The major labels have no real system that is fair and accurate to rate music. They tell us their charts are based on sales and requests to radio stations but it's a deciet.
The big labels are telling you what is popular because that is what they want you to buy, anybody else that tells you different is going to be ... fired, it's that simple.
The internet gives us a powerful and exciting tool to really see what people like.
Imagine a two banquest tables filled with food.
One is free.
The other costs $15.00US.
The free table has food that has been cooked in peoples kitchens, prepared with love and care. There is handmade bread in old iron pans, there are fruits with maybe a bruise or a bug-bite or two picked from the trees that grow in the peoples yards or on their land. There are chickens hanging taken from their range fed stock. There are vegetables taken from gardens that don't look perfect, there are smells peculiar that remind you of old people's houses.
The $15.00 table has highly processed, fancy looking, multi-colored food decorated with things you might not even should eat, it has the best cuts of meat, (so they say), it has large shiny well-waxed fruits ... etc ... etc ... The servers are hired, sterile corporate drones dressed in cute little outfits.
So, a very real percentage of the population, (20% of the US lives in abject poverty, 40% is the bottom of middle class, 65% makes less than 35k per year), a very real percentage of the population is going to the free table first. They may eventually go to the pay table, but more than likely they will only look, and may even wait until the prices are reduced.
So how do you know which of the foods on the free table are good, are the best and DOES it matter to anybody but yourself ?
And how do you know which of the foods on the pay table are best, and who does that really matter to ?
Interesting quandry huh ?
So how do we know on the internet ... which is the best song. Even those of us with broadband, it's not quite as important to us as to which songs we should spend our bandwidth on, as it certainly is crucial to serious audiophile dial-up users, but with broadband users, they are genuinely concerned with what they should actually spend time listening to.
How to tell which is the best table, what is the best song.
I say for the 'time' ... which is money and the most dearest form of money ... the free table on the internet will ultimately provide you with more of what you want, and what you need to be healthy and satisfied.
Always look for the ratings mechanism on a music website first I say.
Look at nowhereradio.com, they have a monthly top 10, that is primarily built through the listenings of actual musicians ... and you might say ... well sure, we're sure to get something good from the top 10 if actucal musicians have been voting ...
NOT
