Comment Re:Remember the good ol' days? (Score 1) 237
Please, God, let no one say 'art'.
Railways. Television. Electric motor. Flushing toilet. Steam engine & locomotive. Computer. Seed drill. Tank. Custard. Cat flap. Jet engine. World wide web. Penicillin.
Okay, okay. Besides railways, television, the electric motor, the flushing toilet, steam engines, computers, seed drills, tanks, custards, cat flaps, jet engines, world wide web and penicillin; what have the British ever done for us?
How could you leave off Monty Python?
Well, yes, of course. It's impossible to make an album of 12 songs that universally appeals to everyone, unless it's a Greatest Hits album.
You've hit upon why the RIAA's business model is flawed. The recording industry has moved away from making music that appeals to a specific audience to trying to make albums that sell to everyone. The lowest common denominator has given us Britney Spears, Pussycat Dolls and endless boy bands and tripe. If major labels focused on creating music that certain people like and others don't, they won't sell a bazillion copies but they'll create fans and have a solid consumer base. One of my favourite labels is Hellcat Records; they make music that 99.5% of the population wouldn't like, but I do. I buy a great deal of their albums.
And of those albums, many of them are chock full of tracks that I like.
This requires that good people, and good lawyers, fight much *harder against these azzholes. Please remember that the French RIAA (forgot its acronym) recently sued motherfscking *sourceforge!
Any plan that requires the participation of good lawyers needs a really good plan B.
Two can Live as Cheaply as One for Half as Long. -- Howard Kandel