S
shmaller
Member
I'm done mixing my album, and in anticipation of my upcoming release, I'm weighing various physical media. Here is a brain-dump on my findings, evaluations, and musings.
Here is my list of release options, from most to least popular mode of music consumption, based purely on my own perception:
Once this initial phase of purchase runs its course, I'll release it on Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, etc., just because that's where everyone is today. So people who want to stream for free on their favorite platform will be able to do so, but not before they've had the chance to donate directly to the project.
If you read this far, thanks! let me know what u think!
s
Why physical media?
I want physical media because I think it's important. I'm not content for my album to exist only digitally. Is this in line with how people typically listen to music today? No. Do I care? No.Here is my list of release options, from most to least popular mode of music consumption, based purely on my own perception:
Digital / streaming release
I'm planning to release initially on Bandcamp. I want to collect as much income as I can from the initial release of the album. This will likely be driven through voluntary donations from friends & family, because honestly, from my perspective, there's not much of a reason to "buy" a digital product.Once this initial phase of purchase runs its course, I'll release it on Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, etc., just because that's where everyone is today. So people who want to stream for free on their favorite platform will be able to do so, but not before they've had the chance to donate directly to the project.
USB drives
Pros:- Everyone has a PC, so everyone has a music player for files on a USB drive.
- If you're using a computer to listen to the music anyway, why bother with a dongle when you can just go to Bandcamp, or eventually, Spotify?
- Many computers are even eliminating USB-A ports entirely, so I'm reliant on them owning and being able to find a USB-A to USB-C dongle.
- Easy to lose.
- No visible artwork on the medium. No one is proudly displaying their USB drive collection (correct me if I'm wrong).
Vinyl
Pros:- Vinyl is hot again. Many people of all ages own turntables and stereos.
- A record works on an AudioTechnica, a U-Turn, a Crosley, and a toothpick and string attached to a soup can. Universal compatibility with player.
- Big, beautiful artwork.
- Pressing vinyl is crazy expensive relative to other media replication.
CDs
Pros:- Medium availability today of CD players; they can be gotten cheaply at electronics and thrift stores, and many cars have CD players (though becoming less common).
- Other media players like video game consoles and DVD players often have CD playback functionality.
- Small, beautiful artwork.
- Cheap to produce relative to other media replication -- but with caveats (see Cons).
- CD replication seems to be universally supported by CD players and has cheap per-unit costs, but I can't find a place that will replicate CDs at a run of less than 300 units. I don't need more than maybe 50-100.
- CD duplication is even cheaper and can be done on short runs, but seems to be no better quality than if I just bought a stack of CD-Rs and burned them myself. These are incompatible with some older CD players, such as my own Technics SL-PD845 (related thread: Order CDs vs. burn my own CD-Rs - a problem of CD player compatibility). I don't want to sell someone a CD that doesn't work on their player.
Cassettes
Pros:- There's definitely an aesthetic to selling cassettes, it feels "underground" and "cool." There is definitely a type of guy who buys, sells, and listens to music on cassette. He wears corduroy. (Before you get mad at me: I own a corduroy jacket.)
- Pretty cheap replication, seems to cost slightly more than CDs.
- I assume a cassette will work on any player? that there are no formatting / compatibility considerations?
- Small, bendy artwork.
- Very low cassette player ownership. Despite having friends who own cassettes of music, and seeing cassettes at shows and in record stores, I do not know a single person who owns a cassette player. I haven't seen one since my mom's '98 Jeep Grand Cherokee (her selection featured a lot of Queen).
Conclusion
I'll probably do a mix of:- Burning my own CD-Rs and sell them dirt cheap. I'll have to learn a bit about proper CD formatting, but I can do this as needed and a dodgy $2 CD is unlikely to seriously ruffle feathers.
- If I really feel inspired, I'll make a short run of cassettes, and if I like it, make a few more.
- If this thing takes off (not expected), I'll make a run of replicated CDs.
- If this thing really takes off (really not expected), I'll make a run of vinyl.
If you read this far, thanks! let me know what u think!
s
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