
crawdad
Dammit, Jim, Shut Up!
Waldo--so am I! I see webcast music as a reinvention of the diversity that flourished in the sixties, when you could hear pop, blues, r&b, country, jazz, rock, raga, folk, etc all on one station.
I had a small cognition the other day. The music that the majors get behind is all based on the large cities, where people have to be incredibly weird to get any recognition. If you leave the large urban complex and get out to the smaller towns that make up most of the country, the majors product doesn't communicate very well. Those less urban people still like real songs that communicate real emotions and life situations. They aren't buying weird for weirdness sake. In essence, there are two major musical markets--the cities and the rest of the country. Outside the metropoli, people still like the musical styles of the 60s-80's.
I checked out the World.com affiliate site too. (Can't remember the name). They are acting as if they are gung ho to continue, despite the bankruptcy. I hope so. Without the bandwidth, net radio is done. I won't even venture any conspiracy theories, but if AOL/Time/Warner puts a bid on the company, I'm one nervous guy.
I had a small cognition the other day. The music that the majors get behind is all based on the large cities, where people have to be incredibly weird to get any recognition. If you leave the large urban complex and get out to the smaller towns that make up most of the country, the majors product doesn't communicate very well. Those less urban people still like real songs that communicate real emotions and life situations. They aren't buying weird for weirdness sake. In essence, there are two major musical markets--the cities and the rest of the country. Outside the metropoli, people still like the musical styles of the 60s-80's.
I checked out the World.com affiliate site too. (Can't remember the name). They are acting as if they are gung ho to continue, despite the bankruptcy. I hope so. Without the bandwidth, net radio is done. I won't even venture any conspiracy theories, but if AOL/Time/Warner puts a bid on the company, I'm one nervous guy.