Metalhed wrote:
First off, I can't believe anyone is taking Gene or Bruce seriously. These are two of the last guys I would take advice from on anything...
Bands like Maiden and KISS are not the ones affected by the downloading - it's the smaller bands that will ultimately pay the price. The smaller record companies that bring you alot of the metal you listen to - examples: Katagory V, Brainstorm, Pyramaze - will find it very hard to stay in business when illegal downloading takes sales away. Downloading may turn some new users on to the music, but there are always those that download without purchasing it and that is a lost sale for the record company.
It is smaller companies that sign many of the good quality metal we listen to today, and they will find it hard to stay in business, as they will not be able to afford signing smaller bands. In turn that means less metal music for us.
Also, while bands like Maiden make a lot of money touring, most of the smaller bands don't. Merchandising for them is also a very small amount of income. If they are going to continue to make music, they need to rely on the smaller record companies funding them to record.
Sources? It seems to me if anything that smaller labels have had greater success with the advent of downloading than before, where the only method of hearing underground music was by buying a CD or going to a live show blind (rare for most people), or through a friend or family member. In any case, enough speculation. Lets cite studies, from Harvard!
http://www.unc.edu/~cigar/papers/FileSh ... ch2004.pdfThis study concludes quite interestingly that, and I quote:
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We find that file sharing has no significant impact on purchases of the average album in our sample... At most, file sharing can explain a tiny fraction of this decline (of record sales)... This result is plausible given that movies, software and video games are actively downloaded, and yet these industries have grown... It is also important to note that a similar drop in record sales occurred in the late 1970s and early 1980s... record sales in the 1990s may have been abnormally high as individuals replaced older formats with CDs
- Page 24
Now, they do conclude that album sales of less popular bands with few sails will decrease, though a statistically insignificant amount- however, the study also concludes that this is unlikely to affect either record production or the livelihood of the artists, as only popular artists profit from royalties on record sales. In any case, check the whole thing out- the main text is only 25 pages long, and its quite interesting.
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Gene is right - downloading is illegal - there is no way to justify it. You have stolen music from the artist that you have not paid for. If you want to sample the music, you have many options now - MySpace and band websites for one. Alot of online record shops (The End Records, CDUniverse, Amazon for example) all offer streams of many albums now. You can listen online before making a choice to purchase. I agree $18 is alot to pay for a crap CD, but downloading it illegally (without paying for the download) is not a legal way to sample.
Can this argument be permanently retired? Here in Canada and other countries, downloading is not illegal. Therefore, this is a more complex argument than "the law says so, so its wrong." The law, in this case, is irrelevant to the morality of downloading.
Unless smaller record labels can find another way to make money off of downloading, we may find that we have far fewer choices for metal other than the crap the major lables throw at us...[/quote]