darcy
Member
About downloading. I have never ever downloaded a single song from the internet and yet I get along just fine in life and music. I have a collection that spans 1300+ cds and all styles of hardrock and metal. Of course I've bought a few cds which I then discovered weren't that good. That's part of the charm for me though. I love placing an order for 4-5 albums/bands I've never heard (=only heard OF) and then sitting down in my comfy sofa to listen through them. If the album really, really sucks I sell it at Tradera or Ebay and get half/a third of my money back. That money is then used to buy another album. That way I can buy a really good album (or another bad one hahaha) for half the cost A fool's logic, I know, but it works for me
That's great and all, if you can afford it... but I don't have that kind of money.
I rarely download full albums, I much prefer to buy, but ultimately I blame the labels & records stores for horribly gouging the buying public for CD's. It was working fine for them back maybe 10 or 15 years ago when everyone was re-buying albums they have on vinyl or tape, and nobody could download music... they had us by the balls. Downloading is more or less the result of horribly overpriced CD's being combatted by internet technology.
Also- nobody wants to buy a CD for $20 if they only want to here 1 or 2 songs on it, but record labels stopped releasing singles because, again, they had us by the balls and we could only buy what they would sell. So little kids who only have a couple dollars get in the habit of downloading, rather than spending their pocket change on a single. They'll never get into the habit of buying CD's if there's no reason to start.
Of course, record labels also have their artists at their mercy more or less (until you're very big) so when record sales go down, they take it out on the artists instead of dealing with it themselves.
This is all more to do with major labels etc than indie metal stuff of course- but I find most metal fans buy what CD's they can, most of the time. Metal fans are usually more devoted than casual pop music fans.