I like to consider myself as a
serious music consumer. I have weeks of music on my iTunes account, and even
more on CDs in my room. I have always obtained my music on “the up and up”,
always purchasing my CDs or buying music form the iTunes store. So a few years
ago, when I logged into iTunes one day, I was very disappointed to find that
iTunes had enacted a sales hike. The majority of songs on iTunes were now
$1.29, as opposed to the previous value of $0.99 for all songs on iTunes. I was
about twelve or thirteen, and obtained most if not all of my iTunes spending
money from gift cards from Christmas or birthdays. I was angry and frustrated
when I saw these hikes in prices. Why do I get less bang for my digital buck?
Around the same time, I kept hearing how the music business is failing, with
numerous record stores across the country having to close down because they
weren’t making any money. Why was this? What was the reason for this change in
the music industry? Since then, I have learned why prices on iTunes have
increased, and why record stores have gone bankrupt.
We are in the digital age, and with
the immense progress of the internet has come the inevitable transition in the
way that the average person obtains music. Rather than physically going to a
record store, music consumers are now able to obtain their music online.
Unfortunately, these online methods of obtaining music tend to be illegitimate,
and cheat artists out of their hard earned money. Therefore, record stores are
failing due to lack of attendance, and iTunes has become more expensive in
order to compensate artists for their financial losses elsewhere online.
An argument as to why the illegal
collecting of music via the web is okay is that the public has a right to free
music. I disagree with this view completely. Perhaps music can be free to
listen to, on websites such as Pandora, YouTube or Spotify, but I’m not sure
that is what people mean when they say the public has a right to free music.
Obtaining music from an artist without compensation is illegal for a reason.
Artists work hard to create music, and deserve to be fairly compensated for
their work. Saying that music should be free is like saying people have the
right to free cars, shoes, or any other product made by a craftsmen. Clearly,
the public does not have the right to these products being free, so why is
music any different? When a song is written, the rights to that song are in the
possession of the artist, and that artist’s record label, with the latter
having greater power in the rights of the song. Artists tend to receive a
smaller percentage of the royalties for a song than the record company, so when
music is obtained illegally online, it is hurting the artist most of all,
because they lose the small percentage of the royalty that they would have
received had the song been purchased legitimately. Hence, musicians are now
going on tour more than ever, because it has become one of the only sure ways
that they can get steady income.
However, there is an exception as
to when it is acceptable to obtain music for free online, and that is when the
artist is making their music available for free online. This is a useful tool
for artists to use to gain publicity, especially when that artist isn’t particularly
well known. Artists that share their music are banking on the fact music has
become so easily obtained online. These artists are merely giving in to the
power of the internet and making music for download simply as a way to get
attention. Of the five artists that were nominated for best new artist at the
Grammy Awards this last February, three of these acts, one of which being FrankOcean, originally were signed by their record labels as a result of releasing
music online.
Having covered the online music
scene, I now look to the record stores and their dwindling sales. As
previously mentioned, less people are going to record stores and choosing to
obtain their music legally or illegally online for the convenience factor. As
well, record stores tend to sell music for higher prices, mostly because the
consumer is paying for the “hard copy”. Thus, because of financially sound as
well as lazy consumers, record stores are not making as much money as they used
to before the digital age. However, there is still hope for some of these
stores. Record stores such as Amoeba Music in California sell used music as
well as new music, allowing for thrifty music consumers to again return to
music stores to purchase their music.
Will illegal websites geared
towards the free download of music continuously hinder the music industry? I
believe that they will, unless harsher online restrictions are made in order to
prevent these kinds of websites from being allowed to provide music to be
downloaded illegally. If harsher measures are taken, then someday, artists may
not have to tour as much as they have to, and maybe, just maybe, I can buy
songs on iTunes for $0.99 again.
(The Bass Department by spaceabstract)
2 comments:
I agree with you about your opinion about downloading music and how its illegal for a reason. Because music has since transitioned into the digital world, record stores have been closing, and itunes prices have risen in order to compensate for that. People are now trying to find a cheat and illegally download the music,and I totally agree with you on this topic.
While I do agree that illegal downloading of music online really does hinder the industry and hurts the artist; just how illegal and hindering would downloading the music of an artist that is no longer in business or one that is dead? who would be the victim here if somebody decided to illegally download Beethoven's 9th Symphony?
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