Qobuz dropping rights to my favorites. A pox on their house (resubmit)


So, I favorite something on Qobuz, come back a few months later and SHAZAM. "The rights holders have not made this content available to listen." This seems to be a growing problem for me and I doubt I’m the only one. WTF?? To add insult to injury, I take a look at Amazon (to which I do not subscribe) and there it is.

Qobuz is the only paid service I use. Tidal has too much overlap to be worth it and I find MQA dubious anyway. Amazon’s march towards world domination is troubling and I just plain don’t like Apple stuff. But my partner uses AppleMusic (I think) and reports similar annoyances.

This leaves me both perplexed and annoyed. I’ve been slowly culling my CDs, LPs and server library with the assumption that streaming service libraries would grow, not shrink. That’s also in keeping with reminding myself to release my attachments to mere things. I’m coming to feel that this may be a grave error. In the realm of music what we don’t physically possess, be it CD, an LP, BR disk or a data file, we never really possessed at all, outside of our souls. But I’m not content to live off memories of how much I once enjoyed hearing something. I might want to hear it again! So, as far as web/streaming content goes I’m moving back to downloading stuff so it can’t be arbitrarily taken away.

Anybody else mad as hell and not gonna take it anymore? Bah, humbug!

And Happy New Year.

128x128kletter1mann

Showing 1 response by sns

So funny, some believe streaming charges excessively, and having to put up with deleted music makes it total ripoff. Others state doesn't charge near enough, rips off artists. Which is it, are the consumers ripped off or is it the artists.

 

If anyone is getting ripped off here its the artists. We pay an amazing piddling amount of money for these music services, to claim something like $9-$40, perhaps $50 per month, depending on services and number of them subscribed to, for these absolutely huge libraries of music is excessive is total rubbish! I've lived through vinyl and cd eras, have tons of both, I'll likely have spent more on these two physical media than a remaining lifetime of renting music via streaming, and this collection of over 3500 vinyl, same amount of cd's is probably 1% of the total content of streaming services. And I'm going to bitch about losing a few albums and cuts here and there! Cost benefit analysis really off here!