My heart goes out to the starving artists that so enrich my life. However, if you connect the dots, you will find that they view purchasing used material as the moral equivelant of copying music. Does anyone remember the firestorm Garth Brooks created by saying buying used CD's should be illegal?
All the radio stations where I live are owned by large holding companies with very narrow programming parameters. Our local Boise State University radio station that had as part of it's programming a lot of jazz has since caved into the pressure and seriously cut back on the format.
Every CD I own is in my computer in MP3 format so that I may listen while I work or burn a copy for my truck. I feel no guilt for copying what I already own.
I have purchased quite a lot of new music by being exposed to a loaner batch of CD's from friends. I suppose this practice of test driving a CD is a real gray area but again, I feel no guilt. I simply purchased what I thought worthy of owning.
This is a difficult problem to wrap my mind around and come to the "right" answer. MP3's are a real threat to the music industry with so many people being accutomed to lo-fi. Then again, exposure to music is what sells it.
Guilt free listening,
Patrick
All the radio stations where I live are owned by large holding companies with very narrow programming parameters. Our local Boise State University radio station that had as part of it's programming a lot of jazz has since caved into the pressure and seriously cut back on the format.
Every CD I own is in my computer in MP3 format so that I may listen while I work or burn a copy for my truck. I feel no guilt for copying what I already own.
I have purchased quite a lot of new music by being exposed to a loaner batch of CD's from friends. I suppose this practice of test driving a CD is a real gray area but again, I feel no guilt. I simply purchased what I thought worthy of owning.
This is a difficult problem to wrap my mind around and come to the "right" answer. MP3's are a real threat to the music industry with so many people being accutomed to lo-fi. Then again, exposure to music is what sells it.
Guilt free listening,
Patrick