
dobro
Well-known member
Nothing, if you're trying to get known via the internet, right?
A guy in September's Recording magazine, Chris Dunnett, makes a couple of interesting points:
1 Relatively unknown bands promote themselves via the internet. They give away their music or sell their CDs more cheaply than commercial product in order to gain exposure.
2 I'll quote him here: "Why would someone surfing the Net downoad your MP3 when they can download a Metallica one for the same price ($0.00)?"
Well, I'd answer the last question with the answer: "Because I don't like Metallica much," but he's got a good point overall - it's harder to get known on the internet, harder to even give your music away, when people can download 'name' acts for free. If people had to pay for commercial downloads, it would give a competitive boost to aspiring unknowns.
Let's not turn this into a four-page thread. It would just go off the tracks.
A guy in September's Recording magazine, Chris Dunnett, makes a couple of interesting points:
1 Relatively unknown bands promote themselves via the internet. They give away their music or sell their CDs more cheaply than commercial product in order to gain exposure.
2 I'll quote him here: "Why would someone surfing the Net downoad your MP3 when they can download a Metallica one for the same price ($0.00)?"
Well, I'd answer the last question with the answer: "Because I don't like Metallica much," but he's got a good point overall - it's harder to get known on the internet, harder to even give your music away, when people can download 'name' acts for free. If people had to pay for commercial downloads, it would give a competitive boost to aspiring unknowns.
Let's not turn this into a four-page thread. It would just go off the tracks.
