A Dilemma for Recording Artists
Posted: May 17th, 2018, 1:07 pm
I have more than enough material to go into the studio and record with some talented young friends from Mexico City. I think after I weed through it, this will be the strongest group of songs I've recorded since 1997's Plays Well With Others.
But why should I bother? Read on before you judge that comment as whiney.
What do I do with the material? Press it on CDs that fewer and fewer people can even play today even if they wanted to? Seriously, my 2017 Kia came without a CD player option. Mercedes, BMW, Ford--they've all announced that they will not include CD players anymore, starting either asap or at the end of the year. Even though a lot of us still listen to them, the CD is a dead medium. The industry now revolves around downloaded files--forget the portable physical artifact with album artwork, liner notes. Forget song orders as well--people can download a handful of an album's tracks and listen randomly, regardless of the artist's intentions about the way it should be experienced. And sure, you can tell the artist to go stuff it, but...it's the freaking artist. If you don't care about his or her artistic vision, why are you buying the music in the first place?
Put it on an LP? Sorry, it costs a fortune and not that many people listen on turntables, although there is probably a higher percentage here than elsewhere. Still, a very small number, and the artist will likely not recoup his costs.
It's really a problem. And think about how everyone's legacies are going to be preserved for the future. Master CDs are a waste of money--in 15 years there won't be any players for them. Files? Where, on our home computers that no one will ever go through after we're gone?
But why should I bother? Read on before you judge that comment as whiney.
What do I do with the material? Press it on CDs that fewer and fewer people can even play today even if they wanted to? Seriously, my 2017 Kia came without a CD player option. Mercedes, BMW, Ford--they've all announced that they will not include CD players anymore, starting either asap or at the end of the year. Even though a lot of us still listen to them, the CD is a dead medium. The industry now revolves around downloaded files--forget the portable physical artifact with album artwork, liner notes. Forget song orders as well--people can download a handful of an album's tracks and listen randomly, regardless of the artist's intentions about the way it should be experienced. And sure, you can tell the artist to go stuff it, but...it's the freaking artist. If you don't care about his or her artistic vision, why are you buying the music in the first place?
Put it on an LP? Sorry, it costs a fortune and not that many people listen on turntables, although there is probably a higher percentage here than elsewhere. Still, a very small number, and the artist will likely not recoup his costs.
It's really a problem. And think about how everyone's legacies are going to be preserved for the future. Master CDs are a waste of money--in 15 years there won't be any players for them. Files? Where, on our home computers that no one will ever go through after we're gone?