
Originally Posted by
Cafe_Post_Mortem
For me it's not about what the music costs, but why it cost what it does. I live under the notion that art of any sort is worth what the artist can get for it. If a musician tells me his album is worth $20 then I will decide case by case if I agree. Sure I would like music to cost less, but I will happily pay the price if I think the album is worth having.
The problem isn't what I pay for music, but why I pay that much. Price fixing, airplay manipulation, ect. If you can get someone to pay $20 for your CD, I say good job. If you can get me to do it, even better. But when you are using your industry power to artificially inflate the price as opposed to your popularity, whole different game.Unfortunately, change takes work and sacrafice. Since I can't give up some of the major label bands I like, I just hope new distribution systems push the major labels into obselecence.
Bookmarks