ProgRocker53 wrote:For all you people holding out on giving Wal-Mart any money at all:
For every one of you boycotting the store, there's a million more going there every day. Is it really gonna hurt you, or the store, that much to go pick up a simple CD?
It's just the principle of the thing. I mean, I can't stop Wal-Mart, or the Bush administration, or the endless parade of comic book movies Hollywood keeps making, but I can decide I don't want any part of them and not contribute to them in any way.
Also, I pretty much completely stopped buying CD's about a year ago. The loudness wars have rendered many of them almost unlistenable anyway, but mostly I just don't have room for them anymore, and got tired of moving them every time I changed addresses (I'm 26 and nowhere near ready to settle down in one place). So I sold just about every CD I owned, and pocketed about $2,500, and have way less stuff to deal with now. The only physical media I really consider buying these days is high quality vinyl...I got Springsteen's
Magic and the Rolling Stones'
A Bigger Bang on vinyl, two albums which were borderline distorted on CD, and it pretty much convinced me to avoid the CD format as much as possible. If i bought a CD tomorrow, it'd have to go right into storage, as I literally have no room for any of that stuff where I'm living right now. I've got about 50 DVD's, 150 or so LP's in the closet, and the rest is clothes and music gear.
I'm hoping a legitimate download service establishes itself eventually, but so far no one's really come up with anything that doesn't totally suck ass. Mp3 downloads just can't be comparitively priced to the CD counterpart...at most, I could understand charging half the CD price, but given that there's no manufacturing, distribution, or physical retail costs, a download album should be about $5 tops, and all of it should go straight to the band (which would be more than they make from a retail CD sale anyway). This is not rocket science...unless you work in the music industry, I guess.
-Steve C.