Duncan O'Leary
Duncan works on projects looking at public services, skills and work.
at 8:32am
on Monday, 16th July 2007
I was bemused watching the news yesterday. Apparently Prince has ‘insulted’ record stores by giving his album away for free with the Mail on Sunday. Now unless this is a comment on the choice of newspaper i don’t get it: did music stores collectively do him a favour in his early career, or did they just sell his records because they were worth selling? And isn’t his own album his to give away? I’m guessing Prince fans aren’t feeling all that insulted right now as they sit at home listening to the album. Or am i missing something..?
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Prince 'insulted' record stores just like longer copyright and over-bearing rights management (technological and otherwise) 'protect' artists.
Like Vince Noir in the Mighty Boosh said, it's all about context. It's certainly difficult to grow attached to the auto-recommendations mechanics from the hive mind of amazon's customer base; or a list of .mp3 icons. But I think its interesting that a lot of the means to access music now add significant value; an hour of myspace link-following or 'visiting' lots of little online, friendly record labels can be a delightful way to find new music. In this sense, online and real life shopping maybe aren't really that different. I don't really find my experience of Amazon that different to HMV etc (aside from meeting, very briefly and in the most trivial sense, real people) - they're easy to use, full of stuff I half-want; in short, like Will just said, I find both very difficult to love.