
Those complaints reflect my use of Limewire (GNUtella), but as I remember, Napster was pretty much the same.
Give me a download site that has all the record catalogs: everything ever recorded, or at least a large fraction of the popular stuff, with the promise of the "minor" stuff to be added on an ongoing basis. Give me good-quality songs at my choice of bitrates (and encoding: mp3, ogg, or whatever). Give me servers that can keep my poor little ol' 128K ISDN connection running at full speed. Give me the freedom to do anything I want to, for personal use, of my downloads: burn them to CD for my home jukebox, or copy them to my iPod for the office.
Give me all that at a reasonable price and I'll gladly give up p2p downloading. I want to get my songs legally. I want lots of choices, speedy downloads, quality encoding, and most of all the freedom to use my downloads fairly. I want to be able to find that old Sanford Townsend Band" album, pay five to ten bucks for it, and download the whole thing as fast as my connection can bear.
Maybe my hopes are naive, especially for a complete catalog. But how many of you, like me, would give up your "pirate" p2p downloads if you could get all I've listed above?
--Jim, Not A Pirate
Re:Not viable yet. (Score:2)
Possible reasons include:
-"It's the right thing to do"
-So the artist can make his/her penny for every dollar the other companies get.
-we offer more features (not sure what that would be)
-no waiting for downloads
-higher quality rips/files
-[insert reason here]
Still, a tough row to hoe. It's their job to convince everyone. -
Now the real test..... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Now the real test..... (Score:3, Funny)
not with this extortion going on! a buck per song... I wouldn't pay more than fifty cents!
Wow (Score:2)
suspicion (Score:5, Interesting)
Wait and see..
Re:suspicion (Score:5, Interesting)
I would find out if I subscribed... but I won't before learning all the details what I have signed away for.
They also have a fixed monthly fee -- 9.99 (Score:2)
S
What for (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:What for (Score:3)
I'm not saying I will jump to sign up for $9.99 a month, or use listen.com at all.. I'm pretty bitter about the RIAA's behavior in the past few years, it will probably take me a while to get over it, but at least now I *can* pay for an mp3 and I know that if I pay for it, there better be a fsking ending on it, and maybe even a selection of bitrates to choose from.
Re:What for (Score:3, Interesting)
1. Existing p2p networks are slow and unreliable. I hate getting half way through a download only for the guy at the other end to disconnect from the network
2. The quality of rips varies *wildly*
What can you get for a buck nowadays? (Score:5, Funny)
Please don't let them get Alf and Terry Bradshaw to do thier commercials.
I can't take that anymore Lord.
Windows only, 10 songs/month only (Score:5, Informative)
I have two problems with this new service:
Their client, Rhapsody, is Windows only, and you can only burn [listen.com]
10 songs per month. Nice try, but lame.
Re:There are ways to burn whatever you hear. . . (Score:3, Insightful)
EMusic has done this for years (Score:5, Informative)
EMusic [emusic.com], for that same price, lets you download fully unlocked standard MP3 files.
$9.95 a month gets you unlimited downloads - not an additional 99 cents per song. You can burn 'em and do anything you want with 'em.
Emusic a very underrated site, now that their big-advertising VC stuff has gone. Really wonderful. (NO I'm not affiliated.)
Re:EMusic has done this for years (Score:2)
Re: mod parent up (Score:2)
at emusic you truely get what you pay for. unlimited downloads for a flat monthly fee. they are all in 128kbit/sec mp3 format. ie: not really CD quality but plenty for most uses. (and if i want full quality on anything i can always bend over and get the CD)
Re:EMusic has done this for years (Score:3, Informative)
Burned vs Downloaded (Score:2)
These aren't exactly the best prices I've ever seen on tracks, but it is nice that one can have the opportunity to only get the tracks they want. I think this is definitely a step in the right direction.
hold on (Score:4, Interesting)
Maybe it's just me, but... (Score:2)
And if you're going to argue with me, you have to own up to at least two CDs you bought "with only one or two good songs"...so that we can make fun of you. :)
Re:Maybe it's just me, but... (Score:2)
Me neither. Some of my favorite songs are the "deep tracks" that never make it to the radio, which is why I never buy "best of" CDs, and why I wouldn't pay per track.
And one of my favorite albums [queensryche.com] makes a lot more sense if you listen to all the songs, in order.
Re:Maybe it's just me, but... (Score:2)
Off the top of my head, when a band sinks, they usually put out one of those albums. Metallica's black album, REM's "Monster", U2's Zooropa.
Bait and switch... maybe. But don't attribute to conspiracy anything which can be more easily explained through simple blunders.
The only way to avoid the top-40 these days is to visit small local bars.
it happens (Score:5, Interesting)
Okay, that song you've been toying with a bit gets recorded. Its ok, not ideal. But if you spend another week in the studio, you're paying even MORE for the time and your contract says this will be ready to be mastered by next week.
You're not proud of it, but it's good enough to slide in between tracks 6 and 8.
It happens. Really.
Bad is when you have 4 - 6 songs like that.
The grateful dead cut side two of an album up into several tracks to meet warner brothers contracts requiring "n tracks" per album.
Music and law meld as well as music and big business.
Slashdot Better Like This (Score:3, Insightful)
Personally, it's nice to own the music I listen to, and if this makes it so I get the songs I want for $15 on one cd rather than for $225 on 15 cds, great. Now, the article seems rather slim on the facts in this case, but I would hope that (a.) the music is in a machine readable format (not copy-protected), or (b.) available in MP3 or some other open format as well.
Re:Slashdot Better Like This (Score:4, Insightful)
good start though.
Re:Slashdot Better Like This (Score:3, Informative)
Take into consideration that most people pay a flat rate for thier bandwidth and don't use all of thier available bandwidth every month. Also, they are also paying for bandwidth.
Also consider that you don't have to pay for gas to goto the record store, and with blank CDs going gor about 30 cents now, there's the money you would have spent in gas. And you don't even have to leave the house! Nor do you have to wait for the CD to be delivered.
I could see this idea working if they got rid of all the DRM crap and let people download plain old high quality MP3s.
Re:Slashdot Better Like This (Score:2)
Are they starting to wake up? (Score:2)
I doubt it. Likely, there are a clever people at Listen.com that marketed this out of Warner Bros and friends, but will have no effect on the RIAA and MPAA's attempts to take over the world Pinky!
Two questions... (Score:5, Interesting)
Secondly, how much of this money goes to the artist? On the assumption that $1.00 of each regular CD goes to the artist, I would expect to see about $0.10 from each track be paid directly to the artist. Yes, that's while I'm paying approximately $0.20 per track. I don't want to pay per track if the artist simply will not see any revenue whatsoever from this. At least if I buy a CD, there's a chance the artist will see some profit from me.
So close... yet so far... (Score:5, Insightful)
It sounds so good, then I see the details.
A dollar per track is a bit high, but I would certainly be interested in buying some tracks for that price. However, that price is "in addition to paying a monthly subscription fee of $9.95." I can't imagine buying more than ten songs per month. Once that's worked in we're up to two dollars per track. Two dollars? Too much.
Furthermore, I expect that this new functionality will be available through their proprietary software [listen.com]. I don't want to deal with your unknown software (even if it did run under my primary operating system: Linux). I want to open a account with some money, then download songs off your web site until my account is empty. Nice and simple. Do it for one dollar per song and I'll very occasionally use it for catchy tunes. Do it for fifty cents and I'll regularly use it. Do it for twenty five cents and I'll make heavy use it, regularly buying music on a whim.
Re:So close... yet so far... (Score:3, Interesting)
Additionally, let me browse the catalog before I sign up, so I know whether there's even anything in it that I want, and offer low-bitrate (64k mono is fine) free samples, so I can check out stuff I've never heard of.
step in the right direction (Score:2)
uh (Score:2)
The company also plans on introducing a service allowing you to brew coffee for only 30 cents a cup.
Imagine the savings! (Score:3, Funny)
Hey, wait a minute!
I guess they don't want my business (Score:2)
* Internet Explorer 5.0, or newer
* Netscape 6.0, or newer
(Please note: In order to use Rhapsody, you will need Internet Explorer 5.0 or newer.)
Oh well.
CD value is nothing compared to DVD (Score:5, Interesting)
For example, on Amazon.com you can buy Mariah Carey's Glitter cd [amazon.com] for 13.28
Even if you're a die hard Mariah fan, there are really only one or two tracks that made it onto the charts. Not to mention that two of the songs on the CD are the same, where one is just a remix.
Compare this to the The Lord of the Rings [amazon.com] for 17.97.
Hrm.. a cd that probably was thrown together in a month [free nervous break down included] compared to a movie, like LOTR, which I won't even begin to comment on how magnificiently it was created.
Add in the fact that it would take about 10 minutes to download and create your own glitter cd for free. Unless you're buying this as a gift, most people would just download the one or two popular songs and be done with it. Currently, it's a huge pain in the ass to download avi files. It's easier just to buy the dvd.
Anyways, the worst part about this post is now Amazon is reminding me on the left hand side that I looked at the Glitter cd. If it starts recommending
Re:CD value is nothing compared to DVD (Score:3, Insightful)
I still believe CDs are way overpriced, though. And I got burned a few times buying a band's CD from hearing one good song on the radio only to find out I paid $15+ for one good song that constantly plays on the radio plus 10 really crappy songs. So I have bought hardly any CDs lately. I'll only buy if I know there are several songs I like.
no love for Opera users :( (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm late, but... concerning quality (Score:2, Informative)
If you want to see how bad the loss is, load up CoolEdit or Audacity [sourceforge.net] and view your mp3s under "Spectrum View" with a range up to 22050 -- I promise that just everything above 16000 will be missing and black, though the original CD audio will have all that quality intact. It's what gives MP3s their "flat" sound on any decent equipment.
I know CDNow uses the original data for their custom CDs, so just buy it from them.
The down side... (Score:5, Funny)
The down side is that $8 punk album I just bought would cost $29.69 online.
They're kidding, right? (Score:2, Insightful)
Or, I can spend my time searching for the tracks I want, pay for my own blank CD, bandwidth, wear on my burner, and end up with a crappy copy (marked with a Sharpie, of course) and a few more files in my playlist for a few dollars MORE!
My worthless two cents: (Score:2, Insightful)
Except, oops, it looks like you have to have windows [listen.com] in order to do any of this stuff. I don't own windows, just this macintosh. My college does have some WindowsXP labs with CD-Rs drives, but the since the user-permissions policies here are currently in the process of changing i'm not sure if i'll actually be able to use their client there. And i do not feel like badgering one of my friends to let me take over their computer for a few hours each month so that i can compose and make for myself mix cds.
Looks like listen.com just lost a customer. Too bad they chose to tether their downloads to DRM technology.. then they wouldn't have to limit themselves to customers who use one software platform.
In the meantime, this emusic [emusic.com] thingy that i found linked on this same slashdot forum looks *great*. Looks like i'll be taking my $9.99 over there instead..
More for less (Score:2, Interesting)
What do I mean?
It's simple. $0.99 for each song. That's in American dollars so for me that comes to around $2.00 each. Add it up and I'm paying the same as I would if I purchased a new release at the local retailer. This is based on the fact that if I look through my CD collection, they average around $25 - $30 each (new release), with an average of 10-15 songs.
If it's an old release, I'm paying more.
At the same time, the pressing and distribution costs for the distributor have substantially decreased. So it adds up to more profits for their bottom line.
Will that in turn mean more money for the artist? Somehow, I doubt it.
Not having to pay for the album fillers is about the ONLY benefit here I can see. Thing is, for most of the music that I buy, I really don't find to many of them.
Am I being pessimistic?
Too bad (Score:2, Insightful)
this is bad. (Score:4, Interesting)
not to mention the only reason i use p2p is to find non-mainstream non-commercial stuff. if i wanted to listen to some friggin skinny blonde chick sing about her teenage crush i would go buy her CD ! i want indie artists and sampling.
if you dont own the CD how are you supposed to know what you want to download ? pay $.99 per track off the album plus for your bandwidth and the blank CD ? so
15 songs 15 x
1 blank cd 1 x 1.00 (guessing)
bandwidth
= $ 16.15 per CD.
wow that sounds like its STILL A FRIGGIN RIPOFF !
ill give them credit when they come up with a better soulution for ME ! the CUSTOMER. NOT THEM the EVIL MEGA-CORP.
although i will give them credit for trying. albiet a shitty attempt.
Burn? Not exactly. (Score:5, Informative)
I will never pay a single dime for crippled formats.
Re:Burn? Not exactly. (Score:5, Informative)
There's no information on Listen's site about Rhapsody 2.0, which will feature burning. The FAQ you list applies to their current service, specifically the Naxos Classical subscription.
The new service will have no DRM, and you will be able to buy as many tracks as you want at 99 cents each. The interesting thing is that they are going to stream PCM audio directly to the burner. So, DRM won't be the issue, buffer underruns will be when their streaming servers can't keep up with your CD player!
10 song per month CD burning limit (Score:5, Informative)
Perhaps I'm in the minority... (Score:2, Insightful)
It used to be, once I got that album home to listen to, these provided a pleasant surprise, and often became some of my favorite tracks.
Now I (and I presume everyone else) will be significantly less likely to hear those tracks (because we'd have to pay for them before receiving, and are unlikely to have heard them through 'regular' channels) and even more excellent music may be lost to the common consciousness.
How do we know whether a song is "filler" or "underappreciated gem" until we hear it?
How do we hear it before we pay for it?
Curious (Score:3, Interesting)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
But how much do the artists get? (Score:3, Insightful)
--Mike
The devil's in the details (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm happily pay for music (or movies or tv shows or books) I might download, but the details have to be acceptable.
These aren't difficult requirements to meet it seems to me, except by panicy and sluggish business entities that can't read the writing on the wall.
Let's clear up some misconceptions (Score:5, Informative)
1) the FAQ is OLD. We're launching on Monday with what we call "a la carte" CD burning. This means you can burn as many CDs as you want. No monthly restrictions, no restrictions at all.
2) The audio format on the CD is regular redbook audio. No DRMs, no restrictions. They're yours after you pay the $.99
3) If you want to check out Rhapsody without paying, just register and download it if you want to see the artist list. You can listen to 30 second clips and a selection of radio stations without paying us.
(remember that this is not released yet. wait 'til next week. ok, back to QA...gotta burn me some CDs ;)
Forget burning... iPod/mp3 player support! (Score:3, Interesting)
Don't they realize that the people who will sign up for this service are the cutting edge music-listeners, the ones that will probably own an mp3 player and not a discman for their portable music needs?
Still not good enough. (Score:3, Informative)
This still isn't good enough. Why? Oh, god, let me count the ways.
In conclusion, I'm sticking with the indies. Go, baby [cdbaby.com], go!
Re:Before you jump in... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Windows only software. Bahh (Score:3, Funny)
Read through this discussion; the reason should be obvious.
I'm sure the conversation in the Development Meeting went something like this:
Suit 1: "What about a version for Linux?"
Suit 2: "Linux? That's the er, free, thing, right?"
Suit 3: "Are you nuts? Those Linux guys wouldn't pay for music if you tied each note up in an individual bow and had Richard Stallman personally deliver it to their homes stark naked on Christmas morning!"
Suit 4: "He's right. I read SlashDot. They won't bite, no matter what. It's the Mac port we need to work on. Those guys'll buy anything; just be sure to make it more expensive than the Windows flavor, and get someone in a goatee to design a new interface in silver."
Suit 1: OK, next order of business...